Newspaper Page Text
S{NDAY., MARCH 17, 1950,
"DE-HU-MATIC™ MEANS SUMMER
COMFORT FOR YOUR BUSINESS
nlax Wright, Inc., Southern Dis
iributor for The Great National
Air Conditioning Corp., announced
today the appointment of White
s Wier Air Conditioning & Heat
iz of 521 Southern Mutual Build
inz as Dealers for the complete
ine of De-Hu-Matic Evaporative
air conditioning.
Known as “De-Hu-Matic” at
rwospheric and temperature con
t-olled air conditioning, these units
.- now used in tens of thousands
of business establishments, manu
¢-cturers and homes and has for
rany years met with the highest
ceoree of satisfaction by its users
i+ alr conditioning and comfort
I | ». ‘ . ‘,
Nse PR T e R A %
e ) ‘ p Y
Y HIGH COST. OF,
I 8 CONDITIONING
T ORI yle V- &
} R T Y My
‘;EE b i . AR A ...,.:%.1 3
cD °
De-Hu-Malic
E - -
ATMOSPHERICALLY CONTROLLED
<. )
Syatem of réin Cooling
© Miracle comfort cooling with De-Hu-
Matic works wonders in any locality. It
provides the refreshing and comfortable
\tmospheres that malke shopping more
pleasant.
De-Hu-Matic builds business for you.
It gives you comfort eooling you can
aiford to buy and operate.
"
| #% €OOL REFRESHING COMFORT ..
| 44 AT ONLY A FRACTION OF .{~
i{ 7/ AR CONDITIONING COSTS ' °
“A§ REFRESHING AS
A SEA BREEZE"
SEt R .
Alr Conditiening & Heating
521 Se. Mutual Bldg., Ph. 1666
Ti ' " '”!: 9 o
1 71 74 fi:‘ 1 v
SB\i ¥ H’z:‘-i ,”"? . b a“t'es
il \ R . ; $
1T&/ \\ ‘l”“ m i 'ltt‘e ¢
IBREE © Y 'y “hl . Z
) e {
TR e e e i
C s Look for them at Baxter’s and b Pl )
Ll m%* watch fairyland dreams come true. Mw.f”a
A e STREY Each girl is a princess, each boy a
7 ™ RN ve g prince when fitted from our won
-7~ ‘fi "/ AP s o ;‘{:". G
r /{f o derful selection of children’s clothes /:
l/é eoy and accessories. i ,
3 # ',‘,,'fi:\ > ”"' J‘ o i : \“:
BNI ¢
oL TS R CRISP COTTONS
NS e o , : izes 1-6 x — $1.98 up.
LN L R TS o ST 6 7 -
o "-' ; i\ W‘AM‘ A g % \
’;v o, i v ”‘{'k
'fi“;»?foE: .-':-?f_ F “‘) ‘:,_i_.
g ® F : i 3 P
/ i \‘i 1 ¥ ; //“\\
; "l f N W
( t\) N ..: R \\& ; /
P “r 2
L\ < , {
{,” A (\7- .'72,0~
‘ O
STARCHED ORGANDIES \ f‘; '?\
Size 1-6 x — $1.98 up. ; b f s \ur?h
) 50 071 Y &
Pigue coats and bonnets in pastels or navy, fluffy PIQUE COATS ¥
yords of organdy in our pinafores and dresses, Sizes 6 mo.-¢ yrs. — §3.98 up. i
Eten coats and suits for our rough and ready
malen. Styled to fit and to please. ik
2 R\ -
axtiers ¢ Q
ONLY 28 MORE DAYS UNTIL EASTER. Fashions for Boys and Girls
185 College Avenue . Athens, Ga.
cooling,
The De-Hu-Matic evaporative
air conditioning unit is low at
first cost, and its operating ex
pense is measured in pennies a
day. Maintenance costs are negli
gible. The healthful and refresh
ing comfort results of this new
type of cooling unit are available
to everyone, practically every
where — truly inexpensive hot
weather relief.
100 per cent fresh air. De-Hu-
Matic atmospherically controlled
air conditioning is different from
other types of air conditioning in
that it works on a principle of 100
per cent fresh air cooling. It does
not recirculate any old air, but
brings into the room, or rooms,
100 percent fresh, cool air. In do
ing so, through the moist tempera
ture reduction sections, it removes
all dust, dirt, pollen and impuri
ties.
Installed quickly, easily. Exten
sive ductwork is rarely required.
No added electrical line is needed.
Installations are completed with
out disturbing usual business rou
tine.
Temperature Control. De-Hu
matic automatically tempers its
cooling results to the needs of the
prevailing outdoor temperature.
