Newspaper Page Text
THURSDAY, MAY 26, 1949,
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Men’s Summer Sportswear Is
Tailored With Comfort, Color
SPORTS LOOK FOR SUMMER MALE: Tailored shorts (left)
are the new design for golf, walking or leafing. Made of tropical
worsted, Wool Bureau experts team these with a lightweight wool
shirt; their counterpart, for swimming, are in gabardine and also
tailored (right). Washable rayon sports shirt (top center) from
Wilson Brothers has a convertible collar and a wide range of
pastel colors; another is washable rayon (bottom center) from
Ameritex has a stibdued pattern, with a bolde rlook for junior's
cotton shirt. 5
NEW YORK.— (NEA) —Com-|
fort, freedom of action and util- |
ity are the keynotes in 1949’s
wardrobe for the American
male’s summertime fun.
But the sloppy-Joe style of
comfort is being pushed out of
the picture, according to men’s
clothing experts. Designers are
adding the tailored “touch to
everything from sports shirts to
shorts, and throwing in a lot of
color to go with it.
The shorts, incidentally, will
be a bigger part of the male sum
mer wardrobe than ever before.
For walking, golf, or just lazing
around, the Anverican design is a
pleated short trouser that ends
above the knee—a little longer
than the traditional tennis shorts,
but shorter than the knee-length
style copied from the British.
The same tailored look carrieS|
over to the newest swimming
trunks, too; except for a snug
titting belt and a waterproof
pocket for change, they look al
most” like walking shorts. Plenty
of the brief-styled trunks in
knitted fabrics still = will be
around, however.
While the T-shirt, either plain
or with trimming or stripes, will
be a big part of the summer
scene for active sports and very
informal wear, the new dressier|
sports shirts ~emphasize both
color and versatility.
In lightweight wool, rayon and |
cotton, they’re designed to be!
adaptable for just about every
summer occasion except. dress-up
in town. They're found in sub
dued patterns, such as glen plaid
or palm trees, for instance, or in
solid pastel colors of gold, maize,
rosewine, aqua and pearl gray,
among others. But holler pat
terns and colors haven’t been
eclipsed as yet.
Washability is being stressed inl
almost every item of men’s sports'
- Graceful Flyer
-3 Type of tree
4 Lieutenant
(ab.)
5 Varnish
ingredien’
6 Indian
7 Existed
8 Chum
9 Alleged foree
10 Land parcel
11 Expunge 2
12 Calyx leaf
17 Indian Z
mulberry 1
23 Mean - :
24 Flag
26 Dispatched ‘
27 Former ‘
Russian ruler
28 Negative reply
29 M{stic
syllable *
HORIZONTAL
1 Depicted bird
8 Rods
11Having left a
will :
1t Idolize
15 College cheer
16 Sea skeleton
18 Light knock
19 Measure of
area
20 Lamprey
21 Symbol for
samarium
22 Greek letter
24 Babylonian
deity
25 Nova Scotia
(ab.)
27 Symbol for
tantalum
28 Memorandum
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30 Filiip
33 Portent
34 West Indian
shrub
35 Symbol for
niton
38 Musical note
37 Too .
39 Knock
42 Universat
language
43 Roof finial
46 Symbol for
sodium
47 Anger :
49 Mourning
Virgin
51 Atmosphere
S2lt 18 & e
bird :
54 Sorrow NVe
56Not tardy
57 Trailed ’
» VERTICAL
i 1 Leather thong
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wear, no matter what fabric is
used. '
Major League
Leaders
By The Associated Press
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Batting — Zernial, Chicago,
.366; Sievers, St, Louis, .349.
Runs—Joost, Philadelphia, 42;
Williams, Boston, 30.
Runs Batted In — Williams,
Boston, 34; Stephens, Boston, 32.
Hits — Kell, Detiyit, and Zer
nial, Chicago, 48. :
Doubles—Zernial, Chicago, 16;
Chapman, Philadelphia, 13.
Triples — Mitchell, Cleveland,
6; Valo, Philadelphia, 4.
Home Runs—Stephens, Boston,
11; Williams, Boston, 9.
Stolen Bases — Dillinger, St.
Louis, 5; Mitchell, Cleveland, 4.
Pitching — Lopat, New York,
4-0. 1.000; Byrne, New York, 3-0,
1.000.
Strikeouts — Newhouser, De
troit, 42; Trucks, Detroit, 37.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
» Batting—Marshall, New York,
Bue, oonoenaienst, St. Louis,
.363.
Runs — Marshall, New York
30; Gordon, New York, 29.
