Newspaper Page Text
I‘L‘EZSDAY. AUGUST 8, 1950.
Coming
Fvents
\Winterville Cannery will be
open only one day a week. un
(il further notice. The day is
fuesday. B
PUBLIC LIBRARY
CALENDAR .
paintings by Sallie Goedwyn
.nd Annie May Holliday are
new being shown in the Library,
A display of early Georgia
{ndian relies and archaeological
drawings are being shown in the
tibrary. The drawings were
made by Susan Carlton Smith.
Library Stery Hour is ‘held
e2ch Saturday in the Children’s
room from 10 a. m. to 11 a. m..
Library story time over
\WGAU each Friday at 5 p. m.
Hours ~of opening: Monday
through Friday 9 a. m. to 6 p. m.
Sunday 3 p. m. to 6p. m.
The First Methodist Church
will have a family picnic, Mon
day, August 7, at 6:30 p. m. The
picnic will be in the church yard
and is being sponsored by the
women's Society of Christian
<ervice. We sincerely hope that
¢l departments ~of the church
will foin’in this evening of fun
and fellowship. 2 :
Friendship Class of the Young
Harris Memorial Church will
meet on Tuesday, August 8, 8
p. m. with Tlrs. Raymend Rich
ards, 237 Barber street. Mrs.
Garnet Bell ‘s co-hostess. -
Viembers of the American
[ecion Auxiliary are asked to
meet with Mrs. J. M. Lewis, 347
(slethorpe avenue, on Tuesday
4t 10 a. m., to make pads and
dressings for cancer patients.
Bring needles, thread, scissors
and any old white cloths,
M. and M. Class of the First
Baptist Churck will have the
regular business meeting on
Tuesday, August 7, 8 p. m., at
the home.of Mildred Carter, 325
Milledge Terrace.
Jackson Cemetery, Oconee
County, will be cleaned on Wed
nesday, August 9. All persons in
terested in this work are asked
to eome early and bring their
tools and lunch.
Regular monthly meeting of
the Entre Nous Club will be
held on August 10 at the YWCA
Home on Hancock avenue. Meet
ing s at 6:30.
Circle Three of the Young
Harris Church will meet Tues
day, 8 p. m., -at the home of
Mrs. Seymeour, 200 Windsor
Court. > :
Wesleyan Service Guild of the
Young Harris Church will meet
Tuesday night, 8 o’clock, with
Mrs. Vera Bishop, 244 Barber
street. All business women are
invited.
Wesleyan Service Guild of
Oconee Street Methodist Church
wil!l meet Thursday night at 8
o'clock at Weaver Bridges shack.
Mrs. Doris Patton, Mrs. Mary
Wigley and Mrs. Vera Murrow
will be hostesses. Members are
reminded to bring packages for
the pantry shower.
Wesleyan Service Guild of the
First Methodist Church will not
meet on the third Wednesday in
August, but will join the WSCS
for a picnic on Monday evening,
OFFICE HOURS
SATURDAY ONLY
8 A. M. to 4:30 P. M.
Dr. C. J. Pompei
CHIROPODIST
FOOT SPECIALIST
Phone 531
26914 N. Lumpkin, Athens, Ga.
LTI
= I
r FLAVOR!
“\fl SANDWICHES SALADS « SNACKS
Mk%Sfi;rAr‘c;E TEMA-C' cSPoICESR -MEI)(SAcKrs
3 rvfr,u»;:(;(a("" M..US‘TB":?:&).:O“: Mé:gmzms
PRE - WAR PRICES
1950 DODGE PICK-UP
1948 DODGE PICK-UP
1947 FORD PICK-UP
1946 CHEVROLET PICK-UP
1946 DODGE PICK-UP
1947 DODGE 2 TON
1947 DODGE 112 TON
3945 DODGE 172 TON
1946 DODGE "2 TON PANEL
Buy Now And Save
J. SWANTON IVY, Inc.
Broad s¢t. Lot . Next To Bus Station.
at the church.
