Newspaper Page Text
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1049
Evenis
Rev. Horace 8. Smith, dis
trict superintendent of the
Methodist Church of the Ath
ens-Elberton Distriet, announ
ces a group meeting of the
churches in the Athens area in
the interest of the Advance for
Christ and His Church at the
Athens First Methodist Church
on September 29 at 7:30 p. m.
bt
A barbecue wiii be held by
the Young Harris Methodist
Church Wednesday, September
28. on the church grounds, 5 te
§ p. m. Everyone is iuviied
attend the barbecue and tick
ets are $1.50 for adults and 75
cemts for children, Tickets can
be secured from Bell's, Hale’s
Shoe Shop and the Georgia
Barber Shop, or members of the
church. There will be plenty
for everyone and this barbecue
promises to be one of the best
to be held in this section.
it
Due to the illness of the hos
tess the meeting of the Tuck
ston WSCS has been postponed
until September 28,
- o ——————————————
Beta Zeta chapter of Beta Sig
ma Phi will meet Tuesday night,
Berryman'’s Cabin, 235 Hodgson
Drive on Tuesday evening, 8 p.
m,
Business Girls Club will meet
Tuesday evening, 6:30, at the
Y. W. C. A. Home. .An interest
ing program has been planned
and all members are urged to be
present.
Tuckston WSCS will meet
Wednesday afternoon, 3:30, with
Mrs. George Wright. All mem
bers are urged to be present and
visitor: are welco.ae. o
BOOKMOBILE SCHEDULE
The Bookmobile of Athens
Regional Library will meet the
following schedule this week:
Wednesday, A. M.—Arnolds
ville School. P. M.—Hardeman’s
Store, Morton Chapel Negro
School, St. Luke’s Negro School,
Tuck’s Store.
Thursday, P. M. — Aiken’s
Store, Teacher Training Negro
School, Holly Heights, Archer’s
Home. s
WCTU will hold its regular
business and social meeting with
Mrs. Stanley Grubb, 490 Pulaski
strete, Friday, 3:30. Vice-pres
idents of the churches are ask
ed to call their members as
plans for the new year will be
made and a full attendance is
urged. ;
PUBLIC LIBRARY
CALENDAR
Group exhibition of recent
paintings by Athens artists:
Misses Sally Goodwin, Jean
Flanigen, Laura Blackshear,
and Mrs, Carlisle Cohh on view
until October 8. Library story
time over station WGAU Friday
5 p. m. Library Story Hour in
Library, Saturday 10 a, m. to
11 a. m, Hours of opening: Mon
day through Friday 9 a. m. to
9 p. m.; Saturday 9 a. m. to 6 p.
m.; Sunday 8 p. m. to 6 p. m.
All legal residents of Clarke,
Oconee, and Oglethorpe counties
have free borrowing privileges
The public is cordially invited
to attend the ceremony planned
by the WOW Friday night, Sep
tember 30, 8 o’clock, in the Win
terville Auditorium. A check
will be presented at this time to
the local Board of Education
from the WOW Service Fund by
Mr. Billy Lowe, district manager
WOW Insurance Society. In ad
dition to the above some special
numbers have been arranged.
Your presence will be greatly
appreciated.
University Drive Sewing Club
will meet Wednesday morning
with Mrs. Roy Proetor.
_ There will be a sapper meet
ing of the Clarke County Farm
Bureau at 7:30 p. m. in the Geor
gian Hotel, Friday, Sept. 30. A
group discussion will follow the
supper on the subject of market
ing milk *~ the Athens Area.
All members are urged to make
reservations and bring along
prospective members,
Local Project Committee of
the League of Women Voters
will meet Tuesday, 8 p. m., at
the Athens Regional Library.
All interested members and
bersons are cordially invited to
sitend,
Pre-school Child Study Group
will meet on Wednesday,
September 28, 8 p. m. at the
home of Mrs. Horace Lund
Beach Creek Road. Mrs. Hamp
ton Rowland is to talk on “Be
ing The Parent You Would Like
To Be”.
