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PAGE TWO
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7 AN
BY Grace N|es F'etCher Copyright 1950 by NEA Service, Inc ‘fl:
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¥ Gloria did not have the faintest idea who lived above or below her . . . but one day
she did catch a glimpse of the people who lived next door.
It the Jovely young Mrs, Miltia
_des Brown, formerly of Mt. Ver
non Streei, Beacon Hill, Boston,
and more recently of the Splendide
{Apariments, Prospect Park, Brook
ilyn, had learned to cook before
she was married, she might never
have known, outside of the movies,
ow one glance at the wrong end
of a gun can turn your mouth
derier than a salted codfish; and
certainly her bridegroom of four
months would never have met
Lieutenant McGann of Homicide.
It’'s funny how things work out;
. & moron writes a cookbook and
$0 two people die, but not from
what they ate. The cookbook ex
plicitly said in small, firm print
“Cut holes with a knife in the top
gfi; erust.” Why didn’t it tell
ides the really important things,
such as, “Be sure to check all
knives before putting them away
in the drawer, so they cannot be
used for sticking into someone?”
Not that you would cxspoet-meh
a thing to happen at the Splendide.
It was & very swanky address
across E:ghth Avenue from the
Park, with a big blond doorman
named Eric who, draped with
more gold braid than an admiral |
of the Navy, paraded over the
huge-hush criental rugs in the
fretted marble lobby.
“Goodness, can we afford the
Taj Mahal, darling?” Gloria had
gasped after one lock. “How won- |
derful to hear the birds sing, right 1
in the eity!” ‘
“Owur apartment isn't exactly on |
the Park,” Miltiades murmured |
uneasily. |
1t most definitely was not. Tt |
turned out to be two and a half |
rooms on the court where only fire |
escapes sprouted and the only bird
Gloria ever heard was the parrot
the woman across the ecourt put|
out on her fire escape every morn- 1
ing to bathe and which sang ap- |
propriately and monotonously over :
and over, “Im forever blowing
bubbles!” (Occasionally he varied
this by squawking, *“Help!”) |
The bedroom was barely as
large =s Gloria’s clothes closet |
back on Mt. Vernon Street, nndl
the kitchenette was so tiny you |
had to step out into the living |
room 1g open the oven doo”.
But the Splendide was near
enough the Eighth Avenue subway
so that Miltiades could communte
rapidly to Manhattan where he
was, as yet, 8 very junior execu
tive, and whose chief aim was to‘
finish his busy work at the office
and get home ag fast as possible to
his beautiful !‘n'l%o (‘}loriu.
Milti never forgiven his
hthermtwohn Nemo Brown,
head dttbto clu:‘iod dnlx)u uttl:i_
pm &t one those -
versities which , infest ‘gooton
worse than fleas, for naming him
after omes of the more famous
Athenian i,cnouh
“T wish ghadtofizhtnllthe
first grade, the blt‘goE!” he told
kis mother after st day at
publie school while she wiped off
enough blood and dirt to be sure
he was hers, His hatred for all
Funeral Notice
ANDREWS, ~— The friends and
reletives of Mrs. Sallie Roberta
Andrews, 094 Boulevard; Mr.
&M Mrs. R. L, Easler, Juliette,
a.] Mr, and Mrs. 8. C. McEl
urray, Moran, Ga.; Mr. and
Cherles E. Leatherman,
hmond, Calif.; Mr., and Mrs.
H an, Athens; Mr. and
: . L Andrews, Marianna,
s Mre. G. W. Andrews, Ma
g GH‘ Mr, Cicero Arnold,
.4 Mr. and Mrs, E. J.
. xontuuma Ga.; Mr.
Mys. €. M, Arnold, Orlando,
§ Mr. and Mre. J. L. Arnold,
Green, Fla,; Mr, and
Ars. Dallas Arnold, ‘{'ampa, Fla,
e invited to attexa the tuneral
Ballie Roberta Andrews,
afternoon, July 22nd,
+ 8 two o'clock from IMemorial
Macon, Ga, The follow
i gentiomen will serve as
Bfig . Rober! Ane
i -y o
3 . A%'
: Mr, Bobbie L
5 Hershal Andsows,
i g »
' w J the Re
officiate. Interment
L a Funeral
brass was further intensified by
being a GI in Battery A during the
recent unpleasantness, so he was
scowling when he arrived home
from Germany and strode into his
father's office,
“Is Pop in?” he asked the sec
retary and then his eyes widened
to take in Gloria sitting there at
her typewriter with a dample going
in and out at the corner of her
luscious red mouth.
