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PAGE SIXTEEN
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CREEINOIT V<l
éHOPPING,IN POLAND—This sidewalk market scene in Lem-
Jburg; Poland, s typical of many cities now behind the Iron Curtain.
Eemburg, once a fairly prosperous city, was absorbed by Russia
faluring the war, Most Lemburg Poles were evacuated westward to
?ohsh territory and replaced by Russians. Almost all merchandise
48 sold through Soviet state stores, at high prices, and these open air
peasant markéts, selling mostly second-hand clothing -and household
goods are the only markets where supply and demand control prices.
Crippled Youth
Total Funds To
Remain In State
Representatives of the 35 Geor
ga Elk lodges met in Atlanta re
ntly and voted to keep all do
wations to their crippled children
gharity here In Georgia. This Elk
gmrity is conducted through their
rippled Children League of Geor=
N ok |
FREE!
t ' |
Visitors' :
(GUIDE To .
NEW YORE!
\Contains illustrated map of
‘entire city, showing bus and
subway lines, with photos
‘and information on where to
go, how to %ct there, Yours
FREE! Simply write Dept. BH
And When You Visit New York-
Why not stay at the King
Edward and enjoy the finest
« it costs no more! 300
rooms with bath, radio, tele«
vision, One blodk from sth
Avenue or Broadway, a few
steps to Radio City, Quiet,
restful, “Grenadier” Dining
Room, Cocktail Lounge,
#rom $3 Bolly, Special Weokly Rotes
iin,
,g‘*
- i
Hing %%‘az -
Cdward | [ F
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Mo it e
44th Street, East of Broodway, New York 18, N. Y,
Milton Finke, General Manoger
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Stees L I - S
How Mrs. Paul Clements keeps track of household bills.
**Household expenses,’”” says
Mrs. Paul Clements, ““are easy to
keep tabs on when bills are paid
by check.
““But I suppose any kind of
money payment is easier and
quicker by check. According to
my banker, about 33,000,000
checksadayareusedinthe U.S.A.
He says that 909 of our country’s
business is done by check.
“But so far as I’m concerned,
my checks are only a small part
of the service I get from my bank,
There are so many o;hg fhings |
kike my safe deposit box, small |
loans now and then, travelers l
ehecks, and so om.
123yAnd thie. is alway: brag: mo |
gia and Elks Aidmore Hospital for
Crippled Children, located at the
corner of Peachiree and Eighth
Street, in Atlanta.
The Elks were affiliated with
The National Society For Crippled
Children and Adults, of Chicago.
Materials and seals were pur
chashed at cost plus 10 per cent
profit. Each year a proportion of
Easter campaign proceeds was
paid to the National Society in
Chicago.
That affiliation has been ter
minated. All future contributions
to the local Georgia Elk Easter
appeal for crippled children will
remain in Georgia, and every
dollar will be spent on the chil
dren of this state.
At Aidmore Hospital the Elks
maintain 60 beds and a complete
staff for the treatment and care
of crippled children. Twenty five
Registered Nurses Aides watch
over the children. A Registered
Dietitian insures a proper diet.
Treatment is supervised by Dr.
Harriett E. Gillette, Medical Di
rector o: the Hospital, assisted by
a staff of therapists, including
physical therapy, occupational,
speech and recreational therapies.
Recently an experimental course
of music therapy treatment was
installed by the Elks, sponsored
by the Pan-Hellenic Society, to as
sist the children, through the
rhythm of music, to regain coordi
nation of damaged feet, legs, hands
and armms. : :
Polio Treatment
Elks Aidmore Hospital receives
children from infancy to 21 years
of age, who suffer from crippling
ailments which are orthopedic,
cerebral palsied or plastic by na
iture. Many victims of polio have
| been treated at Aidmore.
’ This Elk program is integrated
| with the Crippied Childrens Divis
ion of the State Welfare Depart
.ment. Aidmore services also are
| geared in with the National Foun
| dation For Infantile Paralysis, and
| 70 polio victims were placed in
| Aidmore Hospital last year by the
! Polio Foundation.
| Four Hundread forty-tive
'patients were received at
Aidmore last year, :oming from
95 Georgia counties, and 18,572
patient days treatment and care
given. More than 25,000 therapy
| treatments were administered.
