Newspaper Page Text
WEINESDAY, AUGUST 16, 1950
177 LONESOME BRIDE AN
;"j& Groce i Folim, - Wit i }
XX
Just saying Lofty Gordon’s name
under her breuth made the sweat
preak out all over Gloria. Her legs
felt like water, no, longer able to
hold her up. Reuben was tall
enough to be called “Lofty” and
he seemed to know plenty about
ihe Benonis. Lofty once had been
. member of the gang. .
There was safety now only in
lishts and people. Her teeth chat
tored as she looked about desper
ately, saw above her a great light
ed window with a red neon sign,
[la Mae's Beauty Shoppe. Gloria
whirled, ran up the shallow
hrownstone steps, her breath com
ing in great gasps. Would Lofty
follow?
“It's 9 o'clock, Miss,” the girl in
the soiled white uniform.standing
pehind the desk said as Gloria
shot inside like something hurled
out of a gun, “We close in 20 min-
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PR T eiR
Leslie S. Ladd, Jr., of 34 Cleve
land Avenue, Nashville, Tenn,
sure knows his HADACOL, He,
his mother and his grandfather
get precious Vitamin 81, 82, Nia
cin and Iron from this family pro
duct.
“Mzmma, we haven’t taken our
HADACOL,” says Leslie when his
mother forgets sometimes, Mrs.
Ladd explains, however, that hers
will always be a H.\ACOL fam
ily because it has helped relieve
deficiencies of Vitamin 81, 82,
Niacin and Iron for herself, little
Leslie and her father.
TAKES 10 BOTTLES
Read Mrs. Ladd’s own state
ment of their experiences once
they learnéd that they were suf
fering from such deficiencies and
began taking HADACOL: “I have
taken 10 bottles of HADACOL. I
have been run down since mry
oldest son was born, I am 23 years
old, I have had very little appe
tite and I had weak spells every
morning. I would almost faint but
after taking HADACOL they are
gone and I stay hungry all the
time,
“My four-year-old son had lit
tle appetite and his cheeks were
pale. He now -takes HADACOL
and his cheeks are rosy and he
has & wonderful appetite. I also
‘had gastric disturbances, but they
are gone now. My {father took
HADACOL for the agonizing
‘aches and pains of neuritis. He is
‘much better now.”
WONDERFUL HADACOL
FEELING
HADACOL is that wonderful
new preparation -— promising
;blessed relief for your indiges
‘tion, stomach disturbances (gas,
!hear‘tburn, sour “risings” after
imeals), for normal growth in
;ichildren, as well as that general
run-down condition, and aches
'and pains of neuritis, if your sys
[tem lacks Vitamins 81, 82, Iron,
/mnd Niacin,
HADACOL is being recom
mended by many doctors, HADA
OL is so amrazingly successful
ecause if your system lacks Vita
mins 81, 82, Iron, and Niacin it
acts directly to relieve this defi
iency —the real cause of your
%ouble. That’s the kind of pro-
Buct you want —the kind you
ould buy—the kind you should
JMart taking immediately. .
Only One Genuine HADACOL
Don’t go through life suffering
i ich fiendish torture from your
{Momach or aches and pains of
|geuritis when relief is as close at
lpand as the nearest drugstore for
ufferers from these deficiencies.
Buy HADACOL today. Trial size
fpottle only $1.25. Large family or
gospital size, $3.50. Refuse substi
putes. There’s only one true and
't‘truine HADACOL.—Adv.
lj‘) 1950, The Leßlane Corpora=-
Kion,
ST ENEDGR
A b
WAMPHM
Used as money by American Indians many years
beiore the arrival of white Colonists. Made of
beads. Each bead about V 4 inch long.
You gottum Wampum ? Then start now to lay aside
" part of what you earn every payday in a C&S
Savings Account. In a short time you'll have enough
ta buy the things you've always wanted. -
THE CITIZENS & SOUTHERN
NationAL BANK
Member Feommal Dueosrr INSURANCE CORPORATION
utes. We can't do nothng for you
tonight dearie.” :
She yawned, revealing two gold
teeth and the fact she was chew
ing gum. Gloria’s eyes were fran
tically ransacking the place for the
back door. She slid her shaking
hand into her bag, extricated a $5
bill and dropped it onto the
scratched wooden counter.
