Newspaper Page Text
THURSDAY, MARCH 16, 1950.
NEW RADAR TUBE
11A8 MEMORY | bL. Taivg
NEW YORK— (AP) — Engi
neers call one of their latest tube
‘.g'oductl a “MAOD." because
it has what thy describe as a
“visual memory.” It has the abil
ity to store radar or other electric
signals for more htan a minute
for laboratory observation. Ordi
narily such phenomena fade off
the screen of the fube in a few
seconds,
ONE RACK
Nationally Advertised Joe Collins
SALE /?. PRICE
Values Up To 19.95
Beautiful crepes, taffetas, and gabardines special
ly priced to make room for daily arrivals of Spring
merchandise.
ALL SALES FINAL PLEASE
i ;
The Fashion Shop
Across From N & N Cafete
W
eO3 S S RMR D R SG3S R
e ‘
_E_.: N 7 ** FPHONE 4107
FCDRIVE-IN—-
ot THEATRE
E\ & ATLANTA HIGHWAY % |
TONITE and TOMORROW
Rita Hayworth — Glenn Ford
“THE LOVES OF CARMEN"
PALACE NOW!
= iz= PARADE OF LAUGHS OF 4 ;
LA T Worio Wig 1/ W,
. OM\AARCH“IG o
i o 3 d-20.
PALACE FEATURE STARTS: 12:52, 3:00, 5:08, 7:16, 9:24.
e ——
TR ' Today and
GEORGIA royokrow
GREATEST OUTLAW HONT I )
M /SCOTT A
# TeDOOLINS of {BB V o
_OKLAHOMA "S- A%
eorge Macready - Lowise ANbritton - John Ireland 5 ”"&‘«%
o ey S st e P
STRAND
FRIDAY — SATURDAY
THE CISCO 102
" /25~ DUNCAN
ALY ReNaLDO
B woiRBLD
= LAST DAY —
“HOLIDAY AFFAIR”
BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES
SANY MRS WALL ABOUT THIS | |lO LIKE To
SANOIG THAT THE WOSPITAL || PROPOSE A NAME L
AUXILIARY 18 PUTTING ON'|| MRS, ROONEY
- , RUGELES | GOOD |,
ATE “ wé/ Y% 9 MOTHER
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e -e Ul —
REFUGEES GET TB
TREATMENT
~ CAIRO— (AP) — The World
Health Organization has ™virtual
ly completed” vaccination of 215~
572 youthful Palestinian Arab ref
ugees against tuberculosis The re
fugees were among 900,000 who
during the Palestine War, fled
from Palestine. Since then they
have been living in refugee camps
in Arab areas.
RITZ
FRIDAY — SATURDAY
“WILD BILL” ELLIOTT
"IN EARLY
ARIZONA™
— LAST DAY —
“f Was A Male War Bride”
S A e S T eY e
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’ MACHINERY AND
COTTON EQUIPMENT ’
575,900,000 493,000,000
$861,300,000 $891900000
: #
i o f ( |
| ; i
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N PETROLEUM AND &
BREAD GRAINS ITS PRODUCTS i
427,300,000 420,400,000 F ==
| $1,153,000,000 $775,200,000 SN
The newschart above shows the four American products most
frequently requested by Marshall Plan countries during 1949, Under
each item is given the number of “purchase authorizations” issued
by the Economic¢ Cooperation Administration for that product and
the total amount of money spent for it. All Marshall Flan products
issued by ECA in 1949 totaled $3,977,600,000 in value.
The Boy Wonder Of Real Estate
Has 1 Unusual Things About Him
By HAL BOYLE
NEW YORK—(AP)—There® are
two unusual things about Herbert
Fischbach.
He is one of the few men in
America who collect silver corner
stone laying trowels. And he is the
only man in America who is build
ing what he calls “the largest sin
gle unit apartment house in the
world.”
