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PAGE EIGHT
According to our Georgia State
Patrol, it's not just the daredevil
1 i
-~ 88 Aearavs G I g fausss
caused by average people who take
one foolish chance or drive a lit
tle too fast. , One of the worst
times for foolish chances or speed
ing is when average people are
on their vacations. Please get
there and back safe.
Both frankincense and myrrh
are obtained from trees.
Where's George!
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) Mathews-Carr, Inc ™.
gone 20 ... ~
C. A. Trussell Motor Co.
You'll go overboard for these
clean-cut guaranteed Used
Cars,
1949 FORD TUDOR “6” CYL
INDER SEDAN - Origi
nal grey finish, new tires,
radio, heater, spotless in=-
terior, and like new
throughout—
sl,39s.oo
1947 FORD FORDOR SEDAN
—Black baked enamel
paint job. Also equipped
with new W. S. W tires,
new seat covers, and clean
inside and out., Motor has
just been worked over.
A real buy—
51,095.00
1947 MERCURY CLUB COUPE
~—Good biege finish, new
tires, neater, new seat cov
ers, mechanically O, K,
and easy terms—
sl,o9s.oo
1946 FORD STATION WAGON
~—Qriginal dark blue fin
ish, extra good rubber, ra
dio, heater, and wood in
good condition, motor runs 4
we 115995.00
$995.00
1946 MERCURY CONVERTI
BLE COUPE — Original
black finish, new Air Ride
W. S. W. wnves, radio,
heater, good top, and plas
tic seat coverss low mile
age and exceptionally
clean throughout.
$1,095.00
1946 CHEVROLET 4 - DOOR
SEPDAN — Original dark
and light green finish, ex~
tra good rubber, radio,
heater, seat covers, motor
in good condition—
sß9s.oo
1940 CHEVROLET 2 - DOOR
SEDAN—Good dark green
finish, excellent tires, ra
dio, heater, spotlight, seat
covers, motor has just
been worked over—
-5495.00
19560 CHEVROLET PICK-UP
TRUCK — Original dark
green finish, good tires,
heater, deluxe cab, only
driven 1,500 actual miles.
Tops in performance—
sl,29s.oo
1948 FORD 2 - TON LONG
WHEEL BASE TRUCK—
With two speed axle, and
8.25x20 duals and 7.50x20
fronts, with plenty of ser
vice yet to g 05895.00
$895.00
39 Other Used Cars and
Trucks to Select From,
Credit and Terms
handled in our offices.
‘(. A. TRUSSELL
Mofor (o.
“Established 1918”
Pulaski at Broad Phone 1097
Patsy-LynnFabricShop CLOSING - OUT - SALE Patsy-LynnFabricShop i
All Fabrics Are “First Quality”” - Al Fabrics Are Dan River Fabrics
- |
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Anxious to improve her tomboyish fingernails, this teen-ager has planned a hand-care program for her
summer vacation. She buffs her nails (top left) to rid them of ridges, and (lower left) uses nail cream
to coax pnruly cuticle into place. She completes her manicure by smoothing lotion into her hands.
Girls in their teens, whose In
terests shift overnight from jeans
to dancing frocks, often find them
selves with fingernails which don’t
quite match their new glamor
selves.
The years of tomboyish uncon
cern have left their mark in hang
nails, wild cuticles and ridged sur
faces. It takes more than a quick
session with a nail file to correct
this condition. But it can be done
—with a bit of time and patience,
The free hours of summer vaca
tion can be turned to golden ad
vantage if you begin your renova
tion now.
General improvement is your
first goal. Special problems can
be dealt with in their turn.
Get into the habit of real mani
cures. Instead of continuing the
hasty scissor-trims of your old
routine, try shaping your nails
with an emery board.
SMEAR
Chapter IX
Hildy’'s hands, surprisingly
strong, pushed him away at last.
“Bill, I don’t know what to say.”
Neither did Bill Jarvis:
“H-Hildy, I might as well come
c}ean. I guess it happened that
first time I saw you, playing ten
nlxls I iust got interested, that’s
a '"
“Maybe, Bill. And I won’t be
hypocritical enough to say I'm
sorry you did.. This has been
sweet, and swell. But I am sorry
that I let myself get interested too.
I should have kept my head. Be
cause it can’t work, ever. You're
Bev Coulter's guy. And you work
for her father. Can’t you see?”
