Newspaper Page Text
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1948,
L —————————————————————————
Due tolyalmculty of se
curing a speaker the Novem
per meeting of . the Junior
Ladies Garden Club will be
held on the second Wednes
day, November 10, instead of
the first Wednesday.
e e e
A church dinner will be
held at Emmanuel Episcopal
Church November 9, at 7 p.
m. Members wishing to attend
please telephone St. Martha's ‘
Chapter, 2748-R, ot St, Cece
lia, 2115-J.
All friends of the late Miss
Moina Michael, beloved “Pop
py Lady” are invited to at
tend a luncheon at the Geor
gian Hotel, Tuesday, Novem
per 9, at 1 p. m., honoring
distinguished guests present
for the Moina Michael Stamp
sale. Tickets are $1.50 and
reservations may be made
through Saturday, Nov. 6
with Mrs. T. W. Paschall,
phone 1084; Mrs. Marie Flor
ence, phone 1024; or Mrs. A,
D. Ganin, president, American
Legion Auxiliary, phone 1418.
PRS- T et 528
Supper will be served on
Sunday night at the Athens
Country Club, from 7 to 9
o’clock. Members can bring
their friends for supper. |
Meeting of the Board of
Directors of the Young Wo- |
men’s Christian Association,
scheduled for Monday, Nov- ‘
ember 8, has been postponed
until Monday, November 15,
it was announceéd today.
Friendship Class of the
Prince Avenue Baptist church {
will meet on Monday night
in the church-annex, 8 o’clock. ‘
Members are asked to please
bring their. contributions for
the Thanksgiving basket. 1
University Woman’s Club 1
will meet on. Tuesday after
noon, November 9th, four o’-
clock in Dawsen Hall on the
Agricultural . campus. Miss
Mildred Thompson, professor
of History will speak.
There will. be a Church
Family Night Dinner on Tues
day night at the First Pres
byterian Church. A moving
picture, “And Now I See,”
will be shown.
Rev. T. L. Christian of
Danielsvilie, Ga., will be
guest speaker at Holly
Heights Chapel Sunday aft
ernoon, 3 o'clock. The public
is cordially inivited.
e a——
First Christian Church
Missionary meeting is to be
held on Monday afternoon,
Novemberfi,#flm, in the
church parfor:“The Rev. Paul
C. Howle, pastor of the
church, will have charge of
“the program and all members
are urged to be present.
Girl Scout Benefit Bridge
party, Wednesday, November
17, 8 p. m., at the Y. W. C. A.
Tickets are 50 cents each. Call
Msr. Alex McCaskill at 4144-
W for further information.
Bess Johnson Class of First
Methodist Church wili meei
with Mrs. W. D. Crawford,
210 Milledge Heights, Wed
nesday aftéermeon at 3:30
o’clock. All members are urg
ed to attend.
Athens Chapter 268 O. E. S.
will assemble in regular ses
sion Monday evening, 8 o’-
clock. A special program has
been planned honoring Darris
Crawford, Grand Ruth of the
Grand Chapter O. E. S., State
of Georgia. All' members are
expected to be. present and
visiting me,mbers are wel
come, e
Tuckston WSCS will meet
on Tuesday night, 7:30; at the
home of Mrs. Derrell Hancock.
Mrs, George Settle is co-hos
tesses, An interesting program
has been planned and all
members are cordially invited
to attend.
University . Prive Sewing
Club will meet with Mrs. W.
E. Stroud and Mrs. J. M.
Beasley Wednesday morning.
gflm COSMETICS
WF” ... For THE LOOK OF
il 4
lgfiw\ NATURAL LOVELINESS
gy i
Qg :‘é Fashion-right and oh, so luscious
'-:5: \\% g‘wm i% for your skin! Seventeen Cosmet
‘l‘fff-"'"" r' ics impart the radiant freshness
' it shat makes lovely young complex
r ~—~— ."_ ions look lovelier still. Beautiful
8 v % ** packages and gift sefs.
s _"‘: r' s ) . 5 »
s N Lipstick sl, Face Powder $1
fflfl " : Powder Pac 75¢, Lucent Make-up $1
wé’wfi"fiy ;@P Cleansing Cream $1
S w 8 oo Cologne $1.50
§ “‘“/ . “3‘3 ':f’ All prices plus tax
Moon-Winn Drug Co
~ 9 .