At 31 Fishback is the current
boy wonder of Manhattan real es
state. %
He is supervising the erection
of a $12,000,000 massive, luxury=-
type apartment building for 651
families on a riverside drive site
where only one family used to live.
But the family was that of the late
Charles Schwab, the steel titan,
The new building will replace
thel elegant 75-room stone Chateau
built by Schwab at the peake of his
wealth and once known as “the
finest home in the United States.”
Schwald poured from $6,000,000 to
$10,000,000,000 in it, and died in
solvent. An odd fact about the
Chateau: its refrigerators could
hold 25 tons of meat, but Schwab
in his last years ate only a boiled
egg for dinner.
70 Per Cent Rented
“Steel started going up for the
building last week, ang it'll be
finished by Nov. 1,” said Fisch
bach. “But already it is 70 per cent
rented.”
The apartments have about ev
erything the wife of a city slicker
might ask: automatic waste-dispo
isal units, electric dishwashers, |
fireproof paint, big closets with
built-in drawer space, and maid,
valet, catering and shopping ser
vices.
“A" woman could live here for
ever and never even have to leave
the building,” said Fishbach, who
has learned considerable about fe
minine psychology. Most apart
ments have either two or three
television outlets.
“Many families today find one
television set isn’t enough for their
| §£¢4DO6 TALES
g}ifie Finicky Eater
) By TOM FARLEY ~~nmann
DOGS that won't eat the foods
given them are, just about 99
| times out of 100, pampered and
| spoiled dogs. Yet among the most
common type of letters we receivel
are worried queries from pet own
| ers whose dogs refuse to eat. {
A couple of years ago, I was in
| terested in a year old dog that had
become so unmanageable the own-'
ers had to dispose of him. They
told me frankly all his faults—he
attacked the mail man, chased cars,
| barked when left alone, scared
away visitors. But until they told
| me that he would eat only if his
mistress held the dish, I wasn’t
sure it was all just bad training.
When they told me that, I bought
the dog, took him home, gave him
| a short course in obedience train
| ing and developed one of the finest
| dogs I've ever owned. To this day,
| he has never again attacked the
| mail man, chased a car, barked
when left alone or scared away a
visitor. And I certainly never fed
him by hand—nor has he ever re
fused to eat.
An almost exact parallel is con
tained in a letter from Rialto, Cali
fornia. The owner of a French
Poodle writes:
“Cheko is a year old, though how
he ever made it is beyond me. He
will not eat, although he has the
best and most varied of food. He
will, however, try to eat garbage.
When his food is in his dish, it is
N 0 MRS, RUGELES ONT
MY MOTHER ,BUET SHES JOST
ABOUT THE MOST WONRRFUL
PERSON N THE WORID! r
T 4 |;:
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Y X
. T nec. S PAT. OFF!
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
needs,” he explaines. “There is a
growing trend toward more grac
iou silving.”
There must be, as the apartment
rent from $1,200 a year for a two
room unit to $3,600 for a super
duper penthouse.
Far From Glutted
But Fischbach feels the market
for suites in this price range is
far from glutted. He hope to build
more. How he got the assignment
to build the new *“Schwab house”
project is quite a business success
story in itself.
Fishbach quit college at 20 to
learn the building business from
his father, an electrical contractor.
He and a partner started their own
real estate system ten years ago
on a SSOO investment. The partmner
dropped out in 1941), but Fisch
bach, gambling on a growing
America, kept expanding his firm
rapidly.
When the Prudential Life In
surance Company brought the
Schwab home site for a mammoth
apartment house, Fischbach did
some preliminary surveys for it.
“For reasons of their own, how
ever, the Prudential pople decided
to abandon the project—and to
sell,” he said. “Every big builder
and investor in town then tried to
acquire the site.”
Simple Gesture
Young Fischbach and the syndi
cate he operates with won by a
simple gesture.
“We put up $1,650,000 cash—and
nobody could top it,” he recalled{
“That convinced the life insurance
company we were investors—not |
speculators—and they financed the
mortgage for us.”
