Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWO
News Of Fi
ews ires,
Accidents, And
CCiGents, An
P " .
ofice Acfion
BY TOM BROWN
Recorder's Court
In Recorder’'s Court, Judge Olin
Price suspended sentence on a
speeder and placed him on piroba
tion, while another person for
feited a $6.50 bond for running a
stop sign.
For not paying hack parking
tickets another defendant was
fined sls after being found guilty.
Grade Ofiicers
inU. §. Army
-~
Pending the issuance of a Fifth
Recall quota by Department of the
Army, the Quartermaster Corps
has been authorized to order vol
unteers in the company grades in
to active military service, accord
ing to an announcement today by
Headquarters Georgia Military
District, 699 Ponce de Leon Ave
nve, N, E,, Atlanta, Ga.
The Corps is particularly in
need of First Lieutenants and
Captains with World War 2 ex
perience. The applicable age lim
its are 41 for First Lieutenants
and 45 for Captains, Applications
of volunteers should be submitted
to the Chief of the Georgia Mili
tery District.
1t is emphasized that applica
tic 1s should only be made by those
officers who have not previously
applied for recall since final ac
tie@ has been completed on all
a&ations submitted to date. |
(Continued From Page One)
soward attracting additional in
#ustries to Athens. Mr. Wolfe re
vealed that extensive effort has
been devoted to adapting local in
dustrial sites and facilities to the
needs of Westinghouse Corpora
tion and General Electric, but that
need for waterpower and other
req?ments resulted in their
locating elesewhere,
President Mathis and Secretary
Malcolm Ainsworth returned to
Athens last week after conferring
for some time with officials of both
companies in the East. Mr. Wolfe
asserted, and it was from their re
port that the Westinghouse and
General Electric decisions to locate
elsewhere were revealed.
{ Guests
Secretary Ainsworth introduced
several distinguished guests in
cluding Mayor and Mrs. Jack
Wells; Chairman of Clarke County
Board of Commissioners A. P.
Winston and Mrs. Winston; H. G.
White, Savannah; Lane Hubpard,
Georgia manager of Southern Bell;
W. O. McDowell, Northeast Geor
gia Southern Bell manager, and
Mrs. McDowell; Mrs, Smiley
Wolfe and Mrs. Bill Mathis,
wives of the retiring and new
Chamber of Commerce presidents;
Mrs. Catherine Houston, secretary
of the Commerce Chamber of
Commerce; L. W. New, Elberton
Chamber president, and his wife,
W. H. Poole, president of Winder
Chamber, and Mrs. Poole; Mrs. Pat
Hill, Winder secretary, and her
husband; and Rev. and Mrs. Paul
Howle, of Athens First Christian
Church.
(Continued From Page One) ‘
Emrooz, one of Mossadegh's
strongest backers. As Deputy
Premier, he served as governmernt
spokesman and ordered the ex
pulsion of four foreign correspon=
dents.
Number of Plots
There have been a number of
assassinations and plots against
leaders in the last two turbulent
years in Iran,
Premier Ali Razmara was slain
last March by members of a se
cret terror society. He was suc
ceeded by Mossadegh who on sev
eral occasions has said plotters
have sought to slay him. Attempts
also have been made on the life
of Iran’s ruler, Shah Mohammed
Reza Pahlevi.
A riot broke out in Parliament
last Dec. 11 between Mossadegh's
friends and foes. Mossadegh had
gone to the stormy session to ad
dress the deputies. Later he de
clared that “only by chance” did
he escape a plot against his life.
He demanded extra security pre
cautions.
FUNERAL NOTICE
(COLORED)
GUEST, MRS. ESSIE. — Mrs.
Essie Guest of Maxeys, Ga., was
funeralized today, Friday, Feb
ruary 15, 1952, at 3:00 p. m,,
from the Mt Zion Baptist
Church, Stephens, Ga. Her sur
vivorgs were Mr. and Mrs. Rob
ert Lee Hodge, Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Henry Smith, Mr. and Mrs.
