Newspaper Page Text
| wenwESDAY, JUNE 20, 1345
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SALE o 5 BIFOCAL GLASSES
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gee Far and Near
with Same Glasses
These fine glasses are
worth several times
this low price. Sturdy,
sood looking engrav
ed Rhodium finish
mounting, complete
with = TORIC stock
Bifocal lenses for
FAR AND NEAR
VISION in the ‘one
pair of glasses. !
LARGEST OPTICIANS IN AMERICA
principals of this firm own a large optical factory and the largest
chain of factory-to-consumer retail optical branches in America.
15-DAY TRIAL MONEY BACK GUARANTEE
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Stores in Principal Cities Founded 1897
224 College Avenue Open Saturday Nights to 9 p. m.
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TRAINED MECHANICS . .. FACTORY-ENGINEERED IPARTS“-‘
J. SWANTON IVY, Inc.
PHONE 1487 E
- . Da’s na syn, zunne:...kave a Coca-Cola
\ : (SAY, THAT'S GREAT!) ;
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friendliness. Everywhere your Yankee doughboy goes, it comes from his gIR a—*fi% og~
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heart in a good old home-town phrase, Have a Coke. Friendliness is bred in 78070 &\ el Ads
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his bone and it bubbles out—like the bubbling goodness of Coca-Cola itself. ‘j%‘:fi:%‘fifi, -tfifiélb‘)al
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good will ...the old home spirit carried across the seas. 352 N o
; JPR You naturally hear Coca-Cola
LOTTLED UNDER AUTMORITY OF THE COCA.COLA COMPANY §Y : ‘g; B called by its friendly abbreviation
< el }’g:_.»‘; Coke”. Both mean the quality prod
ATHENS COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY N .
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& L © 1945 The G-C C 0 e
X/
4
Seamless
Invisible Bifocals
These are not ordi
nary cheap bifocals,
but latest type. Incon
spicuous, invisible,
seamless. Why pay
more? All lenses
ground on preserip
tion of licensed Doc
tor.
;i" A’ -':)",1.“ ‘.;
PR
1 = O, T
* CREDIT .
IF ‘DESIRED
Ll g ¥
CHARGE
R T
TN
PLYMOUTH
YL
SR BR A ERROR SR RN OSE,
like our reasonable prices,
too! Make an appointment
—today!
Preventable Diseases Show Big Drop
In Georgia During Past Ten Years
ATLANTA, June 20 —(AP)—
From the standpoint of “p-even
table” diseases, Georgia today is
(a much safer place in which to
{live than it was ten years ago.
| A survey of statistics compiled
by Dr. C. D. Bowdoin, director
of the Bureau of Preventable
Diseases of the Georgia State
Board of Health, reveals that the
death rates in all but two of
|Georgia’s 12 greatest killers have
Ibeen suubstantially reduced in
the past decade.
Increases in the 1944 death
rate per 100,000 population over
the 1934 rates are shown only
typhus fever and meningitis.
The typhus fever death rate in
creased from 0.9 per 100,000 pop
ulation in 1934 to 2.00 in 1944%.
During the same period, menin
gities deaths per 100,000 were
upped from 0.8 to 1.5. '
Howeve», Georgians need not
,be alarmed, Dr. Bowdoin said,
for a very cicse wWatch is being
kept on both typhus and menin
gitis. This figures showed there
were 1,143 typhus cases report
ted in 1944, resulting in 61
deaths, and 194 meningitis cases
with 50 fatalities.
Cites Figures
On the basis' of 1944 death
rates per 100,000 population,
‘Georgian’s greatest killers in the
field of “preventable” diseases
are: .
