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PAGE TWO
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s e i N LADY DOVER TOASTERS . . 3.19
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) Double Hot Plate 6.49 | Single Hot Plate . . 2.29
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ey 7)) 4 ~,4.;?"3_}_" ' Set Of 0
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SRR |T'S CROW'S FOR SAVINGS IN ATHENS e soo e
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
SQUEAKS
From i
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The »
by SAM WOODS
For the regular weekly luncheon
meeting Wednesday, D. Weaver
Bridges had tried to arrange a
program featuring members of the
Georgia Bulldogs who have play
ed in Bowl games while wearing
the Red and Black. However, a
number of the players had tests
at the University and were unable
to attend.
But Mr. Bridges made good oh
a program by telling a score of
jokes that illustrated thoughts he
wanted to get over. One of these
aptly illustrated the unnecessary
worrying that people go through,
when they could have gotton by
without wearing themselves out
in this fashion.
He announced that the National
Brotherhood Week would be use
less if all civic clubs functioned as
they should to promote friendly
fellowship. With five civic clubs
already in Athens and a new one
about to be formed, the speaker
wondered if we had justified our
existence as a club,
Coatas Apoostolakis, a foreign
student attending the University
from Greece, appealed for funds
for the World’s Student Fund., He
was presented by Davie Napier,
who also introduced the following
visitors: R. L. Carstrapher, Atlan
ta, with A. W. Wier, sr.; Fred
Snell, Snellville, with Josh Mold~
er; Col. Price and Capt. Bandy
with Col.: Shufelt;: Dr. D, A
Springer with Dr. Walker Mat
thews. A trio of Roamin’ Rotari
ans were H. W. Davis, T. D. Story
of Jefferson, and Tom Seawell of
Carrollton.
.
Music
(Contznued from Page One)
Colleges and Universities.
The program follows:
Now Let All the Heavens Adore
Thee, Johann Sebastian Bach; O
Holy Child Who Came to Save,
Joliann Sabastian Bach — The
Choir.
Come Unto Him, George Frede
ric Handel—John Rogers. ‘
Lo, My Shepherd is Divine —
Joseph Haydn; Sanctus (Imperial
Mass), Joseph Haydn—The Choir.
O Hoiy Father, Camille Saint-
Saens—Mac Steinmeyer.
No Candle Was There and No
Fire, Liza Lehmann; The Shep
herd’s Story, Clarence Dickinson—
The Choir.
Intermission.
Have You Seen But A Whyte
Whyte Lillie Grow, Old English;
The Echo Song, Orlando di Lasso
—The Choir.
Trio from “The Magic Flute”,
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart—Solo
Trio.
Lullaby, Wolfgang Amadeus
Mozart; Precious Wee One, Jose
phine Rorsyth-—The Choir.
Estreilita, Manuei A. Ponce—
Gary Hargreaves.
Hark, Is That A Horn I Hear, J.
Bertram Fox; "Twas the Night Be
fore Christmas, Ken Darby — The
Choir.
More than four times as much
life insurance is now owned in the
United States as in 1920.
'STOMACH AILMENTS, WEAK KIDNEYS,
RHEUMATIC PAINS, ARTHRITIS, NEURITIS
and such complaints as Headaches, Nervousness, Acids, Toxins, Bloating,
Lack of Vitality, Energy, Poor Appetite, Underweight, Dizzy Spelis
Drugless Health
IF YOU ARE a sufferer of these
ailments, try GEO-MINERAL. You
may be astonished at the results.
You need not guess—you will see
facts, GEO-MINERAL comes from
the ecarth — Nature’s Laboratory.
Contains NO dope, NO alcohol, NO
oil. ONLY Nature's minerals, the
oldest, most reliable remedy for
rheumatism, arthritis, kidney and
stomach ailments,
GEO-MINERAL will enrich your
blood, help to make you strong, full
of pep, life and energy. Lack of
minerals in the blood causes ane
mia, headaches, nervousness. Min
erals generate mental brilliancy,
give sparkling eyes, red cheeks,
fight disease, build up health.
RHEUMATISM, arthritis are
dreadful diseases. Acid condition
in the blood is often their cause.
What could be the remedy? For
thousands of years, minerals have
been used to relieve the pain and
suffering of these ills. People, on
the advice of doctors, go to mineral
springs to find cure, or relief. The
late President Roosevelt used to go
to Warm Springs in Georgia. He
was helped or would not have gone
there regularly twice a year.
Amazing Results
YEAR after year, people rush to
mineral springs and spas, to drink
and bathe in their miraculous wa
ter. We have all heard of the won
drous springs of Lourdes, France,
and famous Thronion in ancient
Greece where, according to legend
Hercules, the god of eternal strength
and youth, drank its waters and
bathed to be forsver young.
