Newspaper Page Text
PAGE SIX-A
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-, Here's a Peek Inside Peacetime Version of the B-29 &
g: Length, 110 ft., 4 in, . !
' Transcontinental screw is I ‘ '
ok - operating members, 2 stew- j {
il With standord arrangement, 80 passengers; special ards; trans-ocean, 4 operat- i
o b commuter version, 114 passengers; as sleeper, takes 65 ing, 3 stewards ‘ {
R day passengers, 30 berths plus 14 lounge seats. Main . {
he passenger cabin is 7412 feet long; air-conditioned ¢ . l ,
SR i Semi-private compartment} 7 f 4
i s aft of control cabin; seats ki
E ED eight, convertible to sleep- 4
\\\ ing compartment |
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g. : : V____ s——s b o —-& ‘ L z ; 3 . s :
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: S h BH Four Pratt & Whitney Wasp Major en- [OS e S it 8 Corgo, 900 cu. ft., 9000 B
‘ (-;’3055%.!9!) L gines, each of 3500 hp., produce top speed S (s s 011-cargo plane, |
! : a of 400 mph, with cruising speed 340 mph Wingspread, 141 ft., 3 in. takes 40,000-b. payioad i
i : R ; " L = i
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| Peacetime brother of the famous Boeing B-29 Superfortress and the C-97 military transport is the |
| 'new Boeing 377 Stratoecruiser, pictured in cutaway model and sketched above. The double-deck lux- |
i wury airliner, largest modern four-engine land transport yet built, cruises at altitudes up to 30,000 feet |
i and has a range up to 4200 miles. Its builders say it can make an economical nonstop flight from New |
i\\}forkvto‘ London in 111 hours, Stratocruisers now being built are scheduled for delivery next fall. |
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|B . G p ton
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Auailable FGor “Home Coming
OF COURSE AT
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jl Bl Whltes in Athens
295 College Ave:iue ! Phone 1479
JUST ARRIVED
® All The Time. it * 31
® Love On A Greyhound Bus.
® South America Take It Away.
® Just The Other Day. ’
® |'ve Got You Under My Skin. _
® Cotta Get Me Somebody To Love.
® You Are Too Beautiful. '+ .«
Wave To Me, My Lady. _
~~ SHE BANNER-AERALYD, ATHAENS, GEORGIA.
’Ag Coliege Inifiates
Broiler Breeding
And Tesfing Project
A Broiler Breeding and Test
ing project has been initiated at
the University of Georgia College
of Agriculture, Prof. J. C. Bell,
'head of the Pouliry Department,
»as announced.
Sponsored bv the Poultry De
partment, the project started Oc
’tober 1 and wil: continue until
June 30. 1947. It is the first of
its kind to be carried on in the
South. and. according to Prof.
Bell. ‘4t is expected to meet with
approval ‘since it will provide
information that cannot be se
cured in any other way.”
The project-is designed to pro
mote progress in tae develop
ment. of a more efficient meat
chicken. All entries are from pri
vate breeders, the department
head stated, -and records will be
¥#>t of the ‘individual birds,
trapnesting {being ‘uied.
Three times during the con=
test. eggs from the individual
birde will be hatched and tae
progenv will be raised to deter
mine the progress that is be=-
ing made lin developing a better
meat-tyne bird.
} Alreadv ten entries have been
registered: several of them are
from Georgia breeders, the oth
'ers chiefly from Massacausetts
‘and New Hampshire.
| Each entry consists of ‘thirty
puilets and three cockerels, the
pullets being under seven months
of age. Breeds entered - in-the
contest include Production Reds;
‘meat-type New = Hampsaires;
yWhite Plymouth Rocks; and New
‘Hampshire femaleg and Barred
‘Plymouth Rock maley.
" Prof. Bell explaned that an
attempt has been made to set up
the project so it will include the
performance of the parent stock
as well as that of the offspring.
He feels that the two must g 0
right along together in the de
velopmenit of a more efficient
meat chicken. As a means of
accomplishing this objective, he
explained. records will be kept
of egg size. body weight, brood
iness. feed consumption, morali=
tv and cause of death in the
breeding stock: data will be tak
en on rate of growth, feed con
sumr¥ion. mortality, feataering,
dressed grade, and dressing per
centage of the offsprings. All
data will be summarized on a
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Million Dollar Project:
UNIVERSITY SCIENTISTS WORKING
ON FIVE YEAR PLANTO
LIFT STATE OUT OF AG DOLDRUMS
By PAUL SIMMONS
GRIFFIN, Ga., Oct. 31.—(AP)
—Scientists and educators of the
Univeristy System. today tackled
the job of lifting Georgia from
the agricultural doldrums through
a million dollar, five-year re
search program.
