Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWELVE
:? gL T =’\
| YOU MAY SELECT FROM /R
| SEVENDELCIOUS R
| YR CAKES S
i “Baked As You Would Bake For A Friend” §
” FRESH BANANA
T Y ;
** GRANDMA’S ORANGE FRESH COCONUT 7
: “"Made From Recipes You Use At Home"”
Large Three Layer
: $1.19
f Also Available In Two Layer Sizes.
| ‘s Retail Bakery §
{ Benson's Retail Bakery |
Next To Ga. Theatre.
Iron Curtain Censorship Exists In
American Towns, Writer Asserfs
By JAMES DEVLIN
NEW YORK, March 12 — (AP)
— You don’t have to go to a dic~
tator nation to find public officials
shrouding their activities behind
an iron curtain of censorship.
You can find the same thing
here—perhaps in your home town.
1t is & censorship by closed meet
ings, buried records and “no com
ments”—rather than the direct
“don’t print that” of the totalit
\ @ 3 Just feed him bread and Mrs. Filbert's! The fus
siest folks can’t tell country-fresh Mrs. Filbert's Marga
e gi rine from the most expensive table spread! “My husband
SRS TR wouldn’t believe I'd fooled him till I showed him your
x . +€« ot package, Mrs. Filbert.”
. € gl Mrs. J. Crowley
NEk /‘l‘3‘} 285 Deering Rd., N.W.
CE S § ,\“‘ &9 Atlanta, Georgia
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If your husband doesn’t love this fresher
.
flavor, Mrs. Filbert buys the pound!
el I'm looking for the man Pile Mrs. Filbert's high on fresh spinach
R that doesn't like my mar- tonight. Makes even children eat vege
@ - garine!” says Mrs. Filbert. tables right up! And treat your family to
# ¥ fwll I make it to please you bread and Mrs, Filbert's—plus a little
ladies, so I know it pleases sugar! Mmm-mmm! Will they love yow.
e m‘“-'“"”““‘e me they Yes, tastes so good—Mrs. Filbert buys
- ;:"’ v serve it every meal to fussy the pound if your husband doesn’t agree
rs. M. V. Filbe 1 i
President husbands! it's best. Just send her the carton and a
Mrs. Filbert's Margarine is her own note with his reasons...she’ll send you
recipe. Quality ingredients and 15,000 the price you paid. Buy the Golden Quar
units of Vitamin A in every pound! ters or extra-thrifty Golden Pound feday.
“w ONLY A WOMAN COULD /
o e L T :
,'HI;:::EZ 4‘35'43‘" B % s ::::::'."'<:;fs2;:'.\‘.?::';}‘::r:;"?7f:4 '
O loynd” MRS. Fl LBERTS
A - IR e O
. %0“ Q’uq w"vfl?’;fi?z}‘ , %E‘ > -
7 Weol v TO A
T A
SUORINEE MEUN PO A .
hes Eress TN A L
Murray Bros., Inc., 307 Hale St., Augusta, Ca.
arian countries,
Secrecy Cloak
But the effect is the same in
providing a secrecy clock for
areas of government on the federal,
state and local levels.
Newspapers across the country
are fighting — often successfully
—to remove these blackouts so the
people can know what their of
ficlals are doing.
Officials of one town knew for
15 years that the Federal Public
Health Service had condemmed
its drinking water.
The newspapers didn’t know.
Neither did the people.
A county employe handling pub
lic money stole marriage license
fees. County officials went into
secret gsession, Decided he would
n't do it again and kept him on the
job. The matter was kept quiet,
Taxpayers learned of it six years
later when the thefts mounted to
SIB,OOO and they were called upon
to make up the loss.
A burglar robbed a filling sta
tion and escaped — but residents
of the community took no precau
tions to protect their home. Police
simply did not report the robbery
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
because it would “interfere with
our investigation.”
These examples show that of
ficial secrecy is not a remote mat
ter involving only high govern
mental circles, but lomcthl‘ru that
can affect your health, your money
and your gotecflon.
l High diplomats may meet in
private, but so doeés many a state
agency, local school board and
town eouncil.
Newspaper Fights
The newspaper fight to smoke
out tendencies toward censorship
—except on matters involving the
Ko
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nation’s security — is eommonly
known as a battle for “freedom
of the press.” It is far more.
It is a tight for freedom of in
formation of every individual
American.
James 3. Por, g.cutivo editor
of the Louisville Courier Journal
and Louisville Times and chair
man of the American Society of
Newspaper Editors’ Committee of
Freedom, put it this way:
“When news ls suppressed, all
the newspapers lose is a story,
But the people lose touch with and
control of their government.”
The right te know ls denied
more often than you might realize.
The Associated Press conducted
a mtion-wi%: survey of official
lufpnuion news and what is
being done about it.
It found instances of conceal
ment, and determined newspaper
fights egainst it, from coast .to
coast and from the Canadian bor
der of the Gulf of Mexico.
Some of the newspaper ex
posurers, like the St. Louis Post-
Dispatch revelation of pubilc of
ficials taking fees from private
firms, attract wide attention.
Survey Results
Many of the news blackouts—
and tsm ainst them—are local,
But dod‘%nthcr they from a
broad picture.
The survey showed:
1. There is some degree of news
suppression at overfv governmental
level, from Washington to the
towns,
2. The suppression almost al
ways can be beaten when there is
a determined challenge by spirited
newspafiers, esgecially when they
are backed by the people.
THURSDAY, MAROCY 13, 1952
FAMILY AFFAIR
MT. CARMEL, 111. —(AP)— A
petition for Republican M. V.
Brown's re-election to the Illinois
House of Representatives came
back. completed—but there was
only one family name on it.
Twenty-six citizens named Gar
ret signed the petition when it was
passed in the White County com
munity om Mill Shoals. It was
certified by a precinct committee
man who—of course—was named
Garrett,