Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWO
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LEditorial Pays
Tribute To
"Bill” Strudel‘
The following editorial, paying
tribute to C. W. Strudel, Sr., resi
dent of Athens for a number of
years, was published in the May
27 edition of the Florida Times-
Union, in Jacksenville, Fla.:
“Death of C. W. Strudel, Sr.
*ls Loss to Community
“This entire community, thé
Jacksonville Beaches in particular,
has suffered a distinct loss in the
untimely death of Charles William
Strudel, Sr., editor of The Ocean
Beach Reporter.
“In the 18 months that he had
at the Beaches, he had made a
definite place for imself in the
community’s life. He worked un
ceasingly and discerningly to
make the Beaches a better place
for permanent residence and a
. more attractive resort for visi
tors.
““Bill' as he was familiarly
known, had a wide range of in
terests. He was especially en
thusiastic about sports, being an
ardent fisherman and supporter of
the Jacksonville Beach Sea-Birds.
He was active in church work and
in civic affairs.
“His death is made all the more
shocking by its unexpectedness.
His death from a suddent heart at
tack while he was in his prime
can be but a painful reminder of
life’s uncertainties.
“Because of his unstinted de
votion to development of the
Beaches and of the promise he
held for the future, the death of
Charles William Strudel, Sr., will
be seriously felt by his associates
and the community.”
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Gdayf-
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g
J
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hfie, FOR
(Continued From Page One)
the Court of Appeals place held
by Judge Annie Lola Price of
Cullman. Her opponent is Circuit
Solicitor George Johnson of Ath
ens.
Judge Price, first woman in
Alabama ever to sit on an appel
late court was appointed to the
bench in January, 1951, by then
Gov. James E. Folsom. She seeks
nomination now for the full six
year term which begins next Jan
uary.
The pretty lady jurist led the
field of four candidates in the May
6 vote. Johnson was runnerup,
some 20,000 votes behind.
Florides
(Continued From Page One)
of the water color section led her
to increase the case value of the
first purchase prize offered in that
catagory.
Although the exhibition had for
its setting the ultra modern $400,-
000 Industrial Arts Building de
signed for the college by Frank
Lloyd Wright, no attempt was
made to slant the character of the
art displayed. Since all work sub
mitted was shown, any possible
bias on the part of a jury of selec
tion was eliminated. As a result,
conservative works hung amicably
with their more radical fellows.
Besides Mr. Dodd, other winners
from Georgia included: Marie
Huper of Decatur, SSO Grumbach
er schulpture prize; Lee Fischer of
Atlanta, full scholarship, Florida
International Art Exhibition A
ward in Art Department of Florida
Southern College; honorable men
tion went to Violet Dameron of At
lanta; merit cerificate went to Ed
ward S. Shorter of Columbus and
Thomas Kenney jr of Atlanta.
Reid Rises Wil
Be On Tuesday
l Mrs. W. P. Reid, well known
| resident of Madison county, died
i at the home of her daughter, Mrs.
’L A. Morris, in Colbert, Sunday
! afternoon at 5:15 o'clock. Mrs.
| Reid was 81 years old and had
' been ill for several weeks.
| Services are to be conducted
‘Tuesday afternoon at 3 o'clock
|from Hull Baptist Church with
'th; pastor, Rev. A. E. Logan, of
ficiating.
| Burial will follow in Hull Ceme
tery, Bridges Funeral Home in
charge of arrangements. Pall
| bearers will be Wayne Wood,
iTmy Morris, Hubert Bell, Dorsey
Patton, Walter Morris and Cecil
Bullock.
Mrs. Reid is survived by four
daughters, Mrs. Morris, Mrs. B. L.
Bullock, Comer, Mrs. A. D.
Thompson, Codbert, and Mrs. H.
tw. Williams, Athens; sister, Mrs.
