Newspaper Page Text
;ONDAY, MARCH 13, 1950,
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Hother's Friend
helps bring ease L R
and comfort so ‘3, ;
expectont %?-
mothers. 8 e
s DELIGHT?
I FUL to use in all T
: where a mild, St Y
’ ng, ekin "f'ro}flh- o
s wanted. For i N
! :, ;‘:» years it has been used regularly
or nothers-to-be for massaging the body
) Hregnancy. By hclflng to keep the
5 it and elastic MOTHER’S FRI%ND
cvoids discomfort due to dryness and tight
: |+ refreshes and tones the skin, It is also
g nt application for numb, tingling or
censations of the skin, for tired back
or cramp-like pains in the legs.
» absorbed by skin pores, comforting
; iy, satisfying to use. Only $1.25 a bottle.
. iend
nicther’s Frien
F y praised by users, many doctors and
. YJust ask any druggist for Mother’s
y skin lubricant. Try it tonight.
MOTHER’S FRIEND
Sold in Athens At
CROW'’S DRUG STORE
Athens’ Most Complete
Drug Store.
Coming
Fvents
PUBLIC LIBRARY
CALENDAR
Four small studies and
ketches in oil done by Caroline
urrie Burnet, who died at
avos, Switzerland in 1900, are
.ing shown at the library.
A display of stuffed birds and
irds nests arranged by Girl
cout Troop 7, 18 on display in
he library. The birds are owned
nd were stuffed by Doug Hud
son.
Library Story Time over
WGAU each Friday at 5 p. m.
Library Story Hour is held
each Saturday in the Children’s
Room from 10 a. m, till 11 a. m.
Hours of openmg: WNMonday
through Friday 9 a. m. Saturday
9a. m, to 6 p. m. Sunday 3 p.
m to 6 pp. me °*
(larke County Women Voters
will hold a luncheon for candi
dates in county primary set for
March 29 on Tuesday, March 14,
at the Holman Hotel at one
o’clock. Reservations may be
made by calling Mrs. William J.
Russell at telephone 1092-J.
Tuesday, March 14, the Athens
Art Association will meet in the
Georgia Museum of Art at 7:30
pP. m.
All high school students are
invited to participate in an
N g %
i R
TR TR N i
e OB B SRR R
ARV L e ®
S e R
if You've Been Sickly For
Some Time and Can’t Find Out Why
Many ailments (stomach trouble, in
digestion, constipation, insomnia, ner
vousness and those vague sicknesses)
vhich slow folks up after 50 can be
traced to deficiencies. 8o take HADA.
COL dafly., HADACOL supplies ezira
quantities of B complex vitamins for
vhich dally needs have been estab
lished, fron 20d helpful amounts of cal
clum and phosphorus—great health-,
nerve- and tissue-repairing elements.
HADACOL has brou%ht amazing relief
in case after case such as:
Case ngrt from Lafayette, Louisi
ana. Mr. Robert Meaux writes: “I had
been sick a long time from digestive
disturbances. I couldn’t sleep and was
ust about glvmg ug hoge when I tried
HADACOL. Today at 66 I'm happy and
X .nr.»mlhy,uttzxanks t 0 HADACOL.”
Only $1.25 for trial size. Large family
or hospital size, $3.50,
New Miracle-Working Medicine
§1426
TQDAY
$1395
TO - MORROW
AND
REDUCED
$25 ADAY
CHEVROLET
J. Swanson Ivy, Inc.
April Ist ig positively
the last day to make
tax returns, -
Make yours now and
avoid the rush.
P. ]. SMITH
Tax Receiver
Clarke County Ca.
Americanism Essay Contest,
sponsored by the Jay Bush
« Bod Be. N0D11282 B’nai B'rith.
This contest is open to all high
school students regardless of race
' color, or creed in the surround
ing communities: Athens, Com
merce, Covington, Eatonton, El
berton, Gainesville, Greenshoro,
Madison, Monroe, Royston, Toc
coa, and Winder. The first prize
is a SIOO U. 8. Bond, and a wrist
watch will be given the winner
in each participating communi
ty other than that in which the
first prize winner resides.
