Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWO
"M TUESDAY THRU FRIDAY NS
el Y
¢ : STORE
; O Zowesr Piiccs in Te THE
‘ @mfi”fi"‘;}%&?ni’:“‘"c‘ %'
i LABOR DAY AND EVERYDAY
| YOU WILL ALWAYS
SAVE AT HORTON'S
i MV[R fi
o ol [XAI[ Septemper
| RN o, oPR
E‘\ m . “ -
f =
i~ HALF-PRICE! V%= R
[ CARA NOME CREAMS
® cold cream REG' 52_20 jARS
| tiee | " ow 110 |
§ BACK TO SCHOOL VALUES ~zll
| g (& METAL LUNCH KIT &
| "Bit st Halpat voun ot
S., o VALUE! 0N w'|9B |
PR S oo |
NMY“L‘ON.NQMXM. /% ; m ROOM ’
e 39 78 | 59\ DEoooßany |
“8480" READY-FOAM CREAM SHAMPOO. .11 vie 596 |
FOUNTFAIN PEN & PENCIL SET cascae 5195 v0ue..... 986 §
I.EAD PENCILS Belmont, 1 Doz. No. 2 lead, 40c Valve. .. . . ......... 23° |
GLASS TUMBLERS royed, reg 10ceah...............s 5 33€
REXALL Mi3l ANTISEPTIC 50wce5........... kg 3 198 |
REXALL MILK OF MAGNESIA ¢ouces 25cvaie....... 13¢
FASTEETH DENTURE ADHESIVE ... ... 53¢ |
GILLETTE BLUE BLADES .....................ws49¢
(Yy, FOR SKILLED SERVICE AND COURTESY, BRING YOUR PRESCRIPHON {1 l{S
HORTON’S Weekly Coupon ~ :ials
WITH THIS COUPON WITH THIIS ‘C(.)UPON
LARGE SIZE CANS 5 POUND BAG
PET OR CARNATION GRANULATED
MILK SUGAR
8 Aforddc 39c
Limit Four Limit One
PACKAGE OF 4 CAKES BATH SIZE
WOODBERRY 50AP...... .. . 36¢c
SI.OO VALUE APRIL SHOWERS
KEEP COOL COLOGNE .. .. .. . 69c
REGULAR 1.00 COCOANUT OIL
WOODBERRY SHAMPOO .. .. ..50c
FOR KIDNEYS AND BACK PAINS
DO MRS .. ...........
BOTTLE 100 TABLETS—3S GRAIN ‘
B . .
REGULAR 85¢ LARGE JAR
BOREEA -. . e
PINT SIZE RUBBING
R o
POUND CARTON
R . ... ..oa R
FULL PINT SIZE
ERE RAY .. .......... 1%
RED HEART OR KEN-L-RATION (Limit One)
N ...l
ALL TYPES GERBER'S
BABY F00D5...........3fr25¢
' °‘ A H E‘ AD A“'C HE !
K] ?
: M ‘ “.\%@}i MAKES YOU FEEL BETTER
,@-,5«;& “?
& 25¢ Package of 12 Powder:
Hu RTU st DRUG
STORE
WS SR TIPIPPAy THE
wwon‘.‘éfififiw stn‘%&
ISAVE ON PRESCRIPTIONS AT HORTON'SH
JAPAN: Rebirth of a Nation (7)
T T TS N
i Wi AL B
# 4 “ /] L | :
VR s = -
b |e g: -t;-asg)ff ¥': )
i el R S/ ARy
ee A 0
By 1948, food production and the flow of raw
materials had been restored and national re
covery txperts were able to turn their atten
tion to Jopan's millions of manufacturers of
“not-so-good but twice-as-cheap” products,
In December of 1948, the Supreme Commander
of the Allied Powers ordered the Japanese to
work harder and put in longer hours.
AT THE
MOVIES
PALACE—
Sun.-Mon.-Tues.-Wed.-Thurs. —
“That’s My Boy,” starring Dean
Martin, Jerry Lewis, Screen
Snapshot. News.
Fri.-Sat.—‘“Al Jennings of Ok
lahoma,” starring Dan Duryea,
Gale Storm, Dick Foran. Teresa
Brewer and Firehause 5 plus 2.
Musie Circus. News.
