Newspaper Page Text
rUREDAY, APRIL 19, 1951,
- —.‘M—
Radio Cloeck
wGAU-CBS
1710 AM-99.5 FM
TAURSDAY EVENING
§:oo—Allen Jackson and News
(CBS)
¢-15—Songs for You.
¢-30—Sports Parade.
¢ 15—Lowell Tromas and News
(CBS).
700—Beaulah (CBS).
7.ls—Jack Smith Show (CBS).
7.30—80 b Crosby and Club 15
CBS).
7:45 —»lédward R. Murrow and
News (CBS).
3.00—F. B. L. in Peace and War
(CBS).
g3o—Mr. Keen, Tracer of Lost
Persons (CBS).
9-00—Suspense (CBS).
0-30—Hallmark Playhouse
(CBS). ;
10:00—Let’s Dream Awhile.
10 30—Capitol Cloak Room
(CBS).
10:45—Eric Johnston (CBS).
11.00-WGAU News, Night Final
“ —FEd Thilenius,
11:15—Dancing in the Dark.
12:00—News.
12:05—Sign Oft.
FRIDAY MORNING
6:3s—Sign On,
6:4o—Uews. 5
6-45—Hillbilly Highlights.
0;,3—-AP News
7:oo—Harmony Time.
7:ls—Good Morning Circle,
7.4o—Woria News Briefs.
1-35—Good Morning Circle
8:00—CBS World News Roundup
(CBS). :
¢:ls—The Bread of Life.
B:3o—Music Shop Parade.
0-:oo—News of America (CBS).
9:3o—Homemakers Handyman,
9-45—Barnyard Follies (CBS).
10:00— Arthur Godfrey (SBS).
11 30—Ring the Bell.
11 45--Rosemary (CBS).
12:00—Wendy Warren and News -
(CBS).
FRIDAY AFTERNOON
12:15—Mid-Day Roundup of the
News.
12 30—Romance of Helen Trent
(CBS).
12:45—Farin Flashes
I:ls—Ma Perkins (CBS).
I:3o—Young Dr. Malone (CBS).
1 45— The Guiding Light (CBS)
2:oo—Just For the Ladies.
2:15--Perry Mason (CFS).
2:3o—This Is Nora Drake
(CBS)
2:4s—The Brighter Day (CBS)
3:oo—~The News.
3:ls—Hillbilly Matinee.
4:00—1340 Platter Party.
s.ls—Music You Know (CBS).
s:3o—The News Till Now.
545—Curt Massey, Martha Til
ton & Orchestra (CBS)
A new tire alarm, attached to
the tire like an ordinary valve cap,
whistles a loud alarm when the
pressure within the tire gets be
low the amount needed for safe
driving. It has another safety fac
tor—being luminous, it shows at
night as a revolving circle of light.
A British Thermal Unit (BTU)
is about the amount of heat gen
erated by burning all of a wooden
safety match.
Ben Grauer, the radio commen
tator, also is a rabid book collector
and a member of several biblio
sraphical and literary societies.
IN MEMORIAM
In memory of my .beloved
mother, Mrs. Addie B. Starks, who
left me five years ago today, April
19, 1946,
You bade no one a last farewell,
You said goodbye to none;
Your loving heart just ceased to
beat
Before I knew you were gone,
My heart is fillied with sadness,
. My eyes shed many tears;
50d alone knows how I miss you
At the end of five long years.
Your daughter,
MRS. A. S. BRANTLEY.
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WEB-517 e T——
PERENNIALLY popular ranch house gets the advantages of
_ctler hall layout in this plan B-5117 by Alwin Cassens, jr., archi
» 116-55 Queens Boulevard, Forest Hills, N. Y. This house can
€ built with or without a basement and the plan includes optional
res of fireplace and additional closets in the middle bedroom.
