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PAGE TEN
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INDIAN LEADERS CONFER — Sheik Mohamed Abdullah (left), Premier of Kashmir,
and Indian Premier Pandit Nehru chat during All-India States conference in New Delhi,
| MF s. ). T. Burden
Of F. S.I
Mrs. Jamres T. Burden, jr., resi
tlent of Carnesville, Ga., who for
merly resided at 450 Milledge ave
bue in Athens, is today the proud
- ‘'winner of a 36-piece Towle Ster
ling Silver set awarded by Bush
~ Jewelers in their annual “Sterling
~ Silver Give-Away Week.”
Mrs. Burden’s name was drawn
as grand prize winner yesterday.
Selections have been held each
day ana 11 persons daily have
been awarded Towle silver prizes
daily by simple registration.
Mrs. Burden’s choice of patterns
was. “French Provincial,” one of
the Joveliest in the Towle patterns
from the Towle dealer here in
Athens.
““FThe motto on the first penny
authorized by the U. S. Congress
was inspired by Benjamin Frank
lin and said, “Mind your business”.
A thin cover sauce is good to
use for soup a medium white
sauce is good for scalloped and
other casserole dishes.
Funeral Notice
WHEELER. — The relatives and
friends of Mr. Luther E, Whee
ler of Athens; Mrs. Sara Farr,
Athens; Mr. and Mrs. Clay Un
derwood, and Mr. and Mrs. G.
H. Huff, both of Fort Myers, ‘
Fla.; Mr. and Mrs. Henry Wal
lace, Charlotte, N. C.; Mr. and
Mrs. Ben Wheeler, Winterville;
Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow Whee
ler, Mr. angd Mrs. Moss Wheeler,
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Wheeler, all
of Fort Myers, Fla.,, and Mr.
and Myrs. Lawrence Wheeler of
Albany, Ga., are invited to at
fend the funeral of Mr. Luther
E. Wheeler, this Sunday after
poon, November 4, 1951, from
Pridges Chapel at four o'clock. '
gev. T. R. Harvill, pastor of the ‘
rince Avenue Baptist Church, |
will officiate. Mr. George H. |
Btesens, Mr. L. E. Mitchum, Mr. |
Clyde Hensley, Mr. Perry Sim
mons, Mr. E. B. Addington and
Mr. G. B. Smith will serve as
pallbearers, and will meet at
Bridges Chapel auv 3:45 o’clock.
Interment will be in Oconee
Hill cemetery. Bridges Funeral
Home.
AARON. — The relatives and
friends of Private First Class
Marion V. Aaron of Lexington,
Ga.; Mr. M. M. Aaron, Lexing
ton; Mr. and Mrs. Julian Vann,
Macon; Mr. and Mrs. David
Barkwell, Wilnrington, Del.; Mr.
and Mrs. Julian Hall, Dublin;
Mr. and Mrs. John Garner,
Stone Mountain; Mr. and Mrs.
Hulon Allen, Ozark, Ala.; Mr.
and Mrs. Roy Davis, Macon,
Ga.; Sergeant First Class and
Mrs. M. E. Aaron, Fort Benning,
Ga.; Mr. and Mrs. George
Aaron, Arnoldsville, Ga.; and
Mr. and Mrs. T. V. Coffey of
Comer, Ga., are invited to attend
the funeral of Private First
Class Marion V. Aaron, this
Sunday afternoon, November 4,
1951, from the Stephens Grove
Baptist Church *at two-thirty
o'clock. Rev. Jesse Knight, pas
tor of the Winterviile Baptist
Church, will officiate. Mr. Ray
Harrison, Mr. Don Christy, Mr.
Zane Morgan, Mr. Bill Port
wood, Mr. Joe Mewborne, Mr.
Hosea Stewart, Mr. Paul Butts
and Mr. Franklin Lacount will
serve as pallbearers. Interment
will be in Stephens Grove cem
etery. Bridges Funeral Home.
