Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWELVE
The Holy Family
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And so it was, that, while they were there, the days were ac
eomplished that she should be delivered.
And she brought forth her first born son, and wrapped him in
swaddling clothes, and laid him in a manger, because there was
no room ior them in the inn.—Luke 2:6-7.
Hollywoods' "Cutfing Spree”
Won't Affect Blanche Thebom
BY ERSKINE JOHNSON
NEA Staff Correspondent !
HOLLYWOOD.—NEA )—Holly- |
wood’s on a shearing spree and’
the cries of “cut” have cost
Adolphe Menjou and Gilbert Ro
land their mustaches and Gene
Evans his beard.
But there will be no snipping at
the king-size mane of Met opera
star Blanche Thebom—it measures
five feet four inches in length—if
she signs a movie contract.
Now that Mario Lanza has
proved that popcorn and operatic
warbling can be dished up togeth
er at the movie houses, Blanche’s
phone is buzzing with big movie
talk. But she says it'll be written
above the dotted line that the
studio barber -can’t reach for his
scissors,
“Not even a starring movie can
get me to cut a single hair,”
Blanche announced.
If there is a movie -career
around the corner for her, the
mezzo soprano hopes, the story
will be the old Marcia Davenport
novel, “Of Lena Geyer,” about the
daughter of a charwoman who
becomes an opera star.
Not in the script: “If Pat doesn’t
win a girl in a movie soon, people
will think I won him in a lot
tery.”—Mrs. Pat O'Brien.
Acting Family
Bobby Schwartz, Tony Curtis’
10-year-old brother, is heading
for a movie career. He's testing
for the role of a young Mexican
lad in & new movie for the Nas
sour brothers, He won't take the
Curtis name, though.
Martha Vickers, $2,000 a month
richer with her alimony fromr
Mickey Rooney, stepped before
movie cameras for the first time
in over two years. A half-hour TV
film with Preston Foster. |
Wildest rumor of the week: That
Bing Crosby, who owns scads of
stock in Decca records, will be the
new bossman at Ul when and if
Decca buys out the majority stock
of J. Arthur Rank, Nate Blumberg,
Leo Spitz and William Goetz.
Glenda Farrell is returning to
Hollywoed for another movie fling
and a cuddle with her 18-month
old granddaughter, sprig of her
son Tommy. . . . It's Scott Brady
with Shelly Winters in Ul's “Whip
Hand.”
Neat line in a St. Louis news
paper about Margaret Whiting’s
warbling there at the Chase Ho
tel: “It took a little Whiting to
chase away the St. Louis Blues.”
Comic Jack Gilford explains
why Hollywood is making so many
Biblical films. The producers want
to show a Prophet.
Director Leo McCarey's woes in
trying to assemble a completed
print of “My Son John"” are in the
ulcer league. He's already hired a
double for the late Robert Walker
and now may have to match his
voice.
The screen’s longest duel — six
minutes of rapier play between
Mel Ferrer and Stewart Granger
—will climax MGM’s “Scara
mouche.”
The boys nixed doubles on the
theory that the added value of
the aeting charges it up.
The song hit, “Too Young,); has
iospired a n’ovie-plot idea, “Never
50.0 Young” . . . Virginia Van
pp's screen play for Rita Hay
:zfi Is now the shelf. Rita
gfi( & comeback
m' ' !mfi have &
: Rhubarb
& ltb;:x for glo
| al Erwin Rom=~
| t Fox” will get
* -~ “The Desert
English forces
@erman mili-
Type-casting: An actor named
Sam Scar plays a gangster in “The
"Hoodlum Empire.”
Bob Mitchum’s kid brother,
John Mallary, is playing a GI with
him in “The Korean Story.” . . .
Julie Wilson is giving up her night
club warbling career for stage
musicals.
It isn’t generally known, but
David Niven’s stage appearance
with Gloria Swanson in the scon
due “Nina” on Broadway is his
first footlights book. He's as shaky
as Gilda Grey's hips about it, too.
Frank Sinatra’s wedding pres
ent to Ava Gardner will be a $12,-
500 mink stole. . . . Starlet Bar
bara Ann Knudsen is shouting
the word that hubby Bill Henry
will be out of the Navy by Christ=-
mas. He served five years during
- World War 11.
Required For Each
Type Of Birthmark
By EDWIN P. JORDAN, M. D.
Written for NEA Service
A mother writes that her little
four-year-old girl has a light
colored birthmark on her cheek
and wants to know whether she‘
should consider a skin graft or
whether there is some kind of
paint which can be put on the
mark,
This question and many others
like it are often asked by parents,
but such inquiries are not easy to
answer because there are several
kinds of birthmarks, and they
should not all be treated in the
same way. }
Fortunately, many birfhmarks
are so small, covered with hair or
placed in such an inconspicuous
part of the body that they need not
cause any concern. Some birth
marks are made up of numerous
tiny blood vessels in the skin. Such
a ‘mark” is called a hemangiona.
