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PAGE TEN
Radio Clock
WGAU-CBS
| SUNDAY MORNING
6 55—News.
7:oo—Sunday Morning Serenade
8:00~CBS World News Rounduj
(CBS).
B:ls—Dixieland Quartet.
B:4s—Yesterday, Today, Tomor
row.
9:oo—~The Bible—The Book to
» Live By.
9:ls—~The Gospel Messengers.
~ 9:4S—AP News.
0:00—~Forum Class Discussion.
1:00—Allen Jackson and News
1 (CBS).
I:os—Music to Please.
I:ls—Young Harris Methodist
4 Church.
SUNUAY AFTEENOON
2:ls—Home Worship Hour.
I:oo—~News and Analysis (CBS)
I:ls—Songs From the Old
' Hymnal.
I:3o—Starlight Operetta (CBS).
2:00--Atlanta Crackers vs.
Nashville Vols.
* BUNBAY KEVENING
6:3o—Steve Allen Show (CBS).
7:oo—Guy Lonrbardo Time
(CBS).
7:3o—Hit the Jackpot (CBS).
B:oo—The Pause That Refreshes
on-the Air (CBS).
B:3o—Dave Rose Ochestra
(CBS). s}{
§:oo—Meet Corliss Archer '
(CBS).
9:3o—Horace Heidt Show %
(CBS). s
10:00~Your Sunday Date. :
10:30—One Nation Indivisible
; (CBS).
11:00—~WGAU News, Night
Final,
11:05—Music America Loves.
12:05—Sign Off. :
MONDAY MORNING i
6:ss—News. J
7:00—Good Morning Circle.
7:3o—~World News Briefs.
7:35—G00d Morning Circle,
8:00—~CBS World News Roundup
(CBS).
8:15—Good Morning Circle,
B:3o—Music Shop Parade.
9:OO—CBS News of America
(CBS).
9:ls—Strength for the Day.
9:3o—Let’s Play Hotpoint,
10:00—Music Please (CBS).
10:15—Arthur Godfrey Show
(CBS.)
11:30—Ring the Bell,
11:45—Rosemary (CBS).
12:00—~Wendy Warren and News
(CBS).
MONDAY AFTERNOON
12:15—Mid-Day Roundup of the
News.
12:30—Romance of Helen Trent
(CBS).
12:45—Farm Flashes.
1:00—Big Sister (CBS).
I:ls—Ma Perkins (CBS).
I:3o—Young Dr. Malone (CBS).
I:4s—The Guiding Light (CBS).
2:oo—Designed for Dancing.
2:ls—Perry Mason (CBS).
+ 2:3o—This Is Nora Blake (CBS).
2:4s—The Brighter Day (CBS).
, 8:00—~The News 'Til Now-——
Ed Thilenius.
3:l2s—News.
8:15- -Hillbilly Matinee.
+ 4:00—1340 Platter Party,
s:oo—Here’s to Veterans.
s:ls—Marine Band.
s:3o—Local News — Spot Sum
: mary.
s:3s—Spotlight on Sports.
s:ls—Friendship Presbyterian
1 Church Choir,
Samuel F. B. Morse, credited
with inventing the telegraph, was
a successful artist before patenting
his invention.
FOR THE BEST IN
AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE
ALWAYS COME TO
pesoto SILVEY'S rLymoutH
Experienced Rate Clerk, - Sober,
Married, neat and responsible.
Prefer experience with East-
South Tariffs. Our operation cov
ers territory along east coast from
Atlanta to Boston.
Starting salary $3640 per year,
two weeks paid vacation, two
weeks sick leave, yearly bonus in
centive plan.
44 hours per week. New office
facilities.
Will assist in locating living
quarters in Atlanta,
CONTACT IMMEDIATELY ;
McLEAN TRUCKING CO.
736 Memorial Drive S. E. Atlanta, Ca.
Telephone Main 9912 I
SUNDAY
7:oo—Sign On.,
7:oo—Music for Sunday.
7:ls—Lighthouse Gospel Singers.
7:3o—Healing Waters.
B:oo—The Sterchi Trio.
B:3o—The Good Tidings Broad
cast.
9:oo—~The Community Sing,
9:3o—Lancaster Quartet,
10:00—News and Sports.