197 6:Clagbon = 7 - -~ Phone 67
Notice: Ladies
For
"Pack-A-Towel”
The ladies that are late in
getting their “Pack-O-towel”
bundle in on World Commu
nity Day may bring the towel
to the First Baptist church
during the first part of the
week, as the towels are to be
shipped in latter part of the
week.
#* * *
First Baptist
Circles Meet
ee
On Monday
The Circles of the First Baptist
W. M. S., will meet at four o’clock
Monday afternoon in the homes
as following:
Circle No. 1 with Mss. R. C.
Norman, 337 So. Milledge.
Circle No. 2 with Mrs. T. C.
White, 410 Franklin St.
Circle No 3 with Mrs. Jesse€
Anderson, 470 Milledge Ave.
Circle No. 4 with Mrs. W. W.
Scott, 632 Oglgthorpe Ave.
Circle No. 5 with Mrs. R. E.
Carter, 150 Grady Ave.
Circle No. 6 with Mrs. Bén
Thornton, 1354 So. Milledge Ave.
Circle No. 8 with Mrs. Walker
Matthews, 440 So. Milledge.
Circle No. 9 with Mrs. E. C.
Getzman, 250 So. View Drive.
Cirele No. 10 with Mrs. L. L.
Whitley, Winterville Road.
Circle No. 11 with Mrs. B. O.
Williams, 479 Cobb St.
Circle No. 12 with Mrs. H. C.
Whitworth, 688 King Ave.
Morning Circle, Tuesday a. m.
at 10:30 with Mrs. R. N. Loyd
1989 So. Lumpkin St. _
Int. G. A. will meet Monday
evening at 7:00 o’clock at the
church.
Meeting of the Air Force
Association, originally sche
duled for Wednesday, Novem
ber 10, has been postponed
until Thursday, November 11.
The meeting will be en the
Aviation Department, Memor
al Hall, at 8 p. m. and special
invitation is given all former |
Air Force personnel to attend.
....Athens-Clark County P. T.
A. Council will meet on Wed
nesday, November 10, 10:30
in the Library of the Athens
High School. Plans mapped
out by the Executive Commit
tee of the Council will be dis
cussed and a definite program
adopted. Members of the P.
T. A. Council, include school
principals, P. T. A. presidents,
three representatives from
each school and the officers
of the Council, alse the coun
ty and city school superinten
dents. Officers for this year
are Mrs. L. M. Shadgett, presi
dent; Mrs. D. L. Branyon,
vice-president; Mrs. J. C. Bell
secretary; Mrs. R. T. Scog
gins, treasurer.
Oconee Wesleyan Service
Guild of the Oconee Street
church will meei Thursday
night, 8 o’clock, at the home
of Misses Mary and Lelia
James. All members are cordi
ally invited to attend the in
teresting program.
Business Girls Club will
meet on Tuesday evening,
g:3B at the Y. W, C. A
Home.
The Athens Art Association
will meet on Tuesday night,
November 9, 8 o’clock, in the
Fine Arts Gallery.
William A. L. Sibley, treas
urer Monarch Mills, Union S.
C., will speak on “Steward
ship of Money” Sunday morn
ing at the First Presbyterian
Church, :
Since egg prices usually reach
their peak in November, poultry
men should feed and manage
their flocks to get every possible
egg. The more mash you can get
intc hens, the more eggs you'll
get.