“You must be Miltiades!” Gloria
breathed admiring his discus
throwing shoulders, his smooth
black hair and his marvelous tan.
“No, he’s not in but I'm your fath
er’s secretary. Could I take a mes-
BT - e
“l think,” said Miltiades, “I'll
stick around.”
Gloria was a cute little trick
who had to look up to his six
feet-two, but though she was only
five feet nothing, she had every
thing else, such as jade-green eyes
that promised things, hair the de
llicioul color of Golden Bantam
corn that made your mouth water,
’a tiny perfect figure your hands
ached to curl around, and brains
she was smart enough to hide.
- “Well, Sergeant Brown?” she
smiled teasingly when he had fin
ished taking this all in. Call him
“Miltiades,” he had insister; when
she said it, and for the first time
he could forgive his Pop.
“I think it is a very cute name!”
she retorted indignantly. “Digni
caden boss
fied and yet —er —stripping. Its
cadences go so well with Brown,
What I means is, it's so killer-dil
-ler distinctive.” She added men
tally: “Mrs. Miltiades Brown,
hmmm?”
And so they. Wfi!’e :narried.
Gloria herself was an anach
ronism, a girl who could take her
education or leave it. Believe it
or not, she wore very high-heel
ed shoes in spite of being Phi
Beta Kargla from Radcriffe Col
lege. which was why she got her
job with Professor Brown in the
first place.
After three years what she did
not know about the origin of early
Greek and Roman drama would
go on the head of a pin, and she
called W. Shakespeare affection
ately “Willy.” But her vocabulary
of slang was equally extensive and
the way she scattered it here and
there among the classies added pi
quancy to her remarks,
But she had one big drawback
as a wife; she could not make
‘pastry. She excused this lack of
‘the culinary art reasonat:’l‘y to Mil
tiades before their wedding.
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LIONS WHOOP IT—Parading down Chicago’s Michigan Boule
vacd, delegates so the Lions convention from Wisconsint Delis, Wis,,
go fato a wild Indian war daice. Rom!qew
“You'd never ask a businessman
‘Can you bake a pie?”” So why a,
businesswomen? Besides, anyone |
who can read Greek in the original ‘
ought to be able to knead up a |
tasty crust in no time.” i
“Of course, Sweet,” agreed Mil- i
tiades kissing the dimple in thel
corner of her fascinating cherry
ripe lips. |
But if you knead pie crust, it
very shortly resembles something
l the Dodgers could well use a bat
. unon, as Gloria found out the first
morning after their honeymoon
when Miltiades left her reluctantly
to go to the office.
“But I did exactly what it said
in the book!” Gloria wailed, torn
hetween tears and laughter when
‘they tried to cut her first pie with
| a knife and broke the dish instead.
| “It's the stove,” Miltiades com=-
sorted her, remembering some
thirg he’d once heard his mother
say. “You have to get used to it.
Why bake anyway with a bakery
just around the corner?” he asked
hovefully.
“Goodness, I wouldn’t let an old
pie lick me!” Gloria reproached
him. “Just you wait, my doubting
Miltiades.”
.
Privately she thought he might
be right; it was such a queer little
stove mting that way on top of
the icebox; but though she kept on
trying, day after day, she couldn't
seem to get the combination and
all her efforts came to an untimely
end in the garbage pail. She was
too proud to offer Miltiades any~
thing short of perfection, after the
crack about the bakery.
“If enly,” she thought wistfully,
“I had some older woman to ask
what I do wrong!” >
Put ghe didn’t know a living
soul in Brooklyn, except the cock
voach in her sink, and even he
scuttied away at her coming. There
must have been 300 people in the
apartment, living under the same
roof, but the only one who ever
spoke to her was Eric, the door
man, so inquire magnificently,
“Would Modom like a taxi?” When
he knew perfectly well that all
anyone could afford who live in
Apartment 7B was the ,übw‘ay.
Some times after not saying a
syllable aloud all day, Gloria was
so lonesome she could have
screamed. Even your neighbors
coming up in the gilt, mirrored
elevator with you either tilted
their noses as if you were merely
a bad smell or looked right
through three of you in the mir
rors. It gave you an uncanny
feeling, wondering if you were
really there. .