10:15—Phil Brito.
10:30—Pipes of Melody.
11:00—UP News. |
11:15—East Athens Baptist |
Church.
'l2:ls—Ted Hale, :
12:45—News Review-—
H. Randolph Holder.
I:oo—Athens Federal Savings &
Loan. ‘
I:os—L.ouis Montgomery. |
1:30--Silvey’s Svnday Serenade.
2:oo—~Revolving Bandstand,
6:oo—This Is Your Doctor,
6:ls—Proudiy We Hail.
6:4S—UP News.
7:oo—Candlelight and Silver.
7:ls—Sign Off,
MONDAY
6:oo—Sign On,
6:oo—Reveille Roundup.
6:ls—Ramblin’ Ronnie, |
6:45—8i1l and Evelyn. ]
7:OO—UP News.
7:os—The Blessed Hope.
7:3O—UP News.
7:3S—WRFC Trading Post. ' «
~ 7:4s—Sons of the Pioneers.
B:oo—Early Morning News—
H. Randolph Holder.
- B:ls—Musical Clock,
, 8:30—Ball Scores. ;
~ B:3s—Musical Clock. i
B:so—Poss Dixieland. Quiz,
B:SS—~UP News. i
9:oo—Morning Devotional, v
9:ls—Tune Time,
9:4s—The Feminine Agenda.
10:00—WRFC Jailbirds.
10:30—Mid-Morning News.
10:45—W. C. T, U,
11:00—Chuck Wagon,
12:00—Leon and Red.
12:15—News at Noon—
H. Randolph Holder,
12:30—The Statesmen Quartet.
12:45—The Eddy Arnold Show,
1:00—UP News.
I:os—Rent Control.
I:lo—Luncheon Serenade,
2:oo—Major League Game of the
Day.
4:3o—Record Room,
4:4s—Dave Dennis.
6:ls—Tomorrow’s Headlines—
H. Randolph Holder.
6:3o—Sports Roundup.
6:4s—Jerry Sears.
7:oo—Twilight Moods.
7:ls—Sign Off,
Georgia Graduate
. -
Gets Position
-
In New Hampshire
DURHAM, N. C.—Joseph S. Per
rin, a University of Georgia grad
uate, has been appointed an in
structor of art at the University of
New Hampshire, it was announced
by President Arthur S, Adams.
He was graduated from Clarks
ton High School in 1941 and has
studied at Georgia School of Tech
nology, Virginia Polytechnic Insti
tute, High Museum School of Art,
Ringling School of Art and the
University of Georgia.
He received a bachelor of fine
Arts degree from Georgia in 1950.
Mr. Perrin will begin his duties
at the start of the academic year
on September 26.
In an average year, U, S. forest
fires burn over areas larger than
Deleware and Rhode Island com
bined.
AFTER 4000 YEARS IN BACK
SEAT. WOMEN OF SOUTH
KOREAPLAY BUSYROLEINWAR
By GAILE DUGAS
NEA Staff Writer
NEW YORK—(NEA)-—The wo
men of South Korea, who have
something to say about their gov
ernment for the first time in 4000
years, are doing something about
the war, too.
One of them is Louise Yim of
Seoul, only woman in the South
Korean cabinet, who is now in
America in her role as adviser to
President Syngman Rhee. Five
hundred others are on the Korean
police force, and a few even are
piloting planes with supplies to
the front lines.
“In the 1948 election, 50 per cent
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Korea's Louise Yim: “Ignorant
people fall easy prey to Com
munism.”
of the votes, were cast by women.
It was the first time they had
voted in over 4000 years of our
history,” Miss Yim explains. “In
the second election, in May, 1850,
Korean women got out the vote.”
Though most of them are not
well educated, Korean women are
eager to take part in public life.
“If necessary, they’ll fight at the
front or in the streets,” Miss Yim
says emphatically, ‘“Meanwhile,
they raise money for soap and
other necessities for the soldiers
at the front. They do whatever
they can.” |
Her original purpose in coming
here, just before the war, was to
raise funds for Central University,
the co-educational college she es
tablished at Seoul in 1932. The
Japanese closed the university
during World War II because Miss
Yim refused to train its girls as
nurses for the Japanese army. Miss
Yim’s name was placed on the
death list and she was saved only
by the end of the war a month
later. =
Miss Kim, who was born in
Kumsan, in South Korea, got a
first-hand knowledge of the inside
'of Japanese jails in 1919, during
a national uprising. She was dis
tributing revolutionary pamph
lets when the Japanese police
caught her and sent her to jail for
six months.