WORK DAY AT
PROSFECT CHURCH
Work Day at Prospect Church
on the Tallassee Road for clean
ing the cemetery and church
grounds will be held on Wed
nesday, Aug. 9. Al interested
are urged to come and help with
the work,
A play, “The Womanless
Wedding” will be put on at
Fowler's Cammunity Center on
the Tallassee Road on Saturday
night, August 12, 8 p. m. A
group of men in the community
will present the play. Admission
28 and 50 cents. Proceeds are teo
be used for the community
center,
PERSONALS
Miss Annette Martin has re
turned from -a month's visit in
Baltimore, Md., with her brother
and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Neibling,
S* % @
"Mrs. .'Joe Johnson . and son,
Parks, of Pelham, have joined her
other son, Joe, jr., at the home of
her mother and sister, Mrs. Parks
Betts and Mrs. Victoria' Thurman
for a visit. Joe, jr., has been here
for several weeks.
* * %
Mr. and Mrs. L. T. McClain and
daughters, Lauren and Jana,
former residents of Athens, now
of Memphis, Tenn., are visiting
their mother, Mrs. L. T. McClain
on Grady Avenue.
* * *
Mr. and Mrs. Fain Slaughter
have moved into their new home
on Plum Nelly Road, from Mil
ledge Circle.
** * A
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Penny who
have . been living on Waddell
street for several years, have
taken a house, 99 Springdale, near
Bloomfield. ;
o NP
Mr. and Mrs. John Chandler are
new residents in Athens, having
come here from Columbus. Mr.
Chandler is a student in the School
of Veterinary Medicinfi at the
University, and Mrs. Chandler is
a teacher of piano. They are liv
ing at 490 Milledge Circle.
* * *
Mrs. Anna McGowan has re
turned. to her home in Hollywood,
Fla., after spending two months in
Athens with her daughter, Mrs.
Ruby Hartman on Catawba Ave
nue. § gt
¥ 8.8
+ Mrs, J. H. Dickerson and sons,
Jute, jr., Bobby, Jimmy and Mel
vyn, of Clayton, Ga., are visiting
Mrs. Dickerson’s mother, Mrs. J.
C. Fowler on Buena Vista Avenue
for seevral days.* 2
*®
Mrs. Wyne Dye, and children,
Jane _and Pat, of Blyth, are the
guests of Dr. and Mrs. N. G.
Slaughter. ! i
Studen; ;;ténds
Fraternity Meet
Betty Terry, Thomasville, is
representing the University of
Georgia chapter of Zeta Phi Eta,
national speech arts fraternity, at
its bi-annual convention at the
University of Denver this week.
Miss Terry is a senior at the
University and is president of the
local chapter of Zet Phi Eta.
COFFEE MAGIC
You can have coffee freshly
made when you awaken in the
morning if you plug your automa
tic coffee maker into the timer
clock on your range before you
go to bed at might, says the Gen
eral Electric Consumers Institute.
Just set the clock to start the cof=-
fee brewing any time you desire.
It will shut off automaticlly and
!(teep,warm until you’re ready for
it.
A clock runs faster in cold
weather; the cold shortens the
pendulum.
Win With This Florida Salad
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YOU can't help but win compli
ments if you serve - this cool
summer salad for your mext lun
cheon. Combining the shimmering
appearance and tart tang of Florida
grapefruit juice, with tunafish, it's
sure to make a hit, .
Canned grapefruit juice and
canned grapefruit sections are both
high on the list of plentiful, econ
omical foods this: séason.
Surrounded by greens, garnished
with Florida grapefruit sections
and topped with sliced stuffed
olives and pimiento strips in what
ever order you choose, you couldn’t
set a prettier platter on your sum
mer luncheon table.
Florida Tie Tac Toe Salad
Grapefruit layer:
1 envelope 135 cups hot
unflavored canned Florida
gelatine grapefruit juice
1% cup cold canned
Florida grape
fruit juice
Miss Annie Mitt Wallace And Mr.
Walter M. Collins Wed Aug. sth
Miss Annie Mitt Wallace, of
Winder, became the bride of Mr.
Walter Maxwell Collins, of Ath
ens,on Saturday afternoon, August
5. The ceremony took place at the
home of the Rev. C. H. Ellison,
pastor of ‘the - Central- Bapfist
Church. s
Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Anthony
were the only attendants of the
bride and - groom.
