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PAGE FOUR
ATHENS BANNER-HERALD
Published Every Evening Except Saturday and
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DAILY MEDITATIONS
ITY Have you a favorite Bl(lo
b verse? Mail to—
% flolly Heizghts Chapel.
A. F. Pledger,
The lave of the Lerd is perfect, converting the
" soul. the testimony of the lAmlo is sure, making
w.oe the simple.
The statutes of the Lord are right, rejoicing the
1. art, the commandment of the Lord is pure, en-
I';itening the eyes.—Psalm 19:7-8.
"
rerguson, Cut From Program,
\J :
!(as To Present lke In Detroit
BY PETER EDSON
NEA Washington Correspondent
WASHINGTON. — (NEA) — Original plan for
Genera]l Dwight Eisenhower’s spee(-h” at Detroit
was that he would be introduced by Michigan Sen
_ator Homer Ferguson.
The Republican senator accepted the invitation.
But he made clear that in his introduction he would
have te say that he himself had not yet made up
his mind whom he would au?port for the presi
dency. &
When Arthur Summerfield, Michigan GOP polit
ical Jeader, heard about this he changed the pro
gram &nd introduced Eisenhower himself.
s» 8 o
Fraoklin D. Roosevelt, jr., who is national chair
man of the Averell Harriman-for-President com
mittes, made the pre-election statement that he
would eonsider it a victory if his man were not de- -
teated by more than two to one in the race against
Senator Estes Kefauver for the District of Columr
bia's six celegates.
Roosevelt's reason was that Mr. Harriman had
entered the race only two weeks before the Demo
cratic primary, and this latie start gave Kefauver
the advantage. The way .t turned out, of course,
was that Harriman won, four to one. It shows how
far wrong even professional politicians can be.
- - -
Georgiz's Senator Richard Russell’s hopes of hav
inz 350 celegates from the Solid South for the first
ballot #t Chicago aren’t materializing as rapidly nor
as solidly as anticipated. Here's the line-up:
Alabama—22 split, 7 Russell, 7 Kefauver, 8 un
pledged.
Arkansas—22 pledged to Senator Fulbright as
favorite son.
Florida—24, Russell 19, Kafauver 5.
Georgia—24 sure for Russcll as native son,
Kentucky—26 for Vice President Alben Barkley,
naive son. -
Louisiana—2(o for Russell.
Maryland—lß for Kefauver.
Mississippi—lß for Russell.
North Carolina—Russell 19%, Harriman 1, Stev=
enson 1%, Barkley %, unpledged 10%.
Oklahoma—24 for Senator Kerr, as native son.
South Carolina—l 6 for Russell,
Tennessee—2B for Kefauver.
Texas—s 2 uncommitted. Heavily counted on for
Russell, they may go for House Speaker Sam Ray
burn if his boom develops.
Virginia—2B counted on for Russell.
For Russell this adds up to 151% without Texas,
203% with it. Kefauver has 58. The four favorite
sons—Fulbright, Barkley, Kerr and Rayburn—
would have 124 delegates who would not hold but
would probably be split after three or four ballots,
Likewise, the two scattered delegates and the 18%
unpledged will split.
Of these 144% uncertain delegates needed by
Senator Russell to give him approximately 300, he
would probably get the majority, but not all.
* - *
The Kefauver-for-President committee of the
District of Columbia threw a big whing-ding in
Washington’s Mayflower Holel ballroom the other
night. Te make arrangements for the party and to
keep the organization going after it was over, the
comnrittee opened headquarters in suite 375.
They wanted a private t{clephone put in the
' offices. But when the,telephone installer came to
put in the line, the only way he could get into suite
375 was through suite 376. The occupant of suite
376, of all people, happened to be the chairman of
the Republican National Committee, Guy Gabriel
son.
* * -
Neither the Federal Communications Commission
nor the radio and television networks keep any kind
of box score on the amount of time given to rival
political candidates.
