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PAGE SIXTEEN
L XXV
. As a doctor’s wife, I had to ex<
fend invitations to the hospital
chiefs, who were, in a sense, John's
bosses, although 1 definitely dis~
approved of his hospital aspira
tions. :
- “It would be fine if you were
closely related to the head of the
medical board by blood or mar
riage,” I told John over and over
again, “but this way, it's too pre
carlous. It’s like trying to get work
in a closed shop, when they won't
even let you join the union.”
Since he persisted in his ambi
tion, however, I stood by to help
him get ahead. One day he tele
phoned ;n a dither: “Old Malcolm’s
coming home with me to visit this
afternoon a2t 2 Roll out the car
pet and cross vour fingers,” he said
and hung up
Qld Maleolm was the chief in
surgery, and I was prepared to
FVe the devil his due. I ran into
reda’s for the loan of the lace
doily qad:ozd-p;‘.‘.ed dishes (her
great grandmother’s) and with her
material and .spiritual help
emerged with enough nuts and
¢andies and fruit and little sand
wiches for a charity bazfi
“Leave it in the ki n all
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, S. C., who was a dance teacher before he
was saved. r
If you want to hear the truth preached and get a
blessing from on high, you are personally invited to
eome 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
:arm and hearty welcome at our church at all
mes, ' ;
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fixed,” said Freda, “and at the
'right moment, drag it out as if
your 10 servants prepared it for
you.”
“lI certainly will,” I promised
happily, so busy putting my best
foot forward that I subsequently
tripped.
‘When John and Dr. Malcolm ar
rived, I ushered them into the liv
ing room as if it were the king of
England and his staff. Dr. Mal
colm, I was surprised to note, as
we all sat down, was a timid,
little, bald man of about 50, with
a tanned wrinkled skin, and thick
‘glasses. His hands hung limply
from his wrists “in order to,” he
explained as I stared, ‘“create a
state of complete relaxation,” and
he shook them loosely to demon
strate. He wore an untidy, simple
suit that looked like a used laun
dry sack and would have made a
grade A hobo retreat in dismay,
his shoes were not mates, and he
had two ties around his neck.
“Have I 1?” he asked, when I
couldn’t resist pointing out this
latter absurdity. “Oh yes, I for
got I already had one on.” He
calmly removed the outer tie and
put it in his pocket, while casually
continuing his former conversa-
tion. As I sat and watched his fog
gy momvements with fascination.
Dr. Malcolm reached in a side
comé:artment of his jacket for a
handkerchief and dropped a few
theater tickets in the process.
“Your tickets, sir,” John said,
picking them up.
“Mine?” asked Malcolm in sur
prise. Then, adjusting his glasses
for a better look, he said: “So
that's where they were all the
time. Were for last night,” he ex
plained, as ‘if $6.00 tickets were
ten cent chances on a lottery
board, “but I couldn’t find them,
so we couldn’t go.”
For the entire period of his
visit, I could not stop watching
his slightest absent-minded ges
ture; so much so-that it was not
until he got up at 4 o’'clock sharp
to go, that I remembered all my
elegant preparations in the kitch
en.
“Oh, John,” I wailed, as the door
closed behind Dr. Malcolm, “Come
see what I did!” I led him into
the kitchen where my resplendent
feast stood in untouched glory.
“It doesn’t matter,” John said
consolingly. “He’s so dizzy he
}vlvouldn’t know anyway, would
e?"
"We both laughed. “Eat your
dinner,” 1 said, offering the sand
wiches. Then I gasped, “What a
character! How can he tell the
difference between an appendix
and an infecte%’:mger?”
“But I tell you he’s a whiz at
surgery,” John insisted. “The best
man we've got! Evcept for those
little tricks he ‘pulls. You know
he’s so tiny he operates on a
raised stool, or else the table’s too
high. Well, one hot day last sum
mer, he came into the operating
room with nothing at all on un
derneath his surgeon’s gown, and
with back wide open.”
“Oh, no,” I breathed incredu
lously. “What happend?”
“Nothing,” 'said John, obviously
proud of his association with this
personality, like a little boy boast
ing about how his Uncle Zeke
killed three men before cops
caught him. ‘The nedrest nurse
tied his gown up behind, and sav
ol the dav.” o {
e fe;v days after Dr. Malcolm’s
visit, John came home with the
marvelous news that he had re
ceived an appointment on the sur
gical staff.
