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PAGE FOUR-A
ATHENS BANNER-HERALD
!
T
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Honour thy Father and thy Mother, that thy
days may be long upon the iand which the Lord
thy God giveth thee.
Editors Note: This is the third of. four weekly
articles submitted jointly by Mr. Rutherford Coile,
Clarke County School Superintendent, and Mrs.
J. C. Carter, Clarke County Visiting Teacher.
Parent, is your child exclusively your own?
This is a question which frequently arises for
discussion in Clarke County. The answer is, you
may have the final word on what yourchild eats,
what he wears, or what hour he must go to bed—
but your child has a pretector who is not you, This
silent protector is the laws of the State of Georgia
concerning the child’s rights, particularly the Com
pulsory School Attendance Law and the Child Labor
Law. :
The child’s protector is silent as long as you, as
parents, faithfully discharge your duty, but it is
a decidedly forceful speaker when you wilfully fail
to do so. If any parent should neglect his child’s
health, his child’s moral development, or his child’s
opportunity for an education, you, as parents, will
l{ave to answer for it to the state. These laws pro
tect the rights of your child. To assist that parent
who, in his efforts to comply with the laws, might
be handicapped by circumstances beyond his con
trol, the state also made provisions by law for visit
ing teacher services in each school system.
: Parental Responsibility
' You may not be the sole owner of your child, but
you are the sole guardians of his emotional security.
It is your parental responsibility and pleasure to
maintain a wholesome and a happy home in which
your child may develop his fundamental feeling of
security and belonging. Fortunate is that child
whose parent is giving him honest care, affection,
and understanding, and who is setting a good ex
ample for him both in word and deed.
Any parent in Clarke County who is experiencing
difflculty in giving his child these essential féelings
of security and belonging should realize that in the
County Visiting Teacher he has a ready, under
st_';mding, and helpin\g friend. Parent, if you need and
want the help of the Visiting Teacher services to
give your child a better chance to adapt himself to
the complex society in which he must live, and to
b@come a more useful citizen of the community in
which he lives, remember that the services of your
Visiting Teacher are at your command.
','l‘opping the list of campus commandments, made!
up for:girls who’d much rather get off to school on
the right foot than the wrong, is—guess what?
Don’t pack your summer memoriez off to school.
Dreaming of the pool and beach, which will be de
serted even while your chin is on your hand, will
get you nowhere.
This first commnadment and nine others troop
ing behind come from Betty Betz. She not only
writes a book for teen-agers and in their own lan
guage—“ Your Manners Are Showing” is soon to
be published—but she designs clothes for them. Her
cartoons via magazines, murals, stationery and
greeting cards have invaded the homes, haunts and
habits of teenaged America, |
In “Don’t” number twa she warns against that
sad plight of starting school in a disorganized way,
“Square off on the opening day the school program
and the books and supplies needed,” says Betty
Betz, “and you'll be ready for anything that pops.”
No. 3: Do circulate, and meet new friends. That’s
t!fi‘ only way to insure your social security.
f__Uo. 4: Don’t go steady with anyone, though.
Don'’t get tied down with the first drip that drifts
along, just to be sure of a Saturday night date.
N 0.5: Don’t be extravagant with your allowance.
If you must blow in a hunk of money on a gag
sweater, save for it out of your budget. .
No. 6: Don’t pound the pillow when the alarm
clock rings. Few come-latelies to class ever win
Phi Beta Kappa keys.
No. 7: Don’t skip breakfast. If a good breakfast
is the backbone of the worker, it goes ditto for the
student. .
No. 8: Don’t get behind in your home-work.
Somehow, you never catch up.
No. 9: Do get eight hours’ sleep. This kéeps you
from being dopey. :
No. 10: Do pick a sport, and give one hour a
Mtoit.Sportsmakegoodspo_rta, £
TELEPHONES
DAILY MEDIIT ATIONS
Exodus 20:12.
Exclusively Your Child !
Popularity Rules for Girls
BY ALICIA HART
NEA Staff Writer
~ Blaming It On the Press
:r The free press (Western .style) and its pspctitio,n
ers seem to have become exceedingly handy scape
goats for the disgruntled. We note that in recent
days such dissimilar persons as the Soviet journalist
Ilya Ehrenburg and Father Divine have been tak
ing pot-shots at the reporters and their bosses. But
'we are more interested today in the complaint of
Mr. H. Hynd, parliamentary secretary to Britain’s
First LorQ of the Admiralty. B
! Mr. Hynd thinks that newsmen are making things
unduly hard for the British government. “We find
'in the press,” he says, “not only rather queer re
‘ports, as sometimes happens, but also little bits
slipped in here and there—sometimes in a huinorist
column—all little digs at the Labor government.”
