Newspaper Page Text
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1952,
TENANCY LAW HITS
LANDLORDS
I.ARACHI, Pakistan — (AP) —
The legislative assembly of Pakis
tan’'s rich Punjab province bor
dering India have adopted a new
tenancy law limiting landlords to
retention of a maximum of 50
acres of cultivatable lands.
Under the land reform law—
. of the most advanced in Pak
. ,
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istan—feudal landlords are de
prived of the right to eject tenants
at will without reasonable excuse.
It sets the division of produce be
tween tenant and landlord at 60
per cent for the tenant, 40 per cent
for the landlord.
Punjab provincial officials es
timated more than 500 landlords
are affected by the land reform
act. »
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LANDSLIDE IN LOUISIANA — Judge Robert Kennon
and his wife relax in a New Orleans hotel after learning
of the Judge’s victory in the Louisiana primary for gov
ernor. In.an electoral landslide Kennon defeated Judge
Carlos Spaht, candidate of the powerful Long machine.
The winner of the Louisiana primary is virtually assured
0% moving into the Governor's mansion. — (NEA Tele
photo.)
(Contirued From Page One)
to be submitted in the next three
months. The teams which have re
ported are Dow Chemical and De
troit Edison of Michigan, and Pa
cific Gas and Electric and Bechtel
Corp. of Cal#ornia. The other
groups include Monsanto Chemical
and Union Electric of Missouri
and Commonwealth Edison anrd
Public Service of Northern Illi
nois. More than 100 technicians
and executives have been engaged
in the studies.
“The making of these reports by
the study teams opens anew the
question of the extent to which
private capital can be put into
atomic energy development,” Sal
isbury pointed out. “The proposi
tions - under study would net, if
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
endorsed by the Commission and
made possible by Congressional
amendment of the atomic energy
law, cause an abrupt shift from
government monopoly to private
capital development in atomic en
ergy. But they do represent a new
and fresh approach. The outcome
of the studies and the Commission
action with respect to their recom
mendations are worth, we believe,
the close attention of the Ameri
can press.
“The huge new industry of
atomic energy up to now has not
grown and unfolded in the same
way as the motor industry, the
aviation industry, the electronics
industries, and all the others built
upon private investment and com
petition. There is a general belief
that the developnmrent will be
swifter and sounder if private en
terprise can be enlisted on a risk
basis. But the issues are many and
they are knptty. They deserve
close thought by the people which
will be possible only if the press
gives accurate reporting of the
facts and informed comment on
the issues.”
Distinguished guests present for
the Institute dinner were presend=
ed by Dean John E. Drewry. He
read a telegram from Chancellor
Harmon Caldwell regretting his
inability to attend.
Among those introduced were
Miss Emily Woodward, Institute
founder; Mayor Jack Wells; Re~
gent Chairman Robert O. Arnold;
Earl B. Braswell, Banner-Herald
publisher; University President O.
C.-Aderhold; Monroe KXimbrell,
Rotary district governor; W. Hugh
McWhorter, president of the Geor=
gia Press Association; and Stanly
Parkman, Carrollton, Institute
chairman.
Mayor Wells welcomed editors
to Athens and informed them that
he and council had made available
for each a copy of the recently
published history of Athens. Mr.
Braswell, a former University re
gent, extended the welecome of the
Athens press.
Mr. Arnold one-time Mayor of
Athens, and President Aderhold
spoke briefly about the progress
which has been made in education
in Georgia and at the University
of Georgia. They thanked editors
for their supporf.
Music was under the direction of
Hugh Hodgson and Byron Warner
of the University’s Fine Arts Divi
sion.
Ussß
(Continued From Page One)
at Peiping Wednesday demanded
U. N. acceptance of Russia as a
neutral, declaring the Soviet al
ways has opposed the Xorean
| war. .
| The general headquarters bul
letin warned against optimism as
Ia result of -this week’s agreement
to. hold a post-armistice Korean
| peace conference. :
' Soviet Adrenalin
{ _ It said the 'agreement “has no |
| doubt been calculated by Moscow
to provide the free world with
another shot of phony Soviet
Adrenalin—the Moscow ‘stimu- |
lant’ that is designed to frustrate i
the user, It is a ‘stimulant’ that |
never quite fulfills expectations— |
a drug administered with the idea |
‘that the free world will clamor |
for more and thus be completely
;in the spell of the Kremlin.”
The bulletin also warned that
in addition to two major prob
lems still to be solved—airfields !
and voluntary repatriation of ‘
prisoners— & new .one has been |
added: “The nomination. of Rus-!
sia as a neutral member of the
| supervisory teams.”