- GEO - MINERAL contains min
erals you get at the world’s best
springs. Watch your elimination
from your bowels a day or two after
using it. The waste, black as the
color of your shoes, will start te
break away, and you will SEE it.
Also examine your urine. You may
see impurities — poisonous waste — |.
coming out of your kidneys, reliev
ing yon. And then realize the price- |
less valuc of GEO-MINERAL.
CROW'’S DRUG STORE — ATHENS, GA.
Mol orders 6 above addiess—add ioe for posiaze.
[,
set p“M' |
CGENUINE REPTILE o
PLAY SHOES
- e
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$10.95, would be the price you'd
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of such supple, superior quality reptile!
s .
Michael’s
SHOE SALON
VWildlife “Slums” More Than
Guns To Blame For Shortage
BY CARL F. BISSELL
AP Newsfeatures 1
NEW HAVEN, Conn. — Are
sportsmen in densely - populated
states like Connecticut forever
doomed to do their bunting and
angling on a “put-and-take”
basis® ‘
A member of the Connecticut
Board of Fisherics and Game
thinks not, “if they will realize
what must be done and help do
it |
Jchn P. Montgomery, sports-‘
man - industrialist an< former
president of the Connecticut Lea
gue of Sportsmen’s Clubs, says
“artificial reproduction very def
initely isn‘t the answer to the
problem.” {
In this conneciion he cites
Connecticut's expenditure over
ten years of mere than a million!
dollars on pheasants, and tne
state’s yearly nced to spend more
and more t{o give the gunners an
average of less than one bird per
gun. |
“This is put-and-take with the
taker on the lesing end,” he says.
Montgomery says he thinks‘
Read What They Say!
o VAR 4 . !
B ~ e e
E i o
o . e
. wgm, T e
i % i
' o fffihfi &
| 2 SRR
“We wish to state that after selling
’ Geo-Mineral for eight months, this
| Ftoduct has broken all sales records
' in the medicine line in our drug
- store”—reports Jack Wright, owner of
Economy Drug Co., Anderson, S, C.
“Users report almost miraculous re
sults, heiping sufferers with rheuma
tism, arthritis, weak Kkidneys, and
various stomach ailments. We believe
that there exist very few items on the
druggists’ shelf with the merit of this
natural mineral medicine. Of thous
ands of bottles sold on guarantee ba
sis, there have been very few refunds.”
—————————————————————
"
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WE URGE eviryone to try GEO
MINERAL. Do noi hesitate one
moment. Go to your drug store
now. Get one bottle. Use it one
week. If you are not 100 per cent
satisfied, we will refund your money
in full, Try it today'! It may do won- |
ders for you—and be the best invest
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eat,sleep, work and enjoy life better.
GEO-MINERAL: 1 btl. sl.lO, 6 for $6.00
“the taker will continue to be
’the loser” in stutes like Connect
icut “‘urdtil someone comes up
with an educational program de
signed to dispel popular miscon
‘ceptions as to rights and privil
eges, duties and respounsibilities.”
Conditions Blamed
“It is pretty generally agreed
that destroyed environment, more
,more than hunting pressure, is
responsible for the plight of our
Iwildlife,” he says. “It has been
pretty thoroughly demonstrated
that, given suitable conditions,
;the valuable wildlife species will
reproduce themselves. The better
[the conditions, the more abund
yant the reproduction.
! “It also has been demounstrat
.ed that artificiaily propagated
‘game cannot be liberated in un-
Isuitable envircnment except at a
loss,” Montgomery continued.
{"“That is one reascn Connecticui’s
unsuccessful pheasant program
has been so costly.
‘ “What game restoraiionists are
iup against in states like this is a
‘slum’ clearance proklem,” he
went on ‘“Slums Tiave been cre
ated everywhere by pollution of
our waters, the lack of flood con
trol, soil erosion znd our failure
to replace the trees we've cut
away.
“The problem will be solved
when agreement has been reach
ed as ot whose duty it is to clear
these slums. Realization by the
sportsmen that no wildlife agen
¢y, or combinaticn of them, is
going tu ke aple to 4o it, will be
an importani forward step to
ward developing an optimum
jgame population.
“This will take education, and
|it will require more education to
Iplace the responsibility where it
belongs, and to convince those
who should assume it that it is
theirs,
Neei Restoration
“Restoration ot conditiong
Iwhich can preduce better hunt
ing and angling is the responsi
bility of every individual and
every bpublic and private agency
in this state,” Montgomery as
serted *‘Startling as it is, it is so.