Y '~ Tanee. Toccoa: four broth
ers, Isham Jordan, Alto, Ga., and
Major Jordan, Robert Jordan and
'Emory Jordan, all of Center, Ala.;
twelve grandchildren, twelve
great-grandchildren and a num
ber of nieces and nephews.
A native of Banks County, Ga.,
she was the daughter of the late
Jacob and Sarah Dobbs Jordan.
For the past forty-five years she
had resided in Hull and Colbert,
being a member of Hull Baptist
lChurch. She was preceded in
| death by her husband in 1930 and
since had made her home with
er daughter, Mrs. Morris. She had
been confined to her home for the
past six months by her illness,
put never lost her interest in her
church, family and friends. The
body will lie in state in the church
from 2:30 o’clock until the hour
for the services.
Owls can shut out noise when
they want to do so. They have
flaps of skin in close their ears.
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
Little
(Continued From Page One)
Education students at the Uni
versity.
The American Legion has gen
erously donated the Little League
Park, a part of the Legion
grounds, and work of construction
of the fence and diamond has been
going on for some time. Sponsor
ing the four major teams in the
League will be Chicopee Manufac
turing Corporation, Athens Sport
ing Goods Store, Baxter’s and
Benson's Bakery. In addition,
there will be as many ’farm”
teams as are necessary to take
care of all the 8-12 age boys par
ticipating and to feed them to the
major teams as they are qualified.
Earl Mann, presiednt of the At
lanta Crackers, recently invited
all of the Athens Little Leaguers
to be guests of his team at one of
their home games in the near fu
ture.
The opening day game will be
broadcast by WRFC but the bar
becue won’t, You'll have to be at
the Legion Cabin at 6:30 to enjoy
that. Meantime, get your tickets
from the Jaycees in time to at
tend the baseball game at 5 p. m.
and the ’cue following immediate
ly. ;
S
Historic
(Continued From Page One)
President’s function in the law
making process to the recommend
ing of laws he thinks wise and the
vetoing of laws he thinks bad. And
the Constitution is neither silent
nor equivocal about who shall
make laws which the President is
to execute.”
Black said the power of Con
gress to adopt “such public poli
cies as those proclaimed by the
President’s order is beyond ques
tion.” He went on:
“It can authorize the taking of
private property for public use.
It can make laws regulating the
relationships between employes
and employers, prescribing rules
designed to settle labor disputes
and fixing wages and working
conditions in certain fields of our
economy. The Constitution did not
subject this law-making power of
Congress to presidential or mili
tary supervision or control.
“It is said-that other presidents
fwithout congressional authority
have taken possession of private
business enterprises in order to
settle labor disputes.
“But even if this be true, Con
gress has not thereby lost its ex
clusive constitutional authority to
make laws necessary and proper
to carry out the powers vested by
the Constitution ‘in the govern
ment of the United States, or any
department or officer thereof.’
Order Cannot Stand
“The founders of this nation en
trusted the law making power to
the Congress alone, in both good
and bad times. It would do no
good to recall the historical events,
the fears of power and the hopes
of freedom that lay behind their
choice, Such a review would but
confirm our holding that this
seizure order cannot stand.
“The judgment of the district
court is affirmed.”
That means the high tribunal’s
six-man majority agreed with the
April 29 decision of U. S. District
Judge David A. Pine that Tru
man’s seizure was illegal and un
constitutional.
Dissenting Opinions
For the dissenters Chief Justice
Vinson said “courts may go behind
a president’s findings to see
whether a real emergency exists,
but there is not the slightest basis
for suggesting that the President’s
finding in this case can be under
mined.”
Vinson said the minority felt
compelled to register a dissent
“because we cannot agree that
affirmance is proper on any
ground, and because of the trans
cending importance of the ques
tions presented not only in this
critical litigation but also to the
powers of the President and of
future Presidents to act in time of
crisis.”
BELGIAN BUS CRASHES
GRAVELINES, France, June 2.
