Newspaper Page Text
PAGE EIGHT
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has about 2,800 miles of motor
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o A Round Trip in =
gßel lE$5 Luxurious Super
SENE Coach to:
Atlantic City, N. J, ......$26.05
New York City .... .. .. 27.20
Denver, Colo. ~ ~ «+ .. 49.05 |
Niagara Falls .., ~ .. ~ 30.70
Dallas, Texas ~ ¢, «~ .. 30.00
RKansa@ Oy .. . ¢, o ¢« 30.60
GREYHOUND
offers
A Round Trip in
Easy Chair Com- |
fort All the Way to: 5
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New Orleans .. ~ .. .. 17.30 4
Tami:'.. cdiwe e w 1685
Nate Seiaa evh e ROEO
Roanoke $0 ss es 44 U 9 o 13.28 l
Wilmington, N. C. ~ ~ .. 13.45
Washington, D. C. ~ ¢ .. 19.90 |
Chioa(o.%ll. i. vhaa iy 240 S ;
NovToIR: Vi, ... ;o . 118 h }
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\ GREYHOUND |
offers f
A Rownd Tripon a |
Wide Choice of |
" Bchedules to:
Charleston, 8. €. .. .. ..$8.50 |
pavanuah ... 00000 840
Asheville, N. 0. .. .+ .. .. 628 |
Bristol, Tenn. .. ~ 4 +. 9.25
Birmingham .. .. ¢, 1 . 7.65 1
Ghßdlon® . .. v o i o 130
Golumbis. 8. 0. .. .. .. .. 605 |
Hytinewiok - .. . 6|
(Prices shown do not include l
U. 8 Tax.) }
SREYMOUND TERMINAL-I
¥206 W. Broad Street Phone 2141 |
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Mr. Cotton Farmer:
Please — -
mreg @
Spare Us A Few Moments To Read This
During the last week, we have had the opportunity to talk with
and visit several large cotton farmers.
First, we talked with Mr. Henry Dunson of Commerce, Georgia,
who has over 150 acres in cottcii. Mr. Dunson states that he has
poisoned his cotton—‘‘with a new type of poison,” which is on the
market and on 6 acres he has applied, within the last week, over
200 pounds. On a close check for three days after dusting, Mr. Dun
son found that he had as many boll-weevils as he had before he
started dusting. He states that as far as he is concerned, using a
bug-catcher is going to be the only way to control the insects on his
cotton and he is going to continue to run this bug-catcher day and
night until he gets his crop clean.
We also talked with Mr. Henry Dixon of Elbert County who has been
using a bug-catcher for several years. Mr. Dixon states that he is sure
that the bug-catcher is responsible for his having made the cotton crops
that he made during the last year or so. He also states that if he could
not get another one, ‘I would not take $1,000.00 for mine.
We had an opportunity to visit Mr. A. H. Malcom’s farm in Morgan
County and Mr. Malcom has a full 200 acres planted in cotton. This is
the finest crop of cotton that we have seen in this part of Georgia. He
has a good stand and the color is perfect. Myr. Malcom’s story is this: “I
have dusted and I have sprayed this crop and now I am running my bug
catcher over it. You can see by the many insects that are in the bag that
spraying and dusting alone will not do the job. That bug-catcher will
continue to run until I start picking my 200 bales.” Mr. Malcom further
added, “you can see that we are not only getting the boll weevil, but
that sack is full of other insects that are harmful to the crop. I know the
bug-catcher pays off.”
The point that we want to get over to you cotton farmers is the fact
that even though you dust and spray and even though you walk into
your field and can not see the boll-weevil at work—we feel sure that the
boll-weevil and other insects are out there doing plenty of damage.
What we want to do is to help you make a crop of cotton. We are not
asking anyone to buy a bug-catcher unless we can show them that it will
paly them to run one on their crop. All that we ask—is that you come in,
call or write and give us an opportunity to let you try either a one or two
row bug-catcher at no cost to you whatever.
