Newspaper Page Text
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 30, 1943.
Heyward Allen Motors To
Hold Formal Opening Here
On Thursday And Friday
Thursday marks the formal
opening of one of the newest and
most modern automotive show
rooms and service departments in
the city.
~ Tomorrow and Friday Heyward
Allen Motor Company, exclusive
dealers for Lincoln and Mercury
automobiles in Athens, will hold
formal opening ceremonies in its
showroom from 8:00 o’clock in the
mornings until 10:00 o’clock in the
evenings to give opportunity to all
citizens of Athens to become ac
quainted with the all new 1949
Lincolns and the revoluntionary
Mercury automobiles.
Entertainment during the show
ings Thursday and Friday will in
clude serving of delicious refresh
ments, music, and awarding of free
prizes to visitors.
The Allen Motor Company, oc
cupies one of the most modern
automotive dealer huildings in the
city, is fully equipped to service
all makes of automobiles, and
carries a complete line of Lincoln,
Mercury, and V-8 parts.
The owner and manager of the
company, Mr. Allen, is a native of
Birmingham, Ala., and attended
Ramsay High School in that city,
where he was captain of the foot
ball team and an All-Southern
halfback. While at the University
of Georgia, he captained the
Orange Bowl Foothall Team in
1941. Mr. Allen was also a mem
ber of the Blue Key, The Gridiron
Club and made the “Who’s Who”
in American Colleges and Uni
versities. He i’ a member of the
Chi Phi Fraternity. |
He joined the Navy Air Corps
Best Of Luck
HEYWARD ALLEN
We Wish
You A Successful
Future :
W. H. “Bill” Bailey
Plumbing Co.
130 Best Drive
The Athens Lumber Co.
EXTENDS
Hearty Congratulations
to
Mr. Heyward Allen
Upon the Occasion
of the Formal Opening *
of
Heyward Allen Motor Co.
LINCOLN- MERCURY
~ 4 Automotive Dealer
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HEYWARD ALLEN
in 1942, serving in the Pacific area
of combat.
Returning from the service, Mr.
Allen went into the automotive
field in Gainesville, Fla., and re
turned to Athens April 1 of this
year to direct the building of Hey
ward Allen Motor Company.
Mr. and Mrs. Allen and son live
at the Mathis Apartments on
Lumpkin street.
Mr. Allen said that he and his
family were overjoyed to return
to Athens to live, and that the
most pleasant years of their lives
are associated with this city.
Said Mr. Allen, “The people of
Athens are the grandest with
whom I have had the pleasure to
‘work and live,
) Tomorrow and Thursday, the re
sult of many hours of industry on
ithe part of Mr. Allen and associ
ates will be realized when Hey
ward Allen Motor Company for
merly shows to the public the plant
and service department as well as
revolutionary new cars that they
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Heyward-Allen Motor Co.
-~ Extends To Each Of You A
Most Cordial Invitation To
Attend The Formal Opening
Of Your New Lincoln-Mercury
Automotive Dealer.
July Ist and 2nd-9AM to lOPM
| want you to help me celebrate my return to Athens since my gradu- 2
ation from the University of Georgia March 1942. | will be grateful for |
your company at my open house party beginning Thursday July Ist.
| trust that the conduct of my business venture will merit the friend
ship of all.
| shall strive in the daily conduct of my business to always be a worthy
and respected competitor with my fellow automotive dealers. | will ,
work wholeheartedly toward the betterment of Athens and Clarke
county and assist in every possible manner the development of our
trade territory.
HEYWARD ALLEN
REFRESHMENTS FREE PRIZES MUSIC f
THY BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GHORGIA
distribute,
Mr. Allen said <that the new
Mercury and Lincoln are the “two
finest automobiles that I have ever
~offered the public, Both excell in
riding comfort, handling ease, and
enduring performance.”
On hand will be the Mercury,
the Lincoln and the Lincoln
| Cosmopolitan.
ART AGES PROFITABLY
PARIS — (AP) — Towards
the end of his life, a South Sea
Island cemetery Kkeeper turned
down a painting Paul Gauguin
offered him for two and a half
francs (then about half a dollar.)
Recently in this centennial year
of Gauguin’s birth, one of his |
minor early works brought 492,-
350 francs ($1,640) at the Hotel |
Drouot, Paris auction center.
The sale was the first public\
auction in Paris of*a Gauguin
work since 1942, A 13 by 15 inch
lendscape of a scene in Britta
ny, it was painted under the in
{luence of Camille Pissaro, whom
critics now rate below Gauguin.
Paris art experts say that in the
| unlikely event that one of Gau
| guin’s major works went on sale,
| it would easily fetch two to three
million/francs ($6,700 to $10,u00).
\(ln the United States some of
| Gauguin's work have brought two
]und three times that amount).
DISCORD IN THE
CHOIR LOFT
| STOCKHOLM — (AP) —ln
| Ivetofta church in Skane, South.
ern Sweden, a policeman was
posted on the organ-loft to pre
vent fights between the precen
tor and the woman organist dur
ing the divine service.
In a letter to the Church Com
missioners the organist complain
ed: “The old precentor is very
deaf and the possessor of a thun.
PAGE ONE-A
derous voice, He can not follow . .
the organ but pipes in his own »
rong, sometimes before and some- *
times after the music. He is used
to make wry faces and laugh .
derisively at my performance.”
Said the Church Commission
[ ers “The situation is . . . utterly
: embarrassing.”
| The hiss of big snakes like py
| thons and boa constrictors can be
| heard a considerable distance.