Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWO
Grade Of Milk And Disiribulors
kuproved For Athens And Clarke Counfy
The Athens and Clarke County
Department of Health bereby an
npunces the grade of milk ap
proved for sale in Athens and
Clarke County as determined by
the milk ordinance of the Athens
and Clafke County Board of
Health and in accordance with
regulatiors of the United States
Amuicur
(Continaed From Page One)
ruary 3. The entire television show
for that date will be made up of
talent winning the Amateur Show.
“Competition in the Lions Ama
tér Show is always keen,” Heary
staled “and we felt that the win
ners should be presented to a
much larger audience than can be
gccommodated in the Fine Arts
Auditorium. So plans were made
so ' the Atlanta showing.”
Approximately 25 acts are to be
presented in the Amateur Show,
and six of them are to be awarded
some S3OO in prizes. Top winners
ih cach of three divisions win SIOO
ings bonds and second place
?finers in the three divisions are
'warded $25 savings bonds.
! Divisions of the show are:
oung pecple under 16 years of
xgc, adults over 16 years of age,
#nd University of Georgia stu
dents.
. Profits from the show go to
tlromote sight conservation work
the Athens and Clarke County
area.
*__.__._—..___.N_”_.. i e —————— —
Funeral Notice
{VESTER.—Died Tuesday, Janu
. a~y 15th, at his home in Win
¢ terville, Ga.,, Mr. Thomas L.
| Ivesier. He is survived by his
! wife, Mrs. Lizzie Gabriel Ives
{ ter; six daughters, Mrs. H. D.
¢ LaCount, Athens; Mrs. C. B.
. Rogers, Orlando, Fla.; Mrs. Mat
| 4 Stewart, Winterville; Mrs. H.
i D. Helton, Greenwood, S. C,;
i Mrs. A. C. Carter, Jacksonville,
. Fla.; Mrs. Bill Ewing, Santa
| Monica, Caiif.; three sons, Mr.
i G. L. Ivester, Athens; Mr. Oneal
| Ivester, Hogansville; Mr. Roy B.
. Ivester, Los Angeles, Calif,;
| four sisters, Mrs. Wesberry Hol
" brook, Clarkesville; Mrs. Dora
| Holbrook, South Carolina; Mrs.
EWinnie Shirley, High Point, N.
£ C.; Mrs. Lois Read, Seattle,
| Wasi.; and one brother, Mr. P,
-L. Ivester, Waynesboro. The
funeral was this, Wednesday
. afternoon, January 16th, at
. three o’'clock fromr the Winter
| ville Methodist Church. The fol
lowing gentlemen served as
| pallbearers: Mr. A. V. Gunter,
Mr. T. W. Morrison, Mr. G. C.
' Carnes, Mr. Obie Dawson, Mr.
. C. §. Coile, Mr. G. C. Pittard,
Mr. J. C. Fleeman and Mr. J. R.
Dawson. Rev. J. S. King and
Rew. Jesse Knight officiated. In
terment was in Winterville cem
etery. Bernstein Funeral Home.
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SOLD AT ALL LEADING DRUG STORES
THE BOPE CO., 3015 Waverly, E. St. Louis, Ilinois.
Public Health Service Milk Code.
Approved Distributors of Grade
A milk and milk products.
Athens Cooperative Creamery,
198 West Hancock Avenue, Ath
ens, Georgia.
WEDFORD W. BROWN, M. D,,
Commissioner of Health,
Clarke County, Georgia, ji6
|
News Of Fires,
ews Ires,
-
Accidents, And
| ’
t . .
Police Action
g 9
i BY TOM BROWN
Chief Clarence Roberts and De
tective Walter MecKinnon last
night placed one of the inflamma
ble sweaters on a coat hanger and
set fire to it. According to Chief
Roberts, the sweater was com
pletely consumed by the blaze in
55 seconds.
Legisiafure
(Contirued From Page Onue)
any disputes,
Williams Sets Stage
Sen. Williams, who criticized
the administration bill, set the
stage for a floor fight on the issue
by introducing a counter measure.
1t would strip state executive eom
mittees of the various political
parties—particularly the Demo
cratic Party-——of authority to nom
inate the Presidential electors. It
also would require names of all
presidential candidates to be put
on the ballot.
The property tax easure was
the only major action in either
House yesterday. The Senate
spent most of its brief session dis
cussing a report by the joint com
mittee investigating the State Wel
fore Department.