University Woman's Club To Meet
Tuesday, Nov. 9th In Dawson Hall
“ The University of Georgia's
School of Home Economics is hos
tess to the University Women'’s
Club Tuesday, Nov, 9, at 4:00 p.
m. in Dawson Half
Miss Mildred Thompson, Uni
versity Professor of History will
speak. Although Miss Thompson
has spent many years in the North,
she is a native Georgian, born
and reared in Atlanta. She comes
from Vassar College where she
served as Professor of History and
Dean of the College for 25 years.
Her retirement from this post be
came effective last June.
Miss Thompson attended Vas
sar College, did her graduate work
at Columbia University where she
received her Ph. D. degree. She is
the author of a Southern History
ROSALIND RUSSELL EMOTIONAL IN
SUSPENSEFUL DRAMA, 'VELVET TOUCH'
Giving Rosalind Russell another
strong emotional role, ““The Velvet
Touch,” which opens Wednesday
at the Palace Theater, co-star her
with Leo Genn, Claire Trevor and
Sydney Greenstreet in the story
of a woman who endeavors to es
cape the consequences of a homi
cide of which she is guilty. Her
performance comes closely after
her recent role in Mourning Be
comes Electra. \
The RKO Radio release has a
theatrical setting, with Miss Rus
sell in the role of Valeria Stanton,
a reigning Broadway favorite. In
the heat of a quarrel with her pre
ducer (Leon Ames), who vicious
ly threatens to wreek her forth
coming marriage, Valerie strikes
him with a statuette a!?,d kills him.
This is witnessed by the audience
only.
No one in the photoplay has
seen her go up to or leave his of
fice, and suspicion falls on anoth
er actress (Claire Trevor) who
Athens Site
»
Of Cooking
&)
School Soon
A cooking school, sponsored by
the Boys’ Department of the Y.
M. C. A. and the Athens Refrigera
tion and Appliance Company,
Inc., will be held here November
22 and 23. There will be a sepa
rate school on each day from 10 to
12 a. m.
Directing the affair will be H. A.
Westervelt and R. T. Eberhardt,
co-owners of the co-sponsoring
company. All proceeds from the
50c admission fee will go to the
Y-M. . E£-A. s
Home Economist
Mrs. Gwen O’Connell, Atlanta
District home economist of the
Frigidaire Sales Corporation, will
be in charge of the program.
She lived in Chatsworth through
her early school career, graduated
from the University of Georgia
with a B. S. degree in Home Eco
nomics. She was the state secre
tary of the Georgia Home Eco
nomics Association in 1946 and
’47, Her instruction will include
demonstrations in the proper
methods of electric cooking and
care and use of Frigidaire equip
ment, and other phases of cook
ing.
‘ A number of prizes will be
awarded each day, and the grand
prize for the entire session will be
a Frigidaire Electric Range. Many
merchants are going to give away
gifts announced officials.
The location of the school will
pe announced later.
Effective Wednesday, November 10, 1948, there
will he changes in the schedules of the Athens City
Lines, Inc., as follows:
The East Athens fifteen minute schedule will be
discontinued. 8 -
The East Athens regular will include Strickland
Avenue, Madison Avenus and Thomas Street.
The Prince schedule will be extended up Prince to
Sunset Drvie, turning around at Sunset Drive, return
ing down Prince to Buena Vista.
The Barberville schedule will be extended to the
City Limits on Madison Avenue.
The West Broad-King Avenue and the West
Broad- Holman Avenue schedule will go up Broad to
Holman Avenue instead of going through Hodgson
Drive.
The Milledge-Stanton Way extension will include
Cloverhurst Avenue, McWhorter Drive, Highland
Avenue and Catawba,
All other schedules will remain the same until
8:00 p. m. After 8:00 p. m. there will only be hourly
service, From Monday through Friday.
Saturday service remains the same as now.
Sunday hourly service from 7:30 a. m. until 9:45
a. m., 30 minute service from 9:45 2. m. until 12:45
p. m., hourly service from 12:45 p. m. until 10 p. m.