The “too chilly” interior often
caused by wuncontrolled evapora
tion on cooler days, during eve
ning hours, or late spring or early
autumn seasons, is totally missing.
Simplicity of Thermal Control.
“The De-Hu-Matic control is sim
plicity itself. There are no elec
trical connections, no switches to
hang or contact or points to bind.
All parts are rustproof and dura
ble. .
Mr. Wier announces that users
should place their orders without
delay, as the factory is exceeding
ly busy filling orders now. It takes
approximately three to four weeks
to make delivery and installation.
De-Hu-Matic means the differ
ence between a hot, sticky un
pleasant summer or a cool, com=-
sortable weather season. Whether
you be a manufacturer, merchant,
professional man or homeowner,
there is a unit for every type of
aid conditioning requirement.
REMEMBER the De-Hu-Matic
saves you money not only on the
original investment, but also on
operation and upkeep. For full
particulars and estimates, tele
phone White & Wier Air Condi
tioning & Heating, 1666. Write the
firm at 521 Southern Mutual
Building.
Sometimes March comes in like
a lion, but the Safety Education
Di}ision of the Georgia State Pa
trol warns us that if we rush into
traffic like one of these animals,
we can very well come out like
an injured lamb. Whenever you
walk or drive, be sensible, be sure
and be safe. Don’t gamble with
safety —the odds are against you.
The weight of pigs has been
found to affect their reactions to
temperature in terms of feed and
water consumption,
Hydrogenation is a process for
turning liquid vegetable oils into
solid whtie fat.
What Athens School Children
Will Eat This Week.
Menus for Week of March 13-17
MONDAY
Cheeseburger Diced Buttered Potatoes
Apple, Cabbage and Raisin Salad
Milk Doughnuts .
TUESDAY 4
Creamed Chicken on Rice
English Peas Carrot Strips
Cheese Biscuit Butter Milk Apple
WEDNESDAY &
Country Fried Steak
Mashed Potatoes Scalloped Tomatoes Field Peas
Biscuit Butter Milk Fruit Ball
——-—-’-—-——____..
THURSDAY
Ham Loaf
Creamed Corn Green Vegetable Salad
Raisin Muffins Butter Milk
Fruit Jello — Custard Sauce
FRIDAY ;
Tuna Fish Casserole .
Green Beans Waldorf Salad
Hot Rolls Butter Milk
Peanut Butter Cookies
RUMORS FLYING
Poor Man's Philosopher Asks
"What Can A Fellow Believe?”
BY HAL BOYLE
NEW YORK— (AP) —Slip the
rumor to me, Junior. Did you see
a bird flying barkwards? You say
a lion stopped you in the street
and wanted to know what subway
to take to the Brox Zoo?
How’s that? You just trapped
three men from Mars in the base
ment and winged ’em with your
atom gun?
Do I believe you, son? Well, let
me put it to you this way — I
don’t disbelieve you. I no longer
disbelieve anybody or anything.
The age of smug certainty is
gone. Wonder has piled upon won
der so fast in our lifetime that
few of us have any disbelief left.
It takes a brave or foolhardy man
indeed today to say “that’s impos
sible.” Tomorrow he may be prov
ed wrong and a doltish oaf.
Mankind seems to have lost its
anchors and is drifting helter-skel
ter before capricious winds of
change and uncertainty. Faith has
lost its feathers, and authority is
a broken reed. About all a man
can be sure of is that if he steps
aboard a certain bus he’ll end up
at home. But how about that bus
driver a few years back who
started out on his regular route
here and ended up in Florida?
Can’t Know Nothing
Nope, you just can’t know noth
ing for certain. There is no basket
left you can put your dozen eggs
into and count on getting all
twelve back again. .
Take that story by the dyna
mite salesman about the wreckage
of a space ship being found in
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
Mexico piloted by a gent only 23
inches tall. The airforce says,
“there is no evidence to support
the existence of any interplaneta
ry machines.”
But you will note that the air
force doesn’t rule out the possi
bility. It can’t — it may have to
fight space ships some day. So
may the navy.
As a matter of fact, the rumor
of an interplanetary space ship
having crashed on the North
American continent has been
floating around Manhattan for
months. According to the version
I heard, it hit in the southwest and
the bodies of 34 “things” about
three-feet high were found. The
“things” were supposed to have
ben living beings, but without
skin, flesh, scales or feathers.
A reporter asked a well-known
atomic scientist if he believed the
rumor, and he replied:
“] wouldn’t say I disbelieved it.
Anything is possible,”
Visitors Frem Venus
And so it is. If two pollywog
eyed creatures in green armor
knocked on my door and said, “We
just landed from the planet Ve
nus,” I wouldn’t call them liars.
I'd just hand them the keys to
apartment and say, “let me know
when you get out of here.”