STRAND—
Sun.~Mon,-Tues.-Wed, — “Alice
In Wonderland,” Disney Feature.
Nature’s Half Acre. News.
Thurs. - Fri. - Sat. — “Flying
Leathernecks,” starring John
Wayne, Robert Ryan, Don Taylor.
Slip Us Some Redskin. News,
GEORGIA—
Sun.-Mon.—“Mark of the Ren
egades,” starring Ricardo Montal
ban, Andrea King. Army’s All-
American. Merry Mannequins,
News.
Tues.-Wed.—“Kind Lady,” star
ring Ethel Barrymore, Maurice
Evans, Angela Lansbury. Lucky
Corner. Meremaid Bay.
Thurs. — “The Great Caruso,”
starring Mario Lanza, Ann Blyth.
News.
Fri.—“The Kid From Texas,”
starring Audie Murphy, Gale
Storm. General Nuisance. Ted
Williams.
Sat.—“ Bowery Battalion,” star
ring Leo Goreey, Huntz Hall, Vir
ginia Hewiaa. Mixed Nuts. 100
Pygmies and Andy Panda.
RITZ—
Sun.—“lndian Territory,” star
ring Gene Autry, Gail Davis. Air
Tight. Party Smarty.
Mon.-Tues.—“Bagdad,” starring
Maureen O’Hara, Paul Christian.
Enchanted Islands, Book Revue.
Wed. - Thurs. — “Excuse My
Dust,” starring Red Skelton, Sal
1y Forrest. Woo Woo Blues. Air
Hostess. ¢
Fri.-Sat. — “Spoilers of the
Plains,” starring Roy Rogers.
“Chain Gang,” starring Douglas
Kennedy. Overland With Kit Car
son—chapter 3.
DRIVE-IN THEATRE—
Sun.—“7ll Ocean Drive,” star
ring Joanne Dru, Edmund O’Brien.
Body Guard.
Mon. - Tues. — “Watch the
Birdie,”starring Red Skelton, Ar
lene Dahl. Pal, Fugitive Dog. Test
Pilot Donald. News.
Wed.-Thurs—‘“Call Me Mister,”
starring Betty Grable, Dan Dailey.
Songs of Erin. News.
Fri., — “That Midnight Kiss,”
starring Kathryn Grayson, Jose
Iturbi, Mario Lanza. Pied Piper of
Basin Street.
Sat.—“Cowtown,” starring Gene
| Autry, Gail Davis. Fits in a fid
| dle,” Too 800 or Not to 800.
Whenever there’s re-modeling
going on at your house a few
simple precautions will save you
much clean-up grief. Place shoe
wiping mats here and there be
tween the in-repair part of the
houst and the life-as-usual sec
tion. Or spread strips of building
paper along the traffic lanes to
prevent the grinding of grit into
your floors. A vacuum is your best
bet for disposing daily of the ex
cess litter and soil,
l e ————————.
. When your’re poaching fish and
want to put some mixed pickling
spices in the cooking water, tie
the spices in a small cheese cloth
bag and they’ll be easy to remove
{ when the fish is done.
2 TON PANEL
DODGE
WOULD PASS
FOR NEW
BIC
SAVING
NEW CAR
CUARANTEE
J. Swanson lvy, Inc.
CLOSED FOR LABOR DAY
We will be closed the entire day on Monday,
September 3rd.
HALCOMB SHOE SHOP
264 N. Lumpkin St.
Athens’ Most Modern Shoe Repair Shop.
Pi sa W) JAR LI PN s b FENERI AL 0000
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
inpex Fall and Risé of Japan’s Manufacturing
e ‘
m‘-
m’m fifi-fi
0
30 32 34 36 38 40 A 2 44 46 '4B /50
Graph above shows that by May of 1950 the
manufocture of durable or:, non-durable
gonds sored 1o 893 pr cntof e volume
the years 1932-36. Geared to the needs
of UN forces in Korea, industry soon hummed
at prewar levels and in May of this was on
Wll.Smelmm
" v R eo I T iR
T 4 i g % ‘,,‘.:l:r-fi’?f‘fcéfi?l;,»";?iié?f."’u"ff - q,, B
R o pa R T B SR
2 waE R ] ,IW% ’“fi”*% o R
e eoy o % fi“"%fi‘ .
