Newspaper Page Text
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1951,
lEC Representafive To Inferview
| ocal Anplicants For JobslnS. C.
Are you @ stenographer or secre
tary, accountant or auditor, chem
-1 mechanical, metallurgical,
clactrical, electronics or civil en
eer? Are you interested in se
iv investication worlk?
It so, would you be intresed
nossible employment with the
ited States Government on oge
¢ the Nation’s most important
| urgent defense projects, the
| .arogen. materials production
it in So Carolina, I'nown as
the Savans ver Plant?
Sot Wendesday
w. W. Deßeaugrine, Manager
he locol Georgia Employment
ce Office, announced today
-t a renresentative of the U. S.
. mic Energy Commission will
' uct interviews with anplicants
jobs on the vital project from
o A M. to 4 P. M, on Wednesday,
1" ~vember T 5%
\[r. Deaßeaugrine said ' that
- ~ry ranges for the jobs to be
“Iled with the Government at the
conuth Carolina job are: account
. ts and auditors, S3IOO to $7600;
- ineers, $5400 to S9BOO, security
[ vestizators, ‘54600 to $5350 and
< -nosraphers-secretaries, $2650
P~ g . " '
Latay ,':r' i a_’ r S
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Onoren AS ricd
bLwus
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-~ i s
e For Him
Bv RICHARD KLEINER
NEA Staff Corresnondent
NEW YORK — (NEA)—Charles
Pomerantz has reached the:-pin
nacle of his career. He's had a flea
nomed after him.
To most people, that might
<com like an odd measure of suc
ce-s. But Pomerantz is deeply
truched. He feels humble that
an “ordinary exterminator” has
b2an so honored.
Pomerantz does himself an in
justice with tfat “ordinary ex
terminator” label. He is an ex
tarminator extraordinary. Be
sides being proficient ‘at finding
and killing rats, mice and assortes
insects, he is an amateur eni®-
mologist of wide renown. He
knows more about insects than
most insects do.
Pomerantz is a cherubic look
ing man of 54. When he was 40,
he quit a successful career in the
garment industry because “it had
no challenge’ He found plenty
of chailenge in exterminating —
the first challenge was whether
or not he could stand it. :
“T am a man of aesthetic tend
encies,” he says. “I play the violin
and I love poetry—keep a volume
FORD!
]
'—g_e-'/‘z:"%‘
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P9B
~F
ome . now
ndl Vi/e
o ’
Ceiling Prv’ s
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radio and heater plus
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1950 MERCURY 4 Door Sedan,
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overdrive, radio and heat
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1949 DODGE 1% Ton Pick Up—
Good green and black fin
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for work ........ $925.00
1947 CHEVROLET “Fleetline”
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tires, radio and heater,
seat covers and back-up
lights. Re-newed and
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1946 DODGE 1%-Ton Stake
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Very reasonable . $695.00
'MANY OTHER CARS AND
'RUCKS TO SELECT FROM
CREDIT AND TERMS
HANDLED IN OUR OFFICE
Ed Rock — Mac Mewborn
Bill Swain — Dan Dupree
Broad a¢ Pulaskf Phone 1097
minimum, ;
The Atomic Energy Commission
has estimated that it will cost
ap,\roximately $1,000,000,000 to
build the huge facility in South
Carolina, The area on which the
plant is being built covers 202,000
acres in Aiken, Branwell and
Allendale Counties,
Permanent Organization
The organization which the
Atomic Energy Commission is
setting up at the Savannah River
Plant will be a permanent one.
The facility, when comnleted and
in operation, will produce mater
ials which can be used in either
A-Bombs or H-Bombs. In addition,
some of the materinls to be pro
duced will have wide significance
in the peacetime application of
atomic energy,
No atomic weanons as such will
be made in South Carolina; ma
terials produced will be utilized
elsawhere.
Mr. Deßeaugrine stated that ap
plication forms for the above posi
tions are available at the local of
fice of the Georeia State Employ
ment Service, 289 N. Lumpkin
Street, and should be completed be
prior to the interview.
of Keats by my bed all the time,
And here I was dealing with
roaches ‘and all kinds of things
like that. 7t was appalling.
Read Article
“Then I read a magazine article
that had pictures of college girls
in a zoologv class. One was dis
secting a rat and the other a
roach. I said to myself, ‘What
are you., Pomerantz, a man or a
monkey?’ So I stuck with ex
terminating, and now 1 love it.”