Mr. Hynd would probably chide us for lifting
these “little bits” from the body of the speech that
contained them, but they seem to contain the gist
of his complaint. And if we were one of the Labor
government’s many British supporters, we: should
be a little disturbed if we thought that this com
plaint vepresentéd a widespread official feeling.
For Mr. Hynd’s objections seem to betoken a
feeling of uncertainty, if not of discouragement.
That feeling is often revealed in an acute sensiti
vity to criticism and a susceptibility to severe
bruises at the impact of the least unkind word. |
One might be led to believe that since Mr.'Hynd
considers the Labor government’s political cause to
be just, he expects the press to maintain an attitude
of dedicated reverence unmarred by levity or fault
finding. . :
’ Impatience with criticism is natural anq usual,
But the strong politician, sure of poptilar support of
his goals and methods, can afford to ignore the
petty fault-finding and answer his critics sharply
on major issues, That was the technique of the con
fident Mr. Roosevelt and the confident Mr.
Churchill. It is not the technique of Mr. Stalin.
It might seem that Mr. Hynd, instead of giving
rather peevish voice to his grievances, could be
thankful that criticism of his party’s government
finds expression in bits of humor and little digs.
The Labor government cannot be blamed for the
unhappy circumstances under which it ' had so be
gin its reforms. It bravely undértosk an intricate
bit of juggling in which social revolution, physical
and economic reconstruction, continuance of many
traditional Empire policies, and domestic tranquility
were all supposed to beé kept goihg at once. The re
sult to date is a continued low, drab, dismal stand
ard of wartime “austerity” living.
And yet the British remain good-naturedly pati
ent. A reflection of-—and perhaps one reason for—
their cheerfulness is a free press which can act as
a safety valve for their occasional resentment of
continuing hardships and governmental slowness
and mistakes. As long as “little digs” keep on ap
pearing in the public prints, the Attiee government
and Mr, Hynd may have liftle cause to fear any
more sinister expression of criticism and discon
tent.
Rental Housing
As results of the publie housing program con
tinue to be something short of miraculous, it is en
couraging to read that a $150,000,000 program ofi
rental housing by American life insurance com
panies is under way, with dwelling places for 75,-‘
G 0 persons already under constuction or scheduled
for a start within the coming year, 4
One weakness of the federal program seems to
have been its emphasis on home ownership. Many
veterans refused to buy S6OOO houses for under- ‘
standable reason, quay's _‘ma_te‘g_ia) gnd iaboxj‘ costs‘
don’t supply much house for that money. When the
ceiling was lifted to SIO,OOO, many more veterans
felt unable to pay that price, More rental housing
seems a logical solution. ‘
Of course, the life insurance companies have pro
ceeded slowly aind\ conservatively, as behooves the
investors of policy-holders’ money. And of course
the insurance companies’ project is small potatoes
compared with the government program. Neverthe
less it ig good to see that a private investment group
has seen a critical need “and moved in to do some
thing about it, without waiting for the final outcome
of government-industry Wrangling.
Appert, a Paris chef, originated canning. His
method was to place sealed bottles containing the
food in water bath and then bring the water to the
boiling point,
Three distinctive physical areas makg up Arizona
—llofty plateaus and great canyons in the north,
high mountain ranges in the central section and
plains and desert country in the south.
Honey ants of Australia gather sweets from the
mulga tree, a kind of acacia, and choose some of
their own number to be storage vessels. These stor
age ants get so full of honéy they cannot walk.
In late July or early August of each year the Hopi
Indians of northeastérn Arizona stage their annual
snake dances with live, poisonous reptiles. This is
the Hopis’' way of praying for rain. C
‘The founder of the Australian pearling industry
was an American sailor named Tays, who in 1861
hired aborigines to gather pearl shell off beaches
on the northwest coast of Western Australia.
Very young mussels, ealled glochidia, attach
themselves to birds’ feet and feathers and thus get
a free ride to other waters.
The taipan, an Australian snake, is so poisonous
that horses are sa@ to die of its bite withx four
minutes. ' vtßune | G3OO
Bituminous coal in 1945 provided suet ‘for the
heating of more than 13,000,000 homes housing
more than 50,000,000 people.
