Newspaper Page Text
y Y 22, 1951,
qURSDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1951,
Coming
Events
WwCTU ROUR
WRFC :
over WEFC the following will
pa heard in the Woman's Chris
fian Temperance Union hour
erch Monday morning 10:45 to
11:00 during the month of Feb
ruary 1951:
February 26—Mrs. H.A. Hay
good.
. WGAU
over WGAU the following
«'ll be heard on the Woman’s
curistian Temperance Union
pour each Tuesday afternoon
290 to 5:15 during the month
of February:
February 27—Curtis Proveaux.
e ——
pUBLIC LIBRARY
CALENDAR
gxhibition of prints by Conn
West is on display in the libra
ry.
polls from the collection of
May Erwin Talmadge are being
shown in the library.
Libra=y Story Hour hel
each Saturday in the Chi?hn":
room from 10 a. m. to 11 a m.
pibrary siory time over
WGAU each Friday at 5 p. m.
Hours of opening: -Monday
through Friday. 9-a. m. to 9 p.
m. Saturday 9 a. m. to 6 p. m.
Sunday 3 p. m. to 6 p m
League of Wemen Voters of
Athens will hold a luncheon
meeting Friday, February 23, at
12:30, in the upstairs dining
room at the N and N Cafeteria.
The price is SI.OO. Reservations
by anyone interested in attend
ing may be made by calling Mrs.
pubin Gotesky, 1491-J or Mrs.
sfanley Grubb, 2395. Legislators
(happelle Matthews and Grady
pittard and Senator Robert G.
Stephens, ir., will make brief
talks on the work of the recent
Georgia Legislature session,
Friday evening, February
99d, Dedication of “Book of
erf-ml)l':lxz(f(f'_'—_—‘lVlexico. Project
and Family Night. This meeting
is sponsored by the Women’s
Home League of the Salvation
Army, 454 College Ave., 7:30
p. m. Public cordially invited to
attend.
Fntre Nous Club will meet
Thursday, Feb. 22, 6:3¢ p. m.
at the YWCA Home on Han
ceck.
ANNUAL SAREPTA
MEETING
On March 2, beginning at 10 a.
m. the 50th Annual Sarepta W.
M. U. meeting will be held at
Commerce First Baptist Church.
Reports show a record breaking
year's work in many respects.
Make it a record breaking year
in attendance and have repre
sentatives from every church in
the Asseciation. An interesting
program is being arranged, and
expected visiting speakers are
Miss Jessie Green, Missionary to
China; Mrs. J. I. Alford, East-
Central vice-president; Miss
Hilda Beggs, State W. M. U.
Field Worker; and the Rev. Wil
liam S. Bates, Sarepta Field
Worker. The day promises to be
interesting, and don’t forget the
wonderful hospitality of the
Commerce church, As a high- -
light of the day, Mrs. T. C.
Hardman, Sarepta W. M. U. ]
Historian, is preparing a sketch
of Sarepta W. M. U, History for ‘
the past 50 years.
Evening Book Review Group
of the University Woman’s Club
will meet with Mrs. Roosevelt
Walker, 1196 Prince Avenue,
Friday, Feb. 23, 8 p. m. Miss
Mlildred Ledford is to review
the book, “Mary” by Sholem
Asch. :
Sale of Georgia Day Flags,
sponsored by the Laura Ruther
ford Chapter U. D. C. will bé
heli on Saturday, Feb. 24,
weather nermitting. The head-
Quarters will be in the Georgian
Hotel and the proceeds go to the
Mildred Rutherford Educational
Fund to place essay material in
all the schools.
Associated Master Beauticians
of America, Chapter 1000, will
meet with Mrs. Clyde Maddox,
18 Holman avenue, Monday,
Peb. 26, 8:30 p. m. New members
\n“ be V\’(})come_
University of Georgia z‘éang
Concert, Thursday, Feb. :’-ris
P. m, at the Chapel. J. H‘ried
Mitchen conducting the va it
brogram. This is the "x“i'or
Music appreciation program
this weel,
First Methodist Chureh is
holding a Building Fund dinner
il the Georgian Hotel on Mon
day, 7 p. m. Tickets are $3.00
Per person and $2.00 is to go to
the buiiding fun. Dr, John T.
