Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWO
WITH THE 25TH INFANTRY
DIVISION IN KOREA. — Private
James D. Fhillips, son of Mr. and
Mrs, 4. M. Phillips, Route 2, Jef
ferson, Ga., is now serving with
the 25th Infantry Division in
eastern Korea.
The 25th, approaching its third
year on the peninsula, held off the
Reds at Pusan in the summer of
1950. Now the senior unit in Ko
rea, its patrois afe harassing en
emy positions northwest of the
Punchbowl.
Private Phrillips is a leader in |
in Company B, 89th Medium Tank
Battalion. He entered the Army in
November, 1951, and arrived in
Korea June 2, 1952.
U. 8. NAVAL AIR TECHNICAL
TRAING CENTER, MEMPHIS,
Tenn.—Recently graduated from
the Aviation Elecfronics Technic
ian-Electronicsman School here
was Staff Sergeant Lawrence E.
C&shing, USMC, son of Mrs. R. C.
Cushing of 17 Oak street, Com
merce, Ga.
Cushing entered the Marine
Corps in 1943. Befoer entering the
Marine Corps, he was graduated
frofa Commerce High School.
The school trains students to
maintain and repair complete air
craft electrical systems, as well as
Navy eommunications equipment
and radar systems.
11. A MAN ADVANCED
Among the Navy men advanced
to their present rates while serv
ing aboard the destroyer USS
Frank Knox is William J. Adams,
seaman, USN, son of Mr. and Mrs.
W. B. Adams of Ila, Ga.
The Nla Navy man reported to
the Frank Knox Nov. 25, 1951
, from the Naval Training Center in
San Diago, Calif.
i Adams entered the Naval service
{'Aug. 18, 1951, and received his
}'rocru!t training at the Naval Train
"ing Center, San Diego, Calif.
Before his entry into the Navy,
he attended Comer High Scool.
i The Frank Knox, named for the
‘itormer Secretary of the Navy, has
j‘been operating in Korean coastal
waters gince April of this year.
t New Policy
i New Air Force Policy for Two
" Tour Reservists who participated
‘in World War 11, and have been
icallod to active military service
since the Xorean conflict, is an
¥ nounced by Major Cloude P.
Spencg, Commanding Officer of
the Air Force Reserve Training
Center, Dobbins Air Force Base,
Marietta, Georgia.
All Air Force Reservists who
served 12 months between 7 Dec
ember 1941 and 2 September 1945,
and were called to military service
after 28 June 1950, and who
served a tour of military service,
will not be recalled WITHOUT
THEIR CONSENT except in time
of war or national emergency de
clared by Congress.
This was a welcome announce
ment t 6 Major Spence and the Air
Force Reserve Training Center,
since the AFRTC is the organizer
of G&ort!a': only organized Reser
ve Wing, the 94th Tactical Ae
connaissance Wing. This announce
ment opens the door for “Two-
Tour Reservists” to join the 94th
Tactical Reconnaissance Wing, re
ceive pay, promotion and retire
ment benefits.
BAT “HEAVEN”
» Carlsbad Caverns is the home of
from three to five million bats,
whieh fly out at sundown, except
dusing the winter season. Blind
tish mf‘:)thcr creatures, living in
total darkness, also have been
found Im the caves.
i POLL TAXERS
Seven states still require pay
ment of a poll tax; Alabama, Ar
kann*, Mississippi, South Caro
ling, Tennessee, Texas, and Vir_
giniag 1
58 —
PAUPER’'S GRAVE ‘
To the shame of his contempo
raries, the famous composer Mo
zart was buried, unattended, in the
common burial ground reserved
for peupers. The exact place of
the interment is unknown,
POLO'S JAVA
The first definite reference to
Java in European literature prob
ably is that of Marco Polo in the
13th century, according to the En_
cyclopedia Britannica.
‘.n[ e need for %o be tired, nervous,
. weanky or constipated rdn to distary deficien
“wles which sccur only when the daily intake
of B.vitomine and Niesin is loss thon minimum
requiroments ever o prolonged period, Thess
non-spacific symptoms in themselves do mot
prove o dicury deficiency and may have other
suvses o be due to functional conditions.
If you've resigned yourself to a life
wishout companionship . . . without fun,
and parties ~ ,simply because you
havent the necessary physical power
and energy ... BEXEL SPECIAL
PORMULA may be just what you need
%o pep you up ... to give you new vim,
sparkle . . . new joy in life.
