Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWO
Talmadge Will Address
Cotton Group's Confab
ATLANTA, April 12 — Gov.
Herman Talmadge will head the
list of guest speakers at the 52nd
annual convention of the Cotton
Manufacturers Association of
Ceorgia at Boca Raton, Fla., April
16-18, it was announced Saturday.
More than 600 texiile mill ex
exutives, suppliers and their wives
will attend the meeting, which T.
1. Forbes, Atlanta, association ex
ecutive vice president, character
ized as one of the most important
@nead Loses
To Rule Book
At Greensboro
GREENSBORO, N. C, April 15
— (AP) — Thin man Dave Doug
-128 squeezed through an opening
supplied by golf’s rule book to
turn what looked certain to be
S44m Snead's fifth Greensboro
Onen Tournament victory into a
$2,000 Douglas payday.
Douglas, playing out of Newark,
Del, in the last threesome, came
home with a 69 for a winning
seven-under-par 277 yesterday,
but it was almost a half hour be
fore it was official.
The final event of the winter
tour ended on a chaotic note when
Douglas was finally declared the
winner and a big seven was chalk
ed up for Snead on the par three
17th hole.
Snead, winner here four times,
appeared a sure winner as he took
the lead through 63 holes and
shook off Art Wall jr., the 54-hole
leader. The rest of the boys seem
¢d to be playing for second place
when Snead came to the short
17th two under par,
Then Sammy put his tee shot in
a lateral water hazard. He dropped
it out, taking a stroke three, and
eventually holed out in five strok
es. But Bobby Locke, the South
Afriean ace, and Ed (Porky) Oli
ver of Lemont, 111, who played
with him, told Sam he erred in
dropping the ball closer to the
hole. This is a new 1952 rules
change defining such a situation
of which Snead apparently was
DN
Locke insisted that PGA Tour
nament Supervisor Frank Cay
wood bhad nothing else to do but
charge Snead with a two-stroke
penalty for his lapse under the new
rule. That gave Sam a seven and
his bordie four on the last hole
meant only a three-way tie for
third with Oliver and Jim Ferrier
of San Francisco.
Down on the Farm
VERTICAL
1 Touches
lightly
2 Italian coins
3 Chief god of
the Eddas
4 Elks
5 Engages
6 High card
7 Pumpkins
become ——
with age
8 Continued
story
9 Dismounted
10 Fence opening
11 Heavy blow
19 Mouth part
21 Ellipsoidal
24 Disparage
25 Far off (comb
form)
HORIZONTAL
1 Farm
implement
§ Farm product
8 Kind of
pudding
12 Opera by
Verdi
13 Frozen water
14 Enthusiastic
ardor
15 Journey
16 Unit of
reluctance
17 Ceremony
18 Infirm
20 Lag
22 1t is (contr.)
23 Eggs
24 Divest
27 Farmer's bird
friend
31 Dregs
32 Stagger
33 Hail!
34 Rubber {ree
35 Bamboolike
grass
36 Genur of
. maples
37 Reverberate
39 Cubic meter
40 Diminutive of
Edmund
41 Golfer’s device
42 Oxidizing
enzyme
45 Mollify
49 Circle
50 Sturgeon eggs
52 Notion
53 Poker stake
54 Age
55 Son of Seth
(Bib.)
56 Forest
creature
57 Short poem
58 Grown
. coarse
Tt riery
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TP FI T
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N ‘s TRWILLAMS
— THE OLPEST FEUD Gopr. 1952 by NEA Servies. Inc. 7. M, Reg. U. 8. Pat. O
| i the organization’s history.
| Other Speakers
| Sharing speaking honors with
the Georgia governor at the open-~
ing business session Thursday
| morning, April 17, wiill be Henry
| W. Swift, Columbus, association
| president and executive vice pres
; ident of Swift Spinning Mills, and
Dr. George D. Heston, pastor of
'Myers Park Baptist Church of
| Charlotte, N. C.
| Mr. Swift will point up some
| of the major problems which have
; plunged the industry—Georgia's
largest—into a recession in the
) midst of a high level of business
| activity generally. Mr. Forbes will
| introduce guests at the meeting.