Cocutz, head of the department
of Philosophy of the Atlanta
Division of the University of
Georgia, ig the guest speaker
and his topic is “The Threat of
Communism vs. the Democratic
Way of Life and the Movement
of the Church,” The ticket sale
18 limited tq 300 and reserva
tions shoylq be made at once
With Mrs, T, w. Paschall, Mrs.
Kenneth Waters, Ed Williams,
siperintendent; the church of
fice, anq A, p. Farrar, Southern
Mutyay Building.
Cub Scouts from Pack 22 will
have 2 Blue and Gold party gt
e First Baptist Church, Fri
day, 7 p, m,
Doreag Sunday School Class
o Prince Avenue Baptist
Church winy hold the re{“tll?r
Tonthiy business meeting at the
home of Mrs, H, B. Gailey, 243
Sunset Driye, Friday, February
%38 p. m. Note change in date.
193¢0k M. Hodgsom PTA will
Mohsor g chicken mull supper,
hld&y, h'bfuary 23, 6 to 8 »
~ in the sches! s=2iterium.
Tickets are 35 cents for chil
dren and 65 cents for adults.
Proceeds will go to buy play
ground equipment.
Athens Women's Club will
meet Tuesday, February 27th,
3:20, at the home of Mrs. R. L.
O'Kelley, Winterville Road. Dr.
B. 0. Williams, head of the So
ciology Department of the Uni
versity of Georgia, will speak on
“ilnternational Relations.”
Athenians Are
Pledged By
Zeta Phi Eta
Zeta Phi Eta, national woman'’s
honorary speech fraternity re
cently pledged three University of
Georgia students,
They are Mary Scoit, Athens:
Dottie Crow, Athens; and Susan
McCall, Moultrie.
The fraternity represents wom
er interested in all forms of speech
art including speech , correction,
acting, oral interpretation, and
radio.
Biology Club
George Scofield, Oggs, Ala., has
been elected president of the
Biology Club at the University
of Georgia.
Other officers are James Major,
Atlanta, vice president; Mrs. Ruth
H. Smiley, Savannah, secretary;
Emma Lou Johnson, Millen, cor
responding secretary; Anne O’-
Quinn, Atlanta, treasurer; Ben
Barrow, Athens, editor.
Chi Omega Officers
Leila DuPree, Rome, has been
elected president. of Chi .Omega
sorority at the University of Geor
gia. -
Other officers are Peggy Elder,
Miami, Fla., vice president; Anne
Sweetland, Athens, secretary;
Louise Fite, Calhoun, treasurer;
and Jan Martin, Tifton, pledge
trainer,
* * %
Chittlin Supper
Tonight In
Masonic Temple
Salonia Chapter, O. E. S., will
have a chittlin supper tonight,
6 to 8 p. m.,, in the Masonic
Temple, Meigs street.
Everyone is invited and plates
are $1.25.
Holly Heights Club
Met February 15
With Mrs. Pledger
The Holly Heights Home Dem
onstration Club held the regular
meeting on February 15, at the
home of Mrs. A. F. Pledger. Mrs.
E. J. Silvey, vice-president, pre
sided in the absence of the pres
ident.
The devotional was given by
Mrs.J. H. Bradley on “The Home,”
and she read scripture from Ro
mans 12. Mrs. Homer Williams
closed with prayer.
Business was discussed, after
which Mrs. C. A. Fowler, Home
Improvement chairman, spoke on
“Safety.” She pointed out the
hazards from the attic to the cel
lar anad in the kitchen and bath
rooms, i
The meeting was then turned
over to Mrs. Mary M. Smith, Dem
onstration Agent, who made Lem
on Chiffon pie, which was served
to the ladies, and was delicious.
Mrs. Homer Williams and Mrs.
Edna Barrett were welcomed as
visitors.
