Newspaper Page Text
wEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1952.
5 7% _Dr. Logan's Wi
‘??»‘ ’) !’% o .r?;-f-'-‘ * an s lFe
7 ; L:;d‘u '.-:' '-:: //'-:.5-‘-;__.
S T e
;: | _;] il Copyright 1951 by Diana Gaines, Use
THE STORY: Jennet Logan,
<hose well-ordered life is upset
I her aitraction toward a young
i charming biophysicist, Peter
curinoy, decides to coniribute to
pater's pet project of sium clear
"+ and then never see him alene
o Although Jenmet has re
" ned faithful to her aging and
! puband, Dr. Gus Logan, she
.-nnot keep Peter Surinov out of
+r thouzhts. Dr. Logan, not sus
o oting his wife’s infatuation, has
! oorted Peter in a move by
\Vaxwell Cota, head of the hos
.l iy oust the young mah who
i engaged in research. Jennet
. .» inherited for SI2OO and has a
‘s a adiamond lavaliere which
\E s
JLDER FOLKS with
ITCHENG SKIN
‘ @,-. 5L
v the nagzing, maddening, persist
o itelrof dby skin, so common 0 folks
pus: middle age, Resinol Ointment is a
gnacial, 80 yLhing relief. Acts in E]flCO of
- sing natural skin oils — works fast,
o+ comnfort lasts, How good it feels not
‘ “jave io scratch and scratch, Get
Sheinol and get relief, All drug stores,
hihans lodge
No. 790
B.P. 0. Elks.
1260 South Milledge Ave.
\leets on 2nd and 4th Thurs
jays at 8:00 P. M. each monti.
¢ree suppers for members in
sood standing from 6 to 7:45
)n meeting nights.
Our dining room is open every
day except Monday, for Elks,
their dadies and guests.
P. S. JOHNSON,
SECRETARY
Phone 790.
On Yowr Signatuwre Only
e UP TO S2OOO
* e ONE-VISIT SERVICE '-
e SELECT YOUR OWN |
: REPAYMENT PLAN
¢ PHONE FIRST FOR _
: IMMEDIATE SERVICE
¢ COME IN AND GET IT
. . . TODAY!
LOAN & INVESTMENT CORPORATION
HACKLEFORD BLDG., ROOMS 102-104, 215 COLLEGE AVE,
ATHENS, GA., - TELEPHONE 1371
Serving the South for 25 Years
i COMMUNITY INVESTMENT CERTIFICATES PAY 3% PER ANNUM
AN P Ricn LIS B
i e X O S e
DEREE AR R R
PR USRS R e 8 3 ¥ . S
ER TR DA RS Y R
By "% e reon Gl o
R e R e S
e wmae e y
BaRaL A O
Ene 1‘ e R e
p—— e T £
L BECSERG f % .
k G S Y =
g 00l f : R ;
i B &.
po e 3
am e . :
b e ¥ Qe .
< 5 RS A R 4 »
. 2 R %
S PR o
@0 b oo
i e - Boin s g
Rty b :
5 e :
look lovelier in 24 hours ....;i.«
Here's one hand cream that’s made
®specially te help hands that work!
® I your present hand cream isn’t helping you much,
faybe that's because it’s made for lady-of-leisure
hands. But, hands that go through a daily routine of
'k'“i"fl‘wfl'hing-nookin( + +» or hands that keep busy
l an offics . , , need something special. Give them
Nm‘_’““‘" 2-way medicated carel -
Heips heal—Helps beautify! Noxzema is especially
:‘d? t help sore, unattractive working hands look
velior these fwo important ways: .
) Helns heal tiny ewts and eracks in the skin with its
¥nique medicated formulal
A Heips bands feel sotter—look smoother and whiter—
*uPplies a light film of oil-and-moisture to skin’s
'urfac.l
And Noxsema is greaseless — doesn’t stain. It's 8
¥iow-white cream that vanishes quickly.
. Ty éreaseless, medicated Noxzema on your hands.
