Newspaper Page Text
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 15, 1951
Coming
Fvents
The Coming Events Column
is designed to supply the pub
lie with facts concerning or
ganizational and other meet
ings, times, places and events
only. Contributors 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
Gaturday in children’s room
from 10 until 11 a, m.
Library story time over
WGAU each Friday, 5 p. m.
Opening hours: Monday
through Friday, 9 a. m. to 9 p.
m.; Saturday, 9 a. m. to 6 p. m.;
Sundays, 3 p. m. to 6 p. m.
pDemonstration School 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
precessing.
WCTU HOUR
Over WRFC the following
will be heard on the Woman’s
Christian Temperance Union
Hour each Monday morning,
10:45 to 11:00, during the month
of August:
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 to 5:15, during the month
of August:
August 21, Mr. C. A. Rowland.
Awgust 28, Baptist Student
Union.
Beginning August 14 the Win
terville School Cannery will be
open on Tuesday of each week
for the month of August. The
Summer canning season will end
on August 30. Products for de
hydration will not be accepted
after Friday, Aug. 10th as the
dehydration plant will be closed
for the season.
Relatives and friends who
have loved ones buried at Mar’s
Hill Cemetery are asked to bring
tools and have a clean-up day
on Thursday, August 16.
Mount Vernon Lodge No. 22 F.
and A. M. will have a called
Communication Thursday, Au
gust 16, 8 p. m. in the Masonic
Temple. The Entered Apprentice
degree will be conferred. All
Masons are urged so attend.
Wesleyan Service Guild of
the Oconee Methodist Church
¢ ® - *
Mother! See Our Complete Line of Buster Browns, America’s Favorite Children’s Shoes
ing the BUSTER BROWN %4
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Street Floor
Shoe Salon
Miss Martha Sue Veale And Mr.
T.D.Westbrook Wed On July 14
Mr, and Mrs. Claude Veale, of
Arnoldsville, Ga., announce the
marriage of their daughter, Mar-~
tha Sue, to Travis Dean West
brook, son of Mr, and Mrs. L. C.
Westbrook of Athens.
The, double ring ceremony was
performed at the First Methodist
Church of Oswego, N. Y., on Sat
urday evening, July 14.
The altar of the church was
lighted by candles and the pre
rgiptial music was presented by
Mrs. Matott, church organist. The
songs played were “Because” and
“The Sweetest Story Ever Told.”
The bride was given in marriage
is sponsoring a barbecue on
Wednesday. Aug. 22, 6 to 8
p. m, Tickets will not be sold
at the door as the guild wants
everyone to have a plenty,
Charlie Bridges is to cook the
‘cue. Tickets are $1.50 for
adults and 75 cents for chil
dren under twelve. Tickets are
on sale at Horton’s Drug Store,
Gunn’s and Smith's on Broad
street.
Homecoming will be held at
Mar’s Hill Baptist Church on
?qnday, August 19. Dinner on
he ground. The revival will be
gin and continue each evening,
8 o'clock, through Friday. The
Rev. J. S. Hays, pastor, is to
conduct the services.
Eeventh annual Homecoming
will be held at the Central Bap
tist Church Sunday, August 19.
Regular services as usual with
dinner on the ground at 1 p, m.
PERSONALS
Captian and Mrs. William
Lamb, of New Orleans, La., will
arrive on Friday for the Nicher
son-Tresp wedding which will
take place on August 21. Captain
and Mrs. Lamb have been at their
summer home in Cloudland. While
in Athens they will be the house
guests of Mrs. Zena T. Glover.
* * %
Mr, and Mrs. W. A. Wortham
have returned to Athens after
staying several days at the Cox-
Carlton Hotel in Atlanta. Mrs.
‘Wortham recently underwent an
operation at the Jessie Parker
Memorial Hos‘pital in Atlanta.
* %
Mrs. Ada Sanders, of Homer,
is a patient at the General Hos
pital.
* ® %
Mr. O. B. Dye’s friends will re
gret to learn he is ill at his home
on Georgia avenue.
* * %
Mr. and Mrs. Legare W. Hoge
and children left on Tuesday
to spena a two-week vacation in
Florida.
» -5 B
Lieut. Andrew Reid, of Waco,
Texas, spent last week-end with
by her uncle, Walton McKean, of
Oswego. She chose for her wed
ding a white suit with navy aec
cessories and a white carnation
corsage completed her costume.
Mrs. Westbrook is a graduate of
Athens High School and is now
employed by the New York Tele~
phone Company,
Mr. Westbrook is a graduate of
Winterville school and is now at
tending the University of Georgia.
After a short honeymoon, Mr,
Westbrook returned to Georgia to
resume his studies at the Univers
ity. Mrs. Westbrook will join him
early in the fall.
his parents, Dr. and Mrs. Henry
Reid at their summer place near
Lake Burton. E
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Dr. and Mrs. H, M. Burson are
in Minneapolis, Minn., visiting
their son and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Bob Burson, having made the
trip by plane a week ago.
® % @
Mrs. Thomas Hughes (Alice
Burch) and children arrived Tues
day night from Baltimore, Md.,
having flown down, called to
Athens by the death of her father
Mr. Dick Burch.
* * »
Mr. and Mrs. S. W. Ferebee, jr.,
and son, of Xenia, Ohio, are visit
ing Mr. and Mrs. N. H, Kirkpatrick
in Bogart.
