Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWO
»
New Terrible
\. (Continued freta Page One)
phonograph records which will
coo ot their husbands at night,
urging (a) better attendance at
ballets and P-T-A meetirgs, (b)
a more generous attitude toward
washing dishes and (c) more
money for the missus,
The possibilities are terrifying.
S 0 FAST..PURE..DEPENDABLE
St. Joseph ASPIRIN
WORLD'S LARGEST SELLER AT 10¢
{ ST. JOSEPH ASPIRIN
o Sold in Athens At
;l CROW'’S DRUG STORE
H Athens’ Most Complete
r Drug Store.
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{ SEED IF VE WANT
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If you want to get 100 cents worth
of goodness out of every dollar you
spend for beverages, come to
GREENS’'S PACKAGE SHOP,
You'll find everything you could
possibly want . , . priced lower
than anyone else’s, |
PO e
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I ATLANTA HIGHWAY aZ CITY LIMITS
SR R N
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NYLONS é%
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| 2 /7" q’? m& N\
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WV pair SR G 5
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~ Regular $1.35 Value
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51 Gauge, 15 Denier - First Quality
Hosiery In All The New Spring
Shades. F A
TS TR 5 L eAR LSOO A 7 SRS WSROI - 5 LRIV AP AAR .\
¥K - SI.OO off
g\ All Womens Shoes
’x\‘ Regularly Priced From
S 495 to 10.95 Reduced!
All New Spring Styles.
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Athens’ Leading Department Store. *5. G+
‘. ;, . “THE HOME OF BETTER VALUES™ @3
B ——————— A TR ———,
As for the sleep-learning dem
onstration, it was held in a front
window on busy Connecticut ave=
nue. The sponsor: Educational
Services, which peddles learn-a
foreign-language phonograph rec
ords.
Miss Wa.j;{hlntton
Mary Jane ayes, a nice
brunette item who also answers
to the name of “Miss Washington,”
came in, went to the front win
dow and climbed into bed.
Then while the phonograph
muttered a word drill like “Mis
ter . .. Monsieur” and “Good Day
. . « Bon Jour,” and while the
crowd on the sidewalk wondered
what goes on here, phunographers
took pictures of Miss Washington.
This went on for 30 minutes.
Whereupon the photographers
said they had enough pictures,
Miss W. said she hadn’t learned
any French, which seemed prob
able under the conditions, and a
reporter said:
“Frankly, I'd rather spend my
nights thinking about Miss Wash
ington than about a French
noun.”
Everybody laughed, except me.
Just wasn’t in the laughing mood,
1 guess. I couldn’t get my mind
off salads.
3 R A 0 AN T SR G e
Building
(Continued From Page One)
the adult division of the Sunday
School—which is sponsoring the
banquet—will preside over the af
fair. Dr.J. W. O. McKibben, pas
tor, will deliver the invocation. J.
Smiley Wolfe, chairman of the
Board of Stewards and chairman
of the building committee, will
make a brief talk. t
Dr. Walter Martin, Sunday
School superintendent, will give
the welcome and Dr. N. G. Slaugh
ter, conference lay leader, will
introduce the speaker. Edwin
Blanchard, minister of musie, will
have charge of music at the ban
quet, i
Plates are $5 each and all pro-l
fits will go into the building fund
for a new Sunday School building. I
Tickets may be purchased at the !
door tonight. ;
Amphibian tanks, then known |
as “alligator tanks,” were used by
U. S. Marines back in 1924, |
L e——— |
New York fire boats can con
nect their powerful pumps to high
pressure lines ashore and aid in
fighting fire far inland, according
to the Encyclopedia Americana.
Athens Oplimist -
1
Club Members ™
~ e
Henry H. West, judge of West
ern Circuit, Superior Court, spoke
to members of Athens Optimist
Club on Tuesday night, telling
them that youths of today need
more to do.
He said in years past farm
chores kept them busy. Judge
West cited organizations such as
the Boy Scouts, Girl Scouts,
YMCA and YWCA as a great help
help in developing youths to be
come outstanding citizens of the
future.