Floor Show
A floor show has been planned
lfur the annual banquet at the
Patio Rayole of the Boca Raton
Hotel Thursday night following a
reception for convention guests at
which industry suppliers will be
hosts. Awards also will be pre
| sented at the banquet to winners
,of the annual golf tournament
' which will be played Thursday
afternoon over the Boca Raton
Hotel's Championship Golt
Course. These will be distributed
by Jesse W. Stribling, of Univer
| sal Winding Co., Atlanta, who
heads the suppliers’ special en
tertainment committee,
Rep. Frank S. Twitty, Camilla,
administration floor leader in the
Georgia House of Representatives,
will speak Friday morning.
Committee reports, a review of
the year’s activities by Mr. Forbes
and election of officers will follow
the address. The report of the
nominating committee will be
presented by L. G. Hardman, jr.,
president of Harmony Grove
Mills, Commerce.
A variety of special entertain
ment features has been planned.
Georgia Power Co. will be host
at a reception in the Cloister
Lounge of the Boca Raton Hotel
Wednsday evening, April 16, with
Harllee Branch, jr., company
president, and other officials in
the receiving line. On Friday
night, there will be a charcoal
broiled steak supper at the Caba
na Club.
~ Pointing out that this year’s at
tendance will be the largest in
the association’s history, WMr.
Forbes said the Boca Raton Hotel
headquarters already had been
booked to capacity. The excep
tional interest this year stems
largely from the industry’s cur
rent dilemma—that of rising-costs
‘and declining prices—and from
‘the fact that all aspects of the
problem will be discussed in an
effort to arrive at some sclution.
Answer to Previous Puzzle
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39 Observe
41 Play the part
of host
42 Mouthward
43 Row
44 Grafted (her.
46 Girl's name
47 Gaseous
element
48 Work
51 Boundary
(comb. form)
26 Scottish
sheepfolds
27 Farmers raise
crops from
28 Openwork
fabric
29 Above
30 Existed
32 Melted down,
as fat
35 Regrets
36 Workshop
Many of the delegates will trav
el to Boca Raton by special train
which leaves Atlanta Tuesday
night, April 15.
Association Officers
Association officers, in addition
to Messrs. Swift and Forbes, are:
J. M. Cheatham, president, Dun
dee Mills, Griffin, vice president;
R. H. Jewell, vice president,
Chickamauga Bleachery, Chicka
mauga, treasurer, and Frank L.
Carter, Atlanta, secretary. R. L.
Murphy, Atlanta, is traffic man
ager,
Athenians Attend
General Manager of the Athens
Division, Chicopee Manufacturing
Corporation, D. D. Quillian and
Mrs. Quillian leave Tuesday to
attend the annual convention of
the Cotton Manufacturers Associ
ation of Georgia at Boca Raton,
Fla.,, April 16-18.
Manager Luther Glass of Mail
lison Braided Cord Mill, and Mrs.
Glass left for the same occasion
Saturday.
R. F.Bramelft
Dies Lale Today
R. ¥. Bramblett, well know
Princeton resident, died in a local
hospital this afterrcon at 12:35
o’clock from a gunshot wound suf
fered last Saturday.
Funeral arrangements have not
yet been completed and will be
announced later by Bridges Fun
eral Home.
Velerans May Get
More Training
Under Gl Bill
A recent change in the regula
tions of the Veterans Administra
tion in regard to trainees under
the GI Bill will enable many vet
erans to take additional training,
Willigm K. Barrett, Director of
the State Department of Veterans
Service, said today.
Before this change in regula
tions, a veteran in training could
not secure approval for a change
in course unless an application for
such a change was filed by him
while still actively pursuing his
course or whiie he was in tem
porary interrupted status. Neither
could he secure approval for ad
ditional education or .training in
normal progression after he had
satisfactorily completed his course.
