Newspaper Page Text
FRIDAY, APRIL 6, 1951.
Legal Notices
GEORGIA, Clarke County:
Under and by virtue of the
owers of sale contained in a cer
i Security Deed executed and
" livered by Charles Robert Cox
~ The Citizens and Southern Nat
.o Bank, dated April 7, 1049,
.4 recorded April 8, 1949, in
nook 115 of Deeds, Folio 157,
Clerk’s Office, Superior Court,
Clarke County, Georgia, which
cocurity Deed was transferred
Y 4 assigned for value to Federal
National Mortgage Association by
mhe Citizens and Southern Nat
nal Bank on May 20, 1949, which
ranster was recorded May 24,
1049 in Book 114, Folio 389,
( ke County Records, there will
pe sold by Federal National Mort
o Association, as assignee, at
. outery before the court
L e door in Athens, Clarke
County, Georgia, om the first
moesday in May, 1951, within the
Jesal hours of sale, to the highest
Lidder for cash, the following de~
ccribed property, to-wit:
Al that real estate situated and
being in the City of Athens, Clarke
County, Georgia, and more par
ticularly described as follows:
peginning at an iron pin mark
i the most southerly corner of
the intersection of Talmadge
Drive and Belvoir Heights and
unning thence along the south-l
east side of Talmadge Drive south
26 degrees west 175 feet to an iron
pin; thence south 56% degrees east
¢ feet to an iron pin; thence
horth 39 degrees east 149 feet to
1 iron pin on the southwest side
oi Belvoir Heights; thence along
selvoir Heights north 33 degrees
vest 75.5 feet to the beginning
iron pin,
Th]e property described is Lot
41 in Block “J” of the Talmadge
Jighlands Subdivision as shown
v the plat recorded in Plat Book
" page 51, in the Office of the
‘lerk of Superior Court of Clarke
‘ounty, Georgia. ]
There is excepted from said lot |
he portion cut off to make a
ounded intersection at the corner
t Talmadge Drive and Belvoir
cights, as shown on said record
d plat.
The above Security Deed was
iven to secure the payment of a
ebt in the principal amount of
EVEN THOUSAND THREE
UNDRED ($7,300.00) DOLLARS,
osether with interest thereon
rom date at the rate of 4% % per
nnum, as evidenced by a prom
ssory note dated April 7, 1949,
xecuted by Charles Robert Cox,
‘hich note was transferred and ;
ssigned to Federal National
fortgage Association; said note
eing payable at the _rate of
46,21 as to principal and interest
er month, commencing June 1,
949, and provides for the accel
ration of the maturity of the en
ire indebtedness should Charles
obert Cox fail to perform any
ovenant or agreement in said
eed or Note secured thereby, at
he option of Grantee, or assigns,
he said Charles Robert Cox has
efaulted in the payment of the
monthly payments due October 1,
ovember 1, December 1, 1950,
anuary 1, February 1, and March
, 1951, and Federal National
Tortgage Association has declar
d the entire indebtedness due
nd payable, and said sale will
e made for the purpose of pay
ng the balance of SIX THOUS
ND NINE HUNDRED NINETY
$6,960.000)0 DOLLARS due on
rincipal, and interest to May 1,
951, in the amount of TWO
{UNDRED SEVEN and 56-100
$207.56) DOLLARS, together
ith costs of this sale. The sur=
lug, if any, will be turned over '
0 dharles Robert Cox, |
FEDERAL NATIONAL |
MORTGAGE ASSOCIATION,
As Assignee and Attorney-in-
Fact for Charles Robert Cox. *
ustin C. Williams, Attorney, %'
00 Western Union Building, 3 ‘
tlanta 3, Georgia. »”
6-13-20-727, :
iEORGIA, Clarke County: i
By virtue of an order of the
rdinary of Clarke County, Geor
ia, there will be sold at public
utery on the first Tuesday in
fay, 1951, at the courthouse door
n Clarke County, Georgia, be
ween the legal hours of sale to
he highest and best bidder for
ash, the following described land
n said County, to-wit:
That tract or parcel of land
g and being in Athens, Geor=-
Beginning at the southwest cor
‘et of Park Avenue and Boulevard
nd running South along Park
Avenue 80 feet; thence West par
el to Boulevard 200 feet; thence
North Parallel to Park Avenue 80
cet; thence Bast along Boulevard
200 feet to the beginning corner,
containing 4,10 of an acre, more or
ess, and being parts of Lots 18
nd 19 of Section 22 of Athens
Park & Improvement Company
ands as shown by plat of same
‘ecorded in Deed Book PP, page
985 in the office of the Clerk of
the Superior Court of Clarke
“ounty, Georgla, and known as
197 Park Avenue, . (
Said sale is being had to satisfy
‘reditors and kindred and will
continue {rom day to day between
the slnéue hours until said property
This the 2nd day of April, 1951.