“And that is because the con
ditions which have depleted our
game population affeclt every
man, woman and child, cither
economically or from a health
standpoint,” he went on.
“For instance, the pcllution of
our streams and other waters is
a demonstrable health hazard,
endangering everyone, ani thus
a problem for all.
“Erosicn, which destroys the
soil's fertility, also destroys its
tax value, and may spread to
damnage the property of nthers.
Halting it is the problem of the
owner of the land on which it
occurs, all of his neighbors, and
of the taxing authority of the
cornmurnity,
“And so is the problem of our
destroyed woodlands, which must
‘be restored for their econcomic
value, as well as to halt erosion
and preserve and increase our
ground water.”
“The chere for . the sportsmen
then is to initiate the necessary
program which would de-empha
size their interests, and empha
size the general public good
which can and will result in slum
clearance. The alternative is to
spend more for less geme each
year.”
~ Body and fender bolts on a new
car are inclined to work loose,
and should he tishtened at veou-|
lar iatervals, l
TIIURSDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1948,
LOn Exhibition At
o it
Regional Library
! An exhibition of the art works
of Miss Frances Benson, 227 S.
}Finley St., is currently being dis
played at Athens Regional Library
until Dec. 18.
-~ Formerly a special student of
Lamar Dodd at the University of
'Georgia, and a graduate of Mary
iland Institute of Art, Baltimore,
'Md., Miss "Benson is back in Ath
;ens after a year of study at the
Art Students League in New York,
'having won a scholarship to the
League for the 1948-49 season.
} Miss Benson’s works have been
‘exhibited in a number of state and
‘national shows, and at the Con
temporary Gallery on 57th Street,
N. Y. C. She was awarded second
prize in watercolor in the First
Annual Southeastern Exhibition
with ‘“Recurrence,” a picture
‘which was shown in Athens re
cently at the-opening of the Hol
‘brook Memorial Museum.
~ Paintings on exhibition at the
library include a group of four
portraits in oil, a still-life in oil
titled ‘“Pomegranite and Green
Grapes,” a” gouache—*“Jar with
Lantanae,” iland two watercolor
landscapes, “Autumn River,” and
“Autumn Hillside.”
The portraits are of Jenny Lee
‘and Melissa Daniel, daughters of
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Daniel Jr,
Roy Medders, student in the art
department of the University of
Georgia, and a self-portrait.
East Athens P. T. A.
S b~ .
ees Play Tonight
The East Athens P. T. A. mee!-
ing will lfimld tonight, Dec. 9, at
the schoeliThe play, The Big
Surprtse,f}';;fifi the Northwestern
Press will /be presented by the
sixth gradeselass.
The 'charaeters are: Frederick
Dillard, Thelfja Wimbush, Hattie
Peek, James Johnson, Betty John
son, Rita Brogwn, Frank Sims, Joan
Terrell, Hattig. Johnson, and Clar
‘ence Thor * The play is under
the direction: i C. Wymbs.
sA: gl}‘us ix:tz’ ne “Fanta and dthc
anta Twins’ will be presented at
the Chrimg tree party. Mrs. J.
Richards will be at the piano.
Panama,@s are woven of fine
boiled, % leached toquilla o
jipijapa leaves, while both the fi
bers and the weavers’ fingers arer
wet.
e —————— e Wttt —
FUNERAL NOTICE
POSS --The relatives and friends
of Mrs. Hugh Poss of Athens
Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Poss, Mr
-and Mrs. S. J. Poss, Mr. i
Mrs A. D. Poss, Mr. J. L. Mc
Leroy, Mrs., Cleve FPosy
all of Athens, are invitel
to attend the funeral *
Mrs. Hugh Poss, Friday after
noon, December 10, 1948, fron
Bridges Chapel at three (3:00
o'clock. The Rev. Bud Sha%
pastor of the Primitive Bapts
Church of Commerce, Ga..'Will
officiate and will be assisted
by Rey. T. R. Harvill, pasi'
( of the Prince Avenue Bap!:
Church, and Rev. J. M, Spiveh
paster of Young Harris Metl”
odist Church. The folluwlfll.:
gentlemen will serve as Dodl
bearers: Mr. Bob Poss, Ms
- Dan Poss, Mr. Edwin Poss, M'd'
Jeff Poss, Mr. Carl Poss flf_l']i
Mr. Willie Rumsey and “l
please - meet at Br&dxes Sher
at two~forty-five (2:45) o'clocy
Interment will be in McLel™
cemetery. Tallassee RO
_Bridges ¥uneial Home. .- -