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'H'ers To See Ground Breaking
“eremonies During Council Meet
MILLEDGEVILLE—Green and
ite 4-H cloverleaves will dot
. highway from here to Rock
¢ sle Park Thursday afternoon,
s wust 23, when more than 1,000
= and girls attending the eigh
e th annual Georgia 4-H Clpb
~uncil meeting travel to the site
their State 4-H Center for
.round breaking exercises.
"[. automobiles, buses and
(ucks, all covered with the 4-H
emblem, the rural boys and girls
¢ om every county in the state will
o to see Dr. O. C. Aderhold, pres
" l.nt of the University of Georgia,
romove the spade of dirt that will
snify the beginning of construc
{n on the first 100-capacity unit.
yutstanding 4-H leaders in their
~.unties, the delegates to the State
council Meeting helped their fel
l,w 4-H'ers raise over $40,000 to
help build facilities for the first
100. When completed, the camp
Jill accomodate 1,200. Seeing
work on the camp begin is to be
one of the highlights of thg: Coup
il Meet, which begins in Mil
lodgeville, August 20. :
The four days of peppery poli
ticing, hot competition, dancing
and singing. and discussing pro
ooty and problems will officially
hogin Monday night, August 20,
when Guy Wells, president of
Cieorgia State College for Women,
welcomes the group to the cam
yus.
l Rogers To Speak
mrnest Rogers, Atlanta Journal
~olumnist, will speak Thursday at
the 11:15 assembly. The 4-H'ers
will spend an hour after lunch dis
cussing project problems with
specialists on the State Extension
3ervice Staff. Discussion periods
will be featured each of the four
days.
Some of the best tractor drivers
in the state will put their machines
through the paces Tuesday after
noon at 3:30. Six district winners
in the tractor operators’ contest
will vie for the state title on Geor
gia Military College’s football
field. The champion will receive
that coveted trip to the National
4-H Club Congress in Chicago this
fall.
State winners in talent, song
leading and public speaking will
1150 be chosen during the event.
A visit to the home of Dr. and
Mrs. Wells will be made Tuesday
ifternoon after the tractor driv
ars’ trials. This home was former
ly the Governor’s mansion.
Advisors Day
Tuesday is also adult advisers,
jay, and W. A. Sutton, state 4-H
club leader, expects many -of the
more than 9,000 adult leaders to
ye on hand. 5
Some of the best speeches, at
feast those made with the most
enthusiasm, will be made in Rus
sell Auditorium at 6 p. m. Tues
day. Candidates for State Council
ffices will tell why .they should
2 elected.
Present officers are Erin Turn
ar Bibb County, president; Lee
Wheeler, Greene County, girls’
vice-president; Bubber Pippin,
Dougherty ' County, boys’ vice
president; Carclyn Millner, Jas
per County, secretary; Herman
Palmer, Coffee County, treasurer;
and Richard Darden, Troup Coun
ty, reperter. These boys and girls
will preside at assemblies and help
the ¢-H club leaders, specialists
and county agents with general
administration of the event. |
The session on Wednesday, Au
gust 22, will feature a talk by Wil- |
marose Nicholson, a 4-Her who
spent six months in Europe last
year under the International Farm
Youth Exchange program, This is
also the day for citizenship cere
monies during which boys and
glrls who have reached voting age
will be charged by Ralph McGill,
editor of the Atianta Constitution,
with their responsibilities and ob
ligations as voters. ‘
Members -of the State 4-H Ad
vlsory Committee, made up of out
standing Georgians and boosters
f 4-H, will be present on Wednes
day also. They will be introduced
[ the 4-H group by Walter S.
Brown, Extension Service asso
-late director,
. Entertainment
.ifl entertainment feature of the
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program will be at 8 p. m. Wed
nesday when Asa Candler V shows
a movie he made on a recent big
game hunt to Africa.
Governor Herman Talmadge
will be the speaker at the morning
assembly Thursday, August 23, be
fore the group leaves for Rock
Eagle Park. Roy Harris, Augusta,
will introduce the Governor.
There college scholarships will
be awarded to three outstanding 4-
H’ers during the meeting, One is
a SI6OO poultry scholarship to the
University of Georgia, given by
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Durr, owners of
Durr-Schaffner Hatchery, Atlanta.