HALE.—The relatives and friends
of Mr, James Franklin Hale of
Attica, Ga.; Mrs. Mima K. Hale,
Attica; Mrs. Esther Spencer,
Attica; Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Hale,
Hollywood, Fla.; Mr. and Mrs.
W. H. Hale, Macon, Ga.; Mr. and
Mrs. O. R. Hale, Athens, Ga.;
Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Hale, At
lanta, Ga.; Mr. and Mrs. J. T.
Hale of Attica, and grandchild,
are invited to attend the fun
eral of Mr. James Franklin Hale,
Monday afternoon, November 5,
1851, from Prospect Methodist
Church at three o’clock. Rev. J.
B. Neil, pastor of the Church,
and Rev. M. H. Conway, pastor
of Watkinsville Methodist
Church, will officiate. The gen
tlemren selected to serve as pall
bearers will be notified later.
Intermefit will be in Prospect
cemetery. Bridges Funeral
Home.
‘Many Flowers Grow Well
'From Seed Sown in Fall
A surprising number of both
annual and perennial flowers can
be sown in the fall, and when this
is done plants for next spring's
garden will be produced earlier
than by any other method of seed
sowing, except in a greenhouse
or hot-bed.
The safest way for an amateur
to sow either hardy annuals, or per
ennials, is in a seed box, or flat.
It is the most convenient way,
also. You can. easily prepare a
porous soil, mixing one-third peat
moss,s#one-third sharp sand, and
one-third of your best top seil,
sifted. Put a half-inch layer of
silfted sphagnum moss on top, and
sow seeus in this, then cover light
ly with sifted sphagnum moss.
i S i N
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RESS AR :
Bachelor Buttous of Many Colors.
In a flat, they will escape many
of the winter hazards which seeds
in the open garden will encounter.
The flat can be placed in a shel
tered place near the house during
winter, and covered with leaves;
or better, you can put it in a cold
frame, where it will start into new
growth much earlier in the spring.
If a plant is hardy, which means
frost-resistant, cold will not kill
it. But accidents may destroy it
during the winter. It may drown
in surface water produced by a
winter thaw; or be washed out of
the ground by heavy rain; or up
rooted by alternate freezing and
thawing. These accidents are espe
cially likely to destroy young
plants, but if they are growing in
a flat they can easily be protected
from such mishaps.
Any of the hardy perennials
which grow from seed can be sown
this fall, at any time before the
freeze-up, if assured this proteec
tion. They will not produce plants
in the sprxing equal to established
plants; but they will have a definite
start over seed which is started
nLext spring, and a large propor
tion of them will produce flowers
before the garden season is over.
Fall sown annuals will usually
bloom almost as early next year as
greenhouse or hot-bed plants, and
be much larger and more vigor
orous, as a result of having passed
their whole life outdoors.
Are You Being Kind To Your
Department Store? Boyle Asks
' By HAL BOYLE
NEW YORK, — (AP) — Are
you worried about the disclosures
lof widespread immoraiity in high
and low levels of American life?
Take heart. All is no lost. The
American department store cus
tomer is getting more honest every
| year,
| This cheering note cames from
Max Hess, chairman of the con
sumer education committee of the
retail drygoods association. It re
presents more than 7,000 U. S. De
partments Stores.
Hess has just made a nation
wide survey that found the mor
ality of the nation’s millions of
bargain seekers is at all-time peak.
“The study shows a marked in
crease in both honesty and con
sideration en the part of the pub
lie,” he said, “specifically in re
lation to the bugaboo of retail
stores—refunds and exchanges.”
He said that in the last decade
the precentage of merchandise re
turned had dropped from 5.4 per
cent to 2.1 per cent.
Heartening
But his most heartening con
clusion--heartening to department
store owners as well as students
of morality—is that the customers
try fewer shadier tricks in return
ing goods.
