Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TEN
The: Poor Man's Philosopher
Writes On The Secret Of Life
L % HAL BOYLE
NEW YORK — (AP) — Every
body has a seeret life. Or certainly
everyone tries to.
Some facet of his career, past or
present , . . some wayward long
ing ... some shamefaced deed of
good will . . . some odd attitude
toward the world . . . A person
likes to hold to his heart and apart
from those who know him best.
The funny thing about it all is
'that often he will blurt out to
- strangers this secret he’d lie about
rather than reveal to a lifelong
Y S IR RNS e N
BARBER NOTICE
Bill Curry has retlurned to
Athens Barber Shop, Col
lege Ave. and invites friends
and former customers to
patronize him there. Your
business Appreciated.
NEW SHOES ARE EXPENSIVE!
Save money by having your old shoes rebuilt
at one of our shops.
We have lower prices that you'll appreciate.
If you have tried the rest, why not try the best?
44 Years In Athens
MARTIN BROS. SHOE SHOPS
151 E. Clayton (Next to Kress)
178 N. Thomas (Cor. Clayton & Thomas)
We Feature the Three Price Plan.
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noAmt NLY the Servel Gas
B Refrigerator freezes without mov- G"ARA"TEE é’x
: was-o;" ing, wearing parts—a dependable Jet of Gas PRI ,
*_Flame malkes it freeze. You get silens carefree operation . k‘\ ' b
dhroughout your Servel’s long life. See the late models %
“soday st your Gas Company—or 'phone for a ‘
gepresentative 1o come to your home. Ask about special g_w_el
5 tmde-in sllowances, new low prices and the 10-year
‘!'WthotyougctwithyourmlGußefrigento:. 7//_6 6'/4 (5’ /Qe @ SRy
/ Call yowr Gas Company for prompt ‘
{ ond conrteons Servel information. Special Trade-in Aliowances
'fim'm GAs mfi*-r@(:oumw
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Seruing ATHENS
| REMEMBER, WHEIN YOU CHOOSE...IT'S THE FREEZING SYSTEM THAT COUNTS
acquainttance.
Meets Strangers
| 1 spend a great part of my life
meeting strangers, and they tell
‘| me the damndest things sometimes,
| Cynics say the greatest secrets
|in America are locked in safe de
| posit vaults—or buried under con
crete in the basement or under
| dirt in the backyard, twelve paces
north northeast of the old elm
| tree.
However, I feel that most of
these .secrets ~— dollars hidden
from the inome tax collector —
| have been dug up since the end
of the war and invested or spent.
The real repositories of secrets
in our times are the ears of priests,
the dossiers of lawyers, the health
verdicts of doctors—and the mem
| ories of newspaper reporters.
When I was a student in the
University of Missouri School of
Journalism, I took a course in in
terviewing. I was taught that I
should avoid bringing out pencil
and paper because that might cause
the subject of the interview to
‘{reeze up.”
It took me about ten years of re
porting to learn that this theory
was completely wrong—at least!
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HOME AFTER A DAY AT SEA_Trawlers of the herring fleet, loaded with rela
tives and friends of the crews, return from a regatta at sea off Scheveningen, Holland. -
for me. I found that the quickest
way I could get the confidence of
someone I was interviewing was
to haul out the old notebook and
scribble down his words, just as
he said them.
Desire for Accuracy
There is a passion for accuracy
in the heart of every man, be he
a general of the army, a justice of
the peace of a Pullman porter. He
wants what he says put down the
way he said. When you pull out
that pencil, it doesn't frighten him.
It gives him a sense of dignity. He
feels that makes him a part of his
tory, and it does, too—even though
his printed remarks are wrapped
around a wet fish the day after he
says them, or blown in the gutter
by a passing wind.
But very, very often people say
things to me that make me pause
my pencil. They tell me—a com
plete stranger, passing through
their lives like a wind—things too
private for print. At least for my
print.
What? Well, chiefly their wor
ries. Their wives drink too much,
or their boys aren’t doing what
papa would like, or they wonder
out' loud whether, after all, they
made the right decision in life. And
what can you do but murmur con
solation? A reporter isn’'t a psy
chiatrist . People just often treat
him like he is.
Untold Murder
Sometimes they say things to
you acutely embarrassing. Like
the woman who told me of a mur
der, never recorded.
“This old lady was lonesome,”
THE BANNER-HERALD. ATHENS, GEORGIA
she said. “And she told me how
she made herself a widow. She
had been married to a man who
had beat her and cheated on her
for 30 years. He thought she was
just a helpless housewife he was
tied to by the law.
