Newspaper Page Text
SUNDAY, JULY 23, 1950. »
i Jhe| ONESOME BRIDE NN
7 \
flßLG.rg..c-.e._.._Nle_S,_E|etCher N Copyright 1950 by NEA Service, Inc. : 1
THE STORY: Gloria and Milti
.des Brewn, newlyweds, live at
the Splendide Apartments, near
prospect Park, Brooklyn. The
prowns, lately of Boston, are in a
sirange eity and Gloria did not
{earn how to cook before she was
married. When she fails misera
ply s¢ making apple pie, she
wishes she had an older woman
ior a friend. It was then that she
heging to notice the prosperous
wnd inferesting looking couple who
tive next door.
® * »
II
The next morning when Gloria
was starting out for the super
market on Fifth Avenue where
she did her shopping because it
«ae cheaper, she noticed a letter
not quite slid under the door of
the interesting family next door
and, her heart thumping for fear
s:omeone would see her, she picked
up the letter. . s
"His mame was Benito Benoni.
“Glissendo, like running down
piano keys,” Gloria thought it
sounded, wondering if she’d ever
get to know them. Being opera
singers, or artists or something
exciting would explain the green
hat because artists notoriously
dressed #nd acted as they pleased.
Later that very day, she and
Mrs. Benoni actually came face to
tface over, of all things, their gar
hage pails!
Gloria and Miltiades wused to
giggle because this was such a
ritzy apartment that even the jani
tor speke French, with a Brooklyn
accent. Every ‘morning at ‘' 10
o'clock sharp he would appear at
at the bottom of their dumb waiter
shaft and bellow: “Debris! Debris,
ladies!” He pronounced the final
5 like a cat hissing. And seven
ilights up and down the shaft, 14
doors would open and housewives
MOVIES
S A A
PALACE—
Sun.-Mon.~Tues. — “The Out
riders,” starring Joel McCrea, Ar
lene Dahl. Moments in Music.
Safety Second. News.
Wed.-Thurs.-Fri.-Sat. — “Secret
Fury,” starring Claudette Colbert,
Robert Ryan, Danger Sloths,
What’s Up Doec. News.
GEORGIA—
Sun.~-Mon. “The Iroquois-Trial,”
starring George Montgomery,
Brenda Marshall. Horse Show.
Dog Show. News.
Tues.~-Wed. — “Who Done It,”
starring Bud.Aé)bott, You Caostello,
Boy and the Eagle. It's Summer
time,
Thurs.-Fri. — “Cheaper by the
Dozen,” starring C&: Webb,
Myrna Loy, Jeanne Crain. Matty
Malheek & Ore." News. 7
Sat, — “Million Dollar Kid”
starring Leo Gorcey, Huntz Hall.
Oh My Nerves. Candid Miero
vhone,
STRAND-- ¢
Mon.-Tues — “Rusty’s Birth
lay,” starring Ted Donaldson,
Tohn Titel. Women of Tomorrow.
Action- with Rod and Real. Tick
Toek T'uckered.
Wed.-Thurs, — “The Forbidden
street,” starring Dana Andrews,:
\aureen O’Hara, Leo Gorcey,
Huntz Hall. Angels in Disguise.
Fri. - Sat. — “Taming of the
‘Nest,” starring Bill Elliott. - His
“x Marks the Spot. Undersea
Kingdem — Chapter 4. !
RITZ —
Sun-Men. — %In the Navy”
starring Bud Abbott, Lau Costello.
Horse and Buggy Days. Leghorn
Blows at Midnight.
Tues. — “Claud Casey and the
Sriar Hoopers Show”—on the
State, “Mary Ryvan, Detective”
starring Marsha Hunt, John Litel.
Nurse to Your. Corilla Hunt.
Wed ~-Thurs. — “The Barkleys
0 Preoadway,” starring Fred As
-1 Cinger Rogers. His better
naitt
Fri-Sat. — “Crooked River,”
starring Jimmy Ellison, Russ Hay
len. Fuzzy Knight. Love at First
"R.w ¥ing of the Jungleland —
( har —’,( Y :‘
DRIV IN—
Sun. — “Sundowners,” starring
Robert Preston, Robert Sterling,
John Barrymore, jr. Prize Fighter.
Upe an’ Downs Derby.
Mon.-Tues. — “Wake of the Red
Witch.” starring John Wayne, Gail
f\f:ussw 1. Cat that Hated ° People.
News
Wed -Thurs. — “Johnny Belin
da,” starring Jane Wyman, Lew
Avres, Pluto’s Heartthrob. News.
Fri—" Angels with Dirty Faces”
slarring James: Gagney, Pat
O'Brien. Polka Dot Puss.
_St. — “Buckaroo from Powder
fiver,” starring Charles Starrett.
