Newspaper Page Text
PAGE FOUR
v. F. w.
(Oontinued From Page One)
Foreign Wars of the United States
.is composed of men who have
served overseas in the Armed
Forces in time ofwar in defense
of American institutions; and
WHEREAS, the principles of the
Veterans of Foreign Wars and its
Ladies Auxiliary reflect the high
¢st ideals and aspirations of the
patriotic citizens of this country,
and
WHEREAS, the members of the
Veterans of Foreign Wars exem-~
Pify loyaity to the community in
{pcir many community service ac
:;ivnie'; and
§ WHEREAS, all members of the
Ncterans of Foreign Wars,
‘throughout the United States and
“e'sewhere, will observe the period
-;Q{ January 24 to .31, 1952, as Na
ftional V. F, W. Week and as an
sepporivnity to redadicnte their
4t "ors to the netional welfare, and
‘the weliare of all disabled and
; y veterans and their depen
«dents;
‘ THEREFORE, I, Jack R. Wells,
Mayor of the City of Athens, Ga.,
“y the authority vested in me,
3 pclaim and designate the period
“January 24-31, 1952, as National
V. F. W. Week in this city, and 1
Seall upon all eitizens to join with
e in salutine the members of the
#Veterans of Foreign Wars, and in
i@xmressing our grateful apprecia-
Htion for the patriotic 2nd unsel-
Sdfish contributions which this or-
Alganization is constantly making to
ovr nationsl welfare and security.
g Dore ot the Citv Hail of Athens,
~ this 24th of January, 1952,
724 Jack R. Wells, Mayor.
IE ' E-""z""“;;mi
TPIETRONE
FRIDAY -— SATURDAY
Doors Open 11:00
IR R N ')
Amzong_v
A ?{?LL;}UN A ,_‘
Tom & Jerry “Jerry's Cousin”
Comedy “Mr. & Mrs. Pal”
“PERILS OF DARKEST
JUNGLE “Chapter 9
Last Showing Tonight
“Tanks Are Coming”
Stave Cochran, Mari Aldon
- Features —
1:08, 2:35, 4:14, 5:53, 7:42, 9:31
I IR
NOW SHOWING
l ALA c ! Doors Oven 12:45
ATHENS’' FAVORITE THEATRF — Features —
e l:ll, 3.1“, 5:17. 7;20, 9:238
There’s no room in this picture
for anything but joy and
gladness/// ~ , (W= ~ff(
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Cary Grant
Betsy Drake
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Room For
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ElneE MoRrRE
Plus: Cartoon “BATHING BUDDIES” “Latest News”
] Athens Drive-In Theatre ’
-:,fitmw' " JOHN GARFED
LML= | | WE|SHLEY WS
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AIso—CARTOON & NEWS. and SPORTSCOPE
WS Ires,
cciaents, An
Police Acfi
BY TOM BROWN l
In Recorder’s Court today, Al
derson Smith was found guilty of
speeding and leaving the scene of
an accident. Recorder Olin Frice
sentenced Smith to 60 days in the
city stockade.
Cases of disorderly conduct, vi
olation of the city automobile reg
istration ordinance, and running a
red light were also heard in Re
corder's Court.
Siight
(Continued From Page One)
held remarkably high. Directors
of many companies were inclined
to keep the dividend rates high
and retain less of the earnings in
the business, in spite of the large
demand for cash to finance a vast
industrial expansion program.
Dividends paid on common stock
issues listed on the New York
Stock Exchange declined in 1951
by only 0.1 per cent from 1950.
They paid out $5,466,596,000 in
dividends last year, and $5,470,~
244,000 in 1950.
The profits and dividend pros
pects for 1952 have been judged
by most observers willing to go
out on a limb and guess as being
fairly favorable, although most
expect both earnings and divi
dends to be smaller this year than
last. Their reasons: Cut-backs in
civilian goods production uncom
pensated for by rising defense out
put, and the never heavier hand
of the tax collector.