“ca covered by house is 1,710 square feet; 294 square feet for
“lsize garage and storage. Content of basement figures 35,910
lc feet with 3,428 added for garage. Overall dimensions 57'2"
)V 4 . .
o 41'4”. The architect suggests a front of brick and stone veneer,
es of colored shingles and a roof of asphalt shingles.—AP News-
FRIDAY
s:3o—Sign On.
s:3o—Reveille Roundup.
6:3o—The Farmer’s Guide.
7:oo—News.
7:os—The Blessed Hope.
7:3o—Johnny Lee Wills.
7:4s—Down Melody Trail.
B:oo—News.
B:ls—The Musical Clock.
9:oo—Morning Devotional,
9:IS—WRFC Trading Post.
9:3o—Dick Jergens.
9:4s—The Feminine Agenda.
10:00—Melody Magic.
10:25—News,
10:30—Rosenthal’s Sidewalk Talk.
10:45—Sleepy Hollow Time.
11:00—The ghuck Wagon.
12:00—Leon and Red.
12:15—News.
12:30—Blackwood Brothers.
12:45—Eddy Arnold. X
I:oo—News.
I:os—Luncheon Serenade.
2:oo—Modern Masters.
3:oo—Record Room.,
4:oo—News.! * "
4:os—Record Roont.
s:3o—Lone Ranger
6:oo—Dave Dennis.
6:ls—Torhorrow’s Headlines,
6:3o—Sports Roundup.
6:45-—Music.
7:oo—Sign Off. 3
*
adio —
THURSDAY NIGHT
WSB—Channel 8
6:oo—Magic Slate*.
6:3o—Stars; Weather.
6:4s—News.
7:oo—Kukla, Fran and Ollie.*
7:3o—John Conte*.
T7:4s—News*,
B:oo—The Lone Ranger®.
B:3o—Stop the Music*.
9:oo—Festival with James
Melton*.
10:00—Don McNeill*.
10:30-——Martin Kane¥,
11:00—Broadway Open House
with Jerry Lester®,
12:00—News; Off.
WAGA—Channel 5
6:OO—WAGA’s Wild West
Theater; News.
7:oo—Stranger Than Fiction.
7:ls—Faye Emerson*.
7:3o—Woria News*.
7:4s—Stork Club*.
B:oo—Starlight Theater®.
B:3o—The Show Goes On*,
9:oo—Alan Young Show*.
9:3o—Big Town*.
10:00—Truth or Consequences®,
10:30—Crime Photographer*.
11:00—News; Feature Theater
unti! 12:30 a. m.
*__lndicates network show.
Your Georgia State Patrol tells
us that courtesy costs nothing—the
lack of it may cost a life—yours
or that of some other person.
‘43 PLYMOUTH
EXTRA GOGD
§695.00
A GOOD 46
WOULD COST
YOU MORE
NOW
IS THE TIME
TO BUY
J. Swanson vy, Inc.
Broad St. Lot
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« HOUSEKEEPER'S ; el é
J CLOSET | n A
1. CONSTRUCT FRAME | ’‘l ;
PANELS | A 4 e‘l
4, gggfis AND HANG | }’\ *?}
5. FINISH AS DESIRED Be o
Use this diagram for building a housekeeper’s closet in your
home. Sketch at left shows how neatly and compacily cleaning
utensils and materials can be stored in such a closet.
Large Closet Is
Solution To No
Basement Problem
BY MR. FIX
Written for NEA Service
Not long ago we suggested a
few ways to hang a few of your
wife’s cleaning things alongside
the cellar stairs to get-them out of
the way and tidy up the old home
stead a bit.
A fine idea, commented a read
er, but how about all the new
homesteads built these days with
out cellars, and therefore without
cellar stairs?
The answer to that is a house
keeper’s closet. It isn’t as easy as
putting in a few hooks or hangers,
but it’s a project you can build
yourself some nice rainy week
end, thereby keeping out of mis
chief and making your wife hap
py.
What you need, besides lumber,
screws, nails and tools, is a cor
ner a little under four feet wide
and a little less than a foot and
a half deep. The dimensions in
the drawing are not hard and fast;
you can vary them to suit the
space you have, and you can even
build the closet right up to the
ceiling if you want to.