Providing of proper schooling
for youths of today is a pressing
problem, Judge West said. He
stated that there are 220,000
schools in the United States and
129,000 are one-room buildings,
Judge West praised the work of
Coberrn Kelley in his position as
physi director of the Athens
YMCA. Jr, Kelley is a member of
the local Optinrist Club.
There are eight million illiter
ate persons in the United States,
so it is not surprising that some
times public officials aren’t well
qualified, he went on to say in
speaking of schooling problems.
A business meeting of the club
will be held next Tuesday night
at 7:30 in the Georgian Hotel
Election of new officers will be
held on March 28.
M—
Basketball
m
By The Associated Press
EAST
86Gettsbu.rg 74, Franklin-Marshall
St. Anselms (MH) 75, Tufts 71.
New Britain (Conn) Massachu
setts 47.
MIDWEST .
Ohio State 66, Butler 65.
Xavier (Ohio) 54. Cincinnati 53.
SOUTH
Virginia State 64, Virginia Un
ion 62.
North Carolina College 87,
Shaw 56.
FAR WEST
Pepperdine 65, Chico (Calif) 35.
In order to replenish wunder
ground water reservoirs, flood wa
ter is ofen diverted across porous
earth surfaces.
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS; GEORGIA
Blotter SR P
Blotter &4% |
BY ED THILENIUS
MOONSHINER NABBED
Chief Clarence Roberts today
announced the arrest of Gertrude
Eberhart, colored, for possessing
two gallons of non-taxpaid whis
key.
She was arrested on South New=
ton street by City Detectives
Hardy and McKinnon, She has
been turned over to the county,
RECORDER’S COURT
The case of a retailer possess=-
ing wine without city tax stamps
proved to be the most interesting
in Recorder’s Court today before
Judge Olin Price. Charlie Farris
Teen-Age Center
Events Planned
Teen-Age Center will be open
Friday and Saturday night from
8 to 10:30.
Regular activities will be held
Friday night and a dance exhibi
tion will be presented by Miss El
eanor Starr on Saturday night.
Registration for dance instrue
tion to begin next week-end will
be held this Friday and Saturday
night. Cost per lesson will be 75
cents, payable $3 a month in ad
vance.
Canasta and photography in=-
struction will continue both nights
this week-end. The Canasta in
struction is being provided in pre
paration for a tournament to be
held in the near future.
(Continued from Page One)
place it.
All of the negro schools are of
frame structure except the build
ing on Danielsville road. The en
rollment of white and negro
schools in the county system is
eighteen hundred students, seven
hundred of whom are negroes.
“The insurance rate on buildinge
outside of the city limits of Athens,
on account of lack of adequate fire
protection, is several times higher
than the rate in Athens, ranging
from about twenty-six cents per
hundred in Athens on dwellings to
eighty-three cents in a community
like Winterville and upwards of
$1.95 per hundred elsewhere in the
county. The fire insurance rate
on the same type structure as the
Winterville school auditorium, if
it had been located in Athens,
would have been about sixty cents
per hundred as against the one
dollar and forty-nine cents existing
rate.
The Board of Education, com
priged of Philip J. Jones, jr,"%s
president; Charles R. Albert, B. M.
Bennett, J. L. Dawson, and Mrs. L.
M. Sheffer, several months ago had
a survey made of the school needs.
The report and recommendations
submitted last year, included con
solidation of several negro schools,
as well as improvements to all
schools, white and negro. To have
put it into effect, it is stated,
would have required more than
the existing bond margin in the
county for schools. -
~ 1/ o
G" Day Tilt Free
To Touchdowners
Members of the Athens Touch
down Club will be admitted to the
annual “G” Day football game
here Saturday by presenting their
membership cards at the gate,
President Ed Downs announced
today. )
The “G” Day grid affair gets
underway at 2:30 in Georgia’s
Sanford Stadium Saturday after
noon, with Mal Cook’s “Red” team
battling Bill Grant’s “Whites.”
The general public will be ad
mitted for $1.20, tax included, and
all proceeds will go to the G-Club
of the University.