“Yeah, I see,” he said dully.
She appeared to get possession
of herself. She sat up. “I hope you
gito. Bill, we've got to snap out of
l ."
“Hildy, do you think I'm a com
plete heel?”
“Heel?” Her eyes were smulg
ed, smoky. “No. You're not a heel
and neither am I. We've just run
up against something we can’t
handle. So”—she pulled away
from him—“you’d better forget
that you ever sat in a crazy leaky
old rowboat—and I'll forget it too.
It isn’t the cards, Bill. So why
go on making it tough?”
“Okay,” he said. “I won't make
it tough. But now you know.”
“And I know, now, exactly what
I have to do.” |
* " * ‘
Bev. Coulter made a remark-‘
“able recovery. She showed in mid
morning, fresh-faced and with
scarcely a trace of the cold’s rav
ages. Bill, fooling around on a
putting-green in front of the hotel,
stared in surprise as she came up.
“I can usually throw off a cold
overnight. But” — she explained
somberly—*“is it too soon for you,
darling?”
He was aware of a sudden feel
ing of guilt. “That really doesn’t
call for an answer, does it?” He
tried to sound casual.
“Not really.” Her eyes reminded
him disconcertingly of small black
searchlights. “But you'd have
known that I was much better to
day, Bill, if you'd ' troubled to
phone.” .
Conscious of bricky cheeks, he
mumbled: “Well, I did ask your
mother how you were. She said
l better, but that she wanted to keep
lyou in bed. I—l didn't want to
BY ALICIA HART
NEA Staff Writer
Work it from side to center. It
is harmful to saw back and forth.
Never file deeply into the corners.
Soreness develops, and the nails
tend to break.
Extreme points, unattractive at
any age, detract particularly from
the charm of a young girl. A soft
oval is preferable,
Smooth away the ridges of your
nails with a buffer and a powder
polish. Move in one direction only
to prevent overheating.
The next step is cuticle care—
an important one since short nails
look even stubbier when an un
cared-for cuticle further. dimin
ishes the apparent length.
Don’t maul your cuticles in a
CAMPAIGN
By Edwin Rutt
disturb you.”
She laughed dryly. “Lame, my
dear, but I'll buy.”
He felt like a louse. Engaged to
Bev, at Lookout Crest as the Coul
ters’ guest, but falling—at least he
could be honest privately-—falling
for another girl and trying to find
the courage to tell Bev so. His
eyes went down to clipped grass
and Bev’s sandaled feet.
“Fascinating, aren't they?”
Bill's head jerked up. “Wh
what?”
“My feet, I amagine,” Bev said.
“Whatever you're looking at.”
He flushed again. ‘“That’s be
cause you've got me, cold. I was
careless this morning.”
But another thought darted to
torment him. Was he hesitating in
coming clean with Bev because
her father paid his salary? Be
cause his future, insofar as he saw
it at present, depended on Joe
Coulter—therefore, indirectly, on
Bev?
_‘lf'so, he was worse than he had
suspected himself of being.
. “Poor old Bill,” Bev Said, at
ast.
“Yeah,” he said, irritated. “Poor
old Bill. And the other day I was
the ‘Newfoundland-dog-type.” You
seem to have a flair for making
me feel sort of overgrown and
dumb.” Sl e
“Maybe you are, Bill, but I'm
not,” Bev said. She was no longer
the gay, lovely, mink-coated %irl
he had escorted in New York, but
a woman. “I don't like cross-pur
poses and that seems to be pre
cisely where we are. You must
know, just as I do, that we’ve been
drifting away from each other. I
don’t know why, but something
seems to have happened here at
Lookout.” e g
Bill was aware only of doubt
and perplexity.
“Finding the going rugged,
Bill?” Bev went on. “Or are you
merely miles away?”
He took a grip on himself: “Bev,
I—l just don’t know what to say.”
Her hand waved impatient{y.
He had the absurd feeling she
didn’t want him to say anything.
“Obviously, you don't,” Bev
said. “And it isn't necessary. I've
just finished telling you that I'm
not completely dumb.”
Bill hoped she meant what he
thought she did. It might make it
easier for him to tell her that their
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
burst of sudden disgust. eGntle,
day-to-day treatment will pay the
highest dividends. After every
hand-washing, push your cuticles
back with a towel.