Gloria did not have the faintest
idea who lived above or below her,
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
though she could hear them taking
baths and bawling out their wives,
but one evening she did catch &
glimpse of the people who live
next door, when she and Miltidats
were coming home unexpectedly
late.
They looked foreign, rather like
interesting foreigners, she noticed
while Miltiades was fumbling sos
his key. The woman, amesle of
bosom, with carefully cniffed hair,
wore a black velvet evening cape
and the man’s evening clothes
were expensive, too, but there was
something odd about him, Gloria
decided, scanning his long
swarthy face which had a white
scar on the left cheek.
And then Gloria realized what
was wrong. His green felt hat was
decidely out of place with din
ner jacket.
(To Be Continued)
.
Athenians At
.
Methodist
.
Lay Meeting
. Six Athenians are at Lake Juna
luska, N. C., attending the’ Lay
} men'’s Confeernce of the Methodist
Church, which began yesterday
'and remains in session through
Sunday.
Those attending from Athens are
Dr. and Mrs. N. G. Slaughter, Mr.
and Mrs. J. Smiley Wolfe, jr., Mr.
and Mrs. Arthur Darden.
The group will hear a number
of speakers on various subjects of
interest to laymen. Platform
speakers are Dr. Ralph W. Stock
man, pastor, lecturer and church
leader of New York City; Dr. J.
Earl Moreland, president, Ran
dolph-Macon College, Ashland,
Va.; Alexander Nunn, Birming
ham, Ala., editor of The Progress=-
ive Farmer; and Robert G. May
field, Chicago, associate secretary
of the General Board of Lay Ac
tivities of the Methodist Church.
Gi's
(Continued from Page One)
stopped singing to recount:
“I knocked out a machingun to
the left of our jeep as we drove
out of Taejon. Coyle here at the
Wheel did not even know it, but
machinegun bullets weren’t the
worst we had to worry about as
we came out. They were firing
50s at us from a truck mount.”
Pvt. Virgil A, Coyle, 17, Supe
rior, Wis., said he was with a
group directed to clean out snipers.
“We went into a village behind
two halftracks. They cleaned the
way down the road and we fol
lowed. When we got across a
bridge the engineers blew it up
while we todk the hill overlook
ing it,” Coyle said.
Then three North Korean tanks
opened up. They crossed the river
without using a bridge.”
Coyle, a handsome lad with a
sunburned nose, said the tanks
moved to the hill and fired green
flares. ¢
“The Reds on the bottom of the
hill'saw us outlined in the light
and started shooting at us. But we
lay in ditches. .
“It was 45 minutes before we
got away. But we kept busy with
machineguns and M-1 rifles, The
North Koreans mostly had automa
tic weapons.”
Coyle was glad to learn a buddy,
Pect, Russell Combs, 22, of Coman
che, Okla., had come through ail
right. Combs was with combat en
gineers blowing up bridges.
Pfe. David Lysaker, 19, Onalas
ka, Wis., said he had a real night
of it;
- “We were patrolling 25 miles
of road and prepared for demoli
tiotns when we got the word to pull
out, X
“There was a North Korean pa
trol moving in. I went into a two
and one-half ton truck to pick up
the outposts. I got the first one
ok., but the second was gone.
They started firing at us. About
50 infantrymen I picked up along
the road were ready to_get out of
there. We found a South Korean
who knew & back trail. Three tires
ptle'w off but some how we made
it
Road Cross-Fire
Pfc. Wilbert Post -of Avaca,
Wis., was driving water supplies.
“I pulled through by jumping
trucks four times,” he said “Fif
ties were cross-firing the road and
knocked out one truck after an
other. Strangely, no one got hit—
at least, no one I saw.”
These kids who fled throughout
the night and were happy to es
cape with their lives were not de
feated. They came through a night
of death and fire like heroes. The
inspiration of real leadership was
plain in the way they talked and
acted today.
Dean had a record of fearless
fighting. Both in World War II and
in the Korean war he exposed
himself to enemy fire to lead his
men.
A few days ago he pulled some
of his front line troops out of the
fire in heavy fighting near the
Ku‘r{n river by a peronally led at
tack.
Dean, who was awarded a dis
tinguished serve ¢ross in World
War II for bravery, was well link
ed by his men. The tall, rusty
haired general put his fighting be
fore his personal safety.
The 50-vear-old general had
served as military governor of Ko
rea from 1947 to 1949 and tempor
arily was commander of U. S
Armyv forces in Korea.
