Newspaper Page Text
THURSDAY, MARCH 13, 1952,
Special Vitamin-Rich Cream
Improves Texture Of Skin
By ALICIA HART
NEA Beauty Editor
IF your skin is looking a little
nter=worn, now is ‘the time to
1o something about it. Although
ring is almost here, it will still
he a while before you can enjoy
the warmth