Newspaper Page Text
PAGE SIXTEEN
THE HISTORY OF COTTON TEXTILES
| ][P wATXIRE ML Rorem Die | T [ A mat R i) 0N O D o S
) labor saving de- %‘“w““w g&‘w mm%m &é'o'uz sm%‘t%msmcszs '
peserme BNt 5y . o o ,
m““'...‘:‘..u‘l“"u... The /A o~ oY, e, |
‘.‘.“" | : '; \ ~ ) et A o ' :
gt providers of Job I N WP Lo KN g|/A ! |
more than 500,000 gersons "}, % L e "fis,k,x‘ ') ) Y 9“" fi
:::w;'.:’:‘i.:::';’.;..‘:::: St oA A [“W)AR | [ ) ey (o, |
‘ y = ) CYE, s e, > 3
e o e| A OGE 7 1 N R | o llge PR Ve
contributions to increased N , 4 S e P g ‘fm'l!. WA\ »/ §
production of low cost, high | B ‘ 3 ; l ) ~
quality goods. Devel;fmens mle | o - | - , |/ @\
of the “one process picker” |M . RY. 0 B | / ’ ’/-. Na--
iustrates the progress in || i : s 2 . / i \\ N
mashinery hmprovement. ”li -2= ) e ! L 7
' 1 e V] mummuw&_ IN 1852, £
City Motors, Inc.
is pleased to announce
MARION C. IVEY
has joined this organization. Mr, lvey, with his
pleasing personality and efficient manner, will
make your visit to City Motors an even more en
joyable venture. You will want to stop by soon
and see Mr. lvey at his new Ication.,
l D'w l" Phone
Clen, JHOATRE 4107
I .- )
N Znjow OUTOOOR Mowes!!!
' TONIGHT — ONE SHOWING ONLY—9:OO P. M.
i Marlene Dietrich « Ray Milland
{ in “GOLDEN EARRINGS”
PALACE NOW!
®
AIR CONDITIONED :
A WOMAN CAN DO IT! |
FRUE story of a young romance, i
.« oG peesonss m w ;
| oA L
| STEWART-ALYSON JRN |
e tiitnSt P
FRARK NORSAN « AGNES WORENER), | s |
: R YRS T . k’:%-g,fi
L pmerem -| - S
GEORGIA o
YODAY and RAFY
~ NOMORROW. g BOGART
~ [SERSHERIDAN
'THEYDRIVEBY ""fig
STRAND
MONDAY T"EI“WY
P. % '
I*‘/ ¢ $ (1o
’f.u‘ : o ‘t}(’
i Ky itk QLLZQ,LM’ ¥
RITZ
NOW SBHOWING
; ::‘RE:'A R"C'BLRY‘ 2
-4 YOUNG: CUMMINGS
e
Wo. 19 of a Series
Nurses School
I Accepting
‘New Students
SAVANNAH, Ga. — Applica
tions for the Fall Term of the
Warren A. Candler Hospital
School of Nursing here which
starts on Sept. 12, are now being
zcoe?ted, according to announce
ment made by Mrs. Martha
Cheves, Director of the Nursing
School.
The Warren A. Candler School
of Nuuinf is one of the few nurs
ing schools of South Georgia that
is fully accredited by the Ameri
can College of Surgeons. Students
of the schoel, which is under the
auspices of the South Georgia
Conference of the Methodist
Church, take part of their courses
of study at Armstrong College
here in Savannah. The Senior
Class of 1049 will be graduated
this September.
The Candler Hospital Nursing
School is one of the most modern
ir the South, having been comple
ted in 1945. It offers a full three
year course leading to a diploma
in nursing.
While the hospital and school
are maintained by the Methodist
Church on a nonprofit basis, stu
dents in the Nursing School are
not restricted to members of the
Methodist Church. Those interes
ted In obtaining further infor
mation are requested to contact
Mrs. Bmith at the hospital.