The other two are S4OO general ex
cellence scholarships, one given by
Mrs. Mills Bgé Lane, the other by
Southern States Iron Roofing
Company.
County and home demonstration
agents will attend meetings held in
conjunction with the 4-H affair.
The Master 4-H Club of Georgia
will also hold a meeting on Wed
nesday night, August 22. This is
made up of 4-H’ers who have won
out-of-state trips with thei® 4-H
activities. Associate Dean Paul
W. Chapman of the College of
Agriculture will be their principal
speaker.
TIFTON—A new peaaut com
bine harvester that green harvests
an acre per hour and requires but
two men to operate it will be given
a full test during the current har
vesting season, according to Dr.
C. C. Murray, dean and director
*of the College of Agriculture.
Indications are that several ma
chines will be tested on a full field
basis in widely separated areas of
the Southeast and Southwest.
The machine was developed by
James L, Shepherd and W. D.
Kenney, Agricultural engineers at
the Coastal Plain Experiment Sta
tion here, and is a joint project of
the College of Agriculture and the
SN A
Five man hours on the machine
equal 30 man hours of harvesting
the old way, Dean Murray reveal
ed. Picking 95 to 98 percent of the
nuts from the vines, the machine
results in total losses of 12 percent
in a field producing around 1,500
pounds of nuts per acre, tests
show. A 15 percent loss was re
corded when harvested by the
conventional method.
Officials believe the machine
losses can be eliminated with add
ed improvements.
| The new machine lifts the nuts
from the soil by the vines. It
shakes out the loose soil, picks off
the nuts, bags them, then spreads
the vines uniformly over the soil.
The nuts are then dried mechan
ically,
The machine will also harvest
partially dry or fully dry peanuts
from windrows at two and one
half acres per hour, This is a two
thirds reduction in harvesting
costs over old methods involving
stacking,
Tests to refine the various op
erations of the mechanical harvest
ing of Georgia’s peanut crop will
continue, Shepherd and Kenney
are working on the development
of a farm size crop dryer that will
efficiently Bry peanuts, corn, oats,
lupine, cottonseed, hay and other
crops which may need to be dried
for safe storage and marketing.
- DISTRICT MEETS OVER
Selection of 4-H champions from
six Extension Service districts is
now complete. The last Project
Ahievement meeting ended last
week in Tifton. Winners are now
working on their record books and
demonstrations, preparing for the
State Council meeting in Milledge
ville, August 20-24, or the 4-H
Club Congress in Atlanta, October
9-12, where state champions will
be chosen. .
National Flag
HORIZONTAL
1 Depicted is
the flag of
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13 Act of eating
away
14 Join
15 Ignited
16 Sum
18 Fish
19 Preposition
20 Testifies i
22 Exist
23 Otherwise :
25 Warmth :
27 College official
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2 Bird
3 Decay
4 Bone
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7 Atop
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11 Drum used in
this country
12 Cylindrical
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24 Barbarous
28 Unoccupied
29 Verb
transitive
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30 Neodymium
(ab.)
31 Three-toed
sloth
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33 Products of
hens
35 Ogle
38 Food regime
39 Essential
being
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51 Observe
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56 Rosters
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Little girls like to look their best on the first day back to school. Here are autumn plaids in cotton
fashions that have a wrinkle-free finish. For the nursery school crowd, there’s a red plaid (left)
with minute collar and cuffs and tiny tucks on either side of the bodice. Gay green (center) for
big and little sister are jumpers styled overall fashion with separate white cotton blouses, Separ
ates (right) are done in blue plaid with scalloped jacket and white blouse.
Cotton WEarlyFall?Efi&l Wear
By GAILE DUGAS
NEA Woman’s Editor
NEW YORK-—(NEA)—The first
dress of the school season is best
when it's cotton for some very
practical reasons. The first school
days often bring with them warm
weather. So, school dresses that
are cool and are done in dark
plaids that suggest autumn are
just exactly right.