In clinica] tests, Noxzema helped the red, rough,
sl2pped hands of 9 out of 10 women look lovelier—
often within 24 hours)
certified check made out which
she endorses to Peter. She gives
him the check and tells him she
must never see him alone again,
# ¥ ®
XX
ALL the way back to the hos
jital, Jennet Logan and Peter
Surinov chatted, company - man
nered, .as if a chaperone were
present. Anybody could have lis
tened. She asked him with crisp
politeness about his new -experi
ments and he, displaying his com
posure like hard-won armor, ex
plained almost too fully.
“The emphasis of research in
view of the world situation,” he
told her, “has switched from the
cure of cancer to an antidote for
the effects of atomic bombing. I
mean the effects on people—mili
tary and civilian. Now, it’s been
known that when you treat pa
tients who have blood diseases
with X-ray over the spleen, you
destroy many of the abnormal
white blood cells throughout the
body... .»”
“I hate to be so elementary but
what, pray, is the spleen?”
“It’s an organ under the ribs
on the left side about the size of
a hand, similar in consistency to
the liver. It acts as a blood filter.
Now some researchers at the Uni
versity of Chicago reasoned that
the spleen must contain some pro
tective mechanism or substance
which enables the body to with
stand large doses of radiation. To
prove this point, they operated on
a hundred animals, They took the
spleen out of the adbomen, but
left it connected—they just exte
riorized the spleen so that it could
be covered by a lead box. Then
they irradiated the hundred ani
mals " .
“Caught with their spleens
down?” she cracked sulkily:
“ . . and they found that the
total dose necessary to kill 50 per
cent of these animals was five to
six times greater than when the
spleen was 'not protected by lead.’
Jennet was awed in spite of the
mental pout which his lecture
voice evoked, “You mean that if
we all wore little lead shields
over our spleens .during an atom
S ,::::';.';:i:;::!_:i,i:;:- Il i A
e 0 B = e
G R v;-:.;.;.::.{,/,_’/(, A G
G e e e o
G S u,,:f,/,’ e i ','{-I':':2s’ i ,’ _':/1%_;:'.";‘;:‘
e e, e B
o i é///, .
B TR G L Gl i
'._.,';v.;::::'uv-%*:’i'..»t:.::i AR s ¢ o
S g e, p: S
s T (.
e G N
Y o A A S,
S G R e Y 277
o RR - e e
T - iv e 4 T
b %‘? w2y TF A
e e
G TAI e
BG o s
G ey oqs )
G ; R e Gt 3|
I RN gy
R R 53 3 7 T s B
e e ’;" S 4 w "1///”".’:747'- i g
i Rs N A R o B AR
e it N G
G R Ay s
G Wi T oy P
Ti}{ i e o
ss i T W ,/‘;,.{//,:-_;;i;:;:‘:vf"*r-‘v‘»;i
S R i &3 e
B s ,”z*f&fil,l‘% 5 o b‘{ ke
G "(}’f:{’,.of‘/f’ g AR 3
R O i 3 3 RI, i 3
. s kg
bT e G
i Goy SR S
s G
a 0 g o
Gaew e R R 74
R s
Mrs. Marguerite Macdonald vl
says: ‘‘Cooking, washing and k
cleaning leave my hands sore and & Z %
cracked, But Noxzema quickly P 74 3
soothes them — helps keep them ,/w’ % #
looking smooth, people assume I e 3
have household help!”’ G %
T ]
B e
Noxzema works—or your money back! Try Noxzema
on your hands tonight. 1f you don’t see improvement
—in 24 hours—return jar to Noxzema, Baltimore. Your
money will be refunded.
) ko
S So you can see for yourself how
o o wonderful Noxzema is for hands|
B vge;gwfi 40¢ iar of NOXZEMA
iB P ¢k
s plus
oy QY
At asy drug or cosmetic counter. Limited time only!
T
A TR e e —
. e e e
. s R e " ]
is£s% R @ & 3 ?
& i T—— F ?fi SAy 3 § Saae T 3
AR PR S L SBN & Bl . :
il TR oW §T i "‘g.w« — 3 o Sl T 3
' g e B e % A !