4-H Health
And Training
Meeting Set
' Approximately 90 Four-H club
members will attend the second
annual State 4-H Health Camp and
district officers trainin{ meeting
this week at Camp Fulton, near
Atlanta, announce state 4-H club
leaders today. The group will in
clude 48 health prbject winners,
newly-elected council officers from
each of the six Extension Service
districts and 1949 state council of
ficers.
State 4-H leaders will be in
charge of the camp. They will be
assisted by county Extension
agents and specialists of the State
Extension Service, lncludinil Miss
Lucille Higginbotham, health spe
cialist. 2
Assemblies and many other ac
tivities durmg> the week will be
held jointly by the two groups.
However, for special study, they
will hold separate programs. The
health group will study perconal
and community health problems
and plans to visit the State Health
Department.
The district officers will learn
the duties of their offices, parlia
mentary procedure and the cor
rect way of keeping records. State
council officérs will be on hand to
help instruet them.
Produce Heads
.
Abundance List
By GAYNGR MADDOX
NEA Staff Writer
Here’s how the food picture
looks for August, according to the
U. 8. Department of Agriculture:
Fresh produce dominates the
list of foods expected to be abun
dant. !‘eaturef items on the De
partment’s August list of plentifuls
are loeally grown vegeiabies, ap~
ples and tomatoes.
With fruit picking well under
way, growers are expected to send
heavy shipments of apples,
peaches, pears, fresh plums and
prunes and cantaloupes to the Au
gust markets.
Locally grown vegetables will
crowd bins. In addition, shoppers
will find seasonally large supplies
of tomatoes, cabbage, lettuce and
onions,
Various protein items offer wide
latitude in choice of main-dish
plentifuls. Markets will probably
be well supplied with eggs, broil
ers, fryers and hens, as well as
fresh and frozen fish.
Peanut butter and processed
dairy ?roducu are also expected
to be In excellent supply in Au
gust.
Here is the advance list of Au
gust plentifuls for the nation at
mgm’: Apples, peaches, pears,
fresh plums, fresh prunes, canta
lon{?«.
egetables: Locally grown veg
etables, tomatoes, cabbage, lettuce,
onions,
Other Foods: Eggs, broilers, fry
ers, h fresh apd frozen fish,
peanut i;uttor. dairy ° products
(processed).
In making iced tea or coffee, mix
the beverage in & china or pottery
pitcher first and then pour into
your tall glasses. This will save
YOU SUMner giass Lreakage. I
cidentally ice cubes should not be
dropped carelessly into glasses—
they might chip the fine erystal,
Tee-cold gocoa is delicious on &
hot day. ¥or a gniv. top the
cocoa with a little Cocoa Whipped
Cream. To make the cream put
two tablespoons of ¢ocoa in a bow]
with two tablespoons of sugar and
mix them fogether well Add a
cup of heavy cream and beat until
it begins to get stiff,
Y R Rsy I B D
e .. - =
; ; 77 " R A i R e
¥ AR e % B D B R R R ey A M SR
LA 4 £
, oet & 7 P . > 5%‘;
¢ K 7 i Y p % fio
7 e b é 1 o
eB e P
i o s /7 s L
B, P O o 71 SN v
i Covn B
' co s N S . o
it o «"
/ : 9 L e "zae’fi o
‘ ‘. , Vi TAL
5 ¢ B
£: R |
S % % Tl 5 Ra {
g s FRAReT M i .i
A S Ye N D B G [
@_ L R T ,’% ey
B A AR SGTRE 5. 590 4 o i
FAMOUS FIRST: William E. McKinney, president of
War Orphans Scholarships, Inc., awards the first schol
arship to Jean Hubbard of Annapolis, Md. Jean’s fath
er, a Navy Commander, was killed in the war.
