Newspaper Page Text
SUNDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1551,
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[ TOWN & COUNTRY WAGON ...... .... .... .. .. .....1895
R EARGE STARE DODY WABON .. .;.0 v i ivib il e
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0T FLOW SYATION WAGON .. .. . .. oo i
GBI BIRMARNING GUN ... d e e
HOPALONG CASSIDY SHOOTING GALLERY .... .... ..... 3.29
MBETER BMORER GUN ... ... . i vaee s a e
TEXAS RANGER WESTERN OUTFIT .... .... .......... 198
| HOPALONG CASSIDY DOUBLE HOLSTER SET ........... 7.98
§ LARGE AUTO TRANSPORT WITH WITH 4 CARS .... ... .. 295
- WAY SRPRESS VAN LIMES © ... .. vvis bicsnes wolitne
f TOF TOWN LIIVERY TRUCK ..... ... .o h e
{ FREIGHT STATION, COMPLETE SET ........ .......... 498
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L PIRDETE BRRVREE STATION .. ... ..ot e A
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| ERPETOR SUVS. ALLSAEES .. .. .... v\ ssneiis oo BTN
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E DAISY “RED RYDER 8. 8. CUN - ... . :ivviviicsives 3 e
B DAMYE B CUN - WITH SCOM .....ovn U A
] AMERICAN PLASTIC BULBING BRICK ................. 3.69
! FIRE TRUCK WITH SIREN & AERIAL LADDER ........ 1.79
| CIANT REVERSING TRACTOR TRUCK WITH GEAR .... .. 3.98
i SPARKLING CLIMBIMY TANK . ................+..... 306 §
! “SCOTTIE” GUILD-A-DOG WITH LEASH .... ............ 3.04
E ROAD DURDIMG SET .... .. ... 5 iaem v ivvras 100
I MO NRRBARD ... ... ...... e i T
L DO R URGER BET. . ....i00.0.. . s emitva sih A B 0
L PETL & BEPETE SNOOKIE TWIN ....0... .. ) iiivies o 290
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| FOLDING TABLE & CHAIR SET .. ..., ... oßss cusvies 199
| DOLE BANMNACES. ML SN ..... 0.0 iiis nriiive RS
L MUBERE SHEIERS . . .i e s
E SHOOINY BROMEE .. . i i e v Bie IR
| TEA SERVING TRAY. ... ... . cimanios sersntnsmorows SOO
J5/EC BOARD WITH SEAT ...........oowonnvomen oo 497 |}
TSNI B 18" . e e 1D
§ DOLL SUIT CASE, COMPLETE WITH CLOTHS ... ........ 595
! LARGE ASSORTMENT OF DOLLS .... ......... 1.25 upt029.95
| DOLE BHRMIVURE . ... ... ... oocv oo s woimm ioh il T HEN
| IRONING BOARDS, WOOD OR METAL ..............198up §
| SUPER METAL SERVICE STATION .... .... .c.coees 0w 254
d CHRISTMAS LIGHTS, CANDELS SETOFB .... .... .... .. 298
SPIKE IDOEE BRUNI 8B . ... ... i s IR
| BATON'S - OFFICIAL WEIGHT & SIZE .... .... ..o w... 125
L rOOTRRRIE ... . iy xiescer kveroamnianie suvREEE
| BASRMNIRREE .. h ke hesies ereea iy nek B
SRR e ee s b D
] BONIR Y . o .. eiees vrmams wiikens SRR
MECHEMIBAL TRAINS ... .. ivesves wnebiadir via SOO 09
| SUNBEAM MIXMASTER ... ..oovvrvnne conennns nes oo 4650
| G & R . ... csieivans veey e iaies SRS
] DORMEYER MIXMASTER .. .. «.cov cuvs sovnonss sevs o 29.95
| DOMINON POP-O-MATIC TOASTER .... covv vvvs oo oo +o 1795
f MIRRO - ELECTRIC - PERCULATOR ... ..o vvvn vvne ner e 7.95
SUNBERSE BAZORS ... rou soceoncess nuasiyisoss svans 26.90
I SUNBEAM COFFEEMASTER ......... coco ssos sonw seess 3750
B O SUMBEARE BRONE . .. .. .icvcinaive chse suvmuine 15.5
fßuy Now at These Low Prices...SAVE!
RTINS
| Ernest Crymes Co.
;]64 E. c|° " | Phona 2726
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
U. S. POLICY:
. @ N
"COLONIALISM
"W .