Mrs. Collins is the daughter of
NICHOLSON
HOLSON
W
NEWS
Mrs. Viola Parson and children,
of Griffin, were guests of relatives
here last week.
» Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Smith an
nounce the birth of a daughter,
Betty Elaine Smith. Congratula
tions.
Mrs. W. W. Mealor, of -Com
merce, was visiting here during
last week with Watson Fleeman
and family.
Rev. D. E. Beauchump, of Dan
ielsville, will continue revival ser
vices at the Fire Baptized Holi
ness Church over the week-end.
Mrs. Mary Walker, of Union
Point, was visiting here last week,
the guest of her sister, Mrs. Eliz
abeth Miller.
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Green, Thursday, were: Tom Wat
son, Mrs. Lovie C. . Poweledge,
Bennie Atkins and family, of
Houston, Texas; George West, of
Danielsville; Lloyd Watson, of
Commerce. Che T
Revival services are scheduled
to begin at the Methodist Church
on Sunday, August 13, the Rev.
Garnet Wilder, of Center, in
charge. Your presence is invited.
Mrs. Mamie Strickland and
children, of Commerce, are resid
ing with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
J. W. S. Sorrow, having had the
misfortune of losing her home and
furnishings by fire one day last
week.
A delegation from here will be
in attendance at the State Demo
cratic Convention at Macon, Wed
nesday of this week, composed of
J. O. Farmer, Alton Farmer, Ru
pert Farmer, and Jewett Barnett.
News that the Highway Depart
ment will let additional contract
on the Nicholson-Jefferson High
way on the 18 of August, meets
the approval of our people, who
are anxious to see this road, as
well as the Nicholson-Sanford
road, completed as searly as possi
ble.
Friends here of Monroe Walker,
of Union Point, regret to learn
of his death and burial during
last week. He formerly resided
here and enjoyed the friendship
of many.
The Rev. Horace Chapman, and
his music directer, H. E. Davis, of
Lymon, S. C., are assisting the
Rev. John M. Conwell in revival
services at the Baptist Church,
which continue through Sunday,
Aug. 13, and you are invited to
attend.
Beginning on Wednesday eve
ning, Aug. 16, the Rev. Dalton Mc-
Intire, of Toccoa, will assist the
pastor in revival services at the
Congregational Holiness Church
to which the public is invited. *
Paul Edwards, who has been
How Long Does
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cuaNcE oF LIFE | 35t 7
{:r lola‘e mmen mid-life's erucial
- _gge" ay be & uafonably short time; !
fgl- Others, Gnifortunately, much longer. In |
g&c‘ ’g‘u the "miilg. thing s to 'Tbi. ’
Tylng per ”“g 48 pos .
¥ wyr’&n thousan M%ouv
bless é‘n fnode: m-Gyg: aid so often |
gives Just the eomforting help needed to |
oogc {hsl:’d, d restlessness and re
f(ev that dep g weak, tired feeling.
6onderfully relaxing in nervous irrita- |
bility, Cardui’s grand stomachie tonie
action helps Nature increase resistance, .
lorfif‘ vitality, and give you a brighter .
outlook on life. Do try it! Get Cardui todag.
THE BANNER-HERAID, ATHENS, GEORGIA
Soften gelatine in cold grapefruit
juice. Add hot grapefruit juice and
stir until gelatine is dissolved. Pour
into Binch square pan and chill
until almost firm.
Tuna Salad layer: ;
1 envelope 1% teaspoons
unflavored grated onion
gelatine 15 cup finely diced
12 cup cold water celery
2 tablespoons 14 cup finely diced
Florida lime green pepper
juice 2 7-ounce cans
34 cup hayone tuna, drained
naise well
1% teaspoon
Tabasco
Soften gelatine in cold water,
Place over boiling water and stir
until gelatine is dissolved. Add lime
juice. Cool. Add mayonnaise; mix
in remaining ingredients. Spocn on
top of first layer and chill until
film. Unmold on crisg greens, To
serve, cut into 9 squares and sepa
rate. the squares slightly. Garnish
with pimiento strips and sliced
olives. YIELD: 9 servings.
