THURSDAY, APRIL 15, 1984,
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AWNINGS — Star Mattress and
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nte, Phone 9147. ;
D e
SYECL'\L \ALUES—-—High Qu&llty
ghampoo and Dry Set for 65¢;
Facials §1 to $1.50, Permanents,
$2.50 . and.. up. Ideal Beauty
Shop, Basement' Southern Mu
tual Bldg., Phone 661,
oLD MATTRESSES made over,
renovated, cleaned, re-covered
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vice.. Crawford Mattress & Coal
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OUR METHOD of Dry Cleaning
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TYPEWRITER SUPPLIES—RIib
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T
Lost, Found, Strayed 2
e et
LOST—German Police Dog. Male.
9 months old. With collar. Last
seen near Ag. College. Write or
call C. W. Porterfield, Colbert,
Ga. Reward.
LOST—Bar Pin, set with ame
thyst and diamonds Return to
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FOR SALE
Miscellaneoug for Sale 14
FOR SALE~—Galvanized 5-V Crimp
Rodfing, ‘teing fireproof, re
duces your fire rink, so does the
Rchardson’s HeXagon and Square
Tab Asphalt Shingles. We carry
a complete stock of these mate
rials as well as roll roofing, li
quid and plastic roof cement.
Reroof now and save. Christian
Hardware, Phone 1300,
Remsishabdiadal Boihmorvindal 1. R S
FOR SALE—Gantt Cetton Planter
and Fertilizer Distributors, and
Corn Planters are economical
dependable and save seed, time
and labor. Christlan Hardware
Broad Street, Phone 1300.
FLOWERS FOR SALE—Pyrethrum
and pink daisy chysanthemum.
Now is the time to transplant
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280 Cherokee avenue.
YOU CAN SAVE MONEY by using
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delivers it. Joe Shepherd, Purina
Feed Stores, 383 East Washing
ton street
i FUTOF e e e
MEDICAL BOOKS—Large stock
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FOR SALE—Feed Cornn 10 bush
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bushel bags, 55¢ bushel. Mixed
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CARD OF THANKS
We wish to thank our many £oo¢
f:imls and neighbors for their
“Indness ang good deeds to us di
Mg the illness and' death of our
darling baby, Sunday, April 11,
\\.',. %0 wish to thank = Brother
*‘“'\‘t Save and the quarte‘te for
the beautify] service and songs,
nd especially do we thank the
Atheng Manufacturing employers
for thej, Kindness, and also Bern-
Stein Funerag Home. May Cod’s
)‘ blessing abide with you
Mr. ana Mrs, Jesss follis,
Haze) Hollig
Lucile Carson
“ennie Lea Carson
Dorothy May Carson
| Mandy Doster
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et e e e
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JESTER
100 New Pattern Hats
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Price $2.00, $3.00, $4.00
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METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE CO.
717 SOUTHERN MUTUAL BUILDING
le a Plant Food and Soil Conditioner. Basic Slag Contains
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Basic Slag is good for everything you grow—Flowers, Vegeta
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Very Cheap. Ask for Prices and Free Booklets.
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THE BANNER»H?RALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
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Love Begins At 40
MENCKEN SCOFFED AT TENDER PASSION BUT ROMANCE CAME TO HIM
IN MIDDLE ACE. SINCLAIR LEWIS FINDS LOVE AT 43.
This ig the fourth of a series
of six stories on ‘Love RBegins
at 40,” telling of prominent
personages who found romance
long after the years of their !
youth had passed. Y ‘
BY WILLIS THORNTON |
(NEA Service Staff Correspondent) |
For many vyears Henry Louis“
Mencken was a professional pooh- |
pooher, and there were few things !
he pooh-poohed more vigorously |
than the tender passion. l
The fall of Jericho, therefore, |
was like pushing over a row ot%
dominoes compared to the crash
heard round the world when H. L.!
Mencken blandly annnounced his
forthcoming first mariages—at 45,
the license read; near 50, other
records indicated.
m.jf._:-j s ; i
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: £ - 4
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H. L. Mencken wrote in scoffing vein of love—but at 45 he succumb
ed and marched to the altar with Miss Sara P. Haardt. They are
shown upper right. Romance came once more to Nina Wilcox Put
nam, lower right, at 443, when she married for the third time. And
love began again for Sinclair Lewis at 43, when he wedded Dorothy
Thompson Bard, shown with him above.
Here was the. man who had
laverred ‘that love at any age ‘“is to
be in a perpetual state of anes
thesia.” - “Too many persons mar
ry.” “Church weddings are primi
tive orgies in the worst of taste”
Those 'were Menckenisms on
| marriage, but chucklers searched
vainly through the writings of
Ameriea’s No. 1 bachelor for as®
sertiong that he himself would
never marry. There weren't any.