: MRS, FLOSSIE KILE,
A 5 Administrator of the Estate of
J. 1, Kile, deceased.
A 6-13-20-27.
—a Ll
In the Court of Ordinary of
Ularke County, Georgia:
Petition for Probate of Will in
Solemn Form, filed March 28,
1951, Order for Service by Pub
lication March 28, 1951.
IN RE:
Will of George E, Scott,
Deceased,
To Mrs. Jane Scott McCracken,
Mrs. Katherine Williams Lewis,
Eugene Howard Scott, Jr,, and
Lamar §, Scott, Jy.
. An stryment purporting to be
g:o last‘will and tuumhe::i:f
rge E. Sco deceased, 8
been filed fn t:l'\is court;
And Scott R, Williams, the exe
cutor nominated jn gaid instru
ment, having filed a petition
March 28, 1951, praying that the
he“"“lawot-iddeceasedand
the legatees named in said instru
ment be cited to be and appear at
the June Term, 1951, of
and show cause why M
ment should or should not be
proved in solemn form and admit
ted to record as the last will and
testament of said George E. Scott,
deceased;
Each of you, as heirs at law of
said deceased or legatees nmamed
in said instrument, are hereby re
quired to be and appear at the
Court of Ordinary of Clarke
County, Georgia, on the first Mon
day in June, 1951, and show cause,
if any you have or can, why said
instrumrent should or should not be
proved in solemn form and ad
mitted to record as the last will
and testament of said George E.
Scott, deceased.
This 28th day of March, 1951,
RUBY HARTMAN, Ordinary,
Clarke County, Georgia,
A 6-13-20-27.
GEORGIA, Clarke County:
All creditors of the estate of D.
D. Beussee, Sr., deceased, are
hereby notified to render in their
demands to the undersigned ac
cording to law and all persons
indebted to said estate are re
quired to make immediate pay
ment to me,
This April 6, 1951.
MILDRED STEVENS BEUSSEE,
Executrix, Estate of D. D, Beus
see, Sr., deceased.
A 6-13-20-27, M 4-11,
BIRTH CERTIFICATE
The following have made ap
plication to the local registrar, Dr,
W. W. Brown, Clarke County,
Georgia, for delayed birth certi
ficates and have paid the legal
publication fee of $1:00: -
Lena Mae Huff.
Sallie Giles,
Howell Edward Cobb.
Florence Elenora Papa.
Fannie Be Cobb.
Martha Faye Sims.
Idonia White,
Patricia Ann Hester
James Charleston Morgan,
Will George Moore, Jr.
GEORGIA, Clarke County:
Whereas, J. Grady Crawford,
executor of the will of Luther P,
Crawford, deceased, has filed his
petition for discharge as executor
of said will and estate, in terms
of the law, all persons concerned
are required to show cause at the
next May term of this court why
such discharge should not be
granted.
This April 6th, 1951.
RUBY HARTMAN, Ordinary,
CARLISLE COBB, Attorney.
A 6-13-20-27.
School Has More
Alumni Than Grads ¢
By DAVID TAYLOR MARKE
AP Education Reporter
BOSTON — Brandeis University
has yet to graduate a class, but has
more than 3,000 alumni.
This youngest university in the
nation, located scarcely a stone’s
throw from Harvard, Boston Uni
versity, Holy Cross and MIT, has
been adopted by foster alumni
from all parts of the country. They
call themselves the Brandeis As
sociates.
