Newspaper Page Text
e ONESDAY, JULY 11, 1951
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¢y I-H Pasture
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Chamos Named
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In Two Districts
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Northwest and Southcentral dis
. i+ winners in the 4=H club pas
establishment contest have
laen named by District Extension
carvice Agents L. S. Watson and
L. W. Eberhardt, jr.
Northwest Georgia champions
o Billy Lewis, Polk County,
first; Jack Stubbs, DeKalb county,
second; and David Tisinger, Car
-101l County, third. o
In the Southcentral area winners
sre J. B. Thompson, Laurens
County, first; Billy Abercrombie,
pulaski County, second; and L. De
Flowers, Colquitt County, “third.
pirst, second and third place
district winners received SSO, 's4o
and $25 respectively. In addition,
winners of first place get a free
trip to the State 4-H Club Con
gress in Atlanta, October 9-12.
“ County agents are sharing in the
awards program, too. Johnny
stowe, county agent in Polk Coun
ty, got SSO for supervising Billy
Lewis’ pasture work. Laurens
County Agent G. Y. Duke got the
same amount for seeing J. B.
Thompson’s project through to
completion. :
State Prizes
Four other Extension districts
will name their champions this
month. Winners in each area will
then compete for the state prize
of $250. Second and third state
winners will get $l5O and SBO.
What's Your
Car Worth !
More Than You Think
We Need
CHEVROLET—DODGE
FORD — PLYMOUTH
Bring Yours In For
Appraisal.
See How Easy You Can
Own A Newer Car Or
New Dodge Or
PLYMOUTH -
. Swanson lvy, Inc.
Buy Now and Save.
FOR PROMPTNESS, EFFICIENCY & COURTESY
: e
s ALWAYS CALL
SIH""Y MOTOR COMPANY
; Phone 246 L v Phone 3932 Night
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‘ b Greyhound Fares Remain Amazingly Low! !
One Round One Round |
Way Trip Way Trip
Savannah ... 4.65 8.40 Washington 11.05 1?).9()E
Jacksonville ~ 6.55 1180 N.Y.C......15.55 28.00
Daytona Bch. 8.45 15.25 Boston ......19.70 35.50 _
{ Miami ...., 12.65 2250 Buffalo .....18.45 33.75
lampa ...... 9.50 17.10 Pittsburgh ..15.10 27.20
| | Key West ...15.95 2875 Chicago .....14.55 26.20
{ | Charleston .. 470 850 Detroit .....15.15 27.30 ;
{ | Wilmington .. 7.45 1345 Cincinnati ... 9.35 1685
Norfolk ..., 10.00 18.00 Chattanooga . 3.95 7.15 .
¢ Richmond ... 9.40 1695 Memphis .... 8.05 1450
i % Plus Federal Tax on All Above Fares i
| Recp Youn Orowd Together- Chantor & Greyhound Bus o
| 1 :
; GREYHOUND TERMINAL
b 220 W. Broad Phone 2141
'Harmmmfl e ————————remmmn e '
i Byl
for A 107 I V 11714 e P A e o L
GOGREYHOUND
Sponsor, of the project and do
nor of awards is the Standard Oil
Company.
Records of the two district
champions already named show
that grass is probably the cheap
est livestock feed that can be
grown in Georgia. Billy Lewis en
tered the contest by establishing
an acre of permanent pasture in
cluding Ladino clover and fescue.
Total expenses of the pasture were
$60.15. Billy says the net value s¢
far is $73.95.
This Polk County 4-H'er started
his project by having the soil an
alyzed. Tests indicated that the
acre needed three tops of lime,
which he applied. The land was
cut with a smoothing harrow,
turned with a plow, cut four more
times with the harrow, then
rolled.
Billy sowed 14 pounds of fescue
seed and two pounds of Ladino.
He used 400 pounds of 4-8-8 fer
tilizer at pianting and top dressed
with 700 pounds of 4-8-6 after the
clover and fescue had come up.
Twenty-five animals, including
cattle and hogs, have grazed the
area. Though it included only one
acre, fences were used to rotate
grazing.