i " ?’(b‘ < rer . e o"“’é}f g ; e
%4 TR W R ,»'}&_'(;, s W
i . e ol . oy
5 R gAI e R e £
Peß e |
>y W P 8 &
e. 3 /s”’;‘“’ s;;j;,, G 2% B
e o W s RR A P
P ronl¥ B w R
bR %8 7 % s R R e s T A e R
: ik, ; e e e R 5% ’%‘; 5
% N *: 2 3 F & RN T
i b i RR R
RN 'fi' £ ge o
T T ’ B e o e !
i: i e
Gy e ; S e 3
%4 Y e ¥orion VRS LT
% "-"--fij(':i:lif’-%;& G 778 e e 3
W 7w = B s #
o V““ .1§ .. 1 g
A B v fa e e Y
% o s’%flf{fl ';'::?“fi‘?::::ié,'l.'\'s?(4s?._;‘: YR Feo
574 i e sLo Gid B
’ i £ L e
i S PR e S 7 .ff/
A R B
s g R R S S B
e : O
] e e
% E S R R
A ke 5 Y B S R R R
R e RSR R S
: R e
uny P A S
- et 2 e e S g
4os S R
3 s SaameEl e
b k 4 R R ) :{,42 g
i % G 5 B s e ':5;:_:::::::;:;:;:3;::;55§§
KR e ]
B {:f.;i b e
% Yo A BRI
i e e AR .
o L S R s .:::Z':'Ei;;t;;si?%-::i’f‘:‘§~
s B e
Go 3 g e
Ve fl' e § x ¥ 3 P L
i g % A 4 . % R A L
i %5 54 3 i
B&i 2 % e
R R R 3 S 3 s o P
B R RT N o R G
RS2G g & ; i
56 S Fr . e b o S
LR NS S i 5 o e
;_ R R E RN
T N
e e N s . ; ] Wi
R T A i RS SEER VG
Copalaid G N Y
bgt S e R B E %
JOVIAL PRESIDENTS—President Truman and Philip
pine President Elpidio Quirino share a laugh as they
shake hands during signing of mutual defense pact be
tween the two nations in Washington. Truman called
the peace treaty a ‘“strong step towards security and
peace in the Pacific.”” The colorful signing ceremony
took place in the inter-department auditorium and
brought together top leaders of both countries. Philip
pine Ambassador Joaquin Elizado is in center. — (AP
Wirephoto.)
Athens is one of more than four
hundred communities in the Unit
ed States, Alaska and Hawaii,
cooperating in The = National
Greenwood Plan program for
piercing the Iron Curtain and
promoting world freedon and
peace.
The Athens Chamber of Com
merce is sponsoring The Green
wood Plan program. Chamber
Secretary Malcolm Ainsworth in
dicated the interest of the local
community in The Greenwood
Plan in a communication to the
National Headquarters of The
Greenwood Plan in Greenwood,
S. C. From the National Headquar
ters he received a comprehensive
Greenwood Plan Information Kit.
The Greenwood Plan Informa
tion Kit includes such informa
tion as how to set up The Green
wood Plan-type Committee, sug
gested committee representation,
subcommittees, prizes and proced
ures, suggestions for the program
committee, suggestions for a
speakers’ bureau, suggestions for
an ideas-soliciting committee,
study groups, etc.
The very latest and best ma
terials on communism are made
available along with all of the
other supplies at no cost to the
local community. The Kit also
contains Greenwood Plan bro
chures and posters.
The Georgia Crusade for Free
dom office will judge the entries
received from the Athens Commit
tee and the wvarious other com
mittees throughout the state, send
ing the best ideas to the National
Headquarters for use over Radio
Free Europe and the Voice of
America. The State Crusade office
will also choose the best entry
from the state - to be granted the
state-level award at the close of
the Crusade campaign in Sep
ember,
A panel of nationally known
figures will judge the ideas of the
forty-eight state winners and sel
ect the three best ideas. The three
national winners will receive an
expense paid trip to Germany
where they will visit the World
Freedom Bell Shrine in Berlin on
the first anniversary of the Bell's
The modernization and revitalization of in
dustry, however, has not completely eliminat
ed the numerous small-family or househo!d
factories which won for prewar Japan the
reputation of a “workshop nation.” Common
in Japan is the sight of an entire family, sitting
beneath a ten-watt electric bulb, engaged in .
the manufacture of handicraft articles.