Chapters have been established
in more than 20 cities—in Boston,
Memphis, Atlanta, New York,
Washington, St. Louis, Los Angeles
and San Francisco among others.
These groups pay annual dues just
as other alumni do, and in addi
tion, initiate many fund raising
projects to help in the develop
ment of their alma mater.
How Movement Started
The Brandeis Associates came
into being in Houston, Texas in
1949, George Alpert, Boston at=
torney and one of Braideis’ found
ing fathers, was addressing a group
of Texas businessmen.
“A modern university,” he
pointed out, “requires the finan
cial and moral support of a strong
group of alumni. Brandeis won’t
have a single alumnus until it
graduates its first class in 1952.
Even after that, it will take years
for the alumni to move far enough
ahead in life to be able to support
their school with solid assistance.
We have a problem on our hands.”
In the group listening to Al
pert was a wealthy Houston oil=
man, Crackers Silver. “Let’s be
come foster alumni of Brandeis,”
he spoke up. “Let’s adopt her until
she has her own alumni group.”
That’s how Brandeis associates
was formed and the group mush
roomed to a membership of more
than 3,000 men and women. And
they’'ve raised millions of dollars
for the university.
The women’s committee, for ex
'ample, has undertaken the task of
building a new library and stock
ing its shelves. Others have en
dowed buildings, scholarships and
various professorial chairs,
f Why It’s Non-Sectarian
Although under Jewish aus
pices, many non-Jews are attract
ed to its Jewish-sponsored, non
sectarian program. The chapter in
Louisville, Ky., has a Catholic
priest on its roster. At a dinner
meeting in Detroit, the head waiter
turned over all the tips collected
by the waiters as their contribu
tion, The parents of a polio vic
tim who is unable to attend college
recently endowed funds in their
son’s name for a scholarship fund
at Brandeis. Otherg are helping to
develop a strong sports program.
SAYS CITY CRUMBLES
KUALA LUMPUR—(AU)—This
capital city of the Federation of
Malaya is “crumbling.” So says C.
O. Jennings, municipal architect.
He said Kuala Yampur in a few
years would be a “rotten, filthy,
overcrowded town, scourged by
tuberculosis” unless somrething
radical is done.
Jennings asserted foundations of
buildings were crumbling and
would eventually céllapse.
Mohammed is said to have or
dered the Medina mosque bullt
where his came! stopped and
knelt,
The Islamic religion has some
250,000,000 followers.
S ETORE AR o A e R
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l. Trees grow and forests replace themselves. These pictures, made from t
} val of 10 years, show how fast trees grow in the South. To speed con
|
Forest growth never stops. The
annual sawtimber growth in the
United States today is nearly
four times greater than it was
30 years ago. Forestry is on the
upswing as America heads into
the second half of the twentieth
‘century.
These conclusions, with facts
rand. figures to prove them, are
| forcefully set forth in a recently
published booklet, “The Nation’s
Wood Supply,” now being dis
tributed nationally by American
| Forest Products Industries.
. “Replenishing factors are at
iwork throughout all forested
areas of the United States,” the
booklet points out, * ... they
are ushering in a new forest
|economy. Together, they are
| adding to man’s skill in growing
land using wood wisely.”
The publication lists nine
(replenishing factors that are
| elosing the gap between wood re
imoval and wood growth in the
United States. They are:
¢ 1, Incentive. The value of
|timber has risen to the point
{where it now pays to grow and
'harvest trees as a crop.
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!FAM“_Y FOXHOLE—Latest entry in the parade of home bomb
| shelters is this dome-roofed, concrete structure, which San Fran
| cisco builders say can be installed in your back yard for $1250.}
| The 12%-ton house sleeps six comfortably or 20 in an emergency.
| When not in use as protection against aserial attack, it doubles as
| mtility room or guest house. The 14-inch-thick dome and eight
| inch walls should be adequate protection from the weather.
iSeed Box Good Place to
‘Sow Most Flower Seeds
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If seeds are sown thinly, they will reach garden size faster
without transplanting.