The very smallest pupil of them
all can head for nursery school as
smartly turned out as her big sis
{-H Cooperafive |
Project Champs l
Get Utah Trip |
In recognition of their efforts to
learn about cooperative buying
and selling of farm products and
to improve methods of marketing
farm products in their communi
ties, four Georgia 4-H club mem
bers are to receive expense-paid
trips to an annual youth meeting
of the American Institute of Co
operation at Utah State Agricultu
ral College, August 26-28.
Participating in a new state
wide 4-H cooperative marketing
project, the boys and girls won
the awards in competition with
club members throughout Georgia.
The winners are Earl Gandy
and Ronnie Hall, Grady County,
and Margaret Bradford and Jackie
Whitehurst, Cook County.
The 4-H’ers are scheduled to
leave Atlanta by automobile Au
gust 18. They will arrive at Lo
gan, Utah, in time for the meeting.
Following the meeting they will
visit Yellowstone National Park
and other parks in the Rocky
Mountains. They expect to re
turn to Atlanta September 7.
A number of Georgia agricul
tural leaders are to accompany
the boys and girls and attend the
meeting at Utah State Agricultural
College. These include C. G.
Garner, Agricultural Extension
Service marketing specialist; Miss
Elizabeth Zellner, assistant state
4-H club leader; L. C. Westbrook,
Northeast District Extension Serv
ice Agent; County Agent George
Kessler, Adel; Home Demonstra
tion Agent Mrs. Myrtle W. Meeks,
Cairo; and Bill Prance, public re
lations director of the Cotton Pro
ducers Association, Atlanta. Mr.
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'THE BANNER-AERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
ter. For her, there’s a minute red
plaid frock with tiny white col
lar and cuffs. Bodice and skirt are
gently tucked. But, more impor
tant, this Dan River gingham has
been given a special finish to
make it shed wrinkles. This means
that it stays fresh through many
wearings; doesn’t need washing
and ironing so often,
This same finish has been ap
plied to a jumper duo for big and
little sister. These plaid gingham
Prance’s organization sponsorg the!
'4-H project in Georgia and pro-!
vides the free trips.
| Activities
~ Calling attention to the activi
ties of the farm hoys and girls in
the project, Garner and R. J. Rich
ardson, assistant state 4-H leader,
said the winning 4-H’ers have‘
done an outstanding job of learn- |
ing about farm cooperatives and
other businesses influencing farm
people in their respective com
munities. :
While attending the Utah meet
ing, Jackie Whitehurst will parti
cipate in a symposium on “Public
School Concern in Farmer Coop
eratives.” Mrs. Meeks will discuss
“Young Farm Women’s Interest in |
Cooperatives.” |
Earl Gandy and his father are|
members of a dairy cooperative, a |
Farmers Mutual Exchange Asso
ciation and the Grady County
Electric Membership Cooperation.
During the past year, Earl pur
chased over SSO worth of farm|
supplies through cooperatives,
gave five talks on the importance |
of cooperatives and participated
in four tours to see how such or
ganizations operate.
Marketing % |
Ronnie Hall took part in similar
marketing activities in the same
county. 'He also made a survey
of a local dairy cooperative to de
termine its rules for success. Com
menting on his study, he said: “I|
think cooperatives are doing a!
great work for the rural people of
this section and are helping devel
op our local farms and homes.”
Margaret Bradford studied 12
cooperative organizations in herl
section of Georgia to win one of |
two trips offered to girls. She|
listed the directors of the organiza- !
tions, farm products handled and
the rules by which the organiza
tions operated. Margaret also pur
chased feeds and other items and
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jumpers are designed overall style,
with slender shoulder straps,
tucked bodices and flaring skirts.
Blouses, which are separate, are
white broadcloth.
Plaid gingham with a wrinkle
free surface appears in separates
for big sister. A scalloped jacket
with peplum slips over a white
cotton blouse that’s worn with a
full skirt. Blouse and skirt may
go places, of course, without the
jacket.
sold pecan seedlings through local
cooperatives.
Jackie Whitehurst studied 24 co
operative organizations in her area
of the state over a period of four
months. After completing the
study, she wrote a 2,000 word re
port on what she had learned.
In addition to state individual
winners who get the trips, three
county, district and state cham
pions were named. Counties win
ning plaques given by the Ameri
can Institute of Cooperation were
Cook, Southcentral; Grady, South
west; and DeKalb, Northwest.