But he wasn’t satisfied with
simple extermination. He read
books, attended lectures, learned
all he could about insects. He be
came so proficient in his field that
he pulled off one of the most re=
markable stunts ever done by an
entomologist — and he was an
amateur. »
It happened in 1946. A strange
disease sprang up in a big apart
ment development in Queens,
New York. It baffled doctors and
public health officials. Pomerantz
read all about it in the papers,
and had a theory. He explored
the basements of the apartment
houses and found a strange spe
cies of mite, a tiny insect, living
on mice. Their bites transmit
ted the ailment.
The Disease, now known as
riekettsial pox, was quickly
licked. The cure, was simple—
control the mice and eliminate
the mites Pomerantz discovered.
From them, Pomerantz’ fame
grew. He was invited to lecture
at universities and medical
schools. He received many hon
ors. In 1940, the U. S. Depart
ment of Agriculture named a
new family of mites, found in
southern peach orchards, Pomer
antiziidae afte- him. el
_ “This mite,” read the article,
“js named for Charles Pomer
antz, in recognition, of his en
thusiastic _ services to the study
of the rickettsial pox disease.”
And now comes Stivalius pom
erantzi, a new flea found in the
Philippines and named for him
by the Army Medical Department
which discovered it.
“This species,” the discoverer
wrote, “is named for Mr. Charles
Pomerantz, who by his studies on
mites and rickettsial pox con
tributed so much to the science
of parasitology.”
At the annual convention of
the National Pest Control Asso
ciation, Pomerantz was given a
replica of his personal flea. To
him, that was the crowning
achievement of his career.
. He has now =rown quite fond
of Stivalius Fomerantzi and the
whole Pomerantziidae clan.
“I have,” he says, with a small
smile, “a peculiar love and fond
ness for those unacceptable in
sects. It's the same love that
some men have for a glass of
whiskey — they know it’s a nui
sance, but they love it just the
same.”
Miss. Sevilla Jones ,special Tussy representative,
. is mow in our toilet goods department.
_\ She will be happy to help you ¢
¢& with your skin problems and answer (1 aa
.| all your beauty questions. S
o £ e %? ' o
face your face problems /\
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W S
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THE FIRST THANKSGIVING
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| N e e | &
E B During their seven years at Leyden, the Pilgrims failed
s to flourish. There was little place in the Dutch econ
‘, o 7 omy for unskilled farm labor.
National Future Homemaker Week s
November 4-10, Proclaims Talmadge
BY BERNICE McCULLAR
Governor Herman Talmradge has issued a proclamation
asking Georgians to join with the rest of the nation in ob
ie%ing National Future Homemaker Week, November
“Future Homemakers need to be recognized for their
many worthwhile activities,” the Governor’s proclamation
reads in part. “This type of education, which is an integral
part of the public school program, provides opportunities
for girls to take the initiative in planning 'for and carrying
out activities related to the important field of homemaking,
needs to be further premoted and developed.
I do proclaim that the week of
November 4-10 be obseryed as
Future Homemaker week in Geor
gia.”
333 Chapters
Georgia’s 333 chapters of Fu
ture Homemakers have made
widespread plans for many activi
ties to be carried on during the
week. In scores of Georgia Com
munities, the week will open with
FHA members going in groups to
their community churches to hear
their ministers speak on the spirit
ual values of homemaking. Chanel
programs, dramatic skits, talks be
fore community groups, posters
and exhibits, will all be a part
of the plans by which the Future
Homemakers will bring their or
ganization and their work into
the spotlight this week.
Betty Tate of Atlanta is presi
dent of the Georgia Association of
Future Homemakers. Although the
organization includes high school
homemaking students from city,
small town and rural schools, this
is the first time a city girl has
been elected president. Miss Tate,
who has been a special guest at
the district meetings held over
the state this fall, in a homemak
ing student at Hoke Smith high
school in Atlanta. Her homemak
}ng teacher is Miss Elizabeth Al
an.
District Conventions
¢ Georgia’s Future Homemakers
are just concluding a series of
district conventions held in the
four sections of the state. Each
meeting drew from one thousand
to seventeen hundred high school
homemaking students. Largest at
tendance so far was at the Al
bany meeting, where 1731 Future
Homemakers registered. The last
in the series will be held at Jef
ferson on November 10. State vice
presidents who preside at the fall
and spring district meetings are
DeLoyce Strickland of Moultrie,
Ruth Brown of Metter, Peggy Tar
pley of Athens, and Jane Terry of
Tucker. District program chair
man, who have planned the spe
eches, panels and recreation num
bers for their district meetings, are
Marinel Hall, Leesburg, Emily
Roberts, Dublin, Li ragg, Ila,
and Oretha Sinya Avondale,
The district secretaries are Ouida
Hendley, Vienna, Lorene Manning,
Dudley, Barbara Wolfe, Cumming,
Pit sciccsoriosinnr i
savioagat ¥
Sie g §
S
Medicated Lotion
81
Wear Tussy Medicated Lo
tion as a powder base, It hides
while it helps to dry and heal
unsightly pimples and blem
ishes. Once you try it youll
wonder why you suffered with
a “problem skin.” ;
all prices plus tax
THE BANNER-HERALD., ATHENS, GEORGIA
and Carolyn Ward, Douglasville.
