Newspaper Page Text
FRY %, 100,
(N g A . BY
/’*fi‘* T eoynght 1950 by Wermina Block __ Oist by NEA SERVICE, INC. ——
¥ “‘.——__——_—_—-—f—-—:——_
-~ THE STORY: Clemency Norton,
pursery governess ’:‘ ms e '.‘“An_
gaughter of O Cla politely by
perier, Rad SHEE from Jon's
gyrie #0 keep away
prother Piers, 8t SV lives. But
esert home the ien abie to
Clemency has med oo "in the
avoid pecoming invo 0 day
family’s domestio .fldrg.“:e a
off in Biskra with the ,;:el"
s Bfltish-Canadlan family, - TS
drives hes homeo mvm
Clemency 86C7 oy leo makes
drunk at 8 case, but Piers
no mention of the episode. Later
{he car has a puncture, causing it
to skid dangerously, and for l::lo'
ment Piers holds .Cla‘mency,elo y.
XV :
That night Clemency sent her
meal away almost untouched.
There was nothing to worry
out in the nurseries. Baba was
;;;epmg soundly and had been—
Louilie assured—very, very good.
she had probably also been very,
very spoilt, for unhke_qertain well
publicized people, Louilie had nev
or learned ';o say no—anyhow, not
ittle girls.
» élut hegr sense of depmslon_ in
ereased, and Clemency felt tired
and bruised. She supposed it must
pe something to do with the sand
storm that had struck after her re
furn.
Even a warm bath did not seem
to get rid of her tiredness. When
she slipped between the sheets she
was still conscious of that bruised
fecling which utter weariness
rings. s
’ Shutting her eyes, she saw the
gand-edged road pierced by the
powerful headlights of the car. She
was on the brink of sleep now, and
the scene changed—she saw the
lichted case, Jon Amberley lurch
ing a little, his face caricatured as
a drunken man’s, Back in the car
acain she felt it swerve and spin
around, had the sickening knowl
edoe of the tree trunk ahead.
Then a man’s strong arm stead
ed her.
i You didn’t suddenly discover
that you loved a man who was as
far away from you as the stars in
the heavens. Who had “finished
with that kind of thing years ago?”
“Piers is a one-woman man,
There is never likely to be anyone
else in his life—" The memory of
Syrie’s words floated back to her.
#2 think he despises women—"
* & »
Although by the .morning the
storm had died down outside, when
Clemency got up she found a fine
powdering of sand everywhere,
Oklahoma Beauty
. . -
Relieved Indigestion
-
with Hadacol
Found She Needed YVitamins 8,, 8,,
Iron and Niacin
Carol Jean White, of 3636 W, Park,
Oklahoma City, sent us this letter:
“One of the lucki
est days of my life
was when I heard T
Bob Wills (radio By
star) tell about the P o
*.vondeor‘ful bless=- W e
ings HADACOL., Wy
M%' energy was thfi
down; I suffered b
from st;‘)dmach dis- i
ress and indigese
tion, I took HADACOL
and am feeling better and better as
I oontinue to take it.”
Why don't you get that wonderful
new HApAcoL feeling everyone lis
talking about? mApAcoL gives such
amazing benefits because it treats
the cause of stomach distress, gas,
heartburn, aches and pains of neu
ritis, & general run-down condition
due to vitamin Bi, Bs, niacin and
iron deficiencies. dontinued use of
HADACOL also helps prevent such
miseries from returning. Any drug
store, Trial size, only $1.25, Large
family or hospital size, $3.50.
——— e
~ TODAY! «
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PALACE FEATURE STARTS:
12:39, 2:46, 4:53, 7:00, 9:07
GEORGIA FEATURE STARTS:
1:34, 3:31, 5:28, 7:25, 9:22
MOVIES ARE BETTER THAN EVER
By <
= * *DHONE 4107
& =
| il : THERTRE .1
= W ATLANTA HIGHWAY &
TODAY and TOMORROW
Robert Young — Claudette Colbert
in “BRIDE FOR SALE”
and the aftermath of the sirocco
seemed to be a tail of frayed temp
ers and general irritation,
Baba slept late and thoroughly
objected to being taken out of bed,
While she dressed, Clemency
herd the patient Louilie coaxing
a very cross small girl in the night
nursery.