&
By CHARLES E. WILSON
President of General Motors Corp.
(Distributed by NEA Service)
NEW YORK—(NEA)-—The peo=
ples of all nations and their politi
cal leaders, no matter how they
may have achieved their positions
of authority, power and responsi~
bility, face three major problems
today:
1. How to avoid war and help
maintain world peace and at the
same time protect the territories
of their nations and their legiti
mate international interests.
2. How to establish and preserve
economic stability in their nations
and at the same time maintain or
improve the standard of living of
the people.
3. How to take care of the aged,
sick and destitute whose resources
are inadequate to provide for their
necessities and who are now un
able to earn a living and take care
of themselves.
The peoples of the free world
face a fourth problem—how to
achieve the first three without
losing the freedoms on which their
nations have been built.
The peoples of the world want
peace, not war. The history of the
world through the centuries is that
dictators, not the people, make the
wars. If our nations in the effort
to meet aggression develop into
military and political dictatorships,
they will inevitably become in
volved in war as dictator-dominat
ed nations always have in the past.
The western world has demon
strated beyond a question of a
doubt that the greatest produc
tivity and highest standard of
living can only be achieved by
stimulating the initiative of the
millions in a free society. Like
wise, to maintain political sta
bility in such free natons, it is
necessary to maintain and improve
trlxe standard of living of the peo
ple.
Free societies based on the rec
ognition of the essential dignity
and inherent importance of the in
dividual naturally have the great
est consideration for the aged, sick
and destitute. In such societies it
is not a question of should they
be taken care of, but how best to
do it.
A minimum military establish
ment, including the minimum de
fense production necessary to
protect a nation, is an economic
handicap that seriously reduces the
standard of living of the people.
Likewise, a welfare program, ,
especially when underwritten by’
centralized government and abused
by those who could work and sup
port themselves but don't, also
handicaps the producers and tends
to reduce their standard of living. l
Socialistic schemes are no soiution |
for these problems since by theirs
very nature they tend to eliminate I
incentives, destroy personal initia- |
tive, weaken responsibility and |
curtail production. |
At the present time it is ex- |
ceedingly important to increase’
productivity to the maximum inf
the free world. All of us must be |
willing to make a greater effort,
and we must organize our work so
that we accomplish more with each
hour of work. Our nations must
have military programs sufficient
to protect themselves against ag
gression. |
With an increased birth rate and |
an increased life expectancy, thei
production portion of the popula-‘
tion is reduced, throwing an added
load on each of the producers.
Since to achieve political sta-l
bility in our countries these pro
ducers must have a hope for in
creasing their standard of living as
a reward for their greater effort,
there is a triple necessity for in- |
creased productivity. :
Beginning in the 15th and|
through the 19th Century, the na- |
tions of Europe in varying degrees
depended on a policy of colonialism
to support the people in the home
countries. This system of colon
ijalism was designed to develop the
resources of more primitive or pa
gan countries by more civilized '
peoples. Frequently the system |
was maintained by military power. |
Farm Insurance Co.
Votes Name Change
Atlanta, Ga.—A name change
from Cotton Farmers Mutual In
surance Association to Cotton
States Mutual insurance Company
was voted at a meeting, held in
Atlanta, 6a., on Dec. b, of the pol
icyholding members making up the
mutual insurance organization,
headed by D. W. Brooks, president.
The previous name had been con
fusing, it was said, because many
persons agsumed, erroneously, that
they must be growers of cotton to
be eligible for this “farmers mu
tual” type of insurance. The nzl
name, Cotton States Mutual Ins
ance Company, is thought to be
more definitive, since the company
is now beginning to expand beyond
Georgia into other southern states.
The company, now bearing the
new name, was started ten years
ago under the sponsorship of the
Cotton Producers Association, a
large farmer cooperative with
headquarters in Atlanta, Georgia,
which Mr, D. W. Brooks serves in
the capacity of general manager.
“From a tiny start in the field
of fire and windstorm insurance,”
€. B. Funderßurk, manager of the
insurance organization, told the
meeting, “your eompany has now
grown to a modest but ereditable
place in the insurance business,
including full coverage for automo
bilés, with approximately 85,000
polictes in force, 200 agents repre
genting us, and premium volume n
excess of one million dollars, an
nually.”
Local representative for Cotton
States Mutual Insurance Company
is H. H. (Bill) Giles, Athens, Ga.,
who states that there are approxi
mately 600 policyholders in this
immediate vicinity.
