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DAILY MEDITATIONS
Beho!d what manner of
love the Father hath bestow
ed upon us, that we should be
- called the sons of God, there
fore the world knoweth us
not, because it knew him not.—lst John 3:1.
—Mr. R. V. Self, Hull, Ga.
fHave you & ravorite Bible verse? Mail to
A. F. Pledger, Holly Heights Chapel.
. F.
With lis Governor Under Fire,
. .
Spotlight Is On Puerto Rico
BY PETER EDSON
NEA Washington Correspondent
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico.— (NEA) —Charges by
thiree U, S. senators that Puerto Rico’s first elected
Governor Luis Munoz-Marin is a dictator focus a
new attention on this American island territory.
On March 3, Puerto Rico will go to the polls to
vote on a new constitution. It was drafted at a
special constitutional convention held in San Juan
from September 17, 1951, to February 6, 1952.
Adl political parties participated—Munoz-Marin’s
own Popular Democratic majority party and over
20 of the opposition Republican and Independent
parties. Final vote on adoption was 88 to 3, with
one absentee—nearly unanimous approval.
This constitutional convention was authorized by
a law passed by the U. S. Congress in July, 1950. If
the Puerto Rican voters approve it on March 3, this
constitution will come to the U. S. President and
Congress for final approval.
Senator Joseph C. O’'Mahoney, Chairman of the
Senate's Comnrittee on Insular Affairs, has prom
ired full investigation.
This Puerto Rican constitution would provide for
something new in the American government, It
would give Puerto Rico a “commonwealth” status
instead of its present territorial tie to the United
States.
“For a long time, the people of Puerto Rico have
been emotionally all mixed up over the issue of in
dependence as opposed to American colonialism,”
says Governor ‘Munoz in talking about this new
constitution.
Neither independence nor colonialism would be
good for Puerto Rico, he declares. Statehood might
come later, but the island isn’t ready for it yet.
MUNOZ WORKED FOR NEW SETUP
“If I had been a dictator,” said the gevernor, “I
would have favored independence.” What he actu
ally worked for was this new contractural rela
tionship to tie Puerto Rico to the United States.
Chairman of the Constitutional convention was
Dr. A. Fernos-Isern, Puerto Rico’s delegate to the
U. S. Congress. Governor Munoz was one of the 92
elected delegates, though an admittedly influential
one.
Under the present form of government, the
Puerto Rican governor has the power to declare
martial law and to suspend civil liberties.
xfl:::r the new constitution, these powers of the
goveror are revoked—at Munoz-Marin's own
urging. That is one example he cites of his “dicta
torial” leanings.
When the Nationalist party staged its revolt in
1950, trying to assassinate both Governor Munoz
and President Truman, the Puerto Rican gevernor
was urged to declare martial law. He refused. The
revolt was over in 48 hours. This he cites as an
other example of his “dictatorial” methods.
Under the present form of government, Puerto
Rican courts are under the attorney general, who
is appointed by the governor. Under the new con
stitution, the courts would be put under the Chief
Justice of the Supreme Court, who would be ap
pointed for life.
A dictator would have preferred the present set
up, says Governor Munoz, yet he sponsored the re
fornr to take the courts out from under the gover
nor's domination.
A GUARANTEE FOR MINORITY PARTY
There is no question but that Munoz-Marin’s
Popular party is in control of Puerto Rican politics
now. It holds 70 of the 73 seats in the Puerto Rican
congress. Governor Munoz decided this was too big
a majority. 8o under the new constitution, there is
provision for what is perhaps the first “minority
guarantee.”
Any time the minority parties do not elect one
third of the representatives and senators, the mem
bership of both bodies is to be increased to give
them this proportion. This would be done by de
claring as elected up to six minority senators and
12 representatives-at-large, even though they had
been defeated.
“All democracies need at least two strong par
ties,” Governor Munoz has declared. “But where
can I find it?” he asks. “Everybody likes our pro
gram.” On his program, Governor Munoz says he
will probably run for re-election in November,
though he has not formally announced his candi
::tcy- as yet, Nominating conventions are in Aug
‘At one time, when Munoz-Marin was a rising
political leader and president of the Puerto Rican
Senate, he had ideas on building up the poverty
stricken Puerto Rican economy by a program that
was close to socialism.
The government built and tried to operate its
own factories, to relieve unemployment. It tried to
break up big land holdings and indulged in many
experimental reforms.