Some are level with the surface
of the skin but have a dark pur
pish color which gives them the
common name of port wine mark.
Others made up of blood vessels
are raised above the skin level and
are soft and spongy. These are
called strawberry marks. This
type may occur anywhere, but it
particularly is common around the
lips or tongue.
Another common variety of
birthmark made up of blood ves
sels is irregularly shaped and
, slightly raised. It is called a spider
i nevus because the blood vessels
‘at the center look like the body
while the smaller ones passing
outward resemble the legs of a
spider.
VARIOUS TREATMENTS
There are various ways of treat
ing port wine nevus of birth
marks, all aimed at closing off the
blood vessels, so that blood ceases
to flow through. Carbon dioxide
snow may be used for the small
ones.
| These birthmarks require deli
cate handling, however, as there
is some danger of leaving an ab
normal skin after the port wine
birthmark has been destroyed.
Radium treatment is effective, al
so, in some cases.
There ig also a fairly new type
of treatment with what is called
the Grenz ray. The same kinds of
treatment can be considered for
the strawberry mark, or the spi
der nevus.
In addition to treatments men
tioned, there is at least one good
commercial preparation which can
be used to cover some kinds of
birthmarks. This comes in differ
ent colors and can be matched to
the skin of the individual and ap
plied once a day or so. It has
saved a lot of self-consciousness
and distress but is in no sense a
cure.
The largest known meteorite
crater, Chubb Crater in Northern
Quebec, is 1,325 feet in depth.
Radio Clock
WGAU-CBS
1340 AM-99.5FM
BUNDAY MORNING
8 55-—~News,
7:00-~Sunday Morning
Serenade.
8:00—~CBS News.
B:ls—Church of God Program.
B:4s—Yesterday, Today and
Tomorrow.
9:oo—~The Bible, the Book to
Live By.
9:15--The Gospc! Messengers.
9:4S—AP News.
10:00—-Forum Class Discussion
11:00—First Presbyterian Church
12:00—Music to Please.
SUNDAY AFTERNOON
12:15~Home Worship HRour
1:15-—String Serenade (CBS).
I:3o—Gallant-Belk Santa Claus.
2:oo—Symphonette (CBS).
2:30-—Boulevard Baptist Church
Choir.
3:oo—Columbia Masterworks of
Music.
3:ls—News Analysis (CBS).
4:OO—J. Stewart Fan Mail
(CBS).
4:05—Bill Shadell and News
(CBS).
4:os—The Human Side of the
News (CBS).
4:IS—CBS World News Roundup
(CBS).
4:3o—Frankie Lane Show (CBS).
5:00-—King Arthur Godfrey’s
Roundtable (CBS).
s:3o—How To (CBS).
8:00—My Friend Irma (CBS).
SUNDAY EVENING
6:3o—Our Miss Brooks (CBS).
7:oo—Jack Benny (CBS).
7:3o—Amos 'n Andy.
B:oo—Edgar Bergen and Charlie
McCarthy (CBS).
B:3o—Horace Heidt (CBS).
9:oo—Meet Corliss Archer
(CBS).
9:3o—The Contented Hour
(CBS).
10:00—Inside Athens.
10:05—Music for You.
10:30—The Choraliers (CBS).
11:00—CBS News and Local News.
11:15—Music America Loves,
12:00—CBS News.
12:05—Sign Off.
: MONDAY MORNING
6:3s—Sign On.
6:4o—News.
6:4s—Hillbilly Highlights.
6:ss—News.
7:00—Good Morning Circle.
7:3o—World News Briefs,
7:35—G00d Morning Circle.
8:00—CBS World News Roundup
(CBS).
B:ls—Bread of Life.
B:3o—Music Shop Parade.
9:OO—CBS News of America
(CBS).
9:ls—Hymns of All Churches.
9:3o—Woman’s Whirl.
9:4s—Strength for the Day.
10:00—Arthur Godfrey (CBS).
11:30—Ring the Bell,
11:45—Rosemary (CBS).
12:00~Wendy Warren and News
(CBS).
MONDAY AFTERNOON
12:15—Mid-Day Roundup of the
News.
I.:3o—Romance of Helen Trent
(CBS).
12:45—J0e Emerson Hymn Time.
1:00—Big Sister (CBS).
I:ls—~Ma Perkins (CBS).
I:3o—Young Dr. Malone (CBS).
I:4s—The Guiding Light (CBS).
2:oo—Hymns of All Churches.
2:ls—Perry Mason (CBS).
2:3o—This Is Nora Drake (CBS).