During the planning of the pro
ject Fischbach learned that the
cornerstone for the old Schwab
Chateau had been laid with a sil
ver trowel. He located and bought
it. Then he found eut that in the
old days special silver trowels
were fashioned for the cornerstone
layings of famous buildings, a cus
tom that now has pretty much died
no go, but if I throw it out, he will
eat it. He is so thin, it is pitifal,
I have taken him to a veterinary
who said to pay no attention to
him. I did that, and he ;ot weak
from lack of food. He "will eat
candy, or anything he likes, and
he wili eat if I feed him with a
spoon or. by hand.”
Of course, it is possible that the
“best food” that the lady is offer
ing the dog isn’t the best food at
all, ¥t is possible she is feeding
an unbalanced diet (an all meat
diet, for instance) and the poor dog
has to go to garbage cans toc get
the other foods he needs. However,
if he will eat candy and eat when
hand fed, there is probably nothing
wrong with the dog that training
his mistress wouldn't cure.
In my answer to the lady I said:
“If Cheko were my dog, I would
keep him in the house or on leash
for a few days so he couldn’t raid
the garbage cans. Every morning
and evening, I would put down
about a half can of a good grade
government inspected dog food and
pay no further atteantion to him or
the food. Since these foods are cer
tified by the Department of Agri
culture as being balanced rations,
I would know that, 3( he ate it, he
would be fully nourished. If he
didn't eat it, I would just throw it
away after a couple of hours. I
think within a few days he would
be eating.”
v £D AR MARTIN
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PLEASED ! | W™ OW
SHELL BE SURPRISED |
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O St 195 BY NEA SERVICE. INC
He has about 20 of these fancy
old trowels—they cost from $25 te
sloo—but he has to keep them in
his office. »
“I do that to keep them away
from my wife,” he grinned. “She
wants to use them for cake knives.
Two Athenians
SelectedOn
Nafional Group
Harry Loef and 1. Goodman, of
Athens, have been named to the
‘National Committee of the Com=
‘bined Campaign of the Union of
American Hebrew Congregations
and the Hebrew Union College=
' Jewish Institute of Religion, it was
‘announced by Dr. Samuel S. Hol«
lender, General Chairman. They
will represent Children of Israel
‘Congregation in the councils of the
national campaign on behalf of the
representative institutions of Re
form Judaism in America and will
cooperate with the local effort on
behalf of the Combined Campaign,
The Ur?on of American Hebrew
Congregations, with which the lo
cal Reform congre%ation is affiliat
ed, is the central body serving
more than 400 gmples, synagogues
and religious schools in over 325
communities throughout the Unit
ed States and Canada.
The Hebrew Union College of
Cincinnati, now merged with the
Jewish Institute of Religion in
New York, is the oldest and largest
Jewish seminary in the United
States, It trains rabbis, cantors
and religious school teachers and
directors for leadership in Ameri
ca’s Jewish eommunities.
The local campaign is part of a
Y/ L By i R
ITS HARD ITS ANOTHER IT CUTS °
70 BELIEVE - TIDE MIRACLE! )o, (WASHOAY WORK)
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BUT TRUE! /™ i IN HALF !
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. o« A T T et WOMEN EVERYWHERE say it’s the best washday
’;i’ e s - ifi iy news ever! They love the time and trouble and
o B RS water they save by skipping the rinsing! But most
Asy R A e < & Sy o 5 .
