Newspaper Page Text
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1849
AT THE
MOVIES
wed.-Thurs.-Fri.-Sar. — “Slat~
‘ery’s Hurricane,” starring Rich
rd Widmark, Linda Damne‘u. Ver
.nica Lake, John Russell. Gene
{rupa & Orch, Bad Ol' Putty Tat.
Jews.
(yEORGIA—
™ as.-Wed.—“Sorrowful Jones,”
tarring Bob Hope, Lucille Ball,
wunning the Keys. Often an Or
‘nan.
Thurs.-Fri. — “Hellfire,” starr
ing William Elliott, Marie Wind
or, Dizzy Acrobat News.
€at. — “Fighting Fools,” starr
ng Leo Gorcey, Huntz Hall. New-~
yweds. Drooler’s Delight.
STRAND— . : "
Wed, — “Manhandled,” starring
Jorcthy Lamour, Dan Duryea. Su
ermah — Chapter 6. .
Thurs.—“ They Drive by Night,”
tarring George Raft, Ann Sheri
lan, Ida Lupino. Helicopter Magic.
Vice Will Play.
Fri.-Sat. — “San Antonio Kid,”
tarring Wild Bill Elliott. Movie
5135 truly vomarkable how aquitkly and pleasantly
Liquid Capudine brings relief from headache. Being
flauid it's pain-relieving ingredients are already
dissolved=all ready to go to work at once. Capu
dine Is & prescription type headache medicine, It
contains four specially selected ingredients that
work together to allay simple pains, Use s di
cected on the label. 15¢, 30¢, 60¢ sizes.
é (1
FEL\__% . With Proven Products
= U\
A
>[ e :
flfi@@ Only proven brands find a place
; on our shelves. We can depend on
them to serve you well, because their makers’ reputations are
based on maintaining high standards of quality.
PATRICK'S PHARMACY
175 E. Clayton Phone 882
P M $ ‘
o
A‘Q B g&ifi’« 5 &
16 x 48 Ft. $125.00
These buildings can be adapted to fit any of your
building problems. They are ideal for Lake Cot
tages, Homes, Roadside Stands, Tourist Courts,
Farm Bldgs., Tenant Houses, -Garages and other
uses too numerous to list. Sturdily constructed to
Government specifications, you can buy them ot o
fraction of their original cost. For a small charge,
we vill dismantle In sestions and load. Hauling may
elee be arranged while purchase is being made.
®
Prebilt Homes, Inc..
CAMP TOCCOA
Toccoa, Ca.
P. O. Box 545 Phone 9111-J
HYDRALIC BRAKE Special
] INSPECT, CLEAN AND REPACK FRONT
WHEEL BEARINGS
2 INSPECT AND TURN DRUMS IF SCORED OR
OUT OF ROUND (EXTRA CHARGE FOR
. ""URNING DRUMS)
' B} RELINE SHOES WITH HIGHEST QUALITY
LINING : :
4 ADJUST BRAKE SHOES TO SECURE FULL
PEDAL
§ INSPECT HYDRAULIC SYSTEM
& REPLENISH BRAKE FLUID
#to 45 FORDS ONLY ‘2 5 0
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(. A TRUSSELL MOTOR (O.
Fulaski at Broad Athens, Ga.
Phone: 1097 - 1093 :
Daze. Batman & Robin — Chap
ter 12,
'!sz— -
Wed.-Thurs, - “My Dream is
Yours,” starring Jack Carson, Do
ris Day. Dude Rancheroos. Un
trained Seal.
Fri.-Sat, — “Crashing Through,”
starring Whi% Wilson, Christine
Larson. His Weak Moment. Burn
'Em Ué’ Barnes. — Chapter 10.
DRIVE-IN—
Thurs.-Fri, — “Beyond Glory,”
starrifig Alan Ladd, Donna Reed,
Inferior Decorator. Ski Holiday.
News.
Sat. — Border Feurn” starring
Al “Lash” Laßeuy, Fuzzy St. John.
No More Rrelatives. Winter Draws
On. Gang Busters — Chapter 9.
s s e N
Policy reserves of U. S. life in
surance companies total almost 50
‘billion ‘dollars, -
Lillies of the valley are some
times called “fairy ladders.”
Cacnations were first cultivated
by the Greeks about 300 B. C.
