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PAGE TWO
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LIZARD & SUEDE COMS,
i | 10.95
% GENUINE LIZARD
i 12.95
o e‘, 3 Brown - black - red or green,
BAGS
10.50 and 12.50
plus tax
' Exclusively At
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(‘ POB 4 [AL
' " “SHOES OF QUALITY"
BOY CASHES IN ON
DEVALUATION
CHATHAM, England —(AP)—
A i2-year-old boy was the first
customer to capitalize on the de
valuation of the pound &t the Na
tional Provincial Bank here.
David Campbell reached two
quarters, a dime and a nickel
through the teller’s cage and ask
ed for shillings and pence in ex
change.
“I took the coins from my col-
hask on ! B 1 DVuon o 2
...and keeps § | = _/ | 2
Dixie Crystals B | - @IfIRy |
sugars fresher! Jj | Tag¥ 22
SATURDAY, OCTOBER Ist.
A 1 ry
DON'T BE A "RUG DRUDGE
s Mmoo o
. : at Home bt
FREEI FREE' FREEI WITH PROFESSIONAL
® ® @
RESULTS
DEMONSTRATION ‘o
Saturday, October Ist, 9A. M. until SP. M, § i,
CLARKE RUG SHAMPOO EQUIPMENT [/v [
Bring along a throw rug and have it . e }
cleaned absolutely FREE with the “s“ukfépfigfi
amazing New CLARKE RUG and CARPET | mmpm@ffi iy
SHAMPOO Equipment. You'll be -
a 0
delighted and amazed with the results. Vi FooY
BRING A THROW RUG IN— iR
WE WILL SHAMPOO IT FREE! < iy
v fin QUICK EASY!
‘% NO OBLICATION! : e SAFE!
Restore original, sparkling beauty teo
your rugs. It’s easy so do and costs so
= Mitle,
154 N. Thomas Phone 1761
_m—c—fi—;;i;” he said. “I want to buy a
bicycle pgmp."
The day lily's name Springs
from the fact that each flower
lasts only a day.
e
Ancient Indian rulers in Mex~
ico used to carry rare orchids in
their hands, as a mark of rark,
when they appeared in publie,
Oklahoma’s state flower is the
mistletoe.
’ IST TIME
Corn Loans
Available
In Georgia
r Georgia’s 1949 corn crop will be
| supported at 90 percent of parity
as of October 1, 1949, ard a $1.56
per bushel loa rate is in effect
until the October 1 parity figure
is available. This 1& the first time
corn loans have been g+ailable in
Georgia.
| Corn must grade Number 3or
better, as a general ruie|
T. R. Breedlove, Chairman of
the State PMA Commitiee, states
that loans wi’. be available to pro
ducers on corn stored oa their own
farms or stered in commerciai
warehouses, These loans will be
made on the bgsis of m«isture con~
| tent and test weight (actors to de
termine the grade. Number 2 corn
will have a premium of one-half
cent above the basic support rate
and Number 1 corn will be one
cent above t' .asic support rate.
Loans will be available from time
of harvest through March 31, 1950.
On farm-stored loans, corn may
either be shelled or or-the-ear;
however it must be shelled before
' Commodity Credit Corporation
| will accept delivery. For ear corn
Iplaced under a farm-stored loan,
the moisture content may not ex
ceed 20.5 percent and for shelled
corn, 13.5 percent. These tests will
be made in county ACA offices.
Deliveries may be made during the
first 10 days of May 1950, provid
ed the farmer notified the county
ACA cffice at least 10 cays prior
to May 1 of his inteations to de
liver.
Warehouses operating under a
storage agreement with CCC will
accept corn for storage under the
loan. These warehouses will issue
receipts for the corn delivered by
the farmer. On warehouse-stored
loang, nroducers will pay 10 cents
‘ per bushel to cover the storage to
July 31, 1850, which is the maturi
ty date of all corn loans. If this
storage fee is not , aid ¢o the ware
house by the farmer, tie loan rate
will be reduced by this amount
when the loan is marde. A ware
house receipt must oe issued for
shelled corn and must show the
gross weight, grade, test weight,
and any special grading factor.
The support program is not for
the purpose of buying corn from
farmers but to assist them in ob
taining a satisfactory price for
their corn, Breedlove says. This
loan program provides farmers
with an oppo: ‘unity to obtain cash
for corn now and in thc meantime
dispose of such corn through or
derly marketing.
Funeral Service
For Mrs. Terry
> -
Set For Friday
Mrs. Jeff H. Terry, of Huntsville,
Ala., died Thursday . morning
She is survived by her husband
and one son, Dr. A. E. Terry, pro
fessor of Foreign Languages at
the University of Georgia.
The funeral will be held in
Huntsville Fricay at 3 p. m. Mrs.
Terry had visited in Athens a
number of i:mes and had many
friends here who will regret to
learn of her death.
w *® * .
Tens of thousands of crossings
of plants are sometimes required
to produce a distinetive new type.
THE BANNER-BERALD. ATHENS GEORGIA
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JOHN L. DOES IT ACAlN—Every so often, John L. Lewis,
omnipotent boss of 480,000 members of the United Mine Workers,
“sets up” a shot like this for photographers. These lines of empty
coal cars in the rail yards at Cincinnati, 0., grew longer as the
mine workers continued their “no welfare, no work” strike, Thou=
tsands of railroad workers face layoffs becsuee of the coal strike,
¥
Bob Thomas Says:
Novarro Returns To
Scene Of Triumphs -
By 808 THOMAS
HOLLYWOOD, Sept. 23—(AP)
—You'd expect Ramon Novarro to
be sentimental about returning to
work at the studio where he scor
ed hig triumphs as a romantic star.