Regular meeting of the Board
of Directors of the YWCA will
be held Monday morning, March
13, at 10:39 o’clock in the “YW”
Home on Hancock Avenue.
“YW” classes will be discon
tinued for the duration of the
coal shortage here. Members
will be notified as soon as coal
is available, and classes will be
resumed. :
March meeting of the Co-op
erative Nursery School mothers
will be held on Monday, March
13, 8 p. m. at the Lyndon House.
Mrs. Roger Kendix and Mrs. Jim
loway’s Home, Bethesda.
Boddie are hostesses. Dr. Flor
ene Young will speak on “Un
derstanding The Pre - School
Child.”
The American Association of
University Professors will hold
its regular monthly meeting in
the Forestry auditorium at 7:30
p. m., Monday, March 13th. Sup
per will be served at 6:30 p. m.
in the west wing of the Ag cam
pus cafeteria. The program will
consist of a panel discussion of
some University problems by
three students active in campus
affairs. This will be followed by
a general discussion of the prob
lems raised. All members of the
University faculty are cordially
invited to be present at the
meeting.
Regular monthly meeting of
the University Woman’s Club
will be held Tuesday, March 14,
4 p. m,, in Mr. Hugh Hodgsons’
studio in the Fine Arts building.
Tuckston Wesleyan Service
Guild will meet Tuesday night
at 7:30 with Mrs. George Settle.
Mrs. Derill Hancock will be co
hostess. A full attendance is
urged.
BOOKMOBILE SCHEDULE
The Bookmobile of Athens
Regional Library will meet the
following schedule this week:
Tuesday A. M. — Winterville
School. P. M. Smithonia route.
Wednesday P. M. — Aiken’s
Store, Holly Heights, Archer’s
Home.
Thursday A. M. — Lexington
School. P. M.—Harper’s Home,
Philomath, Nash’s Home, Cal-
Members of the American Le
gion Auxiliary units here whe
plan to attend the banquet in the
Georgian Hotel Tuesday night at
7:30 o’clock for George Craig,
National Commander of the
American Legion, are requested
to make reservations at once by
telephoning 280-JF so that ar
rangements may be made.
Elijah Clarke Chapter N. S.
D. A. R. will hold a luncheon
meeting, Thursday, March 16, 1
p. m. at the Athens Country
Club. Reservations should be
made by oMnday, phone Mrs.
Themas Milner, jr., 2615-J. Mrs.
Joel A. Wier is to be the speaker
and her topic is “Local D. A. R.
History.”
Regular monthly meeting of
the Co-workers Class of the First
Christian Church will be held on
Tuesday, 8 p. m. at the home of
Mrs. C. F. Scheider, 323 Mil
ledge Terrace. Members are
urged to be present.
Regular monthly meeting of
the Woman’s Christian Temper
ance Union will be held in the
annex of Prince Avenue Baptist
Church, 598 Prince Avenue,
Friday, March 17 at 3:30 p. m.
Members of that church will
have charge of the program.
Vice - presidents of other
churches are asked to call their
members.
Athens Chapter No. 268, Order
der of the Eastern Star, will hold
its regular monthly meeting
Monday night at 8 o’clock in the
Masonic Temple on Meigs street.
All members are requested ta
attend. *
Rose and Dahlia Garden Club
will meet March 15 at Memorial
Park at 3:30 p. m. Any member
desiring transportation is re
quested to call Mrs. A. D. Soar,
chairman of the Hostess Com
mittee.
The University Drive Sewing
Club meeting has been post
poned from Wednesday, March
15, to Wednesday, March 29,
Wesleyan Service Guild of the
First Methodist Church will
meet Wednesday, March 15,
6:30, at the Georgian Hotel.
Miss Fannie Mae Teat is the
speaker. All members are urged
to attend,
Business Girls Club will meet
Tuesday evening, 6:30, at the
YW. 0. A
Child Study Group No. Two
will meet Wednesday night,
March 15, 8 o’clock, at the home
of Mrs. J. H. Hubert, 518 Hamp
ton Court. Mrs. R. C. Singleton
will be the speaker.
*® % *
Grady Avenue Social Club
will meet on Wednesday, March
15, 3:30 with Mrs. D. L. Elliott,
193 Grady avenue. Mrs. P. B.
Simmons is co-hostess.