Curfain
(Continued From Page One)
Henry, an applause meter will be
be used in selecting winners. This
meter is to be installed near the
center of the auditorium and will
be used to record the volume of
applause for each contestant.
Judge Arthur Oldham of Athens
City Court is to serve as master
of ceremonies for the show. He
i a former president of the club
and is now a member of the Board
of Directors.
Tickets for the show are on sale
now. They may be obtained from
any member of the club. The box
office will open approximately an
hour before the show begins Fri
day night in the Fine Arts Audi
torium.
in To
(Continued From Page One)
Truman decides to challenge him
by seeking re-eleetion, Kefauver
replied only that his campaign
would be based on a need for
youth and vitality in the national
administration. He is 48.
Gives Platform
A few hours after his announce
ment, Kefauver told a television
audience he would campaign on a
platform advocating clean govern~
ment, world peace, a balanced
budget and continuance of “eco
nomic and social gains”
He said “the South no longer is
on the defense politically” and
there is no longer any truth in the
belief that a Southerner can not
be elected President. Kefauver
spoke from Philadelphia on a news
program (NBC).
Mr. Truman said some time ago
that he would not disclose his
plans until after he had presented
three January messages to Con
gress—State of the Union, Budget
and Economic. Still later, he said
he might wait a while longer, but
in any event the Republicans
would know before their July 7
convention.
John Nangle, National Demo
cratic Committeeman from Mr.
Truman’s home state of Missouri,
said yesterday he believes the
President will run again, He made
the statement after conferring
with Mr. Truman, but he added
he had not been informed regard
ing the Chief Executive's plans.
Kefauver generally is regarded
as an administration supporter on
most matters. It had not been
clear, however, just what his po
sition was on some phases of the
President’s controversial Civil
Rights program. That issue has
split the Democratic party, with
nearly all Southerners bitterly op
posed to the program.
Asked about it when he an
nounced his candidacy, Kefauver
said he is opposed to creation of a
Fair Employment Practices Com
mission (FEPC) with authority to
enforce its ruling in job discrimi
nation cases. The Senator added,
however, he will support the Dem
ocratic party platform on that is
sue as drafted-at the nominating
convention in July.
The 1948 platform included a
strong Civil Rights plank and Mr.
Truman later asked Congress to
set up a compulsory FEPC. Senate
filibusters by Southern members
have blocked action.
Ellender Comments
Senator Ellender (D.-La.), a
leader of the Dixie opposition, said
Kefauver “had better change his
mind about supporting any kind of
an FEPC plank—compulsory or
not—if he is hoping for votes in
the South.”
Ellender praised Kefauver’'s
statement, saying he always has
felt more could be done on a
voluntary and educational basis
regarding Civil Rights than
through legislation.
“If he would stop right there I
think he might carry the South,”
Ellender said.
Kefauver declared that as a
Southerner he has worked con
stantly “for better relations be
tween the people of every race
and creed.” He added: .
“1 want the people to have
equal economic opportunities re
gardless of what their race or
creed may be.”
He said he had taken the lead,
as a member of the House of
Representatives, in a drive for
federal prohibition of the poll tax.
And he said that ‘as a matter of
principle I do not believe in the
milibuster.”
POSSIBLE CANDIDATE
NEW YORK, Jan. 24—(AP)—
The New York Times said today
Governor Adlai L. Stevenson of
Illinois was being mentioned
prominently among influential
Democrats in Washington as a
leading candidate for the Demo
cratic presidential nomination,
A Washington dispatch by
James Restonr, the lead story in
the Times, said this speculation
followed a visit Stevenson had
with President Truman at Blair
House Tuesday night.
Substitution by television set
makers of a compulsory, longer
warranty at additional charge, in
place of the former 90-day war
rant, constitutes a tie-in sale in
violation of OPS General Ceiling
Price Regulation, the stabiliza
tion agency says. Buyers should
have full option to take or leave
any additional item in making a
purchase, OPS says.