It was easy that day, for the
storm had really upset Baba. She
was heavy-eyed and complained
of her head aching, and for once
went for her afternoon nap with
out any shadow of argument. Hav
ing tucked her safely up, Clemency
went back to the day nursery and
sat down to do some knitting.
She started and turned as the
door opened and Jon Amberley
came in.,
He looked ill and drawn, and
though she had felt the disgust
which an exhibition such as she
had witnesses last night naturally
roused in her, she could not help
feeling sorry for him, even while
she liked him less than she had
ever done before.
Intuition so often took the place
of experience with Clemency, and
she realized suddenly last night
had a different significance from
the one she had attached to it.
There was something ravaged and
defeated about the man before her
smingled with a kind of challenging
defiance as he met her eyes.
She schooled her face and her
voice carefully as she smiled at
him.
“Good afternoon, Mr. Amberley.
I'm afraid Baba’s asleep. I think
the storm has upset her, poor
mite.”
“It always does,” he said, with
out returning her greeting. ‘Comes
out of the desert like some darned
tormenting spirit. I hate it. Al
ways know, hours before it
comes.”
‘I can’t say I enjoyed it, but it
seemed to me to come up very
abruptly,” she told him. “I—" She
broke off, deciding not to say that
she had been in Biskra yesterday.
. “Can Y look at the kid?” he
asked. “I won't disturb her.”
~ She hesitated, but he had already
gone through to the *night nursery.
% *
~ He had opened the door noise
lessly and left it wide; from where
she stood she saw him go across
| to the cot and stand looking down
at the sleeping child. He remained
there for perhaps a full minute;
then he turned and tiptoed back,
‘closing the communicating door
'as quietly as he had opened it.
“She looks flushed. Not going to
be ill, is she?” he asked,
“No, no! She’s just a little out
of sorts,” said Clemency quickly.
“Oh, well—look after her!” He
thrust his hands into his jacket
pockets, but not before she saw
how they were trembling. “I'm
going away,” he continued in the
same rather strained manner
which she had noticed since his
entrance. ‘Maybe for a day or two
—maybe longer. I don’t know.
Tell Baba I'll be back, and—to be
a good girl. And—my love and
a kiss.” He walked to the door
through which he had just entered
and paused’ looking back at her;
there was a strange, angry unhap
piness in his eyes. “She’s the on
ly thing in the world I care a
damn about, and I'm not even any
good to her,” he said. “Look after
her.”
“I think you can trust me to do
that,”” said Clemency gently.
He stared at her. “I believe so.
About the only person I've met
that I can trust, Goodby.”
She stood looking after him.
The man who had just gone out
seemed to have left a very dark
shadow behind him—that same
vague sinister thing she had
sensed on her first night”in the
house.
(To Be Continued)
U. S. GYMNASTS :
TOURING JAPAN
NEW YORK — (AP) — Three
American gymnasts are touring
Japan, They comprise the first
U. S. athletic unit to visit that
country since before the war.
William Roetzheim of Florida
State University, Tallahassee, Jo
seph Kotys of Cleveland and
Kent State College and Edward
Scvrobe of the American Turners,
Bronx, N. Y,, are making the trip.
All members of the 1948 U. S.
Olympic team, Roetzheim, Kotys
and Scrobe finished one-two-three
in that order in the all-around
competition at the recent national
AAU gymnastic championships at
Los Angeles.
A 13 man swimming team and
a six man wrestling group also
will visit Japan this summer under
AAU auspices.
The word “drawn,” in reference
to poultry, means that the bird
has not only been dressed but en
trails, head and feet have been
removed.
