Newspaper Page Text
{HURSDAY, JUNE 15, 1950,
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ENLARGED PHOTOG — Robert Earl Hughes of Fishook, 111.,
weighing 800 pounds, may not be the biggest man in the world
but it's a safe bet he’s the world’s biggest photographer. Seen try
ing out a new flash gun camera on his farm in Fishook, Hughes
measures eight feet around waist and 33 inches around one thigh,
POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER
WRITES ON OWNING A HOME
BY HAL BOYLE
NEW York — (AP) — The
greatest home 1 lovers are those
who never bought a house.
Or so it seems to them.
Owning a place of his own is
one of man’s oldest dreams, and
nothing proves more surely that,
to this extent at least, he is a capi
talist by nature.
It begins in childhood, And a
growing boy believes the history
of the human race’s desire for a
bettef shelter.
Soon after he learns to walk he
start crawling under the table and
piling chairs around it to build
him a kind of lean-to home. Next
he digs a cave in the backyard,
roofed over with tin, where he
can roast potatoes over a smould
ering fire and eat them half-raw
in smoky, savage dignity.
Risks Breaks
Then he risks breaking his arms,
legs and neek to build a tottery
tree house in the nearest elm or
oak, and feels he is indeed mon=-
arch of all he surveys. Aand, final
ly, he comes down into the back=
vard again and constructs a wood
en shack as a kind of clubroom
for his pals. He posts a sign on the
door: “Grownups — stay out! this
ABOUT ATHLETE’S FOOT
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Here's what Stout of Parkers
lvurg‘iW. Va., says: “The sale of
T-4-1 has been very pleasing. One
customer said it is the first thing
in six years that gave relief.”
IN ONE HOUR
f not completely pleased. Your
Oc back at any drug store. Locally
at Citizens Pharnracy. (adv.)
LN "9'
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B T
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N\ /’
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to delight .
Athens Housewives
McCorpm
ICK "
Z::‘:’:i‘,:'":;”‘fiv: for *pices, .x'A Yo" " A 's '
add 349 c;: oW brings you : % and oq, for
."n‘w'.p,”. a Fichness gy y..,,m“"“ MAY 0~":V0f
'P'::::, “hf ol :I::'dho;h' volks of "::'.';" Saleds c:’:
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SPICES . EXTRACTS . 1§32 P APO
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means you!!”
He usually has a lock on his
shanty, too. And that shows he
now has a personal sense of prop
erty.
For a few years he doesn’t do
any more building. He is busy
with finishing school and going
through the cocoon agony of be
coming an adult.
After he gets a job and marries,
he starts dreaming again of a
place really his own. Whether he
actually does buy a home or stays
a renter the rest of his days, he
never forgets the thrill of that first
jungle lean-to in his parent’s liv
ing room, the cave, tree house
and shanty in the backyard. The
yearning is there, inherited across
the ages. For home stands for se
curity much more than it does for
'mere pride of possession.
And the longer he goes without
his own home the more he ‘wants
it — in hig heart, no matter what
his mouth says.
My trouble is T can’t make up
my mind what kind of a home I
really want. At first all I wanted
was a log cabin like the one Tro
reau lived in at Walden Pond. But
this was impractical. I couldn’t
build it. I knew if I went into the
woods and cut down a tree — it
would fall on me. That’s how inept
I am. Once I even was run over
by a milk wagon.
Grandoise Period
Later came the grandoise pe
riod. I wanted an estate with. for
mal garden and a huge 46-room
mansion with 47 bathrooms —
something crawling with 17th cen
tury draperies and Italian renais
sance marble. I didn’t give up this
dream merely because it would
require $2,000,000. Who knows —
a kind millionaire might leave me
that.
~ “Why, it would take 30 servants
to staff a place like that” a
friend told me. Well, that ended
that. Who wants 380 maids and
butlers pad-padding . about his
halls?
Every Sunday for the last 18
years I've spent mest of the day
going through the real estate sec
tion, mentally buying a home one
moment, discarding it the next.
