Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWO
E with ?
- stomach s
THANK HEAVENS! Most attacksare just acid
indigestion, When it strikes, take Bell-ans
tableta They contain the fastest-acting
medicines known to doctors for the reiief ot
Beartburn, gas and similar distress. 35¢.
Warrants were issued by Justice
of the Peace, Judge George Bur
pee, Tuesday for the arrest of Lin
coln Faust, negro, 196 Lyndon
Row. Faust is charged with pass
ing worthless checks.
Faust reportedly gave C. V.
Lunceford, 897 North Chase
Street, a worthless check for S2O
on June 20; W. H. Burt, 346 Oak
Street, a bad check for $25 on
June 15, and J. G. Smith, filling
station operator, corner of Las
sater and Hancock Streets, several
worthless checks totalling $47 be
tween May 22 and June 15.
Faust was taken into custody
Monday afternoon and is lodged
% the Clarke County stockade.
Sheriff Tommy Huff requests
anyone having checks written by
Lincoln Faust to bring them by
the Sheriff's office on the first
floor of the Clarke County Court
house.
Faust cashed worthless checks
amounting to approximately a to
tal of S3OO. His system had sev
eral steps. He would buy objects
ranging from wrist watches to
radios and even a car by making
the down payment with a bad
check. He would then pawn the
obect for additional money.
Jimmy Williams was the inves
tigating and aresting officer, and
Sheri?f Tommy Huff commended
Officer Williams for his fine work.
He said ''Black
[ fold me and White Oint
men{)e htnsm(lmefiof
' e bes ection
AbO Ofclenrins agents
ut mlsery known for igch of
Tetter, Eczema,
Acne."” Todw set
Black and White
Ointment. Also
use Black and
White Skin Soap.
Athens Lodge
No. 790
8.P.0. Elks.
Phone 790.
1260 South Milledge Ave.
Meets on 2nd and 4th Thurs
days at 8:00 P. M. each month.
Free suppers for members in
good standing from 6 to 7:48
on meeting nights.
Our dining room is open every
day except Monday, for Elks,
their ladies and guests,
P. 8. JOHNSON,
SECRETARY
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... 50 easy to ice in a cooler
‘ 5¢ for out-of-the-way places.
SOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY
. ! ATHENS COCA - COLA BOTTLING COMPANY
“Cobe" s @ roghvrored trade-mark. © 1952, ™HE COCA-COLA COMPANY
Athenian’s Kin
Dies In Oak Park
Relatives of the Rev. E. Roy
Mathews, of Oak Park, 111., have
received word of his death Tues
day night, June 24.
The Rev. Mathews was 69 and
was born and reared in the vicin
ity of Ath2ns. He is survived by
his wife, Mrs. Agnes Richard
Mathews; two daughters, Miss
Bobby Mathews, of Oak Park,
111, and Mrs, Nancy Montague, of
Dallas, Texas; two sisters, Mrs.
Leroy Oshorne and Mrs. DeWitt
'Daniel, of Bogart;, four brothers,
Earl C. Mathews, of Athens; Vern
land Curtis Mathews, of Bogart;
and Thornton Mathews, of Jack
sonville, Fla.; several nieces and
nephews.
Funeral services will be con
ducted on Saturday morning in
Oak Park, 111., where he was rec
tor of the Good Samaritan
Church.
Russian Spy Rin
PYKing
Foiled In Germany
FRANKFURT June 25 — (AP)
— A Rhineland actress and a
Frankfurt police official were ac
cused Tuesday of directing the
most powerful Soviet bloc spy ring
ever uncovered in West Germany.
The federal attorney general’s
office continued to muffle in se
crecy most of the details of the
espionage network which Allied
and German counter-intelligence
agents smashed last April 28.
But it disclosed that Maria
Knuth, a Cologne stage veteran,
and Hermann Westbelt, Frankfurt
police department secretary, are
held as the alleged chief spies.