> 9 |-k R o 8
- I ' -
s
NLt b
W =N SAT
>
R ¥ A NG
| i .
R~
=~ 7
dedication — United Nations Day,
' October 24. In Munich they will
personally broadcast their prize
winning ideas over Radio Free
Europe’s transmitters to the cap
tive people behind the Iron Cur
tain. They will also visit the Voice
of America facllities in Germany.
The Greenwood Plan offers
. every American the opportunity
to take part personally in the
world wide struggle against com
munism.
- Every city, town, and hamlet
in the United States, Alaska, and
Hawaii is invited to organize local
committees and enter into the pro
gram. Those communities which
' have not already entered may do
'so at no expense by writing The
Greenwood Plan, Greenwood,
South Carolina.
Other Georga communities tak
ing part in The Greenwood Plan
include: Thomasville, Tifton, Val
dosta, Cornelia, Monroe, Gaines
ville, Macon, Atlanta, Cedartown,
Marietta, Waynesboro, Moultrie,
Fitzgerald, Waycross.
If you want your sheets to last |
out a lengthy lifetime, without‘
“accidents” to hasten their end,
avoid these mistakes: Never yank |
the sheet off the bed when you're
in a rush; they may catch on the
springs or upon broken or splin
tered parts of the bed. Avoid too
hurried rinsing of your sheets, lest |
soap be left in them. i
When you're using a pressure
cooker, after the desired pressure
is reached, hold it steady by reg
ulating the heat; avoid having thel
pressure fluctuate, - :
: i 4 :..5
3 et K o
P e W : T
S e T
S P ?;
e 3 R e
& L e 3{ o
B R G S
PR S R
8 A - {‘h § i
b, Sfi S A J Ugr .
B e £fi’w o 3
‘%Q = o “\r {
;_‘&.asq B :;, gLP
0‘;&_;;:.\; 2 \ 3 & ;:»Q V 8 S
3 § , ‘w‘{ ‘i’{\
e . ¢ R
) S 8 RN e
R 3 P Rty TR
R R BYR out
BB SR SRR R
SRR TR ¢ PR s L
P N T S
S A S
oS T s .3@_:‘» R
BRGNSI W 4
SR R 8
el
S N SR 3 g
. BRI QR R ¥ RRh e S
w‘fi Rl W
A %
HERE'S THE PITCH — M
Howard N. Pamment, above, i
out to unseat the mayor of Dea:
born, Mich., Orville L.. Hubbard
by a ecampaign of burlesque
Mrs, Pamment is seen after filin:
as a candidate at city hall. He
slogan #s a take-off on Hubbard’s
oit-spoken remark, “I'm just :
farm boy myself.”
N :
?.M ~*:".~.\,’s;;E;s3l;‘;;;':‘;-..-.:;_:_..'r R s '::‘:-:-:‘:-:u-.-.- K. e iAR
& ¥ o otk < § A ot H N
E NS L &wfi@ o NP et
EAA\N g TS e T e\ \ =
Bl \4‘:*‘-‘&@: SV o o | f‘“»’
NSI LS 5004 VA H€l 5 INeers
PN % il LD ’""? n A ,éé AO= 3% % Ls" e
NANO e S e z{“{& ifil:§% A S §s§ A
SRR 2" T o So e %m%
w‘ )
Friends of Capt. and Mrs. ‘Ho
mer G. Hale, jr., formerly of Ath
ens and Watkinsville, now of Mac-
Diel Air Force Base, Fla., will be
interested to know that Capt.
Hale’s condition ig satisfactory fol
lowing an injury of a broken leg
and a fractured vertebra suffered
on August 24, An engine caught
fire and dropped off the B-29 on
which he served as bombardier.
The plane was brought down safe
ly at MacDiel Air Force Base. His'
injury occurred when he jumpedl
out o fthe nose wheel doors onto
the runway after the plane stop
ped. Capt. Hale is at the base
hospital at MacDiel A. F. 8., Fla.
Lt. Robert H. Brown, USNR,
will return today from two weeks
active duty at the Atlanta Naval
Air Station. Lt. Brown has been
acting Engineering Officer for
FASR on 675 and VP-671. He is
an associate professor in the De
partment of Agricultural Engi
;ieering at the University of Geor
a.
