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PAGE TWO
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6‘/48]2[ ENVELUPES Banbury, white, per pack......... 3¢
KLE"ZO FACIM. TISSUES 300, white or assorted colors. . 24¢
PEPPERMINT PATTIES Homems e e Res. 69c 99¥
PI.ENA"'NS 11 vitamins, plus liver &ir0n............72's 259
REXALI. MAPAC to relieve cold symptoms, headaches. .15's 49‘
HOT WATER BU'ITI.E Kantleek Deluxe; 5 year guarantee.. 300
STAG BRUSHLESS SHAVE CREAM ... .. jumbo twe 50¢
HELEN CORNELL CREAM SHAMPOO .... sz jor 79¢
Mi3l ANTISEPTIC the ati-purpose antiseptic ... ... ...pint 19¢
BISMA-REX reiieves excess stomach acidity. ... ...4% os. 69¢
CARA NOME LIPSTICK nigh-fashion hue 5............. I.lo*
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FREDDIE READS BRAILLE, something he's been able to learn
because he’s a lucky boy. Freddie Allemeier is lucky because he
has two homes and two families to help him, although he’s prac
tically blind,
Blind Youth Is Aided
By Braille’ 2 Homes
BY JAY HEAVILIN
NEA Staff Correspondent
CLEVELAND. —(NEA)—Nine
year-old Freddie Allemeier is al
| most blind. But, by way of com
| pensation, the blond, blue-eyed
youngster has two homes—and in
each, a loving mother, father, two ]
brothers and two sisters.
As soon as he has mastered
Braille at Cleveland’s Anthony
Wayne School, he will leave the
home of his foster parents, Mr.
'and Mrs. Cornelius Durbin, and
return to his home in Lima, Ohio:
That day will probably come in
advance of Mr. and Mrs. Alle
meier’s fondest hopes. The. course
generally lasts about two years,
but in a little more than a month
Freddie has breezed through the
first and second gradss.
His worid an indistinct blur
since birth, Freddie has been en
tered in Lima's sight-saving class
es. Because he is totally blind in
one eye and has only a fading 28
percent vision in the other, Fred
die could not make the grade.
The nearest Braille classes,
however, were in Cleveland, 150
miles away. Lima’s Board of Child
Welfare wrote a letter to a Com
munity Chest organization here
which specializes in finding foster
homes for children,
Children’s services searched
high and low for a couple willing
to shoulder the tremendous re
sponsibility of adding a near-blind
child to their family. Director
William Schmidt was at his wits’
end when Mrs, Durbin~ stepped
into the picture.
“I did it,” explaing Mrs. Durbin,
| “because unless folks start help
ing one another, we'll go right on
living in a world of selfishness and
| wars.”
Not until Freddie walked in the
| door to stay did Mrs. Durbin or
'+ her husband, an apartment house
| engineer, know what kind of boy
| was to share their home. With
Freddie’s first friendly and mis
chievous grin, they knew he
would also share their hearts.
Shortly after. Mrs. Durbin’s
| married daughter and ‘grandson
became boarders. The daughter’s
National Guardsman husband had
been called to active duty. In ad
dition, Mrs. Durbin has a sixth
grade daughter living at home and
has two other children away at
school.
Still Mrs. Durbin claims little
Freddie has been no trouble.
“He's just like any other boy.
He roller-skates and rides his two=
wheeler lickety-split, plays with
the neighborhood children beauti
fully and even goes to the store
alone.”
For Freddie the modest but
MASSALE ga&e
4 .