In addition, press them back at
manicuring time with a cotton
wrapped orange stick dipped in
cuticle oil or remour. Never cut
cuticles with your scissors except
to trim a severe handnail. Good
results can be obtained frora mas
saging nail cream into the cuticles
with the cushions of your fingers.
Choose your fingernail ;iolish to
complement your personality and
your way of life. Leave the blood
reds to the sophisticates, and select
a lively but not too vivid shade.
For girls in their early teens, col
orless polish is best.
~ Hand lotion is an oft-neglected
item on a teen-ager’s dressing ta
ble. Use it often to soften the skin
of your hands ‘and give your new
lovely nails a worthy setting.
engagement was all off, that he
was in love with someone else.
“Will you do something for me,
Bill?” she asked suddenly.
“Sure.” He spoke glibly,:eager
ly, grateful that the talk seemed
to be veering from a danger point.
“If I can.’
“You qualify it,” she shook her
head, “but no matter. Well, you're
our guest and it might look funny,
but what if I were to ask you to
go back to New York tonight?”
For a short space Bill blinked,
taken by surprise. .
“As your guest,” Bill said, final
ly and heavily, “I'd have to go.
But, very frankly, 1 wouldn’t want
1o0.”
Bev gave him a steady look
from eyes of black flint. Then she
ran swiftly up the path toward
the Inn. / :
(To Be Continued)
Scientists estimate the earth an
nually experiences as many as
60,000 earthquakes, big and little,
or about 164 a day.
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HIGCHLAND FLING IN ENGLAND — Kiltea
actor Caesar Romero and actress Vera Ellen do a highland fling
on the set of their latest film “Happy Go Lovely” in England.
TNUMBERE ‘
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OUTNUMBERED
WASHINGTON—Armies in tbe;}
past have been even more badly |
outnumbered than are the U. S.|
forces now fighting in Korea and |
still have won the victory. ‘
Yet when you look back overi
some of the campaigns and battles
of history, you find that an army;
fighting against superior numbers
has only about one chance in ten |
of being the victor. ‘
Maj. Robert B. Riggs, of the
Army General Staff Corps, makes
this estimate in an article in the
current issue of “Military Re- |
view,” published by the Command
and General Staff College at Fort
Leavenworth, Kas.
Battle Study
Major Riggs’ purpose, however,
was to study the battles in which
victory went to the smaller army.
Few as they were, many were
important. Four of them were
among the 15 decisive battles of
the world, as listed by the military
historian, Sir Edward S. Creasy.
Major Riggs’ analysis indicated
to him that victoey—in practically
all battles, from Marathon to the
campaigns of World War 11, has
depended primarily on the human
factor: That is, the leaders’ gen
eralship and tactical skill and the
troops’ discipline, training, mo
rale, bravery and determination.
This has been true, he said,
whether the fighting was done
with swords and spears or with‘
rockets in the newest jet planes.
The development of modern
weapons, said Riggs, has given
new yardsticks for measuring the
comparative strength of opposing‘
forces. The sheer weight of num
bers is less significant than in the
past; fire power, air power and
speed in maneuver are what count,
rather than the number of men on
the front line. Still, however,
large numbers of supporting troops
and factory workers are needed to
put the new weapons and vehicles
in action. And if the human factor ‘
is not favorable, it can nullify the
effect of superior mechanical
equipment.
“Generally, you cannot count on
completely beating more than
about 2% times your own number,
except that today a new set of
numerical values must replace the
old,” Riggs wrote.
Cites England
In reviewing historical facts,
Riggs recalled, “England’s position
in history shows that smaller na
tions often defeat larger ones or
combinations ' thereof. Britain’s
population was outnumbered in
1588 when she conquered Spain,
and again in 1702 against the
French, Spanish and Bavarians, in
the Seven Years’ War, and in
1800.”
Among the battles he cited
were:
Marathon, 430 B. C., in which
the Greeks, outnumbered nine to
one, defeated the Persions through
their discipline and tactical skill.
Guagamela, 331 B. C. Darius the
Persian in Iraq outnumbered
Alexander of Macedon by eight to
one, Darius used almost modern
blitzgrieg methods, driving
breaches into the Macedonian line
with columns of elephants, scythe
wheeled chariots and cavalry. But
Alexander’s tactical skill kept his
few men fighting at the right
places at the right time. And
Darius fled from the field.