The hostess served delicious re
freshments to the members pres
ent. The Valentine motif was
used for the decorations. The next
meeting will be with Mrs. Ralph
Shelnutt.
—Publicity Chairman.
* %* %
p
e R eA e
e e
o* * »
Mrs. Tom O’Dillon, of Watkins-~
ville, is doing nicely following an
operation at St. Mary’s Hospital.
* i *
Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Wing
field, of Asheville, N, C., arrived
today for a visit with their aunt,
Miss Willie Whitehead, on Lump
kin, and their sisters on McWhor
ter Drive.
* * *
Dr. and Mrs. Charles Prothro
Hill (Dotty Bowen) of Newnan,
announce the birth of a son on
February 20 at Newnan. Hospital.
He has been named Charles Lath
am Hill.
® ® =»
Dr. and Mrs. W. E. Crane (Kath
erine Rowland), of Charleston,
West Virginia, are expected with
in the next few days to visit their
father, Mr. C: A. Rowland and
their sister, Mrs. Pinckney Steiner
on Hill street. They are now in
Melbourne Beach, Fla., the guests
of their son and daughter, Dr. and
Mrs. William Rule, of Belgian
Congo, in Florida on a visit with
Dr. Kellersberger, head of the
American Mission to Lepers, and
Mrs. Kellersberger. Dr. Rule has
been conducting one of his Mission
hospitals. :
* ok #
The friends of Mrs. Bessie Teas
ley will be glad to know that she
is improving from an illness of
several days, at her home on Oak
land avenue. Mrs. Teasley is the
mother of Mrs. Lois Lazenby.
® ® *
Mr, and Mrs. R. G. McPherson,
of Baitimore, Md., announce the
birth of a daughter on February
19 at Johns-Hopkins Hospital. The
baby has been nanred Margaret
Lore McPherson.
il
Clothes outgrown and discarded
b older sisters and brothers will
be received more gratefully by
younger children if they are first
given a home dye-dip to remove
that hand-me-down look.
* K %
Miss Annie Foster
Needs Rare Type:
Blood Transfusion
Miss Annie Foster, who has
been ill for some time, is at the
Athens General Hospital, is in
need of a blood transfusion,
“Miss Annie,” as she is called
by the many, many people that
know her, has been office man
ager for the YMCA office for
the past 38 years, and is loved
by all the boys that have ever
affiliated with the YMCA.
“Miss Annie” has a rare type
“0"” blood and it is sometimes
hard to match, Anyone that has
this type blood, and can, is
asked to report to the labora
tory at the Athens General Hos
pital,
Dr. Mary Gaulden
Talks Tonight
In Baldwin Hall
Dr. Mary Esther Gaulden, biolo
gist at the Oak Ridge National
Laboratory, will speak Thursday,
Feb. 22, at 8 p. m., in 112 Baldwin
Hall on the University campus on
“The Effects of Radiation and
Chemicals on Cell Structure and
Mitosis as Observed in Living
Cells.”
Dr. Gaulden has degrees from
Winthrop College and the Uni=
versity of Virginia. She has held.
positions at the University of Ala
bama, the National Institute of
Health, and the Universily of Ten
nessee,
All interested persons are cor
dially invited to attend this lec
ture,
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THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
Radio Program
Discussed The
Working Man
By CYNTHIA LOWRY
AP Newsfeatures Writer
If a man wants to be a howling
success in the world of business
and dollars, his greatest assets are
a nagging, shrewish wife and a
home he’'d prefer to stay out of.
This shocking theory about suc
cess was tossed from a radio one
day recently when I was already
feeling bad from a touch of grippe.
This radio expert went on to say
that every person carries his fam
ily to and from his job, and that
a guy who is worried about his
beloved’s head cold or his heir’s
mumps isn’t likely to do such a
good job of riveting on a produc
tion line or pistol-whipping sta
tistics in a ledger.
The men who make the best
traveling salesmen, he says flatly,
are the gents who look forward to
long periods of freedom, hotel life
and expense accounts away from
the harassment of their better
halves. On the other hand, the
fellow who reluctantly abandons
his comfortable nest and longs for
his smiling, loving helpmate is
likely to return to the home office
with a blank sales book.