But the basis for future furious
action was formed l:gy introduction
of more than 100 bills in the two
houses.
In addition to Sen. Williams’
election bill, the Senate got others
to require periodic inspection of
all motor vehicles, give state in=
come tax concessions to aged and
blind persons, and exempt avia
tion fuel from the state gasoline
tax.
Several measures proposing var
ious plans for reorganizing the
State Department of Education
and several weeks to put certain
exemptions into the sales tax were
among the House introductions.
(Continued From Page One)
bara Hunnius, Jean Messer, Mary
Nash, Carey O'Kelley, Elsa Par
kleford, and Joyce Williams.
Rosalind David
Freshmen are Joan Bell, Rosa
lind David, Nancy Buits, Cissy
Corker, Demaris Fowler, Ann Cox,
Marion Lumpkin, and Pat Rigsby.
Seniors will wear long formals;
Juniors, short formals; sopho
mores, afternoon dresses;, and
freshmen, sweaters and skirts.
The state flower of Arkansas,
the 25th state admitted into the
Union, is the apple blossom.
Colon lllustrations
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COLON
ABNORMAL COLON. Beware of this con
| dition which may lead to complications.
oz
: £3 ?@TQ!'-'QCE + B
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APPENOIXY . USRI
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WHITE PQWDER'__Darrcll Robinson, left, and Jack Reddish sprayed snow hitting into turns on Baldy
Mnunt;om,‘ Sun Valley, Ida., where the Salt Lake la_ds and their United States teammates underwent
preliménary training for the Winter Olympies, hard by Oslo, Morway, Feb. 14-25. (NEA)
Micholson Speaks To Kiwanians
On His Experiences At Oxford
Speaking on three aspects of
life at Oxford University in Eng
land, Homer Nicholson, jr., ad
dressed members of Athens Kiwa
nis Club at their regular weekly
luncheon meeting in Georgian
Hotel yesterday at one o’clock.
Mr. Nicholson, who is currently
engaged in the completion of
work toward his dectorate at Van~
derbilt, has spent the past three
years at Oxford. He is a graduate
of Athens High School and of the
University of Georgia. He received
his master's degree at Vanderbilt
and had begun work there toward
his doctorate when he received a
scholarship to Oxford. At the
present time he is writing his dis
sertation for the Ph.D. degree, He
is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Homer
Nicholson, sr.
The speaker was introduced by
Professor U. H. Davenport.
Concerning himself with the
academic, athletic and social
phases of Oxford life from the
student’s standpoint, Mr. Nichol
son emrphasized the vast differen
ces which exist between the “Ox
ford way” and the various sys
tems of American colleges and
universities and the provincial in
stitutions of higher Ilearning in
England.
Takes Time
“I think I had been at Oxford
for two years or more before I
really came to know what Oxford
life is like,” he stated. .
The tutorial system, which
places the responsibility for gain
ing knowledge directly on the stu
dent, is employed at Oxford, ac
cording to Mr. Nicholson. The stu
dent reads, or studies only one
subject while at Oxford, and he is
assisted in his efforts by a tutor,
known as a doen, who more or less
supervises the student's program.
The usual arrangement consists of
weekly meetings of students and
their respective dons for the pur
pose of reading, discussing and, if
possible, profiting from these pa
pers.
“Thus the student is left to his
own devices,” the speaker stated.
“The system naturally has its ad
vantages and its disadvantages as
do all systemrs. If the student is
assigned an excellent don, he
gains from the experience; on the
other hand, he is stuck with an in
ferior tutor throughout his stay at
Oxford.
One Exam
“There are no examipgations at
Oxford until the final one, which
is nothing short of a medieval
form of torture.” Here again Mr.
Nicholson pointed out advantages
and disadvantages, the lack of the
necessity for temporary learning
being representative of the former
and the torturous process (involv
ing clothing regulations and long,
intensive examination periods)
leaning toward the disadvantag
eous.
Lectures are given, but they are
public lectures, and they are not
too well attended since most dons
advise their students that time
gpent in reading is more valuable.