Lonnie Hodge of Springfield,
Mass.; Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Jewell, Maxeys, Ga.; Mrs. Fan
nie Smith, Mr. Peter Smith,
Stephens, Ga.; Mr. and Mrs.
George Smith, Springfield,
Mass.; Mr. and Mrs, Leroy
Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Pete
Smith, Athens, Ga.; fifteen
grandchildren and a host of
other relatives. Rev. L. B. Ste
phens eofficiated. Interment was
in church cemetery. Mack &
Payne Funeral Home.
BUNKLEY, MR. FRANK. — Mr.
Frank Bunkley of 447 Reese
Ctreet, passed February 13, 1952,
after an iliness of several weeks.
Funeral arrangements announ
ced later. Mack & Payne Fun
i e Home.
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N. E. FACKLER N. W. SHADDEN
Top Film Stars To Have Veto
Over Ads On Their TV Shows
BY ERSKINE JOHNSON
NEA Staff Correspondent
HOLLYWOOD.— (NEA) —Hol
lywood on TV: Ginger Rogers, it
now can be told, jumped into a
$1,000,000 TV contract with her
eyes open much wider than Holly
wood suspected. There will be no
Ginger caught between a burping
beer can and the nasal spiel of a
used car salesman.
Her CBS contract gives the star
the right to veto any objectionable
advertising.
The same clause, I hear, will be
in the contracts of other top film
stars when they move into the TV
channels, .
Ginger’s first show will be in
Hollywood, starting in April, with
the format now being worked out.
One thing certain: She’ll do an
occasional song-and-dance rou
tine.
Eddie Cantor on the film-vs.-
live TV question:
“When it's on film the enter
tainers will last longer — and by
lasting longer I mean on this
earth.”
There's a comparatively new
(hurrah) English movie making
the TV rounds—“ Seven Days to
Noon.” It was filmed in 1950. ...
Bill Williams, who plays “Kit
Carson,” will make a spring per=
sonal appearance tour of the mrid
west and south. . . . Eye-opening
fact: The 108 TV stations now in
operation are covering 61 percent
of the U. S. population. Five mil- 1
lion new TV sets are expected to
be sold in 1952. |
S ]
Jo Stafford turned down a TV
bid from General Mills for a five
day-a-week show, It would have
originated in New York and Jo is
holding out for a Hollywood stu
dio. She’s never been seen on
television.
Space Travel On TV
Herbert J. Yates, president of
Republic, will not use name stars
in the TV films Republic will
‘make. The first is “Commando
iCody-Sky Marshal of the Uni
verse.” It's the first space patrol
show in which rockets will be
seen buzzing through the sky,
thanks to the studio’s special ef
fects department, ‘
There's a TV film series coming
up based on the exploits of win
ners of the Congressional Medal
of Honor.
Howard Hughes may buy up the
rights to “Young Widow,” Jane
Russell’s 1945 movie, to keep it off
TV. Jane and Howard are both
unhappy about its revival. . . .
Pinky Lee and Vivian Blaine, co
starred in that happy-go-lucky TV
show, are speaking to each other
only when the script demands. It's
a great big fat feud.
Ten CBS-TV shows will be orig
inating in Hollywood by this
spring. Ten more will follow in
the fall, when Hollywood hopes to
claim title to “TV capital of the
world.” . . . Ralph Bellamy's pri
vate-eye show, “Man Against
Crime’, was switched to film to
improve the quality. . . . Economy
note: Jack Webb uses no make-up
whatever for his male characters
in the “Dragnet” films. The girls
use their own routine street
make-up.
Eddie Albert is eyeing the pos
sibility of turning out a series of
sex education films for TV to fol
low along the lines of pictures he
is now distributing to schools and
civic groups.
Exhibitors Are Upset
Theater owners are putting Hol
lywood’s major studios on the
spot again, demanding that they
declare their position on the sell
ing of films to TV “so that exhib
itors may know where they stand
in this whirlpool of uncertainty.”
Theater owners are alarmed over
the increasing sale of pictures to
television by some of the bigger
producing-distributor companies.