These counties also won state
awards of plaques given by the
same organization and in the same
order.
Garner and Richardson pointed
out that plans eall for continuing
the project in future years.
4-H'ERS TO MEET
One of the largest youth meet
ings to be held in Georgia this
year is the State 4-H Club Council
meeting in Milledgeville, August
20-24. More than 1,000 boys and
girls, representing every county,
along with county and home dem
onstration agents and state Ex
tension Service staff members will
attend the meeting.
Southern seed certification of
ficials met last week in Atlanta
to discuss ways of bringing uni
formity to seed certification in the
area. ‘
'BROKEN
~OUT -
Black and White
Ointment contains
one of the best
infection clearing
agents known to
relieve itch of
Acne, Eczema,
Tetter, 25¢, 60c,
85¢. Use Black and
White Seap, too.
Relman Morin Says Magaie Higgins
Worked For Her Success In Korea
By RELMAN MORIN
(For Hal Boyle)
NEW YORK —(AP)— My wife,
who is a career woman and ad
mits to strong feeling on the sub
ject, has a favorite cliche, to wit:
“A woman, in any kind of busi
ness, has to work twice as hard as
a man to get half as far.”
I used to be stuck for an answer
to that, but the war in Korea pro
vided one. “How about Marguerite
Higgins,” I ask, by the way of a
crusher.
Maggie Higgins was the only
woman reporter over there on a
daily stint. Some others came and
went on quickies. (One, in fact,
made such a quickie that she had
to consult a map when she got
back to find out where she had
:)een!) But Maggie made a job of
t.
She came back with a Pulitzer
prize, an excelelnt book, and a
clear track for the lecture circuits.
A Hollywood studio wanted her
life-story as the basis for a pic
ture, but the agents made the mis
take of showing her the story-out
line they had in mind, and she said
nix to that. There were many
gther emoluments that came to
er.
Richly Deserved
All of them were richly de
served.
Whether Maggie worked twice
as hard as the men on the same
beat would be hard to determine,
Let’s just say that she worked as
hard as most, and harder than
others.
She underwent all the wusual
hardships of war correspondents—
plus. For example, she stayed
with a South Korean division for
a week or 10 days, and I do not
recall that any other American
correspondent did that,
It was much more dangerous
than sticking with American units,
and by the nature of things, not
much of a story. The newspaper
readers over here naturally were
more interested in closeups of
what Americans were doing than
they were in any of the Allied
units. I doubt that she got much
copy out of it, but it was typical
of her thoroughness to assign her
self to the ROKS.
Very Brave
Her bravery, in fact, bordered
on plain recklessness.
One day, a correspondents’ jeep
was moving up near the front and
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RUNS IN THE FAMILY — Three generations of one family—
grandfather, father and son—display their left hands to .show the
loss of identical fingers resulting from accidents. John Naibert, 81,
of Cadott, Wis., lost his finger in a pump jack; Alfred J. Naibert,
83, of Manitowoe, Wis., lost his while working at a malting com
pany, and Albert Naibert, 23, of Manitowoc, lost his finger after it
was crushed in the closing of a door. The men were gathered for
& Albert’s wedding :
it came to a fork in the road. An
M. P. was standing there, and they
asked directions of him.
He pointed down one road and
said that was the quickest route
to the unit they were hunting, But
he added, “I wouldn’t advise you
to go that way. The Gooks have it
under observation and they shot
hell out of another jeep about an
hour ago.”
The boys debated for a moment,
and decided to take a chance.
Maggie was in the jeep. As soon
as it moved out of earshot of the
M. P. she said, with some irrita
tion, “I have nothing but con
tempt for people like that. If
you worry about being shot at,
you'd never get a story.”
She lived in her dirty slacks and
shirt for weeks on end, ate out of
cans, and swallowed the yellow
dust without a murmur, At the
press camps, she asked for exactly
nothing in the way of privileges
or amenities due her sex.
Every two months or so, she
would fly over to Tokyo, put on a
dress, get a manicure and have
her hair done. Maggie is a very
pretty girl, tall, slim and blonde,
with nice blue eyes, and a win
some, almost a little-girl, manner.
