Newspaper Page Text
PAGE FOUR
L' E |
e e S ——————————————
WCTU HOUR
WRFC
Over WRFC the following will
be heard in the Woman’s Chris
tian Temperance Union hour
each Monday morning 10:45 to
11:00 during the month of Feb
ruary 1951:
February 26—Mrs. HAA. Hay
good.
WGAU
Over WGAU the following
will be heard on the Woman's
Christian Temperanece Union
Hour each Tuesday afternoon
5:00 to 5:15 during the month
of February:
February 27—Curtis Proveaux.
PUBLIC LIBRARY
CALENDAR
Exhibition of prints by Conn
West is on display in the libra
ry.
Dolls from the collection .of
May Erwin Talmadge are being
shown in the library.
Libra=y Story Hour 1s held
each Saturday in the Children's
room srom 10 a. m. to 11 a m.
Library siory time over
WGALD each Friday ot 5 p. m.
Haurs of cpening: -Monday
through iridhy. 9a. m to 9 p.
m. Saturday 2 a. m. to 6 p. m.
Sunday 3 p. m. to 6 p. m.
ANNUAL SAREPTA
MEETING
On March 2, beginning at 10 a.
m. the 56th Annual Sarepta W.
M. U. meeting will be held at
Commerce First Baptist Church.
Reports show a record breaking
vear’s work in many respects.
Malke 't a record breaking year
in attendance and have repre
sentatives from every church in
the Association, An interesting
program is being arranged, and ‘
expected visiting sneakers are |
Miss Jessie Green, Missionary to
China; Mrs. J. 1. Alford, East-
Central vice-president; Miss
Hilda Beggs, State W, M. U.
Field Worker; and the Rev, Wil
liam €. Bates, Sarepta Field |
Worker. The day promises to be |
interest 'nz, and don’t forget the |
wonderful hospitality of the
Commerce church, As a high- |
Yeht of the day, Mas. T. C, |
Hardman, Sarepta W. M, U. I
Historian, is preparing a s'tetch |
of Sareria W, M. U, History for |
the past 50 years.
Assor’ated Master Beauticians i
of America, Chapter 1000, will |
meet with Mrs. Clyde Maddox,
180 [loimar avenue, Monday, |
Feb. 2¢, £:3O p. m. New members
will be welcome, i
First Methodist Church is |
holding 2 Building Fund dinner
at the Georgian Hotel on Mon- l
day, 7 p. m. Tickets are $3.00 |
per person and $2.00 is to go to
the building fun. Dr., John T.
Cocutz, tead of the department
of Philesaphy of the Atlanta
Division of the University of
Georgia, is 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
is limited to 300 and reserva
tions should be made at once
with Mirs. T. W. Paschali, Mrs.
Kenneth Waters, Ed Williams,
superintendent; the church of
fice, and A. P, Farrar, Southern
Mutua! Building. ‘
Athens Women's Club will |
meet Tuesday, February 27th,
3:30, 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
“International Relations.” l
FELLOWSHIP MEETING— ’
There will be a fellowship |
meeting Sunday afternoon, Feb. |
25, 3:30 p. m. at Durden’s audi
torium, located at 459 Clayton ‘
St., over Durden’s music store. l
" I
3 ’ .
ATy Crow's Firstii
f M&
(LS
{&: - s
O/ Ne»
1 c\-‘l Ami
QA e :
{ \\:
|\/ on famous
| TUSSY
CLEANSING CREAMS
$1.75 size (8 oz), now l
$8 size (16 os.), now $1.93
all prioes plus tax
EMULSIFIED
CLEANSING GREAM
for dry skins, rich
in emollient oils,
leaves skin dewy
fresh. /
PINK
CGLEANSING CREAM
for oily or normal
skins. Light, thor
ough, refreshing,
‘olh these famous Tussy
ing Creams are on sale
«..each at budget pampering
prices! Pick the one that's true
to your type ~.save !
CROW'S
[ DRUG STORE |
The Rev. Clark Sorrows is the
invited speaker, and there will
be special singing. The Rev. J.
H. Kesler, pastor of the Pente
costal Fire Baptized Holiness
Church will be charge at this
meeting. Everyone is welcome.
Athens Woman’s Club will
meet Tuesday, February 27, 3:30
p. m. with Mrs. R, L. O'Kelley,
Winterville Road. All members
are urged to attend.
