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PAGE TWO
T F REE PRESCRIPTION DELIVERY [
= SEE for YOURSELF]
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MONOGRAM BELTS | But o ook i worth a thousand words. 5o check ||
$1.50 ea. B o ols Comen thal Yo
money buys more at this friendly drug store.
CROW'S SPECIALS |
1,000 ONE GRAIN SACCHARIN ... .. . §9¢
PINT SIZE ISOPROPYL ALCOHOL.. .. 23<|
LARGE COLOR BOOK AND CRAYONS ... 25¢|
SI.OO IMPORTED PIPES--Special ... .. .. 29
{oc GERBER'S BABY FOOD .. .. 3 for 27°
l I
: Regular 10¢ Ressiir 10 ALARM CLOCKS :
| 7Tc roll 2for2ic 1.98
15 SPECIAL— COLD CAPSULE. ... . Box 7°
Bic ABSORBINER. ... ... .83
I 5 PHILLIP'S MAGNESIA .. .. ... ... §9
LADIES' or MEN'S SHOE TREES .. .. .. .. 59|
QUART GLASS BAKE CASSEROLE .. .. .. 59
15%P0-DO GOLF BALLS.. .. ........... 959
FIGHT PIECE COFFEESET_ 79°
SPECIAL
New Airmaid
Flying Colors
oL
New Spring and Summer
shades add new beauty to
Airmaid’s Trim-Line Look!
Choose YOUR new Flying
Colors todayl
eoy 9lc
—’:‘LHMIJ PRENE Heglons
o)A 2o
_ . I J DRUG STORE
X You ALWAYS SAVE SAFELY B
283 EASTCLAYION ==~ - _PHONE i 767-8
S ——— |() LW AYS SAVE SAFELY AT CROW 'S (e S
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Will your medicine be just what your doctor intended? Will it
be prepared from pure, quality ingredients . . ~ compounded
with precision equipment in hospital-clean surroundings? Our
pharmacists realize the responsibilities imposed by their profes
sion, and this realization is reflected in the care with which they .
fill each and every prescription. Their years of sound academic
training, followed by more years of experience, have prepared
them to serve you ably and well. When you have your preserip
tion filled here, you have the comforting assurance that your
health is in safe hands, s
Three Registered Pharmacists to Serve You
J. W. GALLOWAY — H. J. CARSWELL
G. L. DOOLEY
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
AT R ALI LR
OIAGNOSED STOMACH UL JERS
Hypercin
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SAFE! Quick Relief!
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pes such as “Mormon Temple” (above) in Bryce Canyon National Park, Utah.
30 Long Hours
On A
B-36 Mission
By Staff Sgt. DOUGLAS J. THIEL
(Written for NEA Service)
KIRTLAND AIR FORCE BASE,
N. M.—Do you know how long 30
hours is? Can you visualize seeing
the sun rise twice while you're
still in the air? :
You're at the plane before sun
up, before the rest of the world is
conscious of a new dav-—you and
all your gear. You check your
parachute, oxygen mask, helmet,
heavy flying clothes, flight boots
and bail-out oxygen bottle close
ly, for they are your existence
away upstairs,
Start engines, taxi, pull power
check, and 19 seconds after
“prakes off” you are climbing at
an angle and acceleration thought
impossible of any aircraft.
The world—your world—fades
away, and the world to come is
cold and blue and rich with mo
notony. You feel pretty good now,
still soaring up and up, and each
man in the crew gets settled
on his particular job.
You won’t find a major or a
captain or a sergeant up here. You
are pilot or radio, left or right gun
ner. You're a team, each with a
specialized job and all of you in
the same boat, with many long,
grinding hours ahead at your sta
tion. Don’t worry about that, As I
said, you feel good now.
What’s on the schedule this
time? Navigational legs again?
Celestial shots? Radar bomb score
runs over one of the state’s largest
cities. Down in the city they
won't even know you're up here
dropping radar bombs, one after
another, on the factory mnext to
them, . .
You've been up a few hours
now, and you're sort of hungry.
In-flight lunches aren’t bad—two
sandwiches, milk, hard-boiled egg,
a couple of cookies. How about a
hot meal? Grab one of the frozen
plate lunches and let it simmer
awhile in the electric oven. ..
Time's moving on, and you're
probably a little tired after 10 or
12 hours in the air. Squeeze
through the tunnel to the rear
of the plane, and climb into a
sack, That's it! You’ll close your
eyes and drift into unconscious
ness, Have you ever been lulled
to sleep by six roaring engines?
Sleep your four hours. You've had
a break, but there’s a little rest to
be found up here. . .
® 9 *
The mission’s almost over now,
There’s one thing left to do. Pull
the nose up again and spend a lit
tle time at a really high altitude,
because there are a few things
about this plane the statisticians
still want to learn, ¢
" You've been at 35,000 feet for
quite a while, but now you hear
the flight engineer push on more
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NO HUFF, NO PUFF—Something new in breaking and entering
was devised by bandits who fixed a timber battering ram onto
the front bumper of their stolen car and pushed in the door of a
Chicago currency exchange. A startled cashier fled while the
crooks scooped up SSOOO and left. Inset, lower right, shows a
i ® . . ,’
Chicago policeman examining the improvised ram.
power, and once more the mnose
is looking right at Mars. You keep ‘
going and going — climbing up
here is slower than 'way down,
but you're getting there.
