Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWO
Dr. Truog Speaks
On Work Of
Agronomy Sciences
Dr. Emil Truog, head, Soils De
partment; University of Wiscon
sin, will Speak on “Putting Agrono
mie'Science to Work” at the Wed
nesday morning, August 8, session
of the Agronomy Short Course at
‘the -University of Georgia College
of ‘Agriculture. He will speak again
on ‘the ‘program Thursday.
A native of Wisconsin, Truog
reeaived the B. S. and M. S. de
grees from the University of Wis
consin in 1909 and 1912 respective
ly>-He has been associated with
the Soils Department at his Alma
Mater éontinuously from 1909, en
gaging in research and teaching.
The speaker is a past president
of the American Society of Agro
nomy, and i§ a member of several
sefentific and honorary societies.
He has been active in the develop
ment: of micro-chemical tests
(eommonly called “‘quick tests”)
of. 'Bbil 'to determine fertilizer
néeds. He was a pioneer in the
development of soil science, parti
cularly: soil chemistry, and his
work in the field of fertilizers has
been recognized throughout the
world.
Professor W. O. Collins, head of
the Agronomy Department, Uni
versity of Georgia and chairman
of the Short Course, said, “Dr.
Truog is one of the most outstand
ing authorities on soils in the,
United States”, and urged all per—{
sons interested in agronomic
sgience to attend the meetings. l
4 Other speakers on the Wednes
&y program will include: Dr. Har- l
Teen W Caldwell, president. Uni
\Frsity of Georgia; B. H,
e gt
o PR R . :
e Lewn ants and all other kinds |
i o ants are quickly killed by
is RED CIRCLE ANT KILLER
e Your money will “W“Z
% retunded st you are mnos well ¥
? watisired. At siores 35¢. v ‘
R 0 RO R A . 14 oA
l BENSON'S
© TOP 0" THE HILL
i FOUNT and BAKERY
£ 1202 South Lumpkin
Will Oper
§ Wednesday, August 6th.
" - Stop By '
| You'll Be Suprised
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_ Avtomatic DELCO-HEAT for
l ECO
‘ Delco-Heat Oil Burners are built by General Motors
| ,—the world’s largest and most experienced manufac
turer of fuel burning-equipment. Before you buy any
l { oil burner consider Delco-Heat fuel saving features.
] . e .
: ’. .. », FREE HEATING SURVEY
:e 1 I{{ 4/" S Have your local Deico-Heat
: o| A ‘~' sl B 4 gran dealer make a heating sur-
E A\ TR ” vey in your home. No.obli-
C eStNI . gation.Write or phone your
: { (5t um i) U dealer listed below.
' 7 llf::"f‘:’.:;;fi:;?,: i 4 ' s
¢ L ‘g SEERI DELCO - HEAT
L e §3T J° conversion i
) S 8 OiL BURNER “
(W e :
: Yfyour present heating plant is inadequate,
[ repliciagis wich 5 Delco-Hest Borer A 1 Your SERVICE in Citis
. | or Conditionair,. . for steam, hot water or and Towns frome COAST TO COAST '
; L warm air heating systems. B
k. > . = &
: ‘SEE YOUR LOCAL DELCO-HEAT DEALER -
.
: L. H. BAILEY & SONS
t 845 W. BROAD STREET, PHONE 106
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1 DR. EMIL TRUOG
Hendrickson, project supervisor,
Southern - Piedmont Conservation
Experigment Station, Watkinsville;
Hugh A. Inglis, seed certification
specialist, Georgia Agricultural
Extension Service; and Joel E.
Giddens, head, Soil Testing Serv
ice, University of Georgia.
The afternocon program will con
sist of a tour of the experiment
station at Watkinsville, and at 7
p. m. members of the Georgia Sec
tion of the American Society of
Agronomy and the Soil Science So
ciety of America will hold a din
ner meeting at the Holman Hotel.
The Short Course started Tues
day and will continue ihrough
Thursday. All farmers and other
persons interested in agronomic
subjects are invited to attend the
Short Course, all sessions of which
are scheduled to be held in the
Forestry School Auditorium on the
South Campus of the University.
France produces approximate-
Iy 750 varieties of cheese.
B e T
'Athenians Invited
, - Athenians are invited to hear
the address of John H. Hosch,
jr., vice-presiGgeni, J. Walter
Thompson Company, New York,
N. Y., who speaks before students
of the Henry W. Grady School of
Journalism, Thursday, August 7,
at 10 & m.