Did you see the last TV show
MODERN WAY
ST.JO
| - ASEIRIE 1 TO GIVE
FOR CHILDRED _ASPIRIN TO
| YOUR CHILD
co-starring Dino Crosett! and Jer
ome Levitch? Sure you did. Those
are the real names of Dean Mar
tin and Jerry Lewis.
Richard Avonde, former fencing
champion of Canada, will be the
star of a TV film series, “Don Di
ablo.” The pilot reel was just com=
pleted at the Hal Roach studio.
Time marches on: The new TV
version of the “Our Gang” com
edies, to be produced again by
veteran moviemraker Hal Roach,
will show one of the moppets in a
spaceman’s outfit and another in
a cowboy suit.
Complaint dept.: Hey, what’s the
matter with stop watches on TV?
Too often the breathless master of
ceremonies rushes in front of the
cameras to say, “Our time is short
but here . . .” and then, is ab
ruptly cut off by the network or
station identification.
What he’s trying to say is driv
ing me mad, mad, mad.
NEHRU ATTENDS MASS
NEW DELHI, India, Feb. 15—
(AP)—Prime Minister Jawaharlal
Nehru today knelt in prayer
alongside his sister, Mme. Vijaya
lakshmi Pandit, and his daughter,
Mrs. Indira Gandhi, in the cathe
~dral of the Church of Redemption
at a requiem mass for King
George VI, : :
Those present included many
foreign ambassadors, but repre
sentatives of Russian, Chinese
Communist and other iron curtain
embassies did not attend.
Hair-Raising Idea For Presidential Hopefuls
On October 15, 1860, Grace Bedell, an 11-
year-old miss of Westfield, N. Y., wrote to the
then bare-faced Abraham Lincoln, advising him
that growing a beard would help him become
President, “All the ladies like whiskers and they
would tease their husbands to vote for you . ..”
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Robert A. Taft would look quite
impressive in burnsides, which,
during whiskers' hey-day label
ed the dignified conservative.
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College President Harold E.
Stassen looks properly profes
sional when duked up in a con
ventional Van Dyke beard.
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
Meefings He
Stressing the importance of
teamwork among = farmers and
bankers, approximately 75 Georgia
banking officials concluded an an~-
nual meeting on the College of
Agriculture campus here Thurs
day afternoon.
The officials attending the bank
ers short course, including agricul=-
tural leaders, bankers, and farm
ers, agreed that agriculture is
changing rapidly in this sectioff
and that credit needs of these far
mers who are changing to a live
stock system of farming are chang
ing, also.
Speakers on the Thursday pro
gram called for efficiency in farm
ing and growing a diversity of
crops in order for farmers to be
come good credit risks.
The meeting featured talks by
two Athens bankers, R. V. Wat
terson and R. C. Gilmer, and a
Clarke County farmer, M. C.
Southwell. J. W, Fanning, also of
Athens, arranged the meeting
which was sponsored by the Geor
gia Bankers Association and the
Agricultural Extension Service.
Also speaking on the program
were N. E. Faucker, Cantor; C.
W. Smith, Greensboro; Vernon La-
Cour, Memphis; N. W. Shadden,
Cartersville;, and Claude Bray,
Manchester.
(Continued From Page One)
chance of getting broad subpoena
powers, but not immunity from
prosecution.”
President Challenged
Rep. Keating (R.-N.Y.), who
sponsored a separate House inves
tigation of the Justice Department,
challenged the President on both
counts.
He quoted Morris as saying he
plans to investigate the Justice
Department and the Attorney
General’s office first, and added:
“It would be quite improper for
him, as a special Assistant Attor
ney General, to be given the pow
er to grant immunity to his own
boss.”
Morris, 50-year-old New York
attorney, was picked ¥eb. 1 to
take command of the long-de
manded investigation of any tax
scandals, influence peddling and
unethical conduct in government
with the title of Special Assistant
to the Attorney General.
she predicted. Well, Lincoln DID grow whiskers
and he DID become President, so maybe Gracie
had something there. Maybe our current presi
dential candidates would benefit by following her
advice, perhaps along the lines dreamed up,
below, by our retouch artist.