Elks Aidmore also maintains an
X-ray Department and Clinical
Laboratory for diagnosis purposes.
Two school teachers, essigned
to Aidmore by the Atlanta Public
matter what kind of banking serv
ice I need, my banker is always
ready to -help me out if he can.
This is because banks are in com
petition just like grocery stores.
They can’t give poor service and ™
still stay in business.
“T guess everybody in America
knows that, but I wonder how
many people realize how impor
tant it is to them to have their
banks operate as competitive
businesses.”
This 15 one 1 a serses of storses
of people as tord to the...
CITIZENS & SOUTHERN
NATIONAL BANK
U Memibar Fedoral Beyorit eTI s
‘School System, see that the edu
cation of the children does not
lapse, even though they are hos
‘pitalized for long periods.
The Elk Crippled Children
League of Georgia, a state-wide
direct assistance charity, finances
necessary surgical operations and
medical care for many hundreds
of underprivileged children. Other
children are helped with wheel
chairs, braces, crutches, hearing
aids, eyeglasses and other appli
ances for the crippled child.
Direct Assistance
In the past three years this
state-wide Georgia Elk charity
paid out more than $86,000.00 in
direct assistance to needy crip
pled children in every section of
Georgia.
The families of many of Geor
gia’s crippled children scheduled
for examination in the clinics of
the State’s Cripplew Children’s
Division are not able to pay the
cost of transporting the children
to and from the clinics. The Elks
foot the bill, and those payments
run more than $6,000.00 per year
Last year alone 577 Georgia crip
pled children were transported by
the Elks to the clinics. They came
from 64 counties. The Elks like
wise furnish facilities for state
staffed clinics, the largest of
which is on the grounds at Elks
Aidmore Hospital.
Public Appeals
The Elk representatives voted
to continue their public appeals at
Easter time. The need for help
among the crippled children of
Georgia is great. Donations from
the 35 Georgia Elk lodges and the
13,600 individual Elks in Georgia
furnish the main support of Aid
more Hospital and the expensive
appliancs and surgical operations
necessary to make the crippled
child whole again. But the need
is so great that the Tlks will con
At PENNEY'S
Remodeling
Features!!
100 PAIR
WOMEN'S SHOES
Sandals, Casuals and Dress!
oOdd Lots and Sizes! 1044‘
PR.
40 ONLY
GIRLS COTTON DRESSES
Sheer Cottons in Pastels.
Odd Styles. Sizes 7-12. I°BB
25 ONLY
LITTLE GIRLS SWIM SUITS
g?g};fi_egte Styles in 1.00
PLASTIC
CHAIR BACK AND CUSHIONS
e R
IN TIME FOR JULY 4TH !!
80 PAIR MEN’S
RAYON DRESS SLACKS
Tan, Grey, Blue—in Waist
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Alterations Free!
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Short Sleeves, Tan, :
Grey, Blue, Green. ]"SO
LAST TWO DAYS — NEW LOW
PRICES ON JUNE WHITE GOODS
... Penney’s Quality Brands...
e PENCO SHEETS, 81x108 ...... «0.. .... 2.21
e PENCO SHEETS, 81x99 .. .... «... .... 1.99
® PENCO SHEETS, 72x108 ...... ... .... 1.99
® PENCO CASES, 42%36 . ... vicarcen vsva 4B
e NATION WIDE, 81x108 ...... .... .... 1.94
e NATION WIDE, 72x108 ...... .... .... L. 74
e NATION WIDE, 72x99 ... ...« ««vo .... 1.64
® NATION WIDECASES ... .... «vov v 239
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
REPTRLIQUE /8 w
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HONORS AUTHOR — This
new stamp honoring the great
French satirical writer Francois
Rabelais is being issued by the
French postal system. The stamp
is dark red and has a value of
12 francs—ahout 33% cents.
tinue to call upon their Georgia
friends to share in this charitable
enterprise through annual Easter
appeals to the public, as in the past.