Funeral Notice
DEAN.—The relatives and friends
of Mr. and Mrs. Grover C. Dean
of 180 Best Drive; Mr. and Mrs.
B. F. Doss, Augusta, Ga.; Mr.
James C. Dean, Mr. and Mrs,
Guy T. Dean, Mr. and Mrs.
Clyde M. Dearn: of Athens; Mrs.
Nellie Flournoy, Mr. and Mrs.
W. H. Chafin, and Mr. and Mrs.
T. J. Hall of Athens, are invited
to attend the funeral of Mr.
Grover C. Dean, Friday morn
ing, January 25th, 1952, at
eleven (11:00) o’clock from the
First Methodist Church. Rev.
Dow Kirkpatrick and Rev. G. M.
Spivey will officiate. Members
of Mt. Vernon Masonic Lodge
will serve as active pallbearers,
also as honorary pallbearers,
together with members of the
Reed-Tuck Sunday School
Class. The remains will lie in
state in the church from 10:30
Friday morning until the hour
of the service. Interment Oconee
Hill cemetery. McDorman Fun
eral Home, 220 Prince Avenue.
ALMAND.—Died Tuesday, Janu
ary 22nd, at Sharon, Ga., Mr.
Jim Almand of Watkinsville,
Ga. He is survived by four sons,
Mr. E. J. Almand, Montgomery,
Ala.; Mr. W, K. Almand, Gray,
Ga.; Mr. H. N. Almand and Mr.
A. R. Almand, Union Point, Ga.;
two daughters, Mrs. Paul Hollis,
Union Point, Ga., and Mrs. Irene
Poss, Detroit, Ga.; two sisters,
Mrs. A. F. Lancaster, Anderson,
S. C, and Mrs. Henry Evans,
Madison, Ga. The funeral was
this Thursday afternoon, Janu
ary 24th, at three o'clock from
the graveside. Interment was in
Almanj cemetery, Apalachee,
Ga. Bernstein Funeral Home.
THY BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA ™
Trial
(Continued From Pagze One)
ed that their had never been a
picture of Dean Drewry in her
daughter's room which the two
women shared. She stated that
the only picture on display in that
room was one of her husband who
has been dead for some time.
She described her husband as
looking something like Dean
Drewry, and added that he wore
dark simmed glasses,
dark rimmed glasses.
Mrs. Kathleen Drewry, however,
testified that her son, Milton, had
heard from a friend that his fa
ther's picture was displayed in
Miss Thurmond’s room and had
“hecome incensed and gone to see
for himself”,
She stated that he had gone into
the home of Miriam Thurmond
with a friend and neighbor and
had actually seen the picture. Ac
cording to Mrs. Drewry, he then
went home to tell her about it and
was “extremely upset.”
The defendant again repeated
her charges that the Dean and Miss
Thurmond were engaged in im
proper actions when she entered
the Trumond home and asserted
that the room was “too dimly
lighted to look at pictures or any
kind of ‘materials”.
She again denied the possibility
that the Dean had been engaged
to Miss Thurmond at the time of
the shooting.
Knew Of Engagement
Mrs. Thurmond stated that she
had known of the engagement for
some time prior to Christmas and
that Miriam had been unable to
make up her mind about setting
a date.
In answer to Mrs. Drewry’s
statenfent that the Thurmonds had
pressed the Dean into his March
1950 marriage to Miss Thurmond,
Mrs. Thurmond stated that the
Dean had wanted to marry Miriam
in the hospital but that she (Mrs.
Thurmond) rad refused permis~
sion. Her reasons, she said, were
for Miriam to be well and able to
make her own decision clearly be
fore taking that step.
Mrs. Drewry insisted that the
marriage between Mr. Drewry and
Miss Thurmond was secret and
that he had taken precautions to
“get me out of town at the time.”