~On her release, she attended
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Delightful, delirious doings of
5y .
America’s favorite date! Featuring
.
Janet Waldo. Every Sunday night
3 "
brought? so you by
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
high school in Tokyo because she
wanted to watch the Japanese op
erate, She then returned to Ko
rea to teach at Ewha College in
Seoul. Her teachers’ license were
taken away when she made
speeches advocating Korean free
dom. She finally reached Califor
nia in 1924, where she studied for
and got both her B. A. and M. A.
at the University of Southern Cal
ifornia,
She invested her savings in sev
eral California service stations and
with the profits returned to Korea\
to found Central University, where
students are trained for positions
in government and education., |
When the Korean republic be
came a fact after World War 11,
Miss Yim was in the first cabinet
as minister of Commerce and In
dustry. She is head of the Korean
Women's Democratic Party. But
she feels that her role as presi
dent of Central University is most
fimportant because of the part
education plays in the fight against
communism.
“Our people must be educated
in order to resist the Communists,”
she says. “An ignorant people fall
easy prey to communism.”
¥
Mass-Production
Plastic Cruise
NEW BEDFORD, Mass.—(NEA)
—Plastic cabin cruisers, 24 feet
long, are being built in this one
time whaling city under new mass
production methods which may
revolutionize manufacture of small
boats for civilian and mmtary use,
Plastic boats are not new, al
though they are generally limited
to rowboat or dinghy size, A few
bigger boats—one as large as a
40-foot yacht—have been built on
a custom-made basis.
With the new streamlined pro
duction methods just developed,
however, 24-foot craft could be
turned out one a day, as against
the four to six weeks normally re
quired to build a wooden or metal
boat of similar specifications.
Leakproof Hull
The new process utilizes a com~
bination of Laminac, a polyester
resin, and Fiberglas reinforcing
mat. It results in a single seam
less, leakproof hull and deck
which never needs painting,
caulking or other costly upkeep.
The boats will require only
about one-fifth the maintenance
VUOI"I{ and expense necessary fOI‘
comparable wooden or metal craft,
according to Carl Beetle, presi
dent of the company which has
been building boats for seven gen
erations.
The hulls are formed in molds,
and each cruiser has a molded-in
plastic zasoline tank, water tank,
lcebo "an& smit/walith de¥y rust
and corrosion, |
In durability tests, the boats
have been exposed for long per
iods to alternate soaking and sun
baking, buried in sand, and al
lowed to stand moored in ice, all
without ill effect. Should the hull
‘ become damaged by rocks or other
objects, it can be repaired easily
with plastic patches.
Pheasants Are
Florida Farm
PANAMA CITY, Fla— (NEA)
—A Florida man has a new slant
on small farms for retiring busi
nessmen.
W. E. Banzhaf is the owner of
Florida’s first pheasant farm near
Panama City. After three years
of operation, he now has approxi
mately 4500 birds of various sizes
confined in the wire pens strung
over his five acres.
Not only is it unusual to find
pheasants in such a domesticated
setting, but they are far from
their normal haunts in semi-trop
ical Florida.
There have been attempts dur
\ing the last few years among
southern sportsmen to bring the
pheastant to their area as wild
game. Amendments a few years
ago to the regulations of the Flor
ida Game and Fresh Water Fish
Commission providé for raising of
pheasants for propagation and
food purposes only.
Busy Seasons
Spring and summer are the
busiest seasons for the pheasant
farmer, since that is the time the
young are hatched. All eggs must
be hatched in Banzhaf’s 800-egg
incubator because the sensitive
birds refuse to sit on their eggs in
confinement. Pheasant eggs re
quire 24 days in the incubator.
Banzhaf packs most of his birds
for northern markets during the
fall and winter months. They go
mostly by order to private clubs,
although he also has a growing
local market.