SHARKS PLAGUE
FISHERMEN
SANTA BARBARA, C(Calif. —
(AP)—Local fishermen have had
one of the poorest seaf;ms in
years. And recently their trou
bles have been doubled by huge
basking sharks which move in
close to shere and interfere with
dragnet operations.
Wililam Adler, president of Far
ralone Fisheries, reports that some
of the big fellows, six and seven
ton whoppers as long as 20 feet,
have ripped halibut and sea bass
nets to shreds. The sharks can be
caught, Adler says, “but they are
of no earthly use.”
MULES ARE GOOD MINERS
MORLEY, Colo.—(AP)—Morley
mine has 134 on its work list which
eat heartily every day whether the
mine operates or not. But when
they do work, these 134 mules earn
their 18 pounds of oats daily plus
all the hay they can shove down.
This is one of the few coal mipes
in the eountry where mules are
used to haul coal cars, because of
gaseous conditions uynderground
Rhodda Floyd, a former cowboy,
i sthe stable boss. “Mules are a
lot nicer to work with than peo
ple,” he says. “Mules can't argue
with you.”
“Red -
The Banner-Herald
was found guilty of possessing
nine bottles of wine in his case
without city tax stamps. He was
fined $25.75.
One joint case today concerned
a fight between two men. One
was charged with drunkenness
and disorderly conduct, the other
with disorderly conduct. Judge
Price dismissed the disorderly
charges and fined one defendant
$10.75 for drunkenness,
The other defendant drew a 20-
day suspended sentence for
drunkenness and was placed on
probation, while another was fined
$2 for running a red light.
DeMolays Go To
Church In Group
The Frank Hardeman Chapter,
Order of ‘DeMolay, will observe
Obligatory Church Day this Sun
day by attending morning ser
vices of the First Baptist Church
on Pulaski street.
Members of the Chapter will
meet outside the church at 10:45
Sunday morning and will be seat=
ed as a group for morning wor=-
ship. All members of the Chapter,
former and active, are urged to
be present for the annual cbliga=
tory church attendance.
T i
c. Of c.
(Continued from Page One.)
and
Be is further resolved, that the
Mayor and Council of the City of
Athens and the Commissicners of
Clarke County be requested to
work out an equitable arrange
ment for County fire protection
as a water supply may become
available in populated areas of the
County, and further that a copy of
these resolutions be presented at
a mass meeting of Clarke County
Citizens at the Clarke County
Court House, Friday night, March
10, and additional copies be mail
ed to the Clarke County Board of
Education, the Clarke County
Board of Commissioners and the
Mayor and Council of the City of
Athens.
WORKER OPINION KEY
TO INDUSTRY PEACE
L.OS ANGELES—(AP)—What is
the key problem facing the private
enterprise system? “There are no
clear channels for workers’ opin
ions to reach the top bosses. For
each dribble of genuine worker
opinign that reaches the top there
is a cataract which does not.”
This is the conclusion of Dr.
Robert N. McMurray, Chicago in
dustrial psychologist, after study
ing a national survey of 180,000
employes and 19,000 employers.
“Where there has been a sincere
effort to uncover the sources of
employe discontent,” he said “the
results have been gratifying in
terms of labor-management good
will, productivity and cost saving.”
GALLANT - BELK (O.
5¢ SENSATIONAL
TABLE LAMP SALE
Only 48 Beautiful Lamps
Buy One For 495/
Buy Second One 05 &
Saturday 9:00 AM.
BARGAIN DEPARTMENT - 3rd FLOOR
GALLANT - BELK (O.
Athéms™ beeling Dapartmbar Stornc - 0
SQUEAKS
s& From |
ogps The ¥
ROTARY * WHEEL
by SAM WOODS
Dr. Allen Pope, Associate Pro
fessor of Airplane Designing at
Georgia Tech, was the speaker at
the regular weekly luncheon meet
ing of the Rotary Club Wednes
day, being presented by Moon
Corker.
Dr. Pope talked on his specialty
#nd had his listeners dizzy as he
discussed jet planes, radar and
atoms, The latest jet plane, the
Ram, is capable of traveling
through ~—ace faster than anything
else in 1™ air, the speaker said.