ADVICE TO
TROUBLED WIVES
QGoing Through Change of Life
Afreid that e nerves, your naggin
ngled, ;put fdz{l’g{am.:; sause mlfltfl
rdf Forget lil usands of wives
hted st thelr inerease onorg ::x
ewed zest for Jife, thanks to Cardui,
A grand fe tonie, Cardul hdfo
z-tun build resistanee against the strain
funoMonsl disturbanees. Being also an
g:thpnmo lca,‘fi;rdul encourages & loot;t
-‘l:.Mtx of and 00-Muot 0 v
in helping dispel tension and anxlety
resulting from periodic pain, often exage
m at thr t!m&. For 8. ontlre‘
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COLOGNE AT WAR-—Site of one of the bitter battles of World War 11, Cologne, Germany,
suffered extensive damage from aerial bombardment and artillery fire, The picture above was taken
during the height of battle, as troops of the 104th Infantry Division moved into the batiered town.
Cowboy He-Men Left At Ranch
When Carolina Cofton Rides
By ERSKINE JOHNSON
NEA Staff Correspondent
HOLLYWOOD — (NEA) — I'm
smiling while I'm saying it, pard
ner, but so help me a ridin’, ropin’
and shootin’ cowgirl is about to
show the big he-man cowboy stars
a thing or two by galloping head
long into the perils of the celluloid
west.
Carolina Cotton is the lady’s
name and from the looks of things
she’ll be braver than even Errol
Flynn.
What's more she’ll ride a black
mare named Dolly instead of the
usual white stallion, she’ll have a
feminine sidekick a la Gabby
Hayes and she’ll leave the boy
friend a sittin’ on the ranch house
porch while she rides off into the
sunset,
“In Old Utah,” an Eagle-Lion
movie, is the horse opry in which
Carolina will trade powder puffs
for smoke puffs.
She’ll chase the villains over the
range, get her man—with a gun—
and wrestle for a knife in a fight
with a savage Indian intent on
taking her blonde hair home to
his old lady.
“Everyone in the picture .is
scared,” Carolina said in an Ar
kansas drawl. Arkansas is her
home state but she started out in
show business as a western band
singer in San Francisco at the age
of 14.
“But I'm not scared,” she
winked, “because I've read the
script.”
~ The script is all about a fence
wah with Indians on the warpath
and Carolina and the U. S, cavalry
riding to the rescue of the set
tlers. Carolina, when she comes,
will be wearing blue jeans and a
suede blouse with a six-shooter at
her side, a rifle slung on her sad
dle and revenge in her heart.
Men Lose Out
4T wear a dress in just one
scene,” she said, “and to give the
part a little feminine touch I even
look in a mirror a couple of times,
But I don’t wear fingernail polish
or lipstick and I don’t look at any
men except if one’s framed in my
gunsight.”
Carolina is framed i moon
light when Glenn Strange looks at
her calf-eyed. :
“I brush him off,” she said. “He
start riding after me in the final
scene but I know he isn't going
far because I've cut his sadtge
straps.”
Carolina Cotton is 22, blue-eyed,
blonde and attractive. But don’t
let her name fool you. Her real
handle is Helen Hagstrom, she’s
Swedish and until a couple of
years ago she couldn’t ride a
horse, didn’t know one end of a
lariat from another and had never
even fired a cap pistol.
Before Hollywood got the idea of
picking Cotton for a feminine hoss
opera heroine she was a western
band singer with a yodeling ability
that drove Swiss guides (and
neighbors) to suicide, i
At one time she sang for five
dances and 17 radio broadcasts a
week. Stuff like “I'd Love to Be
a Cowgirl But I'm Afraid of Cows”
‘and, more recently, “You're Git
tin a Good Girl When You Git
Me.”
Then came this idea of turning
Good News for
2 .
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Preparation marfe with the time
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Thousands of loyal, satisfied
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and advise both new and old cus
tomers to get their 666 as soon as
possible.
THE BANNE ::v:::ci'na.' :':mi“.'n.r”r]r -
her into a daredevil cowgirl and
she took riding, roping and gun
handling lessons.
