Newspaper Page Text
PAGE EIGHT
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Year's End Clearance Sale
’
We Want To Clean The House
Liberal Trades l Convenient Terms I
1949 FORD Tudor Sedan—Culver blue finish, radio and heater,
seat covers, excellent tires, tharoughly reconditioned. A
real bargain at e e $1195.00
1948 FORD Tudor Sedan—Original black finish, radio and heat
er. new seat covers, guaranteed mechanically. A good look
er ; iy i i sk ATIROY
1948 FORD COUPE—Clean black finish, radio and heater, ex
cellent tires, tip top running condition. Has utility seats—
s97s.oo
1947 CHEVROLET Fleetmaster, 2-Door Sedan—Clean blue fin
ish, radio and heater, immaculate interior, tip top mechan
-1( .i”_\' .o . & 599500
1946 FORD Tudor Sedan V-8. Clean black finish, new seat cov
ers, excellent tires, radio and heater. Renewed throughout.
o g i e SR G R RS TR
1946 PLYMOUTH “Special Deluxe” 4 Door Sedan — Original
black finish, heater, good tires, seat covers, very scund
mechanically. Exceptional clean all over. ........ $895.00
1940 FORD Club Coupe—Nice green {inish, good tires, thorough
ly re-conditioned mechanically. A real bargain, . $415.00
1949 DODGE !4 Ton Pick Up—Good green and black finish,
clean cab, heater, 6 ply muda grip tires. Ready for work.
$925.00
1950 FORD !4 Ton Pick Up — V-B—Original blue finish, 4 new
tires, clean cab, top notch mechanically. Equipped with
P L AR RRS R T R e $1175.00
1946 DODGE I'4-Ton Cab-Chassis Truck—Red and Black fin
ish: excellent 7:00 x 20 duals and fronts. Reconditioned en=-
gine, good cab. Very reasonable ................ $695.00
1950 FORD !4 Ton Pick-Up—Original green finish, 5 excellent
tires, driven only 10,000 miles. You must see it to ap
enlelate 4t .L L et e 1 eDR RS
1948 CHEVROLET Sedan Delivery—Original black finish, very
good tires, top notch mechanically. Ideal for a route man—
5795.00
MANY OTHER CARS AND TRUCKS
TO SELECT FROM
CREDIT AND TERMS
HANDLED IN OUR OFFICE
Ed Rock Dan Dupree
Mac Mewborn Bill Swain
Clarence Anthony
Broad at Pulaski Phone 1097
By
Jonathan Forman, M. D., Vice President
FRIENDS OF THE LAND
Columbus 1, Ohio
LET’S STOP SQUANDERING
OUR SOIL FERTILITY
United States has only one
sixth of the land surface of the
ALL FORMS OF INSURANCE
Accident Protection
ONE DAY OR LONGER
PHONE |[ESTER
PHONE 437 or 622-).
i BATTERY SERVICE ||
, Slow Charging [
88 or Fast Charging.
@ Service Batteries |
8| for any make car.
8 CLARKE STORAGE |
. BATTERY CO. i
SNOW
224 West Washinglon
PHONE 36%
ASK FOR... |
ICE CREAM
At your favorite Storo]
OF ¢ ¢ »
Arnens Cooperative (REAMERY
198 W. Hancock
Phone 2271
earth, and cannot possibly feed the
world, now should*it attempt to
do so. To give our life-giving
foods to the starving nations is a
noble, humanitarian gesture of
which we all may be proud, but
at the same time, it should be well
remembered that such gifts prob
ably represent future hunger for
our children and our children’s
children.
This thought-provoking point
was made to a group gathered in
Detroit, to attend the first na
tional conference to appraise and
evaluate our nation’s progress in
conservation, by Ollie E. Fink,
program director of Friends of the
Land, conservation education so
ciety which conducted the con
ference.