Gl N,
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In minutes you can feel pain go with -
this amazing Sibert Heat-Massager. . »
Warming Infra-Red heat rays pene- '
trate to tissues below surface— new - .
blood flows to point of pain! Soothing 7
effect on nervous system. Works on AN
any AC or DC outlet. Designed small : 1( &
to reach crevices and contours of body. g / p
Completely safe ~ cannot overheat. ¥ /P
Underwriters approved. Guaranteed i
for one year! Py /
Wonderful for Relieving Pains of |/ & |
ARTHRITIS NEURITIS SORENESS { i
REEUMATISM SWUS TOOTHACHE / S, 9 5
LUMBAGO HEADACHES CHARLEY NORSE 3
BACKACNES STRAMS SPRAINS s =
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THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
comfortable Durbin residence is a
second home. There is a piano in
the front parlor on which his
small and sensitive fingers can
practice music learned in his
Braille lessons. And there is al
most always someone around for
Freddie to impress with his newly
acquired ability to read. “Little
Black Sambo” is his latest accom
plishment, ‘
Though the timre for returning
to his parents, his own two bro
thers and sisters and his soft,
furry dog cannot come too soon
for Freddie, he has not once re
belled at his fate.
“The closest he’s ever come to
complaining,” says Mrs., Durbin,
“was once when he said that God
had forgotten to give him eyes.
“I told hinr that that might be
true, but that he had certainly
been given a good disposition.”
In The
Service
CRAIG AFB, ALABAMA—We
bester L. Bradberry, jr., son of
Mr. and Mrs. W. Lee Bradberry of
345 West View Drive in Athens,
Georgia, is one of the class of
civilian and military pilots at
tending the current six-week
course at the Pilot Instructor
School here.
The Pilot Instructor School, the
only training program of its kind
in the Air Force, offers a six-week
course in both academic and fly=
ing instruction to qualified pilots
who later will be assigned to teach
aviation cadets how to fly at vari
ous air bases throughouf the coun
try.
Upon completion of the course
here, Bradberry will be assigned
to an air base now being operated
by a civilian contract flying school
for the Air Training Command.
A World War II veteran, the
flyer served from 1943 as an avia
tion cadet until March of 1944
when he was graduated from
flying training and commissioned
an officer in the Air Force. He
was a flight instructor from that
time to 1945. 5
Bradberry attended Athens High
School at Athens, Georgia and the
' University of Georgia, also located
}in that city. At the latter he was
a member of Phi Delta Theta
Fraternity and played football.
His wife, Rue B. Bradberry, re
sides at Apartment 5, Milleage
Circle in Athens, Georgia.
GREAT LAKES, Illionis—Under
going recruit training at the U. 8.
Naval Training Center, San Diego,
Calif., is Garnett E, Williams, sea~-
man rescruit, USN. son of Mr. and
Mrs. John T. Eubanks of Winter
ville, Ga.
Williams entered Naval service
on Dec. 27, 1951. Before entering
‘the Navy, he attended Piedmont
College.
This initial training includes in
struction in such fields as sea
manship, fire-fighting, gunery,
signaling, and other courses de
signed to make the recruit well
versed in every phase of Navy
life.
Ufion completion of their 11~
week training period at the train
ing center, graduates are assigned
to duty stations with the Fleet or
at Navy shore stations, or are sent
to service schools for advanced
technical training.
FORT BENNING, GA. — Pfc.
Franklin S. David, son of T. C.
David, and husband of Mrs. F.
D. David of Danielsville, Ga., this
week is demonstrating the fire
power of all types of artillery
weapons for officers of friendly
foreign nations and for students
of the Infantry School.
Sergeant First Class David is in
Headquarters and Headquarters
Battery, 41st Field Artillery Bat
talion, Combat Training Com
mand, Fort Benning.
As a member of Combat Train
ing Command, he joins combat
veterans of two wars in battle
techniqtues at Fort Benning’s fam
ous Infantry School.
GREAT LAKES, Illinois—Under
going recruit training at the U. S.
Naval Training Center, San Diego,
Calif., are three Athens, Ga., men,
James T. Shedd, seaman appren
tics, USN, son of Mr. and Mrs. Bud
Shedd of Arnoldsville; Millard C.
