Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWO
The Makings
Teen Gifts
BY ALICIA HART
NEA Staff Writer
: ‘The ingenious teen-ager can
ease the pinch on her pocketbook
and please more young friends
this 'Christmas by making clever
little novelties that girls love to
wear.
Settle for trick accessories which
have high-fashion acceptance this
winter but are as easy-as-Fie to
m'ake. No unusual skills are
needed, for example, to make such
style-wise accessories as plaited
your haid braids, “tosseled neck
laces for sweaters, “Diamond Jim
Brady” cuif links of big sparkling
gu:‘tgns and flower bedcaded head
ahds.
To make a yarn “hair braid” all
you need are three thick lengths
of contrasting colored yarn about
24 inches long. Add to these a
shorter piece of gold ribbon which
plaited into the yarn adds a
thoughtful touch of holiday glit
ter. Tie yarn and ribbon together
at one end and braid until you
have a band long enough to en
circle your head. Sew two ends of
braid together and let the left
over unbraided yarn dangle at one
Sj]?e as a fetching tassel. If you
like;' tack a fluffy yarn pompom
to the top of the tassel which is a
good cover-up device or any rag
ged ends of yarn which need to
be hidden.
Yarn necklaces that line up a
row of jaunty little men on a sin
gle strand of heavy yarn are smart
for any recipient to wear with her
turtle-neck sweater, heaps of fun
for you to make. To make a tas
selenal, wrap a single strand of
wyarn around a two-inch plfice of
cardboard 20 or 30 times. Tie ‘%e
loop tcgether at one edge of the
cardboard and cut the yarn even
dy at the other edge. The result
is a yarn pempom which you fold
in half and form into a tassel-man
by tying off sections to make a
round “head” and two legs with
fuzzy “feet.”
Four whopping rhinestone but
tons glued to cuff-link baeckings
or . “chained” tiogether with a
heavy thread will put sparkle on
any pal’s shirt like Diamond Jim
Brady's. You can also make ex
pensive-looking dress clips by ce
menting medallion or fake coin
buttons to clip backings which
you can buy at five and dime
stores. Or you can cement on
round jeweled button: to the top
of an inexpensive lipistick case to
add costly lecking ‘glifter to a
modest gift. Before buittons are ce
mented in place, ‘mietal shanks
should be clipped off with a pair
of nippers borrowed from your
Dad’s tool box.
If you have a party-going pal
RTN SAVE ON CHRISTMAS GIFTS AT CROW’S | a——
String Of 8 SA, AT e ' l}{lll(;l(;z::
By - ® Ol g
Xmas fi”‘ | our Chrisiniashist: =
Lights ake shOI f wor qu <§g ' :::6 \*7)7}\ palbE e
Tree Lights B,\AN |\ (SR §y : }fl-‘ t), oy PBat:
54-00 '\B\ b *@ ‘»&-’ // //// \ 51.50
Brach’s ' : » .
te ) S S S > X .. . when you have the Kl 4
S SRS OSSN FRIDAY
, TRty TRbyoud sty sndomndy soiatlion. 5o Bonll Silas . athrt foday and
19c Wl and make way for the brightest, lightest Christmas Shopping of ail SATU RD A Y
limes!
TRY CROW'S DRUG STOREFIRST
CHRISTMAS CANDY | CROW'S GIFT WRAPPING SERVICE
c'fi%i:g '%Nw,mr : ;‘f,?("'c‘m;fi‘( , WE WILL GIFT WRAP FREE OF
ANYWHERE IN THE U. S. A. CHARGE ANY GIFT SI.OO OR OVER
Gifts For Her Gifts For The Family Gifts For Him
TUSSY SAFARI LADY DOVER ALL METAL E
Giff Sefs .. . .. . $1.50 up | Heafing Pads . .. .. $4.49| Camera Tripod .. . $17.95
QUICK WAY WESCLOX EVERE/}DY
Hair Dryers .. .. .. s7.39|Electric Clocks .. .. $5.95| Shaving Brushes 2.50-5.00
PARKER *“51” (‘(ZN(}I:ESS IL()UBLE DECK 2 i .:I.TNB}L;AI:I. l.{‘[’,M]N(-‘.T()N A
Pen Sefs .. .. .. $17.50| Playing Cards .. .. $1.39] Eleciric Razor .. .. 523.50
EVENING IN PARIS WHITE AND WYCOFF MI:EKHR OR AMITY
Perfume Sefs ... $2.50 up | Stationery .. SI.OO- $1.75] Billfolds ... ... $2.50 up
MAX FACTOR MATCHED EMERSON—WESTINGHOUSE MEN'S NYLON
Make-Up Sefs .. .. ss.so|Radios .. .. .. $16.95 up| Club Brushes ... .. §5.00
LENTHERIC OR ELMO GOOSENECK ()L.D SPICE — SEAFORTH
Compacts .. $3.00 - $5.00 | Reading Lamps .. .. $2.19 Gift Sefs .. .. .. .. $2.00
LENTHERIC LADY DOVER ('()URT’I,EY . .