“Well, one day she figured out
his insurance — and there was
fnough to keep her the rest of her
ife.
“The next morning as she was
getting the car out of the garage.
to drive him to the station she
saw him there in front of the
headlights like a sitting duck. So
she ran over him.
“Then she back the car over him.
Then she ran over him again.
Then she ran for the neighbors.
They carried him into the house,
and just before he died the hus
band grumbled, ‘That poor fool—
she never could drive a car.’
“And the old lady is still living
off his insurance, and doesn’t re
gret a thing.”
What, dear reader, would you
do with that secret? :
The woman who told me this
story did — exactly nothing. She
was married herself, And she
wouldn’t even tell me the name
of the lady who put the car wheels
over her husband three times—
“accidentally,” as the saying goes.
The moral: Let your wife open
the garage door.
YOUR CHILD TODAY
By DAVID TAYLOR MARKE
AP Education Writer
Love is not enough for emo
tionally disturbed children, writes
Bruno Bettelheim, in a book just
out bearing that title. (The Free
Press, Glencoe, 111., $4.50) It is
the” story of the University of
Chicago’s Sonia Shankman Ortho
genic School where life is made
livable again for children who
have .turned away from a world
that brought them too much
misery.
According to Bettelheim, head
of the school and Associate Pro
fessor of Educational Psychology,
new methods have been developed
for helping delinquent, schizophre
nic, neurotic, and just plain un
happy children whose disturbances
had failed to respond to all previ
ous efforts at treatment.
“Modern living conditions,” -he
says, “have made it much more
difficult for parents to create a
setting in which bcth their own
legitimate needs and the needs of
their children can be satisfied with
relative ease. That is why love
alone is not enough and must be
supplemented by deliberate efforts
on the part of the parent. For
tunately most parents love their
children and conscientiously strive
to be good parents. But more and
more of them become weary of the
struggle to arrange life sensibly for
their children, while modern pres
sures create more and more insens
ible experiences which are added
to the life of the child. More and
more they are exposed to crowded
living quarters, to overstimulating
and incomprehensible experiences
through radio and television, and
have to face almost daily some new
gadget they must learn to master
or avoid.”
Many a tired parent finds him
self giving up his effort to put
dangerous or breakable things out
of a child’s reach; to substitute
no no!, or a slap on the hands, for
the simpler way of putting things
out of reach. “The result is,” says
Bettelheim, “nos” convince the
child that finding out things for
himself is dangerous and disap
proved of by parents; that this is a
world full of incomprehensible
danger~ where the safe thing to do
is to do nothing, or only what
parents explicitly permit. Often,
too, the child is convinced in the
end that to try to find out for one
self is something bad. Thus, while
the frequent admionition to “love
one’s child’ is well-meant, it falls
short of its purpose when the pa
rent applies it without the appro
priate or genuine emotions.”
In the “school,” continues Bet
telheim, “we try to create a set
ting that stimulates growth rather
than stresses achievement, such as
the setting in which the infant first
learns to li'¢> and relate to the
persons he knows. It is a -setting
which teaches the child to put
greater value on emotional inte
gration than on visible success in
competition, and to shun an empty
‘popularity’ in favor of one or a
few intensive and emotionally
meaningful relations. We are sat
isfied if the child learns to get
along well with himself and a few
favored people, and otherwise suc
cessfully meets the task of be
coming a useful citizen.
SQUEAKS
52\2\%?3‘42 From
ROTARY WHEEL
by SAM WOODS
In an address to the Rotary
Club, Dean James E. Gates, of the
Department of Business Adminis
tration, stated that the depart
ment had been in contact with
over 7,000 students during the past
year. The Dean was the guest
speaker at a luncheon, arranged by
Dean Paul W. Chapman, and held
at the Georgian Hotel.' ‘Dean
Gates explained the details of the
various training programs, which
include contacts with business
men for training in banking, real
estate, insurance, and accounting.
He also brought out that there
were 350 graduates from Athens
this June, and 250 from the At
lanta Division. All' received the
degree of B. B. A.
~ On the same program, Jimmy
Aiken real a letter of apprecia~-
tion from two members of the
School Patrol, whom the Rotary
Club sponsored -on a trip to
Washington, D. C. >
An announcement was also
‘made that Mr. and Mrs. Newman
(Moon) Corker left June 14 to at
tend the International Convention
in Detroit, Mich. Mr. Corker suc
ceeds Alton Hosch as president on
the first of July.
