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Radio Clock
WGAU-CBS
1340
WEDNESDAY EVENING
¢:oo—Allan Jackson and News
(CBS).
.15The Lone Ranger. ‘
g'ig:Lowell Thomas and the
g
lf:l:‘;——'l'he Jack Smith Show
CBS).
7,:7(»--}7-,(ob Crosby’s Club 15
"CB%E{ selon (CBS)
Mr, Chamelon ’
;gtor Christian (CBS),
9;9o—Grouscho Marx Show
(CBS).
9:3o—Bing Crosby (CBS).
10-00—George Burns and Gracie
Allen (CBS).
10:30— VeteranNi!-lia;{momzers.
11:00—News, ght Final.
I‘l 05—Dancing 1n the vark,
17 00—News.
1. 03—Sign Off.
e
THURSDAYX MORNING
§:so=—Sign ON. :
§:F ==NEWS, .
7:00—Good Morning Circle.
7.ls—Local Newe—Bob Oliver.
7:20-—Good Morning Circle.
7:3o—World News ,Briefs
7:4B~The Golden River Boys.
§:00~CBS World News Round
up.
s:zs——Gé’od Morning Circle.
B:3o—Music Shop Parade.
9:OO—CBS News of America
9:ls—Strength for the Day.
9-30—Happiness Is Home Made.
9:4s—Mid-Morning News.
10:00—~Georgia Schools on the
Air.
10:13—Arthur Godfrey Suow
(CBS).
11:30—For the Living.
11:45—-Rosemary (CBS).
12:00—Wendy Warren and News
(CBS).
THURSDAY AFTERNOON
12:15—Mid-Day Roundup of the
News — Bob Oliver.
12:30—Romance of Helen Trent
(CBS).
12:45—The Le Ferve Trio,
1:00—Big Sister (CBS).
1:15—-Ma Perkins (CBS).
I:3o—Young Dr, Malone (CBS).
I:4s—The Guiding Light (CBS).
2:oo—Lou Childre Program
(CBS).
2:ls—Perry Mason (CBS).
2:3o—This Is Nora Drake
(CBS).
2:45--The Brighter Day (CBS)
3:oo—The News 'Till Now— -
Ed Thilenius. :
3:ls—Harlem Review,
3:30--Hillbilly Matinee.
4:00—1340 Platter Party.
s:oo—~Georgia Bible Institute,
s:3o—News.
s:3o—Spotlight on Sports.
s:4s—Curt Massey and Orches
tra (CBS). .
TOSSING SHOT
STATE COLLEGE, Pa—(AP)
—Penn State’s only three-letter
athletie, Chunk Drazenovich, has
turned his attention to track, The
215-pound footballer, who won
his third eastern and first nation
al heavyweight boxing title re
cently, last spring earned his first
letter as a shot putter.
The Alaskan coast, on Disen
chantment Bay, rose 47 feet dur
ing the 1899 earthquake.
The marshmallow plant is a
¢ousin to the hollyhock,
PRETTY NIGHTWEAR EASY TO SEW
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BY SUE BURNETT
Answering a lot of requests for
§23y-to-make pajama m were
&owing today two different pairs
at go together like a charm. If
ou're the tallored type, make the
ked pajamag on the right in a
4 plald flannelette or cotton.
T & more fenvinine version, the
g?jamas on the left will be lovely
flora: prints or soft pastels,
Pattern No, 8250 comes in sizes
}4 16, 18, 20; 40 and 42. Size 16,
ong sleeves, 51% yards of 36 or
BD-inch,
Pattern No. 8535 is a sew-rite
berforated pattern for sizes 12, 14,
WRFC PROGRAM
960
THURSDAY
6:oo—Sign On,
6:oo—Reveille Roundup.
6:3O—UP News.
6:3s—Reveille Roundup,
7:oo—News.
.I:o6—The Blessed Hope,
7:3O—UP News.
7:36—Trading Post,
7:4s—Morning Tuneup.
B:oo—Early Morning New S
H. Randolpn Holder,
B:ls—The Musical Clock,
B:3o—Baseball Scores.
B:3s—Musical Clock.
B:so—Pass Dixieland Quiz.
B:ss—News.
9'oo—Morning Devotional.
9:ls—Show Tune Time,
9:3o—Come Into My Kitchen,
9:4s—The Feminine Agenda,
10:00—Tune-0.
10:45—Madison County Schools.