There’s something wrong with
them all,
It isn’t the size of the house any
more, I'll settle for six rooms, an
acre and a view of mountain and
water. But I can’t decide where I
want my house,
I'd like it in Connecticut and
Maine, in Florida and California,
on the Riviera and in Hong Kong,
in Kansas City and in Seattle, And
in Albuquerque and on the Isle of
Capri — and oh, at least a hun~
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\< 239 (= S VG (Canteloupes
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N ////// es Y ¢At what the correct price is on € .'( &5 pes . éa. L3¢
N~~~/ { £\~ very item you b QRS
s M// \ g o / 7’);};114 % every item you buy ... R\l CALIF. LONG WHITE Lb. Se
RN f." y " L% * L
. . \ "’d "’7“ *At what each figure on your |e\ 2 ofafoes ..S. ¢
(JllSlomel'S e /. II:'/ I CaSh Rég;“’ef S"p f‘f‘l" to. !o * ’45 \x FRESH TENDER
Corner R \\ j '/[ ; T i i
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his is Father's Day In e TR | E " P L e
Customers’ Corner, ¥ e5J@ : '“ ; ICE 's MARKED ou ":‘"“'@M'f”;&:#»(/
- e 'l""‘.*a;’ E' M A'l' vR A P e CALIF. ICEBERG
helping with the family Ao O i e ERY "E ou & B l
shopping, an;i we want the— ; °0 e e"uce 6&b hd. 'oc
quality and price and - > Lt
Vice at A&P it b:";usf‘*:s o -_— Not Just on the Shelves! FANCY RED \
f;::;hrw\:fn:f%?n as it is to , g . 33 DoC)!/o.upkécp tmcklof your lcxpendimrefi as you shop Bing (hefl'ies 'b 3' .',,,F\- ke )
Wt di SBde Lk p T 4 9es leck )olul' purchases against your cash register sl:p Y. c 3;@ i )
St ABP o hitter iises B pAR w \‘\\\\ ¢ .asyou pu% them away .., compare current prices with GA, FRESH TE 7 Q :
;He men of the f'lm;l\v ;o 4 SN ie ythose you've _b_tcn paying? We don't blame you a bit . g - 5
; shop? c T s @@\\\\\\ for thc}sc thrmg' h.tbit}i.T In fact, .m're makmg them okra 'b '9c S ‘ =
Plonsé wrrite: / i \\\«\. Riss casier for you by marking the pmc‘of every item in . "l : ;
: " \NN .your A&P right on its container, as well a 5 00 OUF, F mmmammmmannnann - :
-{":51 Custgrear":e!:hong e \\\ \\\\\\ ° l 'shelves in addition to giving you a C:sh LchistcrnS?x;} ZAN N PAGE FUODS \
Ais anna es';OlrM <D f:opbnentanc‘i) sse how helpful this price-marking policy . , F
; e . obe to you! ' 4 | ——% |
b 7 420 Lexington Avenue |AN . : ANN PAGE - v =N
oQe et reee Grape G ASH |
R \\s Ro h"’, M $ pe ‘/fif% X !,W'}t’f’,'jfl '
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L T LU SESTPIo I '{(W, == ’ )) R tiess dhys, 15 1s more fauporcant than evor 1o o 7N e ' e mgmol §3 e
Y \ DRSS/ ik picten trow by meat you bur, Age, et S\ B e 1 9 f A
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DOMESTIZ—GRADE A" 4 PICKLE AND i i \ \/V g\gificfiig T
si ch ) \ ....'.............z1,ka1t&
1 ANN PAG:
wissCheese fl' PIMIENTO LOAF, ... .. Boz pkg. 30¢ ~" PREPARED SPAGHETTI. .20:cu 170