The Savannah, first U. S, steamer to cross the
Atlantic, was only 320 tons, as compared to the 26,-
000 ton America, largest U. S. merchant ship.
The Murray River of Australia is made navigable
for 500 miles by ‘means',of giant weirs, one of them
570 feet long, which back up the water like dams.
Unlike other members of the deer tribe, both
sexeés of the Barren Ground caribou have horns,
although the horns of the female are shorter than
the male's. =
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Daughtere Gs Mine
By R. Louise Emery NEA SERWCE, INC.
: XXIII
Cecily took a step toward me.
“Aunt Mavis—mother says you
told me what you did tonight be
eause you wanted me to stop lov
ing her. She said you'd always
wanted me. Is that true?”
“It’s true that I always wanted
you,” 1 said. “I saw you in the
hospital even before Della did—
and I wanted you then. But I was
ill and poor—l hadn’t married yet
either. So¢ naturally 1 couldn’t
have you—not for my own, I was
with {A%I great deal while I was
convalescing—you really pulled
me through too I neer got over
wanting you—nol even after Co~
rinna came.” ;
“Until tonight I always thought
that you loved me,” Cecily said
“But now . I knov’ that you've
hated me for a long long, time.”’
“I've hated the way Della
brought you up to kKick people
around. I knew it was all a fairy
tale.”
Cecily walked over to the win
dow and steod there looking out
as if there were anything to be
seen in the darkness.
«1 gave Steve back his ring,”
she = volunteered. I'm not the
same person that I was this morn
ing. I told him it wasn’t fair to
him to b, engaged until we see
what kind of a person I'm going
to be. Maybe he won't like me.
And I'm to upset to think of
marriage now. Maybe later. I'm
so numb that T can’t fee] anything
——ngt even sorry for myself: I
suppose it's shock. But until it
wears off—l don’t know whether
I'm in love or what—"
I felt a pang of pity for Steve
1 saw, as Cecily had seen, that the
girl he had loved wasgone for
ever. Perhaps the old attraction
would hold when the new Cecily
emerged from her chaotic state
but there was no way of fore
telling that now.
--fi&e was no way of knowing.
either, whether Val would pre
fer an ashamed uncertain Cecily
to the arrogant dream girl he had
“I'm not going back to college,”
Cegily said. That’s the first thing
that makes me think I'm not go
ing to be any one to admire. 1
ought to be on, of these chin-up
shoulders-back lasses, but I'm not
I'll have to resign from my so
roriégh-—-’“ :
«Why?” I demanded. “They
don’t know about you.”
“1* know” Cecily said, “Ive
dinged girls out for a lot less than
being born illegitimate, Aunt
Mavis. I dont belong in that
house .any longer.”
égnl—yvturne-d back to me sud-
REDROCK
L Y
Blockin
denly. “Aunt Mavis please let me
stay here tonight if my bed is still
in Corinna’s room.” g
“Of course,” I whispered. My
voice would betray me yet, I
thought. B
“I just want to be with Corinna
tonight,” Cecily said childishly
and began to cry again,
But despit. her grief she slept
long before I did. The memory of
my harshness was a punishing
weight on my heart. And it was
not lightened the next morning
when Cecily and Val met at our
breakfast table, and her poise
deserted her so completely that
she ran {rom the room.
Well, the wedding is over now
Della and I have swept up the
last of the rice as we have done
so many of the tasks concerning.
Cecily together these past months.
Della has not forgiven me but
she has admitted that justice was
on my side—not in words, but by
opening: the doors of her house tc
me—to Corinna, to others whose
background she scorns. She had
no basis any longer for setting
barriades around Cecily on the
claim of superior birth. She would
have driven Cecily from her i*
she had tried and she knew it.
It has taken Cecily a long time
to find herself—jolted as she was
from believing herself superior to
everything but God into an
equally fallacious conviction that
a girl tainted by a beginning like
hers could never again meet any
human being as an equal.
It was Robert, accustomed to
youngsters like Carl and Val, who
brought her out of that dreadful
menta] morass. Val's letter en
couraged her, too—they bore so
unmistakably the imprint of Rob
ert, even though they held Val’s
signature. Val knew the hard up
hill way to a self-cenfidence that
was neither arrogance nor conceit
but a sure knowledge of one’s real
worth.