“The lowest job in the hospital,”
he said with shining eyes, as if he
had just been named Surgeon
General in Washington. “Only a
junior adjunct, but at least a
‘start. And under Malcolm’s serv
ice too!”
“It was my hospitality that
clinched it,” I laughed, as we
swung about the room in a victory
dance. Then we stopped in a real
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
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AQUITANIA GOES TO REST — The 45,000-ton Aquitania, luxury liner, merchant
cruiser, hospital and troop ship, passes into the Gareloch on her way to Clydebank shipbreakers.
photo finish. = “Oh, darling,” I
exulted, after a satisfactory em
brace, “isn’t it wonderful? Isn’t
it grand? I just can’t believe it!”
It seemed to me then that my
marital education was finally com
plete. This unity between us, so
that I could rejoice in his suc
cess as if ‘it were my very own
was like a heady wind. But the
degree 1 so rapidly pinned upon
my chest was shortlived. -
' From Hitler and Mussolini back
'to the stock-market crash of ’29, I
‘have learned that mnothing lasts.
Everytime I reach a point in life
where I think “Eureka, this is it!”
I find that I have unknowingly
settled down on a pin cushion
which sets me forth again., Our
time bomb was set for the day
following the confirmation of
John’s appointment,
Ali?nmst immediately, as inevi
table in its occurfence and as in
terminable and agonizing in its
duration as a bad case of adles
cence, our, first major quarrel
loomed upon the horizon.
(To Be Continued)
University
News Briefs
—————— o — e S ——— P . | e amn—
Twenty-one representataives of
manufacturing and industry are
registered for the annual Quality
Control Course sponsored jointly
by the University of Georgia and
Georgia Institute of Technology.
The ten-day course, which began
Monday, is designed to improve
manufacturing methods through
the use of statistical quality con
trol.
Enrolled in the course are W. W,
Abbott, E. C. Conrad, Wililam D.
Gosnold, H. G. Heedy, and R. P.
Williams, all of the American Enka
Corporation, Enca, N. C.; James
Armstrong, E. I. Du Pont de Ne
mours, Inc., Richmond, Va., Jack
Barrett: and Clyde Moore, Anchor
Rome Mills, Inc.,, Rome;
H. M. Burns, Stockham Valves
and Fittings, Birmingham, Ala.; R.
C. Carter and Woodrow Sanderson,
McWane Cast Iron Pipe Company,
Birmingham, Ala.; E. B. Hasty,
United States Pipe & Foundry Co.,
Birmingham, Ala.; L. R. Horner,
Celanese Corporation, Cumberland,
Tenn.;
J. W. Howell, E. I. Du Pont de
Memours, Ine., Martinsville, Va.;
J. H. Jacobs, The Wheland Co.,
Chattanooga, Tenn,; C. A. Johnson
and G. T. Johnson, United States
Pipe & Foundry Cu., Bessemer,
Ala.; H. H. Jones Jr., Bibb Manu
facturing Co., Macon; J. R. New
berry and Ralph Smith, The Tim=
ken Roller Bearing Co., Canton,
Ohio; and Louis L. Petty, Edgar
Bros. Co., Mclntyre.
Friendship Bond
A strong bond of friendship be
tween pharmacists and physicians
is called “essential to the health of
the public” in the current issue of
The Georgia Pharmacist, quarterly
publication of the School of Phar
macy at the University of Georgia.
An editorial praising the co
operative efforts of the two nro-
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l Between Thomas & Jackson
sessions in fighting the legislation
Lwhich would have lowered the
standards of pharmacy said that a
“closer bond of cooperation and
understanding now exisis between
the two closely aliied professions.”
- “The bond of recognition be
tween pharmacist and physician
seems to have grown stronger, but
growth should not stop here,” the
editorial continued.
“Understanding between both
parties should grow until the bond
is unbreakable. This is essential
not only for the benefit of the two
professions, but also for the bene
fit of those sorved by doctor and
druggist.”
Brown Lectures
Dr. Calvin S. Brown, professor
of English at the University of
TOMORROW
| BE RIGHT THIS SPRING
WITH
WAFFLE or PLAIN? - FLORALS or SOLIDS?
