Newspaper Page Text
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THIURSDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1950
Gallant-Belk Co
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FRIDAY and SATURDAY
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7. Ny ONE LOT ALL WOOL
‘ ;‘j Reg. 39.50 22050
'x.,ff\ g ONE LOT 40% WOOL, 60% RAYON
. 9 Reg. 39.50 22'
-\& } Bought By Special Purchase
| s o l P ' h
pecial rurchase 2/ /y
GABARDINE PANTS £ 2.7 |
= Fr 2= Lo
Reg. 6.95 4.95 ‘
| ALL RAYON GABARDINE ‘
IN NEW HIGH SHADES
FOR SPRING.
D Sh.
%’3 ' ress JMirts
4> 8 WHITE BROADCLOTHS
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oE J ’ v 205 Sale 1-98
#.<L.#/} . PASTEL SHADES
l/ t,{w }ff Reg. 2.98 sale 2'29
ONE LOT SHORT SLEEVE SHORT SLEEVE |
SPORT | SPORT Pullover
SHIRTS | SHIRTS | SWEATERS
1.98 1.00 1.00
‘ Reg. 2.98 Value, Reg. 1.98 Value. Reg. 2.95 Value.
| BT -TR TS N TSNS TR RS A TSI TS
‘ ASSORTMENT ATHLETIC sH 0 R'l‘ s :
SPORT | UNDER | “2irsl
SOCKS | SHIRTS | pRIEFS
31 | 3forl 3 for 51
Reg. 49c Pair. Reg. 49c Each. Reg. 49c Each.
.
GALLANT-BELK CO.
Athens’ Leading Department Store.
“THE HOME OF BETTER VALUES”
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
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BALLUON GLOVES
—Long evening gloves of garnet
faille that balloon about the up
per arm, with jewelry of garnets
and rhinestones, are shown by
Jean Desses in Paris.
(Continued from Page One)
of the most strategic industrial raw
materials and food products.”
Coffin spoke at the first session
in the chapel this morning on
“Poetry, The Law of Life.”
‘ Teol Shapes
In an address filled with much
of his poetry, the famous Maine
poet sald that tools are the finest
shapes in life around which to
build poems. 8
“A tool, shaped to fit the human
hands at work, is a shape like a
poem,” he sald. “Like most good
poems, it has the past built into it.
Its contours have come down from
ancient times and have been de
termined by thousands of hands.”
He named the plow the most po~
etical of tools and quoted his well
known poem about the plow,
“Where I Took Hold of Life.”
A 0 A A et 0 i. e
FRIDAY PROGRAM
Public sessions at the annual
Press Institute in the Chapel
Friday will be as follows:
10 a. m.—Floyd Taylor, direc~
tor, American Press Institute,
Columbia University, New York
City.
11:05 a. m. — Lawrence Lay
bourne, Chief of Life Magazine
News Bureau.
12:05—Robert C. Ruark, syn
dicated columnist and author of
“I Didn’t Know It was Loaded ”
The editor of the Washington
Star, B. M. McKelway, followed
Mr. Coffin’s address in the Chapel.
He told the Institute that the
American press is more free than
ever before.
He gave a behind-the-scenes
picture of the “stupendous” job of
gathering news in the nation’s cap
ital and cited changes that have
taken place in newsgathering there
in the past 20 years.
“The most significant of these
changes,” he said,” is the increas
ing dependence of reporters on’
government public relations men.
There is a tendency to place more '
and more power in the hands of‘
these government agents in th& !
control of news at its source.” |
Nixon Speaks |
Robert Nixon, president of the |
White House Correspondents As-E
sociation addressed the editors at |
noon. |
The Columbus Ledger-Enquirer |
was host at a luncheon. today. W.'
C. Tucker, editor of The Enquirer,
was speaker. ; |
Speaking on the theme that an |
enlightened mind is the guardian
genius of democracy, Tucker said
that “an informed people-is a free
people and freedom goés when the
newspaper goes.” g e
Panel discussions were held dur
ing the afternoon. el
The speaker at the Institute din
ner tonight will be Dr. J. Leroy
Thompson, director of educaticonal
services for the Wall Street Jour
nal. Host will be the -Augusta
Chronicle. 537, i
Astronomers have rid several |
gases not Vet identified im the at- h
mospheres of the larger planets. |
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COLLEGE GIRLS —
' QOlive Bramhall (left) and Caro
| lyn Brumer, students, model col- 4
lege girls’ clothes of then and
| mow in Wellesley College’s 75th
anniversary celebralion.
. ‘
Fr'day and Saturday
3&“
R jiece Gooas dale
LN RS ASSORTMENT BEAUTIFUL
*’igg g}i% V“Q " & & P ,
Pure Print Silks
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- RLEE Regular 2.49 t 0 2.98 L ¥
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WIS’ A& N\ | sOLID and STRIPED - FAST COLOR
T 4 R AN x’% 7
NG il 75, 8
R %) ambrays
NSy |
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't / Regular 79c 59c Yd
27 # | WHITE and PASTEL SHADES
= 5
V7= //é{'- N R lar 79 98¢
| /f/? L eqgular 79c to 98¢
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£/ 41\\ LARGE ASSORTMENT - FAST COLOR
¥« /! Cotton Prints
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945 '
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Regular 49c to 5% ‘ 29c Yd
PLAID GINGHAMS
St T 59¢yi,
LINENS DEPARTMENT - FIRST FLOOR
ORGANDY AND ‘MAR'QUISETTE
CURTAINS
Regularl 3.95 to 4.95. 2 49
Slightly Soiled. ®
BEAUTIFUL CO-LORS AND PATTERNS
TURKISH TOWELS
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Here are just a few of the many exceptional values you will find at Gallant-Belk Company this Fri
day and Saturday. It will certainly pay you to take advantage of these values and save mongy on
your purchases. Visit every department of our store for better values at all times. G
‘ : 2
Athens’ Leading Depart ment Store
“THE HOME OF BETTER VALUES”
PICOLAY CLOTH
Reg. 98c. "9(: Yfl. Reg. 1.49 ln‘g le
| TABLE CLOTHS |
Regular 1.49, l .OO
BEDSPREADS
i 1.00 OFF
PAGE SEVEN