Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWELVE
1 Specialists
To Assist In
Cattle Course
Topre 3 nome; 1., J. JOnNes, acan ol ot
hv‘ St ;a:tiel ;pecna}ists l University’s School of Veterinar;
ave been named to lead sessions | nraqicine; Z. A. Massey, Georgi
of the th.ee-day annual Herds- | Experiment Station, Experiment
men"s Short Course which begins |J. L. McMullen, vocational agri
at the University of Georgia July gui:urf teacher, Jefferson Higl
chool;
17. ' Bill McSpadden, American
The short course staff was an-' Aperdeen-Angus Association, Chi
nounced by Dr. A. E. Cullison, | cago, Ill.; Konrad Purdy, manager
head of the University’s depart- | Holly Springs Farms, Covington
ment of animal husbandry. W. S. Rice, State Department o
Twe days of the course will | Vocational Edueation, Atlanta
deal with the problems of produc~ ’O. E. Sell, Georgia Experimen
ing and showing Aberdeen-Angus Station, Experiment; B. L. South.
and Hereford cattle with one day ' well, Georgia Coastal Plain Exper
being devoted to a general dis-|iment Station, Tifton; “Tex” Spit
cussion of beef cattle production. |zer, manager, J. Garrett Tola
Course Personnel Angus Farms, Pleasant Plains, 111.
Course personnel in addition to | David W. Tomlin, manager, Bian
Dr. Cullison are E. D. Alexander, | chi Hereford Ranch, Macon, Mo.
Charles E. Bell, and M. P. Jarna- | Mrs. Robert C. Watkins, Cameror
gim, of the Georgia Agricultural | Crest Farms, Sandy Springs; anc
Extension Service, Athens, Geor- | Bill Wright, American Hereforc
gia; George Bible, managed of | Association, Kansas City, Mo.
WO EXTRA €57
~ ¢ FOR MOTH PROOFING, PAINT SPRAYING.
3 SHAMPOO RUGS, WAXES FLOORS, ETC,
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t/ VN $ 2 2 YEAR
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RUGS » FLOORS ® MATTRESSES » UPHOLSTERY
CLOTHES © BLANKETS * MOULDINGS © RADIATORS
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- @
| @ Write Dept. G — Send No Money *
fE 406 Peachtree St., N. E., Atlanta, Ga. 2
" ! I would like a free home demonstration of a rebuilt ELECTROLUX Vacuum :
: 'C'uno‘r, oomploto with 7 attachments, plus sprayer, all for only $12.95. "
& ey -"“,;( SR *. "
B T e STATE ik bbmtamisicn :
AMERICAS FINEST AND LARGEST VACUUM CLEANER.SPECIALISTS
Heyward Allen Motor Co.
Announces
Their new “SAFE BUY" Used Car Lot open
ing soon on Broad Street directly across from
Heyward Allen Motor Co. Watch your Ban
ner-Herald for further announcements of the
opening of your “"SAFE BUY" Used Car Lot.
Heyward Allen Motor Co.
257 W. Broad Phone 505
Mountain Cove Farms, Kensing
ton; Harry L. Brown, dean of the
University's College of Agricul
ture;
Ralph W. Cammack, manager,
Georgia Hereford Association, At
lanta; E. E. Chambers, veterinari=-
an, Rossville; George W. Gibson,
executive secretary of the Geor
gia Aberdeen-Angus Association,
Rome; T. J. Jones, dean of the
University's School of Veterinary
Medicine; Z. A. Massey, Georgia
Experiment Station, Experiment;
J. L. McMullen, vocational agri
culture teacher, Jefferson High
School;
Bill McSpadden, American
Aberdeen-Angus Association, Chi
cago, Ill.; Konrad Purdy, manager,
Holly Springs Farms, Covington;
W. S. Rice, State Department of
Vocational Edueation, Atlanta;
0. E. Sell, Georgia Experiment
Station, Experiment; B. L. South~
well, Georgia Coastal Plain Exper
iment Station, Tifton; “Tex” Spit
zer, manager, J. Garrett Tolan
Angus Farms, Pleasant Plains, I1l.;
David W. Tomlin, manager, Bian
chi Hereford Ranch, Macon, Mo.;
Mrs. Robert C. Watkins, Cameron
Crest Farms, Sandy Springs; and
Bill Wright, American Hereford
Association, Kansas City, Mo.