Guests who attended the lunch
eon were introduced by Colonel
H. E. Mann. They were: James
Pert of Nashville, with Bob Hanna;
B. C. Kinney, with B. M. Smith;
Henry Collar of Austell, with Gra
ham Daniel; and M. P. Rooks of
Albany, with Dr. C. O. Turner.
Others present were John Howell
of Thomson, and Jesse Hatcher of
Tennille. Mr. Hatcher received a
token for having traveled iurther
than anyone else to attend the
meeting.
Death is a back seat driver at
high speeds. The pressure of the
unseen hand on your wheel in
creases with every mile of added
speed: You control your destina
tion and fate when you keep your
speed. down. Don’t invite the un
seen hand on your wheel, keep
your speed reasonable, and your
life safe. Reserve your back seat
for the kids and friends. Don’t
invite the ever-present rider of
death with high speed—is the
warning given us today by our
Safety Education Division of the
Georgia State Patrol.
Aluminum is believed to be the
most abundant metal in the earth’s
crust, with iron second.
‘Announcement
There’s a new face at your
friendly Pure Oil Station—
and a new kind of service
too.
W. H. “Bill” Duncan is the
new manager at Prince and
Pulaski Streets Station. Be
hind his pleasant smile
you’ll find a lot of “know
how” on car service—and a
friendly interest in your
car.
We will still have the Pure
oil Products you've learned
to be sure with—Pure Pep
Gasoline, Pure Lube Motor
Qil, Pure Sure Lublication
—and if you are looking for
personal service—the little
courteous and extras that
add so much to your driving
pleasure—you’ll find it a
pleasure to trade here.
Drive in and see him at your
convenicnce. He will really
appreciate it.
“The
Pure Oil Company”
BILL DUNCAN'’S
PURE OIL STATION
REVOLUTION IN
YOUR WINTER
OVERCOAT
o .By NEA Bervice
NEW YORK— (NEA) —A little
more than a year ago, a silvery
fabric that promises t» spell a rev
olution in how wou dress for win
ter was just an experiment in a
converted stable near Cleveland,
Today that cloth is rolling from
a new windowless textile plant in
South Carolina on its wav to the
fall clothing trade. It will reach
consumers first in the linings of
coats and jackets for men, women
and - children. Eventvallv, it may
make heavy coats and blankets as
out-dated as red flannels.
The mnew garments, manufac
turers predict, will be the warm
est ever made of their types and
weights.
One famous maker of sports
wear will use the fabric in a
jacket for golfers who like to keep
playing in all sorts of_ winter
weather. A women’s coat maker
will promote the e'oth as the way
to let women be “warm and slend
er at the same time.” Other man
ufacturers will add the cloth as
linings to existing garments and
offer them as superwarm coats for
use in unusually severe winter
areas. ;
% * *
The revolutionary fabric is
“Milium,” and its secret is a me
tallic finish apvlied to one side of
the cloth by spraying the fibers
with fine particles of metal re
flects back to the body a large part
of the heat radiated by it.
Any metal that flakes, including
gold and silver, can be used, but
aluminum appears to be the most
practical. It is the aluminum that
gives the cloth the silvery ap
pearance,
Rayon satins, twills and crepes
used for coat linings are the fab
rise being processed initiaily. But
the new finish can be applied to
‘any ordinary natural or synthetic
fiber including wool, cotton, ny
lon and the newly developed or
lon.
First work on Milium was done
by James H. Rand, IIT, a young
Cleveland scientist who earlier de
veloped an electric razor, an im
proved electric washing machine
and several medical davices. ;
When a clothing manufacturer
wanted ‘to explore the possibility
of an overcoat electrically heated
like an electric blanket, he went
to Rand. Because of the weight
of batteries required, this idea
was impractical, so Rand turned
to reflection of the body’s own
heat. The metallic cloth was the
answer.
* * %
Paradoxically, he also found
that the same treated cloth which
warmed a person in winter could
also keep him comfortabi~ in sum
mer by reflecting away the heat
of the sun. In effect, clothing could
:)le made to act as a thermos bot
e.
One of the nation’s oldest tex
tile companies financed comple
tion of the research and several
thousand tests at a ‘“cold” room
in Cleveland, at the U. S. Testing
Co. laboratories in Hoboken, N. J.,
and elsewhere before starting pro
cessing of fabrics at a rew plant.
In one of the more startling
tests, it was found that a thin
nylon seersucker coverlet treated
by the new process and a sheet
proved warmer on a bed than a
blanket 10 times as thick. Treat
ed draperies gave promise of
helping keep homes warm in the
winter and co.ol in the summer.
&
A valuable immediate applica
tion is expected to be in children’s
snow suits and similar garments.