THE BANNER-HEKALD, ATHEN 8, GEORGIA
entitled “Reconstruction In Geor
gia.” : ;
During the war Miss T‘nompsoni
devoted her services to Interna
tional Education and made twa
trips to England in its behalf,
First, in April 1944, when she wafs
appointed U. S. delegate to
UNESCO by President Roosevelt,
then again in 1945 when she wts
appointed U, S. delegate by Pres
ident Truman.
The University Women’s Club is
indeed fortunate to have as its
speaker a person with such dis
tinguished qualifications.
All club members and. prospec
tive club members are cordially
invited. )
. Publicity Chairman ‘
was in love with the producer and
who is discovered prostrate lve
side his body. Valerie is content to
leave things the way they are, but
her conscience begins to bother
her, and the ensuing inward strug
gle builds up toa dramtic climax
involving her fiance (Genn), and
a detective Captain (Greenstreet).
In the meantime Miss Russell has
faced the world with a merry
mien that sharpens the suspense
of her situation. .
With Ames, Frank McHugh,
Walter Kingsford and Dan Teobin
have the principal supporiing
roles. Frederick Brisson produced
the offering with John Gage di
recting. Leo Rosten wrote tre
screen play fro mthe story 'by
Williarn Mercer and Annabel
Ross. ;
A unique device employed in
“The Velvet Touch” is a stage re
presentation of the Ibsen = play,
Hedda Gabler, in which Miss; Rus
sell portrays the tragic lheroine,
and which is climaxed by ‘the so
lution of the mystery posedl in the
photoplay.
Forum
(Continued from Page One)
Sick — A. F. Darden, Chair- {
man; Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Hitch
cock, Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Wolfe,
jr., Mr. and Mrs. Millikan, Mrs. A.
F. Darden.
Flowers and Visiting — Mrs. N.
G. Slaughter, Chairman; Mrs. W.
D. Strother, Edward Martin.
Entertainment — Mrs. E. H.
Underwood, Chairman; Mr. and
Mrs. Shields, Mr. and Mrs. Sut- '
ton, Ellis Garrett.
Membership —, Mis. M. C.
Southwell, Chairman; Mrs. Mess
er, Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Hodgkin
son, Mr. and Mrs. John Stiles, C.
A. Carson.
Music —Mrs, J. C. Vinson,
Chairman; Mrs. R. E. Smith, Mrs.
George Raney, Hoyt Robertson, A.
F. Darden, J. W. Simons. i
Publicity — Mrs. Frances Ev—’
ans Brooks, Chairman; Mr. and
Mrs. Hugh Henry, W. A. Maddox.
House Committee — Mr. Felton
Christian, Chairman; Jimmie Ak- ,
ins, Mrs. E. C. Crymes, Mrs. Dan
Arnold, John Stiles.
Directory, Insignia and Year
book -— Mrs. Edward Martin,
Chairman; Mr. and Mrs. Hoyt |
Chick, Mrs. H. G. Byrd, Mr. and
Mrs. Jordan. l
Group Leaders (Attendance,
etc.) — Mrs. E. H. Dixon, Chair
man; Group No. I—Mrs. J. B. Al
exander; Group No. 2 — Mrs. J. M.
Lewis; Group 3 — Mrs. Ben Me- |
Ree; Group 4 — Mrs. Joe Simons; i
Group No. 5 — Mrs. B. W. Stovall; J
Group No. 6 — Mrs. W. D. Stroth- J
er. i
Personals
Miss Dorothy Short is spending
the week-end in Savannah, guest
3f her sister, Mrs. Perry Morgan,
&
» ® * *
~ The friends in Athens of Mrs.
George W. Bishop, of Toccoa,
Georgia, will regret to learn of
her illness in the Stephens Coun
ty Hospital. Mrs, Bishop, formerly
Mildred Stephenson, is the daugh
ter’ of Mr. and Mrs. Mell M. Ste-
Pphrenson of Athens.
® ¥ w*
Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Chamblee, of
"Atlanta, announce the birth of a
daughter, Oct. 31, Kay Marie, at
the Crawford W. Long Hospital,
hirs. Chambiee is the forimer Miss
Sue Crawford, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Guy Crawford of this
city.
