Newspaper Page Text
THURSDAY, JUNE 2, 1949,
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RE-LIVING HIS YESTERDAYS—His face lined with r¢mem
brance of the years spent behind Jap barbed wire, Gen. lonathan
Wainwright squats on a float depicting an enemy prison camp in
the Colorado Disabled Veterans’ parade in Loveland. As the ;mm
of Corregidor stepped down from the float after the parade, he
had tears in his eyes,
Hal Boyle
The Poor Man’s Philosopher
HAVE YOU A LITTLE ELECTRIC
BRAIN IN YOUR HOME?
NEW YORK—(AP)—The hu
man race soon will be able to
spend all its time playing gin
rummy.
At present people still waste a
lot of energy beating a living out
of the world and fretting over
other foolish problems.
Good old science is changing all
that. Almost every day now it
comes up with a new gadget to
solve a worry that has plagued
mankind since the Lord gave
Adam a ribbing.
Take the problem of putting the
baby to sleep at night. Now that
should be a simple thing. But it
has bothered every family since
caveman days, and that is going
back 40,000 years. And it always
ended up with papa or mama hav
ing to tramp back and forth with
the yowling infant crooning it a
lullaby. gt
Well, after these 400 centuries,
a fellow came along and invented
an automatic rocker. It not only
rocks junior, It sings to him, too—
in his mother’s voice. And that
leaves his fond parents free to
stay in the living room and earn
a living at gin rummy off the vis
iting neighobrs.
But the mechanical baby rock
er, the automatic dish washer, the
refrigerator and deep freeze unit,
the vacuum cleaner, the television
set that brings vaudeville into
your parlor—these are as noth
ing to science’s new wonder, the
“electric brain.”
Real Thingamajig
_ Here is a real thingamajig. And
if you expect to keep up with the
Joneses in the future, you've going
to have to have one handy around
the house. And you might as well
start saving up for the down pay
ment now, as a pilot model pres
ently in production will cost about
5200,000.
This “electric brain” is named
“Zephyr” and he’s going to be
(ORI T MA”“
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| ”EW Pf y into your old
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= e \ : Gefting used equipment back
_*___ S -..- —‘Qgéli’[' inte shape is ene of our
< ‘:>‘ specialties. We can serve
4 }i”av s P Fas you best because we're fully
- h e equipped to handie your re
; : : peir jobs. Our mechanics
' ’ RN are skilled—fully trained to
: i* "gj restore ell types of machines
B i /.9":// > te standard condiiien.
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g SRR 7 yeou have any implement
4.L q :,‘_f“\ thet's run beyond its time,
"‘; /41 2 ":\j'kf[fii}:é‘;’:; bring it te us. Enjoy once
el .i B 5 " again the good-as-new per
; T e ! formance. We'll make your
T G %‘? R tractor purr like the day you
S 0 W bought it .. . make it pull
eh ! ‘éfi";-‘«f’ - g the same loads at the same
{ (‘igh,""_ s : speed.
K X %s‘.’m‘\%: N Qur Oliver replacemen
\'\ »W"‘E,@}‘ f"f‘; ¥ parts are the highest in
{ ’/ : le\fl“t i B quality. And our ample
: A k\&j{"’ % ” stock enables us to provide
T I;".‘;b' oet o L,, you promptly with almost
) ;g,f’.L Maleh de .“;',:a_fft LT e any part you may need. For
Brae _ LIVER b i ; overhauling, repairing, re~
A U*ro» A building—be sure to see vus
CHRISTIAN EQUIPMENT GOO,
568 E. Clayton Street i
some boy. He’s being built by Dr.
Harry Huskey for the U. S. Bu
reau of standards at the Univer
sity of California at Los Angeles.
Zephyr will take up where Ein
stein left off. He will be able to
translate three foreign languges,
or perform 16,000 additions and
4,000 multiplications a second.
With this faithful big-brain stand
ing in the corner, no school child
need ever again dread home-work.