Tannenberg: 1914. General Von
Hindenburg, with less than 250,-
000 German troops, gained a clas
sic victory over two Russian
armies, comprising almost 500,000
men. They were commanded by
Generals Rennenkamp and Samso
nof. This is Riggs’ description of
PR ot e e
“Throwing out a cavalry division
to contsin the First Russian Ar
my, Hindenburg turned his back
and attacked Samsonof. Hinden- |
burg ran great risk of heing trap- |
ped, but he let Samsonof’s Slavs |
through his center and then closed i
| his own trap on the Russians, who
| were stumbling about in the forest. l
l Some 60,000 Russians died on the |
| battlefield, and 100,000 others were |
| taken prisoner.
' “With Napoleonic ease, Hinden
burg tihen about-faced his thou
| sands and took on Rennenkamp’s
Cossacks and infantry. Here again,
German arms prevailed. Another |#
batch of Russian prisoners (60,-|”,
000) were marched away ‘for the
I duration’.” ' ;
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'Short Cool Coiffures
Offer Simplified
Setfing Rautine
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This girl combs her newly
washed short hair into a simple
arrangement that will require no|
further setting. ;
By NEA Staff Writer
Short hair’s wonderful, accord
ing to most women who wear it.
Cool and convenient, it offers but
one problem—setting after a sham
poo. Any woman not adept at
making pin-curls finds herself
completely stymied by short hair.
The answer is: don’t try pin
curls. In most cases the ends are
too short to twist them properly
anyway. The result is usually a
fuzz or a stubbiness that would
have looked better left flat.
It’s better to stop struggling
with your old hair-set routine and
adopt an entirely new one to suit
your brief coiffure.
If your hair is the easily man
aged type, it may require nothing
more than pushing into shape with
a comb. This method works best
when there is a slight curl, either
natural or permanent.
For those whose hair requires
more effort, here are some simple
rules. First, put away your bobby
pins. Perhaps a couple should be
saved out for a loose curl over each
ear where the hair is cut longer.
However, the largest part of the
work once done by your pins
should now be taken over by your
brush.
Sprinkle a few drops of pomade
into your palm and rub the bris
tles lightly across your hand for
a thin coating. You then brush the
ends of your hair upward, coax
ing them into a casual, upturned
effect.
Clamps are useful for setting
shallow waves if you wish to cre
ate a softer arrangement. While
your locks are still wet after wash
ing, push a wave into your hair
with your fingers and fasten the
clamb to hold it. Sit in the sun
until it dries into place.
“Don’t take Death along on your
vacation,” is the word today from
our Georgia State Patrol. Every
summer many people see a happy
holiday end in tragedy, pain and
bereavement, simply because
someone was careless or indif
ferent. Vacation should mean a
two-week rest, not a permanent
one.
The flag of the Confederate
States of America, used during the
Civil War, was known as the Stars
and Bars.
Now She Shops
“Cash and Carry”.
Without Painful Backache
As we get older, stress and strain, overe
exertion, excessive smoking or exposure to
cold sometimes slows down kidney funce
tion. This may lead many folks to com
plain of nagging backache, loss of pep and
energy, headaches and dizziness. Getting
up nizi:ts or frequent passages may result
from minor bladder irritations due to cold,
dampness or dietary indiscretions.
If your discomforts are due to these
causes, don't wait, try Doan’s Pills, a mild
diuretic, Used successfully by millions for
over 50 years. While these symptoms may
often otherwise occur, it's amazing how
many times Doan's give happy relief —
help the 15 miles of kidney tubes and filters
flush out waste. Get Doan’s Pills today!
L T R
f o ON
LTI SO 0y
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LAST T!ME}%_TONIGHT WEDNESDAY - Tl!l‘l(é.ng"
yeotidw Heroesin Action! T——
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Eé“ ar woloß & e
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T A SR FAY BAINTER s BRETAIGNE WINDUST He s
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Screen Play by Howard Kech » Produeed by BUDDY AOLER - Birecied by RUBOLPY wii{
LAST TIMES TODAY
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BETTY HUTTON — HOWARD KEEL
“ANNIE GET YOUR GUN”
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JOAN é:st(;mn.o
WM. HOLDEN
"“DEAR WIFE"
Read The Banner-Herald Want Ads.
TONSDAY, JULY 18, itee.
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— Last Day —
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