Newspaper Page Text
PAGE EIGHT
Lesseur Rises
Services for Mrs. Mattie Les
seur, who died unexpectedly in a
local hospital Thursday morning
at 9 o'clock, will be held Satur
day afternoon at 3 o’clock from
Winterville Methodist Church. -
Officiating will be the pastor
of the church, Rev. H. A. King,
and Rev. J. H. Wyatt, pastor of
Lexington Methodist Church,
Interment will follow in Win~
terville cemnctery, Bernstein Fun
eral Home in charge of arrange
ments. Pailbearers will be J. W,
Melton, C. D. Melton, S. S. Mel
ton, W., R. Melton, Frank McCan
non and Veal! Lesseur.
Mrs. Lesseur is survived by
four daughters, Mrs. W, C. Steele,
Lexington, and Mrs. M. A, Carter,
Mrs. H. M. Day and Mrs. E. B.
Harrison, all of Athens; two sons,
R. D. Lesseur and E. M. Lesseur,
both of Winterville; eleven grand
children ard two great-grand
children.
A native of Madison county,
Mrs. Lesseur had lived in Ogle
thorpe county nearly all of her
life.
Bixie
(Continued From Page One)
ern compromise offer came from
Neville G. Penrose of Texas,
chairman so the Good Neighbor
Commission in that state.
He suggested that the 48 state
governors ask mayors to name
local commissions to study racial
problems and then report to the
President on whether federal ac
tion ee legislation is needed.
One ton of bituminous coal is
equal to five barrels of gasoline in
energy consent,
Goody's
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History’s Tongest con- - W/ RN N Next were nominating speeches. The best was Franklin D. tion: lon
vention was the Dem- \ “‘;u \“ :/ Roosevelts, hailing New York Gov. Al Smith a 5 “the heppy gty Aqude
ocrats’ in 1924 —so. o | \h\‘ warrior of the political battlefield.” It sparked a 73-minute 3 4 m“ we
mous for the foghorn- * -~-‘ o l' ) \ demonstration. Clock-watchers were impressed. Others, 5 & battled fora ma.
ing “Twenty - four gl 0 o \N who were not, rallied around Williom G. McAdoo, * - « ek jority. For almest
votes for Oscar W, Un- B N\ "““ 0 % v ,‘( bt o 8 three weeks and
derwood” with which &~ || 45 ; l’-»\, Al S ’yb\ d‘ ‘ el 103 ballots, both
Alabama answered ) 2 A g ) M\‘ - T ) HOAE Y, A 8 sides stood firm.
nearly every roll call. ‘i"_ . \é# ; “ E me 2” ‘ P /i) / e The gruelling
A top platform issue '~ Kl Al B N ___m ! \‘ Feh e 4 s struggle ended
was a plank denounc- _ e ‘ B B s @ (o P 2 SR SR with the nomina
ing the Ku Klux Kian. 14| (&%) ey 4 . 7 e A 7 N LS \PY v e ¢S hd tion of comnro-
Toward dawn after an @ A :.1/ .) i . e 7 . }}’?\s\ Rw\ mise candidate
) all-night battle, Wil- ) § N 6 z fo\ |&l\ AN e ~,r!,'fe-'f.“ % \N‘Q /88 'John Dovis, o
liam Jennings Bryan @" Ay | e ‘ VE) 5 X e § %@i Y S e i\,"_g—\ TS E'? New York lawyer.
dramatically prayed ] "oy ¢ 4 ]g‘ =r V) \ AT\ 4 B {eb VG R ITR e#l Though Davis
for Divine Fuidan;e. VN % 7 O\ N\ g _\é‘ "/4 ks %% i bty fi%mfi AL TSPI was capable,
Pl B e ) "’/fif \1( ””7 ( g'i ¥ oy f D T 52 A“‘.f" ;@s‘, { lé F N e e eY| votersdecided to
;?'v'( Kl 4 "“'@"v ) “*\\\ p o \ r \"\'9,2 AT » GRL N OO TR ek Ok SEBUSRE | 'ccp cool with
Ve B 8B" R \SR | P N AN, . 4 //R s SRR H [ f So PR Ra Coolidqe” and
e sy 1] \ N|| B\ §AL PR T e R i
KR (R | e ¢ g ot e VAN ANy R R ety | R L\ VORGSR VA= GOP candidate.
