Newspaper Page Text
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1949,
It is estinated that the popula
tion of India is increasing at the:
rate of about 3,000,000 a year, -
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' A Merry Chrisimas #‘ 0
« A Hoppy New Year 4&’?
GEORGE A.
N WATSON DRUG (O.
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. L fif\ QA / @nee again we pause as
% "‘\*- i ' another joy-filled Yuletide season
N ' arrives, to wish our many patrons and |
. friends prosperity, health, contentment and peace
this Christmas Day and throughout the year to follow.
Entire Organization
1095 W. Broad
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' Spain, the Near East and Greece
for centuries furnished the world
with its supply of raisins.
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Elll ‘ | SEHSOH’S_ ) l
When Christmas comes, with el is joy
and beauty it is @ pleasure Yo express
. our whole-hearted greetings ! ,
‘ 4t is in this spirit that we extend our sincere :
3 wishes for a Merry Christmos ond o Heppy l
New Year to our many friends .. .. ‘
- GEORGIAN HOTEL |
: and \
COFFEE SHOP
Frenchmen No Longer World’s
Best Lovers, Journalist Says
PARIS— (NEA) — Frenchmen
were joulted out of a certain com
placency when an American wo
man journalist declared that
“Frenchmen no longer live up to
their reputation of the world’s
best lovers. Norwegians are bet
ter.”
The challenge was immediately
taken up by the sensational Pari
san weekly, “Samedi Soir,” which
proceeded to open an exhaustive
inquiry to find what truth, if any,
there wag in this shattering state=
ment.
Famous novelists, popular play
wrights, leading actors and ac
tresses, psychologists, as well as
men and women in all walks of
life were asked to reply to the
following questions:
Is there really a crisis of love
in France? Is it true that moral
ity has disappeared? Do you agree
that cynicism, sexual anarchy and
brutality mark today’s relations
between men and women?
* * *
From all comments offered by
masculine authorities on the far
reaching question of “love,” one
fact stands out like the Eiffel
Tower: Life today is too compli
cated; there are too many finan
cial difficulties to allow French
men time out for sentimentality.
Rene Bazin, successful young
novelist, thinks love has less at
traction for today’s young men
because (1) psychoanalysis has
taken all the poetry out of love
(2) feminism has “depoetized”
women (3) a certain snobbish at
titude rails at romance and true
love and (4) the invasion of wo
men in many professions has
changed men’s attitude towards
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
women besides destroying much |
of their glamor.
Another dramatist attributes
the lack of phosphorous in the
wartime diet of the young as one
of the causes of their lack of in
terest in love but adds: “The
young Frenchman is a ‘lion’ com
pared to his American contem-~ |
porary.”
Feminine Side l
On the feminine side, marriage, '
rather than romance, is the goal
of the modern French girl, says
Mme. L. Bresmes, chief of per
sonnel in a econcern employing
hundreds of women, The 1949 girl
is ambitious. Love in a cottage
does not appeal to her. She is
more interested in men of 35 to
45 than a youngster of her own
age mainly because he has, by
that time, acquired a settled posi
tion and is financially more se
cure.
Under the German occupation
things were different. Youngsters
made big money in the black
market., The older men were ig
nored, proving that the attraction
of youth for youth is irresistible|
—provided there are no financiai |
problems. :
On the other hand, experis are |
pretty generally agreed that the
young Frenchman of today is far
too engrossed in making good to '
flit from (ne girl to another. If he
is serious-minded, he thinks in '
terms of marriage.
* * *
According to Andre Maurois,
when times are easy people have !
more leisure for love. “Gone are !
the days,” he says, “when a man’
could devote four or five hours a
day to the girl of his deams.”
Claude Farrere, 75-year-old |
author of many successful novels, |
poo-poos the notion that the de- |
cadence of love has anything to .
do with ambition, cost of living,
lack of sentimentality or e ven{
phosphorous. Over-indulgence in
sports by both sexes, he says, is |
the main factor responsible for
this sad state of affairs.
The older generation is unan-;
imous in deploring the business-i
like attitude of young lovers. They
ignore 2all of the classical cere-|
monial with which their grand-]
mothers were wooed and won.
They have no time or patience for |
sighs and swoons, for advances
and retreats. :
“Do you ever see young couples !
wandering hand in hand under |
the trees by moonlight?” they ask. “
“How can romance blossom in a |
cocktail bar?”
Mistinguette, too, is ful of re
grets. “ A woman does not boast
of a lover these days but talks of |
him as a pal,” says the famous
dancer. “Tenderness has disap
peared with the many little atten
tions which women of my day ex
pected and received. Yesterday’s
lover was shy; today he is a sav- |
age.” i
The promiscuity of bathing re- |
sorts, masculine and feminine
“Bikini” beach wear are not con
ducive to romantic love, thinks a [
35-year-old bachelor. The element
of mystery on which romance |
flourished has vanished. Stark
realism has Kken its place.