Tweed Soap .. .. . $1.50| Reflector Heaters .. $4.95| Men's Toilefries $2.00 up
UT o o R O R e ettt
Photo Dept. GIFTS FOR BABY Tobacco Dept.
Spartus Reflex .. . 9.98 | Cuddle Bears . . . 1.69 | johnson Baby Sets 98¢ Ronson Lighters . . 5.50
Baby Brownie .. . 3.16 | Hair Brush Sets .. 98c | Cradle Gym .. .. 1.98 Plad Hacks . 108
C. E. Meters ... 19.95 | Baby Training Cup 57c | Food Warmers .. 3.95 R 368
\C:?t:n Met:rs . 29.67 »En w9s )¢Lt JQQ&;‘ Marxman Pipes .. 2.50
ic : _ : :
Saymounrtome . - ;“a';“ ST N ?fiunfi'z SSIJL%;% Kaywoodie Pipes . 2.50
Benee Finder . 9.95 | pSEAEOENION eAR | Evans Lighters ... 3.50
MAKE CROW’S YOUR ONE STOP SHOPPING CENTER SR
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hat do you 7o Ja the myst us glowing Hallowe’en pumpKkin;*what
y i Ul ip? Maybe thcre’s a black and ugly witch,
! a troop of elves, dressed like
! ) ! he see nta Claus, his sleigh
er t H od, lil., lad sees, you can bet he’ll ’
{ It en't invited imo their Hallowe’en
on your list, give her a gala head
dress made from a milliner’s bi
cycle clip wrapped with satin rib
bon and ornamented with two
posies. Tell her she can drape a
black lace handkerchief over this,
mantilla-fashion.
If you know how to crochet,
metallic gold thread can be easily
hooked up to make lacy mesh
mitts for a Cinderella on your list.
When tied with black velvet rib
bon at the wrists, glitter gloves
will win palm-smacking applause
from a grateful party gal.
Almost one-half of the people
of the world live in Southeastern
Asia. :
A delicious topping for cauli
flower may be made by sauteeing
the dry bread crumbs in melted
butter or margarine over low heat
until they are golden brown; stir
the crumbs constantly as they
brown. Sprinkle the buttered
crumbs over the cauliflowerets
(cooked and drained) just before
serving.
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
AMERICAN NURSES" ASSOCIATION
OBSERVE SEVENTY-FIFTH ANNIVERSARY
The 75th Anniversary of profes
sional nursing in the United States,
1873-1948, is sponsored by the
American - Nurses’ Association.
The Diamond Jubilee of Nursing
is officially inaugurated during
Nursing Progress Week, Novem
ber 14 through the 20th, 1948. The
memory of Linda Riehards, Amer-~
ica’s first professional nurse, is to
be especially honored during the
jubilee.
Without the foresight, energy
and courage of Linda Richards,
nursing in this country would not
‘have reached the high level it has
achieved in our time, It is no ex
aggeration to say that what Flor-|
ence Nightingale was to the his
tory of nursing in general, Linda
Richards was to American nursing
aistory. In fact, after meeting the
American nurses in 1877, Florence
Nightingale wrote of her; ‘I have
seldom seen anyone who struck
me as so admirable. I think we
nave as much to learn from her
as she from us.