11:00—Chuck Wagon. .
11:30—L., B. Adams Show,
12:00—Leon and Red.
12:15—News At Noon—
H. Randolph Holder,
12:30—Farm News and Market
Summary,
12:45—Farm News and Market
Summary.
I:oo—Major League Game of the
Day.
3:3o—Record Room.
s:3o—Adventure Attic.
s:4s—Candlelight and Silver.
6:ls—Tomorrow’s Headlines—
H. Randolph Holder,
6:3o—Sports Roundup.
6:4s—The Stars Sing. :
7:oo—This Is the Story,
7:ls—Twilight Moods.
7:3o—Sign Off,
C. T. GRIFFITH
ACCEPTED FOR
NAVY SERVICE
Calvin Thomas Griffith, son of
James M. Griffith, of Athens
was accepted for enlistment in the
United States Navy on May 5,
1950, at the Navy Recruiting Sta
tion here. This was announced to
day by Irest E, Mathis, BTC, USN,
Chief in Charge.
After enlistment as a Seaman
Recruit Griffith was transferred to
the Naval Training Center, Great
Lakes, Illinois, for a three month
period of recruit training, He will
then receive two weeks leave to
return home and will then be as
signed to a Navy trade school or to
a unit of the U. S. Fleet for duty.
Cannery Clinic
Series Completed
A series of community cannery
clinics for wvocational agriculture
and home demonstration agents
was recently concluded by Dr.
John J. Powers, associate profes~
sor, Food Technology Bepartment,
University of Georgia; William
Bruce, USDA; R. J. McCraney,
Department of Agricultural En
gineering; R. Barker of Dixie Can~-
ner Company, and W. A, Maddox
of Ball Brothers Company with
clinics at Swainsboro and Sylves=<
ter, Georgia, April 27 and 28,
During the past two months
seventeen clinics were conducted
for white and Negro vocational
agriculture teachers and supervis
ors.
16, 18, 20; 40 and 42. Size 14, 4%
yards of 50 or 39-inch,
Two separate patterns, 25 cents
each,
For these patterns, send 25
cents, in COINS, for EACH pat
tern ordered, your name, address,
sizes desired, and the PATTERN
NUMBER to Sue Burnett (The
Banner-Herald), 1150 Avenue
Americas, New York 19, N. Y.
The Fall and Winter FASHION
is a dependable guide for your
winter wardrobe, Spzcial designs,
fabric news, free pattern printed
(iindde the book. Send 25 cents to
ay.
HOMES FOR AMERICANS
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LOSET T PAN 18-5008
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BEDROOM
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This plan has been construction tested by Stackler & Frank, Long Island builders,
who used the house shown here as 2 pilot model in building 44 “personalized” varia
tions on plots of an acre and larger in the $25,000 class. Variations included a higher
roof pitch with expansion attic and dormers, an outside door from the kitchen, two
car garages, standard size windows in some bedrooms and other changes. The plan has
an area of 1,684 square feet without garage, and the house is 58 feet wide and 44
feet, 10 inches deep.— (AP Newsfeatures.) T ; i a 5
GARBODREW A LUSH SALARY
FOR ROLE SHE FINALLY NIXED
By ERSKINE JOHNSON
NEA Staff Correspondent
HOLLYWOOD—(NEA)—ExcIu~
sively yours: It’s now definite that
Greta Garbo has vetoed the Walter
Wanger production of “Lover and
Friend” for which she drew
$25,000 in salary last yeag. Garbo’s
choice now is John Ford’s “The
Mother.” . .. Merle Oberon’s
health has her pals worried. Un
derstand her medicos permitted
her to make “Pardon My French”
with Paul Henreid only on condi
tion that she would take to bed
each day when shooting was coms=
RECORD-BREAKING POPULARITY MAKES THIS POSSIBLE!
LOWEST PRICED ROUKET EHEINE GAR
NOW LOWER PRI THAW VR
(8 e i, AT £y ARy
> e b«yfifi* ! g W i
3 i AR AR SR Y S
R 3 sy ¥y w¥y 2
. o \@? ERY 47 40 o Z ? Tl——— .
N(P ~B N N s, e i
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i If! Old ile’ g e e n g ; —— ¢
Try it yourself! Oldsmobile’s & S /‘ p .
21482 . £ B 3 AR - £ g c 0
thrilling "Rocket” ride! ”,_-;}, A 2 % y ; ; ’ k
&Aoi i % &
o & F o - ¥ e ; .