All future coniwrbiutions, the
Elks emprasizs, will stay in Geor
gia and be used for Georiga chil
dren. No part of such funds will
be paid to any National Society or
other out of State agency.
When sewing in zippers by hand,
take stitches so close to the zipper
that the needle brushes the side
of the metal. A tiny back stitch
gives a neat effect.
America Finds
Varied Uses For
Schmidt Lenses
It was a Germar optical scient
ist named Bernhard Schmidt who,
in 1930, invented a lens ten times
faster than a high-speed camera
lens. Ironically enough, that lens
helped the Unived States to win
out against Germany in the sec
ond World War, confirming Dr.
Schmidt’s fear that it would be
used to kill and destroy. In gener
al, scientific achievements are in
ternational property, the Better
Vision Institute points out, and
that rule has contributed enor
mously to the well-being of the
whole world, even though it has
occasior.ally extended the destruc
tion >f warfare.
The Schmidt lens was needed
for wartime military devices. But
no method had been discovered
for producing its intricate curves
except by hand grinding, whereby
months were required to make one
lens. Finally, a way was found in
this country to imprint the desired
shape in a mold of refractory clay.
Then a piece of optical glass was
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VALUES |
4
LOOKS! "PLUS
QUALITY! PLUS
WEAR! PLUS
placed over the mold, reproducing |
the curves of the wonderful lens.
Schmidt lenses have found a
number of important uses in
peace-ime. Fitted to television pro
jectors, they make big, byight,
clear pictures. They are used with
X-ray equipment to make better
pictures of the interior of the
lungs and stomach, revealing can
cer or tuberculosis or ulcers. One
of their widest uses is in public
health examinations for tubercu
losis.
Perhaps most spectacular of all,
a 48-irch Schmidt telescope is
perched in the Mt. Palomar obser
vatory, California, near the great
100-inch instruments. The Schmidt
lens is now making an atlas of the
heavens which will reveal swirl
ing nebulae, fiery gases, island
universes, clouds of interstellar
dust, and probably some 500 mill
ion stars.
Few scientific instruments have
such a range of usefulness as len
ses of fine optical and cphthalmic
glass, remarks the Better Vision
Institute. At one extreme they
pierce the heavens; at the other
they anable people to see better and
live more fully through the magic |
power of spectacles. ‘
To laundry hosiery safely, shake
them clean in a container filled
with warm water and gentle suds.
A covered pint jar makes a good
shaker.
AT PENNEY’S
CHINA’S NEWSPAPERS
DECLINE
HONG KONG— (AP) —Com
munist China’s newspapers are
becoming fewer—and sc, appar=
ently, are their readers. A corres
pondent writing from China’s
great Yantze Valley says the latest
official figures put the number of
periodicals at 253, including 175
daily newspapers. He estimated
their combined circulation at 2,~
500,000.
Under: the Nationalists there
were about 3,000 periodicals in
China with a circulation of around
50,000,000. The correspondent
wrote that readers got tired of a
daily fare in the Communist pa
pers of “monotonous meetings of
government organs, of factory
workers, of school children, ete,”
of celebrations of Communist an
niversaries, of interviews with
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you're set for a day in the sun! Misses’, women’s.
SRepU.S.PaLORT* ¢ - -
YAORIDAY, JONE 29, 1350,
warkers, students an . the like
supporting gsovernmeat decrees
and “of wer avainst midstic
aggressors and the ical
yvick':adness of American imperial
ism.
Face The Change With
A Brighter Outlook
Many women approaching *“the ehange’
worry lest home and family life be unduly
disturbed by the miserable way they often
feel—tired, depressed and irritulfie, nerves
on edge, Seeking relief from such common
symptoms of Change of Life, thousands of
women have found Cardui wonderfully
beneficial, often giving just the kind of
relief they need, when most needed.
A grand stomachic tonie, Cardui helps
to build resistance, fortify vitality, and
encourage a brighter outlook. Aids algo in
easing nervous edgy tension and gives
spirits & lift, thus helping to combat that
jittery uncertain feeling. Try Cardui. Get
it this very dayl