Again, if we are to carry out
successfully the point four pro
gram to the place where all of the
people of the world have a com
parable living standard to ours,
practically all of the non-renewa
ble resources of the word, except
coal, will have become exhausted
within the next five years. If all
the people were to have enough
to eat, the soil resources of the
Earth would probably be exhaust
ed within a decade. 2
What the American citizen
should od about this under the
existing conditions, becomes a
matter of grave concern. For some
time to come, we can feed our own
people adequately to keep them
healthy, if we put to use all the
things we know about soils and
health of plants, animals and
Man. In the meantime, we must
support more research to find
other and better methods for pro
ducing these foods, if we are to
take care of the 6000 additional
mouths that come to the American
breakfast table every morning.
This know-how and research in
formation should be made avail
able to the hungry nations. It
costs us little to transport ideas
about improved practices, but
when we sent a shipload of fcod to
a foreign nation, no ship ever re
turns with a stock pile of ma
terials extracted from the soil to
produce these food stuffs.
It it not true, as Dr. Earl Han
son presented in his book, “Emer
ging New Worlds,” and also in his
address at the Tenth Annual In
stitute on Conservation, Nutrition
and Health conducted by Friends
of the Land in 1950 in Chicago,
that efforts to find a foreign mar
ket must be balanced by efforts to
replace the raw materials reported
from our soil—that is, the raw ma
terials out of which the food and
fiber and other products are man
ufactured.
VEITICAL 3
1 Painter
2 Guide
3 Prohibit
4 While
§ Price
® 6 Atop
7 Erect
8 Rim i
9 Iron (symbol)
10 Feminine 3
appellation :
11 Ethnic group
12 Soils :
17 Comparative ¢
nlx: :
20 Cloys 4
HORIZONTAL
1 Depicted fish
9 It has long
13 Thought
logically
14 Kind of cheese
15 Light brown
16 Theater
18 Goddess of
infatuation
19 Psyche part
20 Hoarders |
22 Medical suffix.
23 Bristle :
25 Love god '
27 Horse’s galt
28 This fish is '
+ widely sold ‘
in ee—
-29 Palm lily
30 Cesium (ab,)
31 Tantalum
(symbol)
32 Pronoun
33 Encourage
35 Permits
38 Nostril
39 Revise
40 It is found
— warm
seas
41 Wood-boring
larvae
47 Transpose
(ab.)
48 Tangle
50 Torment
51 Follower
52 Blackbirds of
cuckoo family
54 Items |
56 Narrow road
37 Comes in
again
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P A T Ry
PL R T T
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MR SEEErERr
Radio Clock
TUESDAY EVENING
6:ls—Tomorrow’s Headlines.
6:3o—Sports Roundup.
6:4s—The Stars Sing. ”
7:oo—Santa Claus.
7:3o—The Pay-Off.
B:oo—News.
B:ls—Religion At the News Desk.
B:3o—Popcorn Party,
9:oo—News.
9:os—Curtain Calls.
10:00—Globetrotters.
10:15—Night Owl.
11:00—News,
11:05—Night Owl.
12:00—Stardusting.
12:25——News Nightcap.
12:30—Sign Off.
WEDNESDAY MORNING
s:3o—Sign On.
s:3o—Reveille Roundup.
6:oo—News.
6:os—Reveille Roundup.
6:3o—Farmer’s Guide.
7:oo—News.
7:os—The Blessed Hope.
7:3o—Red’s Record Room.
7:4s—Vocal Varieties.
B:ls—The Musical Clock.
B:ss—News.
9:oo—Morning Devotional.
9:IS—WRFC Trading Post.
9:3o—Windy Carson.
9:4s—The Feminine Agenda.
10:00—Anything Goes.
10:25—News.
10:30—Shopping Guide.
10:45—Saddle and Scngs.
11:00—Chuck Wagon.
12:00—Whitmire Harmony Time.
WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON
12:15—News.
12:30—LeFevre Trio.
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:oo—Livestock Sale.
4:3o—Santa Claus.
s:oo—Record Room.
s:ls—Cinnamon Bear.
5:30-—-The Lone Ranger.
6:oo—Easy Moments.
Radie~TV
TUESDAY EVENING
WSRB .. Channel 2
(NBC)
6:oo—Santa Claus.
6:ls—Woody Willow.
6:30—T0 Be Announced.
6:4s—Cartoons.
7:oo—Circus Day.
7:ls—Sportsman Club.