Runs Batted In — Robinson
Brooklyn, 34; Mize, New York
Hits — Lockman, New York
Dark, Boston, 48.
Doubles — Jones, Philadelphia
14; Robinson, Brooklyn, 11.
Triples — Furillo, Brooklyn
Smalley, Chicago, 4.
Home Runs—Mize, New York
Kiner, Pittsburgh, 9.
Stolen Bases—Nobinson, Brook
lyn, 6; Reese and Hermanski
Brooklyn; Lockman, New York
4.
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TIES GO
PASTEL
NEW YORK — (NEA)—Pastels
are the big news, in men’s ties for
summer, 1949.
That’s the word from the Men’s
Tie Foundation, spokesman for
the neckwear industry, on what
you’ll wear around your neck
when you're nq} sporting an open
coilar—or no shirt at all.
The pastels range in tone from
pale pink through lemon yellow
to heliotrope and cover a wide
range of taste in patterns—right
up to the boldest.
Polka dots—llittle ones, medium
sized and big, either pastel dots
on dark grounds or vice versa—
are in for a big splurge, say the
experts. Sports motifs include
bowling, tennis, swimming, sail
ing, and even horse racing.
Geometric designs are in the
pastel picture, too, in both big and
little figures. There are swirlds,
florals and abstractions to com
plete the picture.
It isn’'t the pattern that countis
now, however; it's the pastel.
Former Athens
Man Buried In
Cemetery Here
Services for Dr. Wilson M.
Slaughter, former Athens dentist,
were conducted Thursday after
noon at 3 o'clock from First Bap
tist Church in Greensboro, Ga.,
where he had resided for the past
fourteen years.
Officiating were Rev. C. H.
Koop and Rev. E. A. Kilgore, Mc-
Commons Funerai Home in charge.
Burial was in Oconee Hill ceme
tery. Pall-bearers were members
of the Greensboro Masonic Lodge,
of which he was a member.
Dr. Slaughter, a native of Ath
ens, died in a local hospital Wed
nesday morning. He was the son
of the late Dr. Wilson M. Slaugh
ter, sr.,, and Mrs. Willie Holland
Slaughter, and attended local
schools, graduating from Athens
High School and the Southern
Dental College. He %vas associated
with his father in the practice of
dentistry here until he moved to
Greensboro.
Dr. Slaughter is survived by his
wife, three daughters, Florence
Jean Slaughter, Willie . Carol
Slaughter and Mary Kate Slaugh
ter, all of Greenshoro; three
brothers, Paul Slaughter, Mont
gomery, Ala., Willie Holland
Slaughter, U. S. Army, and Asa
Candler Slaughter, Athens; and
one sister, Mrs. Philip G. Herbst,
Akron, Ohio.
Dr. Slaughter was a member of
Greensboro First Baptist Church,
San Marino Lodge, No. 34, F. &
A. M., and Greensboro Lions Club.
BRITISH GOLF FINALS
HARLECH, Wales May 28 —
(AP) — Francis Stephens of En-
THE BANNER-ITERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA,
Caiile Saie
Set Friday
In Blackshear
The registered Aberdeen-An
gus production sale held at the
Northeast Georgia Fair Associa
tion sales barn in Gainesville
yesterday was considered one of
the most successful sales held in
the state until this tinve, reported
Executive Secretary George W.
Gibson of the Geofgia Aberdeen-
Anhgus Association today.
Nineteen females and nine
bulls went through the ring for
an average sale price of $274 per
head. The bulls averaged $302
per head and the females $57 per
nead.
The top-selling animal was an
outstanding two-year-old bull
consigned by Snap Finger Farms
of Decatur whith went to M. H.
Barnett of Washington, Ga., at
S6OO. The newspapers and radio
stations had done an excellent
job of publicizing the sale, Mr.
Gibson said, and the attendance
was beyond expectations. Buyers
were present from all sections of
the state,
The second and last of this se
ries of production sales will' be
held in Blackshear at one o’clock
tomorrow afternoon, at which
some good young cattle from all
sections of Georgia will be offer=
ed at Pierce Company Stock
yards.
What The People Say
NOTICE TO ALL VETERANS
Dear Comrade:
Our state Vice-Commander,
Buddy George Hearn, of Monroe,
Georgia, will' speak to us at Allen
R. Fleming, Jr. Post No. 20, on
June 2, 1949, and his subject will
be “What the legion has meant to
the veteran and the loyalty that
the veteran should show to the
legion,” and I am sure that each
one of you is aware of the fact
that he is well capable of speaking
on this subject.