Observations at Sun Valley, Ida.,
and Cleveland last spring indi
cate that children are less in
clined to perspire excessively and
to throw off Milium-lined coats
oy e
o S {/-~ Y
v tl 0” il ‘ oy
! T g > &
acalto® ..= T O -
/ A oo
WITH THE CHILDREN __ ) /]
gEAUT! T ) N
" Etlinor Vethage |B\
. .v,
‘ BABYSITTERS _' fi# ok i
e bsl ;: GR e ]
While you swim, visit a B et BB Vs g ‘
nightclub or take in a show, Eh o e ——. ok g —
trustworthy babysitters will ™
care for your children. . f" :
’ NURSERIES
For the smaller children s i N ;
there are nurseries com- g&4 oy b e
petently manned by trained S i et "% Y e o
personnel, : 2 gt e}f }
‘ PLAYGROUNDS ks O
There are fully-equipped ’S
playgrounds convenient to Young folks have their ewm special waeation at
all 650 villas.
Ellinor Villzage while you enjoy the breese-swept
‘ STROLLERS Deach, free membership in the Ormond Beach Coun-
Baby econveyances, baby try Club (golf for greens fees emly), horseback rid
beds, high chairs, almost 2
anything you can think of lng,»boating. tennis, ecean fishing ~ . , » eempleie
lfi‘:'t.leb:tr::; vacations for the recreation roster! Rates start at only $43.50 for =
' 3-room Villa. 2 and 8 bedroom Villas slightly high
! :—’{,\,.’ er. :
e W »
CERE TS e IR
=| P B =Reßes v P=3 : \
e -——— =3 LT e N By THE SEA 349503
e g Make reservations early! ($25 deposit required). TR
— Write P. O. Box 1471—For direct reservations, eall B
N “Ellinor Village Reservations”—Tel, Daytiona Beach,
Fla. 2-0431. .
THE. WORLD’S LARGEST'FAMILY RESORT @ DAYTONA BEACH FLORIDA
than those wearing heavier outer
wear.
Milium lining will add a few
dollars to the retail prices of gar
ments. While coat linings prob
obly will utilize all Milium until
pant additions are competed and
other processors are licensed,
many other applications are in
prospect.
~ (The only processor at present
is Deering, Milliken & Co., which
backed final research).
Military authorities are inter
ested in the fabric as a possible
lining for sleeping bags and for
high altitude and cold weather
suits. Several manufacturers are
eager to use it in the bedding and
drapery fields. Even applications
in awnings and automobile tops
are being discussed.
Traffic hazards rise at night—
don’t increase them with high
speed! Night shortens visibility and
increases hazards. Speed multi
plies them both, so if you drive
after dark, increase your chances—
decrease your speed! Remember,
yvour safety factor goes down with
the sun—cut your speed at night—
our Safety Education Division of
the Georgia State Patrol tells us.
Platinum often is recovered as
a by-product in the mining of
copper and nickel.
FOR F. H. A. LOANS
SERVICE see “CHICK”
Buy, Build or Refinance 414 %
20-to 25 Years.
Phone 1130-J
HOYT N. CHICK, SR.
3 DAY SPECIAL!
L ]
MAIL COUPON BELOW BY MIDNIGHT WEDNESDAY
PRICE INCLUDES %
$I 8 5 ATTACHMENTS : b |
@A b |
2 SEND NO MONEY AA% |
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» é Ty ’u%~ X 2 E -3
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» « WITH ACE PARTS » o
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! ‘\ Walls ./
.g ‘ ElEt'nul“ '.‘
. . y P_{
,» ~ R \ 1‘ "{é’
& The Vacuum : T
. (o YT T T <N A i
i é 101 Uses ; A e N ,
(= ). \'g) ‘ «.‘utj':!\"":;‘ 2” /
R :* A y '{.;. i g >
W= ! o MODEL Xli
g =
- = G =P Plt R F.D. Write Directions
3 ~*Regs &(€ s How to Find Your Home.
: SUPPLY LIMTED ~ ACT NOW
ACE VACUUM STORES prrr A
406 Peachtree St., N. E., Atlanta, Ga.
Gentlemen :
: | would like o free home demonstration of o fully
guaranteed Rebuilt Electrolux Vacuum Cleaner, complete
with 7 oftachments. All for only $12.85
-
Nome ______ o—— o —— ‘
Add’m-———-:-——————-—-——-—————-———-—-
SONDAY, JUNE 18, 1950.
LOCAL MEWSP
55 e
Y RSN R
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Chyistion Sclence Monitor /
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