Dr. Pope said the first flight of
a jet plane registered 400 miles
an hour and added that the latest
record recorded 1,100 miles per
hour.
Experts are now working to de
velop economy in consumption of
gasoline, he said, since scme
planes use as much as 700 gallons
of gas an hour. However, Dr.
Pope said our supply of gasoline is
not endangered as this country will
never run low.
Most Remarkable
The speaker said that radar is
the most remarkable weapon ever
developed and told of its many
uses. He concluded his remarks
by discussing some of the atcmic
projects and airplanes ready for
instant duty.
Secretary Malcolm Ainsworth of
the Chamber of Commerce called
attention of members to the pub
lic mass meeting to be held Friday
night in the courthouse to discuss
means of rebuilding the Winter
ville school auditorium and urged
members to attend.
President Alton Hosch called at
tention to the fine attendance mark
set by the club with a percentage
of 88.73, and said that Preson Al
mand, Leroy Edwards, Brant Do
zier and Dink Martin had perfect
records for the past year and that
Clarence Chandler has missed only
two meetings in 22 years, while
Sam Nickerson has 19 years of
perfect attendance.
Dr. O. C. Aderhold introduced
the guests as follows: Major C. W.
Johnson with Alton Hosch; Dr. T.
W. Tippett, Atlanta, with Dr.
Howard Giddens; Martin Kinsel,
Atlanta, with Henry Hill; A. P.
Farrar with Bryant M. Smith; J.
G. She, Jacksonville, Fla., with O.
B. Mcßae. Roamin’ Rotarians were
Steve Knight, Columbus, Harold
Weston, Waltham, Mass.,, and V.
A. Noyle of Amilus, France, who
was presented the club’s pottery
prize for the one present the great
est distance from home.
During their first month of op
erations from two airfields on
Okinawa, Marine fighter pilots
knocked down 209 Jap planes
while losing only four in aerial
combat.
Hand grenades were used by
U. S. Marines who served under
John Paul Jones during the Revo
lution.
Fights Last Nite
By The Associated Press
WORCESTER, Mass. — Don
Williams, 145 1-2, Worcester, out~
pointed Bob Montgomery, 142 1-2,
Philadelphia, 16.
NEW YORK (Sunny Garden)—
Al Guido, 148, New York, and
Claude Hammond, 145, West New
York, N. J., drew, 8.
BROOKLYN (Broadway Arena)
—Eugene “Dummy” Hairston, 155,
New York, and Jimmy Taylor, 153
1-2, New York, drew, 8. )
PHILADELPHIA—Jimmy King,
148, Wilkes-Barre, Pa., outpointed
Bobby Lee, 147 1-2, Baltimore, 10.
BANGOR, Me. — Hermie Free-~
man, 134 1-2, Bath, Me., outpoint
fd Buddy Hayes, 129 1-2, Boston,
0.
The Himayayas virtually bar
Tibet from India.
To begin at CENTRAL BAPTIST CHURCH Sun
day night, March 12th, at eight o’clock. These serv
ices are to be conducted each night by a young
man who has given his entire life to the Lord’s
work and is being blessed with a soul stirring mes
sage. This young man is Rev. Maze Jackson of
Columbia, 8. C., who was a dance teacher before he
was saved.
If you want to hear the truth preached and get a
blessing from on high, you are personally invited to
come and hear him each night.
His message is the same true gospel that other
men of God preach, but Bro. Maze has lot of zeal
with wisdom.
Come see, come hear for yourself. You have a
warm and hearty welcome at our church at all
times.
Easter Special
1-8 X 10 Photograph
Oil Colored
’ 3 - Minature SizeAs
‘ ( Silvertone )
March 19th Thru. April Ist
Gallant - Belk Studio
Mrs. L. C. Arnett)
] Remnae- s
.FRIDAY, MARCH 10, 1950,
During the first five days after
their landing on Iwo Jima Marine
Corps eommunication erews laid
more than 700 miles of telephone
wire, although operating under
heavy artillery fire and harasccq
by snapers.
"
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Athens’ Most Complete 3
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