If we can show you that it will pay you to control your insects in a
cheaper manner, we would like to do so and remember that we will be
glad to give you a free demonstration with no obligation to you what
soever,
Thanking you for your time in reading this letter. ¢
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Russell Daniel, Inc.
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“IT'S WET IN THERE" —Jo-Jo and Jerry, new polar bear cubs
at the Detroit Zoo, have no mother to guide them—into the water.
So trainer Eli Sorak took on the job of teaching them to swim. At
first they seemed reluctant pupils because, as pictured above, they
dashed out of the pool the first chance they got. However, when
left alone in another cage, they jumped into the water and slashed
about like a couple of kids in the old swimming hole.
Poor Man's Philosopher Writes
About Summer’s Best Stories
BY HAL BOYLE !
NEW YORK—(AP)—Notebook
jottings:
Manhattan is the cipital city of |
people who talk to themselves. . .
They walk along gabbling out loud
at a great rate. . . . Many appear
to be out of their minds, but no
one bothers them. ... What hap
pens to them? Where do they go?
Passed one on crowded Sixth
Avenue the other day .. He was
muttering this message over and
over:
“Get ready, sheep, get ready.
You won’t be here long.”
Cutest I've Heard
The summer dearth in good sto
ries has set in. But with a bow to
whomever it belongs to, I'd like
to pass along the cutest one Ive
heard all season:
At a children’s party one daring
yvoungster suggested, “Let’s play
postoffice.” The blushing boys and
tittering girls all agreed it was a
great idea.
The first pair to start the game
were shy. So they went into closet.
The rest of the children gathered
outside the door. They listened and
listened but couldn’t hear a sound.
After about 15 minutes on child'
rapped on the door and said:
‘ “What are you doing in there?”
| And from inside .the closet a
'muffled small voice shrilled des
perately:
“We aren’t doing anything. Our
braces are hooked!”
Friend of mine has a son in
nursery school. When his parents
set our recently to attend an eve
ning meeting with teachers, he
wanted to know why.
“Oh, to learn how to raise you
better,” he was told.
“Well,” . said the boy, *“try to
find out why I'm so afraid of thun
der and lightning, will you?”
How-the-language-grows note:
A Movie producer giving his views
to a luncheon group: “I'm just
thinking out loud — mentally.” . .
But my favorite is the mysterious
remark overheard in a beauty
shop: “So I told him, ‘listen, wise
guy, take your diamond ring out
of my new ten cent hair net’.”
Martini-'Lovers
Martini-Lovers tend to want
their drinks dryer and dryer. And
bartenders sometimes get weary
of being told, “make mine like the
Sahara.”
“Why don’t you just have a
' throwaway Martini?” one barman
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
finally asked one of these high
vol%?vge customers, Slida
" "#What's throwaway Martini?”
~ The barman poured some ver
‘mouth in a glass, swished it
around, then emptied it down the
drain. Then he filled the glass
with pure gin and set it before
the customer with the query, “dry
enough?”
A number of Broadway charac
ters were having one of those
heavy intellectual discussions that
start in night clubs after mid
night. The subject: How to deal
with the German problem?
The argument grew bitter.
Some thought the American policy
was too soft. Some saw it as real
istic. One pointed at a U. S. air
man standing at the bar and said,
“Let’s get his opinion.”
He approached the flyer and
said, “I can see by your ribbons
that you were in the European
theater. What do you think we
should do with Germany?”
“Pave it!” said the airman,
turning back to his beer.
University
News Briefs
Principals and teachers from
four Georgia school are meeting
at the University of Georgia for a
three and half week workshop in
Life Adjustment Education. .
The workshop is sponsored
jointly by the State Department of
Education and the University of
Georgia’s Gollege of Education.
Participating in the workshop
are Principals J. O. Grow, River
Benc School, Hall County; E. J.
Harrell, Hawkinsville School; E.
G. Summers, LaFayette Schol; and
J. E. Trippe, Vidalia School. Five
teachers from each of these schools
have also been registered for the
workshop.
This group is makin ga special
study of recent curriculum devel
opments and plan improved pro
grams for their schools.