N e RN /\’ W i *’f?ud&’.\\fi Ko 0 uf;m: A R S .
DOGS % 7l
MANY years ago it was gener
ally thought that watchdogs
were supposed to growl at strolling
tramps and keep a variety of mo
lesters away from the henhouse,
But that was normally the limit of
their usefulness.
This has proved to be a far too
limited view of a dog's versatility
as a guardian. We've learned we
can train a dog for almost any type
of specialized protective work—
from army scouting to police work
and guarding industrial plants.
One of the best watchdog storles
we have come across originates in
Chicago. About two years ago, the
big Marshall Field department store
bought three German Shepherd
puppies (one male and two females)
and set out to train them as night
watchmen for the store’s ware
heuse.
Each of the puppies was six
months old and of good pedigree.
A couple of months later a fourth
dog—this one a one-year-old female
—was added. (The older dog was
picked to see if she would be easier
to train; it turned out she was.)
The other day Marshall Field
gave -out a report on how— and
what —the dogs are doing: They
Japan and Chile produce sul
phur in commercial volume fromr
volcanic deposits. !
Crude river boats crossing the
open sea brought black-bearded
Russians to Spitsbergen beginning
about 1715.
On Guard
tour the warehouse, floor by floor,
with a night watchman.
While the watchman stands at a
central station, the dogs cover the
floor thoroughly, each following an
individual beat.
| The dogs turn in “all clear” sig
nals at 30 posts on their beats.
(They have been trained to press
each signal bu?n with their paws.)
They are trained to bark at any
sign of fire, water leakage, or
prowlers.
Field’s reports that bullding pro
tection authorities have come from
as far as Denver and Sst. Louis to
see the dogs in action. It looks as
if the idea will spread.
Another specialized type of watch
man’'s work is being carried on in
Trenton, Missouri, by a dog named
Queenie. She works on the railroad,
checking Chicago, Rock Island &
Pacific trains for hot journal boxes
and leaks in the airbrake lines.
When she finds either of these trou
bles, she stands there barking until
a carman comes along to make the
repairs.
Queenfe makes this qualification,
though: She is strictly a freight-car
inspector. She refuses to have any
tking to do with passenger trains.
At Catile Ranch
lke On Vacation
By The Associated Press
A secluded cattle ranch near
Fraser, Colo., became the Repub
lican capital of the nation today.
Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, the
GOP presidential nominee, is
there is the guest of Aksel Nielsen,
Denver businessman, for a week’s
fishing and vacation.
His plan to ‘“do nothing in a
big way” set the tempo for Re
publican politics as the Democrats
warmed up in Chicago for their
riational convention opening Mon
day.
In Washington, GOP National
Chairman Arthur E. Summerfield
urged Republicans everywhere to
exert “peak efforts” at recruiting
rew workers and new voters.
That is the only road “if Ameri
ac is to be liberated from control
by those who have led us into one
disaster after another,” Summer
field said in a telegram to all na
tional committeemen and commit
teewomen, state chairmen and
women, state vice chairmen.
Gov, Thomas E. Dewey of New
York said on a television program
(Author Meets Critics).last night
that American aid, promised and
not delivered, could have saved
China from the Communists. But,
UNCGEEREE
o
" el '|m‘flz
Reference to corruption, in
fluence peddling and general
crookedness seems to have faded
out of the news. Nothing’s been
done about it, of course, and by
next winter mink coats are
likely to be respectable again.
BOYS' BATHING SUITS
were 295 ....... NOW ... 98c
CIRLS' BATHING SUITS
were 4.95 Now £ ],98
INFANT SHOES
Formerly to 2.50 . .. 1.00
DRESSES—7-12 Range . ..... - 3 Off
176 DRESSES
s Ll L 1.98
139 DRESSES
B T s e 2.98
N S 3 Off
CHILDREN’S SANDALS
T SRR N 14 Price
Gift and 255
Kiddie COB B S College
Shop Avenue
Athens, Georgia
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
Convention Sidelights
he said, “I am sure no one in the
State Department, nor any indi
vidual in this country caused the
fall of Chiang Kai-Shek’s gov
ernment.”