The speaker pointed out that the
club system, which is really the
heart of college life at Oxford, is
responsible for the breadth of the
Oxford student’s learning. The
college clubs are usually organized
and directed by students who
command the services of the most
brilliant men in various fields for
the purpose of discussing various
given subjects,
The sports or athletic program
at Oxford is strictly amateur and
is directed toward participation
rather than toward spectator in
terest. Almost no one studies in
the afternoons between the hours
of three and five because virtu
ally everyone is out “playing
something, rain or shine.” Rowing
is perhaps the most popular sports.
Teams in all sports are usually
coached by students, but may be
coached by dons on occasion,
Secial Life
“The social life at Oxford is in
credible,” Mr. Nicholson stated,
“in that hardly anyone can pass
FUNERAL NOTICE
(COLORED)
CHRISTOPHER, MASTER JOHN
NIE MICHAEL. — The re'atives
and friends of Mr, and Mrs, Hill
Christooher, Master Robert
Louis Christopher, Little Miss
Martha Ann Christopher, Mas
ter Doris Christopher, Little
Miss Dorothy Christopher, Mrs.
Matilda Christopher, Mr. and
Mrs. Osear Spellman, all of
Fthens, Ga.; eight uncles and
e ght aunts, are invited ot at
tsad the funeral of Master
Jbohnnie Michael Christopher,
Thursday, January 17, 1952, at
1:30 p. m. from the graveside at
the St. Luke A. M. E. Church,
Lexington Road. Rev. R. A. Hall
will ‘officiate. Intermrent church
yard. Mack & Payne Funeral
Home.
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
an entire day without engaging in
four, five or more social occas
ions.” These occasions may arise
on the slightest provocation, it
seems, one of the most unusual
taking place during the bath, so
to speak. The bath roonr is heated
only in the afternoons during
three days of the week, and the
students make a social occasion of
their tri-weekiy baths by engaging
in conversation with their friends
and intellectual intimates both in
the period of preparation for and
during the bath.
The center of Oxfdrd college
life, according to the speaker, is
the junior common room of the
respective colleges. This room is
simply a large lounge in which a
fire purns constantly and in which
is to be found a washbasin and
hot water. Since the individual
student is allowed to have fire in
his own room during only three
hours of the day and since he is
unable to obtain hot water in his
room without heating it for him
self during the allotted three-hour
period for room fires, the junior
common roonr is quite naturally a
central gathering place; however,
the room serves primarily as the
most likely spot for students to
meet and exchange ideas and
thoughts,
In closing the speaker mention
ed the scouts, men who serve the
students throughout their stay at
Oxord, the college bar, where stu
dents gather for beer prior to and
after the evening meal; and wall
climbing.
Wall climbing, it seems, is a
sport which has evolved over the
years. The college dormitory doors
are locked at nine o’clock in the
evening and are pernranently bar
red for the night at midnight. The
student who arrives at the college
after this latter hour finds him
self hopelessly locked out at the
door and has but one alternative
—to climb the college walls. Proc
tors and other students attempt to
prevent the student from climbing
and thus the sport evolves.
“It's really quite exciting,” the
speaker declared.
Homer Nicholson, sr., father of
the speaker and Clarke county
engineer, was a guest at the lunch
eon and was introduced by Louis
Griffith, a member of the club.
John Bondurant, Kiwanis presi
dent, presided.
(Continued From Page One)
the administration’s foreign policy,
the party can’t be successful in
this year’s presidential election.”
The term “Fair Deal” has been
applied by the President generally
to his domestic program. It in
cludes such eontroversial proposals
as civil rights and national health
insurance.
Humphrey Views
Among Democrats Humphrey
has said would make good presi
dential nominees if Mr. Truman
doesn’t run again are Vice Presi
dent Barkley, Supreme Court
Chief Justice Vinson, Gov. Adlai
Stevenson of Illinois and Senator
Kefauver (D.-Tenn.).
Kefauver is far from seeing eye
to-eye with Humphrey on civil
rights, but Humphrey indicated a
solution on that issue might be
found.
Kefauver talked politics with
Mr. Truman for 30 minutes yes
terday and reiterated later he
(Kefauver) plans to announce
about Feb. 1 whether he will seek
the Democratic presidential nomi
nation.
The Tennessean would not say
whether he got any indication of
Mr. Truman's plans about running
again.
On the Republican side, Senator
Lodge (R.-Mass.) appointed Ar
thur H. Vandenberg, jr., son of
the late Republican senator from
Michigan, to head a national “Ci
tiZens for Eisenhower” committee.