Radio Rict. Australian Surfmas
ters. Mouse Cleaning.
n
Railroad Schedules
SEABOARD AIRLINE RY.
\rriva]l and Departure of Trains
Athens, Georgia
cave for Elberton, Hamlet and
New ¥ork and East—
-11:22 a. m—Air Conditioned.
4:45 p, m.—Air Conditioned,
Legve for Elberton, Hamlet and
#ast—-
2:18 8, .— (Local).
Leave £r Atlanta, South and
West—
-2‘23 ». m.—Ajr Conditioned,
6D &, 3~ (Local).
“M p, m.-klr Conditioned,
@ENTRAL OF GEORGIA
RAILROAD
‘Arrives Athens (Daily) 18:96 pm.
Lsaves Athens (Dafly) 415 pm.
o . e —
*-OYMN RAILWAY SYSTEM
. Lula and Commercs
Agrive 9:00 a. m.
« Best and West
=B9%ve Athens 9:00 a. m.
AN e e
@BORGIA RAILROAD
- Week Day Only
R B 2 30 Dewerts T:00 p. w.
81 Arrives 9:00 & m.
JEued Trains,
TN : f\xé FaaE N
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S o T b e
Did delivery boys usually wing at the customer?
or maids would deposit the debris
pails at the dumbwaiter, beginning
at the top floor, sank slowly to
ward the basement.
Gloria and Mrs. Benoni being on
the top floor had to hurry to get
theirs on the dumbwaiter first, and
it was hard not to see the older
woman a mere two feet away. She
looked plumper and more mother
ly in a pink print house dress with
her gray hair just a suspicion
rumpled as if she’'d slept with a
net on to save her wave and Gloria
wondered wistfully if she dared
venture “Good morning.” Better
not, she decided, dumping her
pail on with such energy that the
lid feH off and her latest concrete
pie fell onto the dumbwaiter with
a thud.
¢ ¢ @
Gloria giggled and Mrs. Benoni
could hardly help smiling as the
bride explained ruefully, “I've
been married four months now and
I can’t manage a decent crust yet.
I can’t imagine where I go wrong.
And my husband does so love ap
ple pie!” '
“A bride?” The older woman’s
face softened. “My Benny loves
apple pie, too. With little slivers
of lemon in it. You never made it
that way? It is delicious.”
“It sounds wonderful,” Gloria
agreed so ardently that the older
woman hesitated. In her green
taffeta lounging pajamas with her
hair caught in a gay knet of curls
on the top of her small head, Glo
ria looked as young and artless as
a stray kitten, so Mrs. Benoni sug
gested, “Why don’t you come over
into my kitchen and I'll show you
how to make pie crust that is pie
crust!” :
“Now?” Gloria gasped, seizing
opportunity by the tail.
“If you want,” the older woman
agreed. e
o ek 2§t e @
Not only a‘cooqdfig 1&?& but a
friend at last! Excited, Gloria
loaded a big tray with everything
she might need, apples, sugar,
flour, cinnamon, lemon, lard —
anything else?—oh yes, a knife to
prick the crust so the juice
wouldn’s sizzle over and fill Mrs.
Benoni's apartment with black
smoke like it had yours.
At their kitchen shower some
months ago, some wag had pre
sented Gloria and Miltiades with
a “Mr. and Mrs.” set, two, knives
with sturdy steel blades and bright
red handles, on one of which was
lettered “Mr. M. B.” and on the
other, “Mrs. M. B.” while both
bore the touching legend, “No
knife can cut our love in twe.”
They were silly but proved use
ful so Gloria added the “Mr”
knife to her already loaded tray
and started out, but before she
could knock at the next door, it
opened silently, swiftly.
“Thank you, I do have my hands
pretty full, Mrs. Benoni,” Gloria
murmured and then her eyes wid
ened for her hostess had gone
white,
“You know my name!”
“I know it was awful of me to
pick up your letter,” Gleoria con
fessed, dimpling, “but it was just
lying there by your door and I
was so darn homesick! I hadn’t
spoken to anyone for days ...”
It was impessible not to believe
her. Mrs. Benoni looked relieved
and led the way into a kitchen as
big as Gloria’s whole apartment,
with more ehremium than on a
new car, and room for not only an
enormous electric stove standing
on its own legs instead of jittering
on the icebex, but for a washer,
a deep freeze and all the other
gadgets at which Gloria looked
wistfully in the catalogues when
Miltiades had gotten a raise.
Mrs. Benoni did net offer to
take her on a four of the rest of
the apartment but you could see
through the door that it turned the
corner, fronting on the park, and
the furnishings, while a little too
Hollywood for Gloria's taste, were
obviously very expensive. Figur
ing on the hundred and twenty
five you paid for your two and a
half rooms, the rent for all this
must be a king's ransom. Mr,
Benoni must be in a very lucra
tive business ‘ind.eed.