FORT JACKSON, S. C.—Sev
eral men from neighboring com
munities in Georgia have recently
completed 14 weeks of basic train
ing with the Bth Infantry Division
at Fort Jackson, South Carolina,
as members of the 28th Infantry
Regiment.
They are: Pvt, Bernice Darwin
Roberts, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ber
nice C. Roberts, Whitehall; Pvt.
Joe Nelson Lester, son of Mr. and
Mrs. James E. Lester, Winterville;
Pvt. Billy Donald Griffeth, son of
Mr. William Hoyt Griffeth, High
Shoals; and Pvt. James W. Cheely,
son of Mrs. M. B. Cheely, Box 242,
Bogart, Ga.
During basic training they fired
the standard infantry weapons,
engaged in platoon and squad tac
tics, underwent intensive physical
training, and are now qualified to
serive’ in a combat or service-type
unit.
Cpl. Jack Darrell Fortson, of
Hull, Ga.,, has been granted a
leave from Columbus, Ohio to visit
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. E.
Fortson of Hull, Ga.p before re
porting to Camp Kilmer, New
The Following Drug Stores
CLOSED
Labor Day
Monday September 3rd.
Citizens Pharmacy
Crow's Drug Store
Hammett Pharmacy
Horton Drug Co.
Patrick Pharmacy
Warren J. Smith, Bros.
‘Hlustrated by Ralph Lane
Japan lost an esti
mated 30 per cent of
her industry during
the war but emerged
. from the conflict |
with power facilities
of better than pre-
N ermetiten, soneamee war capacity. But e
L < waste ron rampant, 4
2 SCAP put s foot
4 G S own with power %
oo e S .Y rationing, and the |
R &§ installation of me
b= "=~ ters. More important .
: —.. has been SCAP’s
‘ LV progress n teaching
t:“\f\"h ! B e the Japanese how to
B O /:i trey regulqte their ut_lln
§ (. I‘\9 ties in the public
AL 110 T S interest
NS ” ',,’-—‘f,‘ ‘.“,J}\‘J 3 q\-“"-\ ”fi"’f., 0 .
,fig S atani e' ot
SR | -
Jersey, for embarkation for over
seas duty in Europe.
PFC Bobby Brooks and PFC
Larry F. Wallace are back in Ath
ens enjoying a 30 day fourlough.
PFC Brooks and Wallace enlist- |
ed through the Athens USA and
USAF Recruiting Station on 8
May, 1951. After completion .of
8 weeks of basic training at Lack
land Air Force Base, they were as
signed to Camp Gordon, Georgia|
for 2 months additional training as
“air policemen,” graduating on'
30 August 1951. |
PFC Brooks is the son of Mrs. |
G. L. Brooks of 699 College ave
nue. . |
PFC Wallace is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. W. A. Wallace of 686
Baxter street.
GREAT LAKES, Ill.—Horace D. |
Goolsby, radioman, third class,
USN, son of Mr. and Mrs. T. w.l
Goolsby of Route 2, Carnesville,
CLOSED
LABOR DAY!
X=X
THURMON
Furniture Company
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1951,
Ga., is serving aboard the newly
re-commissioned destroyer Uss
McCord, recently reactivated at
the U. S. Naval Station, San Dieg,,
Calif,
After post-activation overhs )
she will become part of the De
stroyer Force, Atlantic Fleet.
CHILEANS TAKE TO cClty
SANTIAGO, Chile —(AP)-— iy
out of every 10 Chileans live in
town. This is one of the fact.
about Chile’s population quoted iy,
an article of the paper “Las Ulti
mas Noticias” of Santiago.
In 1920, only 46 per cent of the
Chileans lived in towns. In 194
this had risen to 52 per cent: the
paper figures the new percentage
for town dwellers to be at 60 per
cent. Some of the reasons for this
trek to the cities are the rapidly
increasing tempo of industrializa
tion, better salaries and metropoli
tan attractions.
Legend has it that the kangaroo's
name comes from a native phrase
meaning “I don't know”, given in
reply to the white man who asked
the name of the strange animal.
0L
0
Rt —
'
*When she starts squawikia® |
he calls Orkin! *
(é “ORKIN.
X2k WASHINGTON