Children Whose Fathers Died
In War Awarded Scholarships
BY RICHARD KLEINER
NEA Staff Correspondent
NEW YORK.—(NEA)—If your
father was killed during World
War 11, and if you are approach
ing college age, you may soon
get a very important letter.:
The letter will explain that an
organization known as War Or
phans Scholarships, Inc., was cre
ated for the sole purpose of “aid
ing in the college or vocational
education of children of those
who sacrificed their lives for our
country during the last war”
It will go on to tell you that
“these are gift scholarships, and
no repayment . . . is expected or
permitted.”
If you are Interested in these
awards, you will write to the
man who signed the letter, Wil
liam E. McKinney, who edits the
bridge columms for NEA Service.
You will tell him what your
marks are (they will verify that
information), in what #chool
you'd like to attend, and how
you're fixed financially.
That’s all you'll have to do.
War Orphans Scholarships does
the rest. They try to get scholar<
ships from the schools them
selves, and they have a SSOO
scholarship they award to deserv
ing youngsters. The money goes
directly to the school, not to the
beneficiary. They inform the
child of other aid available, as
some states have enacted laws to
help in such an educational pro
gram. |
The organization doesn’t class‘
its gifts as charity or philanthro
Today’s Grasshopper Battle
A Fight As Old As Human Life
By DOUGLAS LARSEN
NEA Staff Correspondent
WASHINGTON—(NEA)—In the
history of man's fight for survivai
on Earth, grasshopper plagues
rank with floods, storms and
droughts as his natural enemy.
From earliest recorded history un
til today, the grasshopper has been
one of the human being's greatest
competitors for this planet's food
supply.
The Bible refers to the grass
hopper as a locust, but scientists
have identified the Scripture lo
custs as & species of grasshopper.
The book of :Revelations, ninth
chapter, describes them:
“And there came out of smoke
locusts upon the earth; and unto
them was given power, as the scor
pions of the earth have power.”
No ocntinent on the globe is free
of the deadly grasshopper menace.
South America, Africa, China and
the European countries all suffer
continued serious losses from
them.
Experts rank the grasshopper
outbreaks of the years 1874 to 1878
as America’s worst agricultural
disaster. Hundreds of millions of
dollars worth of damage was done
to crops, and acute food shortages
resulted.
In terms of dollars the United
States probably takes the worst
loss from this pest. The period
from 1936 to 1938 was the last
most sericus outhreak. Crop dam- ;
age du those years was $253,-
000,000% a typical non
outbreak year, such as 1945, grass
hopper damage was $13,000,000.
Those figures don't inmclude the
millions spent In trying to eontrol
them. -
Accordinl g.: R. Parker, one
of the U. 8. Department of Agri
culture’s experts, practically every
state of the Union suffers from
grasshoppers in injurious numbers
somewhere every year. |
The area between the Missis
sippt and the Rocky Mountains,
exteriding up into Canada, is the
most vulnerable to the grasshop
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA.
By ANDREW L. PETERSEN
py. They feel that these children
deserve the heip and have earned
it. To emphasize that viewpoint,
they give each scholarship recip
ient a medal, so the youngsier
will realize that the money is an
award, not charity.
Technically, the scholarships
are given to children who are not
actually orphans. War Orphans
Scholarships defines an orphan,
for their purposes, as a child
“who lost one parent in the arm
ed services of the United States.”
“We do not wait for candidates
to learn of our existence by hear
say,” says McKinney, the presi
dent. “From the outset we have
actively and energetically sought
out the children of American
war dead who may be in need of
aid.”
“We anticipate that during the
course of the next 20 years, there
will be 100,000 orphans of World
War 11. Not all of them will need
assistance, but the majority of
thenr will.”
The first War Orphan Scholar
ship was awarded in Septemer.
1944, to Jean Hubbard of An
napolis, Md. She entered Wash
ington College, Chestertown, Md
Jean’s father was Commander
Harry E. Hubbard, who was skip
per of the destroyer, USS Mere
dith, when it was sunk in the
Solomon Islangds area of the Pa
cific on October 16, 1942, Com
mander Hubbard went down
with his ship.
