Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWO
22 Annual
(Continued from Page One.)
tories through this service.
Resolution adopted honoring
Dean Drewry follows:
“Whereas, the program of this
the 22nd annual Georgia Press In
stitute has been of such outstand
ing quality that it will long remain
in the minds of Georgia newspa
per people as a memorable occa
sion, and
“Whereas, Dean John E. Drewry
of the Henry W. Grady School of
Journalism, The University of
Georgia, has devoted himself with
tireless energy to the myriad of
important details in connection
with arrangements for this out
standing program, and
“Whereas, Dean Drewry has
through the years shown himself
to be a true and loyal friend of
Georgia newspapers, always ready
"~ FOR THE BEST IN b
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and willing to serve in any capaci
ty,
“Therefore be it resolved: That
the Board of Managers of the
Georgia Press Association express
to Dean Drewry the feeling of
gratitude and affection that is in
the heart of every member of the
Georgia Press Association.”
Highlights Session
One of the highlights of the In
stitute were speeches by Lee Rog~
ers, managing editor of The At
lanta Constitution, Guy Tiller,
member of sports staff of The At~
lanta Journal, and Mr. Shellenberg
at the banquet of the Georgia
chapter of Sigma Delta Chi, bon
orary professional journalism fra
ternity, and the Georgia Collegiate
Press Association members on
Friday night.
All three talks were based on
tips to future journalists. Presid
ing over the affair was Bob Hazel
rig, Decatur, president of the Sig
ma Delta Chi chapter.
After introduction of the chapter
officers, visitors, and new chapter
members, Dean Drewry discussed
the various journalism meetings
held here yearly and the meaning
of the GCPA.
Initiated into Sigma Delta Chi
on Friday afternoon were: Under
graduates Alan Patreau and Sloan'
Hill, Atlanta; Bill Simpson, Ath
ens; Minor Shadburn, Thomaston;
Julian Clark, Moultrie; Charles;
Martin, Belton, S. G,, Otis Hughes,
Macon; John Pennington, Ander-‘
sonwille; Millard Grimes, Colum
bus; Charles Glenn, Cairo; and 2
David Cook, Ocala, Fla.
The professional members are
Elmo Hester, Atlanta Journal, D.
B. Turner, Bullock Times, States
boro; Roy F. Chalker, The True
Citizen, Waynesboro; Charles T.
Graves, Tri-County Advertiser,
Clarkesville, Thomas Burson, Ca
milla Enterprise; Sam Clarke, At
lanta Constitution: O. B. Copeland,
editor, Georgia Agricultural Ex
tension Service, Athens; Sanders
Camp, Walton Tribune, Monroe;
and R. M. Edge, Pickens County
Press, Jasper.
Theta Sigma Phi honorary pro
fessional journalism fraternity for
women, took in the following pro
fessional members; Miss Yolande
Guin, women’s editor of The At
lanta Constitution; Miss Katherine
Barnwell, staff writer of The At
lanta Constitution; Miss Virginia
Cooksey, staff member of The Co
lumbus Ledger-Enquirer; and Mrs.
Rogers Winter, staff member of
The Augusta Chronicle.
Also last night a costume party
was given by the Savannah Morn
ing News~-Evening Press. Discuss
ion groups and banquets during
the institute were " held at the
' Georgian Hotel while the GPA
dinner affair was held in-the N
and N Cafeteria civic room.
The Institute is sponsored an
nually by the Henry W. Grady
School of Journalism and GPA.
Other speakers during the ses
sions were: Robert P. Tristram
Coffin, Pulitzer prize - winning
poet; Benjamin M. McKelway,
editor of the Washington Star and
president of the American Society
of Newspaper Editors; Robert
Nixon, president, White House
Correspondents’ Association; W. C.
Tucker, editor Columbus Enquir
er.
J. Leroy Thompson, Wall Street
Journal; * Lawrence Laybourne, |
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DALLAS
S
BONNIE MAIDS look good enough to eat in their
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ribbons (run through the beading at the waist
line) make a love of a party dress! In pink blue or
maize.