American, British and French
agents cooperated with the West
German government in raids on
Communist — financed espionage
centers in Berlin, Frangfurt and
Cologne two months ago.
The government later confirmed
that confidential information had
leaked to the Soviet bloc even
from inside Chancellor Konrad
Adenauer’s office.
PASSING OF AN ERA
Once autoless, Bermuda now
permits the use of cars,- The law
permits operation of private cars
and taxis with a speed limit of 15
miles an hour in the city and 20
miles in the country areas. Impor=-
tation of second-hand cars is for
bidden.
Gunpowder is a mixture of salt
petre, sulphur and charcoal.
MDM’N&Q
l Crossword Poker
. 4 Festive ¥
occasions
5 Atop
6 Missive
. 7 Permit
8 Old Persian
4 coin
9 Spoil \
10 Italian river
11 Shakes, as a
dog its tail
17 French ¢
emigrant
19 Intermediate
(legal) 1
23 Stepped
24 Sad cry
25 Heavy cord
26 Lees
| HORIZONTAL
‘ I—— high
[} straight «
4 —— house
+ 8 Kind of poker
12 Not (prefix)
13 Fencing sword
14 Emanation
15 Make lace
| edging
16 Walking |
unsteadily
18 Essential part 1
20 King of Crete
21 Legal matters ¢
22 Heroic 7
24 Wiles 2
26 Haul 2
27 Provide with
AABUREZRT LS AR
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TP
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TP 7= I
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T T r T
JEEN/ JEE
FFEF T F I FT
TP TR
SHARyJREE ]
FT 11 FLOI PO
I weapons
30 One who lends
32 Christmas
tableau
34 Each
35 Weirder
| 36 Oriental coin
37014
39 Actual
40 Formerly
/41 In favor of
| 42 Twit
45 Sacred tunes
49 One who
screams
51 Summit
52 Ancient Syria
53 Flock
54 Age
55 Depend
56 Angers
57 Place
VERTICAL
1 Poker stake
2 Fuel
3 Amuse
E. T. Strickland, Clarke County
Farmer, Owner Of Storage Bin
E. T. Strickland, retired con
tractor and farmer in the Clarke
county area, is the proud owner of
the first grain storage bin in this
county, purchased under the Pro
duction and Marketing Adminis
tration storage bin loan.
The storage bin, recently con
structed on Mr. Strickland’s farm,
is eight feet high and has a 14
foot diameter. The cost of the
storage receptacle, which is rat
and water proof, was some SSOO.
Mr. Strickland is a general far
‘mer, utilizing a portion of his
acreage for the growth of beef
cattle, hogs, in addition to grow
ing cotton and small grains. His
yield of wheat which is stored in
the new bin was taken fromr 50
‘acres of land sown in wheat and
‘the average yield per acre was 37
bushels. -
“Eight or ten bushels per acre
would have constituted a good
yield of waneat several years ago,”
Mr. Strickland said.
Mr. Strickland got his grain
storage bin on a loan from the
Clarke County PMA Committee.
The PMA guarantees an 85 per
cent loan on the cost of bins and
construction and makes loans on
the commodities stored in order to
THE SANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
Answer to Previous Puzzle
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40 Foe
41 Wades
42 Russian ruler
43 Land measun
44 Russian sea |
46 In this place
47 Learning
48 Petty quarrel
50 Greek letter
27 Converts into
: steel
28 Australian
ostrich
29 European
blackbird
31 Card game
33 Mistake
38 Engraver
avoid glutting the market.
The expense of the bins, about
SSOO generally, is repaid by the
farmer over a period of five years.
Mr. Strickland today opined that
his bin will pay for itself in less
than three years.
“The convenience of the bin,”
he said, “makes it worth a lots‘to
me. If I had owned the bin when
I harvested my wheat I could have
ixved ‘from forty to fifty dollars
y putting the wheat right iato
the bin instead of having to sack
it up for storage as I did.”