BEXEL SPECIAL FORMULA
the wonderful new
- vitamin compound,
may be exactly what
you need to put you
on your feet again if
you . .. like so many,
many others , , ~ are
suffering from com
mon symptoms of
specific deficiencies,
et POTENCY
S GUARANTEED
You take just ONE
s easy-to-swallow
; Bexel capsule a day,
5 4 ¢ / and that's all! It
o E) eX fi B costs you only about
“‘a "?'”"fi,{a&’ 6¢ a day .., a tiny
O price to pay to pro
i I tect yourself. Money
i ; back if you don's
A : B foeel better ajter one
R botile of Bewel!
) o ir s &
MecKesson & Robbine
Horton's Drug Store
W 1 E. Clayton Athens
———— ) MEZZANINE AND BOXES ;"»_f;:"‘é?/ GALLE%: CAPACITY 4000 =
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i———fi—ég National Committee F=——=—== (Dems have 1632; GOP, i 206) B
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e ——— —— W eSS A S
CONVENTION STAGE IS SET—Where some 12,000 persons will sit and see our nation’s next
President nominated is shown on the above diagram of Chicago’s International Amphitheater, which
will play host to the Republican and Democratic National conventions, opening on July 7 and 2,/
respectively. Central attractions at the greatest political shows on earth will be the delegates and’
alternates seated in the main floor arena. Surrounded on all four sides by spectators in the boxes,
mezzanine and gallery, they will also be watched by an estimated 60,000,000 radio and television fans. ' !
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Rogar s~ 1=
| “FIRST STEPS"” FOR THE CORPORAL—CpI. Angel Gomez,
of Puerto Rico, who lost both legs and his right arm when he was
. hit by a mortar shell in North Korea, in November of 1950, leaves
his wheelchair to take a few steps on his new artificial legs. The
. triple amputee is a patient at Walter Reed Hospital, Washington.
Man's Eye View Of Lady's Chapeaux
At Style Show Not Very Flatiering
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By RICHARD KLEINER
NEA Staff Correspondent
NEW YORK — (NEA) —A hat
showing, where the latest high
fashion ladies’ hats are presented,
is like nothing else in the world—
except possibly being trapped in a
chicken coop.
Picture the setting. There are
three rows of seats on each side
of a long room. In these are three
rows of fashion reporters, drink
ing coffee and clucking at each
other. Between these six rows
is an aisle, down which ,on sig
'nal, walk beautiful models.
As each one proceeds, the com
mentator, a lady, makes with a
detailed description of the hat.
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Lo Y BN AN
FIRST YOUNG AMERICA MEDAL AWARDS—Two boys and
a girl, selected by the Department of Justice for bravery and out=
standing service during 1951, receive from President Truman the
first Young America Medal Awards. From left: Stuart William
Oberg, 17, of Millinocket, Me., receives the Service Medal for out
standing activity in Civil Defense; Parker Edward Stratt, 10, of
Coral Gables, Fla., the Bravery Medal for saving a 9-year-old girl
from an alligator; and Margaret Galassi, 16, of Springfield, 111., the ;
Bravery Medal for saving seven children for whom she was baby
et - sitting, from a blazing home. == -
She tells a charming little story
about it, how its creation was in
spired, it's costs (gasp) and what
the style number is. The model,
meanwhile, walks back and forth,
bending down so some of the
cluckers can look at the hat more
closely.
For example, here is how one
hat sounded. (For reasons of
personal and bodily safety, the
name has been c‘hanged.)
» .
“Next, ladies, we have one we
call ‘Afternoon of an Anteater.”
There's a charming little story
about this hat. It was inspired
by a trip to the zoo, and the sight
of the charming little anteater
ha N THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
one afternoon.
“It's a charming new nubby
fabric, and it's done in an in
spired, charming style. Here are
grace and elegance, but drapped in
a new way. Doesn’'t it remind
you of—well, of an anteater’s
afternoon?”
Nonsense. It looked like the
dame had been out taking down
the laundry, and a towel fell on
her head. For that, $43. Whole
sale.
There was one hat that the
commentator said came to “a
sugarloaf point.” It looked won
derful, if you don’t mind walking
around wearing a dunce cap. A
white dunce cap, no less. For
$38.50, yet. Also wholesale,
- - *
At one point, when the next
model was a little slow coming
out, the lady said, “You note the
trend this year, ladies. It's charm
ing. The hats are all made in an
easy, almost sloppy style.”
There was one like a big shawl,
wrapped around the head with
the tassels dripping over the eyes.
“That’d look dandy on a grand
piano,” someone muttered in the
rear row.
Some of the hats were of the
tremendous, waiters'-tray-type.
none in between. You either have
to wear a pill-box or a large econ
omy size.
