Newspaper Page Text
FRIDAY, AUGUST 11, 1950.
‘_‘-—___-_———-"—'
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e
PUBLIC LIBRARY
CALENDAR
paintings by Sallie Goodwyn
and Annie May Holliday are
now being shown in the Library.
» display of ‘early Georgia
indian relies and archaeological
Jrawings are being shown in the
iibrary. The drawings were
made by Susan Carlton Smith.
ribrary Stery Hour is held
+l-h Saturday in the Children’s
ro-m from 10 a. m. to 11 a. m.
ibrary story time over
11 AU each Friday at 5 p. m.
Jours of opening: Monday
(i ough Friday 9 a. m. to 6 p. m.
<unday 3 p. m. to 6 p. m.
\ play, “The Womanless
1 edding” will be put on at
vowler's Community Center on
the Tallassee Road on Saturday
night, August 12, 8 p. m. A
sroup of men in the community
il present the play. Admission
24 and 50 cents. Proceeds are to
be used for the community
¢enter.
WVinterville Cannery will be
enen only one day a week un
{l further notice. The day is
Tuesday.
i
rveryone is invited to a bar
becue on the church lawn at the
Methodist Church in Daniels
ville on Friday, August 11 from
¢:2O to 8 p» m. The WSCS is
sponsoring the affair, The
menu Includes sliced barbecued
pork, stew, cole slaw, pickle,
bread, and iced tea. Adults $1.25
and children SI.OO.
The annual hemecoming day
of Corinth Baptist Church will
be held Sunday, August 13. Re
vival services are now being
held with Rev. L. Earle Fuller,
bringing the message each cven
ine at eight o’clock. ’
A barbecue will be held oy
Wednesday, August 6, 6 to 8
o'clock in the evening, on the
lawn of the church. The ’cue is
to be cooked by the fireman and
admission is $1.50 for adults
and for children under 12, 75
cents. The publie is invited.
Graduate Gets
® .
Assistantship
Robert A. Willis, Atlanta, a 1950
graduate of the Henry W. Grady
School of Journalisrn, has been
chosen for a graduate assistant
ship at the State” University of
lowa far the coming year.
Mr. Willis came to the Grady
2 School from the Atlanta Division
of the University, where he was
editor of the student newspaper.
While a student on this campus,
Mr. Willis was a member of Kap
pa Tau Alpha and was publicity
manager of University Theater, .
A long-headled rubber scraper
is a great help in a kitchen for
scraping out bowls, cups, and
spoons when baking or doing
other eooking.
| Add bits of leftover ham, plus
some of the ham drippings, to
cooked green snap beans for zesty
flavor.
THORNWELL ORPHANGE
; " Clinton, South Carolina
: . August 1, 1950
Mr. Le E. Mitchum,
192 Oconee Street,
Athens, Georgia.
Dear Mr, Mitchum:
May we express to you our sincere love and sympathy in the
¢reat loss which you have recently sustained in the passing of
your father, Mr, Homer Mitchum.
You will be interested, I am sure, to know that your good friend,
Mr. Hampton Rowland of Athens, Georgia, recently mailed to us
at Thornwell a memorial contribution dedicated to the memory
of your father, 3
_ Those of us at Thornwell think this is a very splendid manner
in which to perpetuate the memory of a dear departed loved one
in the lives of growing, dependent, orphan children who have also
experiencel much of the tragic in life.
‘We appreciate this gift from Mr. Rowland, and at the same time,
wish to take knowledge of the exceedingly high and'noble purpose
for which it was given. We greatly appreciate the kind re
~ membrances of our friends on all occasions in life,.but especially
during perlods of grief and béreavement,
It is our earnest prayer that the grace of our Heavenly Father,
the comfort and assurance of your knowledge of His Word, and
the indwelling presence of Christ, our Savior, may comfort and
";‘l‘enfihon your heart as you face the days that lie ahead and
igh erish the memory of your good Christian father, who was so
terested in the higher and finer values of life.
With best wishes, T am
Most cordially yours,
M., A. MacDonald, President.