Salary Payments
It is also promised that this
electric wizard will be able to
compute salary payments— not
that this bit of arithmetic has ever
been any strain on the average
man’s intellect. But Zephyr in ad
dition can predict the weather,
even in California, and replace
minor executives,
This last function indeed a hap
py (l)é)e as it px;;lmiseir to ;id the
world - of"a highly oublesome
class —the straw bosses. These
strange people — you find them
in every office staring at a
“think” motto on their desks —
like to boast they work like ma
chines. It will be restful to see
them replaced by machines that
work like people. And, of course,
it was inevitabie that in the march
of progress somebody would in
vent a machine that could collect
flyspecks .as well as do minor ex~
ecutives, who have a career out
of this art that would be no more
than a hobby.
But Zephyr’s real place will be
in the home. With his mathemati
cal ability he’ll be able to balance
your wife’s bank book without
stripping a gear. And he’ll easily
figure a way to cut your income
tax in half, the true test of genius
in our times.
Zephyr is only slightly larger
than a kitchen cabinet, and pre
sumably he’ll come in either a
walnut or mahogany veneer. At a
paltry $200,000 what home can af
ford to be without him?
100th Birthday
0f Gen. Macedo
AP Newsfeatures
Cuba commemorates the 100th
anniversary of the birth of Gen.
Antonio Maceo with a set of eight
beautifully colored and designed
stamps. This set is actually three
vears late in arriving on the phila
telic scene since the centenary
date was 1945!
Gen. Maceo is revered by his
native land because of his bril
liant military leadership during
the revolt of 1895. This ill-fated
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revolution paved the way for the
final fight for independence in
1898. Maceo fought from one end
of the island to the other. Among
the hills of the Sierra de los Or
ganos, he maintained his band of
followers and defied all efforts to
dislodge him until the close of 1896
when he was killed during a dar
ing raid.
L
Philately in abundance is the
word from Chile. That country has
issued a new set of 75 stamps illus
trating 25 different picture designs
of wildlife scenes and animals.
This series was put forth to honor
Claudio Gay, French naturalist,
who visited Chile in 1828 to study
the flora of South America. He
also wrote a history of Chile.
.8
The Soviet government has is
sued three new postage stamps, re
ports Tom Whitney, Associated
Press staff writer in Moscow. The
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set honors the International chess
tournament last spring which re
sulted in a victory for the Soviet
Grandmaster Botvinnik. The 30
kopecks seablue and 50 k red
brown illustrate the House of the
Unions where the match took
place. The 40 k blue-violet shows
a shield with a gheisboard.
L 3 i
Poland has issued a new set of
three stamps, reports the Penny
Black Stamp Co. The series hon
ors the Congress for the Union of
Workers. The 5 zloty red depicts
two workers holding a banner. The
15 zloty violet, expressing close ties
with their Soviet neighbors, pic
tures a medallion with the heads
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of Lenin, Stalin, Engels and Marx.
The 25 zloty shows Ludwick War
ynski with a background of march
ing- workers. .
Sudan has issued a new 2 pias
tres stamp in honor of the 50th
anniversary of the postage stamp
in that country, reports Leon Mon
osson. The new adhesive depicts
the first postage stamp design, the
Camel Post, with a light blue
border. Pictured above the design
are the words “Sudan Stamp Jubi
lee” and the dates 1898-1948.
France has honored two of its
most famous physicists, Paul
Langevin and Jean Perrin, by pic
turing their portraits on two new
issues. Langevin (1872-1846), who
won the Nobel Prize for his work
on the electronic theory of mag
netism, appears on the 5 franc
brown stamp. Perrin (1870-1942),
who won the Nobel Prize for his
work in kinetics, is on the 8 franc
green. 3
Japan opened its first agricul
tural museum in 1942.
s Quick
£o7 ;(;.% AND LONG
N 1
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ST
<+ HEADACHE
Yes, for Headache and Neuralgia Capudine
brings QUICK and LONG LASTING relief.
QUICK because it’s liquid—already dis
solved, all ready to go to work, LONG
LASTING because of its specially selected
ingredients. Accept no substitute. Insist
on getting Capudine for QUICK and LONG
LASTING relief. Use only as directed.