How can 75 years of nursing
progress be measured? Imagine
yourself a patient in the year
1873. You would take it for grant
ed if the nurse slapped onion
poultices, turpent&g stupes, mus
tard pastes, leeches or hot flat
irons on your ailing body. Your
family would also take for grant
ed vour slow rate of recovery. To
day, these quaint nursing treat
ments are almost unheard of and
the life span increase with each
passing decade.
New Inventions
Seventy-five years ago, a nurse
would have been mystified if she
were asked to give a patient a
basal metabolism test, take some
one’s blood pressure or handle
such modern equipment as respi-‘
rators, oxygen tents and penicillin
nebulizers. In 1873, these things
were not yet invented. I
The discoveries of science and
technology in the past three-quar
ters of a century have transform
ed the nurse into a highly skilled
member of the medical team.
Small wonder that today’s nurse
must attend a school of nursing
from three to five years and must
keep abreast of almost daily dis
coveries in medical procedure. Be
fore the birth of modern nursing
education, a girl was considered
qualified to care for the sick if
she speni s=x monihs as an ap
prentice in a medical word and
six months in a surgical ward
without any formal schooling.
Even after the establishment of
the first schools of nursing based
on the Florence Nightingale sys
tem progress was slow. By 1879,
only 11 such schools, educating
198 student nurses, were in ex
istence. But under the leadership
of such pioneers as Linda Rich
ards the concept of professional
nursing took firm hold. As the
years went by, more and better
schools of nursing were set up
throughout the country. Thous
ands of nurses were graduated for
duties not only in hospitals and
sick rooms but in new fields of
curative and preventive medicine
—for work in public health nurs
ing and in industrial psychiatric,
orthopedic, pediatric, and other
highly specialized branches of
nursing demanded by the modern
hospital. Two hundred and nine
ty-eight student nurses were en
rolled in 1879; 106,900 including
men students, were working for
-WEAK-€%
NERVOUS &2/
cranky ‘every month’?
Are you troubled by distress of
female . functional periodic disturb
andes? Does this make you feel so
tired, h!rlgn-stmng, nervous—at such
times? Then po try Lyvdia E. Pink
ham's Vegetable Compound te relieve
such symptoms! Pinkhan’s Com-
Yound is made especially for women.
t also has what Doctors call a
stomachic tonic effect! Any %rfi'.&g%t‘cg&
b y
LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S compouno
SOME FACTS T 0 CONSIDER
The time has come in our Ward when we
must put an end to the selection of Council
men by little groups of men who know what
they want and depend upon public apathy
to put over their candidate.
| want it understood that | entered this
race on my own. | was not hand picked and
no politician took me by the hand and led me
toc the place where my announcement was
made. And no one has been coaching me
what to do and what to say.
- | solicit the support of all citizens of our
Ward but | will not be the tool of any indivi
dual or group of citizens so long as | believe
they are seeking to use me for selfish pur
poses.
Many citizens did urge me to make the
race before | became a candidate but in the
end | made up my own mind, and | am
paddling my own canoe. For that is the only
way | can be free to serve you and all other
Fifth Ward citizens without fear in the
future.
The people of the Fifth Ward will not al
low a professional politician to pick their
Councilman, nor will they allow a group of
politicians to pick him.
an R. N. in 1947. ,
Great Inerease
With the great iiacrease in num
bers came corresponding increase
in teaching techniques. Sixty-six
university schools ,of nursing are
now. in_existence; extra years of
specialized training have been
added to curricula. And with the
great improvemeiat in nursing
care have come the many added
years to the average life span of |
the American pegvple. |
Included in tiye sixty-six Uni
versity Schools bf Nursing is the
University of Georgia’s Depart
ment of Nursing Education. The
interest and they progress in the
basic and advarjced nursing pro
grams is evidenpted through the
over-all registration of 352 stu
dents this fall cjuarter. The de
partment of nursing education
has begun its sg:th year. Twenty
graduate registel ed nurses have
completed the /requirements for
the degree of Biichelor of Science
in Nursing Ed\g ation. The gradu
ates are engagefl in various fields
of work; advanced study at Teach
ers College, Collumbia University,
and the Univeisity of Pittsburgh,
Pittsburgh, Perm., in teaching and
supervision at ?klahoma Univer
sity Hospital, Oklahoma City; Vir-.