It’s the same with the business
types who are chained to a desk
or shop, continued the air-wave
analyst. The man who will do
anything — including hanging
around the office working at night
—rather than go home to a disa
greeable, nagging spouse is likely
to wind up president of the com=-
pany in practically no time at all.
By the same logic, the happily
married man at an adjoining desk
who cuts for home when the clock
strikes 5 p. m., is doomed to sit out
his life until (fension time at that
:ar?(e desk, doing the same old
ask.
This approach to the why and
wherefore of business success
struck me as pretty cynical and
certainly not in line with the
American legend. By his yardstick,
the sympathetic wife who works
overtime to maintain a comfort
able home and establish a pleasant,
good-natured family relationship
actually is working overtime to
deprive herself of a mink coat and
a fish-tailed automobile, By this
measure, the nation’s Horatio Al
ger boys.and the business tycoons
are nothing but a frustrated, un
easy characters with ulcer futures
who are trying to substitute a
holding company for personal hap- |
piness. |
But the radio Solomon wasn't
finished. Many wives, said he in a
level tone, actually don’t want
their husbands to get ahead and
become lord of all the business
they survey. Frequently wives be
come jealous of their husbands’
success, said he, and go out of
their way to puncture their
spouses’ male egos just to inflate
their own. Furthermore, many
wives become unhappy when their
spouses start climbing into higher
income brackets, feel uneasy in
other strata of the social structure
and would rather maintain the
status quo, their old friends and
the familiar house, furniture and
budget.
Because we Americans are suck
ers for the success story, the pos
sibility that every man has a
chance to be president, and be
cause we are pretty apt to judge a
man’s worth by the size of his in
come, this theory has given me, at
least, something to chew over.
I find the theory totally un
pleasant. I want to believe that
successful American men are the
ones who have intelligent, diplo
matic, understanding wives who
help their men on the steps up the
ladder. And I prefer to think that
these men are inspired to keep up
their performances because of the
nice home-life they have.
Besides, even this jaundiced fel
low didn’t say that the size of
one’s income and the importance
of his title were the only measures
of success in life. All he said was
A. “Vagabond” shorts in sanforized
denim with 2 pateh pockets, zip
back closure for snug fit. In blue,
green, shrimp, 10-20, ....... 2.95
B. “Jubilee” two-some in color-fast
Sunyana cloth. Elasticized boxer
shorts have built-in underpanty. In
black, shrimp, light blue. 10-20.
8.95
that there were many jobs that
an unhappily married man did
better than a happily married
man.
NICHOLSON
NEWS
Herman Ledford, of Commerce,
was a recent visitor here, the
guest of friends.
Rev. Garnet Wilder, of Center,
preached here at the Methodist
Church on Sunday mrorning, A
Mr. and Mrs. W, W. Mealor, of
Commerce, were the guests of
Watson Fleeman and family dur
ing last week.
Rev. Furman Mclntire, of Toc=-
coa, filled his appointment at the
Congregational Holiness Church
over the week-end,
Mrs. Eva Lynch, Mr. and Mrs.
Herman Vickery, of Commerce,
were visiting here with friends
during last week,
Rev. D, E. Beauchamp preaches
at the Fire Baptized REoliness
Church on Saturday night and
Sunday.
The illness of Mrs, Harry Bar=
nett is regretted very much by her
friends, who wish her a speedy
recovery. > )
W. E. Wilbanks made a busi
ness trip to Atlanta and return
during the past week.
Mr. and Mrs. Rogers Poe, of
Commerce, were visiting here with
relatives and friends during the
past week. i
Thonras Seagraves left during
the past week for Atlanta, where
he was inducted into the U, S.
Army,
Congratulations to Tom How=-
ington upon the remodeling of his
home, which adds much to the
comfort and appearance.