Widely known in this section,
Hosch is a native of Gainesville
and a brother of J. Alton Hosch,
dean, University School of Law.
Prominent in business and adver
tising circles for the past decade,
he has held positions as buyer for
Sears-Roebuck and Company,
sales promotion manager, W. F.
Young, Inc.; head of the mer
chandising department, account
executive, and currently vice
president, J. Walter Thompson
Company.
. His appearance at the Grad'y
' School is in conjunction with his
annual visit to his parents In
Gainesville.
Death Takes Mrs.
" . "
Louisa Whitfield;
A ’
Services Wednesday
Mrs. Lovisa Whitefield, well
known resident of near Watkins
ville, died at her Oconee county
home Monday mnight at 9:45
o’clock. Mrs. Whitfield, 75, had
been ill for the past three weeks.
Services are to be conducted
Wednesday afternoon at 3 o’clock
from Whitehall Baptist Church
with Rev A. O. Hood, Holiness
Church pastor, and Rev. Worley
David officiating. Burial will
be in Whitehall cemetery grand
sons of Mrs. Whitfield serving
as pallbearers. McDorman-Brid
ges is in charge of arrangements.
Surviving Mrs. Whitfield is a
daughter Mrs Will Nash, Wat
kinsville; son, H. L. Whitfield,
Danielsville; sister, Mrs. Ida Wil
liams_ Canncn, Ga.; two brothers,
J. G. Whitley, Athens and C. I
Whitley, Roystpn; several nieces
and nephews, eight grandehil
dren and sixteen great-grand
children.
| A native of Gwinnett county.
Mrs. Whitfield resided in Ath
ens and Clarke county for twen
ty years, and then moved to Oc
onee county to make her home
with her daughter, Mrs. Nash.
* She was a devoted member of
the Baptist church and was ac
tively interested in the work of
its women’s organization until her
health failed soime weeks ago.
! Asserts Probers Have
' Overlooked Gifts By ‘
Contractors To Others
t (Continuea Frum lage Une)
3. He paid his “fair share” of
~the bills for the parties he dia
| ettend with Meyer. - ‘
z Chairman Ferguson (R-Mich)
of the subcommittee conducting
thT hearings calleq both Roose
velt and Meyer back today with
the announcement to newsmen
that he wantg to find out wheth
| er Elliott was in New York on
Army orders the week-end of
CAug. 20, 1943.
Roosevelt conceded he . had
| been a guest at night club parties
| given by Meye: at that time but
icontended he helped pay the
i bills.
It was on this date that Roose
velt then an air force colonel
completed drafting a report
lwhich the committee has heard
caused Gen. H. H. Arnold, AAF
commander, to reverse a previous
decision ‘and order 100 of Hughes
photo - reconnaissance planes.
| Thig «contract later was reduced
to two planes.
Elliott told the committee yes
terday he couldn’t . remembe:
whether he was in New York on
a mission to look over camera
equipment or whether he went
there on a week-enq pass. He con
ceded that after his service eover
seas he engaged in “quite a bit of
relaxing.” !
To Picnic Wednesday
The Sunday School of St. Paul’s
Colored Methodist Episcopal
Church is sponsoring a picnic
Wednesday evening and ' the
church is ‘cooperating to make
the event a gala one.
There will be 'games of all
kinds to be played and those
who like to fish can bring rod
and reel.
Church Reporter C. T. Hutch
erson, in anouncing the pienic,
said that everyone wishing {c at
tned the picnic is welcomed and
that transportation to the picnic
grounds will be provided, the
buses and trucks leaving the
church Wednesday at 12 noon
The picnic grounds are about
eight miles out on the Nowhere
Road.
Recent medieal reports revea! that an
amazing number of children (and growne
ups too) may be vietims of Pin-Worms—
often without suspecting what is wrong!
And these pests, living inside the human
body, ean cause real distress.
8o watch out for the warning signs that
may mean Pin-Worms—es i':gy the
lunn&in{h:nm itch. Get jAY S P-W
and follow direetions. ,
P-W is the Pin-Worm vreatment devel
oped in the laboratories of Dr. D. Jayne &
Son, after years of &at(ent research. The
small, essy-to-take P«W tablets act in &
special way to remove Pin-Worms.
Ask your druggist: P'W for Pin-Worms !