Now, if the veteran’s application
for such additional progressive
education or training is received
by the VA within thirty days af
ter the completion of the course, it
may be considered, provided that
following completion of his course,
the veteran does actually com
mence pursuit of the additional
education or training on the first
date as of which enrollment of
students in the course of permitted
or within thirty days, whichever
is later.
In those cases wherein veterans
previously have been denied the
right to resume training, the VA
plans to review and reconsider
such denials. There is always the
possibility that some meritorious
case may be overlooked in this re
view.
Barrett urged all persons inter
ested in Veterans Affairs to call
this important change in regula
tions to the attention of veterans,
educational institutions, and train
ing agencies.
(Continued From Page One)
ment of his plans.
One Democratic party leader
said Barkley wants to be abso
lutely certain that Truman and
other administration leaders are
not pushing some other Democrat.
This source said that as soon as
Barkley personally feels certain
of this he will toss his hat into the
ring.
Siecel
(Continued From Page One)
tended Congress long ago should
have passed legislation covering
such emergencies. =
Most other Republicans and
some Democrats argue that the
President should have used the
anti-strike provision of the Taft-
Hartley Labor Act before taking
over the industry. That weuld
have prevented a strike for 80
more days. At the time of seizure,
the union had four times post
poned threatened strikes upon ur
gent government appeals.
French boxers, before engaging
in a bout in their native land, used
to kiss instead of shaking hands.
OUR BOARDING HOUSE MAJOR HOOPLE
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“ZANEWS FLASH,UNCLE W, ARE YOU JOKING 2 NO, T SEE )
Z BULGY-~ PARDON A YOU ARENT /-« CANT YOU
. ME, UNCLE AMOS/ /27 BRIEF THE LAD ON THE
// THAT BIRD, 5777\ SACRED FINALITY OF A 2
7 REGGIE 7] TRANSACTION LIKE OORs £)7
% DEPLASTER, Y —~~TELL HIM THERE'S NO /7
WHO TRADED You MORE SENSE IN HIS
m‘m’ FOR YOUR TRICK. DEMAND THAN |F
oy M"m TIE, WANTS His FRANCE SHOULD
Pl [\ STAMP BOOK ASK THE RETULRN
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A TWO-STORY HOUSE is still the most economical to build.
More rooms can be provided above a smaller foundation and under
a smaller roof. Here is a compact plan with four bedrooms and
built-in garage. Plan 1786 by William G. Chirgotis, architect, 968
Stuyvesant Avenue, Union, N. J., the house contains 24,780 cubie
feet with basement.— (AP Newsfeatures.)
Dr. Aderhold Is Committee Head
0f llinois Education Conference
CHICAGO, 111., April 14 — Dr.
0. C. Aderhold, Priesident, Uni
versity of Georgia, will serve as
chairman of one of the 51 study
groups of the Seventh Annual
Conference on Higher Education
which will be held here, April 17-
19. Dr. Aderhold will lead a dis
cussion on the subject “Respon
sibilities and Opportunities in
Adult Education for Strengthen
ing the Moral and Spiritual Foun
dations of Modern Society.”
Over 800 administrators and
faculty leaders are expected to
be in attendance at the conference
which is sponsored by the Depart
ment of Higher Education of the
National Education Association.
The conference is the largest an
nual gathering of representatives
from all types of accredited col
leges and universities throughout
the nation.
Major Topics
Critical problems of manpower
and finance facing colleges and
universities will be major topics of
discussion. Other topics to be con
sidered by the conference study
groups include; universial military
training, organized courses in reli
gion, ethies and related areas; pro
blems of academic freedom and
restraint, censorship of instruc
tional, materials, and the place of
intercollegiate athletics in the total
college program.
Major addresses will be diven
by Robert L. Clark, of Washing
ton, D. C., director, Office of Hu
man Resources, National Socurity
Ressources Board; Courtney C
Brown, assistant to the chairman
of the Board, Standard Oil Comp
any of New Jersey; and T. V.
Smith, Maxwell professor of citi
zenship, Syracuse University.
At a special information meet
ing scheduled to be held April 18
a number of reports will be made
by administrators of foundations,
universities and government on
college housing programs, the role
of colleges and universities in civil
defense, the new Air Force R. O.