Pneumonia, 48.9; tubercuulosis,
345; influenza, 23.3; syphilis,
11.7; pellegra, 4.3; measles, 2.2;
whooping cough, 2.1; typhus and
dysentery, both 2:0; meningitis,
1.6: diphtheria, 1.2; and malavia,
1.1
For comparison, the 1934
deatp rates for 100.000 popuia
tion were:
Pneumonia, 100.8; tuberculosis,
58.9; influenza, 33.6; syphilis,
14.8; pelegra, 11.7; measles, 18.0:
whooping cough, 11.1; typhus 0.2;
dysentery, 7.3; meningitis, 0.3;
dihptheria, 6.3; and malaria, 13.9;
Among children five years of
age, and under, the greatest kills
er is whooping cough, Dr. Bow-
Former Banner-Herald Staffer In
Mariannas Tells Of Athenians There
'BY CPL. J. ARTHUR HARTLEY
. Formerly of Banner-Herald
| News Staff
. SOMEWHERE IN THE MARI
ANNAS—This is a report on Ath
ens boys on one (?f those islands!
officially declared ‘‘secure” but
‘where patrols. are still ferreting
Japs out of their hiding places
almost daily.
This is no vacation wonder spot
and there are no vacationers here
because everybody keeps busy. If
Athenians could visit this place
they would find here more activi
ty. than in a thrill-packed Allan
Ladd movie.
Until we got out here, we didn’t
fully realize how many “little
things,” as well as the big things,
are necessary to carry on this war
against Japan. Of course, not
realizing that, we could not know
how important war bond purchases
are. But we fully realize it now
because one sees the evidence
almost every minute of the day.
| For instance, there’s Hugh Fow
ler, gunner on one of those Super
forts. Suppose not enough bonds
were bought to keep him amply
supplied with those twin fifties
and the neccessary ammunition?
George Hill is sitting there tap
ping out important reports which
are vitally necessary to these B-29
missions, on a teletype machine
that bonds bought. If it were not
for those machines progress would
be slowed terribly.
Take Nolan Orr, passing through
on his way back to the States
doin pointed out, but recent de
velopment of a “very good” vac
cine jg bringing both the number
of cases and the death rate down.
He advised parvents of younger
children to have them vaccinated
againsy whooping cough. - :
Once the scorge of the human
race, smallpox, has been very
nearly eliminated with wide
spread vaccination, Dr. Bowdoin
said, andvthe last reported small
poz death in Georgia was in
1935. One death was ' reported
that year, and one other in 1931
Seven cases were reported in
in 1944, but there no fatalities. .
A second disease with no 1344
deaths recorded was hookworm,
he said, although 3,354 cases
wer, reported in the state last
year. Hookworm’s high point
was 1939 when 20,384 cases were
uncovered.
Major Problem
Typhus fever was first found
in Georgia in 1910, Dr. Bowdoin
reported, and it has increased
until it is now conside*t;:i one of
the major public healt proo
lems. Between 1932 and 1938,
Georgia reported 40.9 per ceni
of all the cases in the United
States. : e
He said a steady increase took
place in the state except ip 195%,
when a decided drop was noted.
This may have been due to a
rodent control project carried
out by the U. S. Biological Sur
vey and the CWA during the
first *three months of the year.
Dr. Bowdoin expleained it is
now generally assumed that ty
phus is spread and transmitied
to man by fleas carried from
place to place by wats. The dis
ease is more prevalent in the
smaller cities and villages, with
th greatest numbe» of cases orig
inating in July, August and Sep
tember.
Ratproofing of homes and
buildings is the final and only
permanent measure of protection
against the rats whose flea-par
asites carry the disease and give
it to man, Dr. Bowdoin aid.
after months of air, duels with the
Japs. Nolan has strafed many a
Jap with his carrier based Corsair.
He'll not only tell you what a
plane that is but he’ll thank war
bonds sincerely for providing him
with it, instead of some inferior
“coffin crate.”
Walter Price knows what war
bonds mean to the fellow out
here. Walter, a medical corpsman
wiht ‘a fleet hospital, has been
treating Okinawa casualties and
with THE BEST OF MEDICAL
SUPPLIES. He, like the rest of
us, know. that bonds made that
word “best” possible. No sub
standard stuff, but the best.