Consultants for the workshop
are H. S. Shearouse, director, cur=
riculum development, State De
partment of Education, ani Dr.
Walter H. Gaumnitz. Division of
School Organization and Super
vision, U. S. Office of Education.
Curriculum Revised
Dr. Elliott E. Cheatham, pro
fessor of law at Columbia nUi
versity and an alumnus of the
University of Georgia, conferred
here recently with the faculty of
Lumpkin Law School on the
Chevrolet trucks give you
more powerful performance,
thriftier operation
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o~ You can expect great things of these new Chev
rolet trucks. They're the most powerful trucks Chevrolet
has ever built, yet they cost surprisingly little to operate.
Two rugged, wonder-working Valve-in-Head engines—the
Thriftmaster 92-h.p. and the new Loadmaster 105-h.p.—
bring you performance that saves you time and money. New
Power-Jet carburetion provides smooth, quick acceleration,
and the 4-speed Synchro-Mesh transmission in heavy-duty
models means faster shifting and greater safety on the
grades. To you, this means wonderful new performance .. .
— less time on the road . . .
m less time in the haul. So
-—- _ do yourself a favor. Visit
CHEv Ro LET J/ our showroom today.
Z"’""""—"”"'"—i —_— T A Chevrolet trucks have
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ADVANCE-DESIGN TRUCKS
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SCRAPE WITH DEATH—This new sedan was virtually split through the middle in an early
morning crash into the end of a drawbridge gate at Cambridge, Mass. The driver, Thomas Bohan,
escaped deathw bry“i_x»lches, suffering only a broken shoulder. Passersby pulled him frora the wreck. |
school’s curriculum.
Dr. Cheatham, a member of the
class of 07, has beea making a
study of law curriculums in
schools throughout the country.
Several year ago he made a sim
ilar study of the University’s law
curriculum and mad . suggestions
which resulted in a modernization
of the courses offered.
According to Dean Alton Hosch,
Dr. Cheatham made “a number of
excellent suggestions.”
“Dr. Cheatham has always been
interested in the University and
the Law School,” Dean ifosch said.
“All of us here appreciate his con
tinued interest and support.”
European Tour
Eleven University of Georgia
students with an equal number
from other Southern colleges will
sail aboard the U. S. S. Washing
ton July 12 for an eight-weeks tour
of Europe.
They will be accompanied by
Dr. John -A. Downs, professor of
languages at the University, and
Mrs. Downs, tour directors.
The tour will include a motor
trip through England and Scotland,
and visits to Holland, Germany,
Switzerland, Italy, and France.
Highlights of the tour include
a steamer trip on the Rhine, at
tendance of the Passion Play in
UNIVERSITY CHEVROLET CO.
Hancock at Pulaski
Oberammergau, Germany, and an
audience with the Pope in t"e Vat
ican City.
The group will spend 16 days
in Italy where they will visit Flor
ence, Venice, Pisa, Naples, Soren
to, Isle of Capri, and the Italian
Riviera. :
Those going on the tour in
cluding University students are
Shirley Shearouse, Savannah;
Corneille Rylander, Lois Mathis,
Walker Bowen, and Martha La
nier, all of Americus; Gwen Oliv
er, Jo Lane Cheves, Sally Dugger,
Bunny Griffin, Rebecca Cowan,
and Margaret Landers, of Atlanta;
Barbara Berry, Macon; Nick Mob
ley, Thomasville; Emaline Hodges,
Cliatt; Doris' Chapin, Lookout Mt.,
Tenn.; Pinckney Whelchel and
Ernst Ruder, Gainesville; Eula
CaHaway and Rucker Ginn, Cov
ington; Joan Scott, Orlando, Fla.;
Carolyn Gargile, San Angelo, Tex
as; and Marie Deffeke, Tuscaloosa,
Ala.
Community Workshop
A workshop designed to help lo
cal teachers enrich their school
programs through the proper use
of eommunity resources will be
held at the North Canton School in
Cherokee County June 26-30.