T. C. program, and college audio
visual programs.
Earl W. Anderson, Professor of
higher education, Ohio State Uhi
versity is president of the depart
ment and Francis Horn, of Wash
ington, D. C., is executive secre
tary.
Marauding
(Continued From Page One)
Metropolitan area has been eva
cuated — 12 miles in Council
Bluffs and five in Omaha. The
Bluffs exodus from homes is
roughly three-quarters of the
population of 45,000.
As ‘the river slugged on down
its valley, most towns had sur
rendered. Pierre, S. D., had been
punished, Sioux City, la., was
helpless before a record crest
reached yesterday and smaller
towns downstream were deserted.
Mississippi Story
The Mississippi matched the
Missouri in reaching record
heights. At St. Paul the Mississip
pi, an old time offender, poured
through low-lying areas, affecting
5,000 people and poising a big
threat to millions of dollars worth
of water-front industries.
Gov. C. Elmer Anderson asked
President Truman to declare
Minnesota a disaster area.
Asian
(Continued from lage One.)
have been delayed by the French
arrest of the Tunisian Nationalist
Premier and the failure so far of
his pro-French successor to name
a negotiating commission of his
countrymen.
News Of Fires,
Accidents, And
Police Action
Hertha Weaver, colored taxi
driver, was fined $201.50 and his
taxi permit was also revoked
when it was brought our in Re
corder’s Court this morning that
he had been disorderly by point
ing a gun at another person.
Two persons were fined $51.50
each after being found guilty of
disorderly conduct, Evidence
brought out the two had been
fighting with knives.
One person was charged with
speeding on Prince avenue and
was fined $16.50 after being found
guilty as charged. Officers testi
fied that he was traveling 60 miles
per hour.
Several minor cases were heard
by Judge Olin Price in Recorder’s
Court.
IN HOLLYWOOD
By ERSKINE JOHNSON
NEA Staff Correspondent
HOLLYWOOD—(NEA)— Guys
and Dolls: Throw away your gir
dle, Mabel, and let the flesh fall
where it may.
I'm still goggle-eyed, but that’s
what Hollywood designer Billy
Travilla told me to pass to the
nation’s women.
The new fashion changes are
going to occur around milady’s
middle. Travilla is predicting that
the natural body look, even with
a bid of avoirdupois spilling over,
is about to sweep in.
‘Half the women in this coun
try should throw away their gir
dles,” said dapper Travilla, busy
checking gowns that he made for
Marilyn Monroe and Ginger Rog
ers in Fox’s “Darling, I Am Grow=-
ing Younger.”
‘Unless a woman has a really
bad body, there’s no excuse for all
that elastic girdling and feather
boning. Tt gives a staid, stiff, un
natural look. It's time for wo
men’s bodies to look like women’s
bodies.”
As Travilla sees it:
“Women don’t have to be all
pinched in and squeezed tight. A
woman can be completely covered,
yet you get an idea of what's go
ing on underneath.”
® & 9
Hollywoodites who choked on
their caviar a couple of years ago
when they heard about Jean Park
er landing the role of hard-as
nails Billie Dawn in the road com
pany of “Born Yesterday,” can get
ready to choke again.
Jean, who won critical huzzahs
for her Billie and freedom from
the title of Hollywood’s perennial
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TRADE MASTER—
Mrs. Teresa Smid, certified as
a master plumber by the state
of Illinois, threads pipe in the
plumbing shep she and her hus
band operate in Cicero.
Funeral Notice
GOODWYN. — The relatives and
iriends of Mr. R. T. Goodwyn of
254 Dearing Street; Miss Sallie
Goodwyn, Athens; Mr. and Mrs.
S. A. Wood, Mrs. Mary Kurk
and Mrs. Lucy Jackson, ail of
Washington, D. C.; Mr. and Mrs.