; iey Ly F ¥ § ;TR {
&b PR A bSO AR o R " -RS B
v b oX R RUHY % .X S Wol 3 A S A o
TRe Bot o, Ro LT §
SRR T . U RS ST 4R e X {
% S : SRR & 3 i 3 o 9 §
v B iy s : ; o B \ }
-BBt TR St A ¢ 3 g : o 5 iy
< O k v(' ‘é % S &
¢ LRSS, s ¥ & $ X } L
SRR 8 ’ A S g k&» \"«.S L REERaR
FEETE N G SRR R % : y B i S 8 3 ;
R 3ot X e SRR f‘ v 3 % i g
. SIS RS e e Re e ¥
e, i R Sl Lol el L
: 4 § & R A E b . b
RLe - B -
Ve R b e Rl o B ittt g )
S B R AR &
ks . SRS BEE e . S SRR . &
i R G b oal s
e : e LR %\\\ b § #
o : §BO i B B § 3 ‘ ;
RIS o BRRRS B FTDRRB
W bR ; Y
. : R b R SRR
Fi B R S P CORERN AR
o et oR AT sLR xF EE Sl k¥ o o
Bk AR RS T R : SR b il IR TR T R 3 - S
S R i R Met S R R SE S e
248 i S% ’ R 480 R B ¥ .
B o Wf:v'f??*‘ RO i SRR ~’:?'i’*%‘;v % O S i
e L RR R SRR SN A L R
o oe TS ke - "\* :
B R Moo R \\*@ S L W
BT T Y o R SRR S *@\ !
ST g e oo T TR
TR e SRR PR We e e @
I B S e B e - Lo ol SRR Re O R SRR et )
o T ST G L
FORMER KLANSMEN ARRESTED—Ten
former Ku Klux Klansmen line up at the
Fayetteville, N. C., courthouse after their
arrest on charges of kidnaping and flog
ging a white man and woman. The FBI
said the men were members of the Fair
Bluff Klavern in Columbus county which
was disbanded three weeks ago. Left to
ic bombing, 50 per cent more of
us might live?”
“Well, that’s the principle, yes.
But Dr. Pelletier and ' I figure
there might be an easier way to
do it. We want to find out what
the protective splenic substance
is. We want to get a lot of rats,
remove their spleens, put the
spleens in a press and extract the
suices ', | ¥
Jennet wrinkled her nose.
“Don’t be a female — listen!”
Peter scolded. “Then irradiate
the animals whose spleens we've
removed and immedeliately after=
ward inject them with the extract.
If we’re able to save them from
death then we’ll know that the
extract offers protection to people
who have been exposed to atomic
bombing.”
No one knows of this possibility
but you?”
* * %
PETER smiled indulgently. “In
the field of scienfe there’s al
most no such thing as an original
idea. I got the notion of trying
to isloate the . spleen-juice after
reading some preliminary reports
of the work being done at the
University of Chicago. They’re
probably working on the same
thing. For all we know, ther are
a dozen men throughout the coun
try working on it.”
She slowed to a stop opposite
the walk near his laboratory. “It
sounds very thrilling. I wish you
luck with it,” she said, the non
chalance of her tone turning praise
to patronage.
Peter opened the door and let
himself out. He closed the door
with thoughtful precision and
then leaned on the ledge. looking
at her.
“Your'e not serious about our
not seeing each other any more.”
Jennet tossed her head. “I was
never more serious about any
thing.”
He sighted. “Okay. Have it your
way. You're a strange girl, Jen
net.”
L e
TI"E panic of renunication sub
denly engulfed her. She wished
him gone, but not like this,
not without one loving word or
look that she could use later as
both stimulant and anadyne for
pain.
“Don’t go away saying that.”
He grinned down at her and her
eyes lay on his mouth like lips
“All right. Thanks for having
lunch with me, Mrs. Logan.
Thanks for nothing.”
“Please don’t Peter, There's a
limit.”
“What do you want me to say,
Jennet? You’re afraid to hear
anything.”
Her spurt of anger was the last
foxhole in the jungle of her emo
tions. “Oh, very well. Perhaps
THE BANNER-HER!/
right, front row, are Bob Hayes, 36; Early
L. Brooks, 44 ; Steve Edmund, 26 ; Pittman
Strickland, 29; Sherwood Miller, 27. Back
row, left to right, are Horace Strickland,
41; George Miller, 18; L. W. Worley, 25;
Bobby Brooks, 18; and Ross Enzor, 46.—
(AP Wirephoto.)