This idea was further fostered
in Gloria’s mind when, just as
they’d scattered flour on the board
and started to cuf in the lard for
the pie crust, the door beil rang
and a hat box from Ariadne’s was
delivered to Mrs. Benoni.
It was an adorable hat box in
gold and white stripes and a pea~-
cock blue ribbon for the handle,
but Mrs. Benoni looked startled
at the delivery boy, who, come to
think of it, was dressed rather
strangely for such an exclusive
hnttex;. He was a little wizened
man bright blue tKmts. a fan
jacket, and he wore the geen hat
Gloria was beginning to think was
a sort of uniform for Benoni and
Go. And did delivery boys usual
1y wink at the customer?
“The boss sent it" he told Mrs.
Benon{, hoarsely.
%“Oh,” said Mre. Benond.
“Thanks.”
She olosed the door and stood
holding it in her hand and Qloria
cried, “A new hat! I've never even
seen one from Ariadne’s! Do try
it on!”
“No, no,” Mrs. Benoni said has
tily. “I—Benny sent it and he al
ways likes to see how I look, first.
He's funny that way. Have you
cut up all your apples?”
Feeling unaccountably that she
had been urged to get the heck
out of there, Gloria hastily set to
work, seeing out of the corner of
her eye that Mrs. Benoni locked
the hat in the hall closet. Did she
think Gloria would swipe it? Still
it was rather sweet for Mr. Benoni
to be so wrapped up in his wife,
after being married all these years,
that he wanted to see her try on
his present first, Gloria decided.
(To Be Continued)
Butferflies Said
To Miorafe
Lona Disfances
Butterflies and moths are far
from being the stay-at-home in
sects one might suppose. Instead,
they have been known to migrate
several thousand miles and travel
over long stretches of water.
This is brought out in an article |
in The Times of London reporting
abeout seventy species of butterflies
on the British Isles, a fourth of
them migrants that seldom survive
the British winters. Half the Hawk
moths there and probably fifty
other species are immigrants.
The best known butterfly im
migrant is the Painted Lady
(Pyrameis Cardu), found all over
the world. During the British win=
ter it breeds in the desert belt that’
stretches across North Africa into
QP} . ¥rom. late March to early
‘May' a‘etg‘( bhtterflies‘*cross@flme'
Mediterranean -easily and fly
northward through Europe. Their
numbers vary greatly in the north
ern areas from year to year, but in
some years a few stragglers reach
as far as Iceland 2,000 miles from
their starting point.
One of the greatest butterfly
travelers is the North American
Monarch, prized by English col
lectors. It migrates southward in
the autumn along the New Eng
land coast. Whether it gets to
England by ships or flies the At
lantic is not known, although
there is said to be some evidenee
that it flies. In the last seventy
years more than 160 specimens
have been seen in Britain, mostly
in September.
Pretty Confrast
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Y AN R RN
BY SUE BURNETT
Your young daughter is sure to
be pleased with this adorable
yoked frock that combines two
gabrics with such” charm. Yoke
and sleeves are in one and boast
tiny ruffle trim. A longer sleeve
is provided for school wear.
Pattern No. 8612 is a sew-rite
perforated pattern in sizes 4,6, B,
10 and 13 years. Size 6,1% yards
of 39-inch; % yard contrast.
¥or this pattern, send 25 cents,
in COINS, your name, address,
size desired, and the PATTERN
NUMBER %o Sue Burneit (The
‘Banner-Herald) 1150 Avenue
Americas, New York 19, N. Y.
Sond 25 cents mow for the
Spring and Summer FASHION.
48 pages of new styles, fabrie
news, special features. Free pat
tern puinted inside the book. |
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
Business Heads
Nose Australian
Lobster Tails
By NEA Service
GERALDTON, Australia —
(NEA)—‘“The lobsters are crawl
in’” is the cry along the rocky
coasts of southern and western
Australia. To the Australian
fishermen, that cry is good news.
In the last two years, the big
land Down Under has discovered
that there’s a lot of American dol
lars to be had in the lobster trade
because of the demand for the
rock lobster tails Australia has in
abundance.
An American, Led B. Harford,
formerly of Inwood, N. Y., helped
discover the new export bonanza.
He saw the possibilities when he
was in Australia with the U. S.
Air Force. After the war, he re
turned to settle in Australia and
now heads one of the fast grow
ing lobster export companies,
First however, Harford and
other packers had to lick the one
big problem—how to transport the
highly-perishable lobster tails.
They sclved it with an unbroken
chain of refrigeration stagings that
began at the fishing ports and
finish at the point of delivery to
the consumer in America.
3 Off Run
The lobster fishermen, who give
up their net fishing operations
during the six-month lobster run,
work in a maze of reefs extending
over 50 miles off the Abrolho
Islands. They drop baited pots
in the ocean in the early morning.