Backward Yodel
Carolina arrived in Hollywood
eight years ago and first sang with
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Large Selection Spring and Summer Goods (3% 4. % R
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Take advantae of this special piece goods sale Tuesday. W %’:,,'& .2, L , . 11* £
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ATHENS’ LEADING DEPARTMENT STORE
Spade Cooley’s band. Her first
encounter with a western hero was
embarrassing. She spotted a noted
cowboy star at a party given by
Smiley Burnette, at which he
asked her to get up and sing.
She remembers it sadly:
“I got up, parked my gum on the
microphone, took off my shoes —
I like to get a good toe hold on the
floor—and started to sing. But be
cause my dream cowboy was in
the audience I was nervous. When
I reached my yodeling part I was
:;cnred I yodeled eight bars
backwards.”
__ Despite her San Francisco child
bood, Carclina’ is a' counthy’ gif)
at heart and her dislike of shoes
isn't confined to getting a toe hold
on the floor when she’s singing.
Not long ago she was singin¥ in
New York. One day she was late
for work and had to run to catch
a subway train,
Her high heels were hampering
her speed so she just whipped 'em
off and completed the dash in her
stocking feet. Her agents back
in Hollywood swooned when she
told them about it but, as she says:
“T hate to wear shoes.”
Georgia Vels
ATLANTA, Ga.-The total num
ber of Georgia veterans taking ad
vantage of the G. I. Bill's educa
tional privileges has reached an
all-time high of 70,502,
Total subsistance to trainees for
March, 1950, which is the last
month for which figures are avail
able, reached the staggering sum
of $5,631,604.63, an increase of ap
proximately $1,000,000 over Octo~
ber of 1048,
The above figures were released
this week from W. K. Barrett, di
rector of the State Department of
Veterans Service, in a comparison
of benefits veterans are receiving
under the present administration
with that of the last month of the
NOXZEMA'S
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Noxzema Skin Cream, brings
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itching of poison ivy, helps dry
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any drug store. 39¢ and 73¢.
preceding administration,
M%Mw that
43,189 ex llafl women
‘are receiving pension an compen=
sation, an inerease of 194 over Oc
tober, 1948, |
Veterans in institutions of higher
learning now number 12,648 with
comparison of 14,732 eighteen
months ago. Barrett said that this
decrease is accounted for by the
fact that most veterans have row
finished their enllege training.
In other schools, Georgia veter
ans are now enrolled in the grand
total of 28,360, which is nearly
three times the 11,075 who were
enrolled in October, 1948. This
huge increase has been due to the
diligence of the Department in
pushing to the limit this phase of
the educational program.
The number of veterans in farm
training has increased from 12,924
to 19,159, and on-the-job training
has shown an increase of 1,436.
Director Barrett said that the
increasing success of the veterans’
program in Georgia is due to the
WHAT IF YOUR @\
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S\
U
b i
KATING & X/7
2 depai
AR
‘em! And don’t worry about
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Trust those to VALSPAR.
Alittle goes along way. Ask us!
Super
VALSPAR
ot e
Athens Building
& Well Supply
132 Oconee St. Phone 3066
PAGE FIVE
peal and efflciemcy with which the
Departmént of Vetersss Service
has been m the program, plus
the State eoopera~
tion in helping all vetetams re
ceive their rightful privileges un
der the law, :
Office located 283% B Broad
Strect, Raymond E. Lester, Man
ager,
Add whole kernel corn (drain
ed) to pancake batter, bake on
griddle as usual and serve with
maple or maple-flavored Byrup
and lots of hot coffee.
Change of Cass Room
For
| To Chamber of Commerce
| A aditowtemn
See | DR
s
For [JB
% ' "‘,
Yourself i
What | '
808 '
BALE
| THE KIWANIS CLUB
Guarantees This Course
o Your $15.00
B Will Be Refunded Tonight
If You Do Not Wish
To Continue With The
Course
“It s Fun To Learn
The Bob Bale Way”
NO EXAMINATIONS
DPoors Open 6:45 P, M.
For Registrations