Spinks, jr., seaman recruit, USN,
son of Mr, and Mrs. M. C. Spinks
of -88 Elizabeth st., and Curtis O.
Epps, seaman recurit, USN, son
of Mr. and Mrs. John R. Epps of
Route 1.
This initial training includes
instruction in such fields as sea
manship, fire-fighting, gunery,
signaling, and other courses de=-
signed to make the recruit well
fiersed in every phase of Navy
ife.
Upon completion of their 11-
week training period at the train
ing center, graduates are as as
signed to duty station with the
Fleet or at Navy shore stations, or
‘are sent to service schools for ad
vanced technical training.
WITH TME 3RD INFANTRY
DIV. IN KOREA — Capt. Weldon
H. Adams, whose wife, Hazel, lives
on Route 2, Colbert, Ga., has been
| awarded the Bronze Star Medal
. N 41
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You'd find it out, in a mile or so, even if we failed to —use it for a thrilling sense of mastery over cae
tell you. But we think it’s best if we tell you now— and time and space—
—you must treat the accelerator with special respect ~—use it, in short, for happiness and luxpry—and
when you drive the Golden Anniversary Cadillac! for adding satisfaction to every mile you drive.
Down under the hood of this gorgeous car is the As you would expect, this amazing performance is
most powerful engine ever used in standard American but one of the wonderful virtues that have been added
production. to the Golden Anniversary Cadillac.
So take it easy—wherever you drive. __There is marvelous new beauty—inside and out-
Don’t use that power to bolt away when the light side. There is a wholly new type of power steering—
turns green—and other cars have their ways to make available as optional equltpment at extra cost. And
in the traffic lanes beside you. And never use it for there are literally scores of refinements and improve
unnecessary speed, or for dominating the highway. ments of vizal importance.
Use it, instead, for the thing it was put there for— _ Forits “year of years,” Cadillac has certainly built
g : . its “car of cars.”
—use it to give you that easy, floating, comfortm'g : :
ride which can come only when your engine is “loaf- Come in and see it—whether you feel you are ready
ing,” and most of its power is in luxurious reserve— for a Cadillac or not. It’s an inspiration to inspect it—
—use it to give you that “shot ahead” when an and an experience to drive it.
opening shows in the traffic line—or when your safety But if you do drive it, please remember—it’s 70
calls for a blast of power— place for a heavy foot!
'
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B A
RN T AR A e
CITY MOTORS, INC.
127 E. Broad Phone 1606
One Party South May
Keep Democrat Label
By BEM PRICE
ATLANTA, Feb, 24 — (AP) -
The one party South apparently is
going to retain its Democratic
label despite talk of a Republican
boom.,
Any such boom, or more pro
perly, boomlet, is for the most part
on the Presidential level and
stems in large measure from bed
rock anti-Trumanism.
But whatever the trend on the
presidential level, there are few
signs in the South of a grass roots
Republican movement.
The Republicans apparently
don’t have the time, money, lead
ership or inclination to make a
fight for the two party system on
the precinct and courthouse level.
Until such a fight is made, the
South is going to go right on be
ing solidly Democratic in name as
it has since grandpa was a lad.
There are exceptions, of course,
though nothing large enough to
change the region’s political com=
plexion,
These exceptions exist in parts
of Florida, Tennessee, Virginia,
Louisiana and North Carolina, but
they are modest.
Old Guard Faithfuls
Generally speaking the South
ern Republicans are composed of
old guard faithful who operate,
for lack of a general public fol
lowing, though close knit caucuses
and committees.
Their actions usually take place
through small conventions and
their chief influence lies in the
selection of delegates to the par
ty’s national convenfion.
After nearly 20 years with the
Democrats in power, the impact
of the state Republicans on public
consciousness in the South has
been nearly zere.
In many areas of the South it
long has been possible for a small
boy to grow to manhood without
ever seeing a real, live Republi
can.