Many home gardeners start most
flower seeds in seed boxes, even aft
er the weather has warmed up out
doors. Advantages of this practice
are:
1. Soil well suited for germinating
seeds can easily be supplied in the
box.
2. Boxes can be placed near the
source of water; moved to the shade
when the sun is too hot; moved into
the sun in cool weather.
3. All plants that develop can be
set out in the garden each in the
place desired, with no losses from
thinning out.
These are real advantages, as
those who have tried sowing seeds
direct in the garden will understand,
They apply especially to the larger
flowers, which must be widely
spaced, but not so well to flowers
that grow in ribbon piantings, such
as alyssum, and not at all to those
that dislike transplanting such as
poppies, portulaca and salpiglossis.
A disadvantage is that every time
a plant is lifted and moved to a new
location it experiences a shock and
set-back. This can be overcome by
starting your seed boxes early in a
eold frame, hotbed, or in the house;
and also by sowing the seed so far
apart, that they can be moved from
the box direct to places in the gar
den, thus experiefcing transplant
ing shock only once.
To grow the largest plants you
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
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SN B B T e S PR T SRR R
OAR e b s e N IS SO
2. Protection. The American
public is becoming forest fire
conscious. Increased fire fight
ing effectiveness and fire pre
| vention education are reducing
| timber losses. At the same time,
| progress is being made against
forest-destroying insects and
| diseases.
| 8. Sustained Yield. Harvest
|ing practices that mean planned
|cuts at regular intervals from
|every acre of forestland are be
| coming the rule on large indus
trial holdings. Through the
.| American Tree Farm System,
|| now active in 29 states, this type
| of forest management is being
laccepted by small woodland
.| owners, too. -
3| 4, Reforestation. Last year
| the forest nurseries of the nation‘
produced enough seedling trees
»[to plant half a million acres,
»| Man is helping Nature turn idle
-| acres into livini‘forestl.
| 5. Scientific Forestry. Fores
try is one of the fastest growing
f grofessiona. Em‘floymont of
t | foresters by wood-using indus
1| tries has increased sixfold in the
past 15 years.
can in the shortest time, sowing in
a seed box should be made with the
seeds thinly spaced, so plants will
not be crowded when they come up.
It should be sufficient to sow twice
as many seeds as you have room
for, to allow for failures from acci
dents, or other causes. If .all seeds
grow, some plants may have to be
taken out, but as many as possible
should be grown without check to
garden size.
~ Garden size may mean anything
| from the second pair of leaves up,
depending on how late you sow. The
] younger a plant is when moved out
‘doors, the quicker it will recover
and resume growth. Plants may be
moved to the garden as soon as the
weather permits, if they have made
true leaves. They should not be
started under protection so early
that they outgrow their indoors
quarters when it is still too cold to
move outdoors, as this may serious
ly check their growth.
It you take as a guide the date In
your locality after which the garden
is usually safe from killing frosts,
then you mLmn seed four weeks
before that date in & cold frame or
in the house; six weeks before in a
hot-bed and eight weeks or mor¢ in
a greenhouse, and be reasonably
sure that, provided you grow your
plants in containers which have
plenty of soil, you can grow them
without check until safe to move
them to the garden, {
he same camera point at an inter- |
neback, trees were hand planted.
6. Wood technology. Through
research, man is learning more
about trees and how to use them,
Tree types once thought worthe
less now are being put to use.
T. Managed harvests. The
wood yield from each acre is
being increased by harvesting,
trees for specific markets. Moro‘
usable wood is being taken off!
each acre of timber harvested.
8. Utilization. More useful
products are being made out ol}
each tree. Profitable uses forl
tops, bark, slabs, sawdust and|
other manufacturing leftovers
have been developed.
9. Education. All over the
{ United States the forest indul-k
tries and public agencies are
guiding small woodland ownerl'
along the path of sound and:
profitable woodlot management.
“Although ultimate goals in)
|forest protection, management
|and productivity have yet to be
| reached,” says American Forest
| Products Industries, “a.pattern
| for bringing forests to full pro
| duction has been set.”
ON THE
HOUSE .
