Newspaper Page Text
PAGE FOUR
Parties Last Week '
Parties Last Week '
Compliment Miss
Celestia Purcell
Miss ‘Celesiia Purcell, bride
elect of December, was honore
on Tharsday eveping ot a mis
cellinecus sohwer given by Mis
Cloric Putier at . her home 0!
Milledge Circle,
During the evening the guesl
played contests.’ The gifts for th
honoree were beautifully dis
played and attached tc each gif
was a clever verse Lo be read ol
the honeymoon.
Handsomea arrangements 0
chrysanthemums were in the liy
ing room and the table in th
dining roem was covered with ¢
beautiful linen and lace clotl
centered with a bowl of whits
flowers. On ecither side were dis;
ferent colored candles that: mace
a lovely effect.
The members of the young se
were present and Miss Butle
was « assisted in entertaining b
her mother, Vrs, Hoyt Butler,
; Coffee Hour .
O Priday afterncon Mre Ar
chie Langley complimented Mis
Celestia. Purzell with a coffe
hour' at her home on Stantor
Way. Beautiful arrangements o
fall flower:s were used in the
hall ‘and living room.
Diring the afternoon the
guests - made Coca-Cola apron:
for Miss Purcell and had a won
derftl fime. Mrs, L. I. Skinnel
assisted. Mrs. Langley in enter:
taining. :
" " # #*
Tuberculosis kills more peopl
between 15 and 45 than any othe
disease
Nutritionists estimate that nine
tenths of the human race lives anc
dies!in food poverty.
LOST — DOG
Brown and white Cock
er Spaniel, answers to
name Skippy. Notify,
Caroline Mell, Gilbert
infirmary for reward.
Phone 2027. :
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Phone 1726
234 E. Washington
SINCE s 1901
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IRON FIREMAN
Automatic WARM AIR FURNACE
Here’s a furnace that’s one jump unit. You need not sacrifice your
,-ahead of the fuel situation! “You furnace invesiment, .
can select it with built-in Ifon Come in to see the Iron
Fireman Vortex Oil Burner or Fireman Automatic Furnace—
Coal-Flow stoker. You'il get or write or phone for free survey '
% "equally efficient and economical of your beating plant. i 1
heating with either firing unit. Have Iron Fireman
.. 'lf fuel availabilities change later, 3 YEARS i\:;‘(‘);“flug‘e’“h::::
“you can convert to the other TO PAY comfort as you pex.
L. M. LEATHERS SONS
ey 675 Pulaski St. : Phone 264
Thunder Is-
Forecast For
|
,December 1.2
(Editor’s Note — The Bar
ner-Herald is the exclusive
subscriber to the George J.
Mc¢Cormack Long Rang
weather Forcasts in this area.)
' On December 1 and 2 magnetic
’('uments in upper atmospheric
stratas combining with surface air
’rmws can induce winter thunder
{in the southern portions of the
|eastern states. This is a natural
| pheniomenon approximately every
two years, but in different terres
trial zones, states Mr. McCor
mack.
He forecasts there will be low
pressure areas from the Mississip
pi River eastward on December 6
and 7. Also cold fronts are pre
dicted for December 9 and 10.
In this forecast, which he made
on September 22, he stated there
will be low pressure areas over
the eastern half of the country on
November 24-26.
"
v
Rare Suspense Film
An Emofional Wallop
Suspense reached the gasping
point yesterday at the Palace
Theatre, where the Hal Wallis-An
atole Litvak production of Para
mount’s “Sory, Wrong Number,” a
murder chiller with an entirely
new slant, made an auspicious lo
cal debut.
Co-starring Barbara Stanwyck
and Burt Lancaster, “Sorry Wrong
Number” s a shriek-by-shriek
picture of the encroachment of
murder. It compels its audience to
think in common horror with a
woman who early in the story
overhears her death being plotted
and, in an hour and a half of help
less horrification, awaits her end.
Enlarged and transposed to the‘
screen from Lucille Fletcher’s
great radio play, which was re
broadcast seven times by popular®
demand, the film contains three‘
times as many shrudders as the
half-hour network thriller. Miss
Fletcher also wrote the screen
play, and the magic of the movie
camera offered her a broad vista
in which to let her fertile imagi
nation expand. And expand it did,
into many spine-tingling situa
{ions. ‘
Barbara Stanwyck turns in the
performance of her career as the
bed-ridden neurotic whose only
means of commurication with the
outside world is the telephone.
But, for her, the phone becomes
an instrument of slow death from
the moment she accidentally over
hears two men plotting the mur
der of an un-named woman. Her
terror is intensified with each suc-'
ceeding, mysterious call—from her
husband’s old girl friend, from his
ibusiness associates—all piecing to
gether the death plan and all
pointing to one victim, herself,
Then the harrowing climatic call
from her frantic husband-—a des
perate attempt to cancel the
agreement he made for murder——
which'she cannot answer because
of a pair of hands slowly tighten
ing around her throat.
Corn contains about 70 per cent
starch, and is used widely in the
starch industry.