HOMES FOR AMERICANS
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Vol T s
"/U; L“Fi »*L} 3 PLAN #4750 . & 2
‘ Ep-LE o T
. i il NN LTS,
HOW A DREAM comes true—This house was built and
the bathroom, shown on the plan, photographed as
shown in the middle picture. The mirror is above the
built-in vanity table adjoining the lavatory. The plan was
worked out from a list of features people ask for most
frequently, Cost controlled this, but such demands as
ease of circulation, open planning, adequate storage
and low rambling lines were carried out. The result is
what the Small Homes Guide calls ‘The Home America
Needs.” This is plan 4750 by Rudolph A. Matern, 90-04
161st Street, Jamaica 2, N. Y. The plan covers 1,114
square feet. It has been construction tested on a 1,000-
house project at Forest City, Wantagh, L. 1., N. Y., where
it was sold for SII,OOO on a plot 60 by 100.— (AP News
features.) :
Caskey Elected
Contractor
.
Group Director
G. M. Caskey, jr., owner of G.
M, Caskey and Sons, local contrac
tors, has been elected a member
of the board of directors of the
Georgia Branch of Associated
General Contractors of America,
Ine.
The new officers and directors
began their duties for the fiscal
year on July 1, 1950.
Grady Graduate
. .
Gets Position
Frank Rushton, Atlanta, a 1950
graduate of the Henry W. Grady
School of Journalism, University
of Georgia, has joined the staff of
Radio Station WULA, Eufaula,
Ala.
As an undergraduate in the Uni
versity, Mr. Rushton was a mem
ber of Di Gamma Kappa and Kap
pa Sigma,
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
Athenian Gets
Mississippi Post
J. V. Boatrier, native of Athens,
Ga.,, has been named assistant
manager of the J. C. Penney store
in Jackson, Miss. Mr. Boatner has
had nine years of service with J.
C. Penney in Athens and Rome,
Ga., and Gadsden, Ala.
» S S
g Yea :‘%
;N L e
S Y o
T PR i
B SEE Koo, JIIATIRSE -
o PR = §
me .
SR o N
LR e
Mrs. Phyllis Goff, 1902 Park
Avenue, Indianapolis, Indiana, is
now able to go about her house
work in less time than it takes to
talk about it. That is, of course,
since Mrs. Goff has been taking
wonderful HADACOL. Mrs. Goff
had been suffering fromr a defi
ciency of Vitamin 81, 82, Niacin,
and Iron, which HADACOL con
tains.
Now full of pep and energy,
Mrs. Goff is able to give this fine
statement: “It’s pretty bad when
you are in a run-down condition
when you are only 32. That in
cludes headaches, loss of sleep
. .. I was also terribly nervous
all the time. Then I heard about
the wonderful results other folks
were getting from HADACOL.
After taking a few bottles my
nerves were calmed. I got a good
night's sleep, and I gained five
pounds. I think HADACOL is
wonderful. I recommend it to all
my friends.”
This is another one of the state
ments the fine folks who have
been taking HADACOL gave us.
Yes, there are thousands and
thousands of people all over the
country who are getting blessed
relief from wonderful HADACOL
when they needed Vitamins 81,
82, Iron, and Niacin,
Let HADACOL Help You
...if you are suffering from
stomach distress, nervousness, in
sommia, constipation, aches and
pains of neuritis, or a general run
down condition, caused by such
deficiencies. Remember, it will
cost you nothing if HADACOL
doesn’'t help you. Buy either the
trial size for $1,25 or the large
family or hospita! size for $3.50
and if you are not completely sat
isfied—return the bottle and your
money will be refunded.