¥949 PLYMOUTH SEDAN
1948 CHEVROLET SEDAN
1947 DODGE SEDAN
1946 FORD TUDOR
AND SEVERAL OTHERS
OUR PRICES MAVE NOT ADVANCED
L SWANTON VY, Inc
Broed Séreet Lot Next to Bus Station
Miss Merle Jenkins And Mr. John
William Firor, Jr., To Wed In Sept.
~ THOMASVILLE, - Ga. — Mr.
and Mrs. James Harvey Jenkins,
jr., of Thomasville, Ga., announce
the engagement of their daughter,
Miss Carolyn Merle Jenkins, to
John William Firor, jr.
The wedding' will be solemniz
ed on September 17th at the First
Methodist Church in Thomasville.
Miss Jenkins is a graduate of
the Emory University School -of
Union Baptist
Revival’
Revival
Begins Sunday
Historic Unionh Baptist Church
located in Madison county, on the
Ila-Athens highway, will begin its
annual revival meeting Sunday
morning, August the 13th with the
eleven o’clock service.
The Pulpit Committee has been
fortunate in securing the services
of two very fine Evangelistic
preachers. On Sunday the Rev.
Louis Smith, of Athens, will
preach at both the morning and
evening services. The Rev. H. L.
Burnley, well known, and greatly
loved pastor of the East Athens
Baptist Church, .will preach each
evening during the following
week. Services will begin prompt
ly at 8:15 p. m., with praver and
nraise service preceeding the ser
mon.
There will be no week-day
morning revival services. The pe
riod from 9-12 each day during
the week will be snent conducting
a daily vacation Bible School. This
'school should interest both chil
dren and adults. Plans have been
underway for some time to make
this a highly successful school.
C. T. Edwards is local chairman
for the Bible School, J. V. Jen
kins is@gunt., of the Sunday School,
and the Rev, W. T. Bates, associa
tional Field Worker, will be vis
iting-director of the school.
The membership of the church
cordially invite you to attend.
* * s
. > .
University Main
.
Library To Get
A-Weapons Book
The library on the main campus
of the University of Georgia will
have for the use of the public on
August 12, 1950 a book entitled
“The Effects of Atomic Weapons.”
This book, which is scheduled
for release by the Atomic Energy
Commission on Saturday, August
12, has for its purpose the presen
tative of a summary of the results
to be expected from the detona
tion of atomic weapons. Included
are pictures from the Bikini and
Japanese explosions. The effects
on buildings of different types, in
dustrial equlpment, bridges, and
people are noted, and measures
for protection are suggested.
After August 12 this book may
be ordered from the U. S. Super
intendent of Documents, Wash
ington 25, D. C., for $1.25.
To make cream cheese and wa
tercress sandwich spread you
need about one and one-half
bunches of watercress to a three
ounce package of cream cheese.
Chop the watercress fine, mix the
cream cheese until it is soft and
fluffy, and then mix the two to
gether thoroughly. Spread the
sandwich bread with mayonnaise
before adding the filling.
- JCG TR Rol eLy
Nursing and at present is a staff
member of the Florida University
Hospital in Tallahassee.
The bride-groom-elect is the
}so‘n of Mr. and Mrs. John Firor,
;ot Athens. He was graduated with
jhonors from Georgia Institute of
Technology, receiving a BS degree
lin Physics. He now has an assis
| tantship in the Physies department
(at the University of Chicago,
[ where he is doing graduate work.
Benson And Cole
Paintinos Now
In Ga. Art Museum
1 Paintings of Miss Frances Ben
son and Norman Cole, two former
;students of the University of
Georgia Art Department, are now
on disnlay in the Ceorgia Museum
of Art during the month of
August.