“Not even a quick shampoo?”
Gloria murmured. “Of course, I
expect to pay extra this time of
night.” No more was necessary;
Ella Mae’s hand swept out and the
bill was no longer there.
“Last booth,” she said, resign
edly.
How long did she have? Maybe
she could slip out the back door
while Ella Mae was getting the
shampoo, Gloria planned. Her
hands were jerking and she
perched on the extreme edge of
the big leather chair with the
stuffing leaking out the bottom,
longing to make a dash for the
door behind the curtain but not
daring because Ella Mae was
standing nearby, filling a bottle
with nauseous-looking gray liquid
As she came back, Gloria could
only settle back into the big chair,
with her precious pie box and the
handbag containing the gun piled
in her lap.
“Relax, dearie,” Ella Mae urged,
puzzled. “Don’t you want to put
your bundles down? What you got
in them anyway, the Crown
Jools?”
“Sure, An emerald necklace,”
Gloria told her, grinning sickly.
* * *
“Killer-Diller, ain’t you?” Ella
Mae smeared gray goo all over
Gloria’s rigid head and the water
ran down into the shampoo basin
like somtething choking to death.
The things women suffer to be
beautiful! Was that the outside
door opening?
“Relax,” Ella Mae urged again.
“How’m I gonna—" g
sThere’s someone outside!” Glo
ria gasped. She froze to the chair,
her head still dripping water and
goo was, drawing the curElalwha
goo as Ella Mae went out to see
who it was, drawing the curtain
decorously.
“Good evening.” It was Lofty,
all right. Gloria grabbed a towel
moped madly at her hair, and
gripping her precious bundles, tip
toed with agonizing slowness be
hind her own curtain toward the
back door, as he asked Ella Mae,
“A girl in a dark blue slack suit
come in here, sister?”
“What'’s it to you?” Ella Mae
asked sullenly. Thank goodness
for the $5 bill! If Ella Mae could
just hold him a few seconds more.
Gloria had her hand on the door
knob when she heard Ella Mae
gasp.
“He pulled a knife on her!”
Gloria knew wildly. “Like Sal!”
She ought to stay, help the poor
k 4. bat . . .
How Gloria actually got through
the door, sut into the alley, she
never could remember later, but
all at once she was running crazily
down the dark alley, crying,
bumping into things, mangled tears
and goo running into her panting
mouth. This alley too was full of
overflowing garbage pails.
She slid thankfully into a dark
rectangle. This must be the door
way-anyway she’d have to chance
it. When she tried the knob it
moved inward under her shak
ing fingers, and she slid inside just
as Ella Mae’s scream echoed down
the dark alley and there was the
sound of footsteps running.
“Help her get away,” Gloria
prayed and leaned weakly back
against the closed door, shaking
there in the darkness, letting the
awful pounding of her heart die
down wishing she could have
help Ella Mae and knowing she
couldn’t. Lofty would just have
killed both women before Gloria
could get the gun *out* of her bag.
®
Gloria’s eyes were stinging as
if someone had poured salt into
them—that awful shampoo. She
vanked off her scarf from around
her neck where Ella Mae had put
it, and rubbed vigorously till her
hair stopped dripping and by this
time she could see a little in the
room where she was.
It was a store room, filled with
fruit crates, and that rim of light
along the floor must be a door.
She was about to move toward it
when she heard voices. :
“She ain’t coming,” a man’s
i ‘lchbhseEldoorthob mm m m
voice grumbled. “It’s 9:30 and no
signs of her, Sadie”
“Sure, she’s coming,” Mrs, Be-
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DINGHIES OFF ON CHAMPIONSHIP TES T T—Against a background of the
Long Beach, Cal, skyline, dinghy competitors get off in a race for the 1950 championship.
noni’s voice said and. Gloria drew‘
a breath of relief. This was thel
right place, after all. But the re
lief didn’t last long because Mrs.
Benoni said, “I wish you didn’t
have to konk her, Benny. I don’t
like the idea of tying her up and
leaving her. Suppose she chokes?