ginia Mason |Hospital, Seattle;
Washington; G«orgia Baptist Hos
pital, Piedmont) Hospital, Atlanta;
Floyd Hospital, Rome, Grady Hos
pital, Atlanta, and in the Uni
versity’s Atlanta. Division. It is
significant that the University
presented the first certificate in
nursing at this year’s August
Commencement to a nurse who
complete the ' basic requirements
in the theory and practice of
nursing which included the pro
‘gressive plan of ‘instruction in the
integration of the: social and health
'aspects throughout all of the cli
lnical nursing ahd public health |
Inursing experiences. !
1 [&o
U. S. Air
(Continued from Page One)
threatened in the Soviet press but
the Russians had not heretofore
committed theraselves in official
notes.
The new Saviet move was dis
closed when: Brig. Gen. C. K.
Gailey, Clay’s Chief of Staff, re
plied to a le‘ter from Gen. G, S.
Lukjantscher.ko, Russian Chief of
State.
Responsibility Placed
Gailey ncted the Soviet threat
to force planes “to land on the
nearest airiield in the Soviet
zone” and said:
“You are informed that full and
complete responsibility will rest
on the shoulders of Soviet author
ities should any injury be sus
tained by 'any of our personnel or
any damag'e occur to our planes as
a result of” Szyviet action iaken in
this connection.”
The three air corridors between
Berlin anc¢i Western Germany
were established by four-power
agreement. They are approximate
ly 20 miles wide each. In addition
there is ar: international air band
around Berlin 20 miles wide.
The Ru¢sians have tried to alter
the corridor agreement and re
cently claimed no such agree
ments exiisted. The Western Pow
ers hawve. rebuffed the Soviet
moves.
It is not necessary to prick the
skin of either duck or goose be
fore or «during roasting; no more
fat runs out than if the skin is
left unpricked. But be sure to
roast at a slow to moderate tem
perature for best results.
In making frosting, sift the con
fections” sugar used if it is lumpy
to insure a smooth topping.
Four sequence mechanisms en
able thee “mechanical brain” de
veloped at Harvard to handle,
pass on or to transfer 60 numbers
a second.
GSR ST AT WA
DICK THOMPSON
e ouTooO™ . L 3
I con
: NP ‘/; ’; A
KNITTED SLIPS ‘- @o €5
ST LA
For stylish warmth and g 3 o s .
comfort -- - even in the dEn N fii 8
coldest weather -- - wear ge v F
Miss Indera Knitted Prin- & ‘ . o B ;33 ,
cess Slips with exclusive RERR B 8 R
Sta-up shoulder straps i e s *3
or Hip Skirts with Elastic e R :. i
Waist. They'll keep 4 . L
vou warm- as toast, ‘et s F &
they're light as a feather, o 8 euy T v
fit like a glove, glorify FBS 8 2§ ; ¥/
any figure, Patented ZZE THR .3 istg it
features prevent bunch- S-S E S (Inder? D
ing or crawling. R g
LAWENENCE'S
441 E. Broad St. Athens, Ga.
Negro Ex-Con
Admits Cause
Train Wreck
NORRISTOWN, Pa., Nov. 11—
(AP)—A 30-year-old negro ex
convict signed a statement today
admitting he wrecked a train kill
ing two so that he might get
money by “seaching pockets of
the dead and injured,” District
Attorney W. Arnold Forrest an
nounced.
- Forrest identifed the man as
James M. Johnson, a native of Po
comoke City, Md. He will be
charged with murder, Forrest ad
ded.:
The May 9 Reading Co., wreck
occurred at Valley Forge near the
site where George Washington’s
men encamped during the Revolu
tionary war. A coroner’s jury held
that the tracks were deliberately
tampered with in an attempt to
wreck the train.
Forrest said. Johnson served
seven years in prison for attempt
ing to derail a Pennsylvania rail
road train at Stanton, Del., July
8, 1940.
Questioned as to his motive for
derailing the Allentown-to- Phil
adelphia train, Johnson said he
hoped to get money by “searching
the pockets of the dead and in
jured,” Forrest related.