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Sizes 3 to 6 without bonnet .... .... .. 8.95
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THE BANNER-HERALD, ‘ATHENS, :GEORGIA
chief of the news bureau of Life
magazine; Floyd Taylor, director,
American Press Institute; Robert
C. Ruark, sydicated columnist;
Ernest Rogers, Atlanta Journal
columnist, Edward Tomlinson,
correspondent and author of
“Battle for the Hemisphere.”
Stating that he is Dean of State
News Editors on Georgia newspa
pers, Hugh Trotti, Vice President
and Business Manager of The At
lanta Constitution, introduced
iStiles A. Martin at the Constitu
tion luncheon Saturday as the
“man who has served longer than
anyone else continuously as a
State Editor of any Georgia News
paper. |
Martin, Trotti said, is beginning
his sixteenth year as State Edi-}
tor of the Constitution, the last
nine of which he has served con- ‘
tinuously. |
Martin began his career as State
Editor in 1924, serving two terms
of three years’ each, returning to
The Constitution in 1941 and serv
ing continuously since, completing
15 years service.
He is best known in the Consti
tution news room, Trotti said, for
his general knowledge of “all
things” in the State, whether his
torically of geographically, as to
location of cities or towns and
communities. “He does not have to
inspect a map,” Trotti said, “to
tell you that Ty Ty is near Tifton;
Attapulgus is in Decatur County;
that Auraria is in Northeast Geor
gia and that Shoulderbone Creek
is in Hancock County.
Martin is a native of Crawford
County.
LENTEN SERVICES
~ Sunday Mass: 5:55 a. m.—St.
Mary’s Hospital Chapel 8:30, 10:00,
and 11:30—St. Joseph’s Church.
Daily Mass: 5:55 a. m.—St. Ma
ry’s Hospital Chapel; 8:00 a. m. in
the Church.
Wednesday: 8:00 p. m. Rosary,
Instruction,'and Benediction.
Friday: 8:00.p. m. Way of the
Cross and Benediction.
Saturday: 7:30-8:30 p. m. Con
fessions.
Sunday 8:30 p. m. Rosary, Litany
and Benediction.
Average annual precipitation in
Utah is only 13 inches, with some
desert sections getting less than
five and mountain ranges as much
as 40 inches.
HAND CREAM (Reg. 1.50) .. .. ... 1.19
CHEN YU NAILENAMEL .. .. .. ... 60c
HEED DEODORANT .. . .. .. .. .49
S A CLEANSER .. .. .. .. ......1.00
EVE PARIS LIPSTICK & PERFUME .. 100
HAND LOTION, Boz .. .. .. ... . 1.0
LAVENDERTALC ... .. ... .. .. 1.00
POWDER PUFES, 2for .. .. .. .. . 15¢
CREME HARRINSE . .. .. .. .. 1.00
SWIMCAPS .. .. ............ %]
CROW'S &tk
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MOVIE INDUSTRY iS WORRIED OVER
APPARENT THREAT OF TELEVISION
BY ERSKINE JOHNSON
NEA Staff Correspondent
HOLLYWOOD. —(NEA)—FiIm
industry leaders have scheduled
a secret war council meeting for
mid-March to discuss the grow=-
ing television threat. The meet
ing was called following a pri
vate Paramount survey of New
York City which revealed that
TV set ownership cuts family
theater attendance by 20 to 30
percent. An earlier survey, taken
in Washington, showed video
families’ attendance was down as
much as 74 percent. Hollywood,
at last, has been startled out of
its complacent attitude toward
the new nredium.
Deanna Durbin and her 4-year
old Jessica will make the trip to
Europe this spring minus secre
tary and nurse. . . . Spencer Tracy
is raving about Katharine Hep
burn’s fortitude in playing Shake
speare. He says: “What other
movie actress would have the
nerve to do it?”
