Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWO
8 . .
4igh School
»fl,_,;? "j = o W@Sdfly N |'g h t
| The Atlhiens High Beauty Parade
wWill be held Wednesday night, No
yember 24, at §:ls, in Mell Audito
rium. It will be sponsored by the
944 Annual and a fashion show
» ,;;;.beff’;pdt,x_sm:ed through the
cour sy of Lesser's Apparel Shop.
Thirty of the prettiest co-eds of
A. H. 8, will participate.
i Those girls entering for the
'senior cthss ' dWnd wearing formal
gowns Will be: June Peßeaugrine,
. Nan Gillesple, Elizabeth Mize,
#Betty Parr, Susan Rice, Catherine
- Stone, Mary Nelle Tae, Hallie Ann
‘Barber and Anne Thurmon. The
{' who will be announecd
later, will have the difficult job of
‘choosing the three “most heauti
' ful” wingers.
';%%{"r!"mm the junior class: Maryj
“ orge Barber. Barbara Blake]y,J‘
i Madge David, Gloria Downs, Eve
llyn Fowler, Ruth Fowler, Patricia.
| Mell, Jackie Sue Sligh, Mary Bob.
" Turner . and Marion West will
" pompete for the title of “the mostl
“'autiful juniors.” They will bhe |
. dressed semi-formally.
" Sophomores. . elected . are Alice
®rwin, Joyce Keen, Theresa Loef,
Martha Anne Sligh, Bobbie Mae
L ey bR
AT TLI piß e
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e ASSORTED :
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e, CHOCOLATES .
N S 2.25
L SET OF 4 ‘
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ASHTRAYS
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681 SHOWER (APS
Sanitary Protection
s WORN INTERNALLY
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"CROW’S SC%SB
THEBESTF S 5 RLBREEN o ?TNE‘E%J&ODE&ERES }
TAo TNAL T s skttina MR 8 [ 11T (T (T ST
Stewart, Kitty Trussell, Jackie
Wells, Gene Wheeler, Beatrice
Williams and Betty Wood. They
will wear sport ciothes and one
‘candidate will be selected.
] - -
| Miss Hazel Taylor
' And Mr. Olofson
%Wed Here Monday
| Mr. and Mrs. John Lee Taylor
{announce the marriage of their
daughter, Hazel Rosena, to Mr.
lOtto Maurice Olofson, on Monday,
November 15.
f The ceremony was performed at
| the home of the bride's parents, on
;I'nivernlty_ Drive, in the preseénce
;o;‘ a few friends. The Rev. Har
| vey C. Holland officiated.
{ Mrs. Olofson attended Athens
{ High School and the University of
’Georgia,. Her mother is the former
Miss Ida Belle Booth of this city,
,a,nd her father, John L. Taylor,
Icame here from Chipley, Fla.
Mr. Olofson is the son of Mr.and
Mrs. O. M. Olofson of Lake Hu
|ron. South Dakota, His mother is
the former Miss Flora Pfeffer of
l(z‘-a.inesville, Ga. A graduate of
lTech High School in Atlanta, he
is located at present with the Lo
|cal Finance Company. :
eee e e )
' BUY WAR BONDS AND
STAMPS AS OFTEN |
— AS YOU CAN |
SAVE ON PRESCRIPTIONS AT CROW’S|
With the Thanksgiving dinner costing a great deal more than it
did last year, your budget will be thankful for these low, low
prices on home drugs, toiletries and accessories . . . things you'll /
need to look your best and feel your best on the holiday — and
every day. So, make a pilmigrage to CROW’S for your favorite nat
ionally advertised brands. You can’t buy them for less anywhere.
AR T AR SN -| 5 DR, SRSy | R e 35T AT T T ST IR TMR S T R P S eBN S R WP
; SPECIALS
.
Sflff ESTHER CREAM .. DB°
TG SHAMPOD - ... 29°
BATH POWDRY - ... ... ©9°
e S
SHAVING QERM .. ... . 17
Fr T i
i~ 25
P?YRHPPZEPSIN-___ S -
LYDIA E, PINGAM'S -89
PHILLID'S MAGNESIA . 29"
B 4%
i 1
DIV OL . ... 98
\pHosphio-sooa .. .. . . 49"
ABDGowsis .89
DOANS PILS - A3e
YOU ARE ALWAYS WELCOME AT CROW'S
Clarke Nutrition Body
Urges Citizens To Make
Food Fight For Freedom
| November is /Food Pights For
Freedom” month. So are Decem
ber, January, February and all the
| rnonths until the war is won. But
!ln November the people have
' heen asked to tackle the problem
of food in a nation-wide program
that will carry through to victory.
We can make Food Fight for
Freedom by carryving out the fol
lowing Bsuggestions:
1. Produce more food of the right
kinds, on farms and in Victory
Gardens. !
2, Conserve food, stop waste,
3. Preserve fresh and perish
able foods.
4. Eat the right foods every day
for health and strength.
8. Substitute p.antilul for
scarce foods in the ciet,
6. Share through rationing, by
refusing to buy or sell rationed
foods without stamps for every
point.