Mr. Strickland expressed the
opinion that the governmenggd
to the farmer is invaluable in“in
creasing yields and in affording
opportunities for the farmer to
await better prices.
People who are familiar with
prices of wheat at present will un
derstand why -the farmers con
sider the $2.32 per bushel loan on
wheat stored to be advantageous.
The PMA allows the farmer to
store his grain and gives him the
benefit of a loan until prices im
prove, and he feels it to be wise to
sell on the open market.
This system of loans enables the
farmer to get the best possible
price for nis grain and save him
up to several hundred dollars a
year. In Mr. Strickland’s case, he
has taken advantage of the loan
for construction of his storage bin
and has gotten a commodity loan
on his grain, too.
His commodity loan will expire
in April of 1953 in time for him
to store a new crop in the bin. He
retains the privilege, however, of
taking up his note with the PMA
office at any time between now
and then in order to sell the grain.
' The price supports offered by
the PMA zre generally above the
buyers’ price at any given time.
| Mr. Strickland today expressed
'considerable pride in his new
shiny grain storage bin, saying
that the bin will constitute a
money saver for him for a life
time of farming, He added words
of praise ot the PMA Committee
for the aid which it has given
hinr in conserving his soil and for
the part it played in his obtaining
the storags bin.
Sylvania Gets
City Manager
WAYNESBORO, June 25 (APA
—Charles T. Yancey, 32-year-old
city auditor, has resigned his post
here to become the first city man
ager of Sylvania, Ga.
Yancey submitted his resigna
tion to city council Monday night.
He expects to start on his new job
August 1,
Before becoming city auditor,
Yancey served here as clerk of
council, city collector, and acting
city manager.
He is a native of Waynesboro, a
graduate of Virginia Military Insti
}ute, and a veteran of World War
5
KEEPS RECORD CLEAR
Jim Moon, colored, has kept
clear his record of being the first
of his race to report a cotton bloom
from the Holly Heights communi
from the Holly Heights com
munity.
Jim sent the bloom to the Ban
ner-Herald this morning. He op
erates a farm for Miss Nonie Bal
lew and for a number of years has
been the first colored. farmer in
his section to report a bloom. He
sent word that he had blooms in
his fields as early as last week but
couldn't get the word to town.
Funeral Notice
CHANCY. — The relatives and
friends of Mrs. J. T. Chancey of
Athens; Mr. and Mrs. D. B.
Worley, Middleton, Ga.; Mr. and
Mrs. J. G. Jones, Calhoun Falls,
S. C.; Mr. and Mrs, Jimmie W.
Hall, Greenwood, S. C.; and the
nieces and nephews, are invited
to attend the funeral of Mrs. J.
T. Chancey, Thursday morning,
June 26, 1952, from Bridges
Chapel at eleven o’clock. Rev. H.
E. Wright, pastor of the Tal
madge Heights Baptist Church,
will officiate. Nephews of Mrs.
Chancey will serve ag pallbear
ers. Interment will be in Mars
Hill Baptist Church cemetery.
- Bridges I'uneral Home.
New Insurance
Group Formed
ATLANTA, June 23—Four in
surance underwriting companies
chartered and licensed by the
state of Georgia and posessing
combined assets of more than
four million dollars have formed
the Georgia Companies Associa
tion.
Most of the assets of the com
panies are invested throughout
this state in muncipal bonds, water
revenue bonds, school bonds,
building and loan associations and
large deposits in banks. The mem
ber companies established the
new association for the purpose
of informing Georgians of the wis
dom of insuring Georgia's future
through patronage of Georgia
companies, thus creating even
larger reinvestments in public
service facilities.
