Newspaper Page Text
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1948,
RABRE) CLOGK
wGAU-CBS
THURSDAY EVENING
¢.oo—Eric Severeid and News
(CBS).
6-15—R. C. A. Vietor Story
Time.
o 90—American Education
Week, soic e
4 45—IL.owell Thomas and News
(CBS), .4 .
7:oo—Beulah (CBS).
7:ls6—Jack Smi(%! Show (CBS).
7-30—Club 15 ¥
7-45—Edward R. N 3
(CBS). .= ‘
9.00—F. B. 1. in Peace and War
(CBS). £ 4
9:3o—Mr. Keen, Tracer of chst'
Persons (CBS). :
9-00—Suspense (CBS).
9:3o—Crime Photographer
(CEBB)." ™
10:00—Hallmark Playhouse
(CBS).
10.30—Dance Orchestra (CBS).
11:00—Georgia News, ;
11:05—Danting in the Dark.
12:00—News. -
12:05—Sign Off.
FRIDAY MORNING
6:55-—-AP News,
7:00—Good Morning Circle,
790 —World News Briefs,
7-35—CGood Morning Circle,
7:ss—Georgia News,
8:00—CBS Warld News Round
up (CBS).
B:ls—Western ‘Serenade,
B:3o—Music Shop Parade. |
9:OO—CBS News ~of America
(CBS). |
9:ls—Glad Tidings: Program. |
9:3o—Salute to Music. |
9:45—01d Corral. l
10:00—Rich’s Radio: School,
10:15—Mid-Morning News.
10:30—Arthur Godfrey (CBS).
11:30—Ring the Bell,
11:45—Rosemary . (CBS).
12:00—~Wendy Warren and News
(CBS).
FRIDAY A¥TERNOON
12:15—Hillbilly Matinee, '
12:45—Farm Flashes.
1:00—Big Sister (CBS).
I:ls—Ma Perkins (CBS).
I:3o—Young Dr. Malone (CBS),
I:4s—The Guiding Light (CBS).
2:oo—Feminine Footnotes.
2:ls—Perry Mason (CFS).
2:3o—This Is Nora Drake
(CBS).
2:4s—Romance of Evelyn
Winters (CBS).
3:00—1340 Platter Party,
3:2s—News.
3:30—1340 Platier Party.
4:oo—Hint Hunt (CBS).
4:2S—CBS News.
4:3o—Santa Claus.
s:oo—Huddle Sports Interview.
s:ls—Sleepy Joe,
5:30 —Sports Parade.
s:4s—Herb Shriner Time,
T ®
lFord Opines
‘* ik
\ew Pay Hike
Is Inevitable
PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 18—
(AP)—Henry Ford 111, president
of the Ford Motor Company, said
today a fourth round of wage
mcreases “is inevitable.”
“Workers are going to get an
other pay hoost,” Ford told a
news conference. “I don’t think
anything can preveint it.”
Ford came -here with other
g; O\ v; oy ?
B¢ 4 ‘5.};!... Z’ld 5@0% ‘W Jw,
W “XBIRDSEY'S
b RN if,’f W STARTING
h o e MASH
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BIRDSEYS QUALITY
T 25 lbs. 100 lbs.
ALL MASH STARTER 20% . 1.39 S
GROWING MASH . ....... 1.35 4.85
GROWING SCRATCH ..... 1.23 4.30
BROILER MASH 20% ...... 5.00
LAYING MASH 20% ...... 132 4.80
BREEDER MASH 20% ..... 4,95
SCRATCH CRAIN ........ 118 4.20
. _STOCK FEEDS
DAIRVFEED 20% .... .... ..... 390
DRIER & FRESHENING .... .... . 3.60
HOGC ERTION ... ... .>.. i 3 %19
CREFEERE ~.. .. .......° 98 6.70
MASCOT DOG FOOD ..... 2.05 7.70
SPECIAL DISCOUNT - 1000 Ibs. OR MORE
QUALITY SAVINGS
e ————————————— A — —————————————————
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S ‘ om:ctfnou MILL TO YOU »
FRIDAY
6:s9—Sign On.
7:OO—UP News.
7:os—Snorts,
7:10-~Market Summary,
7:ls—Thre Blessed Hope.
7:45--WRFC Trading Post.
8:00—UP News. ;
- B:l6—Musical Clock.
B:SS—UP News,
9:oo—Morning Devational.
9:ls—~Musical Devoticnal.
9:3o—Show Tune Time.
9:45-~The Fetzllinine Agenda,
10:00~WRFC Telephone Party.
10:30--UP News,
10:35~—Ncvelty Tune Time.
10:45=Bing Crosby.
11:00—Chuck Wgaon.
11:45—Leon and Red.
12:00—Hillbilly Review.
12:15—UP News,
12:30—Checkerkoard Jamboree.
12:45—Farm News and Market
Summary.
1:90—--UP News.
I:os—Tax Instructions.
