Newspaper Page Text
PAGE SIXTEEN
Local Colored
Church News
FIRST A. M. E. CHURCH
Corner Strong and Hull Streets.
Rev. J. Roy Moore, Pastor.
Sunday School, 10:00 a. m. Mrs.
M. L. Diggs, Superintendent.
Morning Worship, 11:00 a. m.
Evening Worship, 7:00 p. nr.
Holy Communion rites will be
administered today. Won't you
come t 0 church today?
EBENEZER BAPTIST CHURCH
Corner Chase and Reese Streets.
Rev. C, J. Gresham, Pastor,
Sunday School, 9:45 a. m.
Morning Worship, 11:30 a. m.
B.T. U, 5:00 p. m.
Evening Worship, 6:00 p. m.
. Will you be there?
BT. JOHN’'S HOLINESS
CHURCH
. Rockspring and Reese Streets.
{ Rev. C. H. Lattimore, Pastor.
{ Sunday School, 10:00 a. m.
! Worship Service, 11:15 a. m.
Evangelistic Service, 8:00 p. n.
Junior Church, Tuesdays, 8:00
P m.
Prayer Service Wednesdays and
¥ridays, 8:00 p. m.
We will be looking for you.
i HILL’S FIRST BAPTIST
CHURCH
Corner Reese and Pope Streets,
Rev. R. B. Hawk, Pastor.
¢ Sunday School, 10:00 a. m.
/ goming Worship, 11:00 a. m.
vening Worship, 6:30 p. m.
; Come and bring a friend.
{ FRIENDSHIP BAPTIST
3 CHURCH
t Street. 8%,
{ . J 4. H. Geer, Pastor.
{ ay Bchool, 9:45 a, m. '
orning Worship, 11:30 a. m,
{ gvening Worship, 7:00 p. m.
¢ e and hear the word.
GREATER BETHEL A. M. E.
CHURCH
m at Broad Street,
e B g Morgan, Pastor,
Sunday School, 9:45 a. m. Mrs.
M. Wilburn, Superintendent.
Morning fiorship, 11:30 a. m.
Evening Worship, 7:15 p. m.
Come on and let us walk in the
Beht.
Holy €ammunion today,
HELL'S CHAPEL BAPTIST
{ CHURCH
¢ miitand Broad Streets.
| Rev, Tate, Pastor.
¢ Bunday School, 10:00 a. m.
orning Worship, 11:30 a. m.
. B.T. U, 5:00 p. m.
vening Worship, 7:30 p. m.
Let the church be your home
Yoday.
SPRINGFIELD BAPTIST
CHURCH
i ouria Street.
. W. H. Caldwell, Pastor.
: d ls}xool_, 10:00 a. m.
?% orship, 11:30 a. m.
~ dy Uy 0130 p. mn
g Worship, 7:30 p. m.
meeting days, second
snd foyrth Sundays.
Wednesday night, 8:00 p. m.
The pastor will be there, will
you?
MT. m;ANT BAPTIST
RCH -«
L .nb. SzYlth, Pastor,
l&aoo , 10:00 a. m.
%x(')ship, 11:30 a, m.
% o 08 m.
\?lorlt;’i‘p, 7:30 p. m.
ureh door is open to you
and you.
picture
come to a free pic
fl& wfii Dfioli Church? The
here with the
pkmn that your boys are
4 @ look z)r zou, 8:80,
night, July 11, 1852.
g)m IN USED-CAR ‘
MOSCOW (AP -— The Soviet
ovommmt has decided to Kartict
kta in the used-car market for
ivate ear owners.
Moscow newspapers have an
nouneed *at a special “commis
sion store” for used automobiles
has been opened here. The “com
m store” s a retall ou;let
& person ean go who has
l& z‘“ll. An officlal ap
mnr a price on the item.
seller accepts the appraisal,
he #hflvz a reoeifit for the goods.
i, en the “lh.ll ?ado the sel
ves minus a
-Ar&%«ntuo dg u'czod by the
commission store,
regently there was no com
pm: vtvhiuoh would ac
eept for fi used privately
© sutomoblile.
BNTERTAINING and INFORMATIVE
12 , “Whet Makes Us Tick’!