* *® #*
Mrs. John Nicholson, the former
Miss Louise Dorsey of Athens, now
of Jackson, Miss., is visiting her
sister, Mrs. Barrington Flanigan.
Mrs. Nicholson spent the past few
days with Mrs. Lloyd T. Wheeler
in Atlanta.
® ® *
Miss Nancy Cooper and Mrs.
Hoyt Turner havé returned from
Fort Defiance, Va., where they
visited Mrs. Turner’s son, Cadet
Joel Turner at the Augusta Aca
demy. While there they attended
several college dances.
®% % L
Mrs. A. H. Cochran, of Atlanta,
is the guest of Mr. and Mrs.
George Firor on Ridgewood Place.
# * .
Vice Consul and Mrs. Howard
R. Brandon, of Algerias, Algeria,
announce the birth of a daughter,
born Sunday, October 31. The ba
by has been named Carroll Hart
Brandon. Mrs. Brandon is the for
mer Miss Josephine Hart daugh
ter of Mrs. Maude Hart of Madi
son and Athens. The paternal
grandmothér is Mrs. Frances
‘Brandon also of Athens. During
the summer Miss Carroll Hart and
Miss Ruth Beussee visited Vice-
Consul and Mrs. Brandon.
% * *
Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Williams
and daughter Mrs. Ralph Hill
have been in Atlanta, where they
went to visit Mr. C. C. Kissell,
who underwent a serious eye op
eration on Tuesday at Emory hos
pital. Mr. Kissell is doing as well
as can be expected.
\ % ® %
Among the Friday visitors in
Athens were Mrs. Ruth Clinton,
Social Circle; Mr. Lee H. Barnett,
Bishop; Mrs, Sam Whiteworth,
Mrs. Lillie McGarity, Mrs. A. W.
Ray, Mrs. Curtis Welborn, jr., Col
bert; Mrs. Lon Massey, Mrs. Mary
Evelyn Massey, Maysville; Mr.
and Mrs. Fred Bryant, Miss J. L.
Sanders, Mrs. E. O. Todd, Mrs.
G. T. Chafin, Mrs. Paul Thurman,
Lexington; Mr. J. T. Thornton,
Route One; Mrs. C. R. Andrews,
Misses Ida, Mattie, and Nonie An
drews, Greensboro; Mr. Joe Bick
ers, White Plains; Mrs. Sara Spain,
Union Point; Mrs. J. Robert Find
ley, Comer; Mr. and Mrs. W. H.
O’Dillon, Mrs. Frank McLane,
Route Three; Mrs. Ruth Marshall,
Mrs. E. W. Marshall, Mr. Jesse
Marshall, Farmington; Mrs. Irene
Jackson, Bogart, Mr. and Mrs. R.
C. Jackson and daughter, Bogart;
Mr. and Mrs. W. Y. Martin, Miss
Ann Martin, Crawford; Mr. and
Mrs. L. G. Truelove, Monroe.
ey
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EXCLUSIVE WITH US
Short slit puff sleeves with fabric knotted at base.
Full circular skirt. Nosegay adorns the belt.
Comes in Chocolate Chip and Top Hat accentuat
ed in crisp taffeta. :
The Fashion Shop
134 E. Clayton
Mr. and Mrs. Morton Hodgson,
jr., and children, Patricia, Morton,
111, and Lydia, arrived Friday
from Montevideo, Paraguay, for a
visit with Mr. and Mrs. Morton
Hodgson, sr., and Miss Nell Hodg
son. They are staying at the Hol
man Hotel,
* i %
Friends of Mr. Hal Short will
regret to learn that he is ill in the
General Hospital. :
# w *
Friends of Mrs. Alton Kitchen
will be glad to know that she has
returned home from St. Marys’
Hospital wnere she underwent
and operation and is doing nicely.