Lodge is campaign manager for
the Republican group backing Gen.
Eisenhower for the party's presi
dential nomination.
SWIMMING TOLL
Richard Halliburton once swam
from the Atlanta to the Pacific
through the Pamana Canal. He
paid the government 36 cents for
toll charge, based on his tonage,
and it was necessary to put the
great locks in operation for him.
o Fiery Smarting
of minor
Quick use of this soothing ointment
gives wenderful rell . Keepit handy.
RESIKOL
Dr. Henri Peyre
To Speak Here
Dr. Henri Peyre, Sterling Pro
fessor of French at Yale Universi
ty, will be a visitor on the Uni
versity of Georgia campus Thurs
day and Friday.
The noted schglar is scheduled
to speak several times during his
visit here. One of his lectures
will be es interest to the general
public; one will be in French; and
a third will be at a private dinner
party.
Dr. Peyre will be the guest of
the University’s Department of
Modern Foreign Languages while
on the campus.
He will speak at 11 o’clock Fri
day morning, Jan. 18, in the Uni
versity Chapel on “America and
France Today.” Dr. Peyre has lec
tured frequently throughout the
country on post-war conditions in
France. This lectute is open to
the public.
He will speak again at 3:30 Fri
day afternoon in Park Hall on
“RBalzac: Romancier.” This lecture
will be in French,
Thursday night Dr. Peyre will
speak at a private dinner party in
a local hotel on “Comparative Lit
erature: Its Present and Future.”
Dr. Peyre, a native of France, is
considered to be one of this coun
try’s truly well-read scholars. He
has headed the department of
French at Yale since 1939.
. .
Field Trial
Progresses;
v
.
Birds Scarce
WAYNESBORO, Ga., Jan. 16—
(AP)—Fourteen bird dogs ran
yesterday in the open all-age stake
of the Georgia Field Trial Associ
ation but a scarcity of quail
handicapped their showing.
In the opening brace during the
morning, only two dogs found
birds. One of them was OMI,
owned by Ed Benton and handled
by Paul Mattern of Waynesboro.
The other was Hillbright Mickey,
owned by M. G. Dudley and
handled by Joe McCall of Waynes
boro.
In the fifth brace during the
aftérnoon. Stanton’s Man, owned
by W. Little and handled by Her
man Smith of Hatchichubee, Ala.,
found a covey in a heavy thicket
a few moments before he was or
dered out. This dog had already
penalized himself by an unproduc-~
tive race.
More than half of the original
field uof 59 dogs remain to show.
Up to now, a favorite for top posi
tion is tip top fancy, a pointer
female owned by Raymond
Hoagland of Cartersville, Ga., and
handled by George Crangle of
Waynesboro.
Also well up in the running be
cause of his excellent showing in
Monday’'s final brace is Eufala’s
Mister Ben, a pointer from the
Kennel of Guy Stancil of Gaines
ville. His handler is Bill Etchells
of Leesburg.
Another contender is Hootin’
Tootin’ Newton, owned by Euclid
Claussen and handled by Fred
Bevins of Waynesboro. Hootin’
Tootin’ found birds three times. |
Napinka's Lil Sis, owned by Ger
ry Achbenbach of Vidalia, was a
good ground runner in today’s
13th brace but she failed to find |
a covey for her handler, George |
Crangle, |
(Continued From Page One)
it out told how the gas hit some
possengers.
They said about 60 were over
come temporarily and about 27
were litter patients.
Later, however, Dr. Lawrence
Nelson of Truckee returned from
the train and said all but a few
had recovered. He rode a dog
sled 12 miles and a.Weasel five
and a half miles to get in.
The four servicemen are Air
Force Pfe. Howard Jones of Stu
art, la.; Aviation Machinist’s Mate
Harold A. Norcross of Denver; E.
A. Snail, a navy man, Jeannette,
Pa., and A. J. Richter of Soda
Springs, Calif.
They told how they pushed into
compartments to yank victims out
for respiration, often having to be
rescued themselves.
All praised a Dr. Roehll, who
worked tirelessly against the gas.
He was believed to be Dr. Walter
Henry Roehll of Middletown,
Ohio.
The 15-car City of San Francis
co was out of Chicago. 1t operates
over Chicago and Northwestern
lines to Omaha, over Union Paci
fic from Omaha to Ogden, Utah,
.and Southern Pacific to San I'ran~
eisco.