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Estes Kefauver, often described
as “Lincolnesque” doesn’t look
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tor, even with this shrubbery.
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Having so often been encorced
by Both major parties in C-1:%: 2~
nia, Gov. Earl Warren 1 ight try
the tvo-pronged Dundreary.
Alli
Allies Push
LONDON, Feb. 15.—(AP)—The
Big Three Foreign Ministers
pushed new proposals today for
West German rearmament in a
move to win French approval and
save the French government from
falling.
French Premier Edgar Faure
has staked his regime’s life on a
national asserrbly vote of confi
dence Saturday on the question of
bringing German soldiers into the
projected European army.
The Germans are demanding
admission to the overall defense
setup, the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization (NATO), and satis
faction of their claims to the Saar
if they join the porjected Euro
pean army. Some French Jawmak
ers, fearful of a rebirth of Ger
man aggressive militarism, are
‘balking.
Work Out Crisis
To work out of the crisis, U. S.
Secretary of State Dean Acheson
and French Foreign Minister Rob
ert Schuman mret last night with
Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden
at his home. Officials reported
they had before them a new com
promise army plan drafted by the
12 deputies of NATO. The minis
ters hoped it would give West
Germany a voice in NATO and
still keep enough control over her
to reassure the French. Under the
scheme:
1. The projected European Army
Council would have unitary cor
porate membership on the NATO
Council.
2. The two councils would meet
in joint session.
Thus, Gernrany would have a
voice in NATO decisions but not
full membership. The treaty also
would pledge each country to aid
any member of either organization
in case of attack.
Meanwhile diplomatic officials
reported Acheson had written a
private letter to Schuman asking
the French government to avoid
steps that would bar Germany
from NATO for good. He asked
the French to forget past fears
and quarrels and get on with the
job of building Europe’s joint de
fenses.
A i
(Continued From Page One)
ize that what we have left to do
won’t take long.”
The staff officers aren’t even
discussing the key issue in the
truce supervision deadlock—
whether the Communists have the
right to build and repair military
airfields in North Korea during an
armistice.
The plenary session will con
vene at 10 a. m, Saturday (8 p.
m., BST, Friday) in Panmunjom.
Both groups of staff officers will
meet after the full dress session
adjourns.
The Communist Peiping radio
Friday charged the Allies with
stalling the Panmunjom truce
talsk. Red China’s Premrier Chou
En-Lai accused the U. N. com
mand of ‘“shameless stalling”
while preparing for “a new ag
gressive war on a still larger
scale” in Asia,
Lafayette Square in Washing
ton, D. C., is named for the Mar
quis de Lefayette.
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So many of his opponents think
President Truman is playing
Santa Claus to the world, our
artist mrade him up for the role.
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BELIEVE IN SIGNS?—Good for a second look is the campaign
sign being toted by Buck Foss at the Citizens for Eisenhower
headquarters in New York. The sign doesn’t mean that Ohio’s
Sen. Robert Taft is supporting “Ike” for the presidency. All it
means is that Foss believes his hometown, Taft, Tex. (get it?), is
all-out for Eisenhower.
I Billiard Champ
Clarence E. Anderson, who has
been appointed by the Billiard
Congress of America to assume
the mrissionary duties of Charlie
Peterson, world famed instructor
and trick shot artist recently re
tired, will appear here at the Stu
dent Union, Memorial Hall, Tues
day afternoon, February 19, at
4:30.
Like the batter who followed
Babe Ruth in the batting order,
Anderson has been saddled with a
terrific responsibility, but also like
the late and great Lou Gehrig, who
was the man who followed Ruth,
Anderson is thoroughly equipped
for the job.
Early in life Anderson cherish
ed the hope of becoming a big
league ball player, and here again
he was thoroughly equipped. He
was an excellent hitter and a fine
fielder, and for a large man
moved with unusual grace and
agility. Subsequent events, how
ever, deprived Anderson of com
plete fulfillment of his baseball
dream. Today, however, at the age
of 47, he still manages and occas
ionally plays with the same team
at Kane, Pa., with which he start
ed playing 32 years ago.