SS A R
r b
| ' i e o \‘\;‘“ L
: : i T W o ol
Lol R i
§ { : i g‘ i: 2 A %4 -: .‘}g:ij,;.\. BT
¥ & -‘ : ; .‘.‘:‘ s . i
f - ; s i ‘/;'a:"' ‘ ’ N ¥ E e
j} i B S . e
o Lt B o
o S 5 Ak s S 3 ]
< it \v,i’%s :%’ i o
§ 1 P . s:t,. S
3 o E St e " W s Ging)
:mv, G, S ey - I 4
: **‘% '3'%/:.‘/ F b Gl L T T ;'/ i 4
B i T g’ ‘;"‘:‘S' e E W
* %s’fi”* ¥ Sk b b Y
G o ? S 4 £ D ‘.,‘ i i i 1
&* AP i 7
P 9 eSS t" 3 R g, i
AR TR % o
RN itggfi‘—x& : g, : <
AR .
* #o [, ¥ ks -
% $ ‘)'b’%',‘ ""fvu g S 5 ‘
L L »’;fif"t’} b ; i !
F gt ‘
'sé"f 4 T “*Y” s f_,.*g = £ ;
o b AT : e ! ’
Y. e *‘g,g‘? % *," * % s
P e hpg e Sy A : i !
< 977 S i S R e ] !
C R RO L s so@ ‘ b
WAYWARD SON — Eddie Robinson, jrs (left), son of
actor Edward G. Robinson, shown with his bride, Fran
ces Chisholm, said he was “through taking crumbs”
from his famed father’s table. The youth admitted that
his father had “kicked” him out of the house because he
opposed the youth’s romance with Miss Chisholm.—
(NEA Telephoto.)
I'm being infantile again. Good=-
by, you great big grown-up!”
She drove off with recklessly
competent speed, but the anger
turned to ache as soon as she
could realize that he was gone,
and there is no ache like the ache
of the unspoken and the undone,
(To Be Continued)
Says US Howitzers
Are Out-of-Daie
MEMPHIS, Tenn., Feb. 20 —
(AP)—A returned combat veteran
said Tuesday howitzers used by
U. S. troops in Korea are old and
obsolete and that four of his sol
dier buddies had lost their lives
when one of the big guns explod
ed.
Robert E. Lansdell, jr., 24, a
sergeant in Memphis’ 196th field
artillery battalion, said some of
the 155 mm Howitzers used in Ko
rea were carried over from the
last war.
“When we asked Ordnance to
replace a gun, ordnance just of
fered another old gun in ‘ex
change, so we decided to keep the
ones we had.”
Lansdell said two Memphis
members of the 196th, Cpl. Joel
Troy and Cpl. James Beeman,
were killed when the Howitzers
they were firing at the Reds ex-~
ploded in their faces.
“] was laying wire around the
You Can’t Beat a Medicine That’s GOOD!
RELIEVES A REAL CAUSIE
of A WOMAN’'S NERVOUS
RUN-DOWN CONDITION ‘%
Deficiencies of Vitamins
8.. 8., Niacin and lron
This is the ABSOLUTE TRUTH
No One Can Deny It!
Are you nervous, weak and run
down because of deficiencies of
Vitamins B, Bz, Niacin and Iron
in your system? Then don’t be
satisfied to merely relieve these
symptoms! Because thanks to
HADACOL, you can actually re
lieve a real and underlying cause
of your troubles due to these de
ficiencies. And this is what you
must do if you want real relief and
freedom from such distress.
What's more—continuous use of
HADACOL not only gives conlinu
ous and complete reliel but helps
keep such deficiency-caused nerv
’ ous conditions
¥ g fromcoming
IR back. Let HADA
et COL bring about
e S an amazing im-
B B .
b o SE
R gr TSN ;
l',’ B 7.":‘:‘ I
- B
g; g - H :
g Refuse Substitutes—There’s Only One Genuvine HADACOL
LD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
gun emplacement at the time. Two
other men were killed by the same
explosion.”
He was also on the scene, Lans
dell said, when another Howitzer
exploded and seriously wounded
a gunner.
“] saw him blown straight up
in the air. The only thing that
saved him was his falling into
the camouflage net around the
gun.”