2N & Waffle Piques are
%k//" % .:;‘:' 5 News for Spring
A-BINE s .
-' LN P ERF T YPICAL OF PENNEY'S 59(} yd.
SN , C-&-C VALUES!
COSEINTI A &
P ol u B \ Beautiful, beautiful plain shades, sparkling printed
j:{ w ' florals and abstract designs .. ~ they’re all here!
& ¢ ~- FREIL, ' You'll want several dresses in pique this year. .. it
\ W W ¢PR : rates tops in the fashion picture! Penney’s price is
way down low . .. a thrifty 59¢ a yard!
SOLID COLOR
WAFFLE PIQUE
Yes, you're in the know when you
pick Pique. Yarqs and yards of 590
plain pastels, - 3 Widke
FINE WALE COTTON SN
PINTED PO N s
SEW AND SAVE WITH ‘ a ;', ’ ‘
Penney’s price for pique is just 49¢ a yard! See it in i\&fl \
color-bright prints on spanking whitz grounds, have §, \ “%
it in any one of the always-popular shades. As soon as £ & :
vou feel the quality of this fabric, y():u’ll wonder how ; ;:\;;__" G L
Penney’s can price it so low! 36" wide. U e TR T P
At PENNEY’S
Georgia, will lecture in Mississip~
pi the week of March 13, speaking
twice at the University of Missis
sippi, once in Jackson, and again at
Mississippi Southern College in
Hattiesburg.
The Jackson lecture will be be
fore the college English section of
the Mississippi Education Associa
tion.
Subjects of the lectures will be
“What the Novel Owes to Wag
ner,” “Music and Literature,’ and
“Comparative Literature and the
English Teacher.”
Dr. Brown, a graduate of the
University of Mississippi, was a
Rhodes Schelar. He is the author
of “Music and Literature: A Com=
parison of the Arts,” nationally
recognized as the outstanding work
in this field. He has also pub-
lished a volume of “Masterworks
of ‘World Literature,” in collabora
tion with Dr.. E. M. Everett and
Dr. John D. Wade. >
Society Begun
- A statewide Society for the Pre
gervation of Early Georgia History
was organized on the University
of Georgia campus last week.
Purposes of the society, as set
forth in its charter, are to study
famous sites a 4 landmarks of
pre-historic Georgia history, spon
sor educational programs designed
to increase popular appreciation
and understanding of such sites
and antiquities, and support gov
ernmental programs similar to the
federal river basin survey.
B. C. Yates, superintendent of
Kennesaaw National Battlefield
Park, Marietta, was elected presi
dent. Other officers are Dr. An=-
tonie J. Waring, Savannah, vice-
Egm
To All Of The Cifizens Of Clarke Counfy:
It seems to me that all candidates for public office
should tell the people what they will do for them if
elected.
If I am elected to the office of County Commissioner
for my County I will always represent my Cotinty for
the benefit of every citizen.
You are entitled to good roads, proper maintenance
of all county facilities and representation concerning
County affairs, without favor to any special interest,
This I will do to the best of my ability, if elected,
and your vote and support will be greatly appreciated.
SINCERELY :
HOWARD W. SEAGRAVES
CANDIDATE FOR COUNTY COMMISSIONER.
SOLID COLOR
FINEWALE PIQUE
Right in step with style. Soft-finted
plain shades. You'll find this value 490
hard to beat! S i
SUNDAYX, MARCH 12, 1950,
president and Joseph A. Min
Cartersville seeretary-treagurer.
The official soclety organ v
be a quarterly magarine, Eariy
Georgla, edited by Dr. A. R. Kelly,
head of the University’s archae.
ology ~ anthropology departmen;,
Charles B. Johnston, University
Press, will be the managing eqi.
tor.
The first issue will contain arti.
cles on major Georgia archaeology
explorations, Dr. Kelly said,
EGYPT ORDERS
PAY BOOSTS
CAIRO—(AP)—The new Wat.
dist government has ordered apj.
trary pay boosts for every private
and public wage-earner in Egypt,
These range up to 25 per cent for
the lowest paid class. How much
private employers must pay out
no one can estimate. It will cost
the governmert alone $25,839,000.