Gussie Moran will be technical
adviser on Filmakers’ “Mother of
a Champion,” story of an inter
national tennis champ and her
conflict with her mother. . ..
Hume Cronyn, billed only as di
rector of the Broadway-bound
“Now I Lay Me Down to Sleep,”
also is co-producing with Nancy
Stern and George Nichols. . . . It
cost Fredric March $50,000 in
legal fees to win that magazine
retraction to its charge that he
and his wife are Communists. . . .
Louis Armstrong will do another
jazz concert at Carnegie Hall
this year. His last was boffisimo.
Bad Start
Joey Adams, the night club
comic, will star in “All the Dead
Are Strangers” for producer Ron
Ormand. Joey still blushes awvhen
he remembers his first movie,
“Ringside.” It cost only $54,000
and he says:
“It was so bad it’s the only
NEW picture ever shown on tele
vision. It was shot in seven days
with retakes. I posed longer for
my graduation pictures. Later I
had to make a personal-appear
ance tour to apologize for it.” |
Adams is the fellow who
couldn’t decide what to send Rita
and Aly’s baby so, he says, “I just
sent the cash.” |
Latest quote from Rossellini, in
Modern Screen magazine, on how
Bergman feels about their situa
tion. He quotes her as saying:
“Look, I've fallen in love with a
man who is not my husband. As
an artist, I have a certain respon
sibility toward the public and I
may be criticized. All right, if
that's the case, I no longer want
to be an artist. I want to be hap
py with the man I love.” ... Jess
Barker and Susan Hayward, who
insist they should know, say di
vorce and rumors are not true.
Yvette Dare, the dancer who
does a strip tease act with a par
rot at. Larry Porter’s, has hired
an agent to land her a film role.
The agent also has 10 percent of
the parrot. .
For some udder movie maybe:
When Columbia started prepar
atory work on “The Fuller Brush
Girl,” the Fuller people asked
their field. girls, 7,000 strong, to
write in humorous incidents con
nected with their work. Some
14,000 anecdotes were sent in,
Most unusual concerned a “Ful
lerette” in Wisconsin who was
selling such tremendous quanti
ties of hand cream that company
heads couldn’t believe their eyes
when the orders came in. A
checkup revealed:
Dairy farmers in the area were
ordering the jars in astronomical
numbers and applying the con
tents to the udders of their valu
able cows during cold weather—
%o keep the udders from chapping.
Using Her Head
Marilyn Maxwell, set for a
spring night club and theater
tour, is taking singing and dance
ing lessons. “I've always turned
down these offers,” she says,
“because it seemed stupid to step
onto a stage in a low-cut gown,
sing ‘Night and Day’ and walk
off. I'm working on a very excit
ing act.” Smart doll.
Joe E. Lewis says he has a
new song: “Hand Me Down My
Mercurochrome, My Horse Has
Just Been Scratched.” .. . Slick
title for Gertrude Niesen’s TV
show—*“Private Eye-ful.”
Bud Abbott is at the Wonder
Palm at Palm Springs for a vaca
tion. From what? . . . Even be
fore “Stromboli,” the Fox and
Hounds restaurant was servicing
a drink called Dirgni — Ingrid
spelled backwards. . . . Honor
ary Mayor Eb Hope of Palmr
Springs will Rave a new title for
Desert Circus Week starting
March 21—“ Limp Along Hope.”
Hope’s theme song for the month
of March, says Denny Beckner,
will be “Tax for the Memories.”
Shelley Winters, in one of her
more sage moments (she just had
some turkey dressing stuffed with
sage), said: “The .only trouble
with being virtuous in Hollywood
is that you can’t brag about it.”
“Not Going To
Die”’-Wallace
ATLANTA, Feb. 25.—(AP)—
John Wallace, sentenced to death
in the electric chair five times, is
cgnvinced he’ll never be execut
ed.
“I'm not going to die for a mur
der I didn’t commit,” the one
time wealthy Meriwether county
landowner said. “We’'ve come now
to what nray be my last chance
in the courts — appeal to the
United States Supreme Court.