Southcentral’s winner, J. B.
Thompson, established a pasture
of three acres of Coastal Bermuda.
He began also by making a soil
test and applied the 4,500 pounds
of lime which it indicated was
needed.
After breaking the land, this
Raurens 4-H’er harrowed it twice.
He used 1,200 pounds of 4-8-8
fertilizer and 300 pounds of nitrate
of soda. He set 30,000 Bermuda
stolons by hand. Crimson clover
will be planted on the area in Sep
tember.
The three acres of Bermuda
have furnished grazing for three
animals for 38 days. Total ex
penses were S9O. Net value of the
pasture is $2lO.
- Four H'ers entering the contest
established pastures according to
Extension Service recommenda
tions. Under the score card set
up, they received points for pro
per soil selection and preparation,
absence of objectional objects,
soil testing, liming, fertilizing,
seeding, management and produc
tion.
Conirol Methods
For Peach Borer
Named By Firor
Discussing control of the peach
tree borer in his “Orchard Sugges
tions” for July, George H. Firor,
Extension Service horticulturist,
recommended spraying the trunk
and lower part of the scaffold
limbs with DDT at a rate of six
pounds of 50 per cent wettable
powder per 100 gallons of water.
The first application should
have been made in late June, he
said, and two additional applica~
tions should be made 30 days
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DESIGNED for eight-inch solid masonry construction with light-weight concrete
blocks, this ranch style cottage can be built with or without a basement. The alternate
plan shows how the living room fireplace is moved back to make the chimney avail
able for heating equipment in space that would be used for cellar stairs. The garage
is lengthened a few feet to provide additional space when basement is eliminated.
This is plan SC-62 by Elmer Gylleck, architect, 120 South Grove Avenue, Elgin, 111,
The house covers 1,018 square feet without breezeway and garage, and contains
17,300 cubic feet when built with basement (12,200 cubic feet without basement).
These figures are used as guides in estimating building costs locally.—AP Features.
apart.
“All trash and material should
be removed from around the base
of the tree,” Firor advised. “The
body of the tree should be tho
roughly wet down to the ground.”
For small amounts, Firor recom
mended 12 teaspoonsful of powder
to one gallon of water. This ma
terial may be applied with a
brush, he pointed out.
Better Groomi
Is New Project
u
For 4-H Girls
Several hundred Georgia 4-H
club girls are participating in a
new 4-H program this year, ac
cording to Mrs. Martha Harrison,
assistant state 4-H club leader. It
is the Better Grooming project,
sponsored by The Toni Home Per
manent Company.
The program was offered only
two months ago through the Na
tional Committee on Boys and
Girls Club Work, Chicago. De
spite the newness of the activity,
a majority of the states have al
ready accepted it, G. L. Noble, di
rector of the National Committee,
said.
As incentives for outstanding
achievement in the Better Groom
ing program, S3OO college scholar
ships and trips to the National 4-
H Club Congress in Chicago next
November will be given to the two
top ranking girls in the Nation.
Each state accepting the project
will submit the record of one 4-H
girl to be judged for the awards.
A committee of Federal and State
Extension workers will determine
the national winners,
“Basic good grooming, which in
volves cleanliness and' neatness,
improves appearance,” Mr. Noble
stated. “t thus contributes to good
health, since to look better is to
feel better. Attractive appearance
also serves to develop poise and
confidence in teen-age girls.”
Mrs. Harrison pointed out that
county home demonstration agents
will furnish full information about
the new project.