A meeting of the Athens
League of Women Voters’ Study
Group on Government will be
held on Wednesday night at 8
®'clock at the home of Mrs. Nel
son Hitcheock, 178 Milledge Ter
10t wier M Dot o
other ns are
Invited $o attena
FIR' CALL
Firemen went to Bary's Camp
%3 l(adigon avenue abowt noon
Yesterday where an oil heater had
Saused & fre They raported litile
Gamage was incurred.
Book By Former Athenian Toße -
Featured At. Atlanta Tea Eriday......i.
Tha Wiane Plavdo as Rl PR L pan: Wks VRS St
RIS o eAot il Gg i IR 6 i iia ee o eel
The many friends of Mrs. Chare
les W. Outlaw, former Athenian,
now of Atlania, will be interested
to know that her new book
VOICELESS LIPS, depicting the
Heart Message of Flowers, will be
off the press this week and will be
presented at an Autograph Tea at
RICH'S Friday afternoon at four
o’clock.
Athenians will remember Mrs.
Outlaw as the daughter of ‘two
former beloved Athenians—Mr.,
and Mrs. Walter P. Warren, he be
ing connected with the University
until his retirement aud the late
Mrs. Warren, activé in Religious
and Civic circles. The author
makes beautiful reference to them,
along with her husband, as her
beloved Triumvirate — her Moth
er who led her to Christ, her Fath
er who inspired her to study, her
Husband who made it possible for
her to continue to do so.
The editor, Dr. John L Hill, of
Broadinan Press whicn 8 publishe
ing VOICELESS LIPS, says the
book is something lew in book
publishing, that it is strinkingly
different and a perfect gem. It
gives in the form of Spritual De
votionals the heart messages of
twenty-five different flowers. “All
of the old favorites are there. Yqu
will recognize yours and will ap
nreciate the lovely thougnts which
you will want to take to your
heart.” To quote agamn from the
editor, “It is a surprisingly fra
grant book and if you do not like
New VA Regulation Doesn’t
Effect Vets In Fall School
Thousands of veterans who al
ready have made preparations for
fall school semesters under the G.
L Bill will not be affected by a
recent Veterans Administration
regulation limiting education and
training to courses having a defi
nite connection with their voca
tion. s
The new regulation—based on
Public Laws 862, 80th Congress,
and 266, 81st Congress—states that
veterans who want to take certain
G. L. Bill courses must show VA
that: :
(1) The course is essential to
employment, if the veteran al
ready had completed or inter
rupted a previous G. I. Bill course,
or
(2) The course will serve a
bonafide use in present or future
business or employment.
The new regulation went into
effect in mid-September. How
ever, VA has ruled that the regu~
lation does not apply to veterans
who have completed their plans
for fall schooling, so long as they
(1) submitted their original appli
cations for a certificate of eligibil
ity before September 12, 1949, and
(2) commence their course before
November 1 of this year.
The application for a certificate
must have been received either by
a VA regional office or by the
school before September 12. If the
application was submitted to a
school, it must be in VA’s hands
by September 26. Also, VA said,
supplemental certificates of eligi
bility—issued to veterans desiring
to change courses or schools—will
be acceptable if the veteran’s re
quest for a supplemental certifi
cate was received by VA before
the September 12 deadline.
For those veterans who sub
mitted applications and who enter
training by the specified dates, VA
policies which were in effect be
fore the new regulation came into
being will govern in the disposi
tion of their requests for G. I. Bill
training, VA said. VA emphasized
that previous regulations — based
on Public Law 862,*80th Congress
—prohibited veterans from taking l
G. I. Bill courses for avocational
or recreational purposes. Even
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the beautiful, skip this.” e
_ Aside from her writing, Mrs.