_The new Technicolor movie produced by the
New York Btock Exchange, and which requires
only 36 minutes to see, presents in interesting
fashion certain phases of the American eco
nomic system in aetion.
we believe you will kike to see
we have arranged for show
between the heurs of 8:00 P. M.
and 6:00 P. M. on July Tth and Bth, in
our office at 298 K, Washingion Street.
Theve is no charge and overyone is welcome.
Gowrts & o
C 0 mR Detabliehed 1908
Mombore diow York Bloek Bushenge end Othor Naulional Exchanges
MY Y 906 Bust Waskingion Sireel, Athens, Georgia
LR R TYR IR RR T R _EEE REY
| ; ' Democrats in New York in July, 1868, imd lmle td\
A\ ¢huckle about, The GOP had nominated o sure
« . thing in popular war hero General Grant; the |
. weather was hot and sticky. Still, an address by
. Susan B. Anthony, asking recognition for women's *
ey suffrage, got a big laugh. 2
/ 3 =isi
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WS Alias Basil Willing
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L WT e By Helen McCloy
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: & '!/v -,- . ;~\§'V.‘l‘_l~§:‘w 1951 by Helen McCloy Dresser, printed through permission of the publisher,
PPIRBIENNT. .NS NI Random House, Inc. Distribeted by NEA Service, .
THE STORY:Jack Duggan, a
private detective, was murdered
apparently by poison which he
may have taken in a drink at a
dinner party given by Dr. Zimmer.
also a psychiatrist. Dr. Basil Wil
ling also a psychiatrist, had fol
lowed Duggan +{to the party
because Duggan had been pos
ing .as Dr. Willing. Duggan
dies before _he can explain
to. Basil. The next meorning
an aged blind woman, Miss
Katherine Shaw, who had mistak
en Basil for the impostor at the
pariy, is found dead in her bed.
Basil and Inspector Foyle go to
the Shaw home to question the
dead woman’s nephew, Brinsley
Shaw, and her secretary, Char
lotte Dean, who also were at the
party.
- * *
X
Charlette’s face was white
now. Brinsley preserved his equ
animity. “I think you're on the
wrong track, Inspector. It's quite
clear that you think Miss Dean or
myself gave Aunt Kay occassion to
employ Jack Duggan. But you
forget one point: Aunt Kay never
introduced this detective into her
own home, where he would have
had the best chance to investigate
Miss Dean or myself, On the con
trary, she made rather elaborate
arrangements for him to dine at
Dr. Zimmer’s last night. That cer
tainly sounds as if it .were some
one at Zimmer’s whom she wanted
Duggan to watch.”
“What was her attitude toward
the various people there last
night? ” asked Foyle.
Brinsley meditated for a mo
ment. “She liked Zimmer best. He
is quite charming with old ladies.
In less than a year he became one
of her heroes.”
“Who introduced Zimmer to
Miss Shaw?” .
“Why, I believe I did.”
“Where did you meet him?”
“Come to think of it, the first
time I met him was at Rosamund
Yorke'’s, but I didn't get to know
him well until I became his pa
tient.”
What was wrong with you?”
Brinsley was taken aback. “I—
-well—l had what they call a nerv
ous breakdown about a year ago.
But I'm much better now, Zimmer
knows his stuff, ~ ”
“What about the others?”
“Aunt Kay loved Rosamund
Yoke but didn't care much for
Thereon. Perdita Lawrence Aunt
Kay considered spineless, but she
had a real affection for Perdita’s
father, Stephen.”
“And the Cannings?”
“Aunt Kay didn’t like them at
all.”
“The Cannings—especially Mrs.
Canning—didn’'t seem to fit in
with the others at Dr. Zimmer’s,”
said Charlotte. “And that was the
only place we u‘/er‘saw them.”
»
Basil started to reach for his
cigaret case. His hand dropped
as he saw there were no ash trays
in this room either.
Brinsley was amused. “We can
smoke in the garden.,” He led the
way through an open French win
dow. “As a matter of fact, we can
smoke anywhere we like now.”
It was more like a %:\rden than
most city yards. A high board
fence was hidden by vines and
shrubbery. But skyscrapers, tow
ering, above the shrubs on three
sides, made it a little like the ex
ercise yard in an enlightened, mo
dern prison.
“I take it Miss Shaw didn’t care
for smoking?” ventured Basil.
“Not an ash tray in the house.”