Though the law says that equal time and facili
ties mrust be given to opponents for the same office,
thi{ issue hasn't arisen very often among candidates
« for national office.
In the case of General Eisenhower’s free time on
all the networks for his Abilene speech and press
conference, Senators Taft and Kefauver demanded
equal free time, and got it. But radio and TV offi
cials ¢laim they have no idea on whether candidates
of one party have more time on the air than the
other,
= ~ *
Sensator Taft has been having trouble with the
photographers some more. When the senator’s cam
paign manager, David S. Ingalls, was in Washing
ton recently, the two of them had a quiet dinner to
gether in Mr, Ingalls’ hotel suite.
Photographers got wind of it -and asked pernris
sion to iake a picture of the two having dinner to
gether. Senator Taft refused to allow the picture to
| be made, end told the photographers to come back
after dinner. ,
The photographers thereupon agreed among
. themselves not to return and not to take his picture
i at all,
i} St
You're enly young once, &nd if you work at it
. right, erce is enough.—Comedian Joe E. Lewis.
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* Realistic Dulles Best Qualified
To Draft GOP’s Foreign Policy
John Foster Dulles, who has just been chosen to
draft the Republican Party’s 1952 foreign policy
platform plank, believes war with Russia is un
likely unless Moscow can get its hands on Germany
and Japan first.
This is the sober, considered view of the com
plete realist, the man who understands the factors
that underlie the world power struggle.
Men with this hard-headed approach have been
telling us all along that Gernmrany and Japan were
the big prizes and that Russia would fear to move
against the West without them. It's a matter of
economics: Japan is the industrial dynamo of Asia
and Germany’s heavy industry s unrivaled in
Europe.
Cast these ir. > the balance against the free world,
and the Soviet Union would really have reason to
feel it might win a long test of arms. For there can
be no question of its awareness of American indus
trial might, Without a reasonably equal chance in
extended combat, the Kremlin would not likely take
the leap.
Viewed fronr this perspeciive, the free world’s
recent achievements, first of an operating peace
treaty with Japan and now of a prospective peace
pact with Western Germany, are huge landmarks.
The most significant things about both agree
ments is that they are accompanied by parallel
defense arrangements placing these two industrial
strongholds firmly within the free world’s military
orbit. In other words, if the German pact should
now be ratified as was the Japanese, both nations
would be arrayed on our side against the Soviet
Union and its satellites.
To minimize such an 2ccomrplishment at this
stage is to acknowledge igncrance of the elements
of power politics. To describe as a total disaster any
foreign policy that can successfully woo Germany
and Japan to our side is to lapse into the ridicu
lous.
Since Dulles himself played so large a role in
bringing Japan into the fold, and since many lead
ing Republicans wholeheartedly ascribe to the Ger
man phase of the program, this part of our foreign
‘policy is American, anyway, rather than strictly
administration.
Our overall foreign policy may indeed have im
portant weaknesses. But the winning of Japan and
Germany to the free world’s family cannot be
counted among them.
Dulles is an excellent choice as architect of a
GOP foreign policy plank. No man is better quali
fied by reason of experience and originality of
thought to undertake this vital task.
He may or may not be able to frame a plank that
will satisfy all elements of his party. But he is sure
to draft one that will take account of the realities
on the world scene, His newest expressions on the
prospect of war are part proof of that,
When Russia, during the last fortnight, announ
ced new ambassadors were being ordered to Wash
ington, Peiping and Berlin, the news created little
interest. Communist officials are reshuffled rather
frequently lest their pristine Russianism be sullied
by prefonged contact with insidious foreign ways.
Some of them become scapegoats for the mistakes
of their infallible superiors, others may be the vie
tims of cryptic intra-Kremlin politics. Such mat
ters create about as much stir as the selection of a
new mayor of Minsk.
But when there is a fourth change in the Rus
sian ambassadorship to a world capital, and when
the new choice for ambassador to London is no less
a person than Andrei A. Gromyko, it is time to do
a double-take. .