() 1950; The Leßlane Corpora
tion. : (adv.)
THE DEVELOPMENT OF ANTIBIOTIC
WONDER DRUGS STILL GOES ON
. By EDWIN P. JORDAN, M. D. .
Written for NEA Service
Everyone has become so used to
new “wonder” drugs of the anti
biotic family which attack infec
tious diseases that it is hard to
keep up with them. Penicillin
came first. The history of this re
markable substance, which was
originally obtained from a mold,
is too well known to need repeat
ing.
Millions of people who have re
ceived penicillin for pneumonia,
meningitis, and a host of other dis
eases, owe their lives to that sub
stance, or at least have been
spared perhaps weeks or months
of costly battling with the grim
reaper. ,
Penicillin has been followed by
other substances related to molds
or to germs in the soil. One of
them, streptomycin, has proved
particularly useful in certain germ
infections of the wurinary tract
which yield to it better ghan they
do to penicillin. ‘
Another of these antibiotics is
aureomycin. The antibotic has
brought a whole new list of dis
eases under better control. Par
ticularly important is the fact that
it seems to work against some of
those infections with living in
vaders smaller than germs, such as
viruses or rickettsiae, which are
not touched at all by penicillin.
Developed at about the same
time as aureomycin is chloram
phenicol or chloromycetin. This
antibiotic, too, aets on many of the
smaller infecting agents and on
some of the germ infections even
better than penicillin. Indeed,
aureomycin - and chloremycetin
have both been used against. so
PENNEY’S
."MON - E - SAVERS
*“"wnfiyv»«\‘ ?t‘ ' '
WHO ELSE BUT PENNEY'S
Lo naame e
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oo S
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Frosted With White Embroidery G |
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many infections that it has been
quite confusing to keep track of
the situation.
Latest Addition
The most recent addition to the
group of battlers against disease
is terramyein. As yet this has
been tried on a comparatively
small number of patients but the
early reports are also favorable.
Those people whose memories
go back to the terrible infections
of 15 or more years ago, and to the
little which could be done for suf
ferers from many infectiog at that
time, are the ones who fully real
ize what a powerful weapon
against disease the development of
the antibiotics has brought into the
hands of the medical profession.
May their tribe increase.
. LA
INVESTORS MUTUAL
Dividend Notice No. 39
The Board of Directors of Investors
* Mutual has declared a quarterly
dividend of fifteen cents per share
payable on July 21,1950 to sharee
holdersonrecord asof June 30,1950,
H. K. Bradford. President
Robert E. Statham
140 Morton Ave. Ph,, 2191-W
. - -
First Christian
.
CYF To View
- -
Movie Tonight
The program tonight at the First
Christfan Church CYF will fea
ture a movie in place of the rege
ular Sunday night service for this
group.
The movie, which lasts for
twenty-five minutes, is entitled
“The Kyoto Story” and tells the
ICE COLD WATERMELONS
APPLES — PEACHES — GRAPES |
PLUMS — LEMONS ,
ORANGES — BANANAS — TOMATOES [
- And Other Fruits.
| ALSO MOORE'S ICE CREAM
& MARTIN'S FRUIT STAND ¢
/ 512 'W. Broad St. }
Open All Day Everyday
SUMBAY, JOLY 16, 1950,
story of an Americam missio,. .
in Japan. The theme of the Dice
ture is a conversation Betwee, .
missionary and an American G. | A
through which the importance ;
the mission enterprise is realise,;
The CYF group of this chy.
meets every Sunday night at ;
o’clock in the basement of : [
church. Tonight's movie will |
shown in the regular meeting place
and at the regular meeting timc.
All members of this young peo
ple’s group are urged to atic:
tonight’s movie.