Qutlaw is a speaker 3! note and !'s
well known in Athens in that ca
pacity, Quite recently she was
guest speaker for the Woman’s
Missionary Society at First Baptist
Churcl. All of her frisnds are cor
dially invited by Rich’s to attend
‘the Tea there Friday afternoon,
'September 30th.
_ln a recent review of Mrs, Out
lay’s book, by Morgan Blake in the
Atlanta Journal, the widely known
columnist said, in part:
“This is a charming hittle book
of inspiration, exquisitely written
in poetic prose from its very dedi
cation ‘T'o Kathryn, Lovely Flower
of My Heart’ to its last line, ‘ln
them (the flowers) e glimpses
what Eden was and wiat Paradise
may be’ Not all of us have the
ability to reed the ‘Voiceless Lips’
of the flowers and so we are par
ticularly indebted to Mrs. Outlaw
for giving us their mcssage. Each
of the 25 she has chosen from the
garden of her thoughts seems to
perfume the page of which she
writes down the lesson it teaches.
She calls them little sermonettes
but they are too ethereal to be
described by even the feminine
gender of sermon. Reading this lit
tle book is like a walk in the fields
on a summer mormng, where as
Elizabeth Barrett Browning tells
us, ‘—drowsy poppies nod, where
ill thoughts died- and good are
born—out in the fields with God’.” |
though veterans who meet the
September 12 and November 1
deadlines are exempt from VA's
new regulation, they still are re
quired to submit justification
showing that their training will be
in connection with present or con
templated busness or occupation,
if they plan to take any of the fol
lowing types of courses:
(1) Dancing, photography, gii
der, bar-tending, personality de
velopment or entertainment
courses; all single-subject courses
not part of a general education
program leading to a definite edu=
cational or employment objective:
and all other courses which are
well-known to VA regional office
managers as being frequently pur
sued in their areas for avocational
or recreational purposes.
(2) Music courses, public
speaking courses, and courses in
sports and athletics. These*courses
do not refer to those, applied mu
sic, physical education or public
speaking courses which always
have been considered and offered
by institutions of higher learning
for credit as an integral part of a
course leading to an educational
objective.
The new VA directive states
that under no circumstances will
veterans be -permitted to enter
schools, at government expense,
that have not been in operation on
their own for at least one year.
The one-year limitation was in
cluded in Public Law 2666. This
restriction, of ecourse, applies to
those veterans who applied for
certificates before September 12
and who contemplate entering
training before November 1,
* * %
Frank Stephens
L -
Visited In
Athens Last Week
Frank H. Stephens, manager of
the New York and Honduras Rosa~
rio Mining Co. at San Juanciio,
Honduras, Central America, was
in Athens for a brief visit last
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THESE NAGS AREN'T “DARK HORSES"—Mrs. Winifred |
Price checks over a hobby horse before putting him back with his
“stable-mates” in Erith, England. British toymakers are rushing
production for the Christmas season, and with the pound sterling
devaluation, emphasis is on dollar-earning goods, It’s no long shot
that these nags will make & big hit with American youngsters.‘
Miss Joan Dodd To Wed Mr.
Robert H. Scott In October
Mrs. Oran E. Dodd, of Atlanta,
announces the engagement of her
daughter, Miss Sally Joan Dodd,
to Robert H. Scott, son of Mrs.
Robert H. Scott and the late Mr.
Scott.
Miss Dodd graduated from
Washington Seminary where she
was a member of Sigma Delta,
the Chick Club and the Spin
sters. She attended Stephens Col
lege, and has just returned from a
tour of Europe.
Miss Dodd was invited to join
week after a trip to the home of
fice of his company in New York.
He came-to Athens to see his
son Gay and to look over his farm,
“El Robledal,” on the Jefferson
Road, four miles from Athens. His
son has entered North Georgia
College at Dahlonega for the next
school year and Mr. Stephens vis
ited Dahlonega on his Athens trip.
He is a graduate of North Georgia
College.