Georgia is the largest producer
of china clay.
| e s [\ JdeCaunT syvia, couLo 1 BORROW YOUR | [THANKS SO MUCH, AUNT SYLVIA. BT, CLAIRE,
AUNT SIVIA [=3 o e e \\% /\\{ %\ LUNCHEON SET FOR MY o I| I JUST CANT UNDERSTAND WHY ) THAT ISNT
N 7 W \\L N %& ; (PARTY THIS AFTERNOON? “sd | |MY THINGS WEAR OUT, _/WEAR .THATS
'WHS a & % %& : \Ktfi ' \,MINE WAS SO WORN f} dIl | com. SO FAST! BLEACH
__ogk ¥ @) e Q) P 595/ 4 | GAVEITTO MY __# by T/ i
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| YOU SEE, MANY : o @ T | [PrreRmER T AnNp A DAILY PUREX'BEAUTY |
BLEACHES CONTA( B:‘TG:%DCAN ontE FOR (s aecauee | | cPu;i,; || . \BAHMAES YOUR pancio S“W'fl“"fé
HARMFUL IMPURITIES A& AGAINST (/175 PURET USED AS DIRECTED| | ™ I W EGEnSNe Y S "'% [ wiluee .
o Aok I| | CANST (Fnei vk sik| 7o Gaidl Bleack |B|t e e
DESTROY THE FIBERSFY € DAMAGE, 3 PUREX MAKES WHITE THINGS ieaanate 185 TS L
OF YOUR CLOTH A AUNT £ WHITER, < N\ T 7.5 Ve by | ‘1
INSTEAD OF e, | COLOR- {s3y FOR 1y TR L 2 ST
: YIVIAR® = d fasT (= ) Newe ey | i Vgl Ly iy
SIMPLY WHITENING N (% 2 rarics !, 9% GECAUSE ITs PUpe, W |Ja A 2 Einssiu
Tl N 7 . = B R;{ . 2 . 2 EXCLISIVE Puncx ,RE*%e| [\ V£ ] §i+fi@%‘-‘£
! T™ 9 be d— RIGHTER! 748 AEINOVES HARMPYL ,Mpuiefifa AT Condll RS
LD G R : B ' |/ o’ P @B | VSRAD Furex VO SVORPE S O
‘3 7 ‘\\ ‘\“ ‘ig X \ 2 **ms mmsm»m@ nocsss .“ e :Z:?s :::: :::f:;':"mp‘:i:rl;;m'::
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i gl 1 v 8 “ = fi(;%: g:glmggym%:gmfiw@mm PUREX IS A STANDARD DISINFECTANT see label
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
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S e e G % PR Y e
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UNCLE SAM'S BIGGEST—Here’s one of the first picturegs.of the
U. S. Army’s new monster ‘73-ton tank, stiil in the experimental
stage. Designated the T-30, it carries a crew of six, has a 155-mm.
gun and an air-cooled, 810-HP engine capable of driving it 27 miles
per hour. The tank is shown at New York City, where it will be
part of an 18-car exhibition train at the U. S. Army’s salute to the
Erie Railroad’s 100th anniversary.
Though the number of boll
weevils is smaller this year than
in 1949 and ’SO, the insects are
now in fields in all parts of the
state, and farmers are applying
poison for their contrcl, E. C.
Westbrook, Extension Service
agronomist, said this week.
“Weevils can be kept under con
trol with a minimum loss of cot
ton,” Westbrook continued, “if
farmers follow through with rec
ommended control measures.”
The boll worm, too, is distri
buted throughout the state, but
had done no great damage
through the {first week of this
month, except in a few fields,
“The recommended mixtures
for boll weevil control containing
10 percent DDT are effective in
keeping the boll worm under con
trol, the agronomist said. “Far
mers who have used the mixtures
for boll weevil control which con
tain only five percent DDT have
been successful in controlling boil
worms when these mixtures were
applied soon after the worms
hatched and when they were very
small.”
Westbrook warned however that
10 percent DDT will be needed to
control the worm when it reaches
some size.
Farmers were urged to inspect
their cotton fields three or four
times a week in order to detect
any presence of worms or weevils.
If infestations are observed and
steps taken to kill the insects soon
after they appear they can be
controlled much more effectively,
Westbrook said.
Crab grass is another problem
for the cotton farmer. Frequent
rains in June and July have caused
a big growth of the grass in North
Georgia at the time cotton was
small, making elimination of this
grass difficult and expensive.