Athens-Clarke County PTA
Council is sponsoring Jerard
Jennings, remarkably gifted
child prodigy, in two piano con
certs. Ore on Tuesday after
noon, Feb, 27, 32:15, for the
schoel c¢hildren. On Wednesday
evening. 8 p. m. for the patrons
of the PTA in Athens and sur
roundinz communities. Tickets
are on sale 2t Gallant-Belk, and
Michael's all day Saturday and
Tuesday a. m.; Citizens and
Sauthern Pank and The Nation
al Bonk Saturday a. m. 10 to
12. Als» on sale at the ticket
office the days of the concerts,
Attend the Jennings concert
and support your PTA,
Business Girls Club will hold
their regular program meeting
Wednesday night, the 28th in
stead of Tuesday as the Nation
al YWCA President will be here
at that time. Every member is
urged te attend as this will be
a very interesting meeting.
Please netc the change in the
date.
Barrow School P. T. A. will
meet on Thursday, March 1, at
3:15 in the school lunchroom.
Dr. Theo Dalton will speak on
the subject “Building for Better
Reading Ability.”
College Avenue P. T. A. will
hold a meeting Thursday night,
March 1, at 8:00 p. m. in the
school. The subject “Back To
Scheol for Mom and Pad.” All
parents are urged to attend. |
AAUW Play Reading Group
will meet Tuesday evening, Feb.
27, 8 o’clock, in the home of
Mrs. Rollin Chambliss, 365 S.
Jackson street. A group reading
of “The Frogs” by Aristophanes
will be given. Several University
students will take part, and all
AAUW members are urged to be
present, :
A delegaticn is coming over
from EFmmanuel College, Frank
lin Snrings, Ga., h~aded hv Dean
G. W. Drum, and a number of
their best singers, to conduc! the
pregram, “Flame Worship Hour”
over WGAU, Sundav mornire,
Feb. 18th, from 12:15 to 1:00.
This colleze has made wonderful
strides in the educational field
since located in our immediate
section and the public is invited
to hear this College group.
Junior Hizrh PTA Study Group
will meet Monday, Feb. 26, 8
p. m. at the home of Ms. Howard
Coggin, 599 Milledge Terrace.
Mrs, Martin, of Junior High, will
lead the diseussion of “Develop
ment of Resnonsibility in the
Teen-age Child.” All interested
persons are invited to attend.
If you can come please call Mrs.
Coggin, 2254-J or Mrs. Lenoir,
1900-J.
University Drive Sewing Club
will meet Wednesday, 10:30 a.
m. with Mrs. Fred Leathers.
Athens Chapter 268 OES will
meet Monday night, 8 o’cleck,
at the temple on Meigs street.
All members are requested to be
present and visiting members
are welcome.
Music Group of the University
Woman’s Club will meet Tues
day, Feb. 27, 3:30 p. m. with Mrs.
W. A. Mackenzie, 80 Holman
avenue. Mrs. F. H. Mendenhall,
who recently tourned Europe is
to be the guest speaker, She will
talk on the Passion Play that she
saw in Oberammergau, Ger
many. All members are urged to
be present,
Beta Zeta Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi will meet at the
Georgian Hotel 8 p. m. Tuesday
night. This is a very important
meeting as the members of the
Phi Chapter will meet with the
Beta Zetas. All members are
urged to be present.
Kiwanis Ladies
Night Set
For Tuesday
A full evening of gala entertain
ment is planned for Kiwanis La- |
dies night at the Athens Country
Club Tuesday evening beginning
at 7:00 o’clock. The informal af
fair will feature Warren Foster of
the Coca-Cola Co., Atlanta, Mr.
Foster is known for his hilarious |
speeches which have been deliv-I
ered throughout the Southeastern
states and has been secured for
the event by Walter Sams, jr. of
the Athens Coca-Cola Bottling Co.
Even the music will be in a novel- !
ty vein and will be furnished by |
Leon and Red, well-known come- |
dy team of this area. }
Kiwanis President Bob Steph-i
ens, will preside. The reception
committee under the direction of
Howard McWhorter will greet the
Kiwanians and their guests at the
door with a red rose for each lady.
The complete program has been |
arranged for a full evening of |
pure entertainment by the Pro
gram Committee, Jack Bradley,
Earl Payne, Walter Martin and L.
H. Christian. i
% # *® f
. . |
Business Aids |
In Cancer Plan |
. i
ATLANTA — Business and in- |
dustrial firms in Georgia have |
handed their workers more than '
110,000 “reminders to save lives”
already this year, the American |
Cancer Society’s state headquar- |
ters reports. |
Wililam D. Ellis, textile manu- |
facturer and state Chairman of the |
Society’s Business-Industry Edu- |
tion service, said that firms in 62 ’
communities have started using
the periodic distribn®i~ of iitavac |
ture “to prevent needless cancer
deaths.”
