Newspaper Page Text
1t REDAY, OCTOBER 2 1951
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L TP A i S TRk A b 2
BANNER OF GRATITUDE ~ Shigeru Ebihara, right, a young
Japanese lawyer, presents a large Christian flag to officers and
men of the carrier U.S.S, Philippine Sea in San Francisco. The
flag is a token of Ebihara’s gratitude for a $3600 purse given him
by the carrier’s crew to allow him to eontinue his studies of West
ern democracy at the University of Michigan.
Winder Homemaking Depariment
Penders Service To Community
The Winder Homemaking De
partment gives outstanding evi
dence to a visitor of the communi
tv service being rendered Georgia
by its public schools.
with Howard S. Peek as super
intendent and Mrs. Lewis V.
Kitchens as homemaking teacher,
the Winder department is doing
outstanding work in training high
school girls to learn the fine art
of homemaking, and to render aid
to the homeémakers of the com
mnity.
There are 107 girls in the home
making classes this year and many
‘hers who would have been in the
classes if they could have worked
out their schedules to include it.
They are learning how to make
and care for their clothes, how to
plan, buy and prepare meais for
their families, how to create beau
tv in their school and homes, how
to be better members of their own
families and 'to improve their per
sonalities, guard their health, and
be good citizens of their commun
-ILles.
Suceess Evidenced
That the Winder program has
heen outstandingly successful is
evidenced by the record they have
achieved with the Futuyre Home
makers of Americd, the high school
organization 'of homemaking stu
dents. Winder has furtiished two
of the seven presidents which the
Ceorgia organization has had dur
ing its existence. They were Pat
Randolph * ‘Russell and Jackie
Smith, both of whom did fine work
in the office of president. This
year, for the first time in the or
sanization’s history, . two girls
from the sarae Future Homemaker
chapter won the Inez Murray col
leze scholarship awards. They
were Marie Donehoo and Carolyn
Brown of the Winder High School.
Their weork in homemaking, re
counted for guests at the brilliant
state convention banquet where
the awards were made by Miss
Inez Wallace, state supervisor of
homemaking, education, impressed
hundreds of Georgians.
The Winder school had as its
recent guest Miss Leila Smartt,
national adviser for the Future
Homemakers, who was down from
Washington for a week. Said Miss
Smartt of her visit to the Winder
school, “I was deeply impressed
by the enthusiasm of the girls for
their homemaking activities, the
discerning questions they asked
about the national program of the
Future Homemakers, and the evi
dence of good: training which their
schoel 1s glving them.” Miss
Smartt was accompanied by Mrs.
Mac Barber of Athens, state ad
viser of the FHA since its begin
ning,
State Historian
Barbara Guest of Winder is the
new state hitsorian of the Future
Homemakers and has been an
honor guest at several of the dis
trict ecomventions this fall, where
she was presented to the fifteen
hundred girls who attended each
session,
‘Presmt f‘l:!ns for the Winder
chanter include the observance of
National Future Homemaker Week
1
Gi famil ‘
iveé your ramiiy 1
. |
this taste test w
¢ (and cut your milk bills in half!)
WH be fun to make this nonfat DRY MILK solids is
sest .. . and it'll save you pure, pasteurized rFilk in
money. Get LANDO’LAKES its most modern form—
nonfat DRy MILK solids with all the minerals, the
next time you're at the B-vitamins, and the milk
#tore. In your kitchen re- sugar of fluid milk. Only
me the water which has bfl:n water :é‘,d fat have
removed from this fat remov
frée milk (dicections right In fact, the only differ
on the can). Then serve it ence you'll notice is that
% your family without your milk bill has been
Velling them that they're ouw! in half .. . for it costs
lfltfinuh’a wflm 'llttl::tp. as little as 8¢ a quart!
s t pen. T
They'll relish it Tike the e’
weet, 1 milk ;
i . Pom‘m : W
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LAND O'LAKES puiad
- menbat BRY ids Ty
kit S Lo B 1
November 4-11, plans for No-
Gripe Week at school, designed to
promote fine human relationships
in their school, and the publishing
of a community cookbook in which
the recipes of well-known Win
der homemakers will be included.