“Consumer honesty, as a matter
of fact, has become almost univer
sal,” Hess said. “Attempted re
turns of used or deliberately
damaged merchandise is only an
infinitesmal .0027 per cent of the
total, as opposed to 1.039 ten years
o e s e ———
i B iSR R R
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Cosmos,
No. 1 candidate for fall sowing,
is the annual larkspur.
Shirley poppies, calliopsis, candy
tuft, cosmos, the fragrant nicoti
ana, and all cclors of bachelor but
ton are as hardy as oaks.
When bulbs are planted along in
beds or borders, hardy annuals
may be sown in the same place
this fall, to blossom after the
bulbs have flowered and their so-«
liage has disappeared. Rows of
hardy annuals suitable for cut flow
ers may be sown in the vegetable
f'lot, after it has been spaded this
IL, s :
In sectivns where a brief spring
Fa,f S e
Ay B
Eo T §
Nl e
T ‘; W«;
¥ Y
L 3 ¢ AR B
lxx‘“@\ .’, ~-_‘. ‘N@
E Fragrant Nicotiana,
cuts short the flowering season of
sweet peas, earlier flowers and a
longer season can be obtained by
fall sowing, taking precautions as
suggested against decay in damp
soil. By covering the ground with
a light muich of leaves, straw or
similar substance, after it has
frozen, winter thaws may be pre
vented, which might otherwise
cause injury.
Other annuals which are success
fully fall sown include snapdrag
ons, cynoglossum, hardy pinks,
California poppy, nigella and pe
tunia. 3
ago.” |
| This record would be even bet
‘ter. he remarked, except for an
occasional lady who takes out a
full set of expensive chinaware,
ostensibly to buy it, but in reality
to impress her guests at a fancy
dinner party in her home.
“When shen returns the china
fware a few days later, she sonie
i times hasn't even bothered to
scrape all the food off the plates.”
Some other results of his survey:
Men are getting more fickle than
women; thev are responsible for
65 per cent of merchandise returns
as compared to 38 per cent a de
cade ago.
Young women return more pur
chases than older women.
The articles most commonly re
turned by women are dresses. With
men it's shirts.
Most men DO keep those Christ
mas gift neckites. Only .0108 per
cent were returned last year.
Store Preferences
Hess emphasized that most de
;partment stores today perfer that
a'customer return merchandise he
is dissatisfied with rather than re
tain it. The theory: Long-term
goodwill is always worth more
than the profit of any one trans
action.
In his own department store at
Allentown, Pa., he has a policy of
refunding the purchase price with
! out guestion, no matter how long
ago the sale was made.
“Recently we took back a blouse
, that an 89-year-old lady had
bought from us in 1901,” he said.
THE BANNERK-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
“We were gl-a:rto get?t back for
historical purposes, and gave her
far more than she had paid for it.,”
Another woman returned some
yarn she brought in 1927, and ex
plained:
“Never did find a chance to knit
that sweater.”
Hess had to turn down one small
boy, however, who came in and
wanted to exchange his newly
born baby brother for a sister.
Gallcmt “ Belk CO
®
A(R Y oS W G M N -
7 iR % J 4 ‘ / &
€ /GANTF 05 N7TN 2 | - gty
Toyland on our third floor is now open. For your approval and selection are here and
heaps of sparkling toys. The most exciting gifts Santa will ever deliver! Make your selec
tions early, a small payment will hold your se ections until Santa comes to town. Better be
early and be sure of just the proper Santa pre sent for the youngsters.
\
) AR
FOLDING TABLE and
CHAIR SETS
Can you imagine a bet- 95
ter or more suitable gift e
for the “Little Miss?”
What eise to round-out
a perfect Christmas to 12.95
morning? :
:‘\v:‘?‘;f-,'{:;-‘;__:,_:__!: )
L/. 1y \:i“'\’
(=
N A
L L .