When it was found that these reforms were not
working, however, Luis Munoz-Marin was the first
to abandon them. As governor he authorized the
sale of some state properties to Luis Ferre, a Re
publican and a political opponent, because he was
the highest bidder. ;
.
Doolitile Faces Hard Task
.
In Search Of Air Safety Facts
President Truman’s decision to put Lieut.-Gen
eral James H. Doolittle in charge of a special com~
mittee to investigate air safety is commendable,
Recent air crashes not only have stirred consider=-
able fear; they have clouded the issues.
We need clear light and wise recommendation in
this field.
One of the most perplexing aspects of the prob
lem is this question of how near airports may be
safely located to built up city areas.
Newark airport is closed today because the out
ra-ged vitizenry of nearby Elizabeth, N. J., scene of
three spectacular crashes in twe months, presume
the field lies too close to their comrmunity. Yet 62
of 100 major airports in this country are closer to
. their respective cities than is the Newark field.
LaGuardia Field , on the north shore of Long
Island in New York’s borough of Queens, was of
course badly overburdened immediately following
the closing of Newark. Its daily flight load shot up
frem 520 to 680 a day. By shifting flights to other
fields, cancelling some and consolidating others,
LaGuardia is now reducing that load by 226 flights
daily.
Note that this cut brings its daily total to 454,
well below the old figure before the big move from
Newark. This again reflects official response to
citizens’ complaints.
Now the emotional reaction of people who see
planes dropping in their midst is wholly under
standable. In the Elizabeth case, the indignation
had built up to a point where it simply could not
be ignored, "
But the response aviation officials have made at
Newark and LaGuardia is no real solution.
Pursued to its logical conclusion, it would mean
the prompt closing and eventual moving of more |
than 60 other principal airports in the United
States.
Under present commercial and military traffic
conditions, the closing would mean air paralysis.
And a general mdve to more remote areas would
be utterly prohibitive in cost.
This is not intended to suggest that we should
not wherever possible supplement existing fields
with new facilities to care for the ever increasing
burden of air traffic. It is merely to point out that
the practical answer does not lie in wholesale shut
downs and shifts.
A poll of pilots flying in and out of New York
disclosed that almost unanim‘ously they would
choose to try to land at Newark rather than other
fields if they were in difficult straits. This tends
to confirm the official claim that Newark is among
the safest felds in the United States. {
The quality of the field and its nearness to Eliz
abeth had nothing whatever to do with the crashes
in that area, It was only the rarest coincidence
which produced that situation, since the field’s
safety record up to that time was well-nigh perfect.
At LaGuardia there will now be 454 flights daily
instead of 520. Is that any assurance that accidents
of the type which plagued Elizabeth will not occur
in the future? The answer is no, since none of
them had anything to do with the density of traf
e,
Certainly no airport in the nation ought to be
burdened with excessive traffic, nor so located that
its operations are a continuous menace both to air
passengers and ground residents. But mere prox
imity to built up areas should not be an automatic
black mark against any particular field.
The Doolittle committee has its work cut out for
it. It will not be easy either to sift the facts or to
dispel the fog of emotion that now surrounds the
problems of air safety.
.
Only The Brave Wear Mink
Milady's stubborn loyalty to the coat of mink,
paradoxical symbol of both fame and infamy, re
minds us of the history of the four-ragere, the
braided cord worn about the left shoulder seam of
certain cited military units.
It was first worn, reluctantly, by members of a
battalion in Napoleon’s army who had distinguished
themselves by turning tail in the face of the enemy.
As punishment they were forced to wear cords
about their necks, symbolic of the hangman’s
noose.
But in a subsequent engagement, fighting bravely
to erase their ignominy, they emerged a battalion
of heroes. So, they tucked their cords around one
shoulder and declared them a symbol of great cour
age. Which today they are.
Certainly the ladies who persist in wearing coats
of mink these days have much of the type of forti
tude possessed by Napoleon’s famous battalion.
We predict great things for the mink. A hundred
years from now, who knows what it nray symbol
ize?
I hate to see my country give in to the tactics of
the Barbary pirates. . . . When you start to pay
blackmail ransom, you've reached a pretty low
level.—Senator Styles Bridges (R.-N.H.) on Hun
gary’s demand for “ransom” money for four Amer
ican airmen, ’
No one who drives a car figures he's going to |
have an accident until it's too late. No driver in the
whole wide world has any inkling that it can hap
pen to him until it does, — Charles C. Bernstein, |
judge, Maricopa county (Arizona) Juvenile Court
on why traffic safety programs fail. b
R R R A Tllß————————
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
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POW-WOW—Young Indian Chief, Tom Segundo, talks to a padre.