She related to the Court that
she had a miscarriage in 1938
(Dean Drewry denied knowledge
of this) and that her husband had
paid the bills and talked to the
doctor.
She denied having forced her
husband to prepare his own meals
but admitted that for medical rea
sons she had often not taken
breakfast with him. @
Mrs. Drewry repictured the
Tharksgiving weekend that she as
serted she and her husband spent
together. She maintained that the
two of them had occuppied the
saré\e room throughout the week
end.
In answer to Dean Drewry’s
statement that he had been pres
sed into spending the weekend at
her home she replied that he had
broughtno sleeping garments the
first night but kad picked up pa
jamas at his room the next day and
dropped them at her home. “If I
was pressing him how could I
‘make him do things like that?” she
asked the jury. -
The morning session was ad
journed at 12:30 with afternoon
sessions to get under way at 2:00
p. m. The attroneys for the de
fense and prosecution were to de
liver their argements in the after
noon session.
The defense in the case of State
vs. Mrs. Kathleen Merry Drewry.
was denied a mistrial in yesterday
afternoon’s hearings and Mrs.
Drewry, ex-wife of Dean John E.
l Drewry, delivered to the packed
courtrocm and jury an unsworn
statement in which she stated that
her attack on the dean of the jour
nalism school and the girl he later
married was unpremeditated and
came as the result of “my world
crumbling when I realized that
John was at her house.”
Mrs. Drewry asserted that after
her husband left her house on
December 23 she had learned that
he had not gone home to bed as
he had told her and set out to
find him.- She related that she
saw the Dean and Miss Thurmond
through the curtains of the Thur
mond home in an “ugly and com
promising position” and that her
subsequent actions were the “re
sult of strain and stress severe
enough to unbalance the soundest
mind.” ,
She termed her attack on the
couple as unpremeditated, saying
that had she planred to shoot them
she would not have chosen a
“rusty little pistol of at least 20
years of age” but would have got
ten a “shotgun or something that
could do more damage.”
Mrs. Drewry maintained
l throughout her testimony that her
actions had been in defense of her
home and that the Dean and “that
woman” (Miss Thurmond) were
the ones who were “traitors to so
ciety.”
Ask Mistrial
Earlier in the afternoon Attor
| neys Carlisle Cobb and Rupert
| Brown had asked for a mistrial on
the basis that the jury had been
divided during the recess between
morning and afternoon sessions of
court,
Questioning of one of the baliffs
revealed that three of the jurors
had been feeling ill and that they
had been taken for a walk while
the remaining nine were left in
the custody of a second bailiff.
A roll call of the jury resuited
in unanimous denial that the jur
ors had discussed the case and the
request for a mistrial was denied.
Milton Drewry, twenty-year-old
son of the Dean and his ex-wife,
denied his father’s testimony that
he (Milton) had asked his father
to spend the Thanksgiving week
end at Mrs. Drewry’s home in
order that he might go to a foot-
HARLEM oy
FRIDAY & SATURDAY
808 STEELE in
“TRUSTED OUTLAW”
Late Show Sat. 10:15 P. M,
“Revenge of Zombies”
ball game in Atlanta.
Milton further stated that his
father was in their home frequent
ly following his divorce from Mrs.
Drewry. He estimated that the
Dean spent five out of seven even
ings a week there, coming at
around six and leaving at eleven.
The Dean’s son also denied that
Christmas gifts or bills were dis
cussed by his parents early in the
evening of December 23. Milton
denied having urged his father to
return to Mrs. Drewry, maintain
ing that the Dean was constantly
seeking to get back in his ex
wife’s favors,
Bad Feelings
Milton Drewry, in answer to re
peated questions from the prose
cution, admitted that his relations
with his father had not “been
good.” Asked about his present
feelings toward the Dean, he again
admitted that they were bad.