Joyce Venable of Jefferson is
state secretary, Lois Mcßroom,
Whigham treasurer, Marsha Tuc
ker, Adel parllamenta rian, and
Barbara Guest, Winder, hisorian.
Chairmen of the three Standing
committees are Etta Lee McDaniel,
Alamo, projects, Patricia Ellison,
Atlanta, recreation, and Anne
Sheppard, Swainsboro, public re
lations.
National Projects
The Future Homemakers carry
on four national projects in addi
tion to the observance of ..ation=
al Future Homemaker Week. They
are the promotion of Families To
gether programs for work, home
beautifying, and . recreation; the
adopion of homemaking classes in
Europe, to which they send boxes
of supplies and to whom they write
personal letters; the observance of
United Nations Day; and the part
icipation in the world Friendship
Christmas Festival, through which
they mail gifts before November
1 to young people in all parts of
the world, who open them on Dec
ember 15, which is Festival Day.
The Georgia Future Homemak
ers also maintain a college schol
arship award, named in honor of
Mrs. Nnez Murry, Macon home
making teacher who is also this
year serving as state president of
the American Association of Uni
veristy Women. The award, made
up of nickels given by each in
dividual member of the Future
Homemaker chapters, is given each
To Give You The New Small Waist With
Utmost Comfort
e :
Y arner's'
LeGant*
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Sta-Up-Top e g
the girdle that / ¥ QA
makes you ) - i\
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sleek and L SENR LA
small-waisted “‘(\
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WON'T ROLL OVER 5 lh ;’@,; 7
WON'T RIDE UP f 7
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up e
Even if you could have your girdles
exactly to your order . . . the results would probably
be much like LeGant. For no other girdle sculptures
you so beautifully . . . 80 comfortably!
Sta-Up-Top holds the waistline flat without
cutting into tender flesh. Sleek TwoWay-OneWay
control trims and tapers highs and thighs . . . and
anchors the girdle securely . . . it can’t ride up.
to complete the picture—Warner’s* ABC* Alphabet*
bra, 1.50 up.
Gallant - BEII( (0
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ATHENS LEADING DEPARTMENT STORE
hakes you i
£0 ) e
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- 5‘)&%&\&&%
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The Dutch, quite nut- s
wrally, preferred their’ ‘b% .
own kind, and encour- ),
aged the Pilgrims to be- ; S 111
come Dutchmen. Many
did.
COPR. 1951 BY NEA SERVICE, INC.
year to two outstanding high school
seniors who plan to study home
making in cllefe. This past year,
for the first time, both scholar
ship winners were from the same
FHA chapter. Carolyn Brown and
Marie Donehoo of Winder, the
scholarship winners, are freshmen
at West Georgia College and at
GSCW in Milledgeville, They are
homemaking students of Mrs.
Lewis Kitchens. Winder has also
furnished two of the seven state
presidents which the FHA has
had since its organization in 1945.
They were Jacquelyn Smith and
Patricia Randolph Russell.
State Adviser
Mrs. J. M. Barber of Athens is
state adviser for the Future Home
makers. District advisers are Miss
Annie Stembridge of Ellijay, Mrs.
Alma J, Richardson of Dudley,
Mrs. Albert Morris, Jr., of Lithon
ia, and Mrs. Betty J. Houston of
Blakely.
The homemaking program, in
which all Future Homemakers are
enrolled, is a regular part of the
Georgia high school curriculum,
and the Future Homemakers carry
on their chapter work in conjunc
tion with theit regular school stu=
dies. Georgia’s homemaking ed
ucation program, directed by iMss
Inez Wallace of the State Depart
ment of Education, is the third
largest in the nation.
CHANGE OF CLOTHES
BERKELEY, Calif. — (AP) —
John H. Kilbuck was a civilian
doing important research on de
hydrated foods at the University of
California Agricultural Experi
ment Station. Although the armed
forces ship many dehydrated pro
ducts overseas, Kilbuck was called
to active duty with the Navy.
What did they do with him?