I:l6—That Man With the Band.
I:3o—Luacheon Serenade,
2:OO—UP News. »
2:os—Vocal Varieties,
2:3o—Musi~ You Like,
2:4s—Time Was.
3:oo—Hep Cat Corner.
3:3o—Closing Market
Quotations,
3:35-—Rhett’'s Record Room.
4:45-+Billy Christian At the
Crgan,
s:oo—Tomorrow’s Headlines.
s:ls—Sports Round-Up.
s:3o—Sign Olif,
members of « his firm’s policy
committee to inspeet the Ford
assembly plant at nearby Ches
ter, Pa.
The 3i-year-old executive,
commenting on the probable
wage increase, said flatly:
“Prices can’t go anywhere but
up. If wages go up and materials
go up, ‘prices too must go up.
There is no place else for them
to go.” :
Would price control help?
“No,” Ford insisted. “Price
control would wreck the nation
—the auto industry included—
and ruin the economy.
~ “It is ridiculous to think that
any person siiting in Washington
can tell a company how much to
&charge fer its product. '
“You must have profits. That
is the most important thing in
the country today.
} “You must have vprofits to pay
stockholders and keep 'business
‘modernized.”
’ Ford: declared price control
‘would “turn the nation’s progress
backward,” adding:
“It is a trend toward sociailsm.
And such a system would be des
picable for’ the United States.”
Ford also defended the Taft-
Hartley labor law.
Do you safer from burnime, itching, eloady
passage?! Have to get up nights! Do yem
have back or leg pains? Do you have colds
that hang on? If so, get NEF-TEX, Pink,
Antiseptic Tablets, which cofitain a modera
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bed wetting, Clip this ad a 8 & reminder te
get NEF-TEX Tablets at your drug store,
CROW’'S DRUG STORE
Hal Boyle
The Poor Man’s Philosopher
A CABINET FOR ANY CRISIS
e N e o Rwwrers el Umo 0 cmrere
NEY YORK—(AP) — President
Truman is finding no shortage of
volunteer carpenters in his task
of building his 1949 cabinet.
Everybody is lumbering up with
a new idea. If all who have been
suggested for a place were includ
ed, the cabinet would have to have
more posts than a fence around
Texas. ;
Jest in fun, editor and publisher,
mnfazine of the press, nominated
a formidable cabinet composed
entirely of newspapermen.
And Eric Johnston, president of
the Motion Pictureé Producers As
sociation, more seriously advanc
ed the thought that America’s top
labor leaders should be chosen for
key diplomatic jobs abroad.
This idea is fascinating. If it
is carried out, my nominee for am
bassador to England is John L.
Lewis. His $50,000 salary and
$25,000 expense account give him
the necessary financial back
ground.
Breeches and Hose |
And what an impressive figure
Old John would make at the court
of St. Jame's— with his florid
Shakespearean oratory, his pond
erous, eloquent eyebrows. In knee
breeches and silk hose he would
be unforgetable. The Labor Gov
ernment of England would have to
sit up and listen to a man who
won a SIOO a month pension for
American coal miners,
Perhaps it is time we widened
the whole base on which govern
ment leaders are appointed—and
include men and women from all
classes. It is an essence of the
Democratic belief " that people
grow with responsibility.
And this is an era of experiment
anyway. The nation’s foreign poli
cy of seeking world peace is large
ly being carried out by profession
al military men even as, paradox
ically, gentle scientists are re
searching the weapons for a
possible Third Werld War.
Just for a starter, I have com
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| AN 1.42:& %
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DON'T Wait for Storm SIGNALS S
Contains New Anti-Rust Inhibitors .
' —BRING TH! KIDDIES! 2
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N<9 T sers SIS oße | W i
2‘ /"\\\'\t\ 88 pes. /\’.‘:./‘l\ 9¥ /
of OV ¥ty 965 (e 1 1 (@ =D
X——//L Q@ 2 ? . o 12158 2 ')ilo ~——q
(B
; s Phone 1696
193 E. Clayton Athens, Ca.
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GRORGIA =
piled a tentative list of appointees,
which is being forwarded to Key
West by the next passenger pigeon
that flies this way. Here it is:
Berle Boost Corn
For Secretary of Agriculture —
Milton Berle, who has run the
price of corn up to the highest
peak in history. Or Fred Allen,
who gets about as much for chaff.
Secretary of Labor — Tommy
Nlllfiville, who makes work out of
. .Byecretary of the Interior—Sher
man Billingsley of the Stork Club,
who has made a career out of sat
isfying the inner man.
Secretary of the Treasury —
Bernard Baruch, because in
crowded Washington his fondness
for a park bench would save of
fice space. Alternate choice: Jack
Benny, who spends a dime finger
by finger.
Secretary of Defense — Qreta
Garbo. She keeps her barriers
high.
Attorney-General — Some geod
bartender. He'll never drop a
case.