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA,
Fall Apparel
Showings Set
ings Se
For Atlanta
“Brightest spot on the whole
troubled horizon today is the con
tinuing growth and progress, in
every respect, of our beloved
Southland,” states President Er
nest Norris of the Southern Rail
way System, in commenting upon
the fall apparel showings of the
Southeastern Travelers Exhibi
tors, Inc., to be held June 6-9 in
the new Industrial Annex of the
Municipal Auditorium in Atlanta,
Georgia.
“Fantastically great as this
growth has been in the past, I am
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< ‘\. iy All during JUNE our sheives are filled to overflowing with big money-saving buys
e in household white goods. VALUES GALORE in every department planned with an eye .
— / ” toward giving you the same high quality you've always found at Penney's ... PRICED
=" WAY DOWN low to help you save more! Small wonder we're famous for white goods! .
it b ebk RN k o—_
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Nation-Wide 9-4 Unbleached Sheeting .. 65c yd.
Penco 9-4 Unbleached Sheeting .. 77c yd.
’ NEW LOW PRICE!
~ BIG VALUES FOR HOME
l SEWERS, STURDY
~ PERCALES
LOW PRICED AT
31¢ yi
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@® Long Wearing!
® For Thrifty Housewives!
'SiZe 17 x 82 .« bint fvpe.. and
quick drying— C
Bach o L 25
Colorful Prints at an eye-open
ing price. 1
3yards 1.00
THICK DOUBLE TERRY
BATH SIZE 20” x 40"
High colors of petal pink, mist
grey, Flamingo, Azure, Butter
cup and Greenspray— ¢
BER . e- Sild Ao 55
12x12 Wash Cloth .. .. .. 17¢
HEAVY COTTON TERRY
Two-tone plaids, budget c
priced — each .. .. .. 39
ennev’s Finesl Quality
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High-Coynt Muslin
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o Sheels o Cases
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1 Yol 63” x 108” ... 2.19 .72” x 99" 2.1¢
CASES “ W .
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daily more convinced that it is
but prologue to an even greater,
brighter future.”
The showings next week will
bear out the fact that the south
east as a market center has kept
g‘ace with this phenomenal growth.
he Southeastern Travelers Exhi
bitors, organized in 1936 for tne
purpose of furnishing a certrally
located market for southeastern
buyers, has expanded from a small
association of salesmen into the
largest apparel market of the en
tire area. Year by year the num
ber of buyers and the number of
exhibitors has grown, until today
some 900 manufacturers from all
over the U. S. send exhibits. Many
are Southern firms expanding
along with the general expansion
of the region.
Saves Time
“Perhaps the outstanding reason
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PILLOW CASES ... .. .. .. 43¢ 83
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o~ M i . 72" x 108” .. .. 1.83
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® Closer Woven Fabric! ‘ i 8 ; L A
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® Smoother Texture! : TR ‘ g
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® Finer Quality! - Al
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. Ma ny More Months of \-\“'H r! Rt 3 % ‘¢ ;
behind the success of the Atlanta
showings is that buyers no longer
find it necessary to make time
consuming trips to eastern mar
kets, where merchandise is scat
tered over a wide area in hun
dreds of buildings. The S. T. E.
assermbles all the lines, including
women’s children’s and men'’s ap
parel and accessories, under one
one roof, Buyers simply walk from
booth to booth, and their pur
chases for the season are made in
reasonably quick time. Transpor
tation facilities, too, are ideal into
Atlanta from all section of the
area.
Sam Joseph S. T. E. president,
states that prices will be general
ly lower at the showings next
week, and the merchandise will
be exhibited on a strictly open
‘market for the first time in many
years.
BENSON'S BREAD
P T
GOOD BREAD
B {1 TS A
-l BH‘I’ERH “‘FFT'_', _
* ANOTHER JUNE |
. WHITE GOODS /
o= SPECIAL _ wom
Don’t Miss it!
81” x- 99"
® Unbleached — Unhemmed.
® This i 3 a buy no woman can
afford to miss!
1.35 each
PAGE ONE-A