Miss Benson graduated from the
Maryland Jlnstitute of Art with
honors. She has -exhibited her
paintings in the Baltimore Muse
um, The Association of Georgia
Artists Annual Exhibition, the
Southeastern Exhibition and many
others. She was represented in the
Annual Print Exhibition of the
;Library of Congress, and has won
other awards in the various exhibi
‘tions. Miss Benson's work is rep
‘resented in several private col
lections and a painting of her’s
has been acquired by the High
Museum in Atlanta. She has won
two scholarships, one for a year’s
study at the University of Georgia,
and a year’s study at the Art
Student’s League in New York
City. While in New York a num
ber of her paintings were pur
chased by the Contemporary Gal
lery of New York City. Miss Ben
son has made her home in Athens
since she was released from Red
Cross duty during the war, and
has continued to develop her own
painting. She has filled many por
trait commissions and also has
given private instructions in
painting.
Norman Cole, of Atlanta, Geor
gia, has studied art at the Univer
sity of Georgia and received his
B.F. A., Degree lase June. He . will
receive his Master’s degree in Fine
Arts the end of this month. He is
a very promising contemporary
painter, and his varied work now
on display shows his ability to
handle color and subject matter
of all types.
Mr. Cole was a part-time teach
er of Art at Breneau College in
Gainesville last year. He was a
prilliant student while at the
University of Georgia achieving
the Phi Beta Kappa Society. It is
predicted that he has a bright
future in the art world.
Mr. Cole has also studied
sculpture and several of his pieces
of statuary have received expert
commendation. s .
Soap That Cools
Offered By
Harriet H. Ayer
Imagine a soap that “cools”—a
soap that rides with you after your
shower in filmy breeze on your
skjn after it has hugged your body
with tiney velvet bubbles inside
your shower stall. Harriet Hub
bard Ayer’s Cream Soap does just
that. .
Here is a soap that gives you a
satin - smooth feeling — a crisp
as-letture body to slip into your
lingerie. Just the wispy silkin note
of its texture makes you feel
bathed in luxury.
But as a complexion soap too
this Cream Soap is unsurpassed.
It is really a soap for beauty.
Bland and non-drying, it lathers
in practically ‘all types of water.
The cleansing action of this soap
is superb.
Cream Soap is gentle to delicate
skin — but deep cleansing enough
to coax the most stubborn com
plexion into radiant clarity. All
good soaps are super-fatted but
this one is super-fatted with the
same ingredients that go into *a
cold cream. It digs down and it
digs deep — and you come up
scrubbed to a shine and satin-~
smooth.
Here is a hard-milled soap that
lasts long and lathers like a bub
ble bath into wee irridescent bub
bles. It is made like a cold cream,
with the purest, finest, scarcest
vegetable oils added. In the for
mulation, the moisture content is
dried down to "a bare minimum
which helps this soap to greater
“pody” and to last and last. It
leaves a thin, invisible film on the
skin that helps to protect it but
it acts as a lubricant at the same
time it guards the skin.
It has a fragrance you've never
smelled anywhere else — over 75
different materials are used to
make this-scent. . . . the Orient
was ecombed — Madagascar, Java
and even Australia was exploed
in an effort to find just the right
ingredients. =~
This soap is made almost en
tirely from natural materials —
which contributes to the luxurious
character of the product. Harriet
Hubbard Ayer Cream Soap is al
most a sachet. Put it in with your
lingerie — your linens — a sliver
in your stationery box. It will
scent them with a whiff of Eden.
The new Sweef William Soap
and Harriet Hubbard Ayer’s Gold
en Chance Soap are made from
the same unique formula as Cream
Soap but with their own fragrance
added.
If you would feel cherished —
l smell sweet as morning — try Har
| riet Hubbard Ayer’s Cream Soap
' —the soap that “cools.”
NEW DAN RIVER
PLAIDS
Fall Patterns Just Received
Good Belection Cottons,
Rayon Suitings, Zippers,
Bindings, Efec.
Stitch In Time Store
1689 S. Lumpkin
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
DERSONALS
Mr. and Mrs. David Firor Lhewe
moved into their new home on the
Lexington Road.
- * ¥
Mr. hugh Firor has returned to
Athens after spending the summer
with a friend in Arkansas. He
will be at home until time to re
tburns to Medical School in Septem
er,
:% * *
Friends here will regret to
learn of the death in Spencer, S.