Postmaster - General — Lana
Turner. Everybody would love to
play postoffice with her,
Hutton’s Experience
Secretary of State — Barbara
Hutton. As chief of foreign affairs,
she’d have the experience to keep
us out of entangling alliances.
And for U. S. representative to
the United Nations, nobody but
that arch diplomat of the diamond
— Leo Durogher. Whenever , Vi
shinsky rose to voice his peren
nial charge that the U. S. is try
ing to build an empire, Leo would
have his answer ready:
“Who wants an empire? Not us.
No empire was ever any good.”
With a team like that America
could never strike out.
Negroes cperate more than 25,-
700 retail stores in the United
States.
Library Aids In
Dealing
With Book Agents
The Subscription Books Bulle
tin, a quarterly review that eval
uates books sold by book agents,
is available at the Athens Region
al Library, or at the University
Library. Published by the Ameri
can Library Association, it is an
authoritative source for informa
tion on subseription bocks such as
encyclopedias, dictionaries, atlas
es, handbooks and other compila
tions that are not reveiwed in the
reguar book reviews.
Before “signing on the dotted
line” of a book agent’s contract,
the public is urged to check with
the public library (phone 1585) to
see whether the attractive pros
pectus exaggerates the value of
the set of books. Unfortunately,
many a purchaser of subseription
books has found, as he uses the
books, that she could have brought
much more useful material at less
cost. The set may be made {rom
old plates, glossed over by the ad
dition of a few new pictures. On
the other hand, a good, up-to-date
enclycopedia i§ indispensable in a
home, and can be bought only
through a book agent. Standard
reference books are available in
the Athens Regional Library. Par
ents are cordially invited to ex
amine them before deciding on the
best suited to their needs. But in
case of pressure from an agent,
be sure to consult your library.
As a rule, hams and shoulders
shrink between 10 and 20 percent
during the curing and smoking
periods.
FIND CURE FOR MISERY DUE TO NASAL
CONGESTION, SUPPLY RUSHED HERE!
Relief at last from torture of sinus,
catarrh, and hay fever due to nasal conges
tion is seen today in reperts of <uccess with
a formula which has the powér to reduce
nasal congestion. Men and women with
agonizing sinus headaches, clogged noetrils,
earache, hawking and gpeezing misery teil
of blessed relief after using it. KLORONOL
costs $3.00, but considering results, this is
not expensive, amjounts to only pennies per
dose. KLORONOL (caution, use only s
directed) sold with manecshack puarantoe by
Crow’s Cut-Rate Drug Store, 283
E. Clayton Street, Mail orders
filled.
Membership
Drive Here
For Legions
The drive for membership in
the American Legion posts in
Athens and over the state is still
on in full swing. The goal for
the State Legion is 50,000 mem
bers.
Each year the membership in
the post for c¢ach man expires
and in order to retain the mem
bership status he must pay his
dues for ihe following. So far
new members and renewals in
the Allen R:¢ Fleming, Jr, Post
No. 20 here total over 200. Mem
bership Chalrman Cordis
Thurmon :-egpr,é;d;.that about one
third of thesé dreé new members,
Quota, of 500
' The Allen Fleming, Jr., Post
has a quota of 500 to be filled as
soon as possible. Mr. Thurmon
hopes to reach the quota by Jan
uary 1. wa
He stated that several benefits
from the Legion have been the
G. 1. Bill of Rights, which was
conveived, drafted, ard piloted
through Congress by the Legion;
e ——
; IN THE TRUE °*' =
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LRonston\v” ) as truly Boston as the Common —
= \( @ Hotel Touraine offers visitors tradis
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=4 \/’: > » ience combined witi facilities and
_:‘i._ C. 74 W services as “modern as this minute.”
?Z’ e \\ Moderate room rates—dehixe dining.
= Dreezy "2\
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P BOSTON, MASS.
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the terminal leave pay bill for
enlisted men; the legislation
making possible the : 0.1991" cent
fncreafe in %;lsaebility pge'nl ons zot
veterans. G i
Other Projects
Post Commander W. L. Prick
ett said that cther than benefits
for veterans, the American Leg
jfon is carrying on Junior Base
ball for over a half-million high
school boys, has more than 200,-
000 participants in the Legion’s
oratorical ~ontests - each = year,
sponsors Boys States attended
by at least 25,000 boys partici
’pating' in a week's session on
‘government, and over 3,000 Boy
Scout troops are sponsored by
American Legion posts, =
Mr. Thurmon said, “A. contin.
uous large membership is neces
sary if the programs and activi
ties for veterans and for the
nation are to go forward.”
He added, “I urge all veter
ans to unite with the post here
of their choice. It is hoped each
one will do this by January 1,
'but each will be welcome at any
time.” A M
The three local posts are the
Alien Fleming, Jr., Post, Classic
City Post, and the Mangleburg-
Elrod Post for veterans attend
ing the University of Georgia.
PAGE SEVEN-A
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