—(AP)—At least 34 Belgian tour
ists were killed and 15 injured
last night when a bus carrying
them hom2 from a -holiday in
France crashed through the guard
rail of a bridge and plunged into
a river heve.
More than half of the world’s
inhabitants live on the continent
of Asia.
Funeral Notice
VINEBERG. — The friends and
relatives of Mrs. Charles P.
(Sally) Vineberg, Atlanta, Ga.;
Mrs. Mabel Link, Mr. and Mrs.
Sidney Haskins, Atlanta, Ga,,
are invited to attend the fun
eral of Mrs. Charles P. (Sally)
Vineberg, Tuesday morning,
June 3rd, at 11 a.m. o’clock from
Bernstein’s Chapel. Rabbi Sam
uel Glasner will officiate. Inter
ment will be in Oconee Hill
cemetery. Bernstein Funeral
Home.
REID.—The relatives and friends
of Mrs. W. P. Reid of Colbert,
Ga.; Mr. and Mrs. L. A, Morris,
Colbert; Mr. and Mrs. B. L.
Ballock, Comer; Mrs. H. W.
Williams, Athens; Mr. and Mrs.
A. D. Thompson, Colbert; Mrs.
Janie Jones, Toccoa; Mr. and
Mrs. Major Jordan, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Jordan, and Mr.
and Mrs. Emory Jordan, all of
Center, Ala.; Mr. and Mrs.
Isham Jordan of Alto, and the
grandchildren, nieces and neph
ews, are invited to attend the
funeral of Mrs. W. P. Reid,
Tuesday afternoon, June 3, 1952,
from the Hull Baptist Church at
three o’cleck. Rev. A. E. Logan,
pastor, will oZficiate. Mr. Wayne
Wood, Mr. Dowxsey Patton, Mr.
Troy Morris, Mr. Hubert Bell
and Mr. Cecil Bullock will serve
as pallbearers. The remains will
lie in state in the ehurch from
two-thirty o’clock until the hour
of the services. Interment will
be in Hull cemetery., Bridges
Funeral Home.
News Of Fires,
Accidents, And
Police Action
BY TOM BROWN
Ruby Gertrude Dunn, colored,
was bound over to Clarke Superior
Court today after a hearing in Re
corder’s Court. She was charged
with driving under the influence
of intoxicants, hit and run, and
driving without a state driver’s
license. Judge Olin Price set the
bond at S7OO. Officers said that the
woman hit a grocery truck parked
on Barber street Saturday after
noon.
Willie Bond, colored, was fined
$51.50 in Recorder’s Court after
evidence had been heard that he
was in possession of three pints of
non-tax paid whisky. Officers
found the contraband on a couch
in the house in which Bond lived.
Twenty-six cases of violation of
the city automobile registration
ordinance were called from the
docket this morning in Recorder’s
Court. All defendants failed to ap
pear to face charges, Bonds of $2
each were forfeited.
A defendant, charged with dis
orderly conduct drew 60 days in
the city stockade after evidence
had been heard that he tried to
cut his wife with a pocket-knife.
Eight cases of drunknness were
heard in Recorder’s Court with all
defendants either forfeiting bonds
or paying fines of $11.50.
Chief of Police Clarence Rob
erts received a letter from a chatn
department store in which it said
in part that over a hundred bogus
payroll checks have been passed in
the department stores over the
IN MEMORY
(Colored)
In memory of our precious hus
band and father, Fred Christo
pher, Sr., who left us one year ago,
June 2, 1951.
No one knows how much we miss
you,
No one knows the bitter pain
We have suffered since we lost
you.
Life has never been the same.
In our hearts your memrory lingers
Sweetly, tender, fond and true.
There is not a day, my darling,
That we do not think of you.
Soft and bright the stars are
shining on a lovely grave
Where lies the one we love so
dearly.
It gives us consolation to know our
loved one waits for us.