By DAVID G. BAREUTHER
AP Real Estate Editor
BY DAVID G. BAREUTHER
AP Real Estate Editor
One way to locate a leak in a
roof is to darken the attic on a
bright and sunny day and look
for pinholes of light shining
through.
This works, but it’s likely to in
spire a lot of family kibitzing. For
instance, if you're an average man
-—never a hero in his own home—
your wife is likely to chirp:
“Pinholes? For heaven's sake!
I've heard of a man looking for
needles in a haystack. But never
pinholes in a roof!”
Pay no attention to this.
A good policy in inspecting a
house for roof leaks is never to be=-
come excited. Rudolph Matern,
famous small house architect, tells
about being a& guest at dinner in
the new house of a friend. The
hostess was eriticizing the builder.
“There’s even a leak in the
roof,” she said, pointing to a
shadowy corner of the ceiling. “I
showed that to the construction.
superintendent and he doesn’t
know how we'll locate the leak.”
The architect stood on a stool,
scratched the corner with his fin
ger. The shadow disappeared. :
“Spider web!” he announced,
to the relief, but chagrin of the
hostess.
Usually there's little doubt when
you have a roof leak. Nndeniable
stains in the plaster of ceiling or
walls will reveal it. If you can
try the pinhole trick, push wires
or straws through the holes so you
can find them.on.ths outside,
Another method is to turn the
garden hose on the roof and watch
for the leak in the attic.
The only trouble with that
method is that because of the
slope of a roof, leaking water may
run down the inside of the slope
for some distance before dripping
into the attic. In this event you
have to trace the water along raft
er or sheathing to its source.
Evidence of dripping near chim
ney, roof valley or other struct
ural intersections invariably indi
cates a fault in the flashing.
On slate or tile roof look for brok
en, missing or loose units. Examine
wood shingles for hplits or curl
ing Asphalt sningles may be blis
tered or otherwise disintegrated
from the sun. This will be more
likely on the south pitch of a roof.
» * *
Frequently water backs up un
der shingles when it is prevented
from Iree flow into roof gutters,
or eaves troughs. This happens in
northern regions when snow melts,
forms icicles on the eaves and the
ice and snow along the edge of the
roof dams further damage.
The problem is so common that
General Electric developed a
heating cable laid zig-zag along
the edge of a roof. This melts the
snow and ice and creates drainage
channels along the zig-zags.
Birds’ nests and leaves in roof
gutters also can cause draininge
backups. Even if you have strain
ers over your downspouts, it's a
good idea to clean all rubbish out
of roof gutters after the leaves
have fallen in autumn.
Trees with foilage in contact
with a roof should be trimmed to
allow for free evaporation in or
der to prevent rot.
. s 0
Proper laying is very important
in shingled roofs. Wood shingles
16 inches long should be laid with
no more than 5 inches to the
weather; 18 inches -long 5 1-2
inches exposed, and 24 inches long
with 7 1-2 inches to the weather,
Your Heart And You
This de one of @ series of artioles prepared by heart speclaliste of
fitioted with the Georpia Heort Asecciation to inform the pubdlio on
aspecte of diseases of the heart and Blood vessels,
Heart Disease Can Be Controlled
Medical history has passed
through the stages where control
of nearly every ocontagious or in
fectious disease has been attained,
Deaths from such diseases as small
pox, typhoid, yellow {fever, and
many other diseases have been re
duced in this country to a very
small number,
However, until recently, heart
disease—the combined diseases that
affect the heart and blood vessels—
has continued to be accepted as a
phase of heaith about which little
or nothing could be done. »
This, fortunately, is not the case,
Actually, if you have heart trou
ble today, you are better off than
you would have been at any pre
vious time in the history of the
world. Much more ean be done for
hearts—through new methods of
diagnosis and treatment—than has
ever been done before.