Read
The Banner-Herald
Want Ads,
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ANYTHING COES FOR A DOWN —Employes of Barney Teal, right, above, Detroit
b - & ’
auto dealer, unload a customer’s “down payment” on a used car. In this case. the down payment
\ 1 used radio. Teal's ingenious swappers will accept any item of value—from a fur coat to.a
piece of real estate—as part payment on their autos. Business has doubled since thev developed %
the “anything goes” idea ;
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=« A JOY TO HEAR—Dea! since birth, this little girl in Des Moines,
Ta., utters a squeal of delight as she recognizes a word transmitted
through the earphones of an auditory training unit. Through use
of the special apparatus, youngsters who have lived in a world of
silence can be taught to hear sounds familiar to nc 2l children.
Steps to the Moon
©by Hiliman-Curl, Inc; Distributed by NEA SERVICE, INC. 1
THE STORY: Gaynel Teare has
accepted Fritz Freyman's proposal
| of marriage, even though she had
been previously asked by Barry
Bainbridge, young Detroit million
naire, to be his bride. Gaynel,
however, has many problems to
settle first. Her family, which she
has supportel since he~ father's
death, must now get 2leng on its
moderate income, and net rely en
‘Gaynel's salar,. Gaynel also owes
Barry moaiey which he advanced
ifor an emergency operation on
Gaynel’s younger sister Pat. But
the hardest tack will be to tell
Barry, who is waiting for an an
swer to his proposal. Gaynel de
cides to tell Barry on the way
home from a football game at Ann
}Arbor. But while they are at the
game. Barry spies Denny, Gaynel’s
‘brother, with Madeline Day, a
widow with whom Denny is in
fatuated.
Barry put the glasses to his
eyes. He said, after he had lo
cated them, “It’'s Denny, ail right.
And Madeline. Shall we try to
make our way over? It would take
quite a bit of doing. Rut I think
we've got time.”
“I told you I haven’t sny desire
to meet Denny’s new flame.” Gay
nel supposed she was being nasty.
But that was the way she feif
about it. “I didn’t suppose you
knew the lady well enough to call
her by her first name,” she added.
.Barry said he didn't. Except that
the one time they had met,
through Deiany, Mrs. Day had
asked him to. :
“Hum, how sweet i her!” Gay
nel gas having another look,
thanks to the’ gldsses. ‘ She isn’t
excepti mally pretty. - And she
looks older than Dena .’
“] expect she is. But that
wouldn’t matter. Any mcre than it
matters that she .isn't pretty.”
Gaynel put the glass:s down to
5 3 >
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cinin BB g y 9% _ MUSIC & ENTERTAINMENT f
fifw? ol 120 WES G4TH 5.
B T AL ThILO g S by
B Lg e b e g e ol ol
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
A By‘?
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look at Barry now. “What is there
about her then?” she asked. She
was imply dumbfounde at Badr
ry's defense of this woman. He
must have been taken in, too.
“You've heard of that indescrib
able something, haven't you?”
Barry returned. “There’s no word
for it, really. Unless it might be
‘glamour,” and that poor word has
been so overdone and misused.”
“It certainly has,” Gaynel said.
She' put the glasses to her eyes
again; then rut them down as ab
ruptly. “Have I got ir, Barry?”
she asked. “Glamour, I n ean.”
He regarded har gravely, as
though giving the maiter his most
serious attention. He shook his
head. “No, but you don’t need it,
my dear. You have youth and
beauty, joy and gayety — oh, lots
of other things.”
*“t'hank you,’ Gayn:l said. “But
1 believe I'd rather nave that in
wuescribable something.’ She knew
what it was. rritz had it. Besides
youth and good looks and laugnter
ainu iun. it was what made him
irresistible. Disarming Barry
with all his dark, lean attractive
aess, witn all nis fabulous wealth,
ala oot possess it At least not tor
ner. :
“Maybe that’s it,” she said aloud.
“Glumour is that someuning taat
one person has for certain people;
wat something that does not exist
for anyone else.”
“That’s a good definition, in a
way,” Barry said. “Oniy in that
case, my dear, you showd have it
10r me, since youre ihe one-and
only girl, you know.
“You know me too well!” Gay
nel put in gquickly, Pernaps that
was why Barry did not heave it for
ser. “Guamour means uncertainty,
the call to adventure that lies in
the heart of all of us . . .= mystery.