Carri Towler, reporter for the
chapter of Winder’s FHA, writes
a volumn of Future Homemaker
News each week, with the co
operation of the editor of The
Winder News.
With 120 attending the year's
first FHA meeting, the chapter got
off o a good start, and had 80
paid members bv October. Its
officers are Barbara Lanthier,
president, Charlotte Freeman,
vice-president, Frances_ Peeples,
secretary, Sandra Books, treasur
er, Syble Gresham, projects chair
man, Barbara Esco, recreation
chairman, Ann Kilgore, degree
chairman, Frances Elder and Vir
ginia Davis, pianists, Rose Elliot,
song leader, Carri Towler, public
relations chairman; Sue Rice, his
torian, and Barbara Guest, par
liamentarian. Suetta Sims is
chairman of the cook book pro
ject.
AUSSIE TAXES
CANBERRA, Australia—(AP)
—Fggeral taxation will-now take
an ‘average of $5.25 a week for
every Australian from the cradle
to the wheel chair.
Under the new budget, revenue
per person will average $277 a
year. Income tax covers sllO of
that. Estimated annual expendi
ture on defense services repre~
sents $47 per person.
»
Hushands! Wives!
- -
2 .
Want new Pep and Vim?
Thousands of eouples are weak, worn-out, eXe
hausted solely because body lacks fron. For new
vim, vitality, try Ostrex Tonic Tablets. Containg
fron you, too, may need for pep; also aupfi
vitamin 81. Get 45¢ Introductory size now omly
At all drug stores everywhere—in
Athens, at Crow's Drug.
SCOTTIES >.2
)A- L <
l & .
oo
“Maybe it's time to make
a change. Heyward Allen
is tops in giving a liberal
trade-in value.”
Georgia Workers
Paid Back Wages
ATLANTA, Ga.,, Oct. 35.—Dur
ing the first nine months of the
calendar year of 1951 a total of
8,707 employees of 1,03¢ estab
lishments located in the States of
Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Mis
sissippi and South Carolina were
paid $623,246.83 in back wages un
der the supervision of the Wage
and Hour and Public Contracts
Divisions, U. 8. Department of
Labor. In Georgia 287 employers
paid $159,960.39 to 2,198 em
ployees, or an average of $72.78
per employee,
These figures were announced
by Joseph C. Noah of Birmingham,
Regional Director of Region v,
which is made up of the five
statesg listed above. He said they
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Brand d e
rand-new an Procter & Gamble's most exciting washda SRR e w
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wonderFu”y diFFerent' discovery in more than 100 years of soap makingl & o 3@««% j
CHEER is sensationally different--specially v 'ffi%&%fi)?&ofi%fig
made to do "tough-job" washing as no soap you've s %'“ ‘
ever used can do it! ‘, : : 5 R / ;
Trvi s hi i P o i
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Ty it on the was..mg Let new CHEER tackle those grimy work clothes. .. ; ; , “3 / Wonderful for
: badly soiled playclothes grease-stained towels e No-Rinse
& / 5 o
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OOODS Vv ! ...all the washing you dread most. When you see
VVO C . v / S waShi ' ,
how CHEER suds get these "tough jobs" cleaner, : ~ . e ng, 100
R i iy 3
fresher in hardest water, you'll see why CHEER 2 e j 1 el
gets all your wash so wonderfully clean! 8 - . ‘ B e b R
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HQ;"C,S: the Sag! \'t! New formula makes CHEER different from any A A il i 5 e th, /Ly wTe oN G
Lo ‘:‘: : P o 3 5 ‘, b . # ~X % _,_ b 3 c‘;
washing product you've ever used! CHEER is WS S : % ¢ e B L Y
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specially made with the extra power you need GuEEE T : k. AAy Shslbe
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for your extra-tough washing jobsl B % ; iSR LA Be e
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CHEER is safe for colored washables, kind to ; fi«yfi,.@s.,m
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hands! ¢ % /0/
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Pro'/e it nex{j Washday New CHEER does tough washing jobs better—gets Kec Ch°er on hand’ if you don't agree that new
of g v 2 . . \ CHEER "tough-job"
clothes cleaner, whiter, in hardest water--than p e » does "tough-job" washing
1-- e i TRY ITI better, gets clothes cleaner,
/ ne . sSoap you've eve sed. s | g et
any kind of soap you've ever used . Get the Giant Economy Size package. whiter in hardest water—than
any brand of scap you can buy.