Up to the present time, the or
ganization has helped some 200
children with their college and
vocational school education. l
per scourge on the North American
continent. In Michigan, Illinois,
Indiana -and Wisconsin there is a
lesser danger of “‘severe outbreak,”
with great hordes migrating in
mass flights. But the annual dam
age done by the ’hopper in these
states is still considerable.
The Department of Agriculture
rates a “severe outbreak” as one
during which there is. “serious
damage to crops in many counties
of a state.”
From 1841 to 1940, Montana and
Minnesota experienced major se
vere outbreaks an average of once
every other year. During the same
period Nebraska had 48 out-breaks
during that time include Colorado,
North Dakota, South Dakota, Kan
sas, Utah.and Wyoming.
The present outbreak in the U.
S. starts 2 fourth major cycle in
grasshopper plagues, according to
statistics of the Department of
Agriculture. That is, since rec
ords have been available. The
“cycle” refers to a long-term
build-uS in grasshopper popula
:ilci): followed by a noticeable de
e.
iy S
L
- FLEAS?
- L
ORKIN ‘
PLEASE
LR L R ‘
EASY TERMS . s
| Phone 1726 'k
234 E. Washington
]
: OUR 49th YEAR! - =
- . ‘
Danielsville Boy
Visits Denmark
.
Aboard Cruiser
J. Sam Scarborough, seaman,
USN, son of Mr. and Mrs. S. G.
Scarborough of Danielsville, Ga.,
is visiting Copenhagen, Denmark,
aloard the heavy cruiser USS Co
I'T’S PENNEY’S For
Another Budget - Stretcher ---
---Just When You Need It Most!
GIRLS’ COTTONS
A GIRL’S BEST FRIEND IS HER 1 s
WOVEN PLAID —— e
A f 7\?
- }
gb i |
IMAGINE! BRIGHT * : -4 :'x
‘ [ sl 3o &
WOVEN GINGHAMS\ | NS
AT JUST K g E e
\, SN
: : "¢
.98 554
> o e .:‘:“".fi :
‘ SizesTto 4 et f¢ ’ | \
When schooltime rolls around a r, G PPR t E 8
girl can’t own too many plaid g { I‘\“ b e e e
dresses! They're the mainstays of é ‘“”f \\; S b pmey 1
her entire wardrobe. This year ~ ke ‘ \ol &
you'll be able to give her many A N{
more because Penney’s price is so | : R P
amazingly low! We've dozens of e Y
styles and color combinations :
«« . and every one is made of fine, : ‘ S -
super-quality woven gingham! Yes
Mom, it's Penney's for plaids!
Clever shoppers ¢ %’f se fall coats NOW. . . on
BE SMART GET A
SET AHEAD OF TIME i
SEE WHAT'S NEW IN— M 4
ay
FALL COATS ¢?
:
SMOOTHEST STYLES! £ i}
@ COVERTS! R WW'
® GABARDINES! ’ ’ £
® BROADCLOTH! dr PR a
COLORS OF—RID, B
GREEN, BLACK & GREY! e
CHOOSE YOUR COAT .-
TODAY — USE OUR |
LAY - AWAY PLAN!
2 BIJ I L% B B ./
lumbus, wh’l'd: escorted by mto
destroyers, a cruise
various Dutdx%imvhn
ports.
After 9h e Copenhagen visit(
scheduled to terminate July 27,
the ship will pass through the Kiel
Canal on similar visits to ports in
'The Netherlands.
The shirs, part of the command
of Admiral Richard L. Conolly,
Commander-in-Chief of Naval
RUNDAY, JULY 81 1548,
Forces, Eastern Atlantic and Med,
iterranean, will return to ix!
European home port at Plymo:,
England Aug 4
A o R
Dishes containing egg,
meat, gelatin, poultry or sigh i
c“.g.J and cream-filled cakes gy
pasiry need cold-keeping agains
spoilage in the summertime, ba,.
teriologists of the U, S, Depari.-
ment of Agriculture caution,