One little black bill-box had
an enormoug “burnt ostrich feath
er” leaning off to the portside. It
looked like an antenna on a space
helmet. “What do you hear from
Mars?” sneered a lady in the front
row, who might have had too
many demi - tasses. The model
kept on smiling, bravely. <
- * »* w
There was another one the lady
called “a pill - box with a point.”
It was nothing of the kind. It
was a frying pan. Uuside down.
There was one dilly that was
obviously an old oat-meal box,
cut in half and covered with
stripped meterial. To conceal their
treachery, they'd put a tiny brim
around it. It looked good. Might
have looked Dbetter, though, if
they’d left the original label on.
One was just a few pieces of
glass costume jewelry, strung to
gether and clamped over the head
like a pair of earphones. The kid
looking like nothing more than a
rich telephone operator.
But this year‘s hats, as the com
mentator commented, do show
some great changes. “You‘ll no
tice,” said she, “that there are no
flowers, no sequins, no artificial
fruit.,” She was right. There
weren't
. Husbands won’t be able to
make any cracks about the wife
not needing to buy a new hat,
she could just go to a the ice-box
and whip one up. That gag is, if
you'll pardon the expression, old
hat.
But relax — it’ll be easy to make
up new gags.
I'VE GOT A SECRET
The witness was introduced by
emcee Garry Moore as Mrs. Gar
rison Morfit on show “I've Got A
Secret”. All of the panelists tried,
but they couldn’t discover her se
cret. .
Finally when time had so be
called, Moore, with a twinkle in
his eye, introduced Mrs. Morfot
as his wife, For the record, Garry
Morfit changed his stage name to
Moore for broadcasting purposes
in 1939.
STILL ANOTHER BLOOM
Sulonia Hunter, of near Prince
ton Factory, reported his first cot
ton Dblossom this morning. He
found the bloom yesterday.
This bloom was the first noticed
in his 30 acres of cotton, which he
planted after the second Sunday
in May.
SHRUNKEN
At the close of the Civil War,
America was a continent more
than three months wide; today, by
the best trains, it is three days
wide, while planes reduce that to
mere hours.
STRANGE SPANISH
' In maritime usage, the adjective
“Spanish” has the meaning of
“strange” or unfamiliar. It was
rather freely and indscriminately
used by English-speaking seamen,
who superseded the old mariners
of Spain, for things they did not
know much about.
GRAIL SEARCH
Many knights_errant spent their
lives searching for the Holy Grail,
and finally Sir Galahad was suc
cessful. According to legend, it
was brought down from heaven by
angels and given to knights who
guarded it in a castle on the sum
mit of an inaccessible mountain.
TOO BUSY TO EAT
Chrysippus, Greek philospher,
never interrupted his studies for
the sake of eating. Attendants
forced food into his mouth to keep
him from starving.
News Of Fires,
Accidents, And
Police Action
A car driven by Vonnie e
Drake, Route 2, Comer, was in
collision with another automobile
driven by Ammie Carey, ijr.,
Route 2, Danielsville, yesterday
afternoon, about three miles from
Danielsville on Georgia highway
174.
Carey was taken to the Me
morial Hospital in Royston with
a shoulder injury.
The accident occurred about
11:30 a. m. according to the State
Patrol.
Athens firemen answered a call
yesterday afternoon at the new
Athens High School off Milledge
avenue, where they extinguished
a blaze in a pile of wood shav
fings and scraps. There was no
damage.
Recorders Court
A 16-year old youth was tried
this morning in Recorders Court
for driving under the influence of
alcohol. He was bound over to
the Juvenile Court.
Eight cases of drunkenness, each
resulted in $11.50 forfeited bonds.
Three bonds of $16.50 were for
feited for cases of speeding. ¥
Judge Olin Price heard one case
of disorderly conduct this morn
ing, which resulted in a $26.50
fine. Another disorderly conduct
-charge had a $26.50 forfeited bond.
(Continued From Page One)
extent of an open revolt-any nom
inee who embraced a platform
plank calling for action by Con
gress on such controversial issues
as creation of a fair employment
practices commission (FEPC)
with power to enforce its rulings
against job discrimination.
There was no answer, however,
to reporters’ questions as to whe
ther the threatened revolt would
occur if such a potential nominee
as Stevenson, with Southern fam
ily connections, headed a ticket
which ran on a platform pledging
affirmative action on civil rights
proposals.
Gov. Paul A. Devers of Massa
chusetts, the Democratic keynot
er, left no doubt he hopes the par
tysplitting civil rights issue can be
compromised. Devers said he
thinks almost any Democratic
nominee can win in November,
He included in this, Sen. Rich
ard Russell of Georgia, chairman
of the anti-civil rights group. He
said Taft would be more difficult
to beat than Eisenhower.