Brinsley paced with a leisurely
step. “I was supposed to come
out here. Sometimes I'd sneak a
smoke in my own room like a
schoolboy.”
They sauntered toward the win
dow. “How could your aunt con-
‘-_t - A Y ’) é:-—'u i
B = e !2 ]
i R } On the 18th bal- '*' s/ 7S 5‘ m
4] R lot, @ stompede s @ eaf) 0%
144 -1 "/,; for g:nsavc- 2128 7 2 Sy
-, ¢ £ nia’s . Win- {8 \ | R g
v =\ %Bl field Hancock B W& I Yv},J} Y
{ ) \\€ gathered mo- [ermen B/ i
N/ o Y mentum. Fearing *'\“/h v e
A for Chase, \‘"' iy "
Horatio Seymour, convention mour adjourned PR b, ] \
chairman and ardent supporter the meeting. IR SRS T 0 h
of Chief Justice Chase, presided Outside the hall, J\¢"- ~ =BB ()
over the balloting. When, on the Hancock’s sup- [~ NG
fourth roll call, he heard lns_own porters fired o B 8 o s
name mentioned, he immediate- cannon, claim- (9 L s k
'y declined the votes. ing yictory. yby : s 'E\
s e ;
tact Duggan if Miss Dean didn’t
write the letter for her?” asked
Basil.
“She might have telephoned
him, if someone gave her his num
ber. I still can’t believe she did.”
“The fact remains that your
aunt and Duggan died the same
night. We know that Duggan was
poisoned, and we suspect that he
was employed by your aunt at that
time,” Basil said.
Brinsley looked at him keenly.
“Are you suggesting that my
RINt. . s 7
Basil nodded.
Brinsley considered this while
the amorous cooing of pigeons
filled the sunlit yard. “It doesn’t
mean that Aunt Kay herself was
poisoned, for how could this hy
pothetical person possibly know it
was she who had hired Duggan?”
“Miss Dean knew,” said Basil.
“Because she made out the checks
to Duggan. When she says ‘she
forgot’ she means that her con
sclous memory lost the fact. It was
always there in "her subconscious
memory.”
“But how could she know that a
man announced as ‘Dr. Willing’
was the man she .had made out
checks for as Duggan? And how
could she know that Duggan was
a detective?”
~ Basil smiled. “Then why do you
think Duggan was killed?”
Brinsley looked up at the sky
where ~a white cloud was sail
ing before an otherwise invisible
wind. He spoke slowly as if he
were thinking aloud. “Dr. Willing,
have you done much work in crim
inology?”
“I’d rather say forensic psychi
atry. Except for the war years,
I've been with the district attor
ney’s office since 1938.”
“You must have annoyed lots of
criminals.”
“ Thank you.” Basil’s voice was
dry as he wondered if Brinsley
Shaw were making a crude effort
to curry official favor by personal
flattery.
“There is one extremely obvious
motive that might have made
someone want to kill Jack Dug
gan, and it has nothing to do with
my aunt. Is it possible that it
hasn’t occurred to you?”
“Quite posible.” Basil laughed.
At least this wasn’t flattery. “I'm
not infallible.”
Brinsley’s gaze dropped from
the clouds. His shallow, empty
eyes looked directly at Basil,
No. 1 Sweetclover Pest
MARCH | APRIL | may i WNE ] qur i Aueust
d Aduit vml!' migrate to new * . : New adulis
b seedings o 3 soon o 3 avoiloble ! 5 : omergs
Y KILL WEEVILS WITH DDT NOT LATER ° : ¢
; & THAN TWO-LEAF CLOVER STAGEI! ’ :
L 5 §M i ; &
W, ‘k!'. J ! : : /
Adult weavili Adul waevils ; OSR ' ‘A
come ovtof feed on old Waeevlls lay % Egos hatch \-fl' m’ @ Larvas
hibernation sweet clover ggs beneoth Young lorvoe :" P ! pupate
on first worm wniil new seed- the soil ot the foed on rooMets completing develop- ; in the
days ings eppear base of the plont ment in the soil . : Y : oil
SEPTEMBER | OCTOBER | NOVEMBER | DECEMBER | JANUARY | FEBRUARY
! ¥ g '
: ; ' : . '
\ § : Woevils! i v
¥‘: X enter ¢ ifl' :
| é‘f @YM% /:\
; : ;
I‘Y ‘% + : s l '
Y Afiiflmmfi”wfimfl&wwm
Adult weevih foed on swoet clover | : Adh wouslh lbomete |}
until cold weather.=No eggs ore loid. ; i i sweet clover ond .