Fastest airplane time between |
two points is not always by way '
of the shortest route. Faster time
is made by taking advantage of
strong tail winds and the weaker
head winds.
e it
. Moving stairways soon will be
hel}fing jet flight operations. These
will be capable of carrying 30
Navy piolts a minute from the
hanger deck of a warship up to
the flight deck, 28 feet ahove.
DERSONALS
fl‘l}e friends of little Mary Nell
Wllllams will be sorrv to learn she
is confined to her home on QOconee
street with the measles, ;
* %
Friends of Mr, Sylvester Beer
- will be delighted to learn that he
1S Improving after a recent opera
tion at Piedmont Hospital and
‘hopes to be home within the next
few days.
i» & @
Mr. and Mrs. Jack- Liddell an
nounce the birth of a daughier,
Mary Louise, on Friday, March 10,
at the General Hospital.
. $ 80 5
Mr, and Mrs. Troutman Wilson
announce the birth of a daughter
on deay March 10 at St. Mary’s
Hosplta}. The baby has been nam
ed Robin Dunlap Wilson.
s 5 ¥ 9
Mr. and Mrs. Albon Wood and
Daug}}ter, Sue Bess, accompanied
by Miss Sue Fambro, spent Sun
day in Atlanta with Mr. and Mrs.
Jerome Stovs'l and family.
‘ * % %
The many triends of little Har
old Farr will regret to learn he is
ill in General Hnspital,
& & %
. Friends of Linda Crowley, dau
ghter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Crow
ley, will be sorry to know she is
ill with measles at her home at
1060 Oconee Street.
* * *
Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Croft, of
Elberton, announce the birth of a
son, James Charles, at General
Hospital March Bth. They are orig
inally from Pennsylvania.
* * *
The many friends of Mrs. Carl
Wood, Tallassee Road, will regret
to learn of her illness at General
Hospital. They are wishing for her
a rapid recovery.
* * #
Mr. Garnet E. Massey is a esur
gical patient at General Hosspital.
His condition is good.
% * *
Mrss. C. G. Chandler is a medi~
cal patient at Gene:al Hospital.
% #®
" Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Butler an
nounce the birth of a daughter, Sa
ra Virginia at General Hospital
March Bth.
* * *
The little friends of Master
Carol Liveby are wishing him a
speedy recovery from a tonsilec
tomy at General Hospital.
2 ® * *
Friends of Mr. R. W. Haynie will
regret to learn he s ill at the Ath
ens General Hospital.
z
(Continued From Page One)
officers—the Secretaries of Trea
sury, Interior, Agriculture, Com
merce and Labor, and the Attorney
General, '
Seven of them build up the
executive authority of the chair
men of commissions regulating
business, labor, and finance. Each
chairman becomes the administra
tive boss of his agency.
Two plans build up the Labor
department, It would take over
all workmen’s compensation acti
vities of the Federal government,
as well as wage-hour enforcement
on federal contracts.
Five plans affect the new Gen
eral Services Administration. GSA
would lose several jobs to In
terior Department, including the
new Alaska public works program.
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THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
Benton Seniors
To Give Play “"*""
On Friday Night
“Aunt Min Drops In,” will be
presented by the members of the
senior class Friday evening,
March 17, at 8:00 o'clock at the
Benton High School, Nicholson,
Georgia, The proceeds from the
play will go toward the senior
trip.
‘Aunt Min Drops In” is a com
edy in three acts and takes place
in the Downey ranch house some
where in the remote Scuthwest.
There are thrills, romance, excite
ment and adventure for all.
Those taking part are: Emma
Cochran, as Enough—dark breeze
from the South; Jackie Hutchins as
Mary Downey-—a ranch manager;
Lou Alice Carithers as Gracie
May—in search of romance Ken=-
neth Howington as Alex Sage
brush—a cowboy milkmaid; Jerry
Brooks as Eddie Eddy—a boy
from Ohio; Billy Dun-an as Slick
er Sam—fugitive from justice;
Billy Orr as Professor Peruchi —
a scientist; Myrtice Smith as Mrs.