But he isn’t at all. “It's just as
though I've never been away,”
said Novarro after a 15 year ab=
sence from MGM. “I suppose I
should be excited or worried, but
I'm not.”
The actor left the studio in 1934
after making “The Night is Young”
with Evelyn Laye, Una Merkel,
Charles Butterworth and Edward
Everett Hoxton. He ended 14
years with MGM, during which he
reigned as a screen romantic idol
second only to Valentino.
“Every time I walked through
the studio gate, I told hyself it
might be the last time,” he re
flected. “I never worried about
being washed up. One day I said
to myself, ‘You'd better get out
before they kick you out’ So I
quit.”
He attributed the wind-up of
his early career to the inflewihilia
ty of Hollywood casting in those
days.
“If you were a romantic star,
all you could do was make love
and look pretty., If you were a
heavy, you had to be mean all the
time; you couldn't even pat a dog
or water a flower. There was no
change of pace.” .
“A big executive once told me
if I ever slapped a woman on the
screen, I would be dead in pic
tures,” the one-time star remark
ed. “Look at leading men today!
They slap women around like cra-
ZYA”
Novarro looks older than his 44 |
years in his white goatee and
i . S Jo el i
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SKY TRAILS — Smoke patlerns mark the iralls of two
planes In the sky as they stage an acrobatic duel in a Flying
Tigers air olrcus at Hybla Vialley alrport near Washington, =
makeup for “The Outriders.” But
his enthusiasm for his new career
as a character actor is youthful.
He find the roles much more in
teresting than being the dashing,
stout-hearted star.
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YOUNGEST DEAN—Miss
Phoebe G. Follmer, above,
pretty 26-year-old educator, is
the new dean of women at Dick
inson College, Carlisle, Pa., and
probably the youngest person
ever to hold such a position at
any U, S. college or university.
The newly-elected dean holds
degrees from Columbia and
Bucknell Universities.
F, 4 : & \.\ é?/ o ‘\-.’. ot e t’. ‘,.
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; i ! LS ; -433 ¢ e Y
. & sl Evy I'. oP " ,}/\f\\‘\ @ "\“\\> ; ?
55 PONDS COLD CREAM .. .. .. . 49
50c TRUSHAY HAND LOTION .. ... 47¢
60c KREMLHAIRTONIC . .. .. .. 49¢
60c WERNETS PLATEPOWDFR . . .. 53¢
1.25 CAROID & BILE TABIETS .. .. 9%¢
50c JERGENS HAND LOTION .. .. . 45
300 YES CLEANSING TISSUES .. ... 27¢
GOOSENECK LAMPS .. .. ... ... ... . .. .. $lB
BED LAMPS, req. I.9s—Special.. .. .......... 5147
FUSES .. ......39 I IRON CORDS .. .. ... 29
KODAKX FINISHING
2 260r8
[ re Rolls
9 quh: :e:(vice 2 5 SOLL
FOUNTAIN PENS!
“Crow’s Has Them”
ENSEMBLE .. .. .. ... 3.5
PARKER "21" .. . .. 5.00
"MSELS ... 815
TUCKAWAY PEN . 10.00
Palmolive
Y %; A E;* 4
~ ‘[n“"oducmq the 2
PALMOLIVE SOAP
ONE CAKE ¢ WHEN
TR ’l‘::‘ah :g‘::GUJL:ICPAR':::
fl:’;fi (‘?'».;,‘ >
:i%w 4 Caxis For_
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% 23c
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DCTAGON
THAUNPRY SOAP
Sty 15¢
CROW'S srore
oNN A, s
-=+ SWURSDAY | SEPTEMBER; 29, 1949
lADIEs MAKE CROW'’S
YOUR COSMETIC HEADQUARTERS FOR
THE FOLLOWING FAMOUS COSMETICS
AND BEAUTY AIDS
Dußarry
Richard Hudnut
Lucien Lelong
- Coty - Elmo
Lentheric
Tussy - Yardley
Harriet Hubbard Ayer
Anatole Robbins
Attention Men!!
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE-—CROW’S CARRIES THE
FOLLOWING LINES OF QUALITY MEN’S TOILETRIES.
COURTLEY -YARDLEY
SEAFORTH
OLD SPICE
LENTHERIC
LET US HELP YOU MAKE YOUR SELECTIONS
: TODAY.
Reg. 2.95
CANVASS
ZIPPER
BAGCS
20 Inch
e
SPECIAL
ALL 5 CENT
CANDY, GUM,
MINTS
3 For
10c
TR R T
15¢ QUALITY
Box of 200
CLEANSING
TISSUES
9¢
b FEEEE LB
SENSATIONAL
PYGMY
FOOTBALL
Wear it on your lapel to the
football games,
Imprinis of either {eam,
ATHENS
or
GEORGIA
19¢ each
. PR
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‘LR ] !:‘% i{" Ml
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WAL L) N WSI Fr
\Km f‘( & I
NOW’S the time to prepare
for winter. Ask your Doctor
. about one of the prophylac
tics to help you fight colds,
flu, pneumonia. When he
presctibes, remember that
our Pharmacist is well quali
fled to compound that pre
soription just as your doctor
ordered. i