2:4s—The Brighter Day (CBS).
3:oo—Local News.
3:ls—Harlem Review.
3:3o—Hillbilly Matinee.
4:oo—Gallant-Belk Santa Claus.
4:30—1340 Platter Party.
s:oo—The Chicagoans (CBS).
s:ls—The Chicagoans (CBS).
s:3o—Songs For You.
s:4s—Curt Massey and Orchestra
(CBS).
FOOT TROUBLE FOR COPS
ST. LOUIS — (AP) — Chalk
up the traffic cop as a victim of
this streamlined age.
For, say St. Louis patrolmen,
today’s traffic officer just dosen’t
have a satisfactory place to plant
his foot while writing a ticket
for a motorist.
No running broads, sights Lt.
J. A. McNamara, a veteran of 33
years. Things were different he
says, in the Pierce-Arrow and Stu
tz Bearcat day — when a cop
could lecture with dignity.
McNamara adds that now with
the low-slung cars, the policeman
has to bend over so far hat a lec
ture just isn’t worth the effort.
FAVOR FLOOD AID
DES MOINES, la. — (AP) —
Two meetings are being held in
Southwestern Towa in connection
with the goverrnuent’s program to
provide aid for farm areas damag
ed by excessive rains and floods
last spring. Between $400,000 and
$500,000 has been allotted by the
Federal government to 23 South
western and Western lowa counties
for this work.
’ .
| Railroad Schedules
SEABOARD AIRLINE RY.
| Arrival and Departure of Trains
; Athens, Georgia
" | Leave for Elberton, Hamlet and
'| New York and East—
: 3:30 p. m.—Air Conditioned.
| 8:48 p. m.—Air Conditioned.
| Leave for Elberton, Hamlet and
i East—
, 12:15 a. m.—{Local).
| Leave for Atlanta, South and
_ West—
-6:45 a. m.—Alir Conditioned.
_ 4:30 a, m.—(Local).
i 2:57 p. m.—Air Conditioned.
| CENTRAL OF GEORGIA
. RAILROAD
y| Arrives Athens (Daily, Except
: Sunday) 12:32&. m.
; Leaves Athens (Daily, Except
1 Sunday) 4:15 p. m,
GEORGIA RAILROAD
Mixed Trains.
Week Day Only
Train No. 51 Arrives 9:00 a. m.
Train No. 50 Departs 7:00 p. m.
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS,' GEORGIA
SUNDAY MORNING
6:3o—Sign On,
6:3o—Folk Music.
7:oo—Spiritual Hour.
7:3o—Rock of Ages Broadcast.
B:oo—Sterchi’s Teio.
8:30—Good Tidings Broadcast.
9:oo—Community Sing.
9:3o—Central Baptist Church.
10:00—~News and Sports.
10:15—01d Favorites.
11:00—Pipes of Melody.
11:10-—News.
11:15—Church Services.
SUNDAY AFTERNOON
12:15—Ted Dale Show. .
12:45—News in Review.
1:15-—~Souvenir Songs.
I:3o—Sunday Serenade.
2:oo—Revolving Bandstand.
3:3o—News.
3:4s—Revolving Bandstand.
4:OO—N. E. Georgia Singing
Convention.
5:00-~Revolving Bandstand.
s:ls—Cinnamon Bear.
s:3o—Revolving Bandstand. |
SUNDAY EVENING
6:oo—Proudly We Hail.
6:3o—Land of the Free.
6:4s—My Favorite Album.
7:oo—Candlelight and Silver.
7:3o—Adventures of Frank Race.
B:oo—News.
B:ls—Three Little Words.
B:3o—Take Thirty.
9:oo—News Check-Up.
9:os—Curtain Calls,
10:00—Make Mine Music.
Now At Crow’'s Drug Store
‘ Gift F he Whole Famil
A Chrisimas Gift For The ole Family
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e e g&xfi%@@,@ cabinet of mahogany-finish hardwood. Big, clear 17” picture.
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When these gervices are
ovui\ab\e in your ared;
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283 EAST CLAYTON . .. PHONE 1767-8_
11:00—News in a Nutshell,
11:05—Make Mine Musie,
12:00—Stardusting.
12:25—News Nightcap.
12:30-—Sign Off.
MONDAY MORNING
B:3o—Sign On,
s:3o—Reville Roundup.
6:oo—News.
6:ls—Smiley Burnette Show.
6:3o—Farmer’s Daily Guide.
7:oo—News.
7:os—The Blessed Hope.
7:3o—Down Molod{ Trail.
7:4s—Vocal Varieties.
B:oo—News.
B:ls—The Musical Clock.
8:55--News.
9:oo—Morning Devotional.