The farm has drawn numerous
visitors and, reflecting his old love
of the outdoors, his visitors mean
more than just prospective cus
tomers. It was his first ambition
to stimulate interest in helping to
bring back the pheasant as wild
game,
S. P. McDonald, Florida state
conservation officer, explains that
the state, while endeavoring to
keep a reserve of other types of
game, has never considered the
pheasant a sound investment since
the species requires good farming
territory with an abundance of
grain.
“r’d sure like to change their
' minds,” Banzhaf confessed.
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FEATURE PLYMOUTH | Low-priced Car “A” | Low-priced Car “B” . o
Automatic choke —it saves gas Mo . @
SR i [
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Ignition Key Starter -
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Safety-Rim Wheels — they protect you in case qa Mo 3
of a blowout — hold tire on the rim o ;] 9
Safe-Guard Hydrauhc‘hßTakes — they give you 7&, %o
smoother, surer stops with less foot pressure Mo Wi
7.0 to 1 _engine compression ratio ' e Y
™ o R
—the engine uses gasoline more efficiently 2 o ,hd‘ 8
Chair-height seats s e -
- they give you greater riding comfort % : v
Independent parking brake ; fij_if' &
— it gives you two independent braking systems ? ho ; 4“ o
When you compare the three leading low-priced cars, Set SRR i Y
a check list like this will help you judge their true value. . “‘" . )e: o
Ask for facts — and weigh these facts in terms of their {?Z* - R LRI Q %
benefits to you. Make a note of features that give you A e R T
the most in comfort, safety, performance and economy. g 5 5 s Balg N
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PLYMOUTH Division of GHRYSLER CORPORATION |l s s Oy
Detroit 3, Michigan [upmpppayey es et “’r—"'-:-lE-, -
T =l .
Fleming Post To Again Sponsor
Junior Legion Baseball Squad
Youth in play—citizens in action
is the belief of the Allen R. Flem
ing, jr.; Post No. 20 of the Ameri
can Legion, declared its command
er, Weaver Bridges.
Mr. Briges said the post will
sponsor the American Legion Jun
ior League baseball program again
next summer. “There’s quite a bit
of expense involved, but it's a
mere token beside the returns in
good citizenship taught in team
work,” he remarked.
His remarks came after a review
of the 1950 Junior League in which
Athens youths participated. The
Junior League is a baseball pro
— EFFECTIVE AUGUST 28, 1950 —
Due to the seasonal increase in cost of milk production as well as
increased cost of bottling, it is necessary thaf the price of our milk
be changed to the followign: , :
Bulk Quarts Pints 12 Pints
Sweet Milkk ........... 22¢ 12¢ 07¢
Butter Milk ............ 40c 14¢ v n
Chocolate Drink ........ 20¢ 12¢ 0%
Cereal Cream .......... 65¢ 35¢ 20
Whipping Cream ....... 95¢ 50¢ 30e
OngsAde. ........... 508 16¢ i 05 :
Butter ................ 70¢c per pound ;
Cottage Cheese ......... 25¢ per jar
Athens Cooperative Creamery
Phone 2271 — 198 W. Hancock
gram for youms developed by the
Legion in which boys compete for
national reccgnition. Many big
league stars today got their start
with the Junior League, Mr.
Bridges said.
The Athens league team,
coached by Milton Moore, won
local and district competitions, but
was defeated by Savannah in the
play-off for the right to play in
the state championship.
“Those boys worked hard to
make a winring team,” Mr.
Bridges said. “When he had the
choice of playing Savannah either
here (in Athens) or in Savannah,
SUNDAY, AUGUST 27, 1950.
we chose to send them to Savan
nah. It was a re; ‘Qfflelfim r
most of them, am?! we aveh‘tghifd
cause to regret our choice.”
“The Fleming post got its first
start in youth programs with the
construction of the swimming
pool on the legion grounds on
Lumpkin street,” he revealed. “At
the time that pool was the largest
outdoor tile pool in Georgia.”
The pool is now operated by
the Athens Recreation Depart
ment,
The boat-billed night heron of
Venezuela has a beak like an up
side-down boat.
The Inter-American Highway in
Central America is lined with Co
pey oaks, a variety of white oak.
Sugar Pine cones range from 12
to 18 inches.