That is the word for it.” Perhaps
she was not really ih2 one-and-
only girl for Barry, as he thought.
She was no mystery to him. He
had .taken her pretty much for
granted for a long time. Now he
was more eager because he was
not sure of her. It migat not be so
difficult now to tell him about
Fritz, He would get ove: it, even
though he might think he would
not. Barry would find someone else
who possessed that indescribable
something for him. 7
The whistle blew for the start
of the second half and Gayvnel once
more became part of ine shouting
and slightly hysterizal crowd.
Time lost its meaning tor her, and
it was .with a start that she sud
denly became conscious of Barry’s
voice making 'itself heard above
the roar of the crowd.
“There’s only one more minute
to go. Dan’t you think we'd*better
get a head start and beat the
mob?” y
He was not the oaly one to
think of that. Already people were
beginning to leave their seats. The
fist big flaky drops of sacw melted
as soon as they found a resting
place. By the time Gaynel and
Barry had located the car, which
was no edsy tack with row after
row of cars packed as tightly as
the proverbial sardine, 1t was rain
ing a fire, steady drizzle. By the
time they got onto the main road
it was necessary to practically
creep along, as the 1o 13 line again
formed a sort of pro~ession.
» * *
Gaynel thought, I'd Letter get
it over and done. Before we get
out of this parade and hit it up
a bit. Before this opportunity slips
through my fingers. Bui, oh, dearl
how to begin. She had a sort ot
letdown feeling, anyway, after so
much excitement. She doubted if
her vocal cords could ever be the
same.
“It was grand, wasn't it,”” she
sighed, whipping off her hat and
shaking the drops from it; slump
ing down so that she could rest
her head against the back of the
leather cushion.
Barry was pretty much occupied
with his driving. The cars in back
were honking impatiently for
more speed ahead. The rain, which
was coming down in sheets now,
did not help any. L
STalking sbout glamour,” Gay
nel went on, “I think it’s some
thing one person must feel for an~
other—to be really in love. What
I mean is, you can be awfully fond
of a person—as I am ot you, Bar
ry, and you are of me—Hut unless
there’s that glamour, tco, it's just
fondness, at least it’s not the real
thing. Tpere’s not that myster-
P v
“W};a't are you trying to say?”
(To Be Continued)
R R T
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AMVET COMMANDER
—Harold J. Russell (above), of
Watertown, Mass.,, a handless
veteran, was elected National
Commander of The AMVETS at
convention in Des Moines, la.
T e,
&2 4 7",,\ En*er
(01 frORDS |
- =
Z¥4100,000 ]
W car-sarety conTeST [
‘? end got this attractive
;7 reflzcior Inste’icd FREEI h
A i oo sl R
: R oy Be R e
The Poor Man’s Philesopher
Hal Boyle
ifitfi‘, N. Y..— iAP) —= There
isn't a better woodsman in all the
Central Adirondack = Mountains
-“'me:mdux'lntho,wh'
by its stomp,” say his mbou- !
- Kenwell is a cats | man of |
62 with the posture of an Indian
and eyes as fresh as Eden, he can
still sling a fresh-killed buck deer
over his shoulder and tote it miles
to the hunting camp he has run
for 32 years. The camp is in the
center of a 50-mile stretch of
virgin wilderness. |
‘Many city-bred people picture
a -hunting guide ac a brush-faced.l
tobacco-chewing illiterate Whol
never had the commen sense to
come to town, Gerald doesn’t fitl
into that portrait at all. He is a
courteous, well-bred, widely read‘
‘man who stayed in the woods by |
choice. And he has his own opin
ion of* people who crowd their
lives out in stone cities and never
wake up to the smell of balsam.
“Nature put you on earth to
keep busy,” he said, and “vou’ll
keep busy-—or pay the penalty.”
Gerald doesn’t have much re
spect for modern-day guides who
go to the forest in automobiles. He
likes to yarn about the real old
timers, and their endless resource
fullness. ;
Two Heroes
Two of his heroes are Fred Hess
—taken away in the prime of his
vouth at 84—and “French Louie,”
a hermit-like Canadian lumber
man who schooled Kenwell him
self in the lore of the woods.