The workshop is sponsored by
the Georgia Committee on Re-
source-Use Education under the
direction of the College of Educa
tion at the University of Georgia
and the State Department of Edu
cation.
Principals, teachers, representa=
tives from non-school agencies,
and lay people in Cherokee County
will participate in the five-day
non-credit workshop in resource
use education. It will bc directed
by Miss Reba Burnham, director
of the Georgia program in re=-
source-1 se education at the Uni
versity. .
The workshop will help teachers
to become more sensitive to the
problem of using natural resources
in their county, to become more
familiar with resource agencies in
that county, and to plan school
programs that will deal with these
problems, according to Miss Burn
ham.
Among -those assisting in the
workshop will be Mrs. Elizabeth
M. Bailey, instructional supervisor,
Cherokee County Schools; Eugene
Owens, county school superintend
ent; E. H. Thomas, Agricultural
Exiension Service, Athens; and J.
W. Burdette, head of the education
section, Soil Conservation Service,
Spartanburg, S. C.
Wives of pharmacy students at
the University of Georgia have
formed an auxiliary organization
4 Chevrolet's Valve-in-Head en-
Per[Ormance gines can do more work per
gallon than any other gasoline |
engine of the same displace=
Leaders ment now in use, :
Low operating and repair costs
PleOCld .of Chevrolet trucks are due to
finest engineering and construc=
tion. Chevrolet trucks deliver the
Leqders goods at low cost per son per
; mile.
- For the last full year, Chevrolet
POPU'G""Y trucks have ouhold' the mngi
two makes combined! Thui'(;
proof that Chevrolet is the ng-
I'eqders tion's most-wanted truck, :
o Chevrolet's rock-bottom initial
Prlce cost—outstandingly low cost of
eperation and muinionunu-j
and high trade-in value, all ad
Leaders up io the lowest price 'fcr you,
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 28, 1950.
to the SBudent Branch es ihe
Amevican Pharmaoceautionr Acso
ciation, perhaps the firwt ewganiz.-
tion of its kind in the country.
The purpose of the auxiliary is
to help members to become better
acquainted with the pharmacy
profession.
Officers of the club are Mre.
Jake Williams, president; Mrs. Joe
Maxwell, vice president; Mre.
Robert Robbins, recording secre
tary; Mrs. Jim Farmer, corres
ponding secretary; Mrs. Rudolph
Cox, treasurer; and Mrs. Milton
Johnson, program chairman,
ATTEND MEET
H. B. Henderson, head of the
dairy department at the Universi
ty of Georgia, recently attended
the annual meeting of the Ameri
can Dairy Science Association at
Cornell University.
Other dairy faculty members
who attended are Dr. S. H. Morri
son and J. J. Sheuring, associate
professor. Dr. Morrison read a
paper at the meeting on “Rates of
Grain Feeding for Dairy Heifers
on Temporary and Permanent
Winter Pasture.”
U. S. CAPITALS .
The United States has had nine
different capitals: York, Lancas
ter, Germantown and Philadel
phia in Pennsylvania; Princeton
and Trenton in New Jersey; Bal
timore, Md.; New York City, ard
Washington, D. C.
*“DEVIL DOOR”
A church in Cornwall, England,
has a door built especially for the
devil to sneak out with downcast
eyes when renounced by converts.
The “devil door” is an old custorn
harking back to the day of the
“witches.”
Grasshoppers can be hatched
from unfertilized eggs; these fa
therless insects are always fe
males.
AS A
BOILED
OWL
BECAUSE HiS SKINITCHES LIKE MAD
He'll “crow” with delight
~——l. as Black and White Oini
w'q® B ment checks itch of ugly
-/ 7§ acne, bumps (blackheads),
| /,;} broken out skin (externa ly
:/ cauqed).aantlsepgxé, zx]ds
healing. 25¢, . Alco
\I/\ use Black nn:%bito Scspu
BLACK & WHITE -
Sold in Athens At
CROW’S DRUG STORE
Athens’ Most Complete
Drug Store.
Phone 1856