Yet, in spite of these gains, heart
deaths have risen to first place
everywhere in the Western world
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SINGER WITH A LURE—Arriving in New York by air, Metro
politan Opers tenor Set Svanholm and Scandinavian Airlines
hostess Kirsten Hox try out a pair of lures—Scandinavian Bronze
Age horns that date from between 1500 and 400 B. C. The pic
turesque instruments, believed to be the first ever brought to
America, will be displayed in New York. They were used 3000
years ago to invoke the gods at sowing and harvest festivals, for
cult rites and perhaps in fighting and hunting. |
Asphalt shingles, now widely
used, should be laid according to
manufacturers directions. The
square butt, three-tab type calls
for six nails per shingle, each nail
an inch from each side of a tab
cutout and on a line 5 5-8 inches
from the butt edge. In addition, a
spot of quick setting asphalt ce
ment, about the size of a half
dollar should be placed under each
tab for added wind-tightness.
Nails used for any shingles
should be rustproof, hot-dipped
galvanized, copper or bronze -—
not plain steel or iron mnails.
Almost any roof should be good
for about 20 years—salte or tile
roofs forever. Slates or tiles may
break coff and fall, but they are
easily replaced with hooked cop
per strips.
POLICE CURTAILED,
THEFTS MOUNT
SINGAPORE. —(AP) — Ware
houses along Singapore harbour
have become a happy hunting
ground for thieves. Goods worth
more than $6,600 have been stolen
within the last two months. Thefts
from warehouses have doubled
since last December 31.
Then the Singapore harbour
auxiliary police were disbanded.
Only 40 harbour police lieuten
ants are now patrolling the areas
handled by 120 officers last year.
It is estimated that there are
14,000 difference uses of salt in
our modern civilization. Europe
ans use twice as much salt per
capita in food preparation as
Americans. :
NEW! NEW!
DELUXE
SILVER KING
Cleaner and
Waxer
1-Mops Floors
2-Picks Up Water
3-Shampoos Rugs
4-Polish Floors
5-Moth Proffs
Up to $30.00 On
Old Vacuum
FOR FREE HOME
DEMONSTRATION
CALL 4756-)
where other diseases have been eon
quered. And the trend is still wp
ward,
The emotional strain and mental
exertion of modern living may be
responsible for some heart troubles,
But the principal cause of the in
crease is a natural result of man's
‘grutor life span through the cone
‘quering of other types of disease,
Now the same hope may be of
fered for the ultimate conquering
of heart disease. Prevention, the
great hope of future medicine, has
becoma a reality in some heart
troubles. In others, advances in
treatment can enable many heart
victims to lead normal, useful lives,
The possibility of thus controlling
heart disease lies in research and
education. Following articles in this
series will tell you something about
what is being done to find new in
formation about heart disease, what
can be done teday in treating vari.
ous types of heart disease, and
what you should know about your
heart,
Hal Boyle Gives
Hints On How
To Be Reporter
BY HAL BOYLE
NEW YORK-— (AP)—Do you
want to write for the newspapers?
Would you like to be a war re
porter or a foreign correspond
ent?
Maybe you wouldn't, But a big
percentage of young Americans
now growing up seem to want to
be. For them newspapering siill
holds a lure above that of other
professions that appear more
humdrum,
This time of year they write
deadly earnest letters to men in
the field wanting to know what
they should do to prepare them
selves to become newspapermen,
Recently I have had several such
letters from high school and col
lege students.
And the other day a fellow who
works the typewriter next to mine
said: “My eleven-year-old daugh
ter just announced she is going to
become a newspaperwoman, and
wants to know what I think of the
idea? Why don’t you write a piece
about the business?”
Well, future fellow citizens, here
goes:
No Standard Type
Newspapermen don’t fit in any
standard type of pigeonhole. They
come in all sizes, shapes and tem
perments, Some are full of the
milk of human kindness, and some
are soc mean they wouldn’t get up
to give their old mother a seat on
the subway.
But, by and large, the best of
them live up to an unwritten code.
The goal of that code is to find
out what is going on in the world,
and to write down what they find
out. Their newspaper then prints
it. |
That sounds like a very simple
task — merely to find out infor-l
mation and put it on paper. Act
ually it can be, and often is, an
excruciatingly compiex and pain
ful job. It is easy to get most peo
ple to tell you what they want
you to know. The art of reporting
is to get people to tell you what
you yourself want to know —the
truth of a situation. And often that
DR. CERALD M. THOMAS
ANNOUNCES THE OPENING OF HIS OFFICE
FOR THE
PRACTICE OF OPTOMETRY
234 COLLEGE AVENUE
ATHENS, GEORGIA
HOURS: TELEPHONE 4151
9A MtosP M FOR APPOINTMENT
PAGE FIVE
't ‘easy. s o
} One of the most diffiowit things
for an idealistie %mn or
‘woman reporter to is that
nice-looking people not only can
lie boldly—they can lie with a dis
arming smile, And they will some
times lie when it isn’t even nec
essary.