Lansdell told of the terrifie
service required of the guns.
“Sometimes the gun crew
worked on double shifts, firing 24
hours a day.”
“RESURRECTS”
A resurrection plant is a small
moss-like herb, found in Texas
and Mexico. After flowering, it
rolls up into a ball. The dried
plant, when placed in water, un
folds, becoming green and resum
ing growth and therefore seems to
have been “resurrected.”
SCARED TO DEATH
In Arizona, a 1000-acre forest of
junipers suddenly withered and
died. Foresters are unable to ex
plain it, but the Indians say the
trees died of fear, but they are
not in agreement as to what
caused the fright.
CGood posture helps to do what
ever you are doing the easiest way
with less effort and energy.
Success in fruit growing will de~
pend on the selection of adapted
kinds and varieties.
P R
,f”’é? N e
sz e
ey
é o RE
provement in the way you feel,
often within two to three weeks.
HADACOL must be good for s 0
many millions of bottles to be sold.
So if you are weak, run-down
and rarvous because of these de
f ziencies—give HADACOL a
cixance to help you. You can’t beat
a medicine that’s GOOD!
John Payne Likes Wild, Woolly,
Roofin’-Tootin" Movie Roles
By ERSKINE JOHNSON
NEA Staff Correspondent
HOLLYWOOD—(NEA)—_ Guis
and Dolls: They're ealling John
Payne “Mr. Five o'clock Shadow”
over at Pine-Thomas, where he's
been starring in a series of rugged,
action thrillers, and danged if
John doesn’t glory in the title.
He doesn’t care whether he ever
gets a clean-shaven role again.
Whiskers and grime and heart
of-stone characters have upped
John’s box office rating and he
says of his switch from flawless
profile roles:
“I played pretty boys too long.
There’s nothing worse than a per
ennial juvenile.
“Every male star who's ever
lasted in this business has had a
lick at playing hard, bitter, mean
guys. Look at Gable and Tracy
and Cooper.”
John's scarred and bewhiskered
again in “Carribbean Gold.”
Luscious Zsa Zsa Gabor is lash
ing out at movietown trouble
makers and vows that she isn’t
going to let Hollywood stir up a
feud between her and sister Eva
Gabor.
There's just none of that grudge
business in the famous Gabor
family, said Zsa Zsa, who is on
the “We're Not Married” set, and
no galloping jealousy.
“This talk makes me furious,”
the blonde beauty stormed. *“I
adore my sister, Eva.”
“She’s a very big success in
television in New York and we
telephone each ozzer every day.
My big wish is to be in a play wiz
Eva.”
Criticism that she over-plays
the diamonds - are -a - girl's-best
friend angle on her TV show:
“I do it to make the little haus
frau happy.
“Diamonds don't make women
happy. Anyhow, lately, I'm not so
interested in diamonds.
“I start to prefer pearls better.”
Tribute To Miss Hayes
It’'s hunky dory with Anthony
Quinn if Clark Gable and Gre
gory Peck continue to duck tele
vision producers.
Rugged, dark-eyed Tony co
starred with Helen Hayes in an
hour-long play from New York,
and vows that the part would nev
er have come his way if Clark
or Gregory had been available.
Back in Hollywood to menace
Errol Flynn in “Against All
Flags,” Tony still talks about
Helen Hayes!
“She‘s full of humility about
televison. She doesn’t say that
she knows it all. Why, that great
actress approaches TV as if she
were a beginn:r i‘n the acting art.”
*
Names are getting longer in
Hollywood.
First it was Betsy von Fursten
berg who caused the marquee
keepers to groan and now its Anna
Maria Alberghetti, Paramount’s
15-year-old singer from Italy.
Anna Maria, who knocked mo
viegoers for a loop in Bing Cros
by’s “Here Comes the Groom,”
and is currently shaking art house
theater chandeliers with her bell
tones in “The Medium,” is siated
to face the cameras soon in her
starring movie, “The Goddess.”
Her 22-letter mame?