Gromyko is Soviet deputy foreign minister, and
has been acting head of Russia’s delegation to the
United Nations during much of the postwar period.
He was only 8 at the time of the Bolshevik revolu
tion in 1917, and only 15 when Lenin died, This
makes him more dependable in Stalin's eyes than
an old-timer like Vishinsky, who is in a better po
sition to compare Lenin’s promises with Stalin’s
preference.
Maxim Litvinoff, the most world-minded and
pro-Western of all old’ Bolshevik diplomats, was
suddenly shifted from his League of Nations assign
ment in 1939, and the Hitler-Stalin pact stunned the
world a few months later. People who missed the
obvious implications of the Litvinoff move have
been kicking themselves ever since, trying franti
cally to read the auguries every time another shift
was made,
The Gromyko shift may be significant, too, but
the auguries are not easy to read without benefit of
hindsight.
It seems clear, of course, that the growing influ
ence of Aneurin Bevan in Britain is a development
upon which Russia wants to capitalize, It may be
unfair to call Bevan anti-American, but he wants
to avoid antagonizing Russia, and generally to pur
sue a policy involving less cooperation with the
United States,
Gromyko will make the most of any trouble
making opportunities Bevan gives him,
I am convinced there is no possibility of security
and long-lasting peace for Western Europe if it
does not unite.-—General Dwight D. Eisenhower,
I see things on TV that shock me. It’s the sug
gestions, the movements, the little things that are
hidden and not put into words.—Rep. A. Miller (R.-
Nebraska).
The people of New York (City) are just as pro
vincial if not more provincial than the people of
the rest of the nation.—Rep Arthur Klein (D.-New
York).
Change Of Platoons
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L s T geMl e
Boyle Remarks On The Endearing
Qualities Of Writer Ernie Pyle
BY HAL BOYLE
ALBUQUERQUE, N. M.—(AP)
-—After the man lies down and
dies, his house stands and remem
bers.
Sometimes strangers take over
the house, and the man who built
it is forgotien.
It has been the other way with
Ernie Pyle, Thousands of stran
gers have passed through the
small white cottage he built here
as a refuge fromr his wanderings.
But the more who come, the more
Ernie Pyle is remembered.
Quiet Comfort
Ernie at his death passed out
of the stream of the world’s news,
But he has never lost his peculiar
hold on the American heart. In
death he still gives a feeling of
quiet comfort to those who visit
the little spot out of all the world
he piczed as his anchor against
life’s disaster,
He has a perfect memorial. His
simple white clapboard cottage
with the white picket fence around
it—surely a tribute tc his love of
his Indiana upbringing—is now a
city library. It has ten thousand
books. The garage that Ernie
turned into a guest roonr is about
to be converted into a children’s
IN MEMORIAM
In memory of our dear mother,
Mrs. Ida Jones, who passed this
June 29, 1929.
“In silence and sorrow we pray
for you. The blow is hard, the
shock is severe, we never thought
the end was near. Only we who
have lost you can tell the pain of
parting without farewell.”
Loving daughters and grandson,
Mrs, ida M, Johnson.
Miss Bessie Lewis.
Mr. Robert H. Johnson,
FUNERAL NOTICE
(COLORED)
JONES.—WVirs. Lamar Jones of 349
South Rockspring Street, died
Tuesday morning after an ex
tended illness. Surviving are
Mr. and Mrs, Charlie Gonder,
Athens, Ga.; Rev. and Mrs. W,
A. Barbour, Greenville, S. C.;
Mrs. L. B. Kirk, Louisville, Ky.;
Mrs. Lucy Johnson, New York
City, N. Y.; Mrs, Carrie Booker,
Louisville, Ky.; Miss Charlene
D. Gonder, Atlanta and Athens;
Miss Walter Eloise Barbour,
New York City, N. Y.; Mrs.
Ethel V. Smith, Chicago, Il
Funeral services will be held
Sunday afternoon at 2:00 o’clock
from the Saint John’s Holiness
Church. Rev. C. H. Lattimore
officiating, assisted by Rev.