® » -
Friends of Mrs. N. G. Clements
will be glad 1o iearn that she is
doing nicely following an oper
ation at Ponce De Leon Infirmary
in Atlanta.
® » @
Newman Club
Class Thrives
At University
Sixty-five University of Georgia
students of various denominations
have joined the Newman Club’s
Scholastic Philosophy class, Fran
ces Dominey, president, announced
Friday.
Teacher for the course, she said,
will be the Rev. James Donovan,
M. A, a graduate of Princeton
University and the Catholic Uni
versity of America, Washington,
DO, ;
Beginning October 6, two-hour
classes will be held each Wednes~
day at 7 p. m,, at the club house,
134 Prince avenue.
She explained that “while the
course surveys the works of all
the great philosophers, including
Descartes, Spinoza, Locke, Hume,
Kant. and Hegel, it dwells pri
marily on the Scholastics Albert
the Great, Thomas Acquinas, Oc
kam, Suarez, Scotus and others.”
Particular attention, she added,
will be given to the development
of philosophic thought in the thir
teenth century.
She pointed out that among the
great Scholastics was Anselm of
Canterbury, “sometimes referred
to as the father of scholasticism.”
One of the nrimary reasons for
the course, which is being taught
at Princeton, Harvard, Chicago
and Columbia universities, she
continued, “is the belief that the
gigantic intellectual work of the
Scholastics is not fully appreciat
ed today.”
Miss Dominey said the course is,
essentially, the philesophy of Aris
totle Christianized, “the study of
the ultimate causes of things under
‘the light of natural reasoning.”
The rolls, she said, are still open
for additional students who may
be interested.
The opera “Faust” is said to
have been used more, than any
other five operas combined.
Broilers chould be raised 'to
market size of two and one-half
to three pounds on three and
one-half pounds of feed per
pound of meat.
Tenth District GEA Endorses
Aderhold As State President
Dr. O. C. Aderhold, dean of the
College of Education at the Uni
versity of Georgia, was unani
mously endorsed for president of
the Georgia Education Association
at the meeting of the Athens-El
berton section of the Tenth Dis
trict GEA held in Elberton Fri
day.
The name of Dr. Aderhold was
presented to the gathering by Miss
Ruby Anderson, member of Ath
ens High School faculty and a
member of the Education Policies
Committee of the National Edu
cation Association. Miss Anderson
is one of only twenty members of
this committee selected from
throughout the nation.
Dr. Aderhold’s nomination by
Miss Anderson was seconded by
Elberton Superintendent of
Schools W. M. Hardy and Cotton
Price, Fulton county, president of
the State Department of Class
room Teachers. The meeting un
animously endorsed Dr, Adérhold
to head the state GEA.
In presenting Dr. Aderhold,
Miss Anderson reviewed briefly
his career, saying he was born in
Lavonia and graduated from the
University of Georgia in 1923, re
ceiving his Master’'s Degree in
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DAMASK ROSE by STRADIVARI by
HEIRLOOM WALLACE
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PAGE THREE
1930 and his Doctorate from Ohio
State University in 1938.
Dr. Aderhold served as egflnci—
pal of the high school in Jefferson
in 1923-26, and as Superintendent
of Schools in 1926-29. He served
the University as Associate Pro
fessor of Education in 1929-1937
and as Professor of Education
from 1937 until the present.
Dr. Aderhold was director of
the High School Victory Corps
and a member of the State De
fense Education Committee dur
ing the war, In 1944-46 he wai
Director of the Education Panel
of State Agricultural and Indus
trial Development Board and di
rected fourteen studies in educa
tion in Georgia. including “A
Comprehensive Survey of Publie
Health of less than College Grade
in Georgia.
He has been Dean of the Col~
lege of Education of the Univer
sity since 1946 and is a member of
the Georgia Teacher Council, and
was Director of the Study of
Personnel of the State Department
of Education, the only study of its
kind in the United Sitates. Dr. Ad
erhold is Consultant of the GEA
Legislative Committee and is the
father of the Minimum Founda~
tion Program for Education.