Hess, an ox-built man who
could carry out two bucks on his
broad back is a legend among
Adirondack hunters. He could use
lany tool, and once skinned a wolf
! with a safety pin.
“Fred was what you would cali
a determined man,” recalled Ger
ald. “Never would give up. Never
would back away from a bear
either. Used to go right into their
caves after them.
‘“One 4ime Fred caught a bear
making a bed of spruce boughs in
the deep snow. Fred was on snow
| shoes and didn’t have a gun, but
he said ‘1 want that bear.
“So he tied his hatchet to a
long:-pole and swung it at the bear,
trying to bash in its skull. The
bear just grabbed the hatchet and
sat on it. Then Fred tied his knife
NOTICE
Bids for the City's gasoline
business for October, November
and December are requested. Per
sons interested ‘in making bid can
secure a form in the office of the
City Engineer. Bids are to be re
ceived on October 3, 1949 at 12
o'clock noon in the office of the
City Engineer. s3o¢
NOTICE
Bids for the City’s tire require
ments for October, November and
December are respectfully solicit
ed. Persons interested in making
said bid ean secure a form in the
office of the City Engineer. Bids
are to be fiied in the Office of the
City Engineer on Monday, Oc
tober 3, 1949 at 12 o’clock nooné'(;
330¢c
RU\'IJ \.LEHNED FREE |
~ SATURDAY, OCTOBER fst.
’ "w " 1
DON'T BE A "RUG DRUDGE
‘\'%.- : " i
' I l at Home
FREE! FREE! FREE! v morimonss
RESULTS ~
DEMONSTRATION ™
. ~ s
Saturday, October Ist, 9 A. M. until 5 P. M. P o
CLARKE RUG SHAMPOO EQUIPMENT Kl[N[ &
Bring along a throw rug and have it : - i eh Bt
cleaned absolutely FREE with the g “:F‘EP"‘W P 7‘
amazing New CLARKE RUG and CARPET P 1
SHAMPOO Equipment. You'll be s
delighted and"amazed with the results. e B
BRING A THROW RUG IN— i 'R
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154 N. Thomas Phone 1761
A Wise Man Of
The Woods
to another pole-and crept up and
tried to stab the bear to death.
The bear finally grabbed this pole,
too, and I don't know who was
‘madder—him or Fred. He tried
to grab Pred, but couldn’t catch
him in the deep snow.
“Finally Fred snowshoed back
to his cabin, grabbed up a gun
and came back and got his bear.”
In his later years French Louie
insisted on living alone in the
wilderness, and developed his own
brand of economies. He had a
garden patch and 100 hens. =
“I called on him once and found
one end of the cabin piled with
eggs,” said Gerald. “When I asked
him what he was going to do with
them, he said:
~ “‘Oh, mix them with a little
( No Bother at all ... My Extension }
N Telephone is right here in the Kitcher % .
. 808 AL T- W oo
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Add Comfort and Tonvenience
.
. to your home with an
Housework hums right along when there's an exten- .
sion telephone handy. No need io “drop everything :
and run” when the telephone rings. You save time
and steps—and finish work faster. ; ;
Many homes, both large and small, now enjov
extension telephone service. An extension in your
home will provide a world of convenience and 1».--
phone privacy at little added cost. Why mot call the
Business Office and order yours today? .'
SOUTHERN BELL TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH COMPANT
PAGE FIVE
MW?*‘@‘
venison and feed them back to the
hens, 1 guess.’” 5
Gerald’s own father ‘wss & pio-"
neer who settled in the mountains
and buill his own tote road 55
miles to the nearest siore.
Some young men once askad
the elder Kenwell what was ine
most fearsome noise he had head
in the woods. A bear’s growl? A
wolf’s howl? The cry of a panther?”
“Twasn’t any of them,” allowed
‘the old man. “The wuss noise I
‘ever heard was one winter about
the last of February when I woke
up and heard my wife scraping the
bottom of the flour barrel. =~
“Knew I'd have to snowshoe 55
miles for inore flour.” LI
Among the United States, the
amount: of insurance m force per
capita varies from $409-in-Miss
issippi to_sl97G in New York.
4 O }
b n= 37
folds
—* - —— % >
To relieve miser- "+ \§ y
jes, rub throat, &
rhest and back "!c‘s
with comforting W Vapeßua