7. Help keep food costs down by
paying or charging no more than
top legal prices. ‘
8. Take active part in commun
ity food projects, inspire others to,
do the same.
9. Put the war's food demands
first, adjusting food habits to war
time conditions. 4
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA,
LT. ALICE WOOD
VISITING HERE
Lt. Alice J. Wood, after being
at the Chemical Warfare School
at REdgewood Arsenal, Maryland,
for four weeks, returned to Ath
ens to spend a week with relatives
and friends.
| *While in Athens, Lieutenant
{ Wood was entertained at many
delightful parties,
[ Accompanied by Miss Emily
Nelson, she spent two days in Au
| gusta with friends. .
l Lieutenant Wood left - Wednes
;da,\' with Miss Sue Fambro for At
lanta to spend the day with Mr.
’;md Mrs. Jerome Stovall and fam
{ily. She left Thursday morning
| for Fort Des Moines, 10., where she
| will be stationed until further or
tdm*&
i - ——— i——
f The first minimum wage-law
‘wafi the New Zealand industrial
| conciliation and arbitration act of
| 1894,
| e
| Peas and beans are wortrwhile
'f«md»s. the Extension Service says.
E e
{
.~ “COLD WAVE” Sweeping the
Country. Report to the Beauty
l Bureau— ;
TAYLOR'S BEAUTY PARLOR
KEEP FIT"
==Y /oua> Y
& P HEALTH )
;/t{l gL YOUR 555'
RETEFE i
BT TN (I],
co LGATE GT. SIZE
DENTAL CREAM S7¢
COLGATE %3
TOOTH POWDER 37 ¢
CASHMERE LG. CAKE
it “Soas 3+27¢
'VA'SE['NE’ LG. #1 SIZE
HAIR TONIC 37¢
H A L o LG. SIZE
siampoo 47¢ [
PALMOLIVE ¢©3 2
SHAVE CREAM 39¢
PALMOLIVE ©T%=
BRUSHLESS 39¢*
COLGATE o=
SHAVE CREAM 39¢*
i CBA OS‘:l M EERTE GY. SIZE
Qu
TALC 33¢
CBASHME'R £ GT. SIZE
OUQUET
LOTION 33¢
*To help win the war—your gov
ernment requires you to furnish
on empty tube —any size or kind
—with marked items.
.' B
TO GUARD 3 Y 4
HEALTH AND BEAUTY
\ s & - ‘A\l'fié
“
4 for 19¢
Change In Meeting
Of Entre Nous Club
Entre Nous will hold their
regular meeting this Monday,
November 22, at_::tm o'elock at
the “Y” Home¥ on Hancock
avenue. The change in time ot
meeting is due to Thanksgiv
ing.
ASTP Crowns
Carroll Magill
Queen At Dance
Cadets in the ASTP unit at the
University of Georgia entertained
Saturday night with a formal
dance at Woodruff Hall. from 8:30
to 12 p. m, To the music of Chuck
Correll and his orchestra, cadets
and their University co-ed dates
danced, climaxing the evening with'
a Grand March led by Cologel and
Mrs. F. M. Armstrong.
Miss Carroll Magill, Pandora
Beauty Queen and elected Sweet
heart of ASTP by popular ballot,
reigned . over the ball, being cere-.
monially crowned early in the
evening,
Cadets Donald - Mosher, Ervin
Tippery, Jack-Bohm and Bernard
Nero served as color guard and
escort, They ecarried and escorted
the National Colors and the Uni
versity flag. .
Varying somewhat from the
usual program at dances on the
campus, every third: dance was
designated as a po-break. ,
L
Mrs. W. M. Kimbro and Mrs. J.
8. Hardin, of Greensboro, were
shopping in Athens last week,
800 o &
Mr. Irvine M. Levy of Chicago,
will arrive in Athens today to visit
his mother, Mrs. B. Levy, and sis
ter, Mrs. M. A. Lesser. A
On Being A
Real Person
(Continued trom Page One
sibility from which he has no right
in any situation, by any excuse,
to exempt himself. We are willing
to accept such responsibility when
we succeed; when by dint of de
cision and effort we achieve a de
sired end, we are sure we had a
share in that.
No Chopin, writing mausic in
the throes of creative agony,
breaking up one quill pen after
another and pacing his room in a
frnezy, could believe that the fin
ished nocturne was mereit the
fated result of ‘genes and general
environment. His eonsecious per
sonal share is obvious.
We " thus accept responsibility
when we succeed; Wwe may not
slough it off when we fail, We
cannot eat our cake and have it
too. Indeed, in the face of diffi=
cult situations, when life is lim
ited in endowment and threatened
Iy circumstance, we most need to
accept our responsibility to be real
persons., i
MONDAY: Man is the riddle of
the universe. . .
FUNERAL NOTICE -
MAYNE. — -The -relatives- and
friends of Mr. and Mrs. George
Stovall Mayne of 259 Finley
street; Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Jackson = Lowe of Marshalville,
‘Ga.; Misg Harriet Emily Mayne
of . Athens; Mr. and Mrs. Cars
well Stovall Mayne of Winston-
Salem, N. C.; Miss Marian Eu-~
genia Mayne of Winston-Salem,
N. C.; Miss Harriet Kose Lowe
of Marshalville, Ga.; Mrs. E. C.