‘, Starch was made commercially
from corn for the first time in this
country in 1842,
Losses From
|
P ‘
Poor Seeds
Are Stressed
Although planting hybrid corn
is helping Georgia farmers raise
corn yields to a record average of
16 bushels per acre this year,
poor hybrid seeds are causing
farmers plenty of grief, accord
ing to a warning issued today by
Hugh A. Inglis, Extension Serv
ice agronomist in charge of seed
\certii‘icatiun work, here,
“Last fall some farmers in
lnearby states failed to do the
necessary detasseling to make a
hybrid,” he said, “and this corn
was turned down for certifica
tion, This corn should have been
used for ‘eed and eating purposes
and .not for seed at all.”
Instead, according to Inglis,
farmers around Augusta and
Carrollton planted these seeds
and results have been disappoint
ing,
Some of these other states
have laws restricting the sale of
hybrid corn in the states unless
it is certified, Georgiz has 1o
such law, and farmers who are
tricked into planting these seeds
are the ones who are hurt.
Inglis also called attention to
the dangers of planting poor
seed grown in Georgia.
“Around 400 acres of . hybrid
corn grown in Georgia this .year
were turned down for certifica~
tion because the breeding work
was not done properly,” he
warned. “This eorn will not have
hybrid vigor and should not be
used for seed purposes.”
A large number of Georgia
farmers are growing more than
100 bushels of corn per acre s
year, Inglis continued, and they
are offering proof that good corn
yields are possible in this state.
“When poor seeds are planted,
however, this is just one more
hinderance in the program to
raise our low yields,” he con
cluded. 5
ON THE
AIR - WAVES
Ray Milland® and Maureen
O’Sullivan create -their original
roles in “The Big Clock,” in a full
hour adaptation of that motion
picture thriller on WGAU-CBS'
“Lux Radio Theater,” tonight at
9:00 p. m.
Milland is heard as George
Stroud, detective magazine editor,
who is assigned by his boss to
track down a mysterious figure in
the death of a case society woman,
The boss, actual perpetrator of the
crime, seeks to pin the guilt on
the hunted suspect, but Stroud
soon realizes he is the phanton
quarry and that the evidence he
gathers is closing in on him before
he can trap the real culprit. Miss
O’Sullivan plays Georgette, the
editor’s wife. Y
Determined to bring culture in
to her life, WGAU-CBS' “My
Friend Irma” invests S3O in a
course of piano lessons, during the
comedy broadcast tonight at 10:00
p. m. Unfortunately, while she is
doing that, her economy-minded
roommate, Jane Stacey, sells the
piano. Irma’s efforts to make the
best of her bad bargain leads the
story to a surprising climax.
Bela Lugosi, the terror-boy of
stage and screen, reveals ihe sun
nier side of his talents as guest
star on “Herb Shriner Time,”
over WGEU-CBS, tonight at 5:45
Shriner’s and Lugosi’s perform
ance is supplemented by Raymond
Scott and his orchestra.
“The Monkey Called Death,”
the story of an oriental monkey,
the key to many dark, evil deeds,
is the “Inner Sanctum” mystery
drama broadcast over WGAU to
night at 8:00 p. m. Larry Haines
stars in the role of Steve.
Steve, his evil employer, and
the employer’s pretty young wife
all sense impendinil terror as they
wait in an isolated house. The boss
waits for a strange little oriental
monkey to arrive, his beautiful
wife waits to become a widow and
Steve waits for the tale the mon
key can tell. They soon learn that
when you crowd fate you some
times get pushed back.
It looks like Beulah is going to
munch turkey leg all by herself
this year when the Hendersons
plan to celebrate Thanksgiving
elsewhere and Bill accepts a din
ner invitation from her deadly
rival, Tabitha Jessup, on WGAU
CBS’ “BEULAH” during the week
beginning tonight at 7:00 p. m. But
Hattie McDaniel, in the title role,
winds up by cooking a mammoth
meal for 20 people.
Static electricity generated when
you scuff your feet across a rug
will generate as much as 18,000
volts, engineers estimate.
