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PAGE TWO
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Vo S holstering materials on sale Mondayonly. Ourdepartmentis
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(ROW'S FOR GRADUATION GIFTS AND VACATION NEEDS
Gifts for the Graduate
Ay Sickihaile lor ke WHTBu gito
VANKY CLOVERSET .. .. .. .. . 1.8
EVENING INPARIS .. ... .. .. 215
BATHPOWDER & COLOGNE .. .. .. 200
R elbanne . $lB Mowte Tolouss . . 85¢
¥ ity Lavandar'. 1.05 soouvieg Bowt .. . . 1:00
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SHAVING KITS (unfitied) .. .. .. .. 1.09
GEM RAZOR & BRUSH . .. .. . .. 295
NYLON CLUB BRUSHES .. .. .. ... 400
BILLFOIDS . .. .. . .. .. 2,500 10.0
BOXCAMERAS .. .. .. ... 518
SELECTED STATIONERY . 1.00-1.50
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THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA,
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RO i POPULAR BRANDS
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DTHORAS Reg. 3.50 — Now 2.89
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SPECIAL } 1
Hot Water | 'g;bber
Bottles ’f ) / “J} J o —es
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1.25 SIZE . '
SIMILACBABY FOOB .. .. .. .. .. 81c
75¢ SIZE (LIMIT 1)
DOANSPILLS .. .. ........ ... 4%
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[@a L5~ CROW'S CARRIES A MOST oy,
' s COMPLETE LINE OF f ' ( '
& l 4 Trusses, ELasTic LAY
® & STOCKINGS & SUPPORTS. &
TOMATOES
HIGHLIGHT
BIiG PARADE
GLENNVILLE, Ga., May 27 -—1
(AP)—Luscious tomatoes —the
edible variety—got a big hand in
Glennville’s biggest parade.
Some of the more than 10,000
persons who crowded into town
yesterday for the tomato harvest
ing festival had reason to cheer.
Their pockets were being lined at‘
the rate of SI,OOO profit per acre.
Cotton couldn’t crown a queen
here. But tomato farmers, expect
ing a record crop of 200,000 bush
els, picked a beauty queen and put
on the town’s largest celebration.
Neighboring towns and business
firms entered a dozen floats in a
parade. The tomato queen, pretty
16-year-old Nell Woodcock, rode
on a float adorned with tomatoes
and four beautiful attendants.
Governor Herman Talmadge
and Lt. Gov. Marvin Griffin rode
in the parade through streets
draped with flags, welcome signs
and bunting.
The governor told farmers in a
festival crowd they were in the
most speculative business on earth
but that a* farmer’s life “is the
happiest life you “tan live.”
. The festival was in celebration
of the peak of the harvesting sea
son. The crowds were entertained
at a horse race, baseball iame and
a street dance. The Parris Island
Marine Band supplied music.
Tattnal county has about 2,000
acres in tomatoes this year and
production is expected to double
last year’s output.
Memoria
ial
(Continued from Page One)
Harold Mills, John Divinney, Fred
Parr, W. N. Bradley, Aubrey E.
Mathews, Joe Lumpkin, Arthur S.
Bussey, Neal Hawkins, W. H.
Landers, Ross Creekmore.
Abe Farbstein, Rufus Woods,
Allen Findley, Ivan Cartey, Ar
nold Drake, A. E. Johnson, Paul
' Holliday, I. Q. Cobb, C. A. Suber,
?Emory Eavis, C. J. Jones, George
Nicholson.
| C. O. Bell, Artie Dunaway
John Reese Wier, J. -Russell Til
'ton, Dupree Barrett, Jeff McDuf
fie, Frank Mitchell, Howard C.
Gilbreath, R. R. Childs, Thomas
L. Babb, H. C. Hutchins, jr., Rob
ert Biggs, Paul Collins, Dave
}Bailey, jr.,” Carl Henson, Wallace
L. Lester, Napoleon Thompson.
l Clinton H. Murrell, Chester C.
ißray, James M. Lewis, B. Clay
‘Marlow, William F. Roberts, Hen
ry L. Anderson, W. E. Mattison,
W. L. Florence, Fleetwood Lanier,
Willie Seagraves, W. L. Phillips,
Fred T. Moon.
. Thomas J. Chancey, Edmund
Pulham, John Hoke, Rufus Burch,
George D. Homer, J. Fred Lemon,
Walter Poss, Edward Poss, Grover
C. Little, Richard Bullock, D. L.
Elliott, Harry Towns.
Walter Center, Henry G.® Han
cock, W. M. Hartman, Roy Epps,
Harry Kidd, Dr. H. W. Birdsong,
Paul Lemon, Edwin H. Sterrett,
Norman O. Wood, Earl Threlkeld,
Ben Mcßee, Victor Wallace Moore.
Luther T. Prather, E. P. Fryer,
Hunter Harris, sr., Arthur M. Hag
gard, William T. Schwab, Dr. W.
D. Anderson, Dr. Carl Holliday,
Alexander Scudder, Oscar Kinne
brew, Cosby Dawson, John Walter
Nicholson, Hoyt Bennett, D. L.
Howelil.
Fred B. Lavender, George H.
Drewry, sr., Guy H. Anderson,
Lloyd Miller, John Mell Brooks,
Charles Joel, Loyd F.-Epps.
World War Two: William Glenn
Allen, Mark S. Adams, Carl J.
Aaron, Joseph Peter Alexander,
Walter E. Beard, William M. Bur
son jr., Jack H. Brannon, Leo W.