I was grateful when Steve re
turned on his last furlough before
being sent oveérseas, that Cecily
was well enough emotionally to
welcome him almost as she haa
on otheraccasions. She even ac
cepted a dinner engagement with
nis parents. These were healthy
signs. I still grow faint when 1
realize how near I cameé to break
ing Cecily for all time that night
of her engagement party.
“I suppose she’l] come back
wearing Sieve's ring again,” I
hazarded to Della.
I could accept her choice of
Steve now with equanimity; mar
riage to him would not rob me of
Cecily; Corinna and.l were firmly
entrenched in her life. But my
Red Rock Beverages of Athens, Inc.
#4O West Broad Streed . . mocuman. ‘. Athens Ga,
His Path
heart ached for Val, even though
I liked and respected Steve. He
had been loyalty itself through
Cecily’s crisis.
Della went sour at the hint that
the former engagement might be
renewed. “Steve represents the
things Cecily has always taken
for granted,” she said. “Shp took
his ring last year because she was
mad at Val for washing out. This
year she isn’'t mad at Val.”
“You mean she’s going to—"
“Yes,” said Della” grimly, “It’s
enough to make a dog howl. I've
put in more than 20 years build
ing up to a suitable mariage for
her and you—" :
I don’t remember the rest of it.
I, too had put in 20 years—wait
ing for this moment. When it
came it was too much to bear. I
had to go find Robert.
(To Be Continued)
Thress, Huff Are ™
Speakers Before
Life Underwriters
Two officials of the United
States Veterans Administration
cifice hera were guests of the
Athens Association of Life Un
derwriters at its regular lunch
€cn meeting Friday in |the
Georgian Hotel.
Tae officials were Theodore G.
Thress, executive officer in
charge of the local branch, and
Ernest G. Huff, senior contact
representative,
Mr. Thress spoke briefly and
was followed by Mr. Huff, who
discusseq new changes and ad
ditions in National Service Life
Insurante, and then held a
Guestion-and-answer session.
At the conclosion of the pso
cram. the association again went
or record, as it had, previously
done, in endorsing NSLI whole
heartedly to veterans returning
from service. |
The meeting, with about thir
ty members present, was presid
ed over by the president, J. T.
Wier. o
LETTERS FROM
THE PEOPLE
SIGN YOUR NAME
The Banner-Herald yes
terday received a letter for
publication signed “Six Reg
ular Students.” It is the pol
icy of the letter column not
to print letters without the
_identity of the author. If
' the “Six Regular Students”
will reveal their identity to
this newspaper their letter
will be published.
{ Panama is an Indian word
meaning abounding in fish.
WGAU . 1340 o™
Affiliated With the Columbia Broadcasting System
MOVIE PROGRAMS
FOR THE WEEK '
I'ALACE—
Mon.-Tue. — “Night in Casa
bianca,’ starring Marx. Brothers,
Lois Collier. Unusual Occupa
tions. Rocket to! Mars. News.
Wed.-Thu.-Fri.-Sat. — “00., S.
S." starring Alan Ladd, Geral
dine Fitzgerald. News.
GEORGIA—
Mon.-Tue. — “Seventh Veil,"
starring James Mason, Ann Todd.
News.
Wed.-Thu. — “Dragonwyck,”
starring Gene Tierney, Vincent
Price. News.
Fri.-Sat. — “Cinderella Jones,”
starring Joan Leslie, Robert
Alda. News.
STRAND— .
Mon.-Tue. — “Gay Blades,”
starring Allan Lane: Jean Rog
ers, Fashions for Tomorrow. Hol
iday for Swoestring, Underseas
Spear Fishing.
Wed. — “Crime 2f the Centu
ry.” starring Stephanie Bachelor,
Michael Brown, Cuban Mad
ness. Popular Science.
Thu. — “Walk in the Sun,”
starting Dana Andrews, Richard
Conte. Mes Production.
Fri.-Sat, — “Gentleman From
Texas,” starring Jchnny Mack
Brown. I'll Take Milk. Phantom
Rider No. 12,
RITZ—
Mon.-Tue. — “Mv Renuta
tion.” starring Barbara Stan
wyck, George Brent. Husta My
Monise.
Wed.-Thu. — “Blue Dahlia,”
starrine Alan Ladd, Varoniea
Lzke. Popeye Ala Mode.
Fri.-Sat. — “Ghest of Hidden
Vallev.” starring Buste~ Crabbe.
Hot Spots. Lost City No. 10.
