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PAGE SIX
Two Two-Pistol Officials May Turn
Out Stars Of Screwy-Looey (age Game
_iThe basketball buffoonery of
Tuesday night at the high school
n will be officiated by a cou
e of professionals who will do
r level best to hold down in
fractions of all rules. Pop Pear
son, the mental marble of “Y”
hfi.e‘, and Sam Wilson, the
whistling man and local game
soloist, are to be the referees and
will personally challenge every
attempt of the White Bears and
the Red Elephants to mop up the
place with each other.
All the mopping up will have
to be done by the teamn managers,
the 3pecialists, Presto Almand
and B. A. Grier (Boyce will be
Scientist
' HORIZONTAL
1,7 Pictured
, U, 8. scientist
13 Harvester
14 Interstice |
;15 Mine entrance
116 Musical work
{l9 Goddess of’
. ' discord
120 Source of light
121 Steeples
23 First woman
24 From (prefix)
25 Preposition
28 He serves ——
directsi of the
National
Bureau of
Standards
,28 Man's
I nickname
: 20 Drain
! 3% Soiled
|3B Anger
34 Dip into water
35 Sawmill truck
37 Elude
40 Comparative
f o suffix |
+ 41 Diminutive
t o suffix
42 Compass point
I 43 Chemical
! suffix
|44 Feline
:fl :ytrells
51 Literary scraps
f!é Of the ear
‘54 Fly
55 Narrow strip
156 State of mind
L{g;h‘emical salt
60 Dark place
(myth.)
61 Gazes fixedly
VERTICAL
1 Rubs out
2 Infer
3 Stars in Ursa
Major
4 Likely
H Anent
6 Let fall
7 Container
8 Either
9 Born
10 French
painter
11 Palestine
mouniain
12 English
village
17 Mixed type
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COPR. 1948 BY NEA SERVICE, INC. T, M. REG. U. S. PAT, OFF. 4—6
“They've been fighting for a week, so when she dashed
out today with a grip | thought sure | had a house for
e, You—but it was only laundry!"
57 : % : 5 L eit S EOR
CARNIVAL
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faet / A-64% |
’ OOPR. 1948 BY NEA SERVICE. ING. T. M. REG. U. S. PAT. CFF. ~’
)\‘_“wa then, just let yourself go! Does a man good to get
“\_ 8 chance to complain once in a while, doesn't it?"
Boyce). A solicitor and a school
superintendent were thought to
be good men for any and all
kinds of clean-up jobs. So, these
two are hoarding vitaming for
overtime duty Tuesday night
pushing brooms and wielding
dust pans. Their energy and en
terprise will contribute to every
one’s enjoyment of FATHER'S
FRAY.
Prizes are to be given away at
this showing of male madness
and frivalous filies. Who is giv
ing them and what they are for
is 1o be one of the surprises of
the proceedings of the twentieth
April evening. But they are all
Answer. (o Previous Puzzle
Bl = RINET |8 lgb%,
SREICE TN oA TE
T;%,g"[é oéxL.'EriwA ;%
TLLARIE |LAVERNHDIETE wf
L i
56 J,\*r’é ADREWS 5 1 4
AL CEAAIL
ARSI T O
flg&:,fl SIISITIERS
11 REND T«’TST
39 Puffs up
45 Weary . ¢
47 Employs | |
48 Artificial |
language - |
49 Georgia (ab.)
50 Love god ',
51 Wing-shaped
53 Vehicle ’
55 Ocean
57 Lutecium A
(ab.) AR
59 Lieutenant |
(ab)
18 Abraham'’s
home
21 Thorough
fares
22 Makes 3
unhappy
25 Eagle's nest
27 Smooth
30 False hair
32 Watering
place
35 Grow to be
36 Speaker
aeCve
—By Galbraith
~By Dick Turner
things well worth working for
and will be the envy of all, What
man wouldn’t want a lovely pair
of nylons, well-filled? Or what
woman wouldn’'t dearly love a
nice tie—around the right neck?
Music, high and low, fore and
aft, sharp and flat, will be fur
nished by the High School band.
Those kids will have to make up
for all the wind the Hoople
hoopsters lack. ‘
Both Reds and Whites are
wholeheartedly optimistic over
their chances to upset the oppo
sition. Rivalry is keen and is be
ing capitalized on by the intre
pid coaches. Beefy and Arnold
are rounding their charges into
ship-shape—broad in the middle
-—and will have them straining
at the ieashes by toss-up time.
Every man is an expert in his
field and his sparkling play will
make the cords swish and snap
from the furious pace.