Enthusiasm for the "88" rockets to f:‘\ /V" : g ] 8
an ali-time high! Prices of the "88" £ i s ; 8 ; /
N . & A bl A . g 3
hit an ali-time low! Now Oldsmobile 4 V 4 - o {r
offers America’s most-talked-about 8 . v : : ) : ’__.fl.yr; e :
car, the Futuramic “88,” at lower prices I N ot ; { 7 ;
for ’SO. This is that flushing action Wi ¢ o i ; 3 S v
o N I o : :
star, the lowest-pric.d “Rocket” Wi, “(I’, g : G r i,/ /e
TTLA. ol B > g
Engine car—the “hottest number” P e R B , /./" £
on the highway! This is the car with ‘g VG . " o ”':"""’:’::::;;;.:,__4 G o i e o as
such spirited response that millions have D| 7 B F . s “ :
weard about it—iried I\t—thriiled to iis & iy s ; b i . Vs iy A I
1 bout it—tried it—thrilled to i ”"%_, : A 4, I ;
e . b . B i i N A GO e L ?
brilliant pflrlormancc! And this is the B 'j‘,'fffi"g:,:"/,,;,;,‘; ~ R S b o SRR NEW OMNE-MECGE WINDSHIELDA
car that offers the smooth driving G e 2, - e | . i T Brand new! It’s the wide, curved one
ease of Oldsmobile’s new Whirlaway G R fom, : B ated j Wii ot ) piece windshield for extra visibility
; . e 7 T T i ic 88" !
Hydra-Matic Drive*—also at a lower O e % JE A Py i on all Futuramic "88” models!
price for 1950! So give us a ring today— e e S G '
G R S Ay ‘> N 0T
. s G 5 A s i N W
make your date with a “Rocket 8”1 W £ o
We'l b A GENERAL MOTORS VALUE Wil il @e, P EWL
¢’ll be more than happy to show you R e T L
; ; e TR e
the unprecedented value of the a 0 s A
” o £ N ¢ I 2 il ¢ » 4
Futuramic “88”—and prove our point & o o Y &
with a thrilling “Rocket” ride! ane a 8 Jase W/fé 8 loc‘éei J /
*Whirlaway Hydra-Matie Drive, at reduced price, now optional on all Oldsmobile models;
———— PHO NE YO UR NEAREST OLDSMOBILE DEA.LE Ro ——
CITY MOTORS.. Inc. Phone 1606 or Visit 127 E. Broad Street
— e BUY WITH CONFIDENCE FROM AN AUTHORIZED NEW-CAR DEALER ! c———
A==
VIDEOFH SNAHIV ‘GTVIIR-WIANNVE THI
BEDROOM
13-2 XlO .2
pleted,
I
. Ava Gardner hits Paris for a
three-month whirl after she fin
ishes “Pandora and the Flying
Dutchman” opposite James Mason
in Spain. A certain gent hopes to
join her there,
w &
Alan Ladd, on location in Ari
zona for “Branded,” says he spot
ted this sign on a little saloon in
Miami, Ariz: “ALWAYS RUM
FOR ONE MORE.”
* B B
An independent Hollywood pho-
MID-CENTURY HOUSE is the architect’s de
seription of this one-story rambler with an un
usually large living area that includes two 12-
foot floor to ceiling windows on the rear garden
side and another large window in front. Three
bedrooms and two baths are among other fea
tures of this Plan B-5006 by Alwin Cassens, jr.,
116-556 Queens Boulevard, Forest Hills, N. Y.
to service lensed dozens of shots of
Betty Hutton and Bob Sterling on
a Charleston spree and is ped
dling them under the title, “Mer~
ry Widow.” . . . Broderick Craw
ford is aching to star in “Gus the
Great,” a carnival yarn owned by
UI. He told me: “I'm going to ride
herd on Columbia Uuntil the studio
buys it for me.” . .. Blonde Lola
Albright batted her eyelashes when
I asked her when the wedding
bells would ring for her and Jack
Carson,
“I can’'t say anything,” Lola
blushed. “It will be a whole year
before Jack’s divorce is final.”