Formosa, the present seat of the
Chinese Nationalist government,
“must be maintained as a symbol
so that overseas Chinese can have
not just one place to go—Com
munism,” Dewey added.
William E. H. Howard of Athens,
Georgia, and New York City, who
since 1947 has been a member of
the staff of the Medhane Alem
School in Addis Ababa, has been
notified that he ig the recipient of
one of the coveted Ralph J. Bun
che Scholarships for study in the
University of Oslo, Norway, for
the summer 1952,
This scholarship, named for the
1950 winner of the Nobel Peace
Prize, is given this year by the
Electro-Chemical and Electro-
Metallurgical Industries of Nor
way. It represents a cultural ex
change between Norway and Am
erica,
Howard’s interest in cultural ex
changes and in the furtherence of
international good will and under=
standing has found rich fields for
expression in his present work at
the Medhane Alem (Savior of the
World) School. The student body
of this school is comprised of boys
from the richest to the humblest
families, for Amhara, Borane, Cal
la and Somali populations, from
Moslem, Coptic, Protestant and
Catholic religious. His Imperial
Majesty, Emperor Haile Selassie
I, is an attentive patron of this
school visiting there frequently
and awarding students personally
for their proficiencies.
Educational Field
Other members of Howard’s
family have also served educa
tional fields. His father, the late
Professor J. P. Howard, taught for
more than fifty years in Athens,
Georgia schools. His sister, Camil
la L. Howard, is Professor of Mo~
dern Languages in Spelman Col
lege in Atlanta, Georgia.
The Ralph J. Bunche Schol
arship is not the first recognition
of Howard’s ability and aims. In
1949 he was one of the first Ful
bright Scholars appointed by the
United States Department of State
to spend a year of graduate study
and research in economics at the
University of Glasgow. During
that year he did a study on ‘“The
Effects of International Trade on
the Economy of Ethiopia”. This
summer in Oslo, Howard plans a
“Comparative Study of The Ed
ucational and Economic Systems
of Scandinavia”. After Norway,
he plans research in institutions in
Sweden and Demark.
With traffic increasing by leaps
and bounds every year, motorists
must realize they can’t cover dis
tances safely in the same times
they could a few years ago. The
Georgia State Patrol tells us traf
fic volumes are seven per cent
bigher than last year.
Vacations are fun but every
year people kill themselves and
others when they try to cover too
much ground in a day and fall
asleep at the wheel. The Georgia
State Patrol asks us tc stop im
mediately for the night when we
feel drowsiness overccming us.
Sleeping drivers don’t often walk
eway from resulting wrecks.
Most of the half million people
who live in the Azores Islands in
the Atlantic Ocean are of Portu
guese origin.
Sposato Services
Held Thursday
Final rites were held for Fran
cis James Sposato on Thursday
morning, 11 o’clock at the grave
side in Evergreen Memorial Park
on the Atlanta highway. Father
Donovan officiated and Bridges
Funeral home had charge of ar
rangements.
Mr. Sposato resided at 1677
Robert Road In Decatur and is
survived by his wife, Mary
Broach Sposato, daughter of Mrs.
Ruth Broach of Athens. His pa
rents, Mr. and Mrs. James Spo
sato, one sister Mrs. Frank Coz
zolino, Westerly, R. 1.; and two
drothers, Angelo Sposato, Wester
ly, and Lt. (jg) John Sposato, U.
S. Navy. i
Attending the funeral from
Westerly, R. 1., were Angelo Spo
sato, brother; Frank Cozzolino,
brother-in-law; Frank Morrone,
James Spizzano, Michael Spizza
no, and Dave Cozzolino, cousins.
Vice-Pres.
(Continued From Page One)
party loyalty “is above reproach.”
And he broke further with his
Southern collegues by making it
clear he would support President
Truman, if Truman should run.
The President has said he won’t be
a candidate under any circum
stances.
“I know of no reason why I
couldn’t support President Truman
for re-election—l supported him in
1948,” Russell declared.