She hasn’t done us any harm. If
I'd been alone that morning, Gor
don would probably have come
right into the apartment, and then
it’"d been me, instead of Jack the
Cork”
“Aw, T won't hurt her—much,’s|
Mr. Benoni growled. “We'll get
the necklace and then hike—
what’s that noise?”
Glpria, trying panicky to get
back to the outside door, had
bumped into an orange crate
which came tumbling down.
{To Be Continued
Serious trouble may result if
the starter button is touched when
an automobile is in gear and mov
ing. ’
There are approximately 34,000
competitive oil companies scatter
ed throughout the United States.
Arizona ranks first among west
ern states of the Union in copper
production.
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T 14.44 |
BY SUE BURNETT
Here is a carefully tailored day
time frock that you will want to
have ready for cooler weather.
Expertly designed to flatter a wo
man’s figure, it has nice details, a
choice of sleeves,
Pattern No. 8622 is a sew-rite
perforated pattern in sizes 14, 16,
18, 20; 40, 42 and 44. Size 16, short
sleeves, 5% yards of 39-inch; 1%
yards contrast.
For this pattern, send 25 cents,
in COINS, your name, address,
size desired, and the PATTERN
NUMBER to Sue Burnett (The
Banner-Herald), 1150 Avenue
Americas, New York 19, N. Y.
Ready for you now —the new
Fall and Winter issue of FASH
ION. 48 pages of smart new styles,
special interesting features, free
pattern printed inside. Send 25
cents today for your copy.
! *F
| RIENDLY
| |+ FAST *
|
) Phone first 5o
i YOur money can be waiting for yor,
‘ Loans up to S2OOO
| COMMUNITY
. Loan & Investment
| CORPORATION :
Rm. 102, Shackleford Bldg.
215 COLLEGE AVE., ATHENS, GA,
Telephone 1371 -
THE BANNER-IRERALD. ATHENS, GEORGIA
Modern Textile Industry Seen
As Vital On Production Front
AIKEN, S. C.,, Aug. } «-Ameri
ca’s textile industry is in top con
dition to supply military and civ
ilian needs because in the last
five years management has wise
ly ploughed back over a billion
dollars ‘into modernization, a
speaker asserted here today.
Saying that “the production
front can spell the difference be
tween defeat and victory,” Thom
as D. Yutzy, director of Textile In
formation Service, cited the textile
industry, made up of literally
hundreds of mills, as an “inspir
ing example” of free enterprise in
action.
Mr. Yutzy said that America in
its fight for freedom and peace is
actively engaged on frour fronts
and “if we lose any one of them,
we lose on all.”” He spoke before
the Aiken Rotary Club.
Many Fronts
“Korea is the fighting front, at
the moment,” he said. “But be
sides the fighting front, there is
the production front, and the home
front, and finally and deadliest of
all —the propaganda front. . . .
“Before an army can use its
weapons, it must have two things,
food and clothing. Without these
two essentials, no tanks or planes
or bullets will prevail.
“Can the textile mills produce
ehoNEh? e -
“Fortunately for all of us they
can, and there is one big reason
why they can. It’s a reason that
the Communists and Socialists and
their fellow travelers and vague
eyed theorists love to attack. It’s
profits. If the textile industry had
not been able to show a good
profit since the last war, they
would not be in shape for an
other big job.”
- Ran Consistent
He recalled how the mills ran
night and day, week after week,
month after month in World War
II to turn out an unprecedented
total of nearly 40 billion yards of
cotton goods in four years and to
supply the army alone with 10,000
different items while filling other
essential needs.
“After that stupendous job was
finished, the mills were pretty
badly battered,” he pointed out
“For more than five years there
had been no time for machinery
replacement and plant improve
ment. Many mills had become an
tiquated and inefficient. If the in~
dustry were in the same shape to
day that it was then, it could not
possibly repeat such a perfor
mance.” o
The speaker went on to tell
how the mills, making up an in
dustry which has had many long
lean periods, began to replace
machinery, refurbish plants, and
modernize and streamline equip
ment in the postwar years. .