Wife, Mrs. Matilda Christopher
and Children. ,
Sensational Sale
Wednesday Morning 9 O'Clock
; Imported Japanese
Peeled Cane Chairs
::'::g:l(o;::able 49 8
Comfortable Sitting ‘ ;
Regular 6.95 Value _ i
This Is A One Time Purchase
There Will Be No Repeat Sale!
See Our Clayton Street Window
Gallant - Belk Co.
THE I:tg:lilne(;;g ;:;:Ee; S&oZI.UES
country. The checks were drawn
on the First National Bank of At
lanta under the account of W, L.
Florence Construction Company.
The checks are in amount of from
S3O-S4O.
They are extremely authentic
looking and aceording to reports
are passed by a tall negro in work
clothes. If any of the bad checks
are cashed here notify Chief Rob~
erts immediately.
An accident occurring on the
Commerce-Ila road put three per
sons in the Commerce Hospital
yesterday afternoon.
A car driven by William Strick
land was in collision with a car
driven by J. W. White. Mr. White,
his wife and 22-month-old child
were badly hurt.
Mr. and Mrs. White are reported
in critical condition and the child
is in serious condition.
According to reports from the
State Patrol, Mrs. White had not
riegained consciousness at press
time.
James Winfrey, Athens, was at
tempting to turn into a dirt road
below Watkinsville yesterday af
ternoon and hit a truck which was
driven by Phillip Dial, Winder.
Winfrey is reported in good con
dition by St. Mary’s officials.
A sixteen-year-old colored boy,
Eugene Jackson 1s reported in
serious condition by General Hos
pital officials after undergoing an
operation. The colored youth was
involved in an accident Saturday
afternoon in Jackson County. The
father of the boy was driving a
truck and the boy was in the back
of the wvehicle. The truck over
turned and threw him out. The fa
ther was not hurt, according to
State Patrol reports.
Major League
lL.eaders
By The Associated Press
AMERICAN
Batting: Rosen, Cleveland, ,338.
Runs Batted In: Rosen, Cleve
land, 30.
Hits: Fox, Chicago, 58.
Home Runs: Rosen, Cleveland,
10.
Stolen Basest Rizzuto, New
York, 9.
Pitching: Shea, Washington, 3-
0, 1.000.
NATIONAL
Batting: Adcock, Cincinnati,
833,
Runs Batted In: Sauer, Chi
cago, 45. :
Hits: Sauer, Chicago, and
Adams, Cincinnati, 52.
..Home Runs: Sauer, Chicago, 10.
Stolen Bases: Reese and Robin
son, Brooklyn, 6.
Pitching: Maglie, New York, 9-
0, 1.000. ¢ :
Rev. Clippard|s
Citadel Speaker
The Reverend Edwin B. Clip
pard, Rector of St. Luke's Episc
opal Church in Newberry, All
Saints’ Church in Clinton, and the
Church of the Epiphany in Laur
ens, will deliver the Baccalaureate
Sermon to the June graduating
class of The Citadel on Sunday,
June 8.
The service will be conducted in
the Cadet Chapel at The Citadel
and will begin at 10:00 a m. The
Corps of Cadets of the military
college, members of the Board
of Visitors, the Citadel faculty, and
friends and relatives of the mem
bers of the graduating clasg will
attend the service.
Mr. Clippard, a native of Edge
field, graduated from The Citadel
in 1922 with a Bachelor of Arts
degree. At The Citadel he was a
member of the YMCA Cabinet, the
Bull Dog Staff, and the Shako
staff. He taught at Pickens and at
the University of South Carolina,
and received the M. A. and L. L. B.
degrees from the University of
South Carolina.
After graduatingfrom the South
Carolina Law School he practiced
law in Columbia. Mr. Clippard
served as a captain with the 96th
Antiaircraft Artillery regiment in
the Pacific during World War 11.