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MRS. J. B. CALKINS
Mrs. J. B. Calkins
To Visit YWCA
Feb. 28-March 1
Mrs. J. B. Calkins, of Arlington,
Va.,, former president of the
YWCA of the United States of
America and American vice-pres
ident of the World’'s YWCA, will
be in Athens on February 28th
and March Ist to meet with the
members of the YWCA Clubs and
the Board. She will be the guest
speaker of the Business Girls Club
Wednesady night at a dinner
served by the social comnrittee of
the YWCA Board with the help of
she Entre Nous Club and the Bus
iness Girls Club. Members of the
Board and friends of the YWCA|
are urged to make their dinner
reservations by phoning 976 not
later than Monday afternoon.
Mrs. Calkins served two three
year terms as president, retiring
in 1949 when the new constitution
adopted by the 18th National Con
vention combined the posts of
president of the parent body and
of the National Board, providing
these with one set of officers in
stead of two.
A member of the National Board
of the YWCA, Mrs. Calkins serves
as chairman of the Committee on
Programs and Budget.
In 1947 she was elected vice
president for North America of
the World's Council of the YWCA
at its first post-war meeting in
Hangchow, China. At that tithe
she spent several weeks in the
Far East observing YWCA work
in China, the Philippines and Ha
waii., The World’s Council will
meet again in Qctober, 1951, in
Lebanon.
In the summer of 1948 Mrs.
Calkins was one of an eight-mem
ber team of women from this
country invited to Germany by the
U. S. Military Government to
conduct a series of meetings on
“the role of women in a new dem
ocracy.” In this project, meetings
were held in all the key cities of
Western Germany which thous
ands of Germran women attended
to discuss civie and social prob
lems of the new Germany. Mrs.
Calkins was discussion leader of
one of the groups in this series of
meetings, which marked the first
time that all classes of religions
among the women of Germany
met together. Subsequent to this,
Mrs. Calkins visited Czechoslova
kia, France, Belgium and Great
Britain, where she observed the
YWCA program abroad. While
overseas she ‘also attended an
Executive Committee meeting of
the World’s YWCA in Geneva,
Switzerland.
Again in late 1950 Mrs. Calkins
attended the World’'s YWCA Exe-
AT STERCHI'S-- ‘
COMFORT!BEAUTY! THRIFT!
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THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
Ci
ek ® sng bl B 4
on this most recent trip she found
the women of Europe, like those
of Asia, eager to take their place
in the world scene as equal citi
zens with men. Haunted for years
by poverty, suffering and war,
they are no longer willing to re
main submerged, their voices un
heard, They are demanding edu
cation, an equal opportunity for
jobs and professions, the right of
suffrage and of social and politi
cal leadership., Women of the
world are on the march, Mrs. Cal
king says.
Mrs, Calkins has been an out
standing leader in YWCA work
since 1929, both nationally and
regionally, and has worked with
student and local Associations in
Washington, Rochester and Bos
ton.
A graduate of Cornell Univer
sity, she is a formrer vice-presi
dent of the Federation of Cornell
Women's Clubs, a member of the
American Association of Univer
sity Women, a member of the
Council of Church Women in New
York, and vice-president of the
Federation of Churches in Wash
ington, D, C. :
* % »
——————— e e — e ——————
Mrs. John Hunnicutt, IIT, and
Mrs. Balfour Hunnicutt returned
Thursday from a visit in Atlanta
with the former’s parents, Judge
and Mrs. Frank Holden.
L I T
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Foster
(Myrtle Stone) and their young
son, Danny, arrived Friday to
spend the week-end with their
brother and sister, Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Tappan on Gaines School
Road.
= * *
Mr. and Mrs. Jack C. Fraser
(Carolyn Chapman) and children,
Jeanie, Bob and Tommy, of New
Orleans, La., are guests of Mrs.
Fraser’s parents, Dr. and Mrs.
Paul Chapman, *unEil Tuesday.
&
Mrs. John W. Thurmond’s
friends will be glad to learn of her
satisfactory condition following
an operation at St. Mary’s last
Monday.
g N 9 '
Col. J. V. V. Shufelt and Mrs.
Shufelt have as their guests at
their home on Highland Avenue
their son and daughter, Lt. Col.
R. C. McDonald, Mrs. McDonald
(Jean Shufelt) and their children,
John and Jim, of Fort Bliss, Texas.
They are leaving Athens by plane
on Tuesday for San Francisco,
Calif., to board a transport for
their new assignment in the Phil
ippines.
& * *
Mr. and Mrs. Craig Spratlin, of
Hull, announce the birth of a
daughter, Sharon Henrietta, on
February 22, at St. Mary’s Hospi
tal.