Admittedly the system was de
signed to help the people of the
mother country, but it was de
fended on the ground that it also
raised the economie, soclal and
religious standards of the native
population,
The coloniesg provided a market
for the goods from the mother
country in return for the food and
raw materials produced by the
colonies, Colgnialism was always
more popular in the mother coun
tries than in the colonies. The
colonies insisted on frowlng up.
Perhaps the A can Revolu
tion and the founding of a new
nation was the beginning of the
end of colonialism, While colonial
ism was an accepted pwlcy in
Europe for many decades there
after, and continued to expand in
some areas throughout the 19th
Century, the territories of the
Americas achieved their indepen
dence during this period.
The people ‘'of the United States
have always had sympathy for
other colonial peoples who were
attempting to establish their inde
pendence. As a result of this and
perhaps of our American Monroe
Doctrine, the territories of the
Americas achieved independence
during the same period that colon
ialism was still advancing on some
other continents.
With the rising economic status
of colonial populations after World
War I, colonialism as a policy de
clined rapidly. Following World
War II colonialism as it was un
derstood 100 years ago has largely
disappeared.
Our country now has a policy
what might be called colonialism
in reverse. We are exploiting our
own people and our own resources
toi benefit people in other coun
tries.
This is certainly a new devel
opment in the history of the world.
Even with America’s great ideal
ism and productivity, this policy
cannot safely be counted on for
long by any nation. This is an
other reason why it is so impor
tant for other countries in the
western world to understand the
basis of American productivity
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and rapldly improve the produes
tlvity in their own lands.
Amerioans have no desire to ex~
pand their area of influence in the
pattern of the old colonial empires
nor to take advantage of the peo~
ples of other lands to gain for
themselves by holdlr;g down the
living standards of other peoples.
On the contrary we Americans
consider that our future progress
to a large degree will depend upon
the progress which other countries
make at the same time. We be
lieve that the greates progress for
each nation can be made only
when all natlons make progress in
freely developing their own and
thus the world’s resources.
We are sure that increasing pro
ductivity is the key to prosperity
and peace for the western world,
Death Takes Dr.
J. E. M. Oglesby
In New Jersey
Friends here of Dr. James E. M.
Oglesby have received news of his
death Friday night at the home of
his daughter in Boonton, N, J,,
where he was visiting for the
Christmas holidays. He was 80
years old and death came un
expectedly.
Funeral services are to be con
ductfd today in Boonton.
Dr. Oglesby lived here for three
years, residing at 165 South Mille
dge Avenue. His three daughters,
Rebecca, Mozelle and Mabel gra
duated from the University of
Georgia while Dr, Oglesby was in
Athens. R
"~ His home was im Van Nuys,
Calif.
INDIA-TURKEY PACT
NEW DELHI, India, Dec. 15.~
(AP)—lndia and Turkey signed a
treaty of “perpetual peace and
friendship” Friday at ‘Ankara, the
Foreign Ministry announced here.
Drug addiction is groundl for
divorce in seven U. 8. States.
Brave Laborer
Saves Fellow
I
Workers’ Lives
CLEVELAND, Dee.ls — (AP) —
A man gave his life to save his two
partners when am 11-foot ditch
caved in Thursday.
Gieorge N. Awen, 38, was the he-
TO.
Rudy George, 29, ggt out of the
ditch unscathed. {s brother
Mirior, 34, suffered back injuries
and was taken to a hospital,
The men had been partners for
10 years. They were laying a sew=
er line along a new street, Two
feet wide and 11 feet deep, the
ditch was 25 feet long.
As a steam shovel bit into a
water line 20 feet away, the ditch
G 2
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301 Sow. Mutal Bldg.
71 Off.-Phones-Res. 4453
Open this week from 9 a.m. te 9 P
PAGE NINE
Tillod rapidly snd the wells began
to orumble,
Awen braced hh‘m sgainst
some temporary pl oh one
side, and jammed a knee and his
hands against the other side,
“Get out,” he yelled to his part=
ners.
As the George brothess seramse
bled for the surface, the eave- im
caught Awen, Kis was du
from planking and man M\:
later.
Persons suffering from diabetes
seldom are troubied with seasicks
ness.
COWBOY {
BOOTS _
famd ‘
AR
Sizes Range From
Little s’s to Big 3's
4.45-6.98
HAYGOOD'S
SHOE STORE
151 B. Clayton Athens