His Taft-Hawey revision pro
posal was called by Russell’s aides
an atiempt to break through into
the Northern states. One of these
aides disclosed that the state
ment was made after a recent
conference between Russell and
President John L. Lewis of the
United Mine Workers.
But if Russell made any impor
tant headway with organized labor
it wasn’t immediately apparent.
Study Reeords
Jack Kroll, head of the ClO’s
Political Action Committee, told
reporters he wasn’t impressed by
the Russell switch. Kroll’s com
ment: “We’ve been kidded by ex
perts for years. We prefer to go by
the voting records.”
Although Russell claimed he will
have 300 delegates on the first bal
lot and will go on from there to
-win, there was no evidence that
he or any other candidate now in
the running is within whistling
distance of the nomination. k
Kefauver, a longtime foe of Taft
-Hartley and an advocate of moves
to cut off Senate debate on civil
rights measures, repeated confi
dent claims of victory.
Kefauver said he might lose
some support in the south by his
stand but that he favors an anti
filibuster proposal advanced by
Sen. Herbert H. Lehman of New
York.
Harriman, running as an al'-out
exponent of the “Fair Deal,” made
no predictions on ballot strength
except to say: “The cause I sup
port.” He said he believes it will
give him the nomination eventual
ly.
Harriman said he doesn’t believe
the convention will retreat from
the 1948 platform stand endorsing
President Truman’s proposals for
a compulsory Fair Employment
Practices Commission.
And there wag evidence that if
it does, it will be only after a
bitter fight.
Funeral Notice
LESSEUDN.—The friends and rel
atives of Mrs. J. D. (Mattie)
Lesseur, Lexington, Ga.; Mr.
and Mrs. W. C. Steele, Lexing
ton, Ga.; Mr. and Mrs. M. A.
Carter, Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Day,
. Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Harrison,
Athens; Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Les
seur, Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Les
seur, Winterville, are invited to
attend the funeral of Mrs. J. D.
(Mattie) Lesseur, Saturday aft
ernoon, July 19th, at three
o'clock from the Winterville
Methodist Church. The follow
ing gentlemen will serve as
. pallbearers and meet at Bern
stein T'uneral Home at . 2:15
o'clock: Mr. J. W. Melton, Mr.
C. D. Melton, Mr. S. S. Melton,
Mr. W. R. Melton, Mr. Frank
McCannon and Mr. Veal Les
seur. Rev. H. A. King and Rev.
J. H. Wyatt will officiate. In
terment will be in Winteryille
cemetery. Bernstein Funeral
Home. .
EVERYWHERE YOU GO,
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CSouth’s
(Continued From Page One)
would weaken it.
Byrd was in telephone commu
nication with Russell yesterday
shortly after news of the Taft-
Hartley criticism put a decided
chill on the convention.
Later Byrd received a telegram
from Russell elaborating his views
on changes in the labor law—
views which obviously didn’t sat
isfy Byrd.
There was some discussion that
the Virginians—with perhaps no
where to turn to a candidate at
Chicago — might find themselves
behind the candidacy of General
Dwight D. Eisenhower,
Four years ago the state Dem
ocratic convention instructed its
delegates tc work for the nomina
tion of Eisenhower for President,
but they socught him then as the
Democratic nominee,
(Continded From Page One)
Adams, nothing done on case;
Sailors, et al vs. Sailors, passed;
Bonei' vs. Benson, verdict in favor
of plainti’f and SSOO damages;
Jordan vs. Jordan, passed; Carnes
vs. Carnes, passed; Tanksley vs.
Tanksley, divorce granted both
parties; Gunter vs. Gunter; con
doned; and Daniel vs. Daniel,
passed.
Fauche vs. Fauche, dismissed
because of no jurisdiction; Walker.
vs. Matthews, passed; two cases of
Andrews vs. Wade, dismissed; and
Hogan Brothers Lumber Conrpany
vs. Gamble, held as first case of
October term.
The Herrington vs. Michael case
was one involving cutting of lum
ber; Sailors, et al vs. Sailors was
an equitable proceeding, and Bo
ney vs. Beuson involved an auto
mobile collision.
Cases calied today in addition to
uncontested civorces were Favors
vs. Favors and Shubert vs. Shu
bert.
Nothing Down
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FRIDAY, JULY 18, 1962,