Pointing to the south’s tremen
dous gains in other industries
through Georgians supporting
Georgia, the four companies cited
the textile industry, the bank
ing industry, military production
facilities and the processing of
agricultural products as examples
of Southern progress. It is be
lieved that southern insurance
dollars need not be invested so far
from home, but can be better used
in the South to insure southern
progress. i i
Georgia Companies Association
praised insurance laws which re
gulate underwriting companies in
Georgia, requiring insurance re
serves which make Georgia com
panies as safe in their responsibi
lity for meeting claims as any
companies anywhere in the United
States. E
Member companies are pro
gressive Fire Insurance Company,
Southern Fire and Marine Insur
ance Company, Southern General
Insurance Company and Standard
National Insurance Company. Ru~-
therford , Ellis, prominent civic
leader in state organizations, is
serving as manager of the asso
ciation, which has its main office
at 88 Walton Street, Atlanta. The
four member companies do nog
sell insurance directly to indivi
duals, but write policies through
agents located in almost every
city in Georgia.
Kiwanis Delegale
Reports On Confab
Robert G. Stephens jr. Athens,
delegate atteding the 37th annual
convention of Kiwanis Internation
al at Seattle, Wash., reported that
the groups elected a prominent
Detroit banker to head the or
ganization in the year ahead.
Officers of the Kiwanis Club of
Athens, Ga., were informed today
that Walter J. L. Ray, president
of the Standard Federal Saving
and Loan Association of Detroit,
Mich., would suceed Cloude B.
Hellmann, Baltimore, Md., as
president of Kiwanis International
which is now comprised of 3,500
clubs throughout the United States,
Canada, Alaska, Hawaii, and the
Yukon Territory.
President-elect Ray is the im
mediate past president of the
United States Savings and Loan
League, an organization of lead
ing bankers from all sections of
the United States. He is also a
director and past president of the
Detro’t Mortagage Bankers’ As
sociation. S
A Kiwanian for 24 years, the
new president will assume office
August 1. During the past year he
served as treasurer of Kiwanis
International. He had previously
been an International trustee and
governor of the Michingan Kiw
anis District.
Delegates to the Seattle con
vention, which drew an adult at
tendance exceeding 10,000 men
and women from all sections of
Canada and the United States,
also elected two vice presidents,
a treasurer, and six trustees.
Vice presidents are Kenneth P.
Greenaway, secretary to the presi
dent of Zeller’s Ltd.,, Montreal,
Que., and Albert V. Zimmermann,
banker and lumberman of Alex
andria, La.
Donald T. Forsythe, Carthage,
111, publisher of the Hancock
County Journal, was elected trea
surer of the organization.
Trustees elected for two years
include H. Park Arnold, Glendale,
Calif., H. W. Driver, Euclid, O,
James G. Gass, Regina, Sask., R.
Warren Graffam, Pittsburgh, Pa.,
C. 1. Moyer, Topeka, -Knas., and
Jackson A. Raney, Indianapolis,
Ind. The latter three men are re
elected trustees.
Many male birds which have
neutral colors share the brooding
task with the female, but bright
ly colored males seldom brood the
eggs.
“Miracle Drug"’
say SURIN Users
Pains of Arthritis, Rheumatism,
Neuritis, Lumbago, Bursitis *_
Relief Can Start In Minutes
There’s no internal dosing with SURIN.
Nothing to swallow and wait anx’ously
for relief. You simply apply SURIN
rizht at the point of pain and blessed
relief starts as peneiration beneath the
skin gets under way. Of course there's
a reason for this wonder-working new
external fast pain relief medicine,
It's methacholine, a recent chemical
born of research in a great laboratory.
It acts speedily to aid penetration of
SURIN’s pain-quelling ingredients.
Methacholine also eauses deeper, longer
lasting pain relief and increased speed
up of local blood supply.