; " ANN PAGE—CREAM TH
» G9¢ LIVER LOAF g . 4~ PEANUT 8UTTER..........100.m 396
SonpENs_wrr.cur oIV, GREAM i eas saa pkg. 30c e //J ; ANN PAGE SALAD : :
Kook Bhaess womeal« BE SLICED BOLOGNA .. .. 8 =57 > Dressing »»27¢x=47¢
&A]‘T’S A)filc/m OR PIMI ‘l'; R T ozn pgl /’ 1 3 T #
cese Sfioes ve B 9 WILSON'S CORN KING (j % VIR BTy CHImaRE how o
RMOUR'S . -
o, chooe cnenoe || Sliced Bacon . . Ib. 49¢ 2 w Evap. Milk w~ll¢
*&P OLD-FASHIONED READY = FOR - PAN 7“% S | 4
ub 8utter.......... 08¢ [ D s . —_———————
UNNYBRQOK—LARGE GRADE “A’ ! dr Ib 51 fi
ir.flh,‘?".. . .Dozinetn 47 [l ress? ryers *s c Fresh Sea , SOO SORN B i
WISCONSIN—FRESH COLORSD-DAISY R ARNPIRDATAL ShEED BASS STEAKS .... Ib. 55¢ | cr‘ck‘r Jack ],j P ‘i}‘
Ch 4%, B Picnics 1b.45 Perchm w 0 N
eese - 454 | . PERCH FILLETS .. Ib. 35c ](B 140 z Pige 25¢ XV F
el i o e phS Lt R I e sty S e - A i :{;%fi
—_— Sy 0000 Beap o IgE 0
o t F‘h s .Da . ; TOILET SOAP
. BOUQUET
Cigarettes 23/
Cin. of 10 Pkgs. sz.io 3 rosulr C:k“ 3¢
SMOKING TOBACCO MARVILOUS o
PRINCE ALBERT. .1 7o 85¢ VEL
GEO. WASHINGTON o:in 69¢ \
4 il ’ 12-Oz. Pkg. 27¢ &
SHORTENING CLEA.NSER :
Jewel 1w 22¢ AJAX
41b. Ctn. 79¢ ¢ 3.1 b. Can 69e 2 14.0 z. Cins. 25¢
® ;
A FABULOUS SUDS :
oo i ~ FAB
| ‘?eop h&? i 120 z ths B 4 ¢
; fb Co““ i TOILE: SOAP
MILD AND MELLOW CASHMERE
‘ | BOUQUET
v 5 G
Eight O’clock soh e 10
1-Lb.Bag 6 7fl( 3-Lb.Bag $ 1 .95 spas Arr B 8
RedClsio i g 08 | SUPER SUDS
Bokar. . 165 69e 35,5 $2.01 2 50:ne 21¢
- 23-Oz.Pkg.2 7T eGiantPkg 63¢
Nectar .0
TEA e KITCHEN CHARM
151 b rks. GG ¢ | @%‘L‘ : Wax
TEA BAGS \ {' Pa er
OUR OWN g @_@ P
Comt 374 oA 125 t Rell 21 ¢
| dred other places, :
It looks now as though my
dream house — if I ever get it—
will be a trailer with a built-in
garden and a portabla outdoor
barbecue pit. :
Start Pastures,
Next Buy Cattle,
Dairyman Says
MADISON — “I was set back
a year in getting started in my
dairy business. I made the mistake
of trying to establish pastures with
cows on them.” That's the testi
monial of R. 8. Walker, one of
Morgan County’s outstanding dai
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
rymen,
A hundred acres of - Walker’s
290-acre farm are in pastures
permanent and temporary. He nas
60 acres of winter grazing cut up
into five lots, This way, he keeps
his cows from over grazing any
part of his pastures.
Walker has two five-acre lots of
fescue and ladino clover, one with
oats, rye and vetch, one with grain
and crimson clover and one with
crimson and bermuda.
This Morgan County dairyman
’is enthusiastic about common ber
muda grass. “With fertilizer, my
’bermuda grass grows knee high.”
- “My cows didn’t miss a day’s
grazing this winter on oats or
ladino and fescue,” Walker assert
ed. He has 50 milk cows and 20
heifers. Most of his cows are grade
Jerseys.