Gordon Harris of Lingnum, Va.;
Mr. and Mrs. Wilford Goodwyn,
and Mr. Oliver Goodwyn of
Washington, D. C.; Mr. and Mrs,
Petersen Goodwyn of Houston,
Texas; and Mr. and Mrs. Wirt
Goodwyn of New York City, are
invited to attend the funeral of
Mr. R. T. Goodwyn, Wednesday
afternoon, April 16, 1952, from
the residence, 254 Dearing
Street, at three o’clock. Rev. J.
Earl Gilbreath, Rector of Em
manuel Episcopal Church, will
officiate. Mr. Roby Redwine,
Jr., Mr. Edward Franklin, Mr.
James Barrow, Mr. Kenneth
Morris, Mr. Rufus Payne, Mr.
Brooks Wiggington, Mr. Howell
Erwin, Jr.,, and Mr. Preston
Almand will serve as active
pallbearers and will meet at the
residence at two - forty - five
o’clock. Mr. William Tate, Mr.
Julian Miller, Mr. George Crane,
Mr. Barrington Flanigen, Dr. H.
M. Heckman, Mr. J. H. McLau
rin, Dr. G. O. Whelchel, Mr.
Howard McWhorter, Mr. Sam
Nickerson, Mr. Norman Nicker
son and Dr. E. D. Pusey will]
serve as honorary escort: and
will please meet at the residence
at two-forty-five o'clock. Inter
ment wilt be in Oconee Hill
cemetery PLEASE OMIT
FLOWERS. Bridges Funeral I
Home.
"Uncle” Larry Perkins Has Hobby
0f Finding Cures For Loneliness
(EDITOR’S NOTE: Columnist
Hal Boyle has been bitten by a
cold bug or one of those other
sickness bugs that are busy
bothering people this time of
year. He will be back in action
in a few days. In the meantime
his column will be kept going
by Boyle pals.)
By GRAHAM BERRY
(For Hal Boyle)
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif.,, April
15 — (AP) — Convinced that “if
enough people knew each other,
war would be impossible,” Uncle
Larry Perkins is conducting a
campaign against what he con
siders the world’s worst sin—lone
liness. :
He is attacking it where it is apt
to be strongest—on the battlefield
laind in rooms where sick people
e.
He does it chiefly by writing
letters—thousands of them-—and
by inducing thousands of other
persons to write to each other. He
has 200 “relay” agents in the Unit
ed Nations armed forces to help
him distribute the mail.
- Stages Shows 5
Uncle Larry also stages vaude
ville and variety shows at vet
erans’ hospitals. He’s an ex-vaude
villian and although he’s 49 and
his gray fringe looks a little sor
ry on top, he still can dance and
roller skate on his hands.
Another projects is his “cookie
relay.” He claims he’s persuaded
high school domestic science
classes in every state in the union
to make Easter cookies and send
them to the UN forces in Korea
and Japan.
Letters from shut-ins and the
blind are given special attention.
He introduces blind persons, via
letters, to blind service men at
Wadsworth Veteran Hospital near
here.
~ Entertains At Home
Perkins also entertains Gls at
ingenue, has bleached her hair
and now is giving out with a Mae
' West, western-saloon type char
“acter in Vaughn Monroe’s Repub
lic western, “The Toughest Man
In Tombstone.”
“I'm a buxom blonde—and I'm
having a ball,” beamed Jean.
~ It’s back to movies for Jean, she
said, after a long fling on the
stage in “Born Yesterday” and a
tour of Australia as the wife in
j‘Detective Story.”
~ “The theater is such a luxury,”
she said, that I just ecan’t afford
it for a while.”
' Diana Barrymore’s blasts about
Australia?
~_ “I was there at the same time,”
Jean replied. “She’'s a mixed-up
~doll. I thought the people were
- wonderful.”
Just Comedy for Cary
Cary Grant is admitting that
there isn’t a heavy drama or a
sizzling love story on his sche
dule for the year.
What's more, he may never
again have a dramatic part like
“None But the Lonely Heart,” or
hold a woman close in a sigh-and
swoon opera like “Notorious.”