A few crushea mint leaves add
ed to pineapple juice make a de
licious summer cooler. Serve
strained over ice cubes and add a
mint mfli and a maraschino cher
ry }t}o each glass for a pretty gar
nish.
G~
Uiy
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WAR IS LIKE THIS—A scene of pathos is caught in this remarkable picture taken at a first-ai ’
. station somewbhere near the battle front in South Korea. An Army chaplain bends over.a wounde |
Wmerican soldier, comforting him as-best he can.
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"PINT-SIZE HERCULES — willy Gallacher, 5-foot, 6-inch, 147-pound Glasgow strong
man, demonstrates strength by towing 2 sixteen-ton bus with his teeth at Frankfurt, Germany.
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FATHER TELLS SO N Actor Stirling Hayden, one of Hollywood’s most avid sea enthu=
siasts, describes the clipper ship “Young America” so his son, “Windy,” in their Bel Air, Cal, home. ”’ |
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FRIDAY, JULY 21, 1950,
, Dr. N. G. Slaughter, Athens.
Conference Lay Leader, North
Georgia Conference, will attend
the annual meeting of the General
Board of Lay Activities in Chica
go July 25-27. This group of oute
standing lay leaders and minise
ters is responsible for planning
znd supervising Methodism’s total
program of lay activities.
Among those speaking at the
Chicago meeting will be Dr, Sam
uel McCrea Cavert of the Federal
Council of Churches and six bish
ops of The Methodist Church.
Chilton G. Bennett of Chicago is
executive secretary of the board,
whose president is Ray H. Nichols,
Vernon, Tex., newspaper editor,
(Continued from Page One)
Ralph H. Tolbert was named acte
ing head of the Division of Voca=
tional Education to succeed the
late J. T. Wheeler, Geerge L.
O’Kelley jr. will take the place of
Mr. Tolbert as head of the agri
cultural teacher training program
in this division.
Additions to the University fac
ulty are James H. Burkhalter, as
sistant. professor of physics;
Charles D. Cooper, assistant pro
fessor of physics; and Woodrow R.
Byrum, professor of pharmacy;
James F. Lahey, assistant pro
fessor of geography and geology;
William C. Sears, assoeciate pro
fessor of physics; Mrs. Dorothea
Edwards, instructor in the dem
onstration school; Charles W.
Hartman, instruetor in pharmacy;
and John W. Foster, assistant pro
fessor of veterinary hygiene.
Music Professor
In the Division of General Ex
tension, Earl E, Beach was ap
pointed associate professor of mu
sic and Woodham W. Cauley, di
rector of the Columbus Off-Cam
pus Center.
New members on the staff of
the Atlanta Division include
Charles Henry Sanders, assistant
professor of English; Gaines Win
ningham Walter, associate profes
sor of English; James Whitney
Bunting, professor of economics;
Louis Koteles, instructor in art; J.
C. Horton Burch, associate profes
sor of English; John W. Sawyer,
assistant professor of mathema
tims; Robert S. Christian, assist
ant professor of mathematics; Vir
ginia M. Klaenhammer, instructor
in nursing education; May Sand
ers, part-time temporary instruc
tor in nursing education; M. Clyde
Hughes, associate professor of
economics; and Harbin B. Lawson,
assistant professor of health and
physical education.
Dean Biscoe also announced that
the following persons have been
granted leaves of absence to do
advanced work: Reuben J. Gam
brell, assistant professor of art;
Robert J. Froemke, instructor in
business administration; Mary J.
Tingle, instructor in education;
Floride Moore, associate professor
of education; and Milton E. Kel
ley, assistant professor of business
administration in the Atlanta Di
vision.
(Continued From Page One)
tees both took up the bills
In other developments:
The Marine corps serit out calls
to active duty for all its organized
reserve ground units, about 47,000
officers and enlisted men, The
Navy said several of its air re
serve units are going on active
duty. The Army alerted units of
regular troops in all six contint
ental areas, for movement to the
far east.
The Commerce Department
cancelled all existing licenses to
ship U. S. goods to Communist
China. The goods affected are said
to have no direct mffitary impor
tance but do have some potential
strategic value.
If you like to serve lunch and
breakfast together on a week-end
day, fruit, broiled ham slice with
scrambled eggs, eoffee ecake and
coffee make a satisfying meiu.
Asbestos workers ° sometimes
suffer from asbestosis, caused by
inhaling dust from the mineral.
G INE FOR SCRATCHES
ST
MOROLINE
Sotd in Athens At
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Athens’ Most Complete
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