C., of W. -H. Crow, brother of
Mrs. Homer E. Williams, of this
city. Mr. Crow was 77 years old.
Services were conducted in Spen
cer today.
* & %
Mrs. Charles Eavenson, of El
berton, is attending summer
school here and is stopping with
her mother, Mrs. G. S. Wright on
South View Drive.
& * *
Mrs. D. S. Fagan and children,
and Mrs. J. A. Hossellton, of Gain
esville, Fla., are visiting ‘their
brother and sister, Judge and Mrs.
George Burpee in Athens, and
their mother, Mrs. L. M. Murray
in Watkinsville, -
& * ok
Miss Amma Wright returned
Wednesday from a trip abroad
with a Brownell group, that tour
ed Europe for about two months.
Miss Wright is on Brenau College
faculty in Gainesville;
* &
Miss Ruby Chastain, secretary,
in office of Smith-Boley-Brown,
is in Greenville, S. C., where she
is spending two weeks vacation
with relatives.
el %k &
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Benson
and Miss Sally Benson are in
Waycross for the wedding of Miss
Jean O’Neal and Mr. Joe Benson
Baker, of Sanford, Flerida, which
takes place tonight at eight o’clock.
* & *
Mr. and Mrs. Robert T. Segrest
and Mr. and Mrs. Tom Tillman
are spending their vacation at the
Cloister on Sea Island.
& * #
Mr. and Mrs. Dupree Wilkes an
nounce the birth of a son on Aug
ust 8 at St. Marz’s }-lospttal.
*
Friends of Miss Betty Jo Brown
will be pleased to learn she is re
cuperating nicely at her home 181
Wilkerson street, following a ton
cilectomy at St. 'Mary’s Hospital.
y *
Miss Ida Mae Beck, of Macon,
Ga., is visiting Her sister and
cousin, Mrs. J. W. Scott and Miss
Betty Joe Brown. §
»oR LN
In using brown sugar in baking,
roll out or press through a coarse
sieve if it is lumpy. To.keep
brown sugar soft put a piece of
apple on a square of waxed paper
in the sugar container. Change the
apple occasionally .
S~ -~ ’
, “(7 Betrer Eating
\" by Jean Allen
/ \
BREAKFAST FOR TWO
With most recipes planned for
four or six, cooking for two can
become very difficult indeed.
/.//"’3“-—' Leftovers seem
A‘,\M?'A MELGFf'sa to last forever
'!L[Er k 5 and dividing a
S g recipe often
S heayes o}?e won-
A\ 2857 e dering how to
,s’}“ ‘@.f*sl} find half of three
I\ e
P \‘» Here are two
S easy breakfast
menus planned with these prob
lems in mind.
Menu Number One
Grapefruit Halves
French Toast-Syrup-Crisp Bacon
Cofiee
Baked French Toas®
1 egg
14 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoen sugar
14 cup milk
4 slices stale bread
Beat egg slightly, add salt,
sugar and milk.
Soak bread in X b
mixture until 7 { 538
soft. Place in ;.‘,’; %
well - greased [ 5/~
shallow baking f"b’{’
pan and bake in (§2 ‘w\ “
a hot oven (400° .2 < WS
F.) for 10 to 15 '/~
minutes on each side or until
brown.
Place the strips of bacon across
a wire rack in a shallow pan.
Put the bacon in the oven when
you turn the French toast to
brown the second side. The fat
drains off while the bacon cooks
to a golden crispness. No turning
is necessary and the bacon is
ready to serve® with the French
toast.
Menu Number Two
Orange Juice -
Scrambled Eggs
Corn Muffins—Honey Butter
Coffee
F Aty 7',‘ RECIPE
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/"_’%’ é@/ NN,
~A e 5‘
2 X 8 D @3‘ > U
Corn Muffins
¢ tablespoons yellow cornmeal
2/3 cup flour
2 tablespoons sugar
14 teaspoon sait
114 teaspoons baking powder
1 egg
14 ecup milk
2 tablespoons melted fat
Sift the dry ingredients to
gether into a small bowl. Add the
beaten egg and milk, stir lightly
to moisten. Fold in melted fat.