“But don’t you think a man
would know inside if he was fac
ing death? I honestly don’t be
lieve I'll go that way.”
The 53-year-old Wallace was
convicted and sentenced to death
for the 1948 mutilation - murder
of William H. (Wilson) Turner, a
tenant farmer. Wallace claims he
shot Turner accidentally trying
to “bluf shim into telling me
where my stolen cows were.”
Drivers 16 to 20 years old are
involved in five times as many ac
cidents as drivers in the 45-to-50
age group.
IN MEMORIAM
In memory of our beloved
daughter and sister, Helen Strick
land, who passed away five years
ago, February 27th, :
We cannot think of her as dead
Who from our sight has gone,
Nor that the way we henceforth
tread
Must be drear and lone.
She lives beyond the reach of
sense,
But not beyond our thought; -
In deathless memories from
hence
Her life with ours is wrought.
We cannot think of her as lost
Whose hands no more we hold;
Who walks now with the radiant
host,
Within the gates of gold.
So near is her spirit to ours,"
So close our hearts are bound,
Her dwelling place cannot be far
From where our own is found.
—Selected.
Parents—
Mr. and Mrs. Thurmon
Strickland.
Brother, Bobbie Strickland.
CARD OF THANKS
We extend our deep apprecia
tion and gratitude and thanks for
every favor shown us during the
short illness and death of our
dear mother. Many thanks for the
lovely flowers, for each word of
sympathy, for each visit, for any
service given.
We also wish to thank Bern
stein Funeral Home for their ef
ficient service. We wish to thank
Rev. R. N, Saye and Rev. Pleman
Folds for their words of sympa
thy and comfort. -
The Family of '
MRS. MINNIE STRICKLAND.
ALARM CLOCKS
Special .. ... 1.69
BATH SPRAYS
9%
' MEDS
PRO;9C;‘I N
HALDPIBIZ ISAL
2for 3¢
Fields Services
On Monday P, M.
Funeral services for Mrs, J. F.
Fields, 73, well-known Clarke
county citizen who died yester
day morning, will be held tomor
row afternoon at 3:30 at Mizpah
Presbyterian Church with Rev. P.
B. Cash officiating.
Interment will be in Mizpah
cemetery. Bridges Funeral Home
is in charge of arrangements,
Mrs. Fields was a member of
one of Clarke county’s most prom
inent families. She was a member
of the Baptist Church and her life
was one of devotion and service
to her church. family and friends.
Her grandsons will be pall
bearers.
Survivors are two daughters,
Mrs. J. M. Burgess, Bogart, Mrs.
G. C. Wilson, Commerce; six sons,
H. L. Fields, Macon, T. P. Fields,
Lakeland, Fla., K. J. Fields and
J. A. Fields, L. R. Fields, Athens,
L. F. Fields, Norfolk; one sister,
Mrs. C. J. Bolton, Fairburn, Ga.;
three brothers, M. R. Williams, At
lanta, J. P. Williams, Lexington,
L. J. Williams, Greensboro, N. C.;
18 grandchildren; and 20 great
grandchildren.
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PROPHETIC HALF-SIZE |
Authored by Herbert Levy=this
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nose of poised charm. Glitter
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to important activities. Navy
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Sizes
162 to 2672
Exclusively Ours
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SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1950,
allew Speaks
.
To Exchangeites
Leighton M. Ballew, head of the
drama department of the Univer.
sity of Georgia, will speak at the
regular weekly luncheon meetings
o: the Athens Exchange Club. The
meeting starts at one o'clock at
t. e Georgian Hotel.
Mr. Ballew will speak on current
Broadway plays. He will be in
troduced by Tyus Butler. President
Tommy Wier will preside,
Fifteen per cent of drivers are
responsible for 90 per cent of ac
cidents, research studies report.
CARD OF THANKS
The family of tne late Thomas
C. Kirk wish to thank everyone
for their kindness and loyalty to
him throughout the long years of
his suffering.