The water boy — general fac
totum, including mostly face
mopping and tooth replacnig—
Johnny Drewry, is undergoing
strict training for the strenuous
gkirmish and expects to have to
throw in the towel himself be
fore the fracas is finished. His
mighty physique may prove to
be of sterner stuff though and
stand up to the terrific require
ments of the Battle of the Cen
tury, FATHER'S FRAY.
The bout of the basket bust
ers is to go before the public at
eight on the night of April 20,
this very next Tuesday. The
High School gymnasium, seating
capacity 1,000, is the site for the
memorable occasion and the
price of admission is fifty cents
if you are beyond high school
age, twenty-five if under,
—Publicity Chairman.
(Continued from Page Ong.)
9. “Disaster Broadcast from
Cotton Valley,” crisis services by
Station KXAR, MBS affiliate in
Hope, Arkansas — outstanding
public service by a local station.
3. “CBS Views the Press,” Co
lumbia Broadcasting System,—
outstanding reporting and inter
pietation of the News.
(Special Citation Number 2)
“Studio One,” a CBS series—
outstanding in the field of Dra
ma,
4, Elmer Davis American
Broadcasting System — outstand
ing reporting and interpretation
of the News.
5. “Theater Guild on the Air.”
American Broadcasting Company
—outstanding entertainment in
‘Drama. :
6. The Boston Symphony Or
chestra, American Broadcasting
Company—outstanding entertain
ment in music.
7. CBS Documentary Unit Se
ries, Columbia Broadcasting
System-—outstanding educational
program. ‘ :
8. “The Children’s Hour,” se
ries by Station WQQW, Metro
politan Broadcasting Corpora
tion, Washington, D. C. — out~
standing children’s program.
(Special Citation Number 3)
“United Nations Today,” a ser
vice of the United Nations Net
work for Peace. :
The Peabody Awards are de
signed to recognize the most dis
interested and meritorious pub
lic service rendered each year by
the broadcasting industry, and
to perpetuate the memory of
George Foster Peabody, suc
cessful New York banker and
benefactor and life trustee of
lthe University of Georgia. The
University of Georgia Henry W.
Grady School of Journalism,
with the assistance of the Na
tional Association of Broadcas
ters, administers the prizes. They
were first given in 1940.
" .
Planning Service
The Auxiliafy of Wakefield C.
Brunt Post, No. 3910, Veterans of
Foreign Wars, invites the public
to attend services marking the
first apniversary, the services to
be helg,. Sunday afternoon at 4
o’clock at the VFW Club Housée
located at 136 Gleen street. *
The Post, one of the most ac
tive of the colored chapters of
the Veterans ‘of Foreign Wars,
and its woman's auxiliary, are
among the outstanding organiza
tions in the colored patriotic and
civic field here.
FROM POOL TO TABLE
The Albany Hotel, Denver,
Colo., has a pool containing
mountain trout in the center of
its coffee shop. Diners may se
lect the fish they want to eat and
thus be sure it is fresh. ‘
HIGH PRICES |
In 1780, in Boston, butter sold
for sl2 a pound, sugar for $lO a‘
pound, and tea fer S9O a pound,
due to a great decrease in the
value of paper money. -
MOTORISTS' AID
An English inventor devised a
reversing* signal that warns driv
ers in the rear of a motorist's
intention to vack up. The device
automatically sounds a horn and
lights a signal when the car is
shifted into reverse.
KENTUCKY WAS FIRST
The first state to take g direct
part in road building was Ken
tucky, which had a state highway
department as early as 1821, ac
cording to the Encyclopedia Bri
tannica . s |
PLANT PATENTS
More than 700 patents. have
been issued on plants since the
passage of an act in 1930. Plant
patent No. 1 was granted on a
climbing rose Aug, 18, 1941,
SYHE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENE, GEORGIA
'Shorty Bell
Lok finesion
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Mickey Rooney stars an an
energetic 'newspaperman in
“Shorty Bell,” new CRS “novel
for radio””
HENSON '
(Continnea From Page One) 1
American Legation in Damascus. 1
In Washington, the news service
said, the State Department said
it had neo official word but as
sumed Henderson was George D.
Henderson, recently transferred
to Dhahran,Saudi Arabia, as an
American diplomatic official.
While there was no immediate
explanation of the tragedy, the
Associated Press said that the
Constellation, “Empress of the
Skies,” crashed almost half-a
mile short of its landing runway,
falling into flaming wreckage
2,400 feet from the runway. The
plane was making a routine in
strument approach, the story
added. T o dikee
3-Mile Visibility
Basil Warnock, American
ovefseas airlines stationmaster at
Shannon, said weather observers
reported a three-mile visibility
at the time of the crash—2:34
GMT. (9:34 p. m. Wednesday
EST). Other sources the story
said, placed the ceiling at about
400 feet.