yo, /
b T S D R Y YR TN : e (T VI M IEVIRWE & |
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$ .P l ¥? 3 . $ 16 3 o A GHERA i THE TRADE-MARK GF A SPECIAL ALL-PURPOSE DETERGENT MADE BY PROGTER & GAMBLYE ©198), THE PROCTRR B GAMOLE ComPAMY
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
sepresented the under-payment
that had resulted from failure of
many of the establishrrents inves
tigated to comply with etther, or
both, the minimum wn*o or OvVer=
time provisions of the Fair Labor
Standards Act and the Walsh-
Healey Publie Contracts Act.
Noah sald the $623,246.83 in
wage restitution in the five states
for the first three quarters of 1951
wag considerably in excess of the
12-months’ total for the same five
states for the calendar year 1950,
which amounted to $494,444.83.
During the first nine months of
1951, Noah said, child-labor pen
alties under the Public Contracts
Act in the sum of $4,950.00 were
assessed against employers in the |
same five states performing on |
contracts direct with the U. 8,
governnmrent in excess of SIO,OOO.
The Publie Contracts Act provides
a penalty of $lO per day for each
day a male miner under 16 years
of age wund a femete minor under
18 years of age 1s permitted to
work on & government contract,
These child-labor penaltles are
made pagable to the Treasurer of
the United States.
In The
Service
WITH THE 24TH INFANTRY
DIVISION IN KOREA.—Sergeant
Jack Toney, son of Mr. and Mrs.
S. C. Toney, Whitehall, Ga., i&
serving with the 21st “Gimlet
Regiment, a part of the 24th n
fantry Division,
Sergeant Toney entered the
Army in 1947 and received his
Rx;sic training at Fort McClellan,
a.
His Korean service dates from
September, 1950. Since then he
has beemn awarded the Combat
Infantryman B.d'co“d the Ko
rean !crvlr Ribbon with five
Campaign Stars,
Before enlisting in the Army
Toney was employed In the signal
department of the Seaboard Air
line Railway,
Pfe. Bobby J. Brooks, son of
Mrs. G. L. Brooks, 609 College
Avenue, Athens, Ga, was among
the airmen who participated in
the Armed Forces Blood Drive
held recently at Camp Stoneman,
Calif,, to help alleviate the criti
cal shortage of blood needed by
the Armed Forces.
Brooks donated blood while
awaiting reassignment by the
2349th Personnel Processing
Group (Air Force), Camp Stone
man, Calif,
UNIVERSITY News Briefs .. ..
Tom Brown, University of Geor
gia student from Athens, has been
named managing editor of the
newly-organized Alr Force ROTE
newspaper at the University.
The first isisue of the bi-month
ly publication will be distributed
on November 1. The aim of the
paper is to furnish information
which would not be available
IR T TT B AT
DG
= ~\m SurelieC 5“’6(% R Xg\ !
e e e
PAGE ELEVEN
| through other sources,
‘ Charles Benson, U of
Georgia student from has
| been elected treasurer of the Phys
[ics Club at the Univeristy,
| PHysics Club is an organization
' for students majoring in physics.