* *® *
Friends of Mrs. J. K. Patrick
will regret to learn she is ill in
General Hospital.
§% % %
* Friends of Mr. and Mrs. Jim Al
len will be interested to learn that
their duaghter-inqlaw, Capt. Lo
retta M. (Pat] Allen, A. N. C. ar
rived in Tokyo Friday by plane.
Her husband Capt. Frank Allen,
M. S. C. is with the Medical Corps
General Headquarters in Tokyo.
& * »
Friends of Mrs. W. B. Rice will
regret to learn she fell Friday and
broke her arm, Her condition is
reported good.
® ® %
~ Friends of Master Henry Wil=-
JMilledge Circle, will be
learn he continues to
improve following an operation at
St. Mary’s Hospital on Wednes
day.
. s 0
Hubert Owens, of the Land
scape Architecture Department of
the University of Georgia, was in
Barnwell, 8. C, Friday. While
there he addressed the annual
meeting of the West Low Country
Region of the Garden Clubs of
South Carolina, Mr. Owens talked |
on Landscape Design and illustrat
ed his talk with colored slides. |
* - .
Rankin Promofed
UnitOfAGP |
ATLANTA, Feb, 24.—George L.
Rankin, of Greenville, S. C., to
day was named General Superin
tendent of the Atlanta Unit of
A. & P. Food Stores, succeeding
Charles R. Luker, jr., who will
return East in an executive capac
ity with the company.
The promotion of Mr. Rankin, a
veteran of 31 years with the na-
CONCERT
Sponsorship
Athens P. T. A. Council
February 27 and 28th
America’s Greotest Child Prodigy
Jerard Jennings
b P
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Sa .
o .%a m g
L e By
TTR TN, Y
A e R e, S
— Two Performances —
Matinee February 27th
- Admission:
Children 50c, Adults 1.00
Evening Performance
February 28th
Patron Tickets ... $2.50
Reserve Seats ..... 1.50
Gen. Admission ... 1.00
Prices include tax)
TICKETS ON SALE
(rane's Book Store
B .
Your Nearest School
Tickets on Sale Tuesday until
noon only at—
GALLANT - BELK CO.
CITIZENS & SOUTHERN BANK
MICHAEL'S
NATIONAL BANK OF ATHENS
After Tuesday Noon Tickets On
Sale At Box Office.
tion’s oldest and largest food chain,
was announced by R. M. Smith, of
Jacksonville, Fla., president of the
Southern Division of A, & P.
The new general superintendent
is a native of North Carolina and
has spent his entire business ca
reer with the company in the Car-
T et e e . ,
g “* B se——" *
g=]se Y E A S P
:it ‘A»‘)l %fl? 43rd volume in the
A B /%4%‘ ol . .
TR ~ s N Rivers of America
it Al !" oI Series
ey w 1 .
. . » .
A river with a split personality
OMETIMES IT crawls languidly around icameum
S levees. Sometimes it’s a wild, l.llutit:? tim& fil
with passion, mystery and treachery—but always flowing
through a country of checkered cateets. Here James
Oglethorpe eslanncd 2 Utopia, Thomas Bosomworth, '
a clay-footed clergyman, suffered one of the worst
hangovers in history, and a gracious way of life came
€0 an end with the capture of Jefferson Davis. $4.00
By THOMAS L. STOKES
Ulustrated by LAMAR DODD
£) : -t SR
/
BOOK Mkl"afg DEPARTMENT 7
R oC k er.
s49°9s
.
SI.OO Down Delivers
Here's EVERYTHING vou’ve been looking for in a platform
rocker! Deep, spring-filled cushions that will lull you into
refreshing relaxation every time, Quiet, smooth rocking ac=
tion. Simple, modern styling that will go well with furniture
you already have . . . arm panels and runners in rich,
rubbed and polished loveliness. Covered in long wearing,
beautiful Tapestry! And price? ... a quick look at compe=
tition will convince you that you would pay more for this
quality elsewhere? Now’s the time; the place is Sterchi's,
434 E. Broad Phone 2600
olinas, having served as a super
intendent in Greenville'!s3t gg}
past seven years.
NO DOUBLE BOILER
You don’t need a double boiler
if you have an electrie range with
! Michael’s
requests the pleasure of your company
» at an
autograph tea :
in honor of
Mr. Thomas Lunsford Stokes
Mr, Lamar Dodd
on Friday, the second of March
at four o’clock
Michael’s Tea Room
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1951,
a low heat, says the General ¥le..
16’ | Coniburhers Thbtitute. Bauce
puddings, custards and eandy (i,
be trusted to the low oontrglie
heat in the ordinary saucepar
without fear of scorching, curlin,
or lumping.