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three inches of molding from each of two houses so that he may |
move his home-made craft from the back yard. He also had to !
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ANTI-AMuRicA. £ leeung among some ¢f Japan’s new labor
leaders gives Jap Reds added inspiration to demonstrate like this.
Jap Labor Turmoil Could Become
Unwitting Tool Of Communism
By ELENOR SPALDING
NEA Special Correspondent
TOKYO — (NEA) -~ Turmoil
within the Japanses labor move
ment, combined with political
strikes and growing unrest among
workers, has aroused fear here that
the labor movement the United
States promoted will become the
unwitting tool of communism in
Japan.
The man with the most power to
prevent it or te bring it about is
Minoru Takano, seceretary gen
eral of Sohyo, the General Coun,
cil of Trade Unions in Japan, He
was one of the first men outside
the government with whom the
new U. S. Ambassador, Robert
Murphy, conferred.
Takano, a left-wing Socialist,
has established himself as top
man in the labor movement since
the ousting in April of Takeo
Muto, pro-American and right
wing, from the chairmanship of
Sohyo.
Takano’s agreement to hold a
joint May Day rally with the
Communists gave them their stage
for the May Day riot in Tokyo.
As a result of the riot, he now
asserts that Sohyo never again
will cooperate with the Commu
nist Party in Japan.
- * -
But Takano himself {s respon-
sible for Sohyo's offensive against
rearmanment, against U, S. in
fluence in Asia and for absolute
neutrality. He opposes U. S. se_
curity forces in Japan and favars
trade with Communist China.
The U. S. is getting splattered
with mud in a hot fight between
Sohyo and the Government, of
Premier Shigaru Yoshida be
cause Takano and men like him
identify Yohida as the agent of
Arnerican colonialism.
Perhaps better then ayone
else, Takano persontiies the prob
lem America faces in Japan. A
far cry from men who have risen
through the ranks of democratic
labor movements, he is one of
the educated few with zeal to lead
the down-trodden many as Asia.
At labor rallies he can be spot
ted by the quality and the white
ness of his shirt. A studious lit_
tle man of 51 in horn rimmed
glasses, he writes prolifically and
speaks in the modulated ‘tones of
a college professor.
* * *
Born of good family, Takano
holds a wuniversity degree in
chemical engineering and ac
quired his interest in the labor
movement by doing social work.
He joined the Machinist’s Union
and, under the old regime, went
to jail more than once for his op
position to dictatorship.
During the early days of the
occupation, he was hailed by those
who sought a democratic labor
movement for Japan as a fresh
aggressive leader to replace the
Old Guard which had collaborat
ed with the militarists and mo
nopolists.,
By the middle of 1948, the
young, democratic labor move
ment boasted 6,500,000 members.
Then something went wrong.
Since then, the movement has lost
more than a million members.
Tagano blames it on a change in
U. S. policy which he says has
favored the monopolists at the ex.
pense of small business and
workers.
In 1950 and 1951, Takano led
a successful drive to unite the
non-Communist unions of Japan
in a single, strong federation. He
was elected secretary general of
Sohyo in March, 1951. A year
later his power seemed on the
wane, mainly because of his op
position to the peace treaty. But
since April, Takano has organized
three more political strikes, all
one-day protests against the poli
cies of the Yoshida Government.
Arguments that the labor move
ment is weakening itself by get_
ting invelved in politics instead
of concentrating on the economic
aims of the workers cut no ice
with Takano.
“The Yoshida Government is
out to curb labor. We must win
that fight first before we can ob
tain economic gains,” he declares.
Sohyo boasts a membership of
four million out of an estimated
5.3 million organized workers
making it the largest organized
pressure group in thé nation. But
‘lakano insists the cards are
stacked against labor at the polis.
He claims Yoshida’s Liberal Party
%as the moral support of the
. S. and the financial support of
the Zaibatsu, the economic royai
ists of Japan.
Takano concedes that the U, S.
does not want to curb Japanese
labor. He acknowledges that his
major complaint against the Yo
shida Government is that it.would
revise laws for which occupation
authorities were responsible. But
;, PICNIC-WITH ¢
| BENSON'S |
' DELICIOUS, BREADS, ROLLS ‘5;
AND CAKE
@ BUY BENSON'S !
& BREADS, ROLLS AND CAKE i
#l FOR EVERY OCCASION.
| BENSON'S i
+~MONDAY, JUNE 30, 1952.
P A R P R S ot e
he argues that the eold wi
caused the United Staiss te oy
militarasim in Japan in the inte, .