Ivester Service
Services for Thomas L. Ivester
were conducted this afternoon at
3 o'clock from Winterville Meth
odist Church with Rev. J. S. King
and Rev. {gsse Knight officiating.
Burial followed in Winterville
cemetery, Bernstein Funeral Home
in charge of arrangements.
Pallbearers were A. V. Gunter,
T. W. Morrison, G. C. Carnes, Obie
Dawson, C. S. Coile, G. C. Pittard,
J. C. Fleeman and J. R. Dawson.
Mr. Ivester, a well known resi
dent of Winterville, died at his
honre Tuesday after an illness of
s«;veral weeks. He was 75 years
old.
Mr. Ivester is survived by his
wife, Mrs. Lizzie Gabriel Ivester,
Winterville; six daughters, Mrs. H.
D. LaCount, Athens; Mrs. C. B.
Rogers, Orlando, Fla.; Mrs. Mat
tie Stewart, Winterville; Mrs. H.
D. Helton, Greenwood, S. C.; Mrs.
A. C. Carter, Jacksonville, Fla.;
Mrs. Bill Ewing, Santa Monica,
Calif.; three sons, G. L. Ivester,
Athens; O’'Neal Ivester, Hogans
ville, and Roy B. Ivester, Los An
geles, Calif.; four sisters, Mrs.
Mrs. Wesberry Holbrook, Clark
esville; Mr. Dora Holbrook, South
Carolina; Mrs. Winnie Shirley,
High Point, N. C., and Mrs. Lois
Read, Seattle, Wash.; and one bro
ther, P. L. Ivester, Waynesboro.
A native of Habersham county,
Georgia, Mr. Ivester had lived in
Winterville for the past twenty
years, where he was a member of
the Methodist Church.
s i %
Truman
(Continued From Page One)
of inflationary pressures this year,
assuming no relaxation of controls.
“But any relaxation would in
crease the possibility of another
inflationary upsurge,” the council
wrote, “which could be even more
serious than that of mid-1950 or
a year ago because it would start
from tighter conditions of supply
in many sectors of the economy.”
As for higher taxes, the council
said there is a limit beyond which
rate increases may be “unwise,”
because they dampen business in
centive and perhaps even reduce
earnings to the point of reducing
the tax yield. The proposed new
increase does not reach that limit,
the council held.
Tax boosts intended to curb in
flation may also be self-defeating,
the council said, to the extent that
they “heighten the demand for
higher wages and for larger gross
business profits, which is an infla
tionary aspect.”
Contrels Needed
Price-wage controls are needed,
the council said, along with the
tax and credit control weapons
against inflation.
~ Mr. Truman’s twelve-point le
gislative program evidently was
framed with the hazard of in
flation uppermost in mind. He
called on Congress to:
- 1. Renew the defense produc
tion act for two years beyond June
30, without watering down the
priority and allocation power. He
asked these major changes:
Elimination of the Capehart and
Herlong amendments of last year
which, in Mr. Truman’s view,
“seriously weakened” price ceil
ings; restoration of full authority
to control consumer easy-payment
credit; restoration of beef slaugh
ter controls; and a strengthened
system of defense loans, tax bene
fits and loan guarantees to en
courage plant expansion.
2. Continue foreign aid, both
military and economic; repeal the
defense production act ban on the
import of certain foreign goods.
3. Provide funds for the newly
created small defense plants ad
ministration. It lacks money both
to build a staff for the aiding of
small business, and to take prime
defense contracts and subcontract
them to small firms.
4. Approve the St. Lawrence
seaway and power project and
some other development projects.
5. Provide for “needed housing
and community facilities” in de
fense areas.
6. Revise the Taft-Hartley act
so that it will not hamper “unin
terrupted production.” (before
Korea, Mr. Truman demanded
outright repeal; however, this
would remove machinery for set
tling strikes in essential indus
tries.)
7. Repeal the “sliding scale”
provisions in the farm price sup
port laws; write a “workable” sup
port program for perishable foods;
revise the tax on cooperatives to
exempt newly organized farm co
ops. The sliding scale formula,
officials fear, may work against
the desired expansion of grain and
other food production. The sup
port price drops from 90 per cent
of parity to 75 per cent when pro
duction reaches a certain level.
Farmers, therefore, tend to cur
tail planting. (Parity is a formula
designed to equalize a farmer’s
profits with his expenses).