We wish especially to thank the
doctors and the entire staff of
General Hospital for their untir
ing patience and kindness.
We are deeply grateful +
every one. We also appreciate the
beautiful floral offerings. Cod
bless you, every one.
MRS. T. C. KIRK.
MASTER SERGEANT AND
MRS. ROGER T. KIRK.
Grandchildren—
ROBERTA KIRK.
VIVIAN KIRK.
Funeral Notice
MILLER. — The relatives and
friends of Mr., William Thomas
Miller of Athens; Mr, and Mrs.
Frank Miller, Mr. and Mrs. R.
C. Evans, Athens; Mrs. Sadie
~ Grimes, Farmington, Ga.; Mr.
and Mrs. L. M. Miller, Statham,
Ga.; Miss Hazel Miller, Athens;
Mr. and Mrs. R. Nat Walton,
Porterdale, Ga.; Mr. and Mrs.
Elmer Miller, Athens, are invit
ed to attend the funeral of Mr.
William Thomas Miller, Mon
day afternoon, February 27,
1950, from the Antioch Chris
tian Church at two-thirty
(2:30) o’clock. Rev. N, A.-Sayg
pastor of the Baptist Church
will officiate. Mr. M. J. Jones,
Mr, Chester Arthur, Mr. Frank
Waters, Mr. Douglas Frierson,
Mr. Elmer Miller and Mr. Wel
don Miller will serve as pall
bearers and please meet at the
church at two-fifteen (2:15)
o’clock. Interment will be in
Antioch cemetery, Bridges Fun
eral Home.
FIELDS. — The relatives ~and
friends of Mrs. J. F. Fields of
Jefferson Road, Athens; Mr.
and Mrs. J. M. Burgess, Bo
gart; Mr, and Mrs. G. C. Wil
son, Commerce; Mr. and Mrs.
H. L. Fields, Macon; Mr. and
Mrs. T. P. Fields, Lakeland,
Fla.; Mr. and Mrs. K. J. Fields,
Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Fields, Ath
ens; Mr. and Mrs. L. F. Fields,
Norfolk, Va.; Mr. and Mrs. L.
R. Fields, Athens; Mr. and Mrs.
C. J. Bolton, Fairburn; Mr. and
Mrs. M. R. Williams, Atlanta;
Mr. and Mrs. J. P, Williams,
Lexington; Mr. and Mrs, L. J
Williams, Greenesboro, N. C.:
the grandchilren and great
grandchildren, are invited to
attend the funeral of Mrs. J. F
Fields, Monday afternoon, Feb
ruary 27, 1950, from Mizpal
Presbyterian Church at three
thirty o’clock. Rev. P. B. Cash.
pastor of the Baptist Church
will officiate. Grandsons o
Mrs. Fields will serve as pall
bearers, Interment will be i
Mizpah cemetery. Bridges Fun
eral Home.
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T < 837(
'AN \J A 3.8 yrs.
BY SUE BURNETT
Every little girl likes to ha
dress “just like mother’s” a
these two are as quaint and 10V
ly as can be. Tightly fitting boc
ice, full skirt — and each has
saucy petticoat. ,
Pattern No. 83 69 comes in 517
10, 12, 14, 16, 18 and 20. Size l:
short sleeve, 4% yards of 39-In¢!
petticoat, 23 yards. ;
Pattern No. 8370 is for sizes
4,5 6,7 and 8 years Size
dress, 2% yards of 39-inch; P°
ticoat, 1% yards.
For these patterns, send -
cents, in COINS, for EACH p?
tern ordered, your name, addres
sizes desired, and the PATTEE
NUMBER to Sue Burnett (1’
Banner-Herald), 1150 Avenu
Americas, New York I§, N. V.
Don’t miss the Spring and Su’'-
mer FASHION. This latest issV
iz colortful, tive—a con
plete pattern , Fabr
news, fashion tips, a wealth ¢
smart frocks to sew for summé
are all included. 23 eents,