‘est of produczlon. and defense,
-
en what about the dang
invagion? -
Takano thinks there is a gre
danges that gamtorm,m:}ffi
come to Japan from the right. He
remarks that the Communig
have fough%only where¢ they haye
had native Cyommunists, in Kore,
in China and §n Indo_China, [,
than one per é\\t of the Japanese
labor movement s influenced |,
communism, he né&orts.
“The Communists are agains
Japanese labor. Anl we knoy
“',TI?. nsgrts.
en why trade ith o
munist China? " Sow
Takano believes that l?\the only
way the small businesdmen of
Japan can survive the compef).
tion of the monopolies, \
Important Notice
Effective July 1, 1952, and unt]
further notice passenger service
will be continued between Athers.
Macon and between Porterdale.-
Macon.
CENTRAL OF GEORGIA
RAILWAY,
FUNERAL NOTICE
(COLORED)
WILLIAMS, MR. CHARLIE S.—.
Mr. Charlie S. Williams depart
ed this life June 26, 1952, after
a brief illness. Survivors are his
mother, Mrs. Julia Glatt: one
sister, Miss Ora Williams; three
brothers, Mr. Henry Glatt, Mr,
Albert Glatt and Mr. James
Glatt, all of Chattanooga, Tenn. -
other reiatives, Mr. and Mrs,
Charlie Pruitt, Mr. and Mrs,
Eddie L. Smith, Athens, Ga,
and a host of other relatives ang
friends. Mr. Charlie S, Williams
will be funeralized Tuesday,
July 1, 1852, at 3:00 p, m., from
the Hill’'s Chapel Baptist
Church, Athens, Ga. Rev. i,
Tate will officiate. Interment
will be in the Nimno cemetery,
Center, Ga. Mack & Payne Fun
eral Home. ‘
ADAMS, MRS. CLAUDIA J.—The
relatives and friends of Mr. and
Mrs. Benjamin Adams, Misses
Ella Adams and Lacy Lattimoré,
Mr. and Mrs. Willie Morton,
Athens, Ga.; Mr. Mitchell Dur
ham, Sr., Mr. Mifchell Durham,
Jr., Atlanta, Ga.; Mr, Clinton
Durham, New York City; Mrs.
Mary Hunt, Athens, Ga.; Mrs.
Annie Pass, Chattanooga, Tenn.;
Mrs. Janie Wright, Miss Lillian
Hill, Cleveland, Ohio; Rev. and
Mrs. Eugene Adams, Milledge
ville, Ga.; Mr. and Mrs. Jesse
Owens, Columbus; Ga.; Mr. and
Mrs. Albert Adams, Mr. and
Mrs. Booker T. Adams, Atlanta,
Ga.; Mr. Jesse D. Byrd, Wooster,
Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. John Adams,
Athens, Ga., are invited to at
tend the funeral of Mrs, Claudia
Adams, Tuesday, July 1, 1952,
at 12:30 p. m. from the First A.
M. E. Church, Athens, Ga. Rev.
J. R. Moore and Rev. D. C. Car
ter will officiate. Interment
Spralding cemetery. Mack &
Payne Funeral Home.
Funeral Notice
SCOTT. — The friends and rela
tives of Mrs. Montez Eberhart
Scott, 230 Milledge Circle; Mrs.
- Ruth Bridges, Barnesville, Ga.;
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Scott, Mr.
and Mrs. Will Scott, Miss Addie
Eberhart, Athens; Mrs. May
Gaulding, Richland, Ga.; Mr.
and Mrs. W. S. Eberhart, Ath
ens, are invited to attend the
funeral of Mrs. Montez Eberhart
Scott, Tuesday mworning, July
Ist, at ten-thirty o’clock from
the First Presbyterian Church.
The following gentlemen will
serve as pallbearers and meet at
the First Presbyterian Church at
10:15 o’cleck: Mr. Howell Erwin,
Jr., Dr. John Hunnicutt, Mr.
Robert Eberhart, Mr. L. L. Les
ter, Mr. W. T. Ray, Mr. Charles
Hooper and Mr. Ed Bishop. Dr.
H. B. Ramsey and Dr. E. L. Hill
will officiate, Remains will lie
in state in the First Presbyterian
Church from nine-thirty o’clock
until the hour of the service. In
terment will be in Oconee Hill
cemetery. Bernstein Funeral
Home.
UNDER NEVW
Carrol’'s Truck Stop is
now under the manage
ment of Bob Bailey. We
invite your patronage.
Regular Dinners, Sea
foods, Chops. Will be
open July 4th.
'
Carrol’s Truck Stop
(Across From Uppy’s Drive-In)