Romance and marriage, how- !
ever, are still the goal of the 28,- !
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PROUD PAULINE—This proud
mother is Pauline, ex-circus
tigress in the Whipsnade Zoo,
London. Her month-old daugh
ter, Wendy, is one of a set of
twins who are reported the first
tiger cubs to be bort in winter.
000 women who it is said, seek
advince and comfort through the
IFaaa pier, s e
en’ lies and maga=
zines in France, In France today
there 21,500,000 women o 192,=
500,000 m.n. And the divorce rate
iz going up every day.
Agent Discusses
Facts And Fears
Atioiit Aliimini
Food superstitions often die
hard, even when scientific research
and long experience prove them
wrong, Mrs. Mary M. Smith,
Clarke county home demonstra
tion agent said this week:
One of the most widespread ex
amples of such misinformation
concerns aluminumware, Mrs.
Smith pointed out. Despite the facti
that the American Medical Asso-‘
ciation, the U. S. Public Health
Service and many other authori-‘
ties have agreed that it is safe,
many homemakers still doubt the
:qafety of using aluminum for cook
ing.
Hospitals the countryover, in
cluding those run by the U. S.
Government, use aluminum cook
ing utensils, the home demonstra=
tion agent said. Certainly this
would not be true if research on
aluminum for cooking had given
the slightest suspicion of danger.
Aluminum is found in many bak
ing powders and in some vanishing
creams and deodorants which are
applied to the skin and readily ab
sorbed by the body. Through such
preparations the body takes in
much more aluminum than it does
from foods cooked in aluminum
pans. ¥ |
Aluminum serves many useful
purposes in modern food packag
ing. Aluminum foil is used to
wrap candy, cheese, butter, frozen
foods and in milk bottle caps with
out harmful effects.
Aluminumware has many ad
vantages in cooking. It is moder=
ate in price, attractive, lightweight
but strong and durable and con
ducts heat well, It is fairly easy
to clean but is darkened and even
pitted by strong alkaline cleaning
compounds. Traces of aluminum
may be dissolved by acid foods or
alkaline substances like baking
powder, but these traces are too
minute to be harmful.
For the sake of keeping utensils
in good condition, Mrs. Smith ad
vised that foods which discolor or
pit it should not be stored or left
standing long in aluminum. Very
thin aluminum utensils dent easily
so the heavier ware will give long
er znd better service,
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Our favorite season is here again! For it's Christmas ’% G
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. time—when colorful lights and holly wreaths e
o
brighten every window—when the carefree voices of carolers o P
break the silence of the night, and to wide-eyed
youngsters dear old Santa Claus is the “man of the hour”. :
Beyond all these pleasures our greatest " '
o T
enjoyment comes from the opportunity to wish e T
all our friends a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Y ear. . @}%% e
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; ‘*‘
CONGRESS PARTY
FACES PROTEST
LUCKNOW, India == (AP) ==
The firet organized protest against
Congress Party government was
staged here recently by more
than 15,000 peasants demanding
land and a socialized economy.
The {yeasants marched ir a two
mile-long procession organized by
the Socialist Party, They demand
ed a more liberal deal for peas
ants under the United Province's
bill for aholishing the zamindari
system, under which most of the
land is owned by a few landyords.
e e ' :—=_-».=;j=-:
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;_‘_ Season’s Greetmgs } : '."-i;;;-
=5 To All | .
= We wish for a moment that we were back !7 1 //;
=34 \ . oclaimed th U 111/
30 in the days when town-criers proclaimed r”(: \,v\ J]'{f/“
s R d t the houses o W\ W
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b .Al \Il the folks we know, and perso ; \m' ioy
‘fj:= ;»'l : : s and bountiful \l BBV
I lIN AN each one of you a joyou : ith con- (it 4’
“l 1%/‘Lfi | | Christmas followed by a year filled with ¢ W ';“{
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FIREMAN LOSES STATION
LOS ANGELES-—— (AP)-—Like
it or not, fireman Eugene Cremins,
61, is being trausferred. And Cre
mins doesn’'t lixe 1t because he’s
been at the Main Street station
for 32 years. He loves it as much
as his home. But the fire depart
ment is selling the building and
Cremins is being sent to a station
nearer his residence.
Cremins finds only one advan
tege in being moved closer to his
home. Said he: “At least I'll save
on gas.”
Americans spend $32,500,000 a
day, an average, on meat.
PAGE SEVEN
HE SHOULD WRITE
HEADLINES
TORRANCE, Cajify - AAP) —
How to .bbrevite names like
Paseo de la Estrena, Calle de Anda
sueia or Via Monte DVOre? That's
the problem facing ety manadger
George Stevens who plans to in=
stall street signs in the suburbs.
Steven figures the signs should
be more than two feet long with
letters at least six inches high and
proportionately wide. That only
leaves roo 1 for 12 to 15 letters.
An Alaska sealskin is so light
and pliable that an entire pelt can
be passed through a napkin ring.