Sent him right back to his same
job at the University of California
doing the same thing.
The word herd is applied, in ad
dition to cattle, to whales, por
poises, swans, cranes and curlews.
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But most were proud of their English heritage and v ... |to keep
it. They were annoyed when their children spoke Dutch in pref
erence to English.
Tact Required|
Building U
.. By ROSETTE HARGROVE ..
NEA Staff Correspondent
ROCQUENCOURT, France —
(NEA)—Building an international
army, as the planners of the
European Defense Force are doing
here at Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhow
er’s headquarters, is a job that re
quires tact.
There will be men from France,
Ttaly, Germany, Belgium, the
Netherlands, Luxembourg, the U.
S., Great Britain, Canada, Norway
and Denmark in the FEuropean
Army. What language will be
spoken? What food will be eaten?
What uniform will be worn? How
long will the men serve? How
much will they be paid?
Taking up the problems one by
Uater RThomas Ce’eb Fa fe 5
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Winners will be announced each Sunday on
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alter R hom
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232 E. Clayton “Athens’ Largest Jewelers” : PhOI\G 3'
Illustrated by Walt Scott
one, here's the way the EDF’s
architects now feel about them.
It has already been decided that
English, French and German will
be the three key languages used
in the field. During recent man
euvers in Germany, that arrange=-
ment was used satisfactorily.
There were a few minor technical
hitches, but virtually no serious
confusion, |
* * *
That men of ten different na
tionalities can wunderstand each
other and work in harmony has
been proved at Eisenhower’s head
‘quarters here. Of a staff number
ing around 250 officers, less than
half are Americans, The feeling
is that the same harmony can
exist on a larger scale in a 3,000,-
000-man combat force.
Food is another problem. Al
though the combat units will be
confined to men of one nationali
ty, the service units—signal men,
engineers, medical corpsmen and
the like—will be mixed. Hence
food will have to be standardized.
Exactly how the menu will be
controlled, so that Belgians don’t
get spaghetti and Frenchmen
don’t get hamburgers, hasn’t been
worker out yet. The authorities
hope to come up with a common
gastronomical‘ denominator.
R B
The uniform of the EDF will
probably come about by an evo
lutionary process. No one uni
form is being planned. For one
thing, certain nationalities have
decided preferences in some arti
cles of clothing. A German sol
dier is uncomfortable without
boots, but others prefer low shoes
b
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PAGE THREE
and would be miserable in boots.
Nevertheless, some wunilorm
unit«l)r?‘x‘iitny is nllxiud‘: hpp-nn‘:‘:
As clothing supplies in France, 1
example, are running short, lead
ers have ordered Amerfcan uni
forms. 'The Eisenhower combdp‘
jacket 1s particularly appealing.
Nowaways, only his insignia dis-.
ferentiates the French Poilu from
the American soldier, ¢
Battie uniforms may therefore .
soon become standard in the co
‘operating nations. But there will .
‘probably be no attempt made to
create one dress uniform for the
EDF, because these are part of the'
individual nation’s military tradi=
tions.
* % » o B
Length of service should be the
same in each country, the
ners feel, to eliminate gripes and
grumblings about favoritism. Just
how long such service will be is
still * speculative, but the feeling
here is that it will have to b?
lengthened in most countries. 15
The pay rate is a ticklish sub
ject. Any attempt to work out an
average would be tough on the
American boys, who make far
more than any other nation's sol
diers. But if it is left up to the
individual participants, there are’
liable to Le envious glances cast at
the Americans’ fatter pay enve
lopes.
Nevertheless, the latter course’
seems to be the only practicsl so
lution. Military budgets varg@
drastically from nation to nation,
and it would be a hardship on
some to dietate salary terms For.
the present, pay scales will be
| left to the various nations.
oi 9 ¥
One thing that definitely will bg
| standardized is arms. If each na«
tiona! combat unit used different
| weapons, errors in ammunitig
| supply could easily be tragic.
| A unified arsenal would cut
| down on such mistakes, and also
‘| make the problems of supply and.
| parts much simpler. ;
| All these problems, plus others
| which beset any military force,
| are being worked on, There is a
| feeling of optimism, however; a
| feeling that the problems will be
| licked and quickly. N
Pure lipen is a good tabric in
vestment, not only because of ifs
| beauty, but for its excellent laun
| derability and long-wearing quali
| ties. White linens take well to hot,
| soapy water. Iron while damp, on
| both sides. Colored linens need
| cooler water, ironing on the wrong
| side only if dull finish is desired.
| A little starch may be used if you
| like a crisper effect.
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