He entered the Episcopal The
ological Seminary at Alexandria,
Va., in 1948 and received his Bach
elor of Divinity Degree in 1951.
Mr. Clippard married Miss Sophie
Willis Wallace of Spartanburg and
now makes his home in Newberry.
A.H.S.
(Continued From Page One)
ing.
Jane Floyd, Willie Fowler, Jean
Fulcher, Shirley Gibert, Robert
Gillich, Beverly Grimes, Ann
Hale, Martha Jean Hale, Faye
Harris, Oscar Hawkes, Jane Rabb
Hogan, Marian Hopkins.
Patricia Hudson, Lawrence
Johnson, Keaton Jones, Sybil
Kiser, Rita Loyd, Ottice Martin,
Jimmy Mercer, Pat Messer, Pat
Moon, Bill McGinnis, Herman R.
Nash, Gloria Ann Perkins.
Daniel F. Poole, June Porter=
field, Elmo Ragsdale, Helen Rog
ers, Bill Saye, Hilda Shackelford,
Louis Smith, Geraldine Speering,
Faye Spinks, Tena Stephenson.
Bob Terry, Ralph Tolbert, John
Calvin Upchurch, Jane Weather
ford, Joe Webb, William Conrad
Webb, Ann Montine Wigley, Jack
Melson Williams, Jimmy Williams,
Joyce Williams, Billie Jean Win
frey, Calvin Winfrey,
The land north and east of the
Great Lakes is rising—making a
slow recovery from the great dim
ple pressed into the earth by the
weight of ice during the ice ages,
says the National Geographic So
ciety.
MONDAY, JUNE 2, 19532,
Record Field
Seek Places
In U.S. Open
NEW YORK, June 2 — (AP) —
More than 1,500 hopefuls for the
United States Open Golf Cham.
pionship teed off from one end of
the country to the other today in
the qualifying round,
When all the returns are in, 12
lucky ones out of the record fielq
of 1,505 will have places in the
starting field for the big tourna
ment, scheduled for next week at
the Northwood Club, Dallas, Tey
Thirty-one places already are
taken, 29 by exemptions and two
by Walter Nagorski and Alex
Kong, who qualified in the Hon
olulu section last week,
Those who don’t even have 1o
try for it for the former ope,
champion, the low 20 and ties in
the previous year's tournamen
the U. S, amateur champion, the
P. G. A. champion and the home
club pro. That means that most of
the topnotchers on the circuit, in
cluding defending champion Ben
Hogan, are exempt from having
to qualify.
LaGrange Plans
.
Livestock Sale
LAGRANGE—A veteran Geor
gia livestock expert said today
that a sale scheduled here June ¢
and 10 will be the outstanding
event of its kind ever held in the
Southeast.
Commenting on the Hills and
Dales Hereford Farm Reductien
Sale, Dr. Milton P. Jarnagin, Ex.
tension Service animal husband,
man, said, “Never before have the
land owners of the Southeast ha¢
the opportunity to buy so manv
Herefords of such outstanding
quality and breeding in one sale.”
Some 545 animals will be sold
at what the publie {s willing to
pay, Jarnagin stated, including 150
cows with calves at side. Most of
the cows will be rebred to ou‘-
standing bulls. 'The rest of the
offering is made up of bred cows,
bred and open heifers and 95 bulls
of service age.
Fuller E. Callaway, owner of
the farm, became known nation
ally as a constructive Hereford
breeder when he selected Real
Silver Domino 44th at the then
world’s record price of $52,000 to
head his select herd of outstand
ing females, according to Jarna
gin. The blood of this bull dom
inates the offering.
Speed kills! It you believe that's
right, you’'re wrong . .. Speed in
itself does not kill, But speed in
the hands of an inexperienced
and irresponsible driver can mean
tragedy for many. Keep your
speed down . .. don't overestimate
your own ability . . . This mes
sage from your Georgla State Pa
trol.