Can the H-bomb destroy the
world? One eminent group of sci
entists says, “Yes.” Another says
“Pooh!”
Is a murder defendant crazy or
sane? One psychiatrist testifies
he's a bluebeard and a second
psychiatrist says he’s batty as a
’beury.
' Will anti-histamines cure the
commoncold? There're expests on
both sides.
That's the trouble nowadays.
The world has gone beyond the
}undetstandi;m of the common
man, and whom can he trust
when the experts quarrel among
themselves?
So, Junior, ¥ won’t deny you
saw the backward-flying bird, the
lion on the street, or shot the three
men from Mars, I won't disbelieve
anything. But just don’t ask me
to get excited about your mar
vels. The old man is worn out
with marvels he can’t compre
hend. It might a good idea to
have a five-year moratorium on
them till we can all catch up.
Mt. Sinai is 200 airmiles south=
east of Cairo, Egypt.
t New spring styles in Vitality Shoes. Vitality Shoes -
re Sen S offer last quality in every seen and unseen details for
that restful fit. Vitality shoes truly give you more for your money.
. \ -
‘of beautiful, o Mfi,&“‘
. o ‘ F
comfortable b Bouetts =
B sTG ’fi
; )
s#" ' 5 ’
; Tiulq ""----—:
n X -& % 2
. G 4 r{\L' !
: 2- b- N
. v, N .
Sanchex " : .
d| . ,
Y". i ~:-:'f':‘\ ;m. ‘
e ) ‘ 7] 4 sHOBs .
: ; 'LASTING QUALITY'
in every seen and unseen detail ;
A glorious array of colors o 7 superb
materials .. , wonderful styles, New sandals
\! / end steaps, new pumps and ties , ~
¢ cvery one a gem of quality, inside and om.‘\
& g ij Come choose your new Vitality Shoes.i
. o 4 %' ‘ ‘Vl?dlfy m'fif'flflr-mamy Sb“L
ol .25 and 4{[.95
o ? ; ’“’ v Complete vange of sizes and widehg)
(PO e Ao Viliy Open Rod Shos
foT . P
i&fi” "% A%"/%fi $7.95+ 88,91 + $9.93
F e
1 @8 " N b e )y
i Saay _ \ \&f
ePb 3 & ;
T Lo e e, . F L
<éw : » i & 4
4% im, b s ‘; b, 2
(el Rinsetta
5. .
1. Gwenella, Admiral blue calf, black patent and white sueds . . ... $9.95
2. Sanchez, New spring shade of Pepper Green with antique finish $10.95
3. Tinsley, Black calf (unlined ventilated) .. . .. .. .... ...... $10.95
4. Bouette, Kola brown, biege and frontier bie ge kid platform, same in
Admiral blue withnoplatform .. ... ..... .... ........ .. $10.95
5. Rinsette, Cherry red calf antique finish b eautiful fitting shos . . $9.95
' | e
Athens’ Leading Depart ment Store
The Fifth Region of the U. S.
Civil Service Commission, Atlanta,
Georgia, announces an examina
tion for various types of Instructor
positions at grades GS-6 through
GS-12. These positions are in va
rious Federal agencies located in
the states of Alabama, Florida,
Georgia, South Carolina, and Ten
nessee. The entrance salary range
is from $3450 to $6400 a year.
Veterans who qualify in this ex
amination will be given preference
as provided for in the Veterans
Preference Act of 1944.
This examination will be rated
":‘.:md"’""““&um’“ o g
i y app! are
urged to file., . . #a
For description of the duties,
forms to file, qualification require
ments and other information see
F. W. Orr at the Local Post Office
or apply at any first or second
class post office located in the
states listed above. Applications
must be received by the Fifth U.
S. Civil Service Region, Atlanta 3,
Georgia, not later than March 20,
1950,
The National Georgraphic So
ciety says the first white man to
see the Teton range in western
Wyoming was John Colter, in 1807,
John Colter, a former memlbter{i
of the Lewis and Clark expedition,
discovered Yellowstone in 1808.
PAGE NINE
FEW JOBLESS oy
IN AUSTRALIA :
CANBERRA —(AP)==Only 947
people were registéred as uneme
ployed in Australia as 1950 start
ed. At the same time the govern
ment’s Department of Labor and
National Service held 101,400 un
filled vasancies—66,ooo for men
and 35,400 for women.
The raising of pheasants has be
come a regular part of the domes
tic poultry Musdtgtut: supply a
demand for this Y.
Eggs in this modern x‘ are
“candled” by electricity, at is
an electric bulb is used 10 mml:
the light needed to do the gra b
Since 1775, United States Ma=
rines have made more than 200
landings on foreign shores.