Newspaper Page Text
TeiURSDAY, AUGUST 9, 1951
jeriql .“l‘ JUEA VY RUAS
e e
—— e ———
The Coming Events Column
is designed to supply the pub
lic with facts concerning or
ganizational and other mcet
ings, times, places and events
only. Confributors to this
column are requested to limit
their coming events to these
facts to insure the brevity and
clarity of the various items in
the column,
PUBLIC LIBRARY
Children’s Story Hour each
caturday in children’s room
from 10 until 11 a, m.
ribrary story time over
wAU each Friday, 5 p. m.
Opening hours: Monday
through Friday, 8 a. m. .to 9 p.
m.; Saturday, 9 a. m. to 6 p. m,;
Sundays, 3 p. m. to 6 p. m.
Demonstration Sehool Can
nery will be open each Tuesday
and Friday until further notice.
Hours are 8:30 a. m. to 2:30 p.
m. Products will be accepted for
processing.
Cash, Duckett, Chambers and
allied families will have a reun
jon on August 11 at Harmony
Baptist Church in Hollingsworth,
Ga.
Annual re-union of ‘the stu
dents of the Eighth District A
& M School will be held on the
campus at Madison on Sunday,
August 12. Bring a basket lunch
Mrs. W. H. Thomas, secretary,
requests.
WCTU HOUR
Over WRFC the following
will be heard on the Woman’s
Christian Temperance Union
Hour eash Monday morning,
10:45 to 11:00, during the month
of August:
August 13, Rev. O. F. Keefer.
August 20, Rev. W. S. Pruitt.
August 27, Rev. C. H. Ellison.
Over WGAU the following
will be heard on the Woman’s
Christian Temperance Union
Hour each Tuesday afternoon,
5:00 te 5:15, during the month
of August:
August 14, Dr. E. H. Dixon.
August 21, Mr. C. A. Rowland.
August 28, Baptist Student
Union.
Wesleyan Service Guild of the
Oconee Street Methodist Church
will meet Thursday, Aug. 9,
7 p. m. at the church. Hostesses
are Mesdames Elmer Saye, Bill
Evans, and Willis Houston.
Revival services will begin
Sunday, August 12th through
17th, at the Prospect Methodist
Church. The Rev. Bruce Fannin
1717 Ocanee Street is to preach
each evening at 8 o’clock.
Annual Lord Reunion will be
held at Old Black’s Creek
Church the first Sunday in Sep
tember. All relatives and friends
invited to attend. Black’s Creek
Church is four miles east of
Commerce.
Entre Nous Club will meet
Thursday, Aug. 9, 6:30 p. m. at
the YWCA Home,
¥ % #
Clarke County Women Voters
will not meet this month. The
next meeting will be Tuesday,
September 11.
Bishop Baptist Revival and
Vacation Bible Schol starts Sun
day, Aug. 12. Bible School is to
be Monday through Friday and
beging at @ a. m. The Rev. Mr.
Whitworth is to preach each
night at 8 o’clock.
Everyone is cordially invited
to attend the annual Homecom
ing and revival services at Cor
inth Baptist Church August 12.
The revival services will begin
each night at 8:00 p. m. Rev. L.
Earl Fuller will be the speaker.
_Circle One of the Young Har
ris Methodist Church will meet
Monday, Aug. 13, 3:30 with Mrs.
J. G. Wade, 287 Boulevard
Heights,
Young Harris = Weslyan Ser
vice Guild will meet Tuesday,
Aug. 14, 8 p. m.
Circle Two of Young Harris
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CATH - LIND'S BEAUTY SALON
OFFERS
BACK-TO-SCHOOL SUMMER
SPECIAL
THE PERMANENT WITH A SPARE
This plan offers a complete permanent, entitles you for
the same price the extra permanent curls at a later date
when some of the first ones have been cut off or neckline
grown out.
10.00 Machineless Special
COMPLETE FOR 7.50
AND OTHERS
Master Operators — Agnes LaFave and Louise McGahee
CALL FOR APPOINTMENT PHONE 2026
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+ CLEAN AS A WHISTLE—(YOU BRING THE WHISTLE )—Refreshing as an ocean breeze is |
| the cleaning your car gets at Linda Bee's car wash palace in The Bronx, N, Y. Linda’s place mixes |
| - sex-appeal with elbow grease to lure in the customers—and she’s making a success as the only |
{ woman owner and operator of a car wash business in New York City. Here, “Blondie” Palmgren, ’
{ “Bubbles” Hagen, Laura Collazo and Linda B. Williams (proprietor) show how it works. Linda got ' |
h&w. sasisas into the business after her job as a night club photographer folded. »1]
Methodist Church will meet
Monday, Aug 13, 3:30 with Mrs.
L. H. King, 345 Best Drive.
Circle Three of Young Harris
Methodist Church will meet
with Mrs. Bill Chandler, 590
Highland ave., Tuesday, Aug. 14,
8 p. m.
PERSONALS
Wayne R. Shields, Athens City
Recreation Director, leaves this
week for Cuba to attend the an
nual Havalanta Athletic events.