I+ Wasn't An Orgy
The pooh-poohing nad all been
generalities; facea with the reali
ty, Mencken himself flound that
love—at 45—which lesser men dis
covered years before it could be
gin for him. ;
Inconsistency in Mencken's writ
ings and actions was more appar
ent than real. He had often writ
‘ten, for instance, that women un
der 30 were uninteresting.
Miss Sara P. Haardt, the bride,
was 32. The marriage was held in
the Protestant Episcopal Church of
St. Stephen the Martyr, and was
really wery quiet, in no way a
primitive orgy. i
Mencken and Misg Haardt had
been acquainted for ten years. and
as editor he had accepted some of
her first work for magazine pub
lication.
S Intuition, He Says
H. L. laughed off the interview
ers as good-naturedly as any bride
groom ever did. They failed ut
terly to back him into a corner on
any of his olden peoh-poohings.
“How did I know that I was
enough in love to contemplate and
invite marriage? T can only say
that it was intuition,” Mencken
gspoofed. “The Holy Spirit inform
ed and inspired me)”
“I have no objections to honey
moons, nor to wearing a plug hat.”
“She is getting a husband whose
politeness. has the high polish of
a mirror. The best rule for mar
riage is the best rule for all rela
tions: Be polite.”
Then, in more serious vein, he
added, ‘T have often thought that
in an ideal state marriage should
begin early. But it does not seem
to work out in our ecivilization.”
Tt @oesn't, does it? Though the
modern version would seem to be,
marry early, often, and late.
Sinclair Lewis Weds Again
Sinclair Lewis, whose picture of
voung love in “Arrows Smith is sc
infinitely touching, knews now thaf
there is love also at a later age.
For he was 43 when he went to
the registry office in London with
Dorothy Thompson Bard, and she
became, at 33, the second Mrs
Sinclair Lewis, Both had been di
vorced, Lewis from Grace Hegger
Lewis, the bride from Joseph Bard
No little Dbitterness centered
laround Tewis’ divorce, and his
| book, “Dodsworth,” was followed
shortly by one by the former Mrs
’Lewis. called “Half a Loaf.”
{ Poth were presumed to be dis
|cuised accounts of how the first
| marriage of Lewis collapsed unde:
the tmpacts of social contacts dur
ing a BEuropean trip.
Lewis himself, a little later. a!
a time whén he was having ali
| mory trouble with his former wife
{wrote a plea for ‘“more decent” di-
WM tha¢ “when ¢
] W is m ‘disgever:
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s 0 that they are like two enemies
chained together in a common
‘dungeen, then it is but common
decency to separate them com
rletely anc¢ forever.”
But all this bitterness could not
prevent the Nobel prize winner
ione of the keenest analysts of hu
jman emotions writing today, from
faliing in love again at 43.
AsKked when he became engaged
to Miss Thompson, who is a jour
nalisy ¢f siature in her own right,
’Lewis was quoted ag saying, “Oh,
I should say about 20 minutes af
lter meeting in the Reichstag in
| Berlin!”
So they departed for a honey
moon tour through Scotland and
England with a motor camping
outfit, and the marriage has thus
far been a great success, both be
ifig ‘much engrossed in the up
bringing of a son.
Weds at 76, Father at 77 .
Nina Wilcox Putnam is another
author who found that at 43 she
was still in a mood to contract a
third marriage. Whereas Dr, Rich
ard T. Bly, New York, writer and
president of the Institute for
Economic Research, not only mar
,ried a; 76, but became the father
lot a hoy a year later, also achiev
ing a daughter only a few weeks
ago in his 80th year.
‘ The younger genmeration may
scoff and put their elders on the
shelf at 40. But they won't stay
,there!
Proof is plentiful enough (that
love only begins at 40!
Next: -The Barrymores are the
First Family of tne stage and
e ittt
»
l Railroad Schedules
SEABOARD AIR LINE
Arrival and Departure of Traint
! Athens, Ga.
To and From South and West
Atlanta, Washington, New York
ARRIVE— —DEPAR%
10:08 pm Birmingham 6:33 am
1:28 am Atlanta 4:15 ar
Atlanta
New York-Wash,
3:03 pm Bham-Mem. 2:20 pw¥
To and From North and South
2:20 pm Rich.-Norfolk 3:03 pm
4:15 am Rich.-Norfolk 10:08 pr
New York-Wash.
10:08 pm Birmingham 6:33 am
GAINESVILLE-MI!DLAND
SCHEDULES
Leave Athens
No. 2—for Gamesville— 7:45 an
No. 12—for Cainesville— 10:45 an
No. 11—from Gainesville—lo:oo arn
No. I—from Gainesville— 6:15 prr
GEORGIA RAILROAD
Train 51 Arrives Athens 7:45 ar
Daily Except Sunday
rrain 50 leaves Athens 11:00 am
SOUTHERN RAILWAY
Lula—North—Sßouth
Depart— —Arrvie
6:40 am. 11:20 am
1:80 p.m. 4:20 pm.