Fugitive And Wife
Have Honeymoon
In Jail Together
DES MOINES, Nov. 11—(AP)
—Ray Caughorn, 26, a_ fugitive
from a Tennessee prison mine,
and his pretty, red-haired bride
of three months were in jail here
today.
Detective Chief Paul Castelline’
said Caughorn was arrested while
he and his wife were soliciting
funds in an office building to con
tinue their honeymoon trip.
Castelline said police had no
charges against Mrs.- Caughorn
but that she asked to remain jail
“to be near by husband.”
“I knew all about Ray’s trouble
and his escape,” Mrs. Caughorn
said. “I married him for love and
G N 0 2 g
- Exciting as a
-
. }
R4| : .
,‘\ GENUINE
SS O [
Rl NG |
*’NN a t\ G i RS2 A .
TA2 N\ N
\ '\o £ )y e
/L). 3, .4 \d 1/))0 / fl %
. =
. :
Iy _ ‘
: q ‘r\O"’S 1
i o> Wonderful, wearable
. (_LP“ moccasin with the
G‘_o“d shapely hand-sewn
Lo\.\" > : cling in black or brown
elk. Sizes 4 10 9.
'__':"'%‘. - R _ Other Oxford Styles? Plenty!
e- f - From $2.99 10 $5.99 { ¢
? we'.’Ov_v,/ens? ./[?u.f g)efl'}:;‘.’.—[; .’ {Add 182 £ara)
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1948,
love alone.” i
W
FUNERAL NOTICE
SHORT. — The relativeg and
friends of ‘Mr. and Mrs. Hal R.
Short of ‘Athens; Miss Edna
Short, Athens; Mr. and Mrs,
Edward Sho#t, Athens; Cap
tain and Mrsi*Hal R. Short, J,
U. S. Army;" Mr. A. B, Short,
Athens; Mr! 4nd Mrs. L. G,
Mahone, ‘Ja‘\'}ksonville, Fla.; Mr.
and Mrs. R. Q. Wise, Albany,
+ 8 Mr.,arg Mrs. S. O. Doo
ley, Mr." and? Mrs. Alvin Short,
Mr. Edward Short, Jr., . and
Miss Jun ~(S‘lx)rt, all of Athens,
are invitgd “to attend the fun
eral of Mr. Hal R. Short, Fri
day afternoon, November 12,
1948, fromn - Bridges Chapel at
three - (3:00)%0’clock. Rev. E. L.
Hill. pastor of the First Pres
byterian /Chmtch, will officiate,
- Mr. Harry: SBpeering, Mr. C. A,
Thurmond, Mr. Morris' Held,
Mr. Felton Christian and Mr,
Curtis Christinn will serve as
pallbearersiizand will please
meet at Bridges Chapel at two
¢ forty-five (2:45) o’clock. Inter
ment will- be in Oconee Hiil
cemetery.: r«: Bridges '« Funeral
Home, Liie> 811 o
SRAPTLIN. = Mrs.. Ida ' Rose
Spratlin, widow of the late W.
H. Spratlin, Sr., died in a local
hospital,. Tyesday afternoon,
November 10, 1948. She.is sur
vived by. four daughters, Mrs.
E. L. Fulcher, Athens; Mrs. E.
E. Carter, Crawford, Ga.; Mrs.
H. D. Kinney, Crawofrd; Mrs.
J. C. Tolbert, Jefferson, Ga.;
three sops,,Mr. E. R. Spratlin,
Athens; Mr. W. H. Spratlin, Jr.,
Jetfersop, Ga,; Mr. E. A, Sprat
lin, Jefferson; two step-daugh
ters, Mrs. J. F. Flanigan, Ath
ens; Mrs. B.- H. Barnett, Jef
ferson, “Ga.,#and ‘one brother,
Mr. P. .B. Baxter, Dalton, Ga.
The fut: was this, Wednes
day as n from the Oconee
Street Methodist Church at
three (3:00) o’clock. The Rev.
Charles Middlebrooks, pastor
of the Oconee Street Methodist
Church, officiated, and was as
sisted by Rev. Lama Watkins.
Interment was in Oconee Hill
cemetery. Bridges Funeral
Home.