Fill greased muffin tins two
thirds full and bake in a very
hot oven (425° F.) for 12 to 15
minutes.
Yield: 4 to 6 muiffins.
Faithfully
Q
RROGER FOOD FOUNDATION, CINCINNATY, OH:IO.
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Dining rooms, say many families,
are stuffy, especially in the summer.
Out-of-the house eating is today's
trend. Informality is the keynote
of modern living. All of which adds
up to picnics. Food tastes betier
on the terrace, in the back yard, or
st the picnic grounds.
Food manufacturers of 1950 have
made it easy to plan and fill the
picnic basket. Think of the foods
you can buy ready-to-eat or requir
ing a minimum of preparation in
the home kitchen. Cans of baked
beans, dozens of baked buns, loaves
of cold mea’s and summer sausages,
pickles, potato chips. The store of
fers radishes, green onions, potato
salad, fruits of all types.
So it's a picnic for the family and
almost a vacation for mother on the
next hot summer day. .
How does this menu sound? It
ought to fill a growing boy's hollow
legs, satisfy daughter's eye for col
or afid flavor contrast, and give dad
food that will tempt him beyond his
capacity.
Casserole of baked beans topped
with crisp bacon slices
Potato chips Radishes Pickles
Mustard
Hot dogs in toasted wiener buns
Green onions
Potato salad Sliced cold meats
Hard cooked eggs
Slices of red-ripe tomato
Watermelon Assorted small fruits
Coffee Cream Milk
Real Live Mink Slinks Off In Chicago
All Because His Fur Is Dark Brown
CHlCAGO—Somewhere in Chi
cago there’s a live, loose mink,
worth $250.
" He went AWOL after making an
- “in person” appearance on a fur
fashion show runway at the
Drake Hotel here recently.
Two other minks appeared in
separate cages with him, to show
the fashion audience where fur
coats come from. The latter two
minks had fur in new pastel
\shades. The other’s fur was just
a plain dark, natural-mink brown.
And there’s the rub, thinks Paul
W. Majerus, executive secretary
for the Associated Fur Industries
of Chicago, regretfully, sympa
thetically.
Maybe, says Mr. Majerus, the
' little dark mink felt crestfallen and
outdated — what with all the
;fashion audience applauding the
' newer pastel minks. Maybe that’s
' why he slipped out of his cage,
)unnoticed, somewhat after leav
ing the Drake Hotel.
- It’s thought he may be hiding
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Twu Ifl)p;)ll ]itt]e ”ats to f‘ru]ic
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Shoe Salon ‘ Street Floor
Baked beans are a picnic favorite.
They have been included because
any picnic meal should include one:
hot dish. Empty cans of baked beans
into a casserole, add catsup, top
with bacon and bake in a 325 de
gree oven for an hour. :
Crunchy potato chips, crisp rad
ishes give texture contrast to the
soft beans. Use bunches of washed
radishes with leaves left on. Place
the bunches, leafy part down, in a
glass jar. Stick in a few gleaming |
white onion bulbs and you have a
centerpiece as well as a dish of
relishes.
The buns are split, buttered,
toasted. A hot wiener is inserted.
Balance the part of the hot dog{
that extends beyond one end of the)
bun by stems of green onions ex- |
tending -at the other end. Herb!
flavored mustard is even better
than plain mustard.
Put the potato salad in a large
bowl. Cut rings of green pepper. In- |
sert the rings down the center of |
the salad. Peel the hard cooked !
eggs. Cut the fresh tomatoes in thick
slices.
Arrange the sliced meat at the
last moment lest ¢he edges of the |
meat curl. Use water cress or parsley !
for contrast.
The watermelon should be dead :
ripe and chilled from center to oute |
ermost rind. Add small fresh fruits
for color accent and appetite ap~
peal. Don’t forget to fill the large
enamel coffee pot with amber cof
fee, hot and clear. Everybody ready?
Let's go
I out now in some Gold Coast cellar,
- or trying to burrow a home on the
edge of Lake Michigan,
But Mr. Majerus doesn’t know.