He will be accompanied by Thad
Horton, president of Georgia A.
A U,
i * k%
Misses Alice and Patricia Gen
try, of Columbus, are visiting their
grandmother, Mrs. R, H. Bicker
staff, on Cloverhurst. Their pa
rents, Mr. and Mrs. S. C. Gentry,
who came up with them have re
turned, to join them again next
week-end.,
* % *
Mrs. V. E. Fuller and sons, Rob
ert McClain and Lawrence Eugene,
are at home from Monroe, N. C.,
arriving yesterday accompanied
by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J.
M. Fairley, who returned home
today.
Ed * o
Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Storey have
as guests at their home on the
Boulevard their children, Mrs.
Dave Irvin, of Chamblee, and Mr.
and Mrs. Percy E. Clark of Darien.
Mrs. Clark is here for summer
school.
* % %
Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Rice
announce the birth of a son, Wil
liam Erskine, on July 27 at Athens
General Hospital. The baby is the
grandson of Mrs. R. W. Bryant
‘and Mr. and Mrs. B. S. Rice, of
- Moultrie.
| * N
Mr. and Mrs. Loyd H. Messer
and son, “Butch,” are spending
two weeks vacation at Daytona
Beach, Fla.
o 58
Mrs. J. C. Adolphus of Galves
ton, Texas, is visiting her niece,
Mrs. Grover Presnell, at 1285 Bou
levard,
® * %
Mr, Theodore M. (Theyx) Stew
art is visiting his parents, Mr, and
Mrs. R. A. Stewart on Hall
street, Mr. Stewart is an F. B. L
agent and his last assignment was
in Albuquerque, New Mexico, and
he has been transferred to New
York City for a two year term.
* % %
Friends of Mrs. Lois Hardy,
King Avenue, are glad to see her
out again after a recent illness.
* & »
Mr. and Mrs. Walker Word, Mr.
and Mrs. Charles L. Brown, and
Mrs. Frances Strong were among
the many friends from Athens to
attend the funeral of Dr. Evan
l'l‘aylor on Tuesday in Cleveland,
Ga.
AUGUST ISSUE OF HOLLAND'S MAGAZINE
CARRIES ARTICLE ON MEMORIAL GARDEN
The Founders’ Memorial Garden
of Athens is featured in a three
page article in the August issue of
Holland’s, the Magazine of the
South. Marjorie M. Fowler, a local
free-lance writer, prepared the
article for the Dallas-published
magazine, which hag a circulation
of 525,000 in the fifteen Southern
States.
Founders’ Memworial Garden is a
living tribute to the first garden
club on record. The Athens club,
composed of twelve women and
founded in January, 1891, in the
home of Mrs. E. K. Lumpkin, has
the distinction of being the first
to elect officers, adopt a constitu
tion and organize according to
parliamentary procedure.
The club members were active
and enthusiastic, and in May, 1892,
they held their first flower show.
The club attracted considerable
attention in Athens, and the word
soon spread to other communities.
Visitors to Athens made inquiries
about the club and returned home
to organize clubs of their own.
Extended School Program Plans
Mapped At Principals’ Meet Here
Georgia school principals mapped plans here yesterday
for Georgia’s extended school program which will go into
effect for the first time in many schools next year.
The program which will extend school-directed activi
ties into the summer months, occupied most of the opening
sessions at a three-day meeting of the Georgia High School
Principals’ Association at the University of Georgia Wed
nesday.
~ The meeting will last through
Friday.
According to initial plans made
here, the program, although held
in the summer and directed by
school personnel, will be a far ery
from the “summer schools” which
are held for remedial academic
work.
Enrichment Experience
The six or eight week summer
sessions won’t be strictly a time
for play, but they will take the
pain out of school work and pro
vide “an enrichment experience”
for the elementary and high school
students who attend.
Plans for the summer program
must be made by every school sy
stem in the state by the summer
of 1952 when the program goes
Quick-Frozen Fish Is A Reel Help
In Keeping The Budget In Bounds
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QUICK-FROZEN fish is a real friend to the woman who holds
the purse strings these days. It's a very good buy, compared
with meat, so far as price goes. And, like meat, it's a good pro
tein food, providing a full quota of the body-building materials
everybody needs. ; 3 Enen - 2
T N L T e L Lot o
You can plan a lot of interesting
menus around such surfline treats
as quick-frozen fillets of haddock,
ocean perch and cod. Serve broiled
quick-frozen ocean perch, for in
stance, with carrots and peas, Ford
hook Lima beans, French-fried po
tatoes, and tomato salad, plus ice
cream for dessert, and you'll have
a well-balanced dinner, food-wise
and budget-wise, too.
The quick-frozen fish comes to
vou ready to cook. All cleaning and
trimming were done before quick
freezing, and the fish was quick
frozen shortly after it was caught,
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA - Toer
The movement snowballed, and it
wasn’t many years until a city
without a garden club was the
exception rather than the rule.