The plane was bound for Cal
cutta to New 7 York, the story
said, adding that the dead in
cluded the crew of ten, five Ital
ians, two Tlndians, a Frenchman,
an “Englishman, a stateless youth
and the ' nineteen Americans.
[ Flight Engineer Albert C. Grot
tle, 33, was a native of Hungary.
He was graduated from the Uni
versity of' Alabama in 1941.
LIKE HIGH WINDS
Mountain goats could not sur
vive the winters hitth up in their
rocky abodes werg it not for rag
ing winds. Without wind to
sweep away the snow f’in spots
! the animals would be unable to
‘reach the ‘scanty moss apd lichen
plants on which they live.
’ THEIR DRAWBACK
' If infectious .diseases were
eliminated, all parts of the trop
ics would be suitable for habita
tion and agriculture, according to
the Enecyclopedia Britanbica.
W‘"\
GO AHEAD
WITH A
PIEDMONT
Molors, Inc.
GUARANTEED
USED CAR
3872 E. Hancock Ave.
Phones 2177, 2723
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
S . = " » »,/,7
7 223 NOU'RE ALWAYS lIN FRONT, ¢
A JEROSHAPHAT/ « LOOK, 7} You 7
% TWIGGS! MR. VEECK 6A\/SL») -gzs ~ g&ggfi, ,L\Kt;:,grf_f\‘/-&es‘ggl /¢
~{ KEEP THE #I,OOO/-«1 @ : 4 Sy %
A <'WE'RE FARMING OSCAR.OUT 4 MONEY You co%vé% \\;J%QU%E A
Q) 4w HANK GREENBERG THINKS ) ASPEC“:AEES‘T?\\ Cinoat J T
Y 1 CAN HOLD WIS DALY - o |
Al INTAKE DOWNTOFIVE |-FA 3% - . ;
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”%”:‘ &”f 48 RATTLING FANS
| uframeus r, e - I\ THE KITCHEN= :
(Contlnued Frem Page One)
The President said with a smile
that the magazine knew a lot of
things he didn’t know, if that were
Repeated By Popular Request!
Frid d Saturday Only!
riday and Jaturday Uniy!
- Womens and Juniors
{J(.‘ »\% * :;%n ? :’ V
3 4. < |
e AAR
: 5 75?“‘ ‘ \:} Rd ; d
AR From 10.95 Up Reduce
| 3/X %
j NG gl : e
| ekl BORS ~ W
| e o \55%5
7 | % {W ¢ s
’ —_— (a 4 /Y
{%;%vy SN e
NO EXCHANGES --- NO REFUNDS g N\
; . _‘é§? 3: "- E .‘:‘s *F -
We are repeating our last week’s special sale of all _gg :
women’s and junior dresses priced from 10.95 up £ \*v;-";i
because of the many requests we have had. We have (‘,M ‘ 7
one of the largest and most complete assortment of &f’*’&f’% ’
dresses for you to select frgm we have been able to E}*;\& e '
offer in many years. it wiii cerfainly pay you to take *—“-Rr;:fi’*é‘**———‘ :
advantage of these savings. ‘ .
; i £ ”«*’%&
. ; =
%|| - 4 2
b Athens Leading Department Store
—With MAJOR HOOPLE
true.
Mr. Truman said flatly he does
not intend to send Eisenhower to
see Soviet Premier Stalin. He was
told the magazine also had report
ed that he would.
Mr. Truman would not comment
| on Harold Stassen’s victory in the
| Republican voting in Nerbaska.
He said smilingly that he was
unanimously re-elected in the
Democratic primary. : ‘
TASTELESS “BANANA” |
The “psiang-suribu,” or *“Kking
banana,” tree has its fruit grow
ing directly from the trunk. The
lavger the tree, the larger the
QUT OUR WAY
-/ BUT, SOPA, I DONT GO WITH NO \ ‘
1 PROMISED . DUDE WITH A PAIR O
: TH GENTLEMAN THEM MOUNTAIN
g YoU'D TAKE CHEATERS --HE WON'T o=o
HIM INTO \ BE ABLE TO TEND TO 7[V //r :
¢ BURRO WHERE HE IS, WITH- [~ 1L
CANYONY/ OUT TENDIN’ TQ BY i
TR : : WHERE HE AIN'TL /2 A
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l ‘ GLASS EACGLES oy T RMWIRELIAMS ]
t - = e COPR. 1948 BY NEA SERVICE, INC. T. M, REC. U. S. PAT. OFF. -’ _
THURSDAY, APRIL 15, 1048
| bunch of bananas. The fruit g
lth.is native Malay Peninsula tre
however, is tasteless and is
eaten by the natives.
Citizens of Sweden pay {y,
| telephone company a small fe,
to be awakfned each morning,
—With J. R. WILLIAMS