There It only one generction per yeor. ! 1 weed stubble :
| ! 1 ; : o
Indiana Agricultural Experiment Station.
Seasonal Cycle of Sweetclover Weevil,
Farmers who have depended upon
sweetclover as their principal soil
improvement legume or for other
uses can now breathe a sigh of re
lief. The principal enemy of this
crop, the sweetclover weevil, can
be controlled, This insect has spread
throughout the Corn Belt and into
other areas where aweetck)ver is
grown.
The adult weevil, a small, slen
der, dark-gray snout beetle about
v¥ inch long, comes out of hiberna
tion in the Corn Belt in mid-April
or earlier, It first attacks second
year clover and then moves on to
young sweetclover seedlings, de
vouring the seedling growth as it
becomes available. It is most active
during warm rainy weather.
The eggs are laid below the soil
surface near the base of the plant
from -early May to beginning of hot
weather in June. The adults emerge
in late July and August and attack
sweetclover plants, stripping them
of leaves, and continue to feed until
c¢old weather.
The object of control is to protect
young sweetclover early in the
spring from attacks of the adult
weevil, so that it can get a good
start. The farmer should be on the
alert tgr early nifns of injury in old
s\:nnttg over flelds, as the weevils
w. en do gevere damagg {g any
nearby newfy-leeaed N;éetclover
as soon %s it appears,
Culftiral practices which help con
trol sweetclover weevil are to de
lay seeding until June and to avoid
uodéng adjacent to second-year
stands. Effective chemical control
consists in application of DDT as
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
Convention
“Hasn’t it really occurred to you
that ack Duggan was killed, not
because he was Jack Duggan, but
because he was supposed to be
Basil Willing?”
. 2.9
X 1
Late that day Basil and Gisela
Willing called on Rosamund
Yorke. She was entertaining
guests. She was intoduced her hus
band Theron who was mixing
cocktails, then after the Willings
were settled she demanded: “Who
was that little man at Dr. Zim
mer’s- And what became of him?”
“The little man was named Jack
Duggan,” said Basil. “He died a
few minutes after he left Dr.
Zimmer’s.”
“Died?” Rosamund’s eyes
rounded. “How?” :
“He was poisoned by some opi
ate, probably codeine, while he
was at Dr. Zimmer’s.”
“But no one there knew him
except Dr. Zimmer.”
“Even Dr. Zimmer says he
didn't know the man.” returned
Basil. “He was invited as a guest
of Miss Shaw. Apparently she was
the only person there who ever
met him before.
“And she died the same night.”
This checked Rosamund for a mo
ment. She went on more slowly
than usual. “Did the little man
die before he had time to tell you
why he was using your name?”
‘He told me nothing coherent.
He simply muttered something
about some place where no bird
sang.”
“That is fantastic! Even on
modern battlefields bird sing. And
why on earth did he want Miss
Shaw to think that he was Basil
Willing?”
“What makes you think she
did?” s
“Miss Shaw would never lend
herself to that preposterous mas
querade!”
“Actually he was a private de
tective,” answered Basil. “And
there is a record in her checkbook
of a check made out to someone
with the initial ‘J. D.’. It seems
likely that he was employed by
Miss Shaw under his own name.”
“Basil, have you any idea in the
world why Miss Shaw should em
ploy a private detective?”
* % *
“I’'ve been hoping for a chance
to ask you that,” returned Basil
“You knew Miss Shaw. I didn’t.”
“So that’s why you came to see
me so promptly!” Rosamund’s
mocking glance took in Gisela.
“To you husband, I'm just an
other witness. Or should I say
suspect?”
Basil laughed. “Would I bring
Gisela here if I thought that?”
dust or spray at rate of 1% to 2
pounds of actual DDT to the acre.
As a spray, use 1 gallon of 25 per
cant DDT in 20 gallons of water per
acre. Apply when sweetclover is in
2-leaf stage and when nearly % of
leaf surface has been destroyed but
not later, and be sure to spray the
sweetclover plants. Earlier spray
ing may waste time and material
and delay may result in destruction
of crop.