Papagos Chief
Leads Tribe To
Better Life
BY MURRAY SINCLAIR
AP Newsfeatures
TUCSON, Ariz—~Tom Segundo
of the Papagos, at 31 the young
est Indian chief in the United
States, has a dream that soon his
people will be able to cut many
‘ties with the federal government
and assume full responsibilities of
citizenship.
- To achieve this end the tribes
men are agreeable to the virtual
dissolution of their reservation
that sprawls across 4,400 miles of
sun-baked southern Arizona des
ert. Their trouble stems from the
deterioration of the range which
can no longer support all of them,
Segundo is plugging a plan de
veloped by the Papago Tribal
Council, the Indian Agency at
Sells, Arizona, the Department of
the Interior, and others interested
in the Papago problem.
The plan, started in 1943, calls
for about one-third of the 7,400
tribesmen to eventually leave the
reservation for the white man’s
world.
To Become Farmers
and Cattlemen
Another third would be di
verted into farnmring, an occupa
tion that has all but disappeared
among the Papagos. The remain
der of the tribe would continue as
cattlemen, backbone of the tribe's
economy 1t the present time.
The federal government pro
vides the Papagos with their
health services, educational facil
ities, keeps up the reservation
roads, and supervises law en
forcement. The plan calls for these
responsibilities to be shifted to the
State of Arizona and Pima county
For Promptness, !f.ficiency & Courtesy
WRECKER SERVICE
ALWAYS CALL
SILVEY MOTOR COMPANY
Phone 246 Da Phone 3932 Night
as the Papagos begin paying land
and other taxes from which they
are now exempt.
Segundo, the chief who looks
and talks like an asute business
man, works at getting the plan put
into effect like a politician. He
may become one berore the year
is over. <
In January he was in Washing
ton, illustrating his argunrents
with graphs and charts. He was
one of the Tribal hosts when Oscar
i Chapman, Secretary of the Inter
ior, visited the reservation late
last year
Have Right to Vote
It is less than two years since
Arizona’s reservation Indians were
permitted to vote. Now Pima
county, in which the reservation
is located, is thinking of making
the reservation a legislative dis
trict. If this is done, Segundo
stands a good chance of being sent
to the Arizona ‘legislature as its:
Railroad Schedules
, SEABOARD AIRLINE RY.
Arrival and Departure of Trains
‘ Athens, Georgia |
Leave for Elberton, Hamlet and
New York and East—
-3:30 p. m.—Air Conditioned.
8:48 p. m.—Air Conditioned.
Leave for Elberton, Hamlet and |
East— 1
12:15 a. m.—(Local).
Leave for Atlanta, South and i
West—
-5:45 a. m.—Air Conditioned.
4:30 a, m.—(Local).
2:57 p. m.—Air Conditioned.
CENTRAL OF GEORGIA
RAILROAD
Arrives Athens (Daily, Except
Sunday) 12:35 p. m.
Leaves Athens (Daily, Except
Sunday) 4:15 p. m.
GEORGIA RAILROAD
Mixed Trains.
Weesk Day Only
Train No, 51 Arrives 9:00 a. m.
I'rain No. 50 Departz 700 p m
first representative. |
Segundo is a chunky, energetic,
quiet-spoken, bespectacled Indian
who stands about 5 feet 10. Born
on the desert, Segundo was edu
cated at agency schools, finished
high school, and then enrolled at
the University of Arizona. He took
a war-time job in San Francisco’s
ship building industry. In 1946 he
was holding 'a supervisory job.
He returned home and became
an assistant road engineer for the
Indian service in 1946. Indian cus
tom had dictated that only the
older men were qualified to be
leaders. Even so, within a year
‘youthful Segundo was chairman
of the tribal council.
———e
CAVE-DWELLING ITALIANS ‘
ROME — (AP) — An estimated
two million Italians live in caves,\
holes and walled-up arches of
ancient viaducts. |
l The weekly newspaper, L. Eur- |
opeo of Milan, said that recentl
studies showed. at least 130,000
‘ltalians live in cellars and grottos
in cities. Another two million
“cavemen’ are scattered through
| out country areas.
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AP Newsfeatures
Plant your beauty seeds now
and reap the benefits as-you grow
older. If you want to be glamorous
at 30, lovely at 40, and charming
in your old age, work for it now.