First, build the framework out
of Ix 2 lumber—four uprights, four
pieces at top, three braces about
halfway down, three at the bot
tom, and a single piece across the
back (for a hook strip) about a
third of the way fronp the top.
Now put in the shelves. The ar
rangement here is variable, too;
you may want to work it out a
little differently to fit a particular
vacumm cleaner or other gadget.
you can use three-quarter-inch
lumber, or three-eighth-inch ply
wood, but the latter may give you
trouble on the two big shelves.
Next apply the outside panels
and cailing of three-eighths-inch
plywood. You won’t need a back
panel if you screw the rear up
rights into the wall, and you may
or may not need a ceiling, de
pending on height. But if you're
in a rented house, put the back
panel and ceiling on anyway; then
you can take your closet with vou
By Popular Request!
Another Gigantic Sal
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F‘L! ; e 4":'\‘
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’}?l”’ their own Spring and Summer clothes. Sew
Ol G
-g’«i%p ™ and save!
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Athens’ Leading Department Store
dl=p=n B - 1
THE HOME OF BETTER VALUES”
see s THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA """"a'
when' you move.
The . doors should be heavier—
about one and an eighth inches
thick, because you’'ll want to put
hooks in them and hang up things.
If you insist on plywood, we
won’t argue, but be sure to brace
the doors on the inside with
Ix2s. And in either case, use three
hinges in each door so they won’t
sag.
After you've adapted the sketch
to your own needs and drawn up
your list of lumber requirements,
you can have the lumber supply
house cut it to your specifications,
although it makes the price a little
higher. Whether you do it that way
or cut it up yourself, if you're am=
bitious you’ll double the order.
Then some other weekend you can
build another closet for your gar
dentools or for your cellar work
shop, and save a lot of time.
MALAYA PLANTERS ASK
DRIVE ON TERRORISTS
JOHORE BAHRU, Malaya —
(AP)—The rubber planters in Jo
hore want stern justice for Com
munist terrorists who have been
stealing latex and rubber scrap in
“alarming proportions.” The Jo
hore Planters Association declared
the rubber robbers were living
well off the proceeds of what they
sell while the death penalty for
thefts “has been a mere threat and
the only result has been to bring
the law into contempt.”
The rubber planters said that
their casualties are running high
in trying to keep rubber estates
producing despite Communist ter
rorists raids of murder and plun
der. Nineteen planters were killed
in 1930 in Malaya, five of them in
Johore state.
British troops and police bat
tling the Reds are hopeful they
can end the war and state of
emergency in Malaya by next De
cember.
If you make coffee in a perco
lator it’s a good idea to experi
ment to determine the exact
“perking time” needed to give the
brew you like, and then to use
the same time for perking after
that. Perking time will often vary
with different brands of coffee, so
if you change your brand make
your time experiment again.
Education Expert
Says Deferments
Don't Hurt UMT
By ARTHUR 8. ADAMS
President, American Council
On Education
WASHINGTON —(NEA )~ One
of the most serious problems fac=
ing the nation today is how to
provide adequate manpower for
the armed forces and at the same
time continue the flow of trained
men into all the significant areas
of our society as a whole. The
legislation for Universay Military
Training and Service now being
debated in Congress seeks to es
tablish general policy on this ques=-
tion for the Congress seeks to es
establish general policy on this
question for the future.
In no form yet proposed does
that legislation make specific pro
vision for the students in college
now. Hence the Selective Service
System has been faced with a
practical problem that had to be
solved this Spring.
Several hundred thousand stu
dents, including our future supply
of physicians, dentists, linguists,
teachers, engineers, and scientists,
will complete: part of their acade=-
mic courses in June and become
subject to immediate induction if
no action is taken by the Govern~
ment.
Should all those students be de
ferred? That would indeed be
granting special and undemocratic
privilege to students as a class.