He testified that his parents
were looking at Chrisimas cards
addressed to “Mr. and Mrs, John
E. Drewry” when he left his home
on December 23 to attend a dance
at the Country Club. He said that
they were happy that many of
their friends did not know of their
divorce and that they would again
be married before they learned of
i,
Asked about his father kissing
Mrs. Drewry before leaving her
that night, he said that he left be
fore his father but that the Dean
“kissed mother all the time.”
Mrs. Drewry in her unsworn
testimony later said that her ex
husband had left her home “warm
with my wifely kisses to go into
the tenacles of that woman.”
Mrs. Wilmer Heery, close friend
of Mrs. Kathleen Drewry, told the
jury that she had been greatly
concerned about Mrs. Drewry
prior to the December 23 shooting.
She stated that she had felt her
friend was heading for a break
down due to her “distraught and
upset condition.” She further test
ified that she had discussed the
matter with Dean Drewry and he
had agreed that his former wife
was not well,
Relates Conversation
Mrs. Heery related that Mrs. |
Drewry telephoned her shortly
after the shooting in an upset con
dition and threatened suicide. Mrs.
Heery attempted to hold her on
the phone to prevent her killing
herself and and it was while they
were talking that the police en
tered Mrs. Drewry’s home. |
Mrs. Heery testified that she had
seen Mrs. Drewry later that night
and had talked to both her and
Dean Drewry. Although she did
not remember the exact words of
her conversation with the Dean,
she testified that he had men
tioned being “confused” about
what to do about his ex-wife but
said the events of the evening had
“cleared things up.”
She related that he said his con
nections with Mrs. Drewry had
been severed by the shooting and
that “if Miss Thurmond will have
me, I'm going to marry her.”
Dean Drewry, however, main
tained that the confusion he had
spoken about referred only to the
time that he would marry Miss
Thurmond.
Mrs. Heery termed her close
friend, Mrs. Drewry, extremely
upset on December 23 and opined
that “she was not responsible for
her actions.”
When questioned by the prose
cution as to the cause of Mrs.
Drewry’s upset mental condition,
Mrs. Heery stated that she was
not certain about the cause but
that Mrs. Drewry had been very
lonely.
Unsworn Statement
~ In her unsworn statement which
ended Wednesday’s court session,
Mrs. Drewty pictured the Dean as
i STARTS
12:45 TODAY
£ FOR ONE WEEK
ONE MAN AND 200 @) 7
"“SBMD "UNGRY <~’§ 1:30, 4:00, 6:25, 8:50
WOMEN! (AO, MEET BUCK WIATT...
. £ }d Indian’ fighter, woman
&3 EEE/ | hater. These pionees
A, RN S gir|s were just another
;i@ ‘ %i £. ¥ meal ticket to him, but
T SRR R . > oneof them burned her
[RSB brand on his heart!
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\ ROBERT TAYLOR
- DENISE DARCEL
: Oolh TODADY thru
m 12:45 SATURDAY
FEATURES: 1:20, 3:20, 5:20, 7:20, 9:20
The Roaring Story of the Gun that won the West!
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| D DURYER §N\\\C\\Es“v\ M
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.‘!‘:'man interested only in himself
and his position at the University.”
She declared that the Dean had
forcibly placed her in a mental
institution eighteen years ago and
had cPnstantly reminded her that
she was “insane.” She narrated
that her husband had often told
friends of her “mental condition”
and even the boys in bis journal
ism classes. His purpose for this,
according to Mrs. Drewry, was to
establish himself as “a martyr and
noble soul with his sick-minded
wife.”
She told the Court that she had
sought a divorce as early as 1929.
She accused the Dean of “making
my life miserable from that time
on."
“His selfish, unrestrained ambi
tion,” she said, “came before any
thing else. He made me live with
him so that he would appear nor
mal.”
In regards to the Dean’s rela
tionship with Miss Thurmond,
Mrs. Drewry said that the Dean
had spoken to her of his disgust
for Miriam Thurmond.
