Newspaper Page Text
rHURSDAY, JANUARY 20, 1949,
University News Briefs
pparmacy students at the Uni
versity Of Geqrgia are getting
training in business at well as
phm'mac.\'-
Through the cooperation of the
gchool of Pharmacy and the Col
lege of Business .Administration,j
students majoring in pharmacy are
now participating in the pharma
ceutical accounting class, taught
by Prof. John F. Burke.
pean Kenneth Waters, of the
Pharmacy School, says the new
course will get his students into
the trend of businsess and econo
mics. He says the course is espec
jally desl gned to aid those students
who intend to g 0 into the retail
drug business in small Georgia
towns.
The University of Georgia de
partment of food technology will
act as host to a group of over 30
food technologists from all parts
of Georgia, South Carolina, and
Tennessee, when the Institute of
Food Technologist meeis on the
campus Jan. ok
During the afternoon the visit
ing specialists will tour and inspect
Do FALSE TEETH
Rock, Slide or Slip?
FASTEETH, an improved pow
jer to be sprinkled on upper or
Jower plates, holds false teeth
more firmly in place. Do not
glide, slip or rock. No gummy,
gooey, pasty taste or feeling. FAS
TEETHM is alkaline (non-acidj.
Does not sour, Checks ¢plate
odor” (denture brezth). Get FAS~
ITEE’I‘H et any drug store.
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ACTUAL SIZE! ' : i
9" long x 5% " wide x 24" high
//’ Striking colors!
N\ 7/ SN\w#Yzz, Your choice of four
\ o Y i// (while supplies last) :
‘\ A_ ////,, coral red, spring
[, 'L 7 green, sunshine yel
low, and chocolate
brown; swirling mottled effect. Graceful oval
shape, smart bagket design. Over 9 in. long,
7 o"' '
{‘{\é'@ 6:%.‘;‘ Picture it on y.our
¥ | :.pi:(rt table! Stunning
W~ | f;:;'fi ’ heaped with those
~\f = =€ ' beautiful Red B'and”
j T— biscuits, also other
hot breads. Or fill this handsome basket with
bright fruit as an eyecatching centerpiece.
University departments related to
food industry, among them the de
partments of dairy husbandry,
poultry, food technology, plant
patnology, and the School of Home
Economics.
Dean George H. Boyd of the
Graduate School will discuss “The
Research Program at the Univer
sity of Georgia” at a dinner to be
held in the Dawson Hall Tea Room
at 6:30 p. m. Other speakers will
include Dean Paul W. Chapman of
the College of Agriculture, discuss
ing “The Future of Food Techno
logy in Georgia,” and Dean Pauline
P. Wilson of the School of Home
Economics, who will lecture on
“Food Technology in the Home
Making.”
Miss Virginia Cooksey, 1942
graduate of the Henry W. Grady
School of Journalism, has been
awawded the M. S. degree by the
Alabama Polytechnic Institute.
Miss Cooksey it at present on the
staff of the Columbus Enquirer.
She has also taught in the Off-
Campus Center at Columbus.
Prior to returning to her native
city of Columbus, she was connec
ted with the International News
Service in Atlanta and Ohio.
Dr. A. S. Edwards, head of the
University.of Georgia psychology
department, has been awarded a
diploma by the American Board of
Examiners in Professional Psycho
logy. The diploma was awarded
Dr. Edwards for his work in cli
nical psychology.
H. B. Henderson, head, Univer
sity of Georgia dairy department,
and John J. Sheuring, associate
professor of dairying, will attend
a meeting of the Georgia Dairy As
sociation in Atlanta Jan. 20-21 at
the Biltmore Hotel.
During the two-day session, Mr.
Henderson will speak on the “Re
search in Dairying ,” and Mr.
Sheuring will discuss “Quality
Production and Overrun in Ice
Cream.”
Robert U. Brown, editor ond
Publisher, national weekly journa
listic publication, will address the
twenty-first annual session of the
Georgia Press Institute at the Hen
ry W. Grady School of Journalism,
University of Georgia, Feb. 16-19.
Mr. Brown’s appearance, spon
sored by Editor and Publisher, has
be announced joinMy by Senator
Jack Williams, Waycross, Institute
Chairman, and Dean John E.
Drewry of the Grady School.
Raised in a newspaper family,
Mr. Brown graduated from Dart
mouth College in 1934 and later at~
tended the Empire School of Print
ing in Ithaca, N. Y. His career as a
reporter began when he joined the
staff of the Philadelphia bureau of
the United Press and continued in
the editorial field -on the Auburn
(N.Y.) Citizen-Advertiser. He be
came a reporter for Editor and
Publisher in 1936 and has been
editor of the periodical since 1944.
Another Editor, Robert Brown of
Columbia Ledger-Enquirer, will
be the principal speaker at an In
stitute luncheon to be sponsored by
his newspaper. The Ledger-Enqui
rer will also sponsor the appear
rance of Erwin Canham, editor of
the Christian Science Monitor, as
one of several internationally
known speakers , scheduled to ad
dress the meeting of Georgia jour
nalists.
Other Institute speakers an
nounced to date include Doris
Fleeson.Washington reporter, and
W. B. Williams, sales promotion
and advertising manager of Coun
try Gentleman.
ROSR P MO S !
’ S ./. i
:v Generalflfl-}/ G B o
Ar yo”R : I; . @o . e
.’s/ — ; s
while Supplies last | . \/W |
Nothing to send for! No waiting! Get \flm |
this Basket right at your grocer’s : Ehrjcb : :
when you buy Red Band Flour (10 SN fltsedplo iy
Ibs. or more). it HE ACNED Ur ;
A beauty, this Biscuit Basket. Prac- R
tical, too. Fashioned of gleaming Sty- Gaal s :
ron plastic in four exquisite colors . . : : :
long-lasting, easy to keep clean, mod- j ;
ern as tomorrow! S g
Why this offer? To introduce you to : 5 !