Fotheringay—a blast from the
East; Betty Jones as Alicia—a
pain in the neck; Buster Richey as
Sir Freddie—a fugitive from an
aspirin; Betty Jo Brock as Aunt
Minnie—a lady in distress; Bobby
Jackson as The Sherriff—a lost
soul.
- Ralph Freeman is the stage
manager and Mrs, Fred L. Orr is
the director. - :
Hull Junior G. A’s
Met With
Peggy Lou Murray
The Hull Baptist Junior G. A.’s
held their regular meeting at the
home of Peggy Lou Murray with
6 members present. Mrs. Murray
gave the devotional, which was
followed by a prayer.
Others taking part on the pro
gram were: Nancy Carroll Davis,
Doyle Marie Maley, Mary Kate
Patten, Shirley Ann Wilson, and
Delores Spratlin. This program
was planned by Delores Spratlin.
Mary Kate Patten called for a
report of Community Missions
from the members,
The meeting was dismissed
with sentence prayers. Delicious
refreshments were served by the
hostess, assisted by her mother,
Mrs. Paul Murray.
Publicity Chairman
The final plan of the batch is
the Maritime Commission proposal.
Shipping interests already have in=-
dicated they will oppose it.
When these become law, Mr.
Truman said, “we shall have acted
on almost half” of the 318 recom=-
mendations of the Hoover com
mission. More plans will be sent
to Capitol Hill this session, he
added,
The granting of supreme au
thority in their departments to the
cabinet members was a prime goal
of the year-old Hoover report.
Family boats with one-piece
hulls made of impregnated glass
’ fiber, utilize tiny glass bubbles for
}increased buoyancy. The bubbles
‘ are in a product known as Foam
glas, which is placed in various
parts of the hull.
A flash of lightning can be five
méles olng, have a gurrent of a
billion volts and alst about one
thousandth of a second. ‘
Metropolifan 0
Metropolitan Opera "i
Atlanta April 24.26 '
The Metropolitan Opera will
open its season in Atlanta this
year on April 24, under the
sponsorship of the Atlanta Music
Festival Association and in co
operation with the Atlanta Junior
League. As usual, the Fox Thea
ter will be the scene of Atlanta’s
n.ost gala music event. Jackson
P. Dick is president of the Asso- !
ciation. |
The opening performance will
be “Tosca,” the cast to include
F rruccio Tagliavini and Lijuba
Welitch. On Tuesdav, April 25,
“Lohengrin” will be presented,
with Astrid Varnev and Svet Svan
holm, Wednesday’s. matinee will
be Gounod’s ‘Faust,” when Doro
thy Kirsten, Giusenpe D: Stefano
and Italo Tajo will be heard; and
Wednesdav evening will close the
season with “Rigoletto,” with Pa
trice Munsel, Richard Tucker and
Leonard Warren.
Season Tickets may be had by
mail order only. Write the Atlanta
Music Festival Association, P. O.
Box 35, Station C, Atlanta. Prices
range from SIO.OO to $2.50 ver per
formance. All season tickets, with
the exception of the gallery, re
quire a contributing rmembership,
fee to the Association »f $5.00 for
each pad of tickets. This fee is
necessary in order to secure the
future of Opera in Atlanta, and
enables contributors to have an
early choice of seats.
Single performance requests will
be accented and filled in the order
in which they are received, at the
close of the season ticket sale on
April 10. All orders for tickets
must be accompanied by remit
tance made payable to the Atlanta
Music Festival Association, and a
self-addressed, stamped envelope
must be enclosed with each order.
Mrs. E. F. Blake is Box Office
chairman; for those who wish to
call, her phone number is VErnon
5300.
New Agent
(Continued fisln Page One)
tion of what he reported,
The call doesn’t necessarily
mean the bureau suspects cheat
ing. It has adopted a sample,
spot-check systenr under which a
number of returns are pulled at
random out of the stacks on file
for a further check,
The spot-check system is aimed
partly at determining which inno
cent errors are made most fre
quently and why. The bureau can
then try to eliminate errors by
simplifying forms or by providing
better explanatory information.
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= Michael’s Mezzanine ==
Beitish
(Continued From Page One)
brothers-in-law, walked out of the
wreckage unaided and virtually
unscathed, They had been sitling
side by side in the tail of the
plane,
The third survivor was criti
cally hurt.