Mrs. Wess Wallace and the late
Mr, Wallace, of Winder. For the
past three years she was employ
ed by the Carwood Manufacture
Company in Winder. e
Mr. Collins is. %? son of Mrs.
W. R. Welch and the late Mr. R.
A. Collins, of Crawford. Mr. Col
lins is connected with the Athens
Lumber Company, and the young
couple will make -their home 'in
Athens.
employed in Birmingham, Ala-.
bama, has returned home for a
few day’s stay before voluateer-:
ing for the U. S. Navy. Friends ex
tend best wishes and good luck. #
Mrs. Annie Smith is visiting in
Arnoldsville, the guest of her
son, Loyd Smith and family.
Miss Christine. McClure, of
Commerce, was visiting here over
the week-end, the geust of Mr.
and Mrs. Grady Smith.
‘Curtis Walker and family, of
Union Point, were visiting here
last Sunday, guests of Mrs. Betty
Smith.
Prof. Herbert Carithers and
family, of Cohutta, were among
the week-end guests of Rev. and
Mrs. G. T. Carithers.
Nicholsonians will be in attend
ance at the Superior Court at Jer
ferson during this next week.
MRS. HATTIE REYNOLDS
PASSES AUG. 3, 1950.
During. the early hours of
Thursday morning, August 3, 1950,
Mrs. Hattte Fleeman Reynolds
passed away suddenly at her home
here. She was a life-long resident
of this community and held the
esteem of a host of acquaintances,
who are grieved at her untimely |
death.
Surviving are two sisters, Miss |
Zoe Fleeman, and Mrs. Ella Hud
son; two Brothers, T. J. Fleeman, ‘
of Nicholson; W. H. Fleeman, of
Hull, together with a host of other
relatives. 4 .
The funeral services were con- .
conducted from the Baptist church
on Saturday morning, Aug. 5, at
eleven o'clock, the Rev. John M.
Conwell, of Lymon, S. C, in
charge, and Mrs. Reynoldslaid
to rest in the family burial ground,
south of Nicholson. '
Friends of Mrs. Reynolds extend i
heart-felt sympathy to the bereav
ed family in the passing of their
loved one.
Rolls may be frozen baked or
unbaked, but the unbaked ones
don’t always turn out so well.
B i e inier
Funeral Notice
ALLGOOD. — The relatives and
friends of Mr. Charlie H. All
good of Athens; Mr. and Mrs.
Hoyt Brown, Mrs. W. E. Jones,
Mr. Charlie A, Allgood, Mr.
Marion Allgood, Mrs. Emma
Winn, and Mr, and Mrs. Ralph
Jackson, all of Athens; Mrs.
Lillian Jarrett of Texarkana,
Texas; Mr. and Mrs. Ab All
good, Mr. and Mrs. Johnnie
Allgood, Mrs. Maude AHgood,
and Mr. Ned Brown, all of
Athens; Mr. and Mrs. M. E. Van
Vleck of Norfolk, Va.; Mr. and
Mrs. Winfred Brown, Los An
geles, Calif.; Mr. Bennie Jones
of Jacksonville, Fla., are in
vited to attend the funeral of
Mr. Charlie H. Allgood, Wed
nesday afternoon August 9,
1950, from Bridges Chapel at
four (4:00) o'clock. Dr. E. L.
Hill, pastor Emeritus of the
First Presbyterian Church, will
officiate and will be assisted by
Rev. C.. C. Shafe, pastor of
Central Presbyterian Church.
Chief Clarence Roberts, Captain
L. C. Cornelison, Captain R. E.
Eidam, Captain J. L. Garvin,
Mr. E. M, Wood and Mr. Mar
tin Nelms will serve as pall
bearers. Mayor Jack Wells and
Council, members of the Civil
Service Commission and the
City Police Department will
act as honorary escort. Inter
nent will be in Oconee Hill
cemetery., Bridges Funeral
Home.