This was possible, he said, only
because the mills did make prof
its comparable with other major
industries and because manage
ment wisely ploughed back large
portions of earnings into plant
modernization. He added:
Industrial Democracy
“To me, this is an inspiring ex
ample of how free enterprise ben
efits us all and how the profit
system is the-sparkplug of our in
dustrial democracy, in peace or in
war.”
Mr. Yutzy said that the textile
industry, so largely concentrated
in the Southeast, was America’s
earliest industry and is now its
second largest and that it is “still
typically American, made up as it
is not of a few large corporations
but of hundreds of small busi
nesses.” : e
Speaking in this important tex
tile manufacturing county, he
pointed out that people are prone
to take for granted things in their
midst, and reminded the Rota
rians that “no industry does more
for its employees or for the com
munities in which it operates.” He
said the industry is the “economic
backbone of literally hundreds >t
cities and small towns, and a great
force in the national economy.”
Turning to the fourth or propa
ganda front, Mr. Yulzy warned
that “we have been losing badly
on the propaganda. front for a
long time. If we continue to lose,
victory on the fighting front will
o snton
Don’t Suffer Another Minute
No matter how many remedies you have
tried for itching eczema, psoriasis, infec
tions, athlete’s foot or whatever your
skin trouble may be—anything from gefld
to fpot-—WOND‘R SALVE can help you.
Developed for the ":L‘sh the Army-—
now for you f at home
::IONDII g&l.\'l! is white, .rgas’e!en
eCa WO SaLyr -vl
or money refunded. Truly w--'~rful
Sold in Athens by Crow Wat
soh and Horton-Reid Drag Stores
or your hometown druggiet.
mean nothing.”
Porpaganda Deadly
“Propaganda can be more dead
ly than bullets,” he said, adding
that “the danger is in the kind
that creeps into our minds with
out any label—the half truths and
distortions that raise doubts and
cause confusion,”
“You've heard some of these,
such as :Profits are evil; capital
ism grinds the worker; all bosses
are bal men, You'll hear some new
ones and some old ones revived,
such as ::Business wants war;
Wall Street wants war; business
is profiteering; Moscow really
wants peace; we can do business
with the Communists, and so on.”
Calling truth “our best defense,”
he urged an active offensive on
the propaganda front. “Facts and
common Sense are our weapons
and we've got to begin wusing
them,” he said in urging business
and professional leaders to be
come more articulate. -
“Unless more people who be
lieve in the American way learn
how to define it and get out and
talk about it and write about it
and champion it at every oppor
tunity, we are going to lose,” he
warned.
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NO SURE CURE YET FOR BALDNESS;
MANY REASONS FOR LOSS OF HAIR
BY EDWIN P. JORDAN, M, D,
Written for NEA Service
Everyone hates to become bald,
particularly when the hair starts
falling out early in life. But it is
lucky that baldness is so much
more common in men than in wo
men, Just imagine the excitement
There is a strong family ten
dency to early baldness. In the
if it were the other way around!
most common variety the hair line
over the temple gradually recedes
and the hair becomes thin at the
crown, As time goes on the hair
less area becomes larger and larg
er until the whole top of the head
is completely bald,
Although claims are made for
many “hair restorers,’” there are
too many failures from any form
of treatment to justify the belief
that there is a good prevention or
cure,
The “cures” range all the way
from “sin{eing the hair to keeé)
the guice rom running out” (and,
incidentally, the hair is not hol
low), to costly instruments for
“massaging” the scalp or pro
ducing some other marvelous ef
fect on hair growth. These prob
ably do not help much though it
is true that dandruff or poor cir=
culation in the scalp will speed
the loss of hair. Consequently, if
there is any such condition pres
ent, treatment of the dandruff and
massage of the scalp aimed at im
proving the circulation may delay,
though it probably will not stop,
the gradual loss of hair. .
There are other conditions
which cause loss of hair. The hair
frequently falls out after infec
tious disease such as typhoid,
scarlet fever, influenza or ‘some
toxic condition. After a while,
however, the hair usually grows
back in and may be heavier or
even a slightly different shade,
I’l‘reatment of this type of loss of
hair is usually not necessary as
tnature takes care of the situation.