He has had the Fur Industries
'send out a notice, saying: “All is
iforgiven. Come home.”
He wants the absent mink to
know that even if his fur is plain
dark brown, many people prefer
it that way, and—he’s still worth
$250.
| el
.~ When eggs are not on the break
\fast menu use them to make a
qiuck and delicious lunch. Serve
‘them scrambled or in an omelet
i with tomato sauce, and add
| whole-wheat toast, a green salad,
yand a glass of milk to the menu.
iDessert might be fresh fruit and
cookies.
: If you want garden peas so taste
their best shell them just before
cooking; add only a small amount
of water and don’t boil them more
than about eight to ten minutes.
Mrs. Noble Y. Beall
Spoke To Prince
Ave. Baptist WMS
Mrs. Noble Y. Beall, Field
Worker of the Home Mission
Board gave an interesting talk so
the Woman’s Missionary Society
of the Prince Avenue Baptist
Church last Monday morning.
In, speaking of the subject “How
Christiar. Can I Afford To Be”
Mrs. Beall brought out the fact
that we should exemplify the
principles of Christ in cur homes,
communities and everywhere we
go. The non-Christian and people
of other races are greatly in=-
fiuenced by the way Christians
live. She gave several illustrations
of how kindness and Christian liv
ing had brought many to Christ
and the right w&y of life. :
Mrs. Beall teaches the Aliae
Class of the Second Ponce de Leon
Baptist Church, Atlanta, and her
position as Field Worker gives her
the opportunity to speak to various
groups over our Southland.
Camping Trips ‘
Roy Parr, scoutmaster, and nine
boys of Scout Troop 27 are enjoy
ing a week’s outing in the moun
tains at colorful Georgia State
Vogel Park, it has been announced
by J. M. Molder, northeast Georgia
Council Scout Executive.
Camp was made near beautiful
Lake Trablyta. Swimming, fishing,
hiking, and horseback riding are
among the many activities avail
able, .
The trip, sponsored by the
Princeton Methodist Church, is an
annual event. Also, the church
sponsors the troop.
Local Troop 22, under the lead
ership of Scoutmaster Ernest Bo
land, will leave for its annual
troop summer camp on Monday,
August 15,
Troop 22 will make ecamp on
the shores of Lake Conasauga in
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| Ol]]Y 8.98
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<
PAGE THREE
attanooga National Forest. At
least 13 boys are expected so guko !
the trip. Those who plan og6 are
urged to turn in health eertifi
cate and fees immediately,
This event is sponsored by the
First Baptist Church, Athens, as is
the troop.
"
0. R. . Receives
Unit Commander
.
A new Deputy Commander and
assistant unit instructor has been
assigned to the Athens Military
SubeDistrict and Organized Re
serve Corps. Headquarters here ac
cording to Major C. W. Johnson,
jr., unit instructor for the Athens
Military Sub-District.
The new staff member is Capt.
Robert C. Prince, jr., who has
heen assigned to this post follow
ing a seventeen month tour of
duty in Oki{xawa. 3
As Deputy Commander, Capt.
Prince will assist in the work of
the O. R. C. for Athens and the
surrounding area. :
The new officer is a native of
Charleston, S. C., and has served
in the Army since 1941. During
World War IT he was stationed at
various proving. grounds around
the United States. In 1946, he was
assigned to duty in Japan where
the served for one year. He re
turned to the U. S. in 1947, and
was assigned to Okinawa, where
he served for one year. He re
the Staff Ammunition officer. He
has been back from overseas duty
about one month. ;
Married and with three children,
Capt. Prince expects to move his
family to Athens sometime this
month. He and his family will re~
side at 385 Prince Ave. =
~ Use escarole in summer vegeta«
‘lble salads often. This vegetable,
| along with other dark green leaf
|vegetables is an excellent source
of vitamin A. A generous serving
of escarole will supply about a
day’s requirement of this impor
| tant vitamin.
| Henhaden fish meal is widely
i used in poultry and stock feeds.