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA -~
* Fruit Plate — Salad Style
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FRUIT MACEDOINE
Lettuce o
Orange slices
Honeydew balls
Avocado slices
(‘antalgupe slice{
Arrange. lettuce in five cups on a round chop plate, and fill,
respectively, with orange slices, honeydew halls, avocado slices,
cantaloupe slices and pineapple fingers. Arrange cherries between
the letiuce leaves. Serve with mayonnaise¢ or salad dressing.
THE .
VETERANS CORNER
'~ The questions most frequently !
asked by World War 11 wveterans
about GI business loans were an:w
wered today by the Veterans Ad
ministration. The questiops .and
answers follow: . 3. Ehi
Q. How does a veteran go :about
getting a loan for ‘business pur
poses? i b 8 :
A. As in the case of home loans,
he first must find a bank er
private lender willing to advance’
him -the money. . 1
Q. How much of a - business
loan made by a lender will VA
guarantee, £
A. VA will guarantee 50 per
cent of the loan up to a maximum
of $4,000 if the loan is for the
purchase of businuss real estate
property, and up to $2,000 for
non-real estate business loans,
such as for working capital.
Q. Can the veteran get a guar
anteed loan for any type of bus
iness? : TR
A. If the lender is willing, the
loan may be used ror any legiti
mate business, purpose.
Q. Is there any limit to the
duration of a business loan? ~
A. Non-real estate DBusiness
loans are- repayable in 10 years
or less; real estate loans may run
up to 25 years. San s i
Q. Can a veteran enter into
business with non-veterans and
obtain a guaranteed loan?
A. Yes, provided the inferest of
the veteéran is properly protect
ed, but the guarantee must be
limited to the veteran’s portion of
the business. 4
Q. What interest rates are
lenders permittea to charge on
business loans? t Rl
A. In most cases, 4 percent is
the maximum. However, the in
terest rate may be slightly highet
for certain types of insured busi
ness loans. ;
®. Must the veteran be l@xperi
enced in the line of business he
purposes to enter? ;
A. Experience is an important
element in the success.of the av
erage business. The, veteran
should be able to §hoW a reagon
able expectation of success in his
O3>
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MY |IDEA OF WASTED
ENERGY (S TELLING A
HAIR-RAISING STORY TO
A BALD-HFADED MAN -
We have D. D. T. that will really KILL. INSECTS!
No more confusion about D. D. T. — here’s the sen
sational answer. : :
PESTROY 6% D. D. T., LIQUID COATING
They walk on death when they walk on Pestroy
Pint 69¢ — Quart $1.19
PESTROY 10% D. D. 1,
Pump gun applicator, powder form for bugs, ants,
roaches, etc.
8-Ounce Size 69¢
PESTROY 25% D.D. T.
For farm and commercial use. One quart plus four
quarts water makes five quarts 5% D. D. T.
Quart 98¢
It’ll be a fair wind that blews you here,
where you get the finest.
GHRISTIAN HARDWARE (0.
~ Phone 1946
"Plnaannle Grgore
Bing chérries
Mayonnaise or salad
dressing
. - .
Anti-Jewish-Riots
£ gt g
In British Cities
.
Confinue To Rage
. LONDON, Aug. s—(AP)—Jew
baiting crowds surged through
streets of British: cities last night
for ‘the fourth night in a row amid
inconclusive -indications that their
windew-~smashing demonstrations
might be inspired—-in part, at least
—by members of Fascist-like or
ganizations. TRy
. Thirty~three persons, including
arnumber of awomen, were arrest
ed in Liverpool, where fire en
gines stopd by ready to douse
demonstrators with hoses if the
situation got beyond police con
trol. Several others were arrest
€d;in Manchester and. its suburbs.
Shops windows were . smashed
in, London’s Bethnal '‘Green sec
tion, where many Jews live, and
Communist headquarters in the
same district also »was battered.
Other window=smashing outbreaks
were reported in Newcastle, Colly~
hurst and Chorlton+On~Medlock.
In Birmingham a wall was deco
rated with a sign nearly half a
block long emblazoned with yard
high letters proclaiming:
“Gentiles .arise, resist Jewish
enterprise. Remember Paice and
| Martin.”
Mervyn Paice and Clifford Mar
tin were the two British sergeants
hanged by Jewish Extremists in
Palestine last week in retaliation
for execution of three members
of ‘the Jewish underground.’