Denying that the Dean and his
present wife had been engaged at
the time of the shooting, she
termed their engagement a “fig
ment of Miriam’s imagination”
and said that the Dean wanted to
keep Miss Thurmond “on the back
streets of his life to fulfill some of
his desires.”
Continues Statement
She described the Thurmopd
family as being well schooled to
give Miss Thurmond privacy when
the “great Dean came calling.”
Entering the Thurmond home on
December 23, she said that she
found them in a compromising
position and that they “came out
of their all consuming passion
slowly before noticing me.”
Mrs. Drewry accused the Dean’s
present wife of “conveniently for
getting on the stand what I said
to her that night before leaving.”
She told the court that she had
confronted Miss Thurmond with
an accusation of twice breaking up
the Drewry home,
She protested the idea that
“some people have said that I will
be dangerous to society if freed.”
Although she maintained that the
Dean will have to get a second
divorce before legally marrying
his present wife, she said that she
would grant the divorce.
“John Drewry is not fit for any
woman to have. I wouldn’t have
him,” she said emphatically.
In concluding her unsworn
statement Mrs. Drewry said: “I
have been living in Augusta with
my sister and her family, happily
situated, enjoying family life, and
finding a degree of contentment
and peace of mind for the first
time since the tragedy. Please just
grant me the priviledge of going
on and living in a hostile world.
If you are interested in a fair
plan through justice, you will free
me of this dark cloud. Look into
your hearts and be proud to have
freed me. % %
~ “No one could ask for more,”
she concluded.
OPS is going to test “communi=
ty food pricing” in Fresno, Cal,,
Fargo, N. D.,, and Jacksonville,
Fla., to find out how this method
of posting identifiable ceiling
prices for goods can be practicably
applied nationally. The grocery
posting program is called “com
munity pricing” because it sets a
ceiling price that is community
wide for each commodity in each
class of store in a pricing area. A
similar plan was popular with
shoppers in Word War 11.
American Indians used totem
poles for tombstones as well as
for idols. Ashes of cremated
braves were placed in the poles.
Fleven Atkenians -
Pass Examinalion
To Practice Law
Eleven Athenians were among
162 applicants who successfully
passed examinations last month
for admittance to the bar. A total
of 258 law students took the De
cember examination.
Athenians passing the examina
tion are Robert M. Drake, -480
South Milledge avenue; Albert
Greenstone, Route 2, Jefferson
Road; Giraird W. Hawkins, 167
Catawba avenue; Earle B. May,
jr. (no home address); John H.
Mobley, 187 North Milledge ave
nue; William Tennie Mobley, Ag
Hill Station; Jacob Henry Paul
sen, 11, 480 South Milledge ave
nue; J. Robert Smith, Sigma Nu
House; Ben Louis Weinberg, jr.,
398 South Milledge avenue, and
Isaac S. Williams, jr., Box 492,
Ag Hill Project.
Q. What Can OPS do about
freight and utility rates?
A. OPS has no direct legal con
trol over the rates of public utili
ties, railways and trucking lines.
However, OPS does protest against
proposed rate increases wherever
such increases appear to affect ad
versely the stabilization program
and particii)ates in the public
hearings held by regulatory com
missions in the public interest.
island, with an area of about
84,000 square miles, according to
the Encyclopedia Britannica.
Crane county, Texas, has the
smallest population of any county
in the United States.
Read
Banner-Herald
Want Ads.