Breeding Artificially
‘Walker has a registered Jersey
‘bull, but most of the breeding is
done artificially, If artificial
breeding continues to give good
results, he will sell his bull soon,
Walker is director and secretary
and treasurer of the Morgan Coun=-
ty Artificlal Breeding Associa
tion,
Growing all the hay he uses,
Walker has to buy very little feed.
One eight-acre plot on the place
was cut for hay after being graz
ed, making over a ton per acre,
Some of the pastures are fertiliz
ed with 600 pounds of 4-8-6 and
600 pounds of acid per acre. Wal
ker also used 309 pounds of soda
on some acres,
“l have been milking cows ever
since I can remember,” Walker re
lates. He sells his milk on the Ai
lanta market, It is grade A.
Commenting on the fact that
some farmers are losing milk be
cause it is disflavored with clover,
Walker stated that he has ¥et to
lose his first can because of this.
He puts his cows on clover after
i ALL BRANDS-—-FANCY
Pineapple . »:«29¢
DROMEDARY—SWEET .
Potatoes . =»o«23¢
GOLDEN—CREAM STYLE
A&P Corn . »~:=ls¢
LUCKY LEAF¥—-SLICED, PIE STALEY'S—CRYSTAL WHITE
~ APPLES. .2 ro.zcai 29¢ SYRUP... .141 b. Giass 20e
PACKER'S LABEL—Red, Sour, Pitted STALEY'S—-SWEETOSE, WAFFLE
CHERRIES ro.2cm 25¢ SYRUP....I2Oz Gas 19
A&P JUICE STALEY'S—CREAM CORN
PINEAPPLE 020 37¢ STARCH. .2 ilb. pkes. 23¢
ARGO—CORN SOFT DRINK
STARCH.. 2 11v. ries. 23¢ COCA-COLA. .ct.or6 25e
REYNOLD'S—WRAP NABISCO—RITZ
ALUMINUM zsrc.rot 25¢ CRACKERS. .I.lb.rig 326
A-1 NABISCO-SANDWICHES
SAUCE..... .50zl 31e OREOCREME: owie2l¢
CEREAL BRIGHT SAIL
CHEERIOS . .70. rie. 17¢ AMMONIA. 3202 Bu. 176
Sunnyfield Corn Flakes 220273 22¢
—_—
¥ . Strained or Jjr. Foods 3 sus 29«
Ger ber S Strained or Jr. Meats 2 5 39«
BarleyCereal,Cereal FoodorQatmeal 250:7x¢:.330
MARCAL MARCAL
HANKIES NAPKINS
3 whes i 100 25¢ ws o 80 10¢
v
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S A
) A. & P Store Located At
125 Oconee St. Athens, Ca.
milking. They grake on oats ta the
mornings.
Walker also does other types of
farming, He has 23 acres in cot
ton, 15 in corn and 25 in oats and
Extra-Fast
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more so than either would be alone.
AN A PR N
cONI TR AN
7 J‘lfifif:" BAKERY TREATS
o ;a) Noted for flavor
LG and tteyshpe;s. tA
) e o
MARVEL--WHITE SANDWICH
16-oz. Loal 24-Oz. Loaf
MARVEL-RAISIN : :
Bread 16-oz. Loat 1 7;’
JANE PARKER—SALTED
PARTY RYE
Bread io:wal7¢
JANE PARKER—ORANGE
FONDANT—ANGEL FOOD
BarCake:o39¢
JANE PARKER—DESSERT
Shells ¢ 17¢
Gold or Marble Pound
o S
.NGELUS
Marshmallows
10-oz. Pkg. 17;1
PAGE THIRTEEN
Sheat,
Ne plims to mop his estton so:
the first polsoning with em arsen
ic-syrup-water mixture. He wil
then dust with arsenie and BHC.
When you buy “BC” you may have
it in either powder or tablet form, .
Same famous "BC” formula of medi- |
cally tested ingredients in both. You':
get a preparation that is trustworthy, |
effective and fast-acting, one you can/; .
use with complete confidence for ¢
simple headaches, mneuralgic pains |
and minor muscular aches, Buy "BC"£~:'
today and use as directed. Two tabe«
lets equal one powder. 10c & 25¢.