Anderson of Anniston, Ala.; and
Mrs. J. Walter Amis of Athens
are invited to attend the funeral
of Mr. George Stovall Mayne,
Sunday afternoon, November 21,
1943, from the residence at two
trirty (2:30) o'clock. Dr. Har
vey Holland, pastor of ;First
Methodist church, will officiate.
The following gentlemen will
serve as pallbearers and, meet at
~ the . residence at two-fifteen
o'rlock: Mr. Robert C. Ray, Mr.
. W. T. Ray, Mr. E. J. O'Kelly,
Mr. W. T, Sullivan, Mr. Willi
ford Haygood, Mr. . Bannon
~Jones, Mr. C. 8. Taylor and
Mr. L. O. Price, sr. Interment
willl be in the South Wailker
. cemetery, near Madison, Ga.
McDorman-Bridges. 3
MASENCUP. — The friends and
..relatives of Mrs. Mazell Masen~
' cup, Winston-Salem, N. C.; . Mr.
and Mrs. C. T. Duffel, Miss
Lois Duffel, Mr. and Mrs, James
' Yarbrough, Athens; . Mr. and
Mrs. Alfred Edge, Avon Park,
Fla,; Mr. and Mrs. E. O, Car
roll, Winston-Salem, N. C.; Mr.
and Mrs. D. D. Cook, Augus
ta; Mr, and Mrs. Dewey Duf
fell, Athens, are invited to at
tend the funeral of Mrs. Mazell
‘Masencup, Monday afternoon,
November 22nd, at four o'clock
from Bernstein's Chaped. Rev.
W. O. Cruce, pastor of East
Athens Baptist church, and
Rev. Paul Gunnells, pastor of
Oconee Street Methodist church,
will officiate. Interment will be
in Oconee Hill cemetery. Bern
stein Funeral Home. :
SMITH. -— The friends and relas
tives of Mr. and Mrs. F. M.
Smith, 1150 Boulevard; Mr. and
Mrs. W. L. Bradberry, Athens;
Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Robinson,
Philadeiphia, Pa.; Mr. and Mrs,
M. -E. Lee, Lake . City, Fla.;
Mr. W. F: Bmith, U. 8. A.;
Mr. W. T. Carithers, : Colbert,
Ga., are invited to attend the
funeral of Mrs. F. M. (Minnie)
Smith from the West End Bap
itst church (date and hour to be
announced . later). Rev. Allen
Vine, pastor of West End Bap
tist church, will officiate, Inter
ment will be in Carithers cem
. etery. ‘Bernstein Funeral Heome.
“COLD WAVE” Sweeping the
Country. Report to the Beauty
Bureay— i 4
TAYLOR’S BEAUTY PARLOR
e TS B, S B O R R
Private - James ‘K. Carter of
Spence Field, Moultrie, is in Ath
ens on a ten-day leave with his
family. :
bt s 8 ®
Vice-<Consul and Mrs. Howard
Brandon “léft” recéntly for LePaz,
Bolivia, Seuth rAmerica, where
they will be stationed.
i« s @
Mrs, .J. W. Strot, of Rockford,
Illinois, is visiting her sister, Mrs.
Rex Enright, on. Woodlawn Ave
nue, and_is being , shown many
social courtesies. .
ss @ :
The many friends of Mrs. Dale
Hamilton' will Be& sorry to learn of
her illness at' St: Mary’s Hospital.
iy B e
Mrs. .Albert Snelling and. little
daughter, Julia Ann, of Knoxville,
Tenn,, who.. have been visiting
Mrs. Charles M. Snelling, return
ed to Knoxville today. 3
7 R Gt i
Col. and Mfrs. T. H. McHatton,
who have bgen ‘at Daytona Beach,
Fla., will return to Athens Tues-
Bay. 7l ate 5
L NCE s
Mrs. Gordon Jones, of Atlanta,
is the guest of her mother, Mrs.
Ross' Creekmore. i
a %ot o
Misses. Tsabel Wier and Gloria
‘Hunnicutt spent Thursday in At
lanta), o i i
Jerect Sawr
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Lieut. and Mrs. Sam Cain} 4r.
are expected next week from Cairo
where they are visiting Lt. Cain’s
parents to spend a few days with
T 0 THE VOTERS OF THE
SECOND WARD:
Not having been able to speak to each of
you in person, | take this opportunity to
solicit your vote and support at the polls next’
Tuesday. |
As you know,‘l am not a politician in the
generally accepted sense of the word. | have
no axe to grind; but | have lived in this com.
munity all of my life; | was educated in the
public schools of this city; and my sole inter..
est is in the welfare and upbuilding of Ath.,
ens. - “
ALLEN D. WIER
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SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1943
i e ol Lo T RPN T 0
Mr. and Mrs. Johp Hunnim
Lieut. Cain has been transferpeg
from Sacramento, Cal, toy Co}un}.
bia, 8. C. =