Should all be inducted? Surely
such a radical step would be en
tirely contrary to the national in
terest. llf, then, some should be
gin military service this June and
some at later dates, which ones
should have their induction post
poned—those least qualified to do
successful college work or those
best qualified? .
ome of Questions
These are the questions which
the manpower authorities of the
Selective Service System, the De
partment of Labor, the Office of
Defense Mobiliation, the Depart
ment of Defense, and the National
Security Resources Board an
swered by unanimous approval of
the regulation recently authorized
by the President.
Two facts must be clearly un
derstood in order to form an in
telligent judgment on the regula
tion.
First, the proposal applies only
to students already enrolled in col
lege. It does not determine what
high school graduates may enter
college in the future; that will de~
pend on the legislation now before
Congress.
It establishes flexible standards
to aid local Selective Service
boards in deciding which students
within their jurisdiction should, in
the national interest, have military
service temporarily postponed.
Qualifying Students
Second, students who qualify.
either by demenstrating academic
achievement or by passing an ex
amination testing academic ca
pacity, are permitted to postpone
the time of entering military serv
iee. No student gains permanent
exemption under this procedure.
fi?.“fi' flxorg {lhno confilog bo{w;u
this plan and the proposed plan for
Universal Military fi?rnlnlglg and
Service. The two are complemen=
tary, not contradictory.
The strongest argument ad
vanced against the proposal is that
it diseriminates in favor of young
men whose parents can afford to
send them to college. I am most
sympathetie toward that point of
view,
The American Council on Edu
cation has long advocated schol
arship plans designed to make it
possible for every qualified youth
- Belk CO
Galla nt .
Friday and Saturday
e
A 8 : \
, NEW SHIPMENT 2
spoo BN\
: i ]
PAIR T ) e
o
51 gauge, 18 denier lin latest spring and ‘* {
summer shades. Regular 1.50 value. : L .
£ { s
L
A ) A AW 25 S LMD
f NEW AND EXCITING
ég‘ 7)'&/” 32:;' 5
% == Lalles uloves
w /s
) gr
\
98¢ to 2°°
"\)
"j Just arrived, the newest in spring and summer
”i gloves. White, navy and pastel shades in mylon,
” rayon and cotton.
m‘
OUTSTANDING COLLECTION . %
il B
Costume Jewelry %8
3
our oice |
Finest in white summer costume jewelry. Earrings, 4
chokers and necklaces. Also gold and silver scatter Qw
pins.
BEAUTIFUL NEW
2 Handbags
| !
Regulsr .96 oo suvinvhsvnseniic 818
/ Rogntlar 895 i iis . iisbsinnssiin.s 200
»Si:"”' Regular 1.40 t 0 1.08 ..isi ccov v4ss 1.00
B . TL B R . R . L L S TR oTY MO Y S RS AN
ld. ( t ‘ A
adies Compacts :;, <%
p oo 4) L :*' e,
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Regwbar 3.29.. .00 . T e
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. e e
A wonderful assortment in gold plated and silver . X
plated compacts. Some handpainted and engraved.
R N . ARSI TR SR SSR N,
Gaant 3 "( C
llant- Belk Co
R- 4 .
Athens’ Leading Department Store.
“THE HOME OF BETTER VALUES.”
in America to secure a eollege edu~
cation. But as a practical matter,
I must join General Hershey imn
asking if we ean afford, in the
present state of the world, to mis
handle the manpower resources
we have because our gocial system
has not yet reached perfection,
The imperative need for trained
men in many areas of national life
is clear., We must obtain them
from the sources mow avallable.
That is the only realistic basis for
any well-considered program of
adapting our manpower resources
to our manpower needs.
PAGE SEVEN
The first U. 8. hookey team was
formed in Pittsburgh in the winter
of 1897
USE T4-L FOR
ATHLETE’S FOOT
BECAUSE—
It has greater PENETRATING
Power, With 80% undiluted alco=
nol base, it carries the active
medication DEEPLY, #o kill the
germ on contact. Get happy relief
IN ONE HOUR or your 40e¢ back
at any drug store. 'foday at Citi=
zens Pharmacy.