I wish to extend to you a hearty
welcome to be our guest at this
meeting, as our whole purpose and
aim is to further the cause of the
veteran. In regard to Mr. Hearn,
I feel sure that he will be our next
state commander, as at present,
tnere is no one else in the field,
and he is so well qualified that
everyone knows it is not necessary
to seek another man at this time.
So, please join with us and hear
this splendid “Son of America”
tell his message, for he is’ an
American who faces his God and
his country fairly and squarely.
I am,
Yours very truly,
CARDIS H. THURMON
Commander, Allen R. Fleming,
Jr. Post No. 20
American Legion, Athens, Ga.
PRAISES BANNER-HERALD
Editor Banner-Herald;
The Athens High School Parent-
Teacher Association wishes me to
convey to you our sincere appre
ciation for the splendid coverage
you have given to the work of our
organization during the past two
years. : z .
Often a member of your staff
was present to cover the meetings
of the Association. The articles
were then placed in prominent po
sitions in your publication, and
generous space was always given
to the stories.
The activities of the High School
= e oy LaltES eLR E TASE TUCE SERTS
have been numerous, but high
lighting every plan of the organi
zation has been the vision of and
the work for a new high school
building. This project, culminating
in the bond election on May 24,
has met with overwhelming suc
cess. The unlimited space you gave
in publicizing the bond election
and your €ditorial support of this
important and constructive issue
were great factors in the victory,
and we shall always be grateful
to you and to your staff for the
magnificent way in which you
kept the issue before the citizens
of Athens.
As a social institution you are
rendering an immeasurable ser
vice to our community.
.. Respectfully,
RUBY ANDERSON, Secretary,
Athens High School Parent-Teach
er Association.
interville
W ill
{Continued from Page One)
Saws.
.The adult area provides well
divided space for two tennis
courts, volley ball, badminton
and horse shoes, not to mention
swings and plenty of benches for
those who like to watch the ac
tivities and engage in conversa
tion with friends.
Highly Praised
The accomplishment of their
purpose draws much praise from
every#citizen for the fine, untir
ing work of the committee,
Their only defeated aim so far
is the regretted absence of thy
prospective blafiound director,
Miss Martha Pittard, who is to
undergo surgery and be hospital
ized for an indefinite period of
time.
Miss Pittard, a junior at Geor
gia State College for Women in
‘Milledgeville, is the daughter of
Msayor G. C. Pittard, sr. She is
majoring in Physical Education
and was recently elected to the
presidency of the Athletic Recre
ation Club there. It was she who
brought the spark to a small
group last winter and .fired their
zeal info activity, resulting in the
park as it is today.
gland faced Mrs. Val Reddan of
Ireland today for the British wo
men's amateur golf championship.
Miss Stephens, 24-year-old En
glish champion, advanced to the
36-hole final by defeating Philom
ena Garvey of Ireland, 5 and 4.
Mpyre, Boddan heat Mrg Como Fal
comer of Scotland, 3 and 2.
The.Littie Man Who Came Back
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Revived 10 mmutx after being pronounced dead,”four-year-old
Larry Page, is recovering i a Pasadena, Calif., hospital. Here
he is visited by his parents,Mr. and Mrs. Francis Page, of Mojave.
His left leg, broken.in therauto accident that almost cost his life,
: . . is in;a,traction splint,
ADVICE TO COLLEGE GIRL
GRADUATES --GET A MAN!
NEW YORK—(AP)—The sweet
young thing had a stormy look in
her eyes as she marched up to my
desk. {
“May I be of any. assistance to
you, Ma’am?” I inquired cautious-
You have to be cautious in a
newspaper office these days when
pretty girls come up to you. You
never know whether they want
you to be the last man in their
pyramid club, or to tell you they
just shot down their dear old
grandmother for reading too many
comic books.
“Yes, you can help me,” she
said. “You wrote a piece telling
college men graduates how to get
ahead in life. But how about the
girl graduates? Haven’t you any
thing to tell me?”
“Have. I?” I asked, looking to
see which ear she wanted filled
first. “Sit down, my dear.”
The only seat I have for callers
is an iron-rimmed wastebasket.
She stood and stared at it in care
ful helplessness. I sat and stared
at- it, too. Then I got up and sat
down on the wastebasket, and she
moved over and sat down in my
chair.
“I don’t think there is anything
I can tell you,” I said.
uWhy?n
“Because you just showed you
have already learned woman’s
most important art — how to get
men to do what you want.”
“Oh, men!” she said. {I some
times wish all the men in the
world were dead — not that they
probably aren’t.”