Mr. and Mrs. Stephens expect
to build a new home at “El Roble
dal” withifi' the next few years,
where they will live when Mr,
Stephens retires from his work in
Honduras.
They both have many close
friends in Athens who will wel
come their return here as perma
nent residents, :
. .
Mrs. Richard Barclay Neff and
son, Dickie, have returned to their
home in New York after spending
the summer here with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Carlton Jester on
Cobb. .
2 & =B
Mr. Coleman Whitehead, of At
lanta, spent the weekend with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd
Whitehead on‘Hxin l.ioad.
Mrs. H. T. Mahley, of Atlanta, is
wie guest of Mrs, W. T. Nach and
Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Smith in Ath
ens
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA,
the 1949-56 Debutante Club, but
has decided to forego making her
debut in order to be married. She
is a member oi Taiiulai Falis Cir=
cle and the Rabun Cap-Nacoochee
Circle,
Mr. Scott attended Riverside
Academy, and wos later a stu
dent at the University of Georgia
and Columbia University, He is
associated with Robert H. Scott,
linc., Advertising Agency.
The popular young ccuple will
be married in late October.
Party Saturday
Honored
Miss Underwood
Saturday, September 24, mark
ed the sixteenth birthday of Miss
Claudette Underwood. The occa=
sion was celebrated with a ho-bo
or tacky party held in the evening
at the YWCA gym. on Hancock
avenue.
Among the number of guests were
some from out of town who came
for the fun, and to join friends in
Athens. A round of square dances
highlighted the evening and a
string band furnished the gay
music.
The invitations to the party
were unusual and colorful, written
on brown paper, which had been
crushed, then placed in a bright
print cloth and tied to a stick
—representing the traveling kit of
a hobo. :
The guests frcm out-of-town
present included Mrs. W.-H. Proc
tor, Mrs. W. M. Greene, Miss Glo
ria Sellers, Mr. Billy Proctor and
Mr. Don Morris of BEirmingham,
Ala.; Mr, and Mrs. Johnny Martin
and Miss Dorothy Powell of Gain~
esville,
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‘ This Christmas your gift may ,
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L AN .v;;;‘,‘. PO (S /,j T, with Brownie Monogramming
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ors: turquoise, port wine, camellia, bay blue, shell, sun aqua, deepwater blue, starboard green, sand, or
or pearl. :
LINENS — STREET FLOOR Lk
Personals
Friends of Mr. Ted Bonner will
be pleased to learn he has left the
General Hospital and is at his
home, 298 Qakland avenue.
* % %
The friends of Mrs. J. K, Brook
shire, of Colbert, will regret to
hear of her illness at St. Mary's
Hospital,
" * '
Among the weekend visitors in |
Athens were Mr., and Mrs. Louis
Lindsey, Mrs. James Mapp, Mrs.
Robert Landrum, Union Point;
Mrs, Beatrice Morris, Mr, and Mrs.
Fred Luncsford, Mrs. Pauline Ed
wards, Crawfordville; Mrs. J. C.
Cochran, Mrs. Roy Massey, Mrs.
L. P. Crawford, Mrs. Ruby Fort
son, Mrs. Sam Porterfield, Mr. and
Mrs. Leonard Smith, Mr, Hope P.l
Davis, Miss Burnice Brock, Mrs.
Annie Sue Vandiver, Commerce;
Miss Shellanna Fortson, Miss An
nie Sue Fortson, Route Three; Mr.
C. V. Langford, Mr., Tom McEl
hannon, Mrs. J. N. Crowe, Mrs.
Louise O'Kelly, Bogart; Mr. and
Mrs. A. J. Doster, Winder; the
Rev, and Mrs. G. H. Hammond,
Whitehall; Mrs. Ruth Ginn, Dia
mond Hill: Mrs. Mima Fowler, Mr.
and Mrs. I, L. Oldham, Mr. andl
Mrs. Harold Coffee, Route Four:
Mr, and Mrs. Willie Epps, Mr, L,
E. Tate, Route Two: Mrs. Reed
Duvall, Mrs. Rob Bishop, Mrs. J. !