You increase the pressure in
your oxygen mask so your breath
ing is harder, The oxygen blows
up your lungs, but it’s up to you
to exhale against it. The higher
you go, the more pressure you
have. Ever felt this tired before?
You need a shave and your eyes
burn and you figure that double
flying pay wouldn't be worth your
aching bones and fatigue.
Take a look out the blister.
You can make out the curvature
of the earth from here, The thick
layer of billowing clouds on your
left contrasts sharply with the
dark, sinister shadows of the
world below,
® »
You're flying in the heaven you
see from the ground, and your
heaven is now the vast emptiness
of space, crystal clear and omi~
nous in its depth. You've got a
feeling greatness, for you're not
even a part of what you call
“home.” You feel like a pioneer
—a trespasser ih God’s domain,
There’s no interphone jabber up
here, because every man is lost
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‘LADPDY CODIVA’—
Tights and a flaxen wig will
be worn by actress Ann Wrige
(above), selected to portray the
role of Lady Godiva in a pageant
at Coventry, England.
in his own thought. Perhaps you
feel you're too close to (god to
want to disturb, him or maybe
you really believe you're in a
world of your own and there’s
no one else to talk to, A hundred
crews have a hundred different
feelings, but each man has the
feeling of a conqueroy in his own
right,
Suddenly, the nose drops, Now
you're pointed at the city, with
the traffic, noise, seething heat
and discomfort. You're aimed at
the guy who's building your next
plane, the gal you want to see,
and the brass who'll want to know
all about the mission.
You crack a smile, and feel
warm onee more, In a few short
hours, you'll be home,
Speeders lose their thoughtful |
judgment—lose control of their
cars——lose the time it takes to‘
avoid accidents—llose their lives!!
is the wamini’ today frorm the
Georgia State Patrol, ‘
For an economical party dish
add diced cooked chicken and |
cooked or canned peas to thin!
spaghetti that’s been mixed withl
a cream gauce. Serve with Parme- |
san cheese. |
TRURSDAY, APRIL 19, 1951,
What The
People Say
FROM SERVICE MAN
Editor, The Banner-Herald:
To the people of the city of Ath
ens, Georgia. I am only one of the
young boys who has left from
there to %o into war, and when
ever anybody asks me where [
am from I can hold my head high
and say I am from Georgia,
So I believe there ghould be a
day set aside in Athens for prayer
for the boys over here, (Korea),
A prayer where they will return
safe to settle down and live in
Athens, for most of them are like
me, they have lived there most of
their life and that will always be
home to us.
There is nothing better we would
like than to be there this very
minute, but there are always some
cruel and greedy men in the
world that start these was, so
until these men are done away
with, there will be thousands of
young boys from Athens in this
war. But let’s hope our sacrifice
will keep our young brothers from
going.
As for myself, I have no young
er brothers, but I did have a
brother to give his life for what
he believed was right and I also am
willing to give mine, but let's hope
it is not wasted.
So people of Athens, I think you
owe it to us young soldiers of Ath
ens to set aside a day of prayeg
for the boys of Georgia,
Yours truly,
A Soldier from
Athens, Ga.
Princefon Head
By HAROLD W. DODDS
President, Princeton University
PRINCETON, N. J.— (NEA) —
As one who has consistently be
lieved that universal military
training and service is essential in
the present world situation, I nat
urally view the prposal for almost
blanket deferment of college stu
dents as wrong for the nation and
detrimental to the best interests
of the colleges in the long run.
The President’s Executive Or
der places college students, as
such, in a preferred position which
entirely misrepresents their basic
patriotism and willingness to
serve.
On the other hand, the proposal
to defer students in subjects es
sential to the detense effort is
sound and should be preserved.
The impact on the morale of
troops now in service of ahy pro
gram of college deferment bevond
the essential needs is r™-ous.
Yields To No One
T vield to no one in the impor
tance 1 attribute to the national
need for young men broadly edu
cated in the fields of the humani
ties and social sciences.
If, as I hope, a system of uni
versal military training is adopted
promptly, these values need sufier
no essential loss once that svstem
is established, and the rotation of
men through the armed services
permits a return of the college
pooulation to normal.
To be sure, the period of tran=
sition will create the gravest dif
ficulties in the educational world.
But I believe that these difficul
ties can be resolved without re
sort to a deferment policy so
broad and so little selective as the
Executive Order contemplates.
Students Suffer
College students have suffered
greatly from the strains imposed
by the temporizing in Washingfon
and continued confusion over the
Covernment’s plans for their im
mediate future. They can and will
adjust patriotically to national
needs.
As one close to the strains they
have been under and sympathetic
to them, I hope that the present
confusion will quickly be resolved
in the interest of the principle of
share and share alike in posts in
which the individual’s service will
count for the most.
After all, this is what the col
lege men want, And I believe it
preferable to protecting them
against interruption of their col
l!:fe careers, which would react
adversely upon their influence as
future leaders and the long time
values of the subjects they are
studying,
Portland cement, basie ingredi
ent of concrete, is @ chemical com
bination of lime, silica, alumina,
iron oxide, and small amounts of
other ingredients, to which gvp
sum is added in the final grinding
to regulate the setting time of the
cement,
CAN YOU
BELIEVE IT ?
JUST
$645.00
1946 NASH
AMBASSADOR SEDAN
A NICE ONE
WILL IT BE
HERE SATURDAY,
FOR ANOTHER
REDUCTION
$50.00
J. Swanton lvy,
Inc.
Broad St. Lot