They met at the Georgia Ex
periment Station under the: chair
manship of Director H. P. Stucky
and_explored almost every likely
possibility of raising the level of
Georgia farm operations.
No less than 70 projects, rang
ing from $1,400 for studying con
sumer preference for field peas
for table use to $60,000 for im
proving the marketing of flue
cured tobacco, were outlined by
Dr. Stucky for addition or expan
sion as the program progresses.
. A Full List 1
The projects list ran the gamut
of Georgia farm life. It included,
to name only a few titles: farmer
cooperatives, milk supply, live
stock, poultry, vegetable growing
and marketing, curb marketing,
freezer locker development, pecan
marketing, small grains, seed
crops, cotton, peanuts, farm me
chanization, tenure contracts,
eradication of noxious weeds, le
gumes, forage, pastures, insect
and disease control, peanut pro
cessing, muscadine grapes and
pears, and human nutrition.
“It is not that we are sitting
still ‘in pushing Georgia agricul
ture forward,” said Dr. Stucky in
emphasizing .the necessity of ex
panded research. It is a question
of pressing forward more rapidly.
Other states are advancing—some
of them veéry creditably — we
must keep up with progress. To
}progeny test basis.
Results of tae tests will be
available to all interesteq poul
try raisers upon completion of
the project, Prof. Bell said. He
predicted that the wproject will
in the long run mean as much
to the meat oroducer as tae Lay
4ng Tests have meant to the egg
producer.
do that, we must take leadership
in certain fields.” 1
As an example of what he|
meant, the Experiment Station
director cited Georgia’s loss of
leadership. in carload lots of‘
sweet potato shipments. Louisiana
he said is now making Georgia
“look small” in that respect. Per
sistent down-to-earth stuay in;
potato harvesting, curing and
marketing methods are necessary,
he added, to regain the lead in
this profitable line. ‘
Money Problem
One of the first problems of
the research leaders will be to
make a showing before the legis
lature to obtain state funds to
'match federal money for the
studies. To secure upwards of
15500,00’0, maximum expected to
be available from the federal
'government within five years, an
equal or near equal amount must
lbe put up by the state.
" Members " of the research
group said, however, that they
felt “when the crying need” for
improving the lot of Georgia
farmers was made clear the task
of c¢btaining legislative appropri
ations, even in competition with
other agencies, would not be im
possible. '
Upwards of 25 of the Univer
sity System personnel participat
'ed in the program planning con
'ferences. They included in addi
‘tion* to Dr., Stucky, L. R. Siebert,
secretary to the Board of Regents;
(7 ..
YIS
R e ' § § B y
L9v i i
p A Disappeareéd Overnight
/’,\ ¢ Blackheads too. No waiting
‘\\~~ @S Ves, it is true, there is a safe,
%Q“ 5 "7 harmless, medicated liquid called
7 KLEEREX that dries up pimples |
Yy overnight as it acts to loosen and remove ‘
P ugly blackheads. Those who followed sim
/ ple directions and applied Kleerex upon
retiring were amaziuflysurprised when they
found their pimples and blackheads had disappeared. |
These users enthusiastically praise Kleerex and |
claim they are no longer embarrassed ONLY l
and are now happy with their cleap |
complexions. Use Kleerex. If one ap- @
plication does not satisfy, you ?et C
double your money Inc{. Ask for
Kleerex today, sure, <
CROW’'S DRUG STORE
Director .George . King of the
Coastal - Plain Experiment Sta
tion, Tifton; Director Gerald Ros
selot’ of the Georgia Tech Engi
neering Experiment Station; At~
lanta; Dean Paul W. Chapman of
gt
' 1009 WOOL SUITS
. Hardwick Woolen Mills all wool eclothing for men
and boys is now available in new c%ors, patterns,
materials in good sizes; as well as ntimerous other
wanted items of wearing apparel such as pants,
dress and sport coats, wool and leather jackets, sport
shirts (long sleeves), shoes and hats — in‘fact most _
anything you need and all at new LOW ERI@S! |
2 ‘
WALTER DOOLITTLE'S CLOTHING STORE
433 East Broad Street . Bthens, Ga.
|, GET'YOUR CAR §;
"READY FOR WINTER
~ WE WILL GIVE YOU
EXPERT SERVICE
- @ RADIATO‘R‘kREPA.IRING \
! set Vil
New and &fid Radiators for Sale -
COLLIERS
RADIATOR & WELDING “ORKS
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1946,
the College of Agriculture, Ath.
ens; L. I. Skinner, assistant direc
tor of the Extension Service, At}
ens; and Director John E. Bailey
of the Mountain Experiment Sta«
tion, Blairsville, " *