Additional Revenues
8. Provide “at least enough addi
tional revenues to reach the reve
nue goal proposed last year, by
eliminating loopholes and special
privileges, and by tax rate in
creases.”
9. Give the Federal Reserve
power to increase the funds held
as “reserves” against loans, there
by limiting bank lending; also pro
vide authority to curb speculation
by controlling margins, or down
payments, on the commodity ex
changes.
10. Raise Social Security bene
fits; extend old age insurance to
farmers and others; extend unem
ployment compensation so more
workers and enlarge the amount
and duration of jobless pay. _
11. Approve federal aid to edu-
SOOTHES-PROTECTS-RELIEVES
T BURNS - SCRAPES
womßune) SCALDS - SIMPLE CUTS
R IBITA Minor SKIN IRRITATIONS
e CHAFED SKIN
g el L 8 8=
WORLD'S LARGEST SELLIRE PETROLEUM JELLY AT 104
MAKE THIS HOME RECIPE
TO TAKE OFF UGLY FAT
It's simple. It's amazing, how
quickly one may lose pounds of
bulky, -wguy fat right in your
own home, Make this recipe your
self, It's m?‘-—-‘fi troudle at all
and costs little. contains noth«
ing harmful, Just go to your drug
:m.-dflm!urmu;o(
liquid ANARO OConcentrate, Pouwr
this into & pint bottle u? add
enough ,gnnenu juice to fill the
bottle. on take two tablespoons
ful twice a day. That's all there
is to it.
It the very first bottle doesn't
show the simple, easy way to lose
cation, both to help meet operat-~
ing costs and to aid school con
struction. e EO
12. Authorize federal aid for
medical education, and for
strengthening local public health
services,
llaW. M. S. Met
Monday
With Mrs. Stovall
Ila WMS met Monday, Jan. 14
with Mrs. G. N. Stovall with
thirteen members present.
The program was on “Good
News For All Who Seek” and led
by Mrs. A. E. Ginn. Mrs. Calvin
Langford gave the devotional fol
lowed by a prayer by Mrs. A. K.
Bennett.
Anne Stovall sang a solo, “Make
Me A Channel Of Blessing”. Re
ports were given during the bus
iness session.
The February meeting will be
held with Mrs. Obe Smith and
Mrs. Calvin Langford is to be in
charge of the program.
The hostess served refreshments
during the social hour.
Publicity Chairman.
In The
Service
GREAT LAKES, lllinois—Serv
ing with Air Transport Squadron
2, based at the U. S. Naval Air
Station, Alameda, Calif., is Joseph
A. McGarity, jr., aviation machin
ist’s mate airman, USN, son of Dr.
and Mrs. J. A. McGarity eof the
Holman Hotel, Athens, Ga.
Before entering the Navy, Mc-
Garity attended Watkinsville High
School.
The Squadron flies giant Martin
“Mars” seaplanes from Alameda
to Hawaii carrying priority mili
tary cargo and passengers. The
“Mars,” which is capable of carry
ing 301 passengers, has established
a non-stop record for seaplanes on
a 4,748 mile fling from Honolulu
to Chicago.
3RD ARMORED DIVISION,
Fort Knox — Pvt. Howard B.
Stroud, 21, son of Mr. and Mrs.
George Stroud, Box 121, has com
pleted Army Basic Training con
ducted by the 3rd Armored Di
vision, here.
During his sixteen weeks of in
tensive training, Pvt. Stroud at
tended classes on Indoctrination,
General Military Subjects and had
practical work in combat skills
and the firing of basic army weap
ons—the M-1 rifle, carbine, .45
pistol and grenades.
As a prospective tank erewman,
Pvt. Stroud received special train
ing in tank crew platoon tactics
and driving and maintenance of
vehicles.
The Pin Curler
Feud is Ended
ANTIOCH, Calif, Jan. 16 —
(AP)—The pin curler feud is over.
Theola Barton can wear ’em to
high school if she insists.
She does.
Monday she came back to school
for the first time since last March.
She was permitted to stay.
In March, the teacher sent her
home to “get dressed.” Her irate
parents kept her there. They
finally were cited for keeping her
out of school.
Justice Yates F. Hamm fined
the parents $lO each last Friday.
The parents, Mr. and Mrs. Amos
Barton, say thy’ll go to jail before
they’ll pay.