“So the cycls will continue, Ev
| ery step forward will be followed
| by a step backward until Moscow
is convinced that the final de
cision . for Korea must be made
without further delay.” '
At Panmunjom, staff officers
working on plans for prisoner ex- |
charrge agreed on some minor |
proints, but made no progress on |
lthe key issue of voluntary rep
' atriation.
REDUCING JET
ENGINE WEIGHT
+EAST HARTFORD, Conn.—
(AP)—There is a way, at least
theoretically, to reduce the weight
of jet airplanes, says William C.
Schoolfield, chief of aerodynamics
at Chance Vaught Aircraft. g
" The pilot must fly at top speed,
say about 690 miles an hour. He
must maintain a constant altitude
and he must head due east. If
these simple directions are follow
ed, the weight of a 25,000-pound
fighter will decrease about 135
pounds, Schoolfield maintaing,
. . |
Todd Rites Will
Be Held Friday '
Services for Thomas I. Todd,
who died at his home on the Win
terville Road at noon Tuesday,
will be conducted Friday after
noon at 2 o'clock from Clyde Mc~
Dorman’s Chapel.
Conducting the services will be
Rev. J. B. McNeil, Athens pastor,
and Rev. D. S. Patterson of
Gainesville,
Burial will follow in Prospect
Cemetery with John Hancock,
Sherman Hancock, Dave Hale,
Harold Chambers, Lester Cape
and Virgil Vinson serving as pall
bearers.
Mr. Todd is survived by his
wife, Mrs. Frances D. Todd; two
daughters, Mrs. C. C. Baker, At
lanta, and Miss Mary L. Todd,
Athens; four sons, M. N. Toddy
Winterville, Alvin D. Todd, Sarah,
Ga., Samuel Tribble Todd, Cum
ming, Ga., and Robert T. Toddy
Athens; three sisters, Mrs. Pres
ton Whitworth, Hull, and Mrs.
Walter Jennings and Mrs. Jerry
Davis, both of Athens; two broth
ers, John Paul Todd, Atlanta, and
Roy Todd, Canton, Ga.; daughter
in-law, Mrs. Raymond Todd, Ath~
ens, twenty grandchildren and six
great-grandchildren.
‘A native of Hall County, Ga.,
Mr. Todd had been a resident of
the Athens area for more than
fifty years. He was owner of the
Todd Medicine Company and was
widely known throughout this
section, Mr, Todd was a member
of Prospect Methodist Church.
Local Student
At Eomry Plays
i ”
In “Escape
James N. Thompson, 1023 Oc
onee St., Athens, was selected for
a place in the cast of John Gal
sworthy’s play “Escape”, presented
at Emory University last week=
end by the Emory Players. Thomp=-
son is a junior, majoring in history
at Emory, and is a member of Eta
Sigma Psi leadership honorary, and
Alpha Tau Omega fraternity.
Emory University embarked
this year on a plan of develop
ment which, according to Dr.
Goodrich C. White, president, aims
to doble the university’s resources
in ten years. The drive was off
to a good start with a grant of
$7,000,000 from the General Ed
ucation Board of the Rockefeller
Foundation. This is one of the
largest single grants ever made by
the foundation to an institution,
and is earmarked as endowment
in support of graduate wo.k. Some
of the interest from this fund will
go into graduate fellowship and
scholarships. £
NATO
(Continued From Page One)
ship between NATO and the
(EDC), from whose projected
European Defenese Community
European army the council hopes
eventually to get 43 divisions for
Western defense. Essentially, the
problem centers on west Ger
many’s place in the program,
German Status
Some progress toward defining
the German status was made in
weekend London conferences be
tween west German Chancellor
Konrad Adenauer and the big
three foreign ministers.,
The Germans would join EDC
but won’t be admitted to NATO,
at least for some considerable
time. But the relationship being
worked on is that if any NATO
member ‘is attacked the EDC’s
six-nation European Army, in
cluding Germany, is struck, then
the NATO powers will rally
around. -
The other five nations proposed
for EDC—France, Italy, Belgium,
Luxembourg, and the Netherlands
—are NATO members.
But they have not yet set up the
European Army. Plans for it are
making halting progress, part
icularly through the French and
German parliaments. Many ar
rangements, including financing
and what kind of authority will
direct the Army, remain to be
agreed on,
Most of the interest among de
legates to this ninth NATO Coun=-
cil meeting was focused on the
air base question.