LOCAL-EOLOR MUSIC
PROMISED IN PULLMANS
CHICAGO—A P.—A new note in
railroading is a plan to regale pas
serigers with tunes issuing from
wire recorders, which record
sounds on wire spools that can be
played like phonograph records.
The Pullman - Standard Car
Manufacturing Co. says the pro
grams will have to be arranged to
“fit the locale.” It adds: “Rivers,
creeks and waterfalls may call for
sparkling, tinkling musie. Indian
country may call for music with
the chanting undertone so charac
teristic of the early American In
dian folk and war songs.”
WHEAT HARVESTERS
LIKE COMIC BOOKS
ALLIANCE, Nebr. —(AP) —
The vast army of wheat harves
ters moving north througa Al
liance swept magazine dealers’
shelves bare of pulp magazine
“funnies.”
“Four or five will come in at
a time,” one dealer said, “and
they will buy a nalf dozen dif
ferent varieties. They will trade
«among themselves and practical
lv wear the bool's out before
they toss them away.” ;
_ 150L0D IN A\ v
: N 8 HoOUuURS >,~ o VR
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AT:SIEUNTOIF LY/
Most people are able to take their solo flight
after just 8 [ ours instruction. You can progress at
. your own rate under our experienced instructors.
_ Let us show you how you can learn to fly.
BEN EPPS FIELD PHONE 2715
SOUTHEqSTERN
IR SERVICE, INC,
Why Not Give Us A Trial?
You Will Be Delighted With Your Shoes
If We Rebuild Them.
Our 39 years experience, together with
our ‘modern equipment (the best possible
‘to obtain), and our top quality materiais
enables us to give you the best rebuild job
possible. Our work costs no more than or
dinary work. ;
We carry a complete line of Dog Collars,
Harness, Riding Saddles, Shoe
Polishes, etc. S
MARTIN BROS. SHOE SHOP
151 E. Clayton 459 E. Clayton
" (Next te Kress’) (Below Gallant Belks)
- WE KNOW HOW
SUNDAY, AUGUST 18, 1944,
SONDAY MORNING
7:oo—Sunday Morning Serenade
7:ls—Lancaster Singers of Thy
Day.
7:4s—Spinks Trio,
B:ls—Renfro Valley Folks—
-B:4s—Yesterday, Today and To
morrow.
9:oo—The Bible for Today,
9:ls—Radio Revival Hour.
9:30—01d Time Religion Pro
gram.
10:00—Warren Sweeny & New
(CBS) E
1 0:05—-_—First‘1§aptist ‘Church Foru
» Class - Discussion. .
11:00—musical Lncores,
11:30—Our Church on the Afr,
SUNDAY AFTERNOON
12:15—Rev. C. E. Vaughn,
I:oo—Assignment Home (CBS)
I:3o—Your Sunday Waltz,
2:oo—Columbia Symphony —
Orchestra, |
3:oo—Faith Broadcast, ]‘
3:3o—Summer Electric Hout
(CBS) - |
4:oo—Family. Hour (CBS)
4:3o—Johnny’s * Front Pore
(CBS)
4:4s—William L. Shirer an
News (CBS)
s:oo—Silver Theater (CRS)
s:3o—Viva America—CßS,
SUNDAY NICHT
6:oo—Gene Autry—CßßS,
6:3o—Blondie—CßS,
7:oo—Richard Lawless (CRBS)
7:3o—Crime Doctor—CßS,
7:ss6—Ned Calmer & News CB
B:oo—Meet Corliss Archer—CH
B:3o—Texaco Star Theater—
CBS.
9:oo—Take It or Leave It—Cß
9:3o—We, the People—CßS,
10:00—News and News Analys
—CBS. :
10:15—Your Sunday. Guest.
10:30—Back Home Hour. *
11:00—01d Fashioned Revival
Monr.
12:00—CBS News,
12:05—Sign Off.
From Our North Carolina Factory
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3-4.5-6 ROOM HOMES FHA
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6 ROOMS AND BATH $1995
Permanent, year-round homes. Delivered in com
plete prefabricated, 4-foot sections ready io
erect easily and quickly without skilled labor. We
can also supply interior finish, hardwood flooring,
plumbing fixtures, cabinets, etc.
Send 25c¢ in coin for new, illustrated
“ catolog showing pictures and. plans.
Seabourd Ready-Built Homes, lnc.
wan 330 WALNUT ST, PHILA, 6, PA, ==