The Communist Daily Worker
asserted. that the anti-Jewish
demostrations were “inspired by
organized gangs who, like Hitler,
have .embraced anti-semitism and
who ery the name of Sir Oswald
Mosley from street corners.” It
called on Home Secretary Chuter
Ede to suppress these activities.
venture, ‘'
«(Veterans wishing further
inforrhation about veteran’s
benefits: may have their
«questions personally answer
ed by visiting a Contact Rep
resentative at the VA Con
tact ‘Office, 144 North Jack
son street, Athens).
KILL
THOSE
INSECTS!
uqup contn
Veterans’ Vocational
Education Program
Begins In New Building
(Continued From Page One)
and overhaul.
| Office Equipment Course
' The Office Equipment Course
is in progreess now with 30 train
ees, which is a capacity class.
‘Two t-ainess will complete the
work and go on the job this
month and two veterans on the
waiting list will receive instruc
tion. The Office Equipment Re
pair shop is equipped with type
writers, dictaphones, and all
types of mechanical office equip
ment,
A mechanical drawing and
drafting room is equipped with
20 desks for use in all technical
trades. Equipment for the Re
frigeration couse has not yet
been completed.
Three offices provide for th#
Vocational School Administ-ators
and the Veterans Coordinator,
Dean Beacham is instructor in
the Office Equipment Repair
Shop and Ed Bearden, who was
ascaciated with the Vocational
Education Division here before
Wold War 11, is instructor of the
Aireraft Engine course.
A larger and more combplete
program is planned for Septem-~
ber with mnore inectrusrtors anA
equipment, City School Superin
téndent B. M. Grier, announced,
One phase of the September
program is the proposed Com
me-cial course. The Commercial
course at the Atheng Vocational
School will prepare a person to
hold the following positions:
Secretary, Typist, Record Clerk,
Billing Clerk, Steno-Clerk, Book-
aan"L e | 0|
BLUE RIDGE HAND PAINTED
- WEDNESDAY MORNING AT 9
This is the most beautiful 2ssortment of dinnerware we have ever
been able to offer for sale. The reason we can pass along such
great savings is because we purchased this excellent Chinaware
direct from kiln in very large quantities. It will certainly pay every
housewife to shop this sale Wednesday morning at 9 o’clock—
3rd floor of our store.
9 and 12 Inch Dinner Plates ... .. . .. 25¢
8 Inch Breakfast Plates .. ._._________2o¢
SOO . . o L il L ek R
9 Inch VegetahleDish . ... ... 25
BEBINS D AT
P NG
BB . i
BIE oot R
SHNE & oo T o ke
EXTRA SPECIAL
Table Lamps
:;iftlfirrlggf t\:/I:'luhj:BASE_ LAMPS! $4-95
Gallant-Belk Co
®
Athens Leading Department Store
keeper, File Clerk, Assistant
Credit Manager and Receptionist.‘
The Diversified Training Build
ing is being remodeled to house
‘the Commerecial program. Train
ees will be admitted to class any
time duving the year and certifi
}cates will be awardeq to pupiig
who complete the full course. |
Individuals who have not com
pleted high school, ang desire to
pursue the Commercial course,
Director Hicks states, may com
plete his high school work in the
Vocational School before enroll
ing in the Commercial Work.
Colored Program
Separate trai%ing shops - are
maintained for the 160 colo-ed
veterans now enrolleq in the Vo~
cational School. Courses in Brick
Masonry, Tailoring, Plastering
and Carpenty are being taught.
Two full time classes in Brick
Masonry are being taught with
Joe Turner, colored, as instructor.
The lab was built by the local
| school. ;
A building is now unde- con
struction which will house the
Tailoring, Woodwork and Car
| pentry classes for the colored
i veterans. Plastering classes ave
| being held in the Knox Institute
' building. Raymond Johnson teach
tes Carpentry ang Woodwork, Ed
AZ;[o 5 i 2% b
BAL AR LRI '
“reD WEEMS ¥
«
5 SECHESTRA AND ENTERTAINERS il
S Wi - T . S i
el P Lo LU £ 2 WOODRUFF HALL
x*q}"" H: Sha kK. AUGUST 12—9 - 1 A. M.
TUESDAY, AUGUST 5, 1947
Peek teacheg Plastering ang Er
nest and Crawford Cobb teach
Tailoing. All are colored in
structors.
A .
| | '3
¥3 5 !
T
|FOR-LOANS!
|
i e et
l Loans S6O to S2OOO
| \oan & Investment
| » CORPORATION
Rm. 102, Shackleford Bidg.
; 215 COLLEGE AVE., ATHENS, GA, /
« Telephone 1371
i Community Investment Certificates Pay 39, Per Annum