Belcher, John Coffee Braswell,
William C. Bisson, Richard Bul
loch, Edward C. Breedlove.
Addie S. Burgess, David J.
Burkhalter, Walter L. Bryant, Wil
liam B. Broach, Homer George
Cooper, jr., Victor S. Crowe, Sam
P. Cain, jr., Morris. Sheppard
Coile. Douglas Campbell, Roland
Earl Carter, James Roland Carter,
Powell D. Cochran. ;
Layman Cash, Nick Carpenter,
Claude Harold Darnell, Dr. John
Weyman Davie Robert Daooley,
lCecil W. Doster, Roy Lee Doster,
Louis S. Davis 111, William B. Day,
J. J. Dodd, Vernon L. Dockery,
END-OF-MONTH SALE!
One Rack
Dresses
Russian Cord Chambray
12.95 — 14.95 Values
8.95
One Rack .
SUMMER SUITS
Sharkskin & Russian Cord
19.95 — 24.95 Values,
14.95
All Sales: Finall
The Fashion Shop
sk Ve e - 134 E. Clayfton '
SUNDAY, MAY 29, 1949,
Dr. Pound
Speaks On
“Grady Day”
Dr. Merritt B. Pound, head of
the University of Georgia's de
partment of political science, ad
dressed journalism students and
faculty assembled Friday night at
a banquet at the Georgian Hotel to
celebrate the 99th anniversary of
the birth of Henry W. Grady.
Prior to the banquet, which was
sponsored by Sigma Delta Chi and
Theta Sigma Phi, journalism fra
ternities, Sigma Delta Chi initiated
four professional members.
They are John Battle, city edi
tor of the Augusta Chronicle; Syl
van Myers, managing editor of the
Gainesville Daily Times; Phil
Scroggs, sports editor of the Au
gusta Chronicle; and Charles Kopp,
Georgia Teachers College, States
boro. Mr. Kopp was formerly on
the staff of the Henry W. Grady
School of Journalism.
A dance in the Georgian Ball
Room followed the banquet.
H Speaks
earn Speaks
To Vets Here
George Hearn, state vice-com
mander of the American. Legion,
will speak at Allen R. Fleming, jr.
Post No. 20 here on Thursday
night. His topic will be “What the
Legion Has Meant To the Veteran
And The Loyalty That the Veteran
Should Show To the Legion.”
Cordis H. Thurmon, commander
of the Post, invites all veterans to
hear Mr. Hearn of Monroe speak.
Harry E. Epting.
Gurrey Epes, Carroll D. Flana
gan, Ralph Ferguson, James Adri
an Gillespie, Louis Gordon, Heror
M. Gunter, Theo E. Green, Samue!
D. Holmes, Cyril B. Hammond
Claude B. Hayes, Matthew Ear
ren Hall, Harold Haynes.
Edward McDonald Hardy, Jo
seph G. Hardy, Edward Hamilton
Kenneth Hamilton, Roberit F
Hodgson, Winston Davenport
Hodgson, James Troy Hill, Riley
Monroe Hitt, Lewis Elmer Hum
ber, William Higgins, Roswell
Ison, Charles J. Jones.
James C. Johnson, jr., Johnnie
Pate Johnson, Jack King, Marvir
Edward Lea, Jessy B. Lewis, Jame:
W. Leach, Orval Louis Little
Issac James McKee, Lacey Man
gleburg, David N. Maxwell, Wal
ter M. Moore, Simon Michael.
Ralph Caryle Maddox, Hiram N
Manus, jr., Ben Mcßae, Charles L.
Marsh, John Carlton Moseman
Richard T. Moore, jr., Leßo}
Neely, David McNeil Nichols, Win
field Nisbet, Edward Douglas
Parks, William T. Payne.
Thomas N. Powell, sr., Thoma:
N. Powell, jr., Benjamin F. Parks
Andrew J. Péeyton, Holmes L
Payne, Harvey B. Pruitt,‘Harry F
Patat, jr., Frank Roberson, Hen
ry Walter Ruark, William W
Reade, Howard L. Roberts, Jame:
M. Rogers.
Carl Delbert Rodenheaver, Wil
liam M. Rivers, jr., Mell Stephen
son, Frank G. Smith, Aubrey St
John, James R. Smith, Henr}
Steiner, Carl V. Tanksley, George
W. Thomas, Edward H. Taylor
Harold Tiller, William T. Tolbert
William Riley Thurman.
George Emmett Tulley, sr.
Owen Woods,) Stokes Walker, Wil
ilan Osmond White, jr., Jame:
Williams, James D. Watson, Rob:
ert Franklin Wright, David Russel
Watkins, Jerrod O. Skelton.
Dying sinee .war: David A. An
thony, Wil @e mith, James L
Brown, Cosby " Dawson, Jame:
Paine, jr., Carlton Henson, Jame:
Long Archer, David Spencer Pru
itt, James "H. Vickery, Margaret C
Hunnicutt, Roy Jackson Flanagan
Henry Walter Cape.
Colored Veterans of World Wa
II: John Foster, James D. Harper
Joe H. Hectoly Liewis E. Mack, Raj
More, Clevefl%ghd Wilson, Willian
H. Cheney; ¥, Arthur Huff, jr.
Edwin D. Burns, Richard Howell.
Among some. African native
tribes, a wife may divorce he:
husband if he fails to sew hel
clothes, according to Encyclopedic
Britannica.