Sustitution
Valli and her husband, Oscar de
Bejo, have switched the name of
their new son, now four and a
half weeks old, from Paul to Law
rene. Says Vallii “We just
changed our minds,” . . . Barbara
Stanwyck’s going to be careful
about swinging into a risk
Churlg:u tr’:m now on, An .fils
M ul" “m WL]
Tons- Dlana Gafrett romance, Se's
Tone-Diana romance. She's
dating someone else . , . What goes
with Jane Wyman and Ronald
Reagan? They've been having
quiet dinner dates at the Marquis
on the Sunset Strip.
® % »
Another crisis for Hollywood.
Film Dalily, a trade paper, reports:
“There will not be enough qual
ity popcorn available to supply the
needs of U. S. movie houses this
year.” Goody, goody.
% &
Bruce Bennett's first motion pic
ture, “Olympic Champ,” filmed in
1034, when he was still Herman
Brix, the Olympie shot-putting
champ, is having a revival on tel
evision. It was also Joan Fon
taine’s first movie—and one she’ll
never forget, It almost cost Joan
her life. As Bruce remembers:
“We were on location and an
other actor, Reed House, picked up'
a heavy rock between scenes, took
a comical stance and tossed it with
the crack, ‘ls this how you shot
put?’ Just then Joan darted in the
path of the rock. It struck her
on the back of the head and
knocked her unconscious. I rushed
to her, thinking she was dead.
Blood splattered all over me. We
rushed her to a hospital but the
next day she was back working.”
| Air-Minded
Jon Hall’s flying club, the Clover
Leaf Flyers, has organized a series
of mass week-end flights for its
entire fleet of 18 aircraft. . .. All
Vic Mature will say about the new
home he’s building in Brentwood
is: “On a clear day I'll be able to
seel Xavier Cugart’s swimming
poo »
" @ ‘
Don’t hold your breath until
such Warner cuties as Doris Day,
Pat Neal and Ruth Roman hit the
nation’s Bijous looking like the
flat-chested, snake-hipped glam
our babes of the Rearing Twenties.
Designer Leah Rhodes gave us
the latest flash from the sewing
machine tickertape on Hollywood
and the grass blade look. Says
Leah:
“The styles may be the same.
but what’s underneath is different.
I mean the undertrimmings—bras
and panty girdles, They went with~
out them in the flapper era. I'll
put stars in the flapper silhouette,
sure, but their undertrimmings
will give them busts and every
thing else.”
Leah is a regular bluebird of
happiness on the “Tea for Two"”
set. She said:
- “With Doris, Patricia Wymore
and Virginia Gibson, I don’t have
to work hard. They have nothing
that a designer has to cover up.
Divine figures. You can always
add, but you can’t take away.”
R
Quote of the week: Director Al
fred Hitchcock in Quick Maga
zine, explaining why film stars are
so often in hot water:
“They are really children. You
could hardly expect them all to be
adult when at least a third of their
lives is spent zn ?alse-beuevo."
Howard Hughes is talking to Ul
about fiftti?’! the film rights to
“Gus the Great” for Broderick
Crawford.
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TR O
SAFEST DRIVER — Albert
Winters of San Jose, Calif., who
drove 119,600 accident-free miles
last year, won top honors in the
inter-city truck division of the
National Safety Council’s miles=
per-accident contest. Winters has
driven a million and a half miles
in 18 years, and has never beev
the ranse of an secident.
DON'Y BE A SISSY—COME ON DOV AND JOI THE FUR
881 KS_GHosTS-SHIVERS-..,-*fi e
SVogpißS““R'”Sk; e
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Tax Included.
L L
0561 *of XVH ‘XAVASANGIM
.
Demonstration On
* *
Clothing Given
A demonstration on dothhg was
conducted by Mrs. Mary M. Smith,
home demonstration agent for
Clarke county, at the April meet~
ing of the Brooks Crossing Home
Demonstration Club.
The meeting was at the home of
Mrs. Fred Hill. Mrs. Smith spoke
on clothing and showed samplet
of new types of material for us¢
this summer.
Refreshments were served the
12 members attending by Mis
Imogene Cochran, hostess. Thret
new members of the club are Mrs
L. C. Browder, Mrs. C, H. Wood
and Mrs. D. Morris. A visitor wat
Mrs. Grace Gurthy, Norfolk, Va.
LOSING WEIGHT
Those persons under 20 years
of age should not attempt to lose
weight without the guidance of a
physician, according to bealth
workers. People under 35 years
of age who need to reduce should
take off weight slowly -~ not more
than a pound or two a week,
The average person in this
(i%x;gtry consumed 374 eggs in