* * %
Mrs. J. M. Reade and grandson,
Billy Reade returned today from
Johnson City, Tenn., where they
visited Mrs. Reade’s brother and
sister, Mr. and Mrs. Tankersly Mc-
Arthur and M.rs. 1. W. Richardson.
* %
Miss Mary Todd
Miss Mary Todd, former Geor
gia 4-H Club member and home
demonstration agent, has been
named as one of two Americans
going to Germany to introduce
4-H Club work there.
Miss Todd is one of the mem
bers of the first 4-H Clubs, and it
was while she was a student at
the Athens High School that she
was the first to win to the National
Convention, a trip to Chicago re
presenting her club here in Clarke
county. She is a graduate of
Athens High School and the Uni
versity of Georgia, and her friends
in Athens and at Winterville feel
great pride in the distinct honor
that has come to her.
She is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Thomas I. Todd of Winter
ville.
Mss Todd will leave by plane
from New York A.ug. 31 for a six
month visit in Germany. Formerly
home demonstration agent at Law
renceville and in Carroll county,
Miss Todd has served as 4-H Club
agent at Cape May Courthouse,
N. J. the last few years.
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
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MAIL AND FEMALE — Mrs.
Pauline Carter Grisham, above,
of Martinez, Calif, is suing her
husband, James, for divorce,
due to 12,000 correspondents—
NOT co-respondents, The Brit
ish bride was homesick, so she
wrote a London newspaper, en
closing the photo above and
asking friends to write to her.
The response was so great that
her husband, she says, became
jealous of her mail (NOT male)
friends. Her divorce plea char
ges cruelty.
Scoufs Gather
3,000 Pounds
0f Clothing
Scout Executive J. M. Molder
afnounces that the 3,354 pounds
of clothing gathered in the recent
clothing for foreign relief have
been packed and shipped overseas,
Several organizations, including
the Jr. Chamber of Commerce, the
Athens Elks Lodge and the Boy
Scouts worked together to put on
the campaign.
Boy Scouts from Troops No. 19
and 22 and Mothers of Troop No.
19 Scouts sorted and packed the
clothing into shipping cartons giv
en. by Mallison Braided Cord Co.
The Athens Elks Lodge paid the
shipping costs. .
The -success of the campaign is
attributed to the generous cooper
ation of the affiliated organiza
tions and the publicity given by
the newspaper radio stations and
the churches.
The 3,354 pounds of clothing is
now on its way to aid the war
displaced people of Korea, Europe
and the near East.
Balfling Women
Now Good Friends
ATLANTA, Aug. 15—(AP)—
Two women who battled through
Albaama Courts for two years for
the custody of a curly-haired little
girl are “good friends” now.”
Mrs. Laymon Alvin Edwards,
mother of four - year - old
Jewel Viree Edwards, was award
ed the child by decree of the Ala
bama Supreme Court last Dec
ember. Mrs. Evelyn Sessions, fos
ter mother who formerly had le
gal possession of the baby, lives
near Mrs. Edwards here now.
Mrs. Sessions, who publicly
cowed the Supreme Court decision
would not permanently separate
her from her adopted daughter,
said yesterday:
“l see Viree almost every day,
and she recently spent the night
with me. I'm so proud to be with
her again.”
Said Mrs. Edwards: “There was
hard feelings between us all once,
but not any more. It's sort of like
a happy ending.”
A Bessemer, Ala., probate Judge
granted a final decree of adoption
to Mrs. Sessions in Oct. 1949. The
action followed the July 28, 1949,
pailing of Laymon Alvin Edwards,
then an unemployed miner, in
Bessemer on suspicion of “selling”
Jewel Viree to Mrs. Sessions and
her husband for SSOO.
Both Edwards and Sessions den
ied that the SSOO was the little
girl’s “purchase price.”
Sessions was killed in-an auto
mobile accident last December.
Mrs. Edwards appealed the
adopton decree which was upheld
by a circuit court but reversed
by the Supreme Court.
She said she was “so upset about
it all” that she divorced her hus
band and charged him with non
support but that they have now
been remarried and “I think we're
going to all be happy again.”
She added that Edwards, an
electrician, is now working ‘“day
and night” to support his family.
Little Jewel Viree calls Mrs.
Edwards “mother” and Mrs. Ses
sions “aunt Evelyn.” Last night
she hugged both and was all
smiles as the group left to go to the
ball game.
COSTLY OFFENCE
LOS ANGELES, Aug. 15—(AP)
Herbert Bringold was ordered by
a policeman to pull over to the
curb.
The officer, H. M. Goldstein,
said he saw Bringold go through
a red light yesterday. He asked
for the driver’s license and Brin
gold produced it, held it out, then
slumped over dead.
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Wedding Plans Of Miss Lucy Nickerson
And Mr. Lothar Tresp Announced Today
The wedding plans of Miss
Lucy Nickerson and Mr. Lothar
Tresp have been completed and
announcement is made today.
The ceremony will take place
on Tuesday, August 21, four o'~
clock, in the Emmanual Episcopal
Church, and the Rev. J. Earl Gil
breath is to officiate.
Ushers will be Sam Nickerson,
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The bride is to be given in mar
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Following the ceremony Mr. and
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PAGE THREE
a reception for the immediate
families and out-of-town guests
at their hqme onsCloverhursly .y 1
The tomatoes on the market now
have soaked up plenty of summer.
sunshine and so they’re higher im
vitamin C than are fall and winter
hothouse tomatoes. Use plenty of
them in summer meals; our bodies
do not store any appreciable
amounts of vitamin C and so we
every day need to eat foods that
contain it.