Morgan ¢nd others. The body
will lie in state at the church
from 1:00 until the hour of the
funeral. The pallbearers and
flower ladies are requested to
meet at the church at 1:55 p. m.
Interment Gospel Pilgrim cenr
etery. McWhorter Funeral Home
in charge.
Railroad Schedules
SEABOARD AIRLINE RY,
Arrival and Departure of Trains
Athens, Georgia
Leave for Eiberton, Ham’et and
New York and East—
-3:30 p. m.—Air Conditioned.
8:48 p. m.—Air Conditioned.
Leave for Elberton, Hamlet and
East—
-12:15 a. m.—(Local).
Leave for Atlanta, South and
West—
-5:45 a. m.—Alir 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.
Week Day Only
rain No, 51 Arrives 9:00 a m
I'raln No. 50 Departs 7.00 p. m
reading rocm.
I think Ernie, who had a lot of
trouble but no children to give him
the trouble that rewards, would
like that. In his own childhood he
didn’t have so nice a place to go
and read.
Ernie and “that girl”—his wife,
Jerry—had slept in 800 hotels in
six years and journeyed 250,000
miles when they chose to make a
gypsy retreat here. One of the rea
sons was to give a shelter to the
books they had gathered.
~ “We were like trees growing in
the sky, without roots,” Ernie
‘wrote. “So we decided to acquire
... a sort of home plate, that we
could run to on occasion, and
then run away from again.”
Why did he choose Albuquerque
as his traveler’s rest? In a piece
explaining why, he mentioned as
another Joved place, Honolulu,
where he is buried today among
the doughboys whose deaths he
shared. But in life he gave this
explanation for settling here:
“Our front yard stretches as far
as you can see. Mt. Taylor, 65
miles away, is like a framed pic
ture in our front window.”
Liked Friendliness
He mentioned also the friend
liness here, the vastness, the rab
bits that came out every evening,
the quail on his lawn every morn
ing, the meadow larks across the
unpaved road that said things like
“your face is awfully pretty,” and
“here comes the preacher.”
The rabbits, the quail, and the
view are partly gone. They paved
the street by his.house, built new
houses across the road that hide
the faraway mountain except in
winter, But there are children
across the way, and Ernie, I am
sure, would prefer them to his
‘mountain view.
I thumbed through Ernie’s own
small cluster of books in the li
brary, and found a sentence he
wrote in London in 1941 that I
have never forgotten:
“I could not bear to think that
for me there might never, never
be another spring.”
Desire to Live
So far as I know that was the
only time Ernie put into print his
own desire to live. And as I step
ped into the warm Albuquerque
summer from the home that Ernie
built ‘and never lived to really
enjoy I felt—well, I felt I would
give half of the unknown part of
life that I have left myself for
R aLrEpl e
e/ ’ 29¢ Size L
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Py W Gam s G Arv L & |
| hen You By MY Gt G|
: TAKE YOUR CHOICE ! |
PALMOLIVE LATHER °&il® 53¢ | |
COLGATE LATHER ‘=i 53¢ |
PALMOLIVE BRUSHLESS ‘i’ 47¢ | |
COLGATE BRUSHLESS ‘&’ 4T |
CROWSE =
| YOU ALWAVS SAVE SAFELY }
AT S T N R T |
five minutes there in the sunshine
with him aiive again.
If the Lord ever built friend
ship in a man, he put it in Ernest
Taylor Pyle, dead at 44.
Nafion Holding
Currency Qut
Of Circulation
An interesting phenomenon that
has prevailed in -this country
since the end of the last war is the
abnormal amount of cast that has
been accumulated and held by the
people at large, contrary to pru
dence and to sound individual
money practices, the Institute of
Life Insurance reported today.