~ And last, I know what bond
purchases mean HOW. How im
‘}portant they are, because a good
‘part of my time i¥ spent with my
ears glued to headsets awaiting
reports over my receiver from
B-29s on another raid over Japan,
If we did not have those receivers
1o listen in on the air-sea rescue
channel, many. more beys would
| be lost.
‘ The above is just a small “thank
you” not to the folks, back home
\ for the bonds they bought and are
}buying. All of us want to make
you proud and you sure help us
lbring this thing to a close quicker
every time you buy a bond.
Mpnmfcrsmrw SKIN & \
OROLINE 5/
WHITE PETROLEUM JELLY ™ 3
THE BPANNFR.HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA ™
SKIN IRRITATIONS OF
S EXTERNAL r AUSE
Tezema, scne pimples, simple n® worm,
tetter, salt rheum, bumps (blackheads),
and .ugly broken-out skin. Millions re
lieve itching, burning and soreness of
these miseries with thissimple home treat
ment. Black and White Ointment goes
to work at once. Aids healing, works the
antiseptic way. 25 years success. 10e,
25¢, 600 sizes. Purchase price refunded
if you're not satisfied. Use only as di
rected. Vital in cleansing is good soap.
Enjoy Black and White S‘iin Soap daily.
Ry T
!( /M g Nfieq '
@mgfls Business
PREPARATION ‘
FOR MARRIAGE .
If men and womeén began their
business or. artistic careers as un
prepared as they do marriage,
their careers would necessarily be
failures. If they pursued their
careers as carelessly and with as
few sacrifices, if they had as lit
tle determination of purpose, and
trusted haphazardly to Iluck as
they do so many times in mar
riage, their careers would come
to a disastrous close,
Happiness comes not by acci
dent but by intelligent effort and
tireless good will and endless
hard work. %
. Not long ago, a young friend of.
mine brought his fiancee to see
mee and to make arrangements
for their wedding. She told me
that she _had just finished her
long training and she was going
to be a nurse. .
“You have spent a lot of time
and effort and thought at that,” I
said. “But what preparation have
you made for marriage? Have.
you thought about it?”
She looked puzzled. “Oh, we'll
work it out all right,” she said
cheerfully.
"“But you could hardly be a
good nurse on that basis, could
you?”
She laughed. “Of course not.”
“Which is more important to
you-—being a good nurse or being
a good wife?” T
“Being a wife . . . Oh, I see,”
she said slowly. “You mean that
marriage is my real life work.
And you don’t think I know much
about it.” |
“Well, do you?” |
She shook her head. |
“It’s going to be a harder job
than nursing,” I péinted out, “and
there aren’t any graduation exer
cises. Your study must go on and
on. You two will find that you
don’t like the same things, you
don’t enjpy the same people, you
are accustomed to spending your
leisure time in different ways.
Learning to adjust to one another
is going to take patience and a
lot of good clear thinking.” -
She nodded. “I'm going t?i dto
my best, and try to get used to
t}iinking"g& marriage as my real
career, my life work.”
Living is an art. It is not a hap
hazard, irresponsible experience.
Like any art, its technique must
be learned, its meaning must be
explored, Divorce is a sign of fail
ure in lllfng, and an excellent
remedy for divorce, as well as for
the unhappy marriages which do
not end in divorce, lies in the'
hands of 'parents of children now
growing up.
We cannot stop the disaster or
prevent it by working from the
wrong end—after marriage. We
can prevent divorce and unhappy
marriage only by preparing our
children for marirage and by
teaching’them from babyhood the
facts of life. We must teach them
self-reliance, independence, the
sanctity of marriage, its spiritual
features, its ethics, its duties, as
well as the liberty that must be
given to both parties if the mar
riage is to last and to be right.
A knowledge of sex and an un
derstanding of the part it plays
in marriage is an essential part
of the preparation for marriage.