A young plant will wilt if it
doesn't get proper care—water,
sunshine and air. So, too, it is
with a young body. If it is not
nourished, rested and exercised
properly, it will not weather life
gracefully.
Respect your mind and bocy in |
your teens and you will grow
into lovely womanhood. Many
young girls write asking whether
there are beauty secrets available,
Youth has the secret of beauty.
Bend the twig in the right direc
tion now, and it should pay off
with-handsome dividends.
Ask yourself these questions:
Do I look clean? Beauty begins
in the bathtub for teen-agers. At
your age soap and water should
be a fetish with you. It is inex
pensive and available, so why not
use it? The well-scrubbed look is
necessary for shining beauty and
radiant complexion. Use your
nailbrush and bathbrush.
Wash your underwear and hos
iery each day in warm soapy wa
ter for a clean over-all feeling.
How about hair? Do you sham
poo it frequently and keep it
spanking clean? Hair washings
are likely to wvary according to
the type of hair. Fine blonde hair
needs shampooing more often than
the dark, thick kind. However,
it is essential to keep the scalp
clean by regular shampoos and
frequent brushing. 5 |
Wear a casual easy-to-care-for‘
hair style, one you can arrange
at home yourself. g
What about your diet? Are you
a lollipop kid who limits nourish
ment to candy, sundaes and ice'
cream sodas? Or do you get a well
balanced diet—butter, milk, whole
wheat bread, fruit, meat or fish,
green vegetable, egg and potato—
each day. ;
Do I make-down instead of
make-up? . .. The way to make
up is to make-down. That sounds
paradoxical. But if you learn to
make-down you can use makeup
at such a minimum that the effect
looks perfectly natural.
Inexperienced hands are likely
to plaster makeup in a sculping
of goo that looks like a mask. You
can make up perfectly by using a
deft touch — applying foundation
cream, powder, lipstick so that one
must look twice to see if you’re
The Flossie Gerdine Dancing School |
(American Legion Cabin — Lumpkin St.) i
announces
A BEGINNERS’ ADULT CLASS E
Starting Wednesday 6:30 ’til 7:30 P. M. |
| February 27th.
~ Fox-Trot, Waltz, Rumba, Jitter-Bug, Shag
‘ will be instructed. v
l Phone 4125-M.
e T T
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 195>
RTT TR g 2 :_T_V-—v——"“‘
¥ o G
| #pply toundation cream lig).
then rouge, then powder over all,
Rub a cotton dipped light,
skin freshener or cold water (. .
your face, blot well with cles,...
| ing tissues and apply another . ¢
of powder, even over your lips.
| Smack your lips to remove ey, .
| powder, and you should have |,
| flawless makeup. (Face Powder
| and foundation cream shoylq .
| at least a shade darker than v,
skin tone to give a natural 1o )
| Do I look healthy? ...1t ino
| longer the vogue for young girls to
| have that interesting pallor, It is
stylish to be sparkling with » pink
glow. Young complexions can },.
kept clean and radiant by ysin. a
soapy washcloth and tepid water,
Dry your skin with a turkish loy
el and rub briskly, Use a compley
ion brush to stimulate the skiy,
Exercise is important: Engage
in an outdoor sport at every sea
son of the year,
Do I reek of perfume? .., . i i
better not to usé any fragrance if
you limit it to cheap scents, My,
young girls make the mistake (¢
showering themselves with sccp s
instead of applying cologne, {oilc
water, perfume or sachet in a
ladylike quantity. A drop of any
good fragrance will go a long way,
et et o
The vitamin-packed liver is one
of the most important parts of 1.
shark,
"—"’—‘——_—_\_‘"_ 5
MAKE-UP 7o
oN'T HiDE e
ENDAR LOOK (R =,
c‘ SR
EEETEY
But this scientific way ~/a 3
may aveid showing monthly “nerve.”
All the make-up in the world ean’t take that dry
nervous look out of your eyes each month. But here'y
a modern way that has helped many women 44
girls who suffer from calendar misery, nervous . s
and lits signs. It’s Cardui, a tested medicine (.t
helps build strength and resistance each mor
go, after a time, many women feel no montily
cramps at all. Also helps relax jittery nerve
sleep better. Look, feel your normal, happy soit
Ask your dealer for Cardul. (Bay: “card-
MONTHLY CRAMPS
CHANGE OF LivE
——————e e
) I ) m
! S " “: : -;7,»"‘:;',’;
| v} i
X PHONE 1726
234 E. Washington