The total of currency now out
side the banking system figures out
to the equivalent of around S4OO
for every member of the working
population, including the armed
forces, the Institute said. The com
parable figure in 1929 was only
slls, the Institute continued, while
throughout the prosperous period
of the Twenties the total currency
in circulation outside banks was
never more than the equivalent of
SIOO for every person in the work
ing population. :
“What makes this expansion all
the more unusual,” the Institute
said, “is that an incerasingly large
part of the money in circulation
consists of bills of denominations
that most people would not ordi
narily use in every-day trans
actions. For example, bills of S2O
and more, considered = together,
now make up more than three
fifths of all the cash outstanding,
as against less than half before
World War 11. And SIOO bills aolne,
of which there are more than $5
billions now out standing, repres
ent nearly one-fifth of the total
money in circulation.
$26 Billions
“Figures compiled by the Fed
eral Reserve System show that
money in circulation outside the
banking system reached a peak of
$26.7 billions at the end of 1946,
more than four times the 1939
total. In the next four years, 1947
through 1950, the total dropped
more than a billion dollars. This
down-trend was reversed last year,
and the current figure for cash
outside the banking system is in
the neighborhood of $26 billions.
About four-fifths of this cash be
longs to individuals.
“The whole economy, of course,
has grown greatly in the past de
cade, and the general price level
has neraly doubled as well. These
and ' other factors would help to
explain the ne¢ed for a very much
larger amount of cash for per
sonal and business reasons than
existed previously,
| “Nongth{glegs. the amount of
cash now in the hands of the pub
lic has grown substantially more
than can be attributed to economic
factors alone, as indicated in the
following comparisons between
1939 and 1951:
“Gross national product— up
from $91.3 billions to $327.8 bil
lions, a rise of 259 per cent.
“Total wage and salary income
—up from $45.7 billions to $169.7
billions, a gain of 271 per cent.
“Consumer expenditures — up
from $67.5 billions to $205.5 bil
lions, a gain of 204 per cent.
“Currency outside banks — up
from $6.4 billions to $26.3 billions,
and increase of 311 per ceni.
“Cash in circulation has also in
creased considerably more pro
portionately than have bank de
posits. The total of currency out
side is now' the equivalent of
.around one-seventh of all bank
deposits in the nation, including
savings accounts and Postal Sav
ings, a ratio nearly half again as
great as prevailed before World
War 111.
Savings Element
“It is natural for a situation like
this to arouse widespread specula
tion as to its causes. There can
be little doubt, for one, that the
savings element has been a signi
ficant expansion factor, even
though stashing away cash is
hardly a sensible or economically
productive way for an individual to
save. In his connection, it should
be noted that the growth of money
in circulation over the past year
coincided with a marked increase
in personal savings in general.
“Nonetheless, considerable sus
picion exists that tax evasion and
hoarding have played an import
ant role as well. This suspicion
is strengthened by the Federal
Reserve figures showing the ex
tent that the bills of larger de
nominations have exceeded the
rate of gain of the smaller bills
that the average person is ac
customed to using.
“Right now the total of S2O bills
outstanding, by far the largest
amount of any single denomina
tion, is nearly six times greater
than in 1939, and the SSO and SIOO
bills are not far behind in their
rate of growth. By contrast, there
are three and one-half times the
amount of $lO bills outstanding
now as in 1939, and only twice ¢he
amount of $1 and $5 bills,®
Fourth Annual
4-H Naval Stores
Camp Scheduled
VALDOSTA — The fourth an
nual 4-H naval stores camp has
been scheduled for June 30-July3
at the Lowndes County 4-H Club
camp near here. The four-day
event will bring together approx
imately 100 boys and girls who
have made autstanding records in
forestry and home improvement
projects. The boys will represent
counties in the naval stores belt,
while the girls will come from
counties all over the state.
Producers and users of naval
stores products, the youngsters,
will receive instruction in six sub
jects that is expected to help them
do -even better work in their pro
jects.
They also will see educational
demonstrations by fellow club
members, watch movies, take part
in supervised recreation, and tour
nearby pine tree plantations, tur
pentine stills, wood preserving
plants and quail feeding stations.