Slacks Reduced
Over 100 pair fine Men’s Winter Slacks reduced
for immediate Clearance:
Original 2195 NOW 1595
Original 1995 NOW 14.45
Original 1895 NOW 13.95
Many Other Ranges'
"We Furnish Alterations”
GUNN'S
i 139 Per Lb ]| 1143 Per Lb.J:: 1655 Per Lb |
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BACAE R LU :;;g;;g:p;;h;;Ezi,.,4_.,._.,,.,.:;gsisézésézézgsig‘
o 833 Perth] {139 One Head] | 1950 PRICE J.
& Y Poenrn s
MARKET BASKET'S HIGHER-The basket of groceries that
cost $lO in 1939 and $23.75 a year ago has gone up another $1.75
this year. Above Newschart shows comparative prices in cents
of certain food staples for 1951 and 1952. Some feod prices have
dropped but the majority of the items have soared in price despite
government controls. Bureau of Labor Statistics officials say indi
cations are that prices will go still higher before they start to level.
Liz Tayior
(Continued From Page One)
the first floor registry office
through a corridor and gown the
steps to their cars.
The little office of Registrar
James D. Holliday was filled with
flowers, many of them sent by
Wilcox and Miss Neagle a few
hours before the ceremony.
This was an unexpected delight
ton an obscure London couple
married a half haur before the
Taylor-Wilding ceremony.
Marriages are mad¢ in assembly
line fashion in the rzgistry office
and the Londoners yvho came first
had the benefit of all the decora=-
tions. g
Only about a dozen persons saw
the ceremony, which was the sec
ond marriage for both Liz and
Wilding.
They included Wilcox, Miss
Neagle, Wilding’s parents, and his
brother Alistair with his wife and
four-year-old daughter.
Last Minute Whirl
The wedding climaxed a last
minute whirl of ring buying and
arrangements which followed the
young movie queen’s arrival here
from America by plane Tuesday
night. % -
_ But first the produet of science
had to bring along Liz's proof she
was properly divorced from her
first husband, American hotel
heir Nicky Hilton: Before - her
flying trip to London, Liz hastily.
stuffed her handbag with all the
innumerable things women stuff
handbags with, but she left out the
divorce papers.
The registrar at Caxton Hall
insisted proof of divorce must be
shown,
What a problem.
Then burst the dazzling thought
—radiophoto! The . photographed
paper went erackling across the
Atlantic and the registrar accept=
ed them as authentic. s
Both had to be divorced in order
to marry. After Liz was freed
from young Hilton, they still had
to wait for Wilding’s British di=
yorce to become final. He was
divorced Dee. 18 by Actress Kay
Young, who charged him with
desertion since 1945. They were
married in 1937,
SHOES HAVE GOLD
SINGAPORE-—(AP)— Customs
officers, searching a newly ar
rived small Chinese ship, noticed
a pair of shoes in a passageway.
Inside the shoes, they found 12
ounces of gold—worth about SSOO.
No one confessed ownership, so
the customs men made everyone
aboard the ship try the shoes on.
They fitted non one particularly
well. Stymied, the officers made
no arrests but took the gold away.
Henderson Rises
Will Be Friday
Mrs. Frances Henderson, prom=-
inent resident of Jelferson, died
at Emory Hospital in Atlanta
Wednesday afternoon at 2:30 o'-
clock after an illness of three
weeks, Mrs. Henderson was 43
years old.
Services are to be held Friday
afternoon at 2 o'clock from First
Baptist Church in Jefferson, with
the pastor, Rev. J, D, Mathieson,
officiating, Interment will be in
the cemetery at Maysville, Bern
stein Funeral Home in charge of
arrangements.
Mrs. Henderson, a native of
Maysville, is survived by a son,
Tom Henderson, Jefferson; moth
er, Mrs. John P. Hale, Maysville;
sister, Mrs. H. D. Roth, Washing
ton, D. C., and three brothers,
John P. Hale, Atmore, Ala., Jack
L. Hale, Mobile, Ala,, and Charles
H. Hale, Dublin, Ga. -
One of the most popular wom
en in the Jefferson community,
Mrs. Hale was connected with the
Health Department cf Jackson
county.
- W E DIET
filSSEngPl\?B’l:.—(AP)—Poople
who are finicky about their diet
should try the fare of “English
John,” a trapper on the fringe of
this mining settlement, 100 miles
northeast of Winnipeg.
English John has lived with the
Indians of Manitoba as one of
them since he was a small boy. He
speaks the language better than
most natives.
In his time—John figures he's
“somewhere around 63" —he has
eaten most of the foeds of his
adopted brothers incl eari
bou, fish, beaver, squirrel, lynx
and hawks. But he has often
gone hungry while on the trap
line trail. '
“Sometimes we would go three
and four days without food,” he
says. “We had to live on the wild
stuff. If there was none we went
hungry., But I backed up on
night owls and skunks. That was
too much for me.”