In 1936 the garden clubs of
Georgia resolved to create a living
memorial to honor the twelve
founders of the first club, and the
area surrounding the Landscape
Architecture Building on the Uni
versity of Georgia campus in Ath
ens was selected as an ideal spot
for such a memorial. Mr. Hubert
Owens, head of the Landscape
Architecture Department of the
University, planned a series of
gardens that is a singularly fit
ting tribute to the original club
members. Actual construction be
gan in April, 1939, progressed as
money was donated by clubs and
individuals, and was completed in
September, 1941. f
The Holland’s article is illus
trated with photographs of the
garden made by Kenneth Kay,
Athens photographer. A complete
description of the planting and a
plan of the garden are also given.
into effect.
Nearly 100 pricipals were on the
University campus Wednesday to
hear out-of-state experts describe
the program and offer suggestions
for setting it up.
Generally they agreed that the
extended school program would
offer cultural values for which
the normal academic program can
not provide. Attendance will be
strictly voluntary and students
will register for only the activi
ties in which they are interested.
Wilson Statement
G. F. Wilson, director of the
summer program in Hillsborough
County, Florida, said that, proper
ly set up, the program “can give
children a summer’s experience
that will be the best of their lives.”
Wison, who has headed the
r| so that all its deep-sea flavor and
s | goodness are preserved.
4 Quick-frozen peas and carrots,
1 | and the Fordhook Lima beans, too,
-|are prepared for cooking before
- | quick-freezing, axd can be put into
- | boiling water without thawing. The
> | fish, if you broil it, should be
E thawed just enough to separate the
>| fillets or cut in serving pieces.
y Quick-frozen French-fries, which go
1| s 0 well with fish, are all cooked,
_ | delicately browned by frying in
.| pure vegetable fat. They need only
, | heating in the oven.
Hillsborough coune‘tiy program for
four years, pointed out that the
m aepglon, greates an infor
tmosphere _between teacher
and student, instilléd a love of
school in children, and gives par
ents an idea of the good things
a school can do.
The summer school program
may include directed activities in
shop, nature study, speech, music,
arts and crafts, homemaking ac
tivities, day camping, swimming,
and many others.
The Florida school executive
points out that although no aca
demic work is required, the ex
tended school program gets “be
yond the narrow phase of recrea
tion.”
Salvation Army
July Report
During the month of July, 1951
the Salvation Army conducted 22
senior meetings wig: an atten
dance of 428. Meetings for the
youth, 33, held with an attendance
of 366. J
Number of applicants at the
Transient Lodge 80. To this num-~
ber 174 meals were supplied and
80 lodgings, 13 garments and of
this number 6 were women. s
Under Service and Relief, 9 gro
cery orders, 4 fuel orders, 198
garments, 7 pairs of shoes, and 60
quarts of homemade fruits and
vegetables to needy persons.
Five young girls attended the
Life Saving Guard Camp at Jas
per, Ga. for a period of 7 days.
Three young people attended the
Youth Camp at Jasper, Ga. for a
period of seven days. Troop com
mitteemittee provided picnic for
guards and Sunbeams.
The Salvation Army is a mem
ber of the Athens Community
Chest.
The human material to make a
better world is the concern of the
Salvation Army. Children growing
up strong and sound with high
ideals and courage. Men and wo
men well adjusted and effective in
their work, and in their family and
social relationships. The physi
cally handicapped and the aged
cared for and secure from anxiety.
A useful place in the scheme of
society for the misfits of life.
These have been the human ob
jectives of the Salvation Army
since its founding by William
Booth 80 years ago in the slums
of East London.
Today -the Salvation Army is
amplifying and strengthening all
these services in the interest of
keeping America strong and se
cure, America has trusted and
aided the Salvation Army greatly
in the past. We ask the continued
support of the nation — as we
march forward.
95% of our fatal traffic deaths |
are-blamed on Human failure— l
not mechanical failure, Remember ,
—*“the most important nut on any |
automobile is the nut who has his
hands on the wheel”.
World’s oldest know village, in
Iraq, has been shows by the radi
oactiv calendar to be about 7000
years old.
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SOUP’'S ON!—First sound of the dinner bell brings a rush of
hungry Korean waifs at the Munske orphanage in Seoul. The
youngsters are seen fighting for first place at the serving counter,
where their bowls are filled with rice. (NEA-Acme Telephoto by
Staff Photographer Hisao Egsohi.)
Fall’s Nicest Seasoning. .
. WINTER SPICE ... in
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YL 8 . RING MASTER
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PAGE THREE
Red Cross Gefs
{sl Pints Blood
NS pilood
The local Red Cross chapter re-M
ported this morning that 151 pints
of blood were received from a
possible 167 donors.
The Red Cross Bloodmobile unit
was stationed and sponsored by
the Local Order of Elks, Lodge
number 790.
Only 16 persons were eliminated
from giving their pint of blood be
cause of diseases, recent ilinesses
or operations.
Although the local Red Cross
chapter did not meet its 200 pint
quota, they were happy about the
final results.
HOCKEY DISABILITY
Wilbur Wright was prevented
from attending college by an ice
hockey accident that disabled him
for almost eight years, according .
to the Encyclopedia Britannica.
There are 50 islands in Lake
Champlain. b