Emory Operation May Give Life
To Sufferers From Lung Disease
ATLANTA, Aug. 7T — (AP) —
Nearly 100 sufferers of a eommon
lung disease which formerly
brought death apparently have
been given a future by an opera
tion developed at Emory Universi
ty Hospital.
An Emory surgeon said the
treatment still is in the ‘“evalua
tion stage but we are very opti
'mistic.”
The surgery is tailored for pa
tients suffering pulmonary em
physema or vanishing lung dis~
ease, §
Progressive disability of the
lungs, sometimes to the extent that
a lung disappears completely,
marks the ailment.
The surgeon attributes the dis
ease to several causes, including
chroni¢ irritation of the bronchi
al tubes, infection from excessive
smoking and certain industrial
hazards.
The trouble begins with chonic
or repeated spasms in the bron
chial tubes which make it easier
for air to get into the lungs than
to get out. As a result, areas of
the lungs are everdistended, en
larging at the expense of healthy
tissue.
Sufferers then are unable to ex
pel air properly and complain of
a shottage of breath.
V 4 7o ONESOME BRIDE AN
THE STORY: Gloria Brown, a
lonesome bride, learns how so bake
apple pies from Mrs. Benoni, who
lives in the apartment next door.
Seemingly as an afftermath, two
murders are commitited, Gloria’s
husband is jailed and the Benonis
become fugitive jewel theft sus
pects. .Gloria has a contact with
Mrs. Benoni through Reuben, the
doorman, and she agrees fto ex
change the pie which Mrs. Benoni
baked, in the crust of which Mrs.
Benoni said she placed her safe
deposit key, for information which
would clear Gloria’s husband. Han
sen, the assistant janitor, whe may
be a policeman in disguise, catches
Gloria as she went to get the pie,
but Gleoria eludes him. Gloria now
has just learned from Lieutenant
McGann of Homicide that her fin
gerprints were on the knife used
in one of the murders.
& * *
: XV
Lieutenant McGann sipped - his
coffee while Gloria. tried to con
sider what it meant to have her
fingerprints on a murder weapen.
She hoped the coffee choked the
lieutenant. :
‘“The bathing cap wrapped
around the knife that killed Sal
had a woman'’s face powder on it,”
he went on relentlessly, “The
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As featured on cover _
s 4 v
page of August (back to
school) issue of Glamour - |
The surgeon said the disease
kills by producing so much ob
struction. of the flow of blood
from the right side of the heart
that the heart finally just is un
able to beat,
v He explained that the Emory
operation actually is only a ¢om
bination of those used for other
diseases, with cdertain madifica
tions. .
It combines the operation for
removing massive air sacs from
the lungs with the best operation
for stopping spasms in the bron
chial tubes.
The main contribution of Emo
ry doctors was to prove infection
and bronchial irrvitation were the
agents responsible for pulmonary
emphysema, he added.
In the operation, nerve struc
tures going from the heart to the
lung and the outer lining of every
blood vessel from the heart to the
lung are removed. Damaged areas
of the lung are taken out or re
construeted and the irritation and
infection are controlled. ¢
Several patients followed for
five years after their operations
maintain they are cured but the
Emory doctors said they would
need 10 to 20 vears to convince
themselves the benefits are per
manent, :
murderess,” he emphasized the
feminine gender, “must have
vrapped the knife in the cap so
that only the point stuck through.
Sal never knew what hit her. Do
you use Rachel powder No. 2?”
Gloria slammed down her cup
on its saucer and glared at him.
“I do not. There’s my dressing
table in the bedroom. Take a look,
if you like.”
She did not expeet him to take
one but he did. He calmly took a
sample of powder from the ivory
powder box on her dresser, opened
both little drawers to be sure there
were no other boxes.
“Ariadne says she has no de
livery boys,” he changed the sub
ject casually. “They’re all girls.
Sit down why don’t you? It doesn’t
cost anything.”
“Well, Jack the Cork certainly
brought Mrs. Benoni’s hat,” Gloria
told him stubbornly. Then she re
members she hadn’t seen the hat.
She gulped, hesitated, for sudden
ly she knew without a shadow of
a doubt not only what had been
in the hatbox, but why Mrs. Be
noni had locked her in the bath
room and what was baked into the
pie in her icebex this very minute!