“Daddy thinks maybe it should
be plain Anna Maria,” said the
coloratura soprano who looks like
W/V M e s
n
g };:1
: <
Wy W
-— .3
elicious, refreshing milk is one food :P = : .
that gives you economy plus. In many &f‘ --;-_ : P
foods you buy waste. But every drop of = S e
good fresh milk is food—with the vita- - @ -
mins, minerals and proteins and other ¥y & <
essentials to body-building and vigor- '( ; : "
ous health. No other food gives you so Vil B
much for so little. MILK is indisput- v T
ably YOUR BEST FOOD BUY! e
¢ f_:“\‘ < @ WP o ":-.;'.r\,‘, <
soclli il B = » YOUR GECGRG!A DAIRYMAN
5 - KON ouas il%
v SEL A N pNer——
a junior version of Rusalind Rus
sell.
“The studio hasn’t said anything
about changing my name, though.”
Holywood's newest “Deanna”
started singing at the age of 6 and
was appearing as a concert star
throughout Europe by 1948, A
U. S. tour brought her many of«
fers of movie contracts,
“Daddy thought that Paramount
would do better for me. After all,
MGM has Kathryn Grayson and
Jane Powell.”
Anna Maria’'s “Daddy” is Da
niele Albergetti, a former baritone
and cellist who began training her
when she was a toddler.
Sour Note for Singers
The heads of some mighty big
singers are going to roll and it's
the TV bogey-man that's going to
bowl them straight down the alley
to obscurity.
That's what noted Hollywood
vocal coach Al Berkman says,
shuddering as he predicts that
wome million-dollar best-sellers
on records and radio won’t make
the TV grade.
Berkman ‘blames it on the all
seeing camera eye of TV that
picks up things like fish mouths,
too much eye-blinking, lip puck
erers, self-conscious movements
and the wvertical mouth-shapes
made by over-trained baritones
and sopranos.
“Dinah Shore’s made a TV home
run, but some of the other song
kings and queens aren't going to
get to first base,” Berkman said.
“A great voice is no longer all=
important, TV audiences want to
enjoy looking at singers.”
WELL-FED
About two bushels of corn and
150 pounds of alfalfa hay are re=-
quired to make a 60-pound feeder
lamb into a finished 90-pound
lamb.
NEW MEDICINE WORKING MIRACLES
ARTHRITIS - RHEUMATISM
NO FASTER, NOR MORE COMPLETE
- PAIN RELIEF FOUND "’fl
“ ‘)‘% The formula of RUMADOL as @y &3
W,‘ prescribed by many physicians is O\ A 5
’i“i:‘-,j‘J accomplishing wonders, helping | 5 f.{""",
Sl many back to useful happy lives R
e where painful sweiling, stiffness, AASESOEEN
[REHE W tenderness had caused all hope g(A 9 Vol
| JESES | |to leave. The scientific formula " ST
(= ¥ .. of RUMADOL was developed in
oy a great university and tested un- ,* ’
der hospital conditions. Of 306
patients, 95% received relief and many completely recovered IN
ONLY 14 DAYS. With RUMADOL now available for sale over
the counter, at inexpensive prices, there's no reason for you to
suffer the agonizing, &
tormenting pains, for
there is new proyed
help. Get RUMADOL HOSPITAL TESTS PROVE
today on the guarantee o
of satisfaction or mon- 95 /o OF 396 CASES
ey back.
Y™ DRUG
| " STORE
‘{c'wmt V 0905 mLo /%
V‘HO“E,'SSS\;ERV A Z( .SrOߣ
PAGE FIVE
“BAILEY’S BEADS”
Because of its mountains, the
moon casts an irregular ghadow
during a solar eclipse, Just before
and after the moment of total
eclipse, the mountains break up
the sun's light into points known
as “Bailey’'s Beads.”
Terraces should be Yelmud with
some crop and not left without
some growth. ‘
YN / T -
= 1T
/b A 4 8l A
o<l |33 3
\ ':"-':2:5'.'1_.. fl .:
> Y
S\ GRSz |
oy N\ Bk ) v
R
ofl"’ofa PG
® Big 4505q.in. Sl E
Cannon dish ’ ver;
towel = yours D"SiI i
in every Giant [ioox JFRENE {
Size box of 57;;' 3o
Silver Dust. |il 5 C
(g
1~/
SAFE,WHITE RICHER SUDS °
FOR LAUNDRY AND DISHES !