Thirty years ago Clarence An
derson turned to pocket billiards
as a diversion. Instantly, the game
presented such an appeal that he
decided to beconre a professional.
Shortly after he had mastered
most of the games intricacies, he
Ideveloped a distaste for competi=
tive billiards. It has been suspect=
ed that the reason for this trans
position was merely his kindly
j@ature asserting itself. He just
could not feel happy about de
feating an opponent.
Be that as it may, Anderson
definitely decided that he would
take up teaching billiards. With
the teaching came the acquisition
of a series of trick and fancy shots
used merely to break the monot
ony of continuous instruction.
Today, his repertoire includes
more than 250 trick shots, and he
is known from coast to coast as
the World’s Champion trick shot
pocket billiardist. For many years
Anderson toured the highways
and byways of Anrerica with his
'sackful of tricks under the man
‘agement of the late Sylvester Liv- ‘
ingston.
Clarence Anderson has recently
been appointed by the Billiard
Congress of America to take over
the entertainment and instruc
tional side of the National College
program, and to date nothing but
praise of the highest order hasf
been forthcoming from the col—{
leges he has visited. i
Protect Visicn
At All Times
By NEA Beauty Editor
Your eyes are too precious to |
take for granted. They may seem
to endure the abuse of constant
and uninterrupted use, but in}|
time they may suffer from abuse. ;
Whether or not you wear glasses {
is unimportant in daily eye care. |
All eyes have the same basic need: |
to be allowed moments of relaxa- i
tion and rest. |
‘When you have been working |
o 1 reading for a long period of |
time, for instance, divert your at- |
tention at frequent intervals to |
some object at the far end of the |
room. Looking off into the dis- |
tance is always relaxing. ;
To soothe aching eyes, take to |
your couch or bed, and apply |
witch hazel compresses. It's a good ’
idea to use an eye wash once a |
week, especially if you live in the |
city. 5 !
If you do get a particle of dirt ;
in your eye which refuses to come |
out, see your doctor immediately. |
The tiniest speck can cause an |
eye infection if it is allowed to re- |
main for any length of time. i
If you have trouble getting to‘
sleep because of a nearby street- t
light or sign, try wearing eye
shields. They're comfortable and !
A SOOTHING DRESSIAG ,
can be invaluable aids.
To ward off aging expression
lices, apply a rich lubricating
cream to the area around your
eyes before you go to bed. Never
use a massaging motion as you
may streich the delicate skin tis
sues. .
If you can’t stop eye strain with
simple daily care, better have
your eyes checked. They proba
bly require the help of an expert.
Grieving
' (Continued From Page One)
nearest the hearse car ahead.
¥ Guardsmen
A bearer party of guardsmen
lifted the coffin, still draped in
the royal standard, from the train.
It was placed on a gun carriage.
‘The jewelled crown, Orb and
Sceptre were put back on the
casket, To the accompaniment of
slowly beating drums and a fun
eral dirge the procession moved
toward Windsor castle and St.
George’s chapel.
Elizabeth 11, in a black carriage
drawn by two white horses,
moved behind the coffin. Naval
ratings pulled the carriage upon
which the coffin rested.
Thousands upon thousand of
flowers, including a wreath of red
tulips from President Truman,
brought color to the scene.
One hundred and fifty white
gaitered British sailors drew the
King’s coffin through London on
a- gun carriage, at the end of
white nylon ropes. The imperial
crown glittered from its purple
cushion on top of the draped cas
ket. g
At Paddington Station, purple
draped everywhere in deep
mourning, the keening sound of
Bo’sun’s whistles sounded the last
boarding for a sailor king. Kilted
Scottish bagpipers wailed the high
land lament, “the flowers of the
forest.”
Funeral Carriage
Behind the coffin, a great black
funeral carriage halted. The black
draped women of the monarch’s
family—Queen Elizabeth IT; Queen
Mother Elizabeth, Princess Mar
garet, and the King’s sister, Prin
cess Mary — emerged, trailing]
mourning robes, and entered the
coach behind that bearing the
body.
The widow, sitting far back inl
the funeral carriage, kept her
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FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1952,
head bowed in grief and prayer
through most of the procession.
Her daughter, newly come io
j the throne, seemed calm ang
watched the faces of her subjects
lining the streets. A woman in
the crowd said, “she looked every
one in the eye—she seemed to he
reviewing her people.”
A few minutes before the body
was taken from the place where
it had lain in public honor since
Monday amidst the stones of his
toric Westminster Hall, the new
queen came once more to look
upon the coffin,
With her was her mother, sister,
Princess Mary and Britain’s four
royal dukes.
Widow’s Flowers
A wreath of flowers from the
King’s widow, Queen Mother Eliz
abeth, was the only floral decora
tion on the coffin, which was
draped in the red and gold royal
standard. Atop it also were the
glittering bejeweld symbols of his
sovereignty, the great imperial
crown, the sceptre and the orb.
The dukes walked abreast be
hind the carriage—Windsor and
Eddinburgh in uniforms of the
Royal Navy, Gloucester in the
uniform of a British General, Kent
in civilian dress.
Walking just before the coffin
bearing carriage were the King's
two closest personal servants—his
two valets, Thomas Jerram and
James MacDonald. It was Mac-
Donald, taking a morning cup of
tea to his master on Feh. 6, who
found the King dead.
1 s _l7
' Quo Vadis" Is
.
Awarded Prize
HOLLYWOOD, Feb. 15—(AP).
The movie “Quo Vadis” took the
top award of SIO,OO as the Chris
tophers, a Catholic organizatien,
made its annual presentations last
night to creators of works of “en
during spiritual significance.”
The SIO,OOO is to be divided by
Producer Sam Zimbalist, director
Mervyn Leroy and writers John
Lee Mahin, S. N. Behrman and
Sonja Levien,
The Christophers, dedicated to
the belief that individuals, acting
as individuals, can make the world
a better place, distributed other
cash prizes, $25,000 in all. Awards
included:
Newspaper: A story written in
The Atlanta Constitution last
April by Reporter Celestine Sib
ley, a mother of three children,
$2,000.
Magazine: “See How They
Run,” an article in the Ladies
Home Journal by Elizabeth Vro
man, a teacher in a negro school
in the South, $2,000.
’ ATHLETES HALTED
~ OSLO, Feb. 15 — (AP) — Ath
letes and spectators at the Olym
pic winter games’ opening cere
monies at Mislett Stadium stood
in silence with bared heads for a
.minute today in homage to Bri
taiin’s late King George VI.
Not a sound could be heard
from the crowd of almost 30,000.
i The flags of the 30 nations com
peting in the games, which were
grouped in a semi-circle at the
central platform, were dipped.
e i i
Funeral Notice
CHAFIN. — The relatives and
friends of Mr. and Mrs. William
Marshall Chafin of Lexington,
Ga.; Mr. and Mrs. E. D. Shupp,
Chamblee; Mr. and Mrs. E. W.
Chupp, Jr., Smyrna; Mr. and
Mrs, J. E. Cook, Atlanta; Mr.
and Mrs. W. C. Chafin, Winston-
Salem, N. C.; Mr. and Mrs. S.
W. Chafin, Charleston, S. C.;
Mr. and Mrs. M. H, Chafin,
Thomson, Ga.; Mr. and Mrs. M.
L. Chafin, Augusta; Mrs. J. L.
Byrd of Lexington, and the
grandchildren are invited to at
tend the funeral of Mrs. William
Marshall Chafin, Sunday morn
ing, February 17, 1952, from
the Bethesda Methodist Church
at eleven o’clock. Rev. Robert B.
Winter, pastor of the church,
will officiate, and will be assist
ed by Rev. C. H. Wheelis, Meth
odist pastor of Augusta, Ga.
Gentlemen selected to serve as
pallbearers will be announced
later. Interment will be in Be
thesda cemetery. Bridges Fun
eral Home.