Says Cary: “The public doesn’t
want me in dramatic roles. And
I'm too old for romantic parts. The
last dramatic role I had was in
‘Crisis’ for MGM. So they adver
tised it: ‘See Cary Grant Make
Love Under a Palm Tree.’ No
more of that. People want me to
do comedy. They just want to see
me fall down manholes.”
“City Slicker” Now
“That old boob fellow’s gone.”
Stuart Erwin talked about his
switch-over from the bumpkin
with hay wisps in his hair that he
played in dozens of Hollywood
movies to his undertsanding-fath
er role in the TV film series,
“Trouble With Father.”
As a small-screen star, Stu’s
been able to charige types, realize
a long-time dream of working
with wifey June Collyer and en
poy spells of home life in New
York—“We move there because
we thought that’s where TV would
be”—between filming the family |
life comedies in Hollywood.
Hefty percentages for Stu and
June in the showings and re
showings of their video show?
“You bet,” Stu said, “that’s why
we beat our brains out shuttling
between New York and Holly
wood and working like beavers.”
Long exposure to sunshine is
damaging to wool fabric.
AMERICAN LEGION SPRING FESTIVAL
ATHENS
LEGION GROUNDS —S. LUMPKIN ST.
APRIL 14TH THRU 19TH.
PRESENTING
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FCC i s
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Wi U R TR N R 4
15—NEW HICH CLASS SHOWS=IS
15—NEW MODERN THRILL RIDES—IS
A KIDDIELAND FOR THE TINY TOTS
— ALL NEW THIS YEAR —
TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 1952,
his modest bachelor’'s home; it is
bulging with such items as 40¢
pairs of riding and cowboy boots
beautiful leather cowboy costumes
which he designed himself, civil
ian clothes, uniforms, bobsleds,
skis, mineral and stamp collec
tions—and everywhere bundles of
letters.
Uncle Larry keeps the cowboy
costumes because servicemen like
to have their pictures taken in
them.
His house also contains many
gifts from grateful Gls, includ
ing shoulder patches, service rib
bons and medals. He is especially
proud of a gift from First Sgt. w.
F. Webb of Princeton, West Va.
It is the field coat of the late Gen.
George Patton, who placed it over
Webb as the latter lay wounded
on a stretcher in North Africa in
1943.
“Search Lists”
The genial gent, who has diffi
culty finding time to make.a‘liv
ing as a gardener, also conducts a
missing persons bureau in the
armed forces. His “search lists”
are posted at many military
camps.
His big interest, of course, is hi:
relay mail system. He's talkec
dozens of coeds at the University
of California at Los Angeleg and
young people from churches anc
other groups into writing letters
starting them simply, “Dear Cou
sin.”” The letters are sent to relax
agents in army, navy and a&ir force
units who distribute them to.men
who need them.
Many newspapers send him let
ters they receive from lonely Gls.
Although he’s a bachelor and
lives alone, Uncle Larry says he
has found the cure for loneliness
It's simple, he says: Just try to
help other people from feeling
that way.
Goodwyn
(Continued From Page One)
ed a large circle of friends who
were drawn to him by his brilliant
mind, keen sense of humor and a
democratic spirit of friendliness,
and these friendships lasted
through the years. He will be
greatly missed in this ecommunity
where he placed high valwe on
his citizenship and invariably ful
filled those responsibilities.
BABCOCK BOOMED BY BUTTS
Coach Wallace Butts considers
Georgia's senior offensive right
end, Harry Babcock of Pear! River,
N. C.,, the south’s outstanding can
didates for all-america honors this
fall. Last year Babcock, SEC lead
er in passes caught with 41 and
yards gained with 666, received
more votes than any other line
man in the official all-conference
selection.
An acre of ground contains 43,-
560 square feet.
Now hear again with nothing in
either ear, no tubes, no head
band, no pressure of any kind
with the famous Acousticon
“DR-1 Special,” with Contact
Receiver, the new invention
that is worn behind
the ear. Yours now 69 50
fToroMly. . cvabviw
R T
LSRR LR VT o R
Acousticon of Atlanta
224 Peachtree St. N. W.
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DY iit anaongutseiser
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