Mad At hken
“Why are you mad at men?”
“Because they take up so much
space. What chance has a woman
who wants a career? Men hold
the big jobs. If there’s a soft
touch in life, it’s theirs.”
She said this — and me sitting
there ecramped on an iron waste
basket.
“Look,” I said. “You've got life
backwards. Men lost out in ihe
struggle to rule the world long
ago. It’s a woman’s world today.
The prime aim left to men now
is to make women happy. Men
work, women spend. This isn’t
just a feminine age we’re living in
—it’s a feminine rampage.”
“Well,” she said. “I can see
why they call you the Poor Man’s
Philosopher. You certainly aren’t
the Poor Woman’s Socrates—or
Gable either, for that matter.
What about equal rights?”
“What about egual wrongs—do
you want those, too?” I asked.
“Einstein couldn’t figure a for
mula to give women equal rights.
And it wouldn’t be fair to them
if he did.”
“How can I have a successful
career?”
Work Hard
“Work hard, use your brains,
be friendly — just like I told the
college boys. And don’t try to cap
italize on sex in business.”
“Is there any way I can avoid
it?” she dimpled. =~ . .
“No, I guess not,” sighed. “Not
for another 30 years. Then it won’t
make any difference. What’s your
name anyway?”
“Just call me Jane College,” she
said. “I came to see you on a
dare.”
As she turned to leave, I said:
“Can I give you just one more
piece of advice? Few women—or
few men either—ever found com-
City Taxes for the year 1949 are now due and
if paid in full between May Ist and June Ist a
discount of 2% will be allowed.
Or, the First Installment (1-3) must be paid
between May Ist and Juae Ist to avoid the pen
alties. |
Please pay early and avoid the rush,
A. G. SMITH, Treasurer.
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HUNK OF AAN—Here he is,
girls—Mr. ®*America of 1949—
otherwise known as Jack Delin
ger, of Oakland, Calif, The 22-
year-old muscle man won the
title over 40 contestants in the
annual contest in Cleveland, O.
Delinger weighs 198 pounds,
stands 5 feet 8 inches and hopes
to go on the stage. Right now,
he’s classified as an unemployed
shipping clerk. :
plete happiness in a career alone.
’lt’s better to be q‘;.leen in a kitch
enette than a sub-princess in a
20-room office. Find you a nice
healthy man and marry him.”
.. “Who'd you have in mind?” said
the sweet young thing.
I went back to my chair, stiil
feeling like I was sifting in the
wastebasket. 1 suppose thiz is the
way any man feels who ever tries
to tell any woman anything.
LEMON FROSTING
To make a lemon frosting for
the top of an 8-inch sponge cake
cream two tablespoons butter or
margarine, beat in a cup of con
fectioners’ sugar. (Be sure to sieve
the sugar if it is at all lumpy.)
Now add a tablespoon of lemon
juice (the juice of half a sn;allj
lemon is usually enough) and
thin with a little cream. Sprinkle
with finely chopped nutmeats
after spreading over the top. of
the cake if desired; this amount
of icing will not frost sides,
Remains of stone-age cakes,l
made of coarsely-ground grain, !
weré found in the Swiss lake=|
dwellings. i
Newman Club
Met Sunday
The Newman Club of the Uni
versity of Georgia held its sev
enth and final meeting of the
Spring Quarter in the Reetory of
Saint Joseph’s Catholic Church
Sunday night at 8. A full attend
ance heard outgoing President
Jerry Deleski’s annunciation that
parties are to be given for new
members of the Freshman class
of the Summer Quarter and that
the thirty-fifth National Conven
tion of the Newman Club Feder
ation wiil be held in Chicago
September 7-10. g
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— LAST DAY —
“JOHN LOVES MARY”
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TODAY — TOMORROW :
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Wi! | “THE ANGEL AND THE BADMAN” | ;
ih Cartoon: “BUCCANEER BUNNY” News d
oWHERE DLD AND NEW ATIANTS HISHIAYS Siskrs 2 }
PAGE SEVEN
Mr. Delenski, successful presi=
dent for two complete quarter:
will graduate in June. His lead’l
ership in the Newman Club was
one of admiration and respect
whirh was well-carnel
A letter from the Province
Secretary was read and there
followed an address on “Mar
riage.
® 5 =
LOW HEAT
Whe nyour youngsters make
fudge, suggest that they put it.
over low heat at the beginning
and stir constantly until every
grain of sugar is dissolved. This
careful dissolution of the sugar
is one of the secrets of making
creamy fudge.
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— LAST DAY —
“JUNE BRIDE”