Rarely Fooled
As reporters grow more expe
rienced they are rarely fooled by
these people, no matter how high
or low their position. The occupa
tional ‘hazard of older reporters is
cynicism, a kind of life-weariness
marked by a growing suspicion of
all people. Detectives, wives and
politicians are subject to this same
disease. They see so much shoddy
in life they come to doubt the ex
istence of anything that is real
and fair and true. And this dis
belief can wreck an older resorter
just as sure as laziness will de
stroy a younger one.
It doesn’t take any one type of
background to be a newspaperman.
I've known good reporters—and
writers—who started out as pro
fessional boxers or motorcycle
cops. A college education, how
ever, gives a big advantage, par
ticularly if you take courses in the
basic fields of human knowledge
—-history, government, language,
social science, physical science.
You ought to know a little some
thing about people, birds, trees,
Communism, flowers, the atom
bomb, and the electoral ecollege.
And some one subject you should
know well—you might want to
specialize in it later.
Loses Appeal
~ Reporting is rarely exciting
physically after the first few
years. After you cover ten fires,
the fire bell doesn’t have the same
‘appeal. But reporting should re
main mentally exciffng all your
life, as you go on to tetgorting
things more important to the hu
man way of life than fires.
The rewards? They range all
the way from what a bank clerk
makes to the income of a bank
president. If you reallf yearn to
own a yacht, however, 1t might be
wise to try some other occupation.
But the highest reward of a real
newspaperman is to have another
newsp:(rerman he respects say,
“I liked your story. It had it.”
You can’t deposit such compli
ments in the bank, But if a man
gets enough of them he ean grow
old gracefully in the newspaper
business.
COW TOWN TURNS
TO DERBIES
DALHART, Texas.—(AP)—This
west Texas town is going to aban
don the traditional ten-gallon hat
and other cow-country styles tem
porarily. As a stunt to publicize
Dalhart’s golden jubilee party May
25-26, a thousand men will wear
headgear of 50 years ago — der=
bies,
You can get draining trays, for
dishwashing, in aluminum, rubber,
or plastic. If you choose one of
plastic make sure it is the type
that won't be damaged by almost
boiling water.
e
100:>:FOR4S
Make Nearly DOUBLE SAV /IN GS'
St. Joseph aspini
ATHENS
Mon.
Apr.
FAIR GROUNDS ¥ ]
Aus. Shrine Club No. 1
cKI : BROS.
om.o's ;
WORLD'S {{% =4
FINEST o / 4
BIGSHOW N "
USED FOR
ITS 2000
WORMDERS
BIGGER—BETTER —GRANBER — THAN-EVER
AN ECLIPSING EPOCH lIN THE
WORLD’'S GREATEST
AMUSEMENT INSTITUTION
sOO reOPLE—[Brimming Syeren
150 ARENIC STARS| Wendrows Surprises
—250 WILD ANI- n‘mfl: g'-11--
MALS —IN GREAT | fng’ Features from
5 CONTINENT|AHI Strange Lands.
MENAGERIE—]|POTTER TROUPE
5,000 SEATS—SO 9‘.:."&'.‘.2:2?.'{:,'
MUSICIANS — NEW IN THE wonLd
FEATURE, 6 FoLD| 2 FLYING ACTS
CIRCUS —5500,000 E&m&%
CAPITAL INVESTED, | TINEN TAL ECROPE
Mat. 3 PM - Nite 8 PM I SRtes
Doors Open £ snd ¥ ]
ADMISSIONS SLASHED!
Back to Pre-War Prices.
Children 50¢c - Adults $1
Plas Tax
Reserved Seat Chairs On Sale
CIRCUS DAY AT
MOON-WINN DRUG CO.