Many farmers have wanted to use
chemicals for killing erab grass,
but the use of these materials is
in the experimental stage and are
not recommended in cotton fields
to kill crab grass, except where it
is used for experimentol demon=-
strations, Westbrook pointed out.
Thirty nine per cent of Idaho’s
area is forest land.
a
Show Increase
Livestock experts helieve Geor
gia’s sheep population will show
an increase of 2,000 to 3,000 head
in 1951. The major reason for this
is that more than 800 ewes have
been brought into the state the
past two months,
Charles E. Bell, jr., the Universi
ty of Georgia's Extension Service
livestock specialist, says that most
of these have been placed with
new growers in the Piedmont sec~
tion. Three double-decked cars
of Suffolk and Hampshire grade
ewes were brought here from Cal«
ifornia under the direction of Bell,
the White Provision company, At
lanta, and Swift and Company,
Chicago.
McDuffie, Carroll, Spalding,
Coweta, Cobb and Floyd counties
received the bulk of the ship
ments. One group of 25 was sent
to Lee County in South Georgia.
They were placed on farm in
groups ranging from four to 30,
with a few lots of 50 and one of
100. Bell explains that Georgia
decreased in sheep production
from 600,000 in the mid 1800’s to
13,000 on January 1, 1950. How
ever, because of better methods
of controlling parasites, better
fences and better pastures, along
with the price and scarcity of
wool, more Georgia farmers are
becoming interested in sheep pro
duction. Bell says that one en
couraging sign was evident at the
recent lamb show at Rome. Four
hundred and three lambs were
shown. All of the ewe lambs
went back to farmers.,
The livestock expert concludes
that farm flocks of 25 to 35 ewes
fit nicely into the farming systems
practiced in the Georgia Piedmont
region, “We have that early mar
keting advantage,” he says, “and
our spring lamb production is not
to be confused with the commer
cial lamb production of the West.”
Marine Recruife ‘
Office Thursda
Marine Recruiting Sergeant
James R. Collins will be at the
Post Office in Athens each Thurs
day to interview prospective ap
plicans for enlistment in the U. S.
Marine Corps.
The U. S. Marine Corps is seek
ing young men between the ages
of 17 and 28 with no previous
service; age limit extended to 32
for veterans. Enlistment periods
are now open for either 3 or 4
years for a first enlistment, option
of more for reenlistment. Now,
too, a man with dependents may
'be enlisted, depending on his
background, either as a regular
Marine or a Marine Reservist,
Young men eligible for draft are
given special invitation to see the
Sergeant to find out how the draft
will affect their chances for vol
unteering for the service of their
choice.
Young women between the ages
of 18 and 30 are also offered an
excellent future in the U. S. Ma
rine Corps. Exciting and essen=-
tial jobs are now open in aviation,
communications, personnel and
supply.
The acreage of late spring toma
toes for harvest in Georgia in
1951 is estimated at 18 per cent
above that of 1950,
GET FAST RELIEF FROM
WITH RELIABLE 8.G.0.
“8.G.0.,” a medicinal ointment contain.
ing the best known and most widely used
ingredients, will give on-the-minute relief
from the itching, or money back. “8.G.0.”
is praised by those who use it, not only
for Poison Ivy, but for other external skin
conditions such as Sunburn, Cuts, Ath
lete’s Foot and kindred conditions.
“8.G.0.” not only relieves itching, but
aids in healing, Try it at our risk, ft’ you
don’t like it, get your money back. 60¢
and SI.OO, in tubes or jars at drug coun
ters. Beeman’s Laboratory, Atlanta, Ga.
Master Of Eloquent Pause Earns
Much By Keeping Mouth Closed
By JACK QUIGG |
(For Bob Thomas) ‘
HOLLYWOOD, &uly 11—(AP)
Silence is golden, especially if you
can keep mum as artfully as Gale
Gordon.
Mr. Gordon, a handsome, forty
ish gentleman with a Clarke Ga
ble mustache and the trace of a
British accent, earns as much as a
lot of movie stars simply by keep
ing his mouth closed—at the right
time.