“Maybe it was something- else,”
she finished lamely.
“The jewels,” the lieutenant
nodded. “Yeah. But our most ex
perienced operators went over the
whole apartment yesterday and
last night again.”
She held her breath as he looked
at her sharply but he didn’t say
anything about her being there
last night, so she let the breath
out in a long, slow exhalation.
When she saw Hansen again she'd
say thanks.
“The necklace simply isn’t there.
The Benonis must have taken it
with them when they skipped.
You're sure,” he demanded, “you
haven’t remembered where they
are?”
ok * *
“How could I remember what I
never knew?” she asked reasona
bly, but her heart quickened its
thuds. How was she going to
evade Hansen long enough to take
the pie to Tony the Fruitman’s? If
she went—even thinking of it
‘made the palms of her hands go
- damp. “Hasn’'t Miss Strong any
i idea where she left the necklace?
People do misplace things.”
“Not,” Lieutenant McGann told
her, “a necklace a foot long with
a lot of heavy doodads and things.
She says the only visitor she had
during the show thai night was
sister Sal.”
“Sal!” Gloria gasped.
“Haven’t you seen the morning
paper? Alida and Sal are sisters
all right, but she swears Sal
wouldn’t steal her necklace. She
admits her sister was the black
sheep of the family. Alida used to
get her bit parts but she blew
her lines too often when she got
coked. But Alida insists Sal was
honest in her way. Families are
the devil when it comes to getting
evidence.”
Gloria shivered. Taking drugs
was worse than murder, almost.
Murder was so big it kind of
stunned you, seemed unreal; but
dope was merely nasty, obscene.
It killed the soul rather than the
body. “Must you go? she mur
mured, relieved, as Lieutenant Mc-
Gann went to the door. “If you
see Miltiades, will you please tell
him that I don’t think I can come
to jail to visit him today?”
“I'll be darned,” the lieutenant
marveled. “You two love birds
put on such a show last night, I
thought you’d be down yelling to
have breakfast with darling.” His
eyes narrowed as he advised,
“Don’t try any tricks, Mulligan.
I'd hate anything to happen to a
girl from Ireland.”
“East Boston,” Gloria corrected
him.
* % »
The door had barely closed before
she slid the night lock so no one
could open it from the outside,
flew to the icebox and yanked out
the pie. With hands shaking with
excitement she cut through the
crust with a silver knife and it
hit something hard at once, £ s
Careful, she warned herself,
don’t make too big a hole so the
Benonis will know. When the tip
of her knife pulled up a large
green stone so that she could see
PAGE THREE
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Gloria Brown had the necklace
it, she felt actually sick after all,
the whole Brooklyn police force
were looking for, the necklace twg¢
people probably had been mur
dered for, right in her icebox!
She had found out long ~go that
soaking the body peacefully brings
the same resuits as soaking the
head before a college examination;
it helps one to concentr-te. And
she needed desperately to do this
because her own and Miltiades’
whole life would be inflaenced by
what she decided. She poured
geranium bath salts lavishly into
the tub, turned on the water, and
soon was soaking luxuriously,
thinking furiously, but every now
and then a shiver would run over
her lovely pink and ivory bedy
floating in the warm-caress of the
water.
(To Be Continued) 4
Food Insfifute
To Dixie Secti
The Dixie Section of the Insti
tute of Food Technology has been
granted its official charter by the
National Institute, according to an
announcement by its chairman Dr.
Powers, associate professor of food
technology at the Uhiversity of
Georgia. : !
The Dixie Institute was rec~
ognized by the nationa! organiza=~
tion during its summer meeting at
Lake Winfield Scott recently. The
section, comprising the states of
Tennessee, Alabama, South Caro=-
lina and Georgia, is the 17th re=
gional section to be recognized.
The National Institute is a pro
fessional society in the field of
food research, teaching and pro
duction. There are approximately
90 members in this area, :
The Dixie Section meets every
two months to hear technical and
professional papers read by its
members, Dr. Powers said. '
Irrigation is the spreading of
water from a stream or ditch over
farm land sown to crops. v