The Indiana station recommends
dusting a DDT-superphosphate mix
ture to the sweetclover in the very
early seedling stage, Mix thorough
ly 4 pounds of 50 percent or 20
pounds of 10 percent DDT with 200
to 400 pounds of 20 percent super
phosphate per acre. Apply soon as
possible after mixing. Best stands
are obtained by this method because
the DDT kills the weevils running
along the ground and the fertilizer
stimulates the plants so they are not
so easily killed by the weevils,
Care should be taken not to ap
ply DDT to foliage likely to be eaten
by milk cows or animals being fed
for slaughter. There should be no
risk, however, in applying DDT to
sweetclover seedlings as outlined
above or to sweetclover to be plowed
under as green manure,
Sweetclover is the cheapest soil
building legume in seed cost for
1952 planting. Its value in increas
ing yields of subsequent crops, such
as corn, is well-established, News
of control .of its chief enemy will
be most welcome in those sections
where some curtailment of use has
followed the inroad of this pest.
Sidelights
“Thank goodness you brought
her!” Rosamund had recovered
her usual manner, an air of mock
ing challenge. “But I haven’t the
faintest idea in the world why
Miss Shaw should engage a pri
vate detective, I really can’t help
you at all.”
“T think you can,” said Basil
mildly. “There was a curious at
mosphere at Dr. Zimmer’s last
night. Why were you so surprised
to see me there? Why did you say
you always supposed I was on the
other side of the fence?”
“You are on the other side of
Max Zimmer’s fence.” Was Rosa
mund’s answer a shade too glib?
“You're a modified Freudian and
he is strictly Gestalt. I'm a pa
tient of his.” 5
For the first time Basil looked
at Rosamund with a clinical eye.
He had some women patients who
seemed healthy but none who ra
diated vitality as Rosamund did.
Was Zimmer one of those plausible
quacks who specialize in neurotics
with ample checking accounts?
“Brinsley Shaw is a pationt,
too,” said Basil. “Do Dr. Zim
mer’s parties usually Include his
patients and their families?”
O, yes,” Rosamund answered
readily. “That’s another reason I
was surprised to see you there.
'And that’s why I said we were
‘ all supposed to know each othar.
Max believes a psychiatrist should
study a patient in his normal so
cial enviroment, He says biolo=
_gists used to study cross-sections
‘ot dead animals, but now they
study animals tissue kept alive
in serum and see life functioning
in the fourth dimension of time
and change. He thinks psychia
trists should study patients while
|they are functioning socially. So
he givesweekly dinners for us and
sponses to each other.”
“Who were other patients last
night besides Brinsley and your
l Neit?”’ l
“The only other one I know |
about is Perdita Lawrence.”
“But one of the Cannings is
probably a patient?”
. “Of course. Only I don’t knowl
\whieh. It’s hard for a layman to
tell.” j
1 s e
~ Basil found himself wondering
if neurotic temperaments in such
concentration might build collec
tive tension to the point of explos
ion.
Could this situation induce Miss ‘
Shaw to engage a private detec
tive? A sick mind likes to keep
the secret of its sickness.
“That explains one thing”, he
said aloud. “You were a rather
oddly assorted company. An eld
erly invalid like Miss Shaw, an
intellectual recluse like Stephen
Lawrence, and then a rather friv
olous pair like the Cannings.”
“And another rather frivolous
pair like the Yorkes,” added Rosa
mund gaily.
“I shouldn’t have been surprised
to meet you and Miss Shaw to
gether,” he answered. “But the
Cannings and the Lawrences
seemed out of place, each in a |
different way.” !
(To Be Continued) |
el S Mot 1
’ |
Judy Conova's i
|
Confract Lels |
. l
Her Do TV Stint
The contract between Judy Ca- !