WICKER CRADLES
Of course little misses
need a cradle to snug- 49
gle and tuck baby doll ®
in. The “mother” in
stinct makes this a
must on the Christmas
list!
D) f=4
TRICYCLES — Just set one under the Christmas
tree and see what happiness halos the face of the
Youngster, male or female. They come in all sizes,
and what sparkling beauties they are.
=
Ww/f
4.95 1o 6.50
CHAMPION
TOOL SET
complete with all metal
box. Junior will surely
enjoy this.
» |
Gallant-Belk Co.
Athens’ Leading Department Store
THE HOME OF BETTER VALUES
T 5 alr;;l}‘gave a brother,” the
little boy said.
’ But Hess had a r#asonable ex
cuse: The babg brother hadn’t
come from his department store.
PAYING PRIVILEGE
Stamps were not used on letters
until 1840. Previous to that time, |
the receiver had the privilege of |
lpza';ng the postage or refusing the |
etter, a 0
h o — 7
\ B
‘ '
b
2.69 to 11.95
HOLSTER SETS
Smokey Joe and Texan
Holster sets. Cowboy
accessories he’ll love.
: ADOPTED ACT
' The Gold Standard Act was
‘adopted: in the United States dur
ing the' first session of the 56th
Congress. President McKinley
signed the bill on March 14, 1900.
et e el e e e
It's a good idea to apply a thin
coat of oil or grease to an iron
skillet after it is washed and dried |
and before it is put away. Thisl
will insure against rust,
3 - LT
& Yen¥® Y
L 3 ‘g& {
%‘é:k ‘3 Sgd g “
N 9""""9 sfi"‘ Zoiting B ’\"‘lw E ’\( :g..
o/ AW X
~;q ; o i ‘hoi‘
Famous Horseman Dolls with softee skin, & o §
L & aF
plaster face and hair that can be actually ,2‘ 5.8 ?: S
combed, dressed in‘ beautiful nylon frock & ; “ifi 2 ‘
ind et TRy . . Ll 08 it
Madam Alexander Dolls in many styles and sizes @” it '4
priced Irom .sv e i T vee ot 598 to 19.98 é"%
iEe St 0 :
And many others ranging in price from it ¢ e
98¢ to 29.50. £ s
EFFANBEE
Santa < Come-to-Town!
Fleciric Sfoves . 6.50 & 8.50
Desk & Chair . 21,3910 39.95
Doll Carriages 4.95 o 19.95
Musical Cradles .. .. 10.95
Bi- Chair .. .. .. ... 2.95
Gym Sefs . .. .. ... 4250
Kir Rifles - 4.95&7.95
&
Choo-Choo Trains! .
Mechanical Train Sefs
THRILL OF A LIFETIME for either boys '
or girls. Sparkling train sets that fasci
nate even Mcm and Dad. Yep — you’ll .95 .so
love 'em, too, and bet your boots you do! to
POOR PARACHUTES
Because of the high altitude of
Bolivia, parachutes rre of little
use there; they descend too rap
idly through the rarefied atmos
phere,
Ripe olives come chopped nowa
days, in convenient small cans.
{ They are good mixed with egg or
I ham salad for lunchbox sand
wiches.
TENIENIE il o R L
Rocky Horses .. ... 16.45
llr;:lilxi;;yfieoards s B
lroning Boards 1.98 & 295
Dol Carriages . 49510 19.95
Doll Carriages . 6.95 & 10.95
Musical Cradles .. .. 10.95
Doll Beds . 1.98 & 2.95
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER i, 155
GUARDIAN GULES
Balt Lake City has a mony o
honoring a flock -of gulls . .
saved the community from f.. .
in 1848, at which time ap inge
plague was destroying crops
e e ———era,
French Toast is delicious wl,
it has been fried in deep fat, 1
the fat to about 375 F., and frv 1,
a minute or two, or until the |,
ter-dipped bread is goldenbroun,