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‘CI.'OVERI'.EA”
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THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
‘Cactus Jack’
Observes 80th
Birthday Today
_UVALDE, Tex., Nov, 22—{AP)
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i 88 Armour Star or Wilson Certified Whole
| Tenderized Hams, Ib. .. . 59¢ |
o : S
| FRESH SOLID PACK NORFOLK N
- S
- Standard Oysters, pint .. 79¢
| 1| LEAN (BOSTON BUTT)
£ PorkShoulderßoast,lb. . 53¢
% U. §. “GOOD” SQUARE CUT \
| Beef Shoulder Roast, Ib. . 69¢
FRESH MARKET MADE PURE :
. DorkSausage,b. .. .. ..49c
\ | MORRELL PRIDE (EXTRA SPECIAL) \;
:
. Sliced Bacon, b. .. .. .. 6%
\ ' GRADE “A” IN CARTONS—ARMOUR’S "f
| (Cloverbloom Eggs, doz. . 13¢
|| THEYRE FRESH! DRESSED LOCALLY
s : 2
. (Colonial Fryers, Ib. .. .. 65¢
-
TURKEY'’S — Specially selected grade “A” B
Hen Turkey’s. Full breasted and tender. ‘s\*
N
Snowhite Cauliflower, 2 lbs. . . 29¢
Spring Onions, bunch .. .. 10c
Idaho Baking Potatoes, 5 Ibs. . .. 29¢
Kiln Dried Yams, 51!bs. .... .... .. 3%9¢
Extra Large California Celery, stalk . .. 25¢
Large lceburg Lettuce, 2 heads . ... .. 25¢
| California Parsley, bunch .... ..... 10c
Avocado Pears, each .... .... .... 25¢
Fresh White Grapes, 2 lbs. .... .... 35¢
York Coooking Apples, Ib. .... .... 10c
Juicy Oranges, 2 dox. .. .... 45¢
Fresh Chestnuts, Ib. .. .... 29¢
FRESH CRANBERRIES,
BROCCOLI, CUCUMBERS,
SQUASH, SPINACH, BELL
PEPPERS, POLE BEANS, ETC,
| ““hmlr ~' |nn "
Wi i
WA T
4 BELLSE ‘Yiw
A W A R T R e\ We Will Be Open All
;F@O D M ARKET j 000 MAR : Day Wednesday —
i S DELIVERY SERVICE AT SMALL EXTRA CHARGE T Y Closed e e
WASHINGTON AT PALASKI ST. = - + - - - ATHENS R ’
——-——___
—4“ Cactus Jack” who turns 80 to
day is “in favor of every man
reaching his own conclusions and
his own confusions.”
The Texan who was the 32nd
Vice President of the United
States thinks that there have been
“too many statements by too many
people.” And that was his ex
planation of why he didn’t have
some birthday statement full of
advice. Another reason is his long
habit of reticence about making
statements.
John Nance Garner reaches his
80th birthday in good health and
SAUCE 1 Ib. : f":,
CRANBERRY STOKELY'S 2 Cans 35 C {
CROSSF & BLACKWELL’S
PUDDINGS DATE, PLUMB, FIG 13 oz. can 47c
FANCY k
PECANS stewarrs LD, 2 5 C=- 29 C a
Hard Sauee, 60, jar - 4
zhu!n:y, g'/z oz jar .. . slc
Rasns, 150 z phg. .. 19¢
(rabapples, 16 01. glass 23¢
Or fi;fi;iade, bb. ... 29
Date Nut Bread .. - . 19¢
Pedrele e ioe
DOLLY MADISON WHOLE SPICED PEACHES, No. 2%; can .. .. . 36c |
LIBERTY MARACHINO CHERRIES, 8 oz. bottle .. .. .... .... . 28¢c §
* STOKELY’S FINEST PEACHES, No. 2V2can ... .... .. ... 29c f
% STOKELY’S FINEST CATSUP, 14 oz. bottle .. .. .. .. ... 19¢
| VAN CAMP'S PORK & BEANS, No. 2can ... .... .... 15¢ §
WONDER BROWNRICE, 1 lb.box .... .... .. .. .. .. 10c
- W WATERMAID WHITE RICE, 2 Ib. box . ... .... .... ... 28¢
WHITEHOUSE APPLE SAUCE, 17 oz. can .. .. .. .. ... 13c |
- ’ CHOCOLATE COVERED CHERRIES, 1 Ib.box .... .... .. 79 §
l' STOKELY'S TINY GREEN LIMAS, No. 303 can .... .... 33¢ |
CHOICE BRI NUTS, 8h.0011b.5. 00 ... oiay . 30 - |
_/ff ! FRESH ENGLISH WALNUTS, Ib. .... .... .. ... 39¢ — 45¢
’ | NABISCO PREMIUM CRACKERS, Ib. box .... .... .... 25¢
> SWANSDOWN CAKE FLOUR, 234 oz. pkg. .... .... .. 43¢
| CALUMET BAKING POWDER, 1 Ib. can .. .. .. .... .. 2lc
COPPRSSMOP CDRFEE. B Bsk .. . .o i oo e
DUKE’S FINER MAYONNAISE, pint ... .. .. ......... ..., 46c
BONNY LASSIE ASST. CHOCOLATES,Ib. . ... . ... .... ...+ ..95¢
good spirits. He plans an ocuting in
the woods today, but no special
preparations for the day have
been planned.
Since returning to private life
in 1941 after two terms as Vice
President, Garner hag lived quiet
ly, keeping an eye on his banking,
STOKELEY’S TART T 2
Red Cherries, No. 2 can 31c |
FAMILY SECRET—2O OZ. JAR ‘f:
Mince Meat, jar .. .. .- 29¢ |
MUSSLEMAN'S e :
Apple Juice, qf. .. .. . 22¢ |
CHURCH'’S PURE
Grape Juice,pt. .. .. .. 21c §
Cockfal, No. 2% can .. 4c |
- Coconut, doz.can .. -. 19¢
Parly Peas, 17 oz. can . 24c |
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1942
ranching, and real estate interes;.
His wife d%,}_ln August and
since has lived* alone in his b,
house next door to his son an
daughter-in-law, Mr. and M.
‘Tully Garner.