nova and Republic is the first in
Hollywood history to give a star
the right to devote most of her
time to TV and make movies when |
she’s free. l
It’s in the fine print of her con- 5
tract and may cut down her movie |
making to one a year after she |
completes “The Hot Heiress” in |
London this summer. l
In this and her current film, |
“Wac From Walla-Walla,” Judy is |
going light on the cowgirl theme, ]
concentrating instead on back- l
ground comedy that has nothing |
to do with her hill-billy past. l
She’ll avoid being a Sagebrush |
Sue on her NBC telefilms, too.l
“Too many westerns on TV,” Judy |
confided. “The story is what’s go- |
ing to count in my series. We're
going to pick all kinds of locations ’
so that we won’t be hemmed in |
by any set cast or format.” |
“I'm Not An Actor” f
Cowboy star Rex Allen will |
desert the saddle long enough |
jiroad Schedules
Raiiroad Schedules |
SEABOARD AIRLINE RY. \
Arrival and Departure of Trains |
Athens, Georgia |
Leave for Eiberton,” Hamlet 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). |
Ceave for Atlanta, South and |
West— ;
5:45 a. m.—Alr Conditioned 1
4:30 a. m.—(Local). {
2:57 p. m.—Air Conditioned. !
CENTRAL OF GEORGIA |
PAILROAD |
Arrives Athens (Daily, Except |
Sunday) 12:35 p. m, |
Leaves Athens (Daily, Except |
Sunday) 4:15 p m. !
e e 1
GEORGIA RAILROAD ‘
Mixed Trains. !
Weok Day Oniy I
frain No. 81 Arrives 9,00 a. @™ |
irain N0..'50 Departs 9:00 o‘o |
W 12 7/////
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That night foes of Hancock begged Seymour ‘:;'
to be a candidate. Though Seymour refused, §§
Ohio voted for him the next moming. Alert ¥
friends bustled Seymour out a door. Twenty
& minutes later he was nominated. Though he §
lost to Grant, he had won fame as “The 8
h Great Decliner.” .
to star in “The Life of James
Whitcomb Riley” for Republic in
the fall.
It’s not an attempt to switch to
dude roles, though, and Rex is
saying:
“Even if I could, I wouldn’t
want to get out of westerns. I
was born a cowboy, I've lived as
a cowboy and I want to die a
cowboy. It's my life. Anyhow,
I'm not an actor.”
« %
New York’s highest-paid and
most-seen TV queen is saying
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'phooey to talk that a lot of video
Bernhardts just aren't interested
in gld-fashioned. dying Holly=
wood.
“Sour grapes,” howled Nina
Foch, who's back in town to play
a Mexican charmer in MGM’s
“Sombrero.” “Anybody in televi
sion who gets a movie offer is go=
ing to be interested. We're in the
acting business, Wherever it’s
more advantageous to me and
easier to act, that's where I go.”
New York or Hollywood as the
future center of TV? “I think it
will be nice if everybody just re
laxed,” says Nina, “There’s plenty
of room for both New York and
Hollywood.”
18 DAY FURLOUGH
Private Clarence Harvill, Sig
nal Corps, U. S. Army, is home
on an 18-day furlough visiting his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jackson C.
Harvill, 430 Sunset Drive.
Mr. Harvill was drafted on No
vember 5, 1951, and received his
pasic training in Conrpany 12;
next he was in Field Cadre, Com~
pany 17, B. T. G., and on May 1
entered Message Center School in
Company B, T. T. G., and grad
uated on Saturday, June 28, with
SUNDAY, JULY 6, 1952.
a 94 average. During the eight
months of training he was giy.
tioned at Camp Gordon, Ga,
He received orders for overses.
duty In the Far East and will Joce.
Athens by plane on July 20 to,
Camp Stoneman, near* Pittsburg
Calif.,, for reassignment, :
Mr. Harvill received his edycg.
tion from the Athens Pyp),
Schools. He graduated from At}
ens High School in 1949 and .
tended Routson Business College
He was employed as assistans
bookkeeper for the Coca-Co):
Company, but due to draft staf.
had to discontinue bookkeepiyy
and then was employed at th,
Co-op Creamery until he receive
his draft notice.
His father is employed by Bu.h
Jewelers end his family has liveq
in Athens for about twelve veays
He has one krother, Avery Harvil
who is a student at Piedmont Co).
lege in Demorest, Ga,
SCIENTISTS SHORTAGE SEEN
LONDON (AP) — Britain s
running short of scientists, {he
Gowernment’s advisory council on
scientific policy has announced
Warning that there will be more
jobs than scientists during the next
five years, the council said in g
report: “We are already begin
ning to lose some of our good
scientific men to American in
dustry.”
The report called for increased
scientific educational facilities in
Britain, both for the needs of gov
ernment and industry.