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gl o
o - "
4\ //
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1948 STUDEBAKER Commander 4 Door Sedan—Original green
finish, automatic hillholder, gas saving over-drive, good
seat covers and tires. Try it today. .............. $1095.00
1948 CHEVROLET Fleetmaster Convertible—Original black fin
ish—excellent WSW tires, radio and heater, custom-tailored
upholstery, many other accessories. Snappy good looks and
fine performance. .... .... esee soee sout siennn $1165.00
1947 PONTIAC Streamliner 4-door Sedan—Very clean through
out, radio and heater, tip top mechanically ...... $995.00
1948 FORD Tudor Sedan—Original black finish, radio
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ically. A g2ood lOOKeT .... ... c¢ cvee soce cuvr oo 895.00
1948 FORD Super Deluxe Tudor Sedan - V-8 — New
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1947 CHEVROLET Fleetinaster, 2-door Sedan — Clean
blue finish, radio and heater, immaculate interior,
tip top mechanically .... .... «cecv eves eoes eees 895.00
1950 FORD % Ton Pickup - V-8 — Original blue finish,
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equipped with spotlight, ............5 ceooeeeee 0 1,175.00
1941 FORD 14 Ton Panel Delivery—Black finish, very
good tires, re-conditioned engine. Looks good and
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1948 FORD 145 Ton Pickup—Original black finish, 6:50x
16 6 ply rear tires and 6:00x16 4 ply fronts, good
heater, clean cab, mechanically reconditioned .... 895.00
1949 INTERNATIONAL KBS Cab Chassis—New red fin
ish, spotless cab, excellent 7:50x20 duals, 7:00x20
fronts. A heavy duty hauler thats reéady for work . $1375.00
1949 DODGE 14 Ton Pickup—Good green and black fin
ish, clean cab, heater, 6 ply mud grip tires. Ready
BOF WO, i e erh set s iss. B9SOO
1946 DODGE 114 Ton Cab-Chassis Truck — Red and
black finish, excellent 7:00x20 duals and fronts. Re
conditioned engine, good cab. Very reasonable .... 695.00
1948 CHEVROLET Sedan Delivery—OQOriginal black fin
-I‘sh, very good tires, top notch mechanically. Ideal
208 2 DOUSEMIBNY L. o it R o v eey s 00,00
MANY OTHER CARS AND TRUCKS
TO SELECT FROM
CREDIT AND TERMS
HANDLED IN OUR OFFICE
Ed Rock Dan Dupree
Mac Mewborn Emory Teat
Clarence Anthony
. *
Open Evenings Till 6:30 p. m.
c- A- TRUSSELI— MOIOR COI
Broad at Pulaski Phone 1097
THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 1952,
Almand Servic
Services for Jim Almand,y ho
died Tuesday night .in Sharon,
Ga., were conducted this aftc, -
noon at the graveside in Almang
cemetery at Apalachee, Ga.
Mr, Almand was 72 years old
'and had been ill for several weel: .
'He was a native and lifelong resi
'dent of Oconee county.
He is survived by four sons, ¥,
J. Almand, Montgomery, Ala., W,
K. Almand, Gray, Ga., and H. N.
Almand and A. R. Almand, both
of Union Point; two daughters,
Mrs. Paul Hollis, Union Point, and
Mrs. Irene Poss, Detroit, Mich. :
two sisters, Mrs. A. F. Lancaster,
Anderson, S, C., and Mrs. Henry
Evans, Madison, and several
| nieces and nephews.
(Contirued From Page One)
Flournoy, Mrs. W. H. Chaffin and
Mrs. T. J. Hall, all of Athens, six
grandchildren and several nicces
and nephews,
Native Athenian
A native and lifelong resident
of Athens, Mr. Dean for manv
years had been connected with the
furniture business and at one
time was connected with the Geor
gia Power Company. He was a
member of the Methodist Church
and took an active interest in the
Reed-Tuck Sunday -School cla:s
and its activities. He was a
member of Mt. Vernon Lodge of
Masons and was keenly interested
in its affairs.
Mr. Dean was @ man of demo~
cratic spirit and was civiceminded
to a high degrea. He took an ac
tive role in civic and religious life
of the city, as well as in the fie'd
of government and politics. I'e
had a Jarge number of friends
throughout this section who will
greatly miss his cheerful demeanor
and friendly spirit.
The remains will lie in state in
the church from 10:30 Friday un
til the hour of the service.