But, anyhow, Theola’s in classes
again.
Legion Home
Has Laundry
NEW YORK, Jan. 16—(AP)—
Part of an American Legion club
house in Brooklyn is now serving
as a Chinese laundry.
Ing Sinn, 56, the laundry pro
prietor, is greeting customers in
the reception room of the J. W.
Person post’s three-story building.
His equipment is in the clubhouse
basement.
The veteran, a member of the
post, moved in Monday at the bid
ding of fellow members of the Le
gion. They acted after learning
he had been evicted from his
laundry-home of the past 12 years.
The laundryman, a veteran of
the World War I battle of the Ar
gonne, had to move when his jand
lord said he wanted to use his
quarters, |
MISS WANDA SCHOOL OF DANCING
Classes for Ladies Begin
Monday, January 21st. Tap, Ballet, Calathenics
and Modeling. $3 Monthly.
Some enroliments now cpen for children.
— For Further Information Call —
YWCA Phone 976
' WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 16, 1952,
bulky fat and help r dn alepder,
more graceful cul?v“: & l‘.“cfble
pounds and inches of emcess fat
don't just seem to disappear aAlmost
like magie from neek, chin, arms,
bust, abdomen, hips, calk and
ankles, just return the G-‘“ bot
tle to the manufacturer for your
money back, Follow the easy way
endorsed by many who have tried
this plan and help brhW, allur
ing curves and grace ender -
ness. Note how quiekly bloat dis
appears—how much better you fosl,
More allve, youthful appearing and
active,
M And M Class
Plan Party
For Thursday
The M. and M. Sunday Schoo!
Class of the First Baptist Church
will have a party at the home of
Mrs. Ed Massey, who is the teach.
er.
The meeting will be held or
Thursday, January 17, at 8 o'clock
in the evening and all members
are cordially li.nvited‘ to attend.
.
Tea Today Honors
Mrs. Stickles,
Visiting Artist
Mrs. William Stickles, of Long
Island, New York, will give two
demonstrations and lectures
Thursday in Dawson Hall. “Na
ture’s Gift to the Arranger” will
be the subject of the 10 a. m. ses
sion, with “Period Arrangements”
as the topic at 2 p. m.
~ Mrs. Stickles comes to this com
munity highly recommended. She
is instructor of the New York
Botanical Society and adviser to
the New York Flower Associa
tion.
A tea honoring Mrs. Stickles
will be given this afternoon from
5 to 6 at the home of President
and Mrs. Omer C. Aderhold.
A large gathering is expected
for this event, which is sponsored
by the North Georgia Judges of
Flower Shows. Among the group
present for the series will be a
number of outstanding horticultu
rists.
Admission to these lectures is
one dollar for the public and fifty
cents for student.s and faculty.
* *®
Painting By Millie
Dearing Shown
i The wanderings of people are al
ways interesting to their friends
and sometimes the wanderings of
paintings are hard to explain.
When Miss Millie Dearing was
arranging her paintings at the
| Athens Regional Library, where
' they are on display for two weeks,
it happened that Paul Johnson,
now a University of Georgia stu
dent, came into the Regional Li
| brary and exclaimed over a mag
nolia painting being placed on the
wall. He said the picture and the
name of the artist were strangely
familiar to him. He recalled that
he was in North Africa during the
second World War, and one of his
’camping places was in Casablan
ca.
One evening he visited the Offi
cers’ Club and noticed an Air
Corps officer was hanging a wa
tercolor painting of a magnolia in
a conspicuous place in the “club
house. The officer explained that
a number of Southerners were
‘stationed there and he had writ
ten to his. wife to send him some
'thing that would appeal to these
‘boys from the South. She sent
‘him the painting of a magnolia,
because it is so typically Southern.
The watercolor painting was by
Millie Dearing of Athens, Ga.
REWITTEN LATER
The official record of the pro
ceedings at the meeting of an or
ganized body originally was
called the minutes because it first
was taken down in minute or small
writing, to be transcribed later in
a large and more careful hand.
to relieve distress of
No New Anticold Pill Can Relieve
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g Child's Mild Musterole is
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b can relieve eoughs and local
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So at the first sign—rub your child’s
chest with Musterole. It not only promptly
relieves distress but breaks up loeal con
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usterole is SAFE. 3
o 8 29 4
Child's Mild
TR
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