HAIR SOMETIMES RETURNS
| There is a condition called alo
pecia areata in which the hair
falls out completely in roundish
spots, ranging in size from that of
a small coin all the way up to
total loss of hair of the scalp, eye«
| brows and eyelashes. This is prob-
FOR THE GIRL WITH ITCHY PIMPLES
But ‘““smooth sailing”’ ’f/
when Black and White .
Ointment soothes itch, LoD
burn of bumps (black- b 7 t
heads), acne, simple rin(f— 71\ S
worm. Antiseptic, aids i
healing. Cleanse with R !
Black and White Soap.
BLACK & WHITE
Sold in Athens At
CROW’S DRUG STORE
Athens’ Most Complete
Drug Store.
ably a true disease of some kind.
though just what causes it no one
has yet discovered. The hair may
be gone for sev:ral months and
then grow back: just as before.
Treatments prodably hasten the
regrowth in such cases,
The hair can fall out also as &
result of certain diseases of the
scalp, such as ringworm. In such
cases, it is the ringivorm which
has to be attacked. TV it has not
lasted too long, the hair generally
comes back satisfactorily,
{-A Men Can
Now Enlist Or
Join Reserves
MACON-—The Georgia State Se
lective Service headquarters has
announced that men classified 1-A
now may join any organized re
serve unit or volunteer for service
with a branch of the regulars.
Yormerly, potential draftees
could not enlist voluntarily with
any military service, active or re
serve, They had to wait after
from your o 0¥
every mofning with-
B
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afldl aks —
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CORN(! F Kee | |
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8 handy-size boxes ‘uxis == =~ fg v
of Kellogg’s Corn Flakes = & = “\\ %E\ g
in 1 collophane wrap! - = : s§\s &% !
CRISP, TASTY N =y
’ ),
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com flN(ES S
Kellogg-fresh! Hear "em ! PR e
rustle with crispness! il
| Each box so convenient ' b
for generous servings. | m‘s («\%\\e\\ -
Enjoy the freshest Corn i S "
Flakes—Kellogg' s— “ Eate e :
this new handy way! A"DI pA o
All the new Plymouth asks is that you look
al the evidence. Compare ihe great value in
this new automobile with the value in other
cars. Weigh the facts and figures, then come
to your own decision!
Get in this new car and see how easily it
handles, how securely it hugs the road. Notice
the top-hat headroom, the stretch-out legroom.
Relax ocn the chair-height seats. Enjoy the new
comfort of the famous Air Pillow Ride. :
And compare the engineering—the prompt
convenience of Ignition Key Starting . . . the
get-away power of Plymouth’s high 7.0 to 1 com
pression ratio . . . the smooth, sure action of
Safe-Guard Hydraulic Brakes .. . the extra
protection of Safety-Rim Wheels.
Make Plymouth prove its case! Your nearby
Plymouth dealer will gladly arrange for a dem
onstration drive. You be judge and jury.
NOW-—-MORE THAN EVER—THE CAR THA? LIKES TO BE COMPARED
See the value-packed Plymouth at
your nearby Plymouth dealer’s mow
PLYNMOUTH Bivision of CHRYSLER CORPORAT SN, Baloeld 83, Wioingss
PAGE FIVE
‘Men v WW
ble for voluntary .
Major John C. Landrum, officer
in charge of Marine recruiting for
Georgla, stated that assignment of
Marine Corps Volunteer Reserv
ists to extended active dutg':n re
cruiting duty within the te of
Georgla has now been authorized
Women reservists qualified as
clerks, typists, stenographers and
administrative clerks may also be
assigned as recruiters, In certain
instances qualified former women
Marines may be enlisted in the
Volunteer reserve and assigned
in limited numbers.
The 1949 fish catch in New Eng
land was valued at $60,000,000,
A daily serving of potatoes pro
vides as much as one-fourth of
the normal vitamin C quota,
A SOUTHING DRESSING !R?Sx
T
MOROLINE
Sold in Athens At
CROW’S DRUG STORE
Athens’ Most Compleie
Drag Store.