T, Elder, Mr. and Mrs. A, R. Sax
on, Farmington.
* 0 @
Mrs, Ira Teat has returned to
her home in Charlotte, N, C., after
a visit to Athens. While here she
entered her daughter, Miss Bever
hfl‘ ‘: I/l 7 ,///,
; : P Smart front for your
>3 suits, our
e Jane Holly
s /,-mm-—‘; :‘ v i
s Blouse
L e f . ™A IN WASHABLE RAYON CREPE
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A, fl‘A ‘ T ol
/ ; The blouse of exquisite detafl . . .
as seen : e incomparable elegance, in finest
in CHARM ‘g ot rayon crepe. Tucked bodice .. .
. %(f“}* y eriss-cross collar gives bow tie es
B sect. In brown or gold. Sizes 32 - 38
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SPORTSWEAR - STREET FLOOR
ly-Ann Teat in the University.
{* ® »
~ Mr. and Mrs. A, P. Stewart spent
}the week-end as the guests of
Mrs. Stewart’s parents in Arnolds
viile,
« ® »
Mr. Ben Whitley, of Greenville,
S. C,, is the guest of Mrs. Walter
Percy.
X&i : 4
Mrs, Nell Huff, of Atlanta, is
the guest of her daughter in Ath
ens,
® & B
Mrs. E. F. Culpepper, of Belton,
S. C, is the guest of her sister,
Mrs. Earl Lively and Mr. Lively
on South Church street.
.nl £ -
Mr, and Mrs. W, T, Oldham, of
Ninty Six, S. C,, are guests of the
Oldham families in Athens, and
surrounding areas.
5 »
Mrs. Nelle Gable of Greenwood,
S. C,, is the guest of her daughter
Mrs, Carlton Ward and Mr. War(i
of Winder. They were in Ath
[ens on Saturday.
w @ £
Mr. C. T. Smith attended the
Fair in Elberton this week,
| *® & »
[ Mr, and Mrs, J. E, Caudell have
just returned from vacation trip
to Toronto, Canada, going up via
Sky Line Drive in to Wnlhinm
D. C., then New York City,
Park, Niagara Falls, nturn{ng via
PAGE THREE
Windson, Detroit, Cincinnati, Lex
ington Knoxville. They M a
marvelous high seeing i
* ok fvv«;.qa,“:!q.u
Miss Mary Mohr spent she
week-end in Atlanta with Miss
Blizabeth Oaldwait e e e
L - ® 3 B
Mrs. Thomas Elliott jr., and
children, Tommy and L%. of
Decatur are visiting Mrs. Elliott’s
mother, Mrs. C. S. Ashford on
Prince Avenue, £t s
* e
Mrs. S. C. Gentry leaves Thurs
day for Cave Spring to visil her
sister, Miss C}ark. & e AR
®
Exotic Plants
On Display
AtV ve's
an Cle -
Many rare, unusual and exotie
plants have been seut to Vai
Cleve’s as gifts from other florists,
These will be on display at the
opening of the remodled shop to
night from five to nine o'clock.
Among t : imporfed xi»lgnts,
some of which c¢ame as far as
Hawaii, are ' Hanging Heliconia,
Antherums, Bird ox Paradire, Red
Ginger, Torcle Ginger, L.oatris and
many beaut'ful and unusual or
chids. : :
There will also be handsome ar
rangements of Croton leaves mix
ed with beautiful flowers. Anoth«
er unusual and new flower is the
red sweetheart rose, it.too, will be
on display. i
The new, enlarged shop has &
pleasing color scheme the sales
and display roora 1s done n aqua
‘and the work room is yellow. The
l blic is cordl. 'y invited to call
g:tween five and nine o'clock this
evening and see the florist shop.