7:3o—Views; Weather. ;
7:4s—News.
8:00—Milton Berle*.
9:oo—Fireside Theater*.
9:30-—Circle Theater®*.
10:00—Original Amateur Hour
with Ted Mack®*.
11:00—News.
11:15—“Hitchhike Lady” with
A. Skipworth,
12:15—News; Silent.
WAGA — Channel 5
(CBS-D)
6:oo—Newsreel.
6:ls—Logan Sisters,
6:3o—Santa Claus.
6:4s—Film Shorts; News.
7:oo—Xmas at Home*,
7:3o—News*,
7:4s—Stork Club¥*.
B:oo—Frank Sinatra*,
B:3o—Wrestling.
9:oo—Crime Syndicate*.
9:30—-Suspense*.
10:00—Danger*.
10:30-—Bigelow Theater.
11:00—News.
Silent.
WLTV — Channel 8
(ABC)
6:oo—Swingbillies.
6:3o—Mystery Squad.
6:4s—Van Varieties,
7:00—Roller Derby.
7:3o—Beulah®.
8:0¢ “harlie Wilde*.
B:3o—Little Lord Fauntleroy”
with Freddie
Bartholomew.
10:00—*“Undercover Agent”
with Russell Gleason,
Silent.
*_lnaicates Network Programs
14 BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, QEOIOIA
Answer to Previous Puzzle
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IAITIEL IR IAITIAL IE AR
LIOIRIAI INFIAMEIRICE]
|| INIS[I [DIE] EM 1 [T]s]
21 Little sacs 43 Have on
24 Sway 44 Ready (dial.)
26 Assembled 45 Italian city
33 Beast 46 Check
34 Fruit 49 Can
36 Giggle 51 Island (Fr.)
37 Emphasis 53 Direction (ab,
42 Near 55 Court (ab.)
WGAU-CBS ‘
1340 AM -99.5 FM
TUESDAY EVENING ‘
6:oo—Allen Jackson and News
(CBS).
6:ls—Sports Parade.
6:3o—The News. ,
6:4s—Lowell Thomas and News
(CBS).
7:oo—Beulah (CBS). ‘
7:ls—Jack Smith Show (CBS).
7:30—80b Crosby’s Club 15
(CBS).
7:4s—Edward R. Murrow and
News (CBS).
B:oo—Harvest of Hits. |
B:3O—MTr. and Mrs. North (CBS).
9:oo—Life With Luigi (CBS).
9:3o—Pursuit (CBS).
10:00—Inside Athens.
10:05—Music You Want, When
You Want It. |
10:30—Dancing in the Dark.
11:00—CBS News and the World
Tonight (CBS).
11:15—Dancing in the Dark.
12:00—Sign Off.
WEDNESDAY MOERNING |
6:3s—Sign On.
6:4o—News.
6:4s—Hillbilly Highlights. 4
7:oo—~Harmony Time.
7:ls—Good Morning Circle.
7.3o—~World News Briefs,
7:35—G00d Morning Circle,
8:00—CBS Worla News Round
up (CBS).
B:ls—The Bread of Life.
B:3o—Music Shop Parade.
9:OO—CBS News 'of America.
9:ls—Hymns of All Churches.
9:3o—The ‘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
WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON
12:15—Mid-Day Roundup of the
News.
12:30—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—Grady Cole (CBS).
2:ls—Perry Mason (CBS).
2:3o—This Is Nora Prake (CBS)
2:4s—The Brighter Day (CRS)
3:oo—Local News.
3:ls—Hillbilly Matinee.
.4:oo—Gallant-Belk Santa Claus.
4:30—1340 Platter Party.
5:00--Life’s Fuller Measure.
s:ls—The Chicagoans (CBS).
s:3o—Songs For You.
s:4s—Curt Massey, Martha
Tilton.
Ginger is one of the few spices
that grow below ground.
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CAPTAIN EASY
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TUESDAY, DECEMBER 18, 19y,
BY MERRILL BLOSSE
BY EDGAR MARTINI
BY ALVERMEE
BY LESLIE TURNIR
BY V.T. HAMLI
MAJOR H&fil