e P %E&0 5; of all they love the way their clothes come dazzling
1 s p§ = _— i % clean. You already know how clean Tide gets
o,’ ges O {"'};/ ov, R clotheswithrinsing—cleaner than anyother wash
;"? e / s et f ing product known. Now try the same wonderful
BE L e e:.'-v' ~;., 5 BS K R 5 g e e - & 2 *
i4PI W g <SPy *’,._’ S ,ii Tide without rinsing, and compare the results,
B 00 ok A 5 RS i N/ ,;, You’ll be amazed to see how bright and clean your
' sgW. fij “ ,f«::rf’ ff’ !/ i wash comes right from the wringer. Get Procter
PU—— g@ b2fi /) g & Gamble’s Tide today. Every package of Tide
. e o £ /g’ > on your dealer’s shelf right now will give you a
. V 1 o g dazzling clean wash without rinsing! -
& R SRR W, e %, A g g ’
T R e et T A S 5 i X
%fi‘ s RO« 7¢¢g; gt () WERE ARE THE FACTS ABOUT WASHING WITHOUT RINSING
g -v " -f=) : L, _;’ /éx \ %y . : s
e | e B oo 4 e 1. Will this method really get clothes clean? Yes, Tide :
hl s o keeps the dirt suspended in the sudsy water. When you
BB [ & ) wring out the clothes, the dirt runs out with the washwater i
I v ’4 —clothes come from the wringer CLEAN and as bacteria-
Ve Bt | s s Jfree as rinsed ciothes.
R ! - 2. Will clothes come white? Yes, clothes come dazzling
oy b white! Just see if you can possibly tell the difference between
a rinsed, and an unrinsed Tide-washed shirt!
“SAVES SO MUCH TIME ON WASHDAY!” 3. l}llo\v l:fitlit lro:llntghun:nsedf.:lofl:;s‘? ghen you u“Tlid.
SAYS MRS. JOY MAYO OF PORTLAND, MAINE without rinsing, clothes dry soft and Suffy .. . iron essily.
et She g g e o . v 4. 15 this method safe for fabrics? Yes, it is safe ~ . skipping
No more rinsing is wonderful news for every woman who .
Srnahos clotheal 1% itk .» tiaciiavas bo tabe thi Wikh the rinsing and extra wringings actually saves wear and
right from the Tide suds, put it through the wringer, and tear om clothes.
! onto the line! And everything looks so bright and clean!” sl g
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“ROGER" ON YOUR CLOVER~The lawn-mower industry,
moving at a fast clip, has produced this radio-controlled, mobile
cutter, which was unveiled in Chicago recently. Its inventor, Jim
Walker, shows how easy it is to trim a lawn simply by operating
the tiny transmitter which controls the ground unit,
nation-wide drive for $1,875,000
for the Union of American Hebrew
Congregations and the Hebrew
Union College-Jewish Institute of
Religion, Leading the national
campaign are Dr. Samuel S. Hol
lender, General Chairman; and
four National Chairmen: Fred Laz~-
arus, jr., of Cincinnati, member of
the Board of Governors of Hebrew
Union College; Herman M. Stein of
New York, member of the Jewish
Institute of Religion Executive
Board; Philip Meyers of Cincinna
ti, Vice<Chairman of the Union
Executive Board, and Herbert R.
Bloch of Cincinnati, member «f
the Board of Governors of the He
brew Union College.
PAGE NINE
THE SIGN WAS RIGHT
the Central Mvm —
“And be sure your
you out” — g burglar entered the
mission and vobbed it ;
A few minutes later he was ar
rested by a fioliceman while sit
fi:’gt on a park bench counting his
PASTEL DIAPERS
The newest gimmick for the
nursery set is pastel-tint dtm
available in three colorg -
blue and maize. Thglm availa
ble in packages of six, all of one
color or an assortment.
pont be "
You remember Ichabod
Crane in literature; he
was so skinny people
laughed at him. The best
way to get over being
skinny is to eat more...
and to help your body
get more out of its foad !
That's what Hood’s Sare
saparilla has done for
millions of people. It i 8
used and blessed all over
the world. See if it
doesn’t help you to love
f00d...t0 put on wanted
weight , , . to boost your
pep and joy of living..,
to get more health and
happiness out of life.
Don’t refuse these bless
ings. Get a bottle of
Hood's today.
HOOD'S
SARSAPARILLA
COMPOUND