Physical attraction is an import
ant part of marriage, but only a
part. A clear knowledge of sex
and a sense of proportion about
it are a protection to every child
or young person on the verge
of marriage. . ;
Whew the child begins to ques
tion you, answer in térms he will
understand. As he grows older,
put into his hands some of the
cgmpetent books which have been
written on the subject. An ig
norant mind is not an innocentl
mind. |
Sex. must not be disregarded.
It should not and it cannot be.
Rut if you teach your child from
the very start the truth about it,
the good and beautiful and nat
ural part it plays in life, the child
will grow up without abnormal
curiosity or exagr"firated carnal
appetites. Marriage will then be
stabilized and entered upon in a
deeper and holier spirit.
Next: Problems of the Wartime
Marriage.
| i i
| FROM EVIL TO NECESSITY
| Smoke, once considered a nec
essary evil by an attacking force,
since it gave away its position,
lnow is being made in ever in
i creasing quantities for use in
sereening troop, ship, and air
[ plane movements.
@L L 3
L~ R T L N L
i -
a‘ Blackheads, Too,"lient Fast
o Yes, it is true, there is a safe,
7&,_;& (7 harmless, medicated liquid called
7 KLEEREX that dries up pimples
‘¥ overnight asit acts to loosen and remove
ugly blackheads. Those who followed sim
ple directions and applied Kleerex upon
retiring were amazingly surprised when they
found their pimples and blackheads had disappeared
These users enthasiasticaliy praise Kileerex and
claim they are no longer embarrassed and are now
happy with their clear complexions. Use Kleerex.
1f one application does not satisfy, you get doubie
' your momey back, Ask for Kieerex today, sure.
.
CROW'S DRUG STORE
T A A ——IRRRISSSRs_=—e e e R o
PALACE— Now Showing 4
h, {' et é g e . . iwwzl
L V g b ; . 24 2 1’;
I 4 Sl REAL PEOPLE in the same scones§ . ¢
d y "¢~ with Donald Duck and his pals!...So °
. A NN utterly amazing, so thrilling, so new a 0 .
R, R / novel that you'l hardly believe what el
Rk K your own eyes see! - - :
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Vi & B . S ® XN e G
} Waer Disney:s :gyr.s
FSL el o S 5
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e he THREE BIRDS OF A FEATHER—ALL OUT FOR THEIR FUN! Z‘‘_ %
BN, PANCHITD - JOECARIEA - DIMALD DUCK €Ay
mfl“ \ and] GTt EURE
S \, Ao MIRANDA - oo (U 7 - ciouek MOLINA Y|-
. ‘«\t:‘\:g?po‘lo \ Released by RKO Radio Pictures Inc. VR : ,%
633:**‘:,& R 9 & 73‘5‘%3 ;
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f‘%fi'@”‘\ 5 ADDED SHORTS “Dark Shadows" |DEA SINCE
sary ee e T wenOW W
g FEATURE STARTS -(;.—‘{—”l:47—-3:15 )
; Lt g DR eD b
9 EORGIA— ‘ o Today-Thursday
4| Mw/fi ITS DEANNA.
i “ J/Oé A m her first “CHN[COWR tr;\xm})]\! wn}\
f the Miace Melodes of JEROME KERN !
SP\ Deami |
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i ‘rt’«‘d 'M;»rlexmrji{?yarr”_‘(,Jhtnrn.u-:'.'". (\(‘"M L with ROBERr PAI(‘E "{?:
FEATURE STARTS —— 1:14—3:16—5:18—7:20—9:22 .w
STRAND— Today
"’ Adventures of Kitty O’'Day”’
L JEAN PARKER —— PETER COOKSON
—Thursday—
A=T . ,QJ
R AL ATAR i e Naal ..
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’ 37 INTERNATIO%L‘IZICTURES, INC. ™y
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W\giis . GYPSY ROSE LEE A\ M 1
« §27 . DINAH SHORE . ;
% RSO @ <
304 the Yokon
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PAGE FIVE
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