Tested on ehvonic rheumatics in large uni.
versity hoepital it brought fast relief to 729,
patients and in home-{or-the-aged 779%. To
tally diferent from old-fashioned rubs and
liniments, modern SURIN brings faster re
lief, longer without burning or blictering;
without unpleasant odor or grease, Simply
smooth on SURIN et the point of pain and
fecl pain ease in minutes. Money-back at your
drug store if SURIN dossn’t relieve muscle
pain faster and bolicr than anyihing you've
ever nsed. A gen~ous far costs $1.25, *"SURIN
i 8 not @ eure for eny of these ccd ove,
McKessen & Robbins, lnc., Bil 'ge vrl 0, fompe
Horfon's Drug Siore
101 E. Clayton Athens
Pl R e
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CORNY, BUT NICE — Kay
Goudron, of Rome, models a
corn-decorated bathing suit, de
signed by Gasberri, one of Italy's
foremost stylists. The kernels of
corn are the real thing, and on
hot days may keep things pop
ping on the beaches.
(Continued From Page One)
were in the West and third was in
the South—Sen. Richard Russell
of Georgia in New Mexica; Mutual
Security Administrator Averell
Harriman in Oregon and Sen.
Estes Kefauver of Tennessee in
Louisiana. :
Harriman, in a speech at Taco
ma, Wash., last night, called for a
house cleaning in Congress of
“men masquerading as the De
mocrats.” Such men, he said, give
the Democrats “a phony majority
in Congress.”
At Phoenix, Ariz., yesterday.
Russell hotly denied a charge by
Gael Sullivan, Kefauver’s cam
paign manager, that he had aided
a conspiracy to “stop Kefauver.”
Sullivan had said backers of Rus
sell, Harriman and lillinois Gov.
Adlia Stevenson had huddled over
such a plan.
IMMUNE DOGS
Dogs are not susceptible to ivy
poisoning. At times they may
show symptoms like those suf
fered by victims of poison ivy, but
dogs with such symptoms ap
parently are victims of hives, the
same kind -of hives from which
humans suffer.
SILVER STERLINGS
Under the Saxon kings, the Brit
ish minted coins called sterlings
from silver, 240 to the pound.
Large quantities of the coins were
reckoned as pounds of sterlings;
later, pounds sterling, present
name of the British monetary unit.
FIRST FILES
The original files were cords,
wires, or spikes, on which letters,
receipts, and papers could be
strung for convenient reference,
according to the Encyclopedia
Britannica.
\ g &
2 _oF ®
se"c\yr » & Sira_ps, Ties
v s’\‘\ —IN BLUE and WHITE, TAN and
6 ‘\o‘“ \ WHITE BUCKSKINS, BLUE KID
& & |
L and CALF.
v TWO-TONE TAN, BLUE & WHITE.
, NYLON MESH
N % Bnidgs
\‘ A\ 1 ~Drves—
N
‘ e SALE $6.95
\ ‘!w\ 4 ™ 1 ax
Iracie - jrea
~ SMART SHOES FOR BRACEFUL POISH
SALE $4.95
\\\2
/ALL SALES FINAL — NO EXCHANGES — NO REFUNDS
1 Lewi
amar Lewis Co.
"Nyleen Suits Me Fine”
... and you'll say the same once you slip into the eool
crispness of the “Calcutter,” Kingsridge’'s new cord
suit, With the combined genius of nylon and ace
tate rayon how can it miss the mark of perfec- :
tion — far as summer comfort and style are
concerned? Look mine over, then let me
tell you why I like my “Calcutter” cord!
{
*Kingsridge Tradename. l
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LB W Y Also Shorts
g Y . and Longs.
o e .::35553..7:555 % T }
L AR
R A e it Menswear
Street Floor
First of all it's a fine, all-round suit — takes me to
work, to play or traveling and gets me there with.a
“just pressed” look! Its coat with three patch
pockets, serves just fine as a sports coat with
other trousers. It’s in shady-cool eolors of
brown or blue. Its fit is fine, its price is
too! Try one on. I'm sure you’ll want to
own it!
Pe?
i*’s SO-0-0-0 Cool At Mklha%
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 2§, 1952,