Twenty-four hours later, they re
turn and bring their catch bacl to
their depot, usually one of the
islands. A two-man boat team
can earn as much as SI3BO in six
days.
Luggers put out from Gerald
ton, in the western part, every
week, stopping at the various
islands to land supplies for the
men and to pick up the week’s
catch. The luggers rush back to
Geraldton with the lobsters in
bags.
Since the packers will not ac
cept dead lobsters—they’ve learn
ed that it doesn’t pay to process
dead ones—speed is essential.
After being taken from the water,
a lobster will live at least 12 hours.
The luggers will have to get the
catch to the factories within that
time.
No matter what hour of what
day they reach Geraldton, the call
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UN OBSERVER — Col. Alfred
Katzin, above, of South Africa,
is serving as UN Secretary Gen=
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server in the Korean battle.
goes out for all hands to help in
the processing. Cars are sent out
to round up the fishermen’s wives,
sons and daughters to go to work.
There’s no rest until the whole
boatload is processed. :
Tails Removal
The tails are removed, the in
nards taken out and the flesh
washed a dozen times. Drained
and graded, the tails are wrapped
in cellophane, boxed and taken
into chambers for quick-freezing.
Less than a half-hour elapses be
tween the time the tail is removed
until it is frozen. Trucks then take
the frozen tails to the ports for
shipment to America.
What's left of the lobster—the
legs, claws and head—is ground
down into pouliry food meal. Some
BROMEN-OUT
TEARS
BECAUSE UGLY, ITCHY SKIN MARS BEAUTY
You’ll smile quick— gy
Black and White Oint- =)
ment checks itch of messy Ay
acne, eczema, broken out B
skin (extetna%v caused). .
Antiseptic, aids huhp{; \
25¢,60¢, 85¢. Cleanse wit! \
Black and White Soap.
BLACK & WHITE
Sold in Athens At
CROW'’S DRUG STORE
Athens’ Most Complete
Drug Store.
UNIVERSITY CHEVROLET CO.
|of the larger specimens found in
southeastern Australia have ex
cess meat in the legs and claws,
which is packed and exported.
Australia’s Department of Com
merce exercises rigid control over
the lobster catch, 75 per cent of
which is exported. Lobsters can't
be sent out of the country without
export permits. They have to be
processed in registered plants, and
graded and packed according to
regulations. Even the tempera
tures in which they are frozen and
shipped are fixed.
2 b jndtant reack e
NS o
Toanchin Lo
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>y _FRom VILLA or BEACH!
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R{ " 1 -
- 110 Beautiful Stores V. ' ’ c ’ e
; Shep in your bathing suit! Drug store, food store, gife |'ag e en e' ~4
| shop, toy shop, ladies’ and children’s clothing, men's e
tlothing and sporting goods, guests’ service center, Greutel;'gw ‘cef“?m'“ OIO:‘OWG‘”‘:J.:: g "1
Western Union, restaurant, auto service headquarters, zozr in m:; 'b?g.“:qcad:o” W and 9
cocktail lounge ~ . and that's not all! 4 »: ig new shopping “lhq
i service center, right on the beach. Grogs) |
i : eries, supplies and services ot home.y - -
| Super Market &, sown Ppse . o 468 g fr::- ;my‘hd it
) ” _completely furnis mily-size]
A. & P, itself calls the big se-service Ellinot Vilage : . b .
i svper store one of its very finest, villas with ell-electric k"d‘?”’ tled 5
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| : vrious living rooms. Make your. reservae p
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Bvorything the ardent angler needs for fresh or solt £ “"'““fff' .v,lm.. B o &% Q
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daundermat : : L CRCR Rl D=
1 ——r IR ST N
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b 4 ‘Twe bedrooms .
7 For direct reservations, \ slightly hgher B g
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Sg b 0 Sihaduian
Rosa Ponsells Seeks Divorce
BALTIMORE—Mrs. Rosa Pon=
selle Jackson, former Metropoli
tan Opera star, today filed a suit
for divorce from Carle A. Jackson,
son of Baltimore’'s former Mayor
Howard W, Jackson., She charged
he deserted her a year ago Jan
uary, Before her marriage in 1936,
Miss Ponselle had publicly listed
these qualifications for the “right
man': Tolerant, trustful, roman
tic, sentimental and a business
man with understanding. She now
lives in Stevenson, Md
/CH-E'V_:R_O.LET/
ADVANCE-DESIGN TRUCKS |
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Firdt! Matfne Corps officer wad”™
First Lieutenant Jokn Trevett. He
reported for duty on boutg”tht
“Columbus” in November, 1775.
it e e e e A o rena P
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SERVICE see “CHICK”
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upkeep, and ‘lgh trade-in value
add up to the lowest price for you,
Compare valves! Compare what
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Chevrolet trucks.
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