Friends of Charlie Duncan re
gret to note his illness, and trust
that he will enjoy a speedy recov=
0. “Corker,” corduroy short for
swimming, sunning or fuhning o .
back-zipped for snug fit. In blue,
pink, yellow, cream, 10-20 ... 4.95
D. Cotton gabardine piped short in
red-navy, white-green, green-lime,
brown-white or black-white. Sizes
O I icos coci socy shis ADB
ery.
Mr. and Mrs, Robert Matthews,
of Jefferson, were among the
guests of relatives here over the
week-end,
Friends regret to note C. T,
Coleman, jr., having to enter the
hospital in Atlanta, and trust he
will soon return home. ‘
James Carithers and family, of
Ellenwood; Prof. Herbert Carith
ers and family, of Elberton, were
guests of Rev, and Mrs, G. T. Car
ithers over the week-end.
C. P. Falmer and family, of
Morgantown, were visiting here
over the week-end, guests of rela
tives and friends. el
~ Jack Wilbanks and family, of
Jefferson, were among the visitors
gere last Saturday, guests of rela
ves.
The illness of little Joe Potts,
jr., infant son of Mr, and Mrs. Joe
Potts, is regretted very much, and
friends trust his recovery will be
speedy.
Nicholsonians will be in attend
ance at Union Meeting services at
the Jersey Fire Baptized Holiness
Church, February 23-25, 1951.
Miss borothy Barnett, of Comer,
was visiting here on Friday night,
the guest of Jewett Barnett and
family.
W. O. Palmer celebrated his
birthday last Sunday together with
the family and friends.
Congratulations to the Metho
dist people upon the painting of
}he interior of the church build
ng.
Friends regret to note the illness
of Rev. G. T. Carithers, and trust
that his recovery will be speedy.
Lieut. and Mrs. William How=-
ington arrived here last week from
Houston, Texas. At the end of his
leave, Lieut. Howington will re
turn to camp, preparatory to going
overseas, Mrs, Howington will re
prain here and at Jefferson with
rélatives, b
Quarterly conference was held
at the Methodist Church en Sun=-
day evening, following an inter=-
esting message by the Rev. J. C,
Callaway, District Superintendent,
of Athens. Several visitors were
Dyed-to-match T Shirts im finest
quality all-combed cotton yarn with
non-stretch neckband. Stripes and
golids. 8, M, L cvce sinus isnns 599
®
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\“—7’
PAGE THREE
in attendance at the nrviex The
rtx&xt quarter will be held at Cens
Bill M. Bickler and hfi gy
Commerce, were among the '
tors here Sunday afternoom with
friends. :
A. D, O'Keelley, of Maysville,
was among the visitors here on
Monday morning, the guest of
friends,
Mrs. W. T. Whitley, Misses Lau
trelle and Gwynelle Barnett were
visiting in Jefferson last Sunday.
Mrs. A. C, Smith, Mr, and Mrs.
Grady Smith were visitinf in Elli=
jay last Sunday, guests of friends.
Friends are glad to note Gordon
Wilbanks recovering from his re
cent illness, and trust his recovery
will be speedy.
Fish Supper
. Bear in mind the Senior Class
of Benton High is sponsoring a
fish supper in the lunch room of
the school, Friday evening, March
2, beginning at six o’clock. Money
derived from the supper will as
sist in paying for their trip, so be
sure to attend upon this occasion
—tickets now being on sale,
In connection with this event,
the Seniors will get half the pro
ceeds derived from a cake-walk
in the auditoriuny, which will be
staged the same evening as the
supper. Looking for you there.
The stubborn dirt in handker=
chiefs will yield to this pre-wash
treatment, Put them in a porce
lain pan and cover them with cold
water to which one-third cup of
soap and two tablespoons of bleach
have been added. Heat the water
just to the boiling point, then re
move the pan from the flame.
Rinse the handkerchiefs well un
der warm running water before
adding them to your regular wash,
To prevent galoshes and rubbers
from becoming hopelessl mud
covered as winter wears on, wash
them off from time to time with
warm soapsuds. To scrub away
stubborn dirt on heels or sole
ledges try a worn toothbrush.