This is wholly deceptive. On a
job, she is ferociously competitive,
and eternally driven by a restless
necessity to be wherever “the sto
ry” is.
As a group, women reporters
are mighty good. Maggie is one
of the best.
PASTURE WINNERS NAMED
Georgia’s 4-H club pasture es
tablishment project was won this
year by a 13-year-old Laurens
County boy, J. B. Thompson. He
received $250 from the Standard
Oil Company of Kentucky. Jim
Williams, Sumter County, won
second place and $l5O, with Billy
Lewis, Polk County, taking third
and SBO.
According to the 1950 census
there were 52,000 tractors on
Georgia farms in 1950 as com=-
pared with only 25,000 in 1945,
o ODERN WAY
“AsPißln | TO GIVE
FOR CHILDRENLS ASPIRIN TO
YOUR CHILD
PAGE FIVE
AT THE
MOVIES
PALACE—
Wed.-Thurs.-Fri.-Sat.—“Ma and
Pa Kettle Go to Town,” starring
Marjorie Main, Percy Kilbride,
Meg Randall. Ambulance Doctor,
Farmyard Symphony. News.
GEORGIA—
Tues.-Wed. — “House On Tele
graph Hill,” starring Valentina
Cortesa, William Lundigan. City
of Ball Tossers. Party Smarty.
Thurs.-Fri.-Sat. — “Little Big
Horn,” starring Lloyd Bridges,
John Ireland, Marie Windsor.
“Savage Drums,” starring Sabu,
Lita Baron, News. Mr. Basket
ball.
STRAND— i
Sun.-Mon.-Tues.-Wed. — “Show
Boat.” Held over.
Thurs.-Fri.-Sat.—*“Francis Goes
to the Races,” starring Donald
O’Connnor, Piper Laurie, Jesse
White. Kids and Pets. Pied Piper
of Basin Street. News.
RITZ—
Wed.-Thurs.—“The Thing From
Another World,” starring Margaret
Sheridan, Kenneth Tobey. Fun
on the Run. Room and Bird.
Fri.-Sat. — “Thunder In God’s
Country,” starring Rex Allen,
Buddy Ebsen. “Gallant Thorough
bred.” Atom Man vs, Superman
—chapter 14.
DRIVE-IN— \
Wed.-Thurs. -~ %“Tomahawk,”
starring Van Heflin, Yvonne De
Carlo. Fair-Haired Hare. Want
ed—One Egg. News. "
Fri.—“ Rogues of Sherwood For
est,” starring John Derek, Diama
Lynn. Malice In the Palace, Hams
That Couldn’t Be Cured.
~ Sat.—“ Bells of Coronado,” star
ring Roy Rogers, Dale Evans.
’Three Blonde Mice. Elephant
Mouse.
AFRICAN WATERMELON
The watermelon, a member of
‘the cucumber family, is believed
to be a native of tropical Africa,
fronr whence it was carried to In
dia, southern Europe, and south
western Asia. It appears to have
been introduced into China as
‘early as the 10th century.
THE PERSONAL TOUCH
PRESTON, Ont.—(AP)—Ans
wering a fire alarny, fireman How
ard Ruppel found it was his own
home that was ablaze, His four
year-old daughter was rescued by
his wife and a neighbor and dam
age was confined to two rooms.
Chlorosis of the azalea (yellow
ing of the foliage) is a physiologi
cal condition that can be controlled
with ferrous sulphate in the form
of a spray.
'SIOMA(H GAS
Taxes the HEART
l An accumulation of gas in the
,stomach formrs pressure, crowds
the heart and results in bloating,
L“gassy" catches, paliptation and
shortness of breath. This condition
may frequently be mistaken for
heart trouble.
CERTA-VIN is helping such gas
“yictims” all over Athens. This
new medicine is taken before
meals, so it works with your food
—helps you digest food faster and
better, Gas pains go! Bloat van
ishes! Contalns Herbs and Vitamin
B-1 with Iron to enrich the blood
and make nerves stronger. Weak,
miserable people soon feel differ
ent all over. So don’'t go on suf
fering. Get CERTA-VlN—Crow’s
Drug Store.