Red Band, the Southern “Success cuits, hg)t. breads, cakes, piecrust.
Story” Flour. Fine white Red Band Try it! AS]‘; for Red Band Flour
Flour was first milled in 1925 in John- at your grocer’s today. And get your
son City, Tenn. Now most popular Biscuit Basket at no extra cost!
quality flour in many Southern cities. ‘ 1o
Sl Kir all SOt g, bl bl SERL S
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
ATHENS BENEFITS
$24-Million Expansion Plan
Is Announced By Power Co.
,ATLANTA, Jan. 20—The Geor
gia Power Company will spend
$24,000,000 on construction pro
jects this year, C. B. McManus,
president, said Thursday. The an
nouncement was made following a
meeting of ‘the Company’s Board
of Directors at which the 1949 pro+
gram was approved. ‘
Expanded and improved service
will be provided for the Company’s
electric and transportation custo-l
mers through the construction of
new facilities and the replacement
of existing facilities which are no
longer adequate.
More than $8,500,000 will be in
vested in new power generating
facilities, Of this amount, over
$5,000,000 will be used to' continue
the contsruction of Plant’ Yates, a*
a 200,0000-kilowatt steam-electric
plant located on the' Chattahoechee
River near Newnan. Completion of’
this plant is scheduled for late
1950. A~ .
Nearly $2,000,000 will be requif- |
ed for completion of Plant Mitchell
a 45,000-Kilowatt . steam-electric
plant located near Albany.” The
first unit of 22,500 Kilowatts is al
ready in service, with the second
unit scheduled to come on the line
this spring. 1
Construction of ‘the 50,000-kilo
watt Furman Shoals hydroelec
tric plant on the Oconee River near
Milledgeville will be resumed dur
ing 1949. The plant was begun in
1929 but work was suspended in
1931. It is scheduled for comple
tion in 1952, Mr. McManus said.
On the 1949 construction sche
dule are a number of new trans
mission lines designed to streng
then the Company’s electric ser
vice in various parts of the state.
A 110,000-volt transmission line
will be built from Gordon tc Wad
ley, a distance of 58 miles. It will
provide an increased power supply
for a large section of East Georgia.
A 24-mile transmission line carry
ing power at 110,000 volts will be
constructed between Winder and
Athens. This line will give Athens
a third source of power in addition
to the two existing transmission
lines serving the city. Another 110,
000-volt transmission line will be
constructed from Tifton to Fitzger
ald, a distance of 25 miles. It will
give Fitzgerald another source of
power and provide for the future
growth of the community.
' The largest item in the contsruc
tion program, more than $6,500,000,
is allocated to service extension to
pfovide for the needs of new users.
The Company expects to serve 33,-
650 neWw customers this year in ci
ties. towns and rural areas.
Mr. McManus said extensive im
provements are planned on the dis
tribution facilities in Atlanta and
DeKalb County. The moderniza
tion of Atlanta’s transportation
system will be completed at a cost
of more than $1,000,000.
+ The power company’s 1949 con
struction programis made neces
sary by the rapid industrial and
commercial growth of the state,
‘Mr. McManus said. “Our expendi
ture this year is part of a contin
uing activity, one which will con
tinue on approximately the same
scale for the next several years.
These large investments are neces
sary no only from the Company’s
standpoint but from the standpoint
‘of the state as well. No factor is
of more importance to the progress
of Georgia than an adequate, de
'pendable supply of electricity,
‘available throughout the area.”
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i{c‘h WOVEN PATTERNS! They couldn’t be more attractive
‘ kil ... they’re such clear, fresh coiors, in plaids and stripes
&\ 2 : ... come in such easy - wearing, good looking styles.
/ /, They couldn’t be more practical — low price is an ex
/ 0 o NP ample of PENNEY’'S CASH AND CARRY SAVINGS.
4 \ / Sizes 12-20,
‘NS GRS 4' . NYLONS / o S
\\ ' e g
\\ 2 ?' 9 Our fine 45 gauge, 30 denier & e
\ \ o i full fashioned hose in sizes |& .
N\s ‘\ / 7 814 - 10%. A real buy.
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Even on the slimmest budget Penney shoppers o
find all the smart styling. of more expensive R ”’"s:i i;v ’
coats. Styles in all wool covert, and rayon and Te , ; .
wool gabardines: . . BB
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DRESSES .. B =
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All the style features you like in more expensive /” sy 5 .
dresses, yes, but more than that . .. this skilfully o
blended rayon gabardine in brand - new spring : o
colors too, sizes 9-15 & 12-20.
'
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e Rayon gabardine spe
| g N cially treated to resist
{ B T shrinkage! A variety 19
" ,‘vA,;‘«?H:,’,‘ of lovely colors for o
& e e Spring, light and dark.
l¢oi e g | Hand washable. Prac
s A N tical. 42"x5¢4” ... 198 Yd. :
B L O
-el WOOLENS
v 0 L L this a fine value ~,at & thrifty
S o |[N [ ] price. Woven foriwear and fine
ee o A [ draping. Pastel calots.
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MO-DE - GAY - PER- L 1‘" v K RRFET S /(* eé’
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start you sewing for S o iG AN f/"
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CHAMBRAY | 50564 »
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36” pastel colored Chambrays :2*'\ V:S, & '@,‘
for your spring cottons and ?__‘;3,» & Si\ LA B
summer spoftswear. Wash so '{?, ,m&fi b Cw‘@ ‘X‘ ) :
easily .. . colors stay fresh, L4/sg p 4&% :(}/‘:X ! ; :
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PAGE ONE-A