Telephone 81
J. L. Cox, Assistant Gereral
Freight-Passenger Agent.
CENTRAL OF GEORGIA
Dally (except Sundays) 6:30 am’
i and 4:16 pn.
Sunday only 7:50 a.m. and 4:00 p.m
IR - Al e B R XST e
Rs L S e e IS
B e e B A et
S S A N T ;g’fé‘ :
RO B ’-:;-:-:1:‘,7:';5;'- e e R
R 2 R R RO
£ L
B B SRR S 0 WSSI
< P IR WG T e R
SR S e e
eRR . b S
EESE 3 R 9 7Re
0 3 2% e ;;5,;;;?
movies, but John wrote “41” on the
marriage register, and started out
on an eminently successful ven
ture for a family of his own.
) oo - s % g . | |
So:) 2 o |
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’w S e t 3 G g P ""?}%‘}Z,S, f,”éj'"\f . ;,/55/ i 3
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3%»",35 %5, i . t Y ‘
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R e o N 2 “’ 3 AR
R .N 8 3 \ 'j/f /’g&“.:‘ ; 7
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Less Allowance for Your Old Tires.
CALL FOR SATURDAY 78!’EC|ALS!
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U. S. ROYAL TIRE STORE v
Telephone 1987 Dave Gordon, Manager 251 E. Broad St
ROAD SERVICE DAY AND NICGHT—PHONE 1987
—CO-OPERATIVE DEALERS—
Poss Service Station BUgi‘_’;%',:flwco_gf;ss’,n'o%fl‘_g Happy Service Station
EXPERT VULCANIZING = woco-PEP — TIOLENE OILS SINCLAIR PRODUCTS
Phone 9275—312 E. Washington St. gy .o 721.700 Lisspidn 8 Bread Phone 9123—Prints Avenr
Streets g.lr
. ' Brunson Motor Co. “
CHEVROLET DEALERS B
Phone 1606—168 W. Washington St. g E
Co-ed Wins Mention in
Nation-wide Contest
In Costume Designing
University of Georgia co-eds
learn not only how to dress them
selves, but also how to dress other
people, and Miss Sara Souther,
daughter of Mrs. Allie Souther of
Gray, and a student in the Univer
sity ScHool of Home Economics,
receives honorable mention in a
nation - wide costume designing
contest, a letter received today by
ers. Bllen P. Rhodes, dean of
! women, made known,
i The contest was conducted by
| Marshall Field and Company, of
}(?hicago. one of the largest depart
| ment stores in the world, and en-
Itrieg were received from thousands
{of girls, representing 264 colleges
|and universities.
! Seventeen University students of
loostume designing entered sketch
es. Mrs. Margaret Blair, agsistant
professor in the School of Home
Feonomics, teaches costume design
at the University.
CUYLER A WALTZ KING
In addition to his grace in the
Cuhe’ cutfield, “Kiki” Cuyler is
also a graceful dancer. He has a
I whole room- full of prizes won for
Ewa’ltzlng. < !
IS your
Line often reported Busy?
Are people frequently getting the “busy” report or signal
when they call your office or place of business? If so, you are
making it difficult for them to do business with you. ;
It is expensive to wait for customers to tell you they are
experiencing delay and trouble in reaching you by telephone.
If you are not sure that your present telephone facilities are
sufficient don’t wait for customers to tell you, call vs. We will
gladly make a thorough investigation to determine if additional
telephone facilities are needed to meet the demands of your
customers.
Trying to get along without proper telephone service is
likely to result in loss of business. So if you are in doubt, call
the telephone business office today. It costs you nothing to be
sure that you have what you need.
SOUTHERN BELL TELEPHONE
AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY
{Atlanfa Girl Passes ‘
; 524 Hours in Coma;
| Hurt in Auto Crash
ATLANTA, Ga—(P)—Close to a
record in the experience of lm
doctors, Miss Nell Bullard has
passed her 624th hour in a comas
tose condition from injuries re
ceived in an automobile accident,
She apparently is aware during
the day time of some things going
on around her bed but doctors “‘
not know whether she under=
stands when someone speaks to
her. Miss Bullard’s eyes are open
but she cannot speak. T g
One doctor a: Grady hospital,
where the girl has been since the
accident, says blood is - probably
seeping into the brain tissues and
causing a pressure which has
deadened her body. o
Records at the hospitel show
only one other case in whiq&t;}fi’;-’
patient has been unconscions
longer than 600 hours—that of &
boy shot through the brain whe
lived {n a coma for 35 days.. .
TAKE OUR TROTTERS
More than 100 thoroughbred
American trotting horses were
purchased in European markets
during 1933, e
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PAGE SEVEN