There will be instruetion in the
following subjects: “Identification,
Care and Planting of Georgia
Trees,” “Gum Production,” “Col
or in Home Furnishings,” “The
Use of Acid on Turpentine Tim
ber,” “Money Management for the
4-H Club Members,” and “Wood
iand Management.”
Instructors will be Miss Willie
Vie Dowdy, Extension Service
home improvement specialist; E.
O. Powers, Naval Store Congser
‘vation Program; Ralph Clements,
Southeastern Forest Experiment:
Station; Tom Herndon, Naval
stores Conservation Program; F.
J. Albrecht, International Paper
Company; C. Dorsey Dyer, Exten
sion Service forester; Walter
Chapman, Assistant Extension
forester; and Eugene F. Grene
ker, American Turpentine Farm
ers Association,
The camp is sponsored by the
ATFA and the Agricultural Ex-
MARIONS
255 College Ave.
1,000
11SPECIAL!!
SUMMER HATS
Below The Cost To Make!
00 HATS ......0 0 »:..1.98
o Ry - A
| NYLON cLovzs'
1.00 1.00
SHOP TODAY!
FRIDAY, JUNE 27, 1952.
tmg‘on Service. One of the high.
lights of the camp will be , tal
by AFTA President Harley L.“g_‘
S A
_ Other scheduled speakery 0,.,.
R. E. Hoffmeyer, Sherwin Wil
liams Company; T. G. Williamg
-extension Service landscape Spee
} cialist; M. E. Coleman, ATFA ¢,
cational director; W. §. Brown
-associate Extension director: W A
Sutton, state 4-H Club leaqe,
'and Dr, C. C. Murray, dean and
director of the College of Agri.,.
ture.
Mrs. Martha Harrison and r |
Richardson, assistant state 4.
leaders, and Lowndes County .
tension agents Mrs. Katherip,
Rodgers and R. E. Miller wij| |,
in chage of administration of the
camp.
Officers of the Georgia 4-} Clup
Council will be on hand to condyy
vesper services and flag raising
and lowering ceremonies. The
officers are: Billy Davis, Lowndes
County, president; Etta Lee 1.
Daniel, Wheeler, girls’ vice-pre.
sident; Bill Ford, Chatham, boys’
vice-president; Betty Bowers
Coweta, secretary; Libby Gaines,
Hart, treasurer; and Wendel]
Johnson, Paulding, reporter,
Watkinsville Man
Buys Ayshires
O.D. Few sr., Rt. 1 Watkinsville,
Ga., has recently made an initial
purchase of two registered Ay;.
shires according to the Ayrshire
Breeders’ Association Executiye
Secretary, C. T. Conklin, of Brap.
don, Vermont. \
The transaction was recordeq iy
the National office of the Ay,.
shire Breeders’ Association ip
Brandon where complete records
on all .. zistered Ayrshires in the
United States have been main
tained since 1875.
Because of their ability to pro
duce at a low cost an abundance
of milk with an average butterfat
test of 4%, the Ayrshire breeqd
of dairy cattle has become in
creasingly popular with dairymen
throughout the country.
GEORGIA FUGITIVE HELD
BOSTON June 27— (AP)—John
Henry Henderson, 49, was held in
SIO,OOO bail Thursday on charges
of being a fugitive from justice in
Georgia.
U.S. Commissioner Peter J,
Nelligan was told Henderson es
caped from a public works camp
and that he is serving a life sen
tence for murder.
L
VARIETY SHOW
Tonight At 8:15
MAGIC - ACROBATICS |
FUN FOR ALL 5
ON THE LAWN AT g
THE |
Lyndon House |
Presented By ]
LYNDON HOUSE BOY
SCOUTS
Troop Post No. 150
— So That —
LYNDON HOUSE
GIRL SCOUTS
Can go to summer
Camp in Florida.
AR\ TR
Admission 25¢ !