There were five women aboard,
one of them the plane’s steward
ess. All were killed.
Most of the dead were coal
miners, scheduled to return to the
pits last night. They had scraped
and saved for months to get the
money for the trip.
Horrified relatives and .friends
who had crowded the airport to
await the plane’s return ran
blindly to the accident scene.
Choking back feelings of hor
ror, they dragged bodies from the
wreckage and left them in the
field to rush back for more. Some
of the rescued showed flickering
signs of life but died shortly aft
erward.
The RAF station at St. Athan
was turned into a mortuary for 34
of the victims, The others were
taken by ambulance to Llandow,
Though the Tudor was built to
carry a normal load of 44 per~
sons, officials said it could carry
many more without overloading
on a short flight such as that
from Dublin to Wales, ;
On the scene for today’s inquiry
was Air Vice Marshal Donald
Bennett, head of the charter line
which made yesterday’s ill-fated
flight and a leading supporter of
the Tudor plane, In 1948 he re
signed as chief executive of Brit
ish South American Airways when
the big ships were taken off Bri
tain’s - publicly-owned airways
after they were involved in acci
dents.
Bennett, whose charter company
made more than 300 flights on the
Berlin airlift with Tudors, said
the plane which crashed yester
day held ‘the airlift record for
having flown more hours—l,4oo
without an accident — than any
other single plane, British or Am
erican.
Until yesterday, commercial
aviation’s largest death toll in a
single accident had been the 55
killed November 2, 1949, when an
Eastern Airlines plane collided
with a Bolivian-piloted fighter
plane at Washington, D. C., and
plunged into the Potomac River.
WEDDING MAKES NEWS
MELBOURNE— (AP) —There
was a wedding at St. Columbanus
Roman Catholic Church East
Bullengarook, Victoria, the other
day. It was the first wedding in
the church for 30 years. It was
only the fourth in 88 years. About
100 people live in the district. The
church has seats for 30 worship
pers, but the community is so
small that regular services are
nat held. :
(Continued From Page One)
King had carried 21 of the coun
try's 30 districts and seven of its
nine provinges, 2
These final official returns gave
Leopold 57.68 per cent cf the valid
ballots. ;
The Liberals have said they
would not accept the King
again if he did not get a majority
in each of the country’s three parts
—Flanders in the north, Brabant
in the center and Walloon in the
south. Political observers were
not sure, however, the Liberals
would stand by this statement. .
In Flanders Leopold yesterday
was strong, with a majority of 729
per cent. In Brabant, where
Brussels is located, his majority
was 50-2 per lent. In the French
speaking Walloon area, though
he carried two of the four pro
vinces, he came out with only 40.2
per cent of the total vote,
Complete Control
Should Liberals and Social
Christians join, the coalition could
command the Parliamentary ma
jority necessary to vote the King
back to his throne. But some ob
servers thought the Social Chris
tians, of the Liberals, opposed the
King’s return, might call for Patl
iament’s dissolution and hope to
win ecomplete control of both
Michael
Has Several
Positions Open For
‘ Salespeople
and |
- Stenographers
514 day work - week, year round.
Also part time openings for those who cannot
work more than half - day daily. '
MANY EMPLOYEE BENEFITS
For Interview Come To—
. /
Michael's ez
PAGE THREE
houses in the subsequant election.
Any further steps in the King"
favor were expected to wr,
fierce opposition from the Soc
ists, who waged the bitterest pro
referendum fight against Leopold
Already there were reports tha
strikes were likely to develop soo
in such Socialist strongholds a
Mons and Charleroi in Souther:
Belgium. .
.
2 Fire Calls In ,
Downtown Area
Firemen answered two down
town calls yestercay, both fires
being of a small nature,
They went to Findley Dry
Cleaners pick-up station early
Sunday morning where some
clothing was afire. Firemen re
ported the blaze began from an
undetermined origin, but little
damage was incurred. 5
Late yesterday afternoon they
were called to Kroger Grocery
where a refrigerator motor was
burning. Little damage was in
curred here.
The insecticide now known as
DDT first was compounded in,
1874 but its practical value was
not determined until 1939.