9:IS—WRFC Trading Post,
9:3o—Evelyn Knight,
9:4s—The Feminine Agenda.
10:00—Anything Goes.
10:25—News.
10:30—Shopping Guide.,-
10:45—W. C. T. U.
11:00—~The Chuck Wagon.
12:00—Whitmire Harmrony Time.
MONDAY AFTERNOON
12:15—News.
12:30—LeFevre Trio. g
12:45-—Checkerboard Time.
I:oo—News,
I:os—Luncheon Serenade.
2:oo—Record Room.
3:ls—Shopping Guide.
3:3o—News.
3:4s—Hive of Jive.
4:ls—Record Room.
4:3o—Santa Claus.
s:oo—Record Room.
s:ls—Cinnamon Bear. i
s:3o—The Lone Ranger.
6:oo—Easy Moments.
. The ‘Morro Castle” burned off
the New Jersey coast Sept. 8, 1934
with a loss of 134 lives.
The rocky French island of St.
Malo is honeycombed with dun
geons and ancient treasure vaults.
’ ¢ 5
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Lonely People Find Companionship
‘ln New York's Mole-Like Shelfer
By HAL BOYLE
NEW YORK — (AP) — The big
city is patting itself on the back
for the way it behaved during it
first A-bomb alert,
At the screaming of the first
air raid sirens the streets emptied
magically. The people took to the
nearest bomb shelters,
To get a New Yorker to do any
thing expected of him is quite an
achievenment, as he is by nature
one of the most independent-mind
ed creatures on earth, suspicious
of any kind of ‘“regimentation.”
Of course, some did show an
unfortunate tendency to cluster
at skyscraper windows to watch
the show, but that is also a charac
teristic of New Yorkers. They
don't like to miss anything.
But generally they did quickly
and calmly what the civil defense
organization had instructed them
to do— an indication of how they
would react had the emergency
been real. They are learning ‘“the
pattern of survival,” the lesson all
must learn who live in these times.
All—Clear!
Although they joked about the
situation, they remained in the
shelters until the all-clear sound
ed.
One interesting sidelight: The
employes of Tass, the official
Soviet news agency, paid no at
tention to the demonstration. They
kept right on sending dispatches
to Moscow.
In an actual air raid it is hard
to tell how people will react to
it, sometimes a population under
steady bombardment becomes in
different or phlegmatic to danger.
many adopt a fatalistic atitude.
During the early days of the
great air raids on London a num
er became blinded for life as a
result of curiosity. Windows throu
gh which they had been watching
the spectacle suddenly were blast
ed, filling their faces with glass
shards. It became a pastime with
some to go up on rooftops to view
the city at night, ringed with huge
fires and reverbreating with ex
plosions.
Some people, suffering from
clausrophobia, never were able to
stand the mole-like existence in
the shelters. Others, including the
lonely, actually seemed to enjoy
the companionship of the deep
shelters in the “underground” —
the London subway. They would
go to sleep there whether there
was an air raid or not, merely for
the company.
Remained A-Bed
A substantial portion of the
citizenry, adopting the policy that
“If a bomb has your name on it
will find you,” remained cheerful
ly a-bed during the nightly attacks.
They figured it was about as
pleasant a place to die as any.
On visits back to London from
the front during the last war that
is what I generally did. The lux
ury of lying between clean sheets
in a soft bed meant more than the
peril from possible death overhead.
The chances are always in your
3 - -SCOTSMAN
"5 HEYWARD AI7[EN MOTOR COMPANY
v [ ICOLN-] ] JErCIUIY lAL 18 i
SUNDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1051,
favor during an air raid,. @
After the Allies began their
own tremendous bombardment of
Berlin, the populace there eame i,
time to adopt the same philosoph v,
One German lady told a friend
of mine after the war:
“During your raids I used to sit
in a warm bath sipping champa
gne. If T had to go, I wanted to go
out as comfortably as possible "
ACCIDENT PREVENTION
ZURICH, Switzerland — (AP)
—A Swiss traffic policeman has
invented a device which, he say:.
could prevent 80 per cent of &
traffic accidents.
Jakob Gossweller, an inventor
who is assigned to the Zurich
Police Department’s traffie divi
son as a technical expert, sald that
if his combination brake and ac
celerator dpedal had been used in
the United States the past 50 yeas
800,000 lives would have been
saved.
Under Gossweiler’'s system of 2
combined brake and accelerato:
pedal, one pushes down with his
heel to provide mere gas and with
the ball of his foot to apply the
brakes. The foot is, therefore,
always in braking position. Fur
thermore, pressure on the brake
pedal automatically cuts off the
gasoline so there is no possibility
of ‘stepping on the wrong pedal.”
A person living on a diet of milk
exclusively would develop anemia
and other disorders due to a de
ficiency of vitamins.