On the Presidential level, how
ever, there hasn’t been so much
for meritorious service during 11
months of Korean combat.
Adams rotated to the United
States in October. He was a mem
ber of Battery A in the 39th Field
Artillery Battalion, 3d Infantry
Division.
The decoration was presented in
recognition of his performance be
g;vseen Nov. 12, 1950 and Oct. 25,
3.
Republican talk and activity since
1928, the year Herbert Hoover
defeated Al Smith.
Even then the South’s seven
bolting states weren’t voting so
much for Republican Hoover as
against Democrat Smith’s Cath
olic religion and wet platform.
That was the year the Republi
cans carried Florida, Kentucky,
North Carolina, Oklahoma, Tenn
essee, Texas and Virginia.
The most hopeful of the Re
publicans are counting on a re
peat of the 1928 situation in 1952,
using as issues spending, foreign
policy and corruption,
In any case there is a marked
Eisenhowar-for-President boom
let on in nearly all the Southern
states. The Eisenhower backers
claim the General is attracting the
support of many Democrats.
This Eisenhower movement has
drawn the ire of many of the old
guard who favor Taft.
In fact, the Eisenhower-Taft
forces are engaged in legal battles
in Louisiana and South Carolina
for party control.
The old guard seems to fear that
the Eisenhower supporters are
largely Johnny-come-latelys and
that they will gain party control.
Seek Delegates
There are definite groups in
nearly all the states of the South
seeking to swing delegations into
one camp or the other.
Qddly, Democratic Mississippi is
one state in which Eisenhower, if
nominated by the Republicans,
may appear on the ballot as the
Democratic candidate.
At least that is the opinion of
House Speaker Walter Sillers.
This opinion is qualified by Sillers
with the explanation that it could
happen only in event of Truman’s
candidacy or a candidate on Tru-
The Flossie Gerdine Dancing School
(American Legion Cabin — Lumpkin St.)
announces
A BEGINNERS’ ADULT CLASS
Starting Wednesday 6:30 ’til 7:30 P. M.
February 27th.
Fox-Trot, Waltz, Rumba, litter-Bug, Shag
will be instructed.
Phone 4125-M.
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1952,
man's “Fair Deal” platform,
From the Rfirubflcan stand.-
point, the possibility of developir,
some form of opposition on I},
Democrats in the South appears
to be most hopeful in Florig,
Louisiana, Tennessee, Arkans.,
and Virginia.
———
Political Announcements
— Y
FOR CLERK OF SUPERIOR
COURT
I hereby announce nry candi.
dacy for re-nomination as Clerk of
Courts in the Clarke County Depy,.
ocratic Primary to be held Mar.},
26, subject to the rules and regy.-
lations of the Clarke County Den
ocratic Executive Committee, |
sincerely ask the support and vote
!of all the citizens.
Respectfully,
ELMER J. CRAWFORD.
FOR ORDINARY
I hereby announce my candi.
dacy for re-nomination as Ordi.
nary of Clarke County, Georgia
in the Clarke County Democratic
Primary to be held on March 26th,
subject to the rules and regyla
tions of the Clarke County Dem.
ocratic Executive Committee.
will appreciate the support ang
vote of all the citizens.
Respectfully,
RUBY HARTMAN,
FOR TAX COLLECTOR
I hereby announce myself a can
didate for re-election as Tax Co)-
lector in the primary election of
March 26, 1952; subject to the
rules and regqlatlons of the Dem
ocratic Executive Committee, Yoy
vote will be appreciated.
IDA DORSEY DAVISON.
FOR TAX COLLECTOR
I hereby announce my candi
dacy for the office of County Tax
Collector in the County Dem
ocratic Primrary to be held March
26, subject to the rules and regy
lations of the Clarke County Der
ocratic Executive Committee, 1
will deeply appreciate the vote
and support of all the citizens,
Respectfully,
JOE B. COOPER.