One of Holiywood's top radio
actors, he is known in the trade
as “the master of eloquent pause.”
1f you don’t quite place his
name, you undoubtedly know him
by voice if you're any kind of a
radio fan—he appears resularly
on seven big network prcgrams.
Gordon is:
Plays Many Parts \
Mayor Latrivia on the “Fibber
McGee and Molly” show; bank
president Rudolph Atterbury on
“My Favorite Husband”; school
g;incipal Osgood Conklin on “Our
iss Brooks”; Mr. Scott, head of
RCA, on the Phil® Harris-Alice
Faye show; Mr. Merryweather,
Ronald Colman’s rich friend on
“Halls of Ivy”; Mr. Bullard, the
next door neighbor, on “The Great
Gildersleeve,” and the girl friend’s
father on the Dennis Day Show.
“These characters are all of a
type,” says Gordon, “pompous,
stuffy, opinionated and loud.
Therefore, it is easy to make them
humorous if the script writer is
skillful.” :
What is the eloquent pause?
Here is an example from, say, the
Fibber McGee show:
McGee says something insulting
or aggravating. Gordon, as Latri
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LENS TIEUP— Come
dian Red Skelton has his hands
full with his cameras as he pre
pares to shoot the sights upon
arrival in London to fulfill the=
africal engagements,
WE NEED
Used Cars
46 — 47 — 48 — 49
CHEVROLET — DODGE — FORD
PLYMOUTH
Our Stock Is Low—To Quickly Build It Up
We Wil Give You ,
A BIC TRADE - IN FOR ONE WEEK ,
LET'S DEAL NOW ¥
J. Swanton lvy, Inc.
PAGE FIVE
via, should properly reply with
anger or frustration—something
quick and sarcastic. But he doesn’t
“1 wait. There is a long pause,
T am trying to control my temper,
The audience knows this and in
its mind it is going over all the
possible answers T may give.
Flat Remark
“Then, at last, I come out with
a very flat remark., Maybe some
thing as simple as the one word,
‘ves.’ It is doubly funny because
everyone listening knows that you
fought off a temptation to explode
into something more violent.”
Gordon savs the technique is so
effective he frequently gets laughs
before he makes his comeback.
The secret, he savs, is knowing
how long to keep silent before re
plying.
Gordon readily admits he's
typed, but he doesn’t mind. “I am
paid very well, well enough so
I'm not struggling to get out of the
rut.” he says.
New York born, but schooled in
England—which accounts for the
British accent — he broke into
show business on Broadway and
was a leading man in stock com
panies before settling in Holly
wood in 1926.
His eloquent pause being such
a laugh-getter, why haven’t more
actors tried it?
“Several have,” says Gordon,
“but they didn’t have the nerve
to keep still long enough.”
irritation of ExtomaLlly Caused
To gently cleanse broken out skin, |
then soothe itchy irritation, and‘
so aid healing—use time tested
RESINOL.CS:
i -AND SOAP
Railroad Schedules
SEABOARD AIRLINE RY.
Arrival and Departure of Trains
Athens, Georgia
Leave for Eiberton, Hamlet and
New York and East—
-3:30 p. m.—Air Conditioned.
8:48 p. m.—Air Conditioned.
Leave for Elberton, Hamlet and
East—
-12:15 a. m.—(Local).
Leave for Atlanta, South and
West—
-5:45 a. m.—Air Conditioned.
4:30 a. m.—(Local). i
2:57 p. m.—Air Conditioned.
CENTRAL OF GEORGIA
RAILROAD
Arrives Athens (Daily, Except
Sunday) 1235 p. m
Leaves Athens (Daily, Except
Sunday) 4:15 p. m.
SOUTHERN RAILWAY SYSTEM
From Lula and Co:imerce
Arrive 9:00 a. m.
East and West *
Leave Athens 9:00 a. m, ;
GEORGIA RAILROAD
Mixed Trains. -~
Week Day Only
Train No. 51 Arrives 9:00 a. m.
I'rain No. 50 Departs 700 p. m.