The longest eclipge of the sun
in modern times occured in 1937,
Viewed from the Pacific Ocean
area it lasted 7 minutes and 4 se=
conds.
Four of every five automobiles
made in Britain are exported to
countries overseas. °
A full-grown menhaden, & spe-~
cies of fish, weighs about three=-
fourths of a pound and measures
a foot in length. E
FLORSHEIN
SHOE SALE
Discontinued Styles Only !
Original 18.95 to 21.50
Now 15°°
Original All Below 18.95
Now 147°
GUNN'S
PAGE FIVE
ATTENDANT'S CASE HEARD
ATLANTA, Feb, 21—AP)—Dis~ .
missal of Robert 1. Carr as atten
dant at Milledgeville State Mos
iihl was to be considered by the
tate Personnel Board at its
monthly meeting this afternoon.
Carr was discharged last Dec.
16 by Dr. T. G. Peacock, hospital
director, and appealed his case to
the State Personnel Board,
A hearing was conducted at
Milledgeville last Jan. 9, but Ed
win L. Swain, merit system direc
tor, said the board deferred action
o the case until the February
meeting.
The majority of television sta
tions are in the states north of the
Ohio River and extending from
the Atlantic to the Western plain
area.
.
ltheral Notice
COBB.—The relatives and friends
of Mr. and Mrs. Carlisle Cobb,
. Jr., 3 Cloverhurst Court, Ath
ens; Mr. and Mrs, Fred J. Dale,
Rome, Ga.; Mr, and Mrs. H. L.
McCullough, Marietta, Ga.; Mr.
and Mrs. Fred S. Dale, Gaines~-
ville, Ga.; Mr. and Mrs. Francis
L. Dale, Cedartown, Ga.; and,
Mr. and Mrs. Mark C. Dale, At
lanta, are invited to attend the
funeral of Mrs, Carlisle Cobb,
Jr., Friday, February 22, 1952,
from the First Preshyterian
Church, hour to be announced
later. Dr. Harmon B. Ramsey,
pastor of the church, will offi
ciate. Interment will be in Oco~
nee Hill cemetery, Bridges Fun
eral Home. g
ittt
HENDERSON, — The friends and
relatives of Mrs, Frances Hen
derson, Jefferson, Ga.; Mr. Tom
Henderson, Jefferson, Ga.; Mrs.
John P. Hale, Maysville, Ga.;
Colonel and Mrs. H. D. Roth,
Washington, D. C.; Mr. and Mrs.
John P. Hale, Atmore, Ala.; Mr.
and Mrs. Jack L. Hale, Mobile,
Ala.; Mr. and Mrs. Charles H.
Hale, Dublin, Ga., are invited to
attend the funeral of Mrs. Fran
| ces Henderson, Friday after
noon, February 22nd, at two
o'clock irom the First Baptist
Church, Jefferson, Ga. Rev. J.
D. Mathieson will officiate. In
terment will be in Maysville,
Ga., cemetery. Bernstein Fun
eral Home.
TODD.—The relatives and friends
of Mr. and Mrs, Thomras 1.
i Todd, Athens; Mr. and Mrs. C.
C. Baker, Atlanta; Miss Mary I.
Todd, Athens; Mr. and Mrs. M.
N. Todd, Winterville; Mr. and
Mrs. Alvin D. Todd, Sarah, Ga.;
Mr. Samuel Tribble Todd, Cum
ming, Ga.; Mr. Robert B. Todd,
Mr .and Mrs. Walter Jennings,
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Davis, Ath
‘ ens: Mr. and Mrs. Preston
Whitworth, Hull; Mr, and Mrs.
John Paul Todd, Atlanta; Mr.
and Mrs. Roy Todd Canton; and
Mrs. Raymond Todd of Athens,
are invited to attend the funeral
of Mr. Thomas 1. Todd, Friday
afterncon, February 22nd, 1952,
at two (2:00) o'clock from the
| chapel of Clyde McDorman
| Funeral Home with Rev. J. B.
MeNeil of Athens and Rev. D. S.
, Patterson of Gainesville offi
ciating. The following gentlemen
will serve as pallbearers:
Messrs. John Hancock, Sherman
Hancock, Dave Hale, Harold
Chambers, Laster Cape and Vir
gil Vinson. Interment Prospect
| cemetery. McDormran Funeral
| Home, 220 Prince Avenue.
| SCOTTIES <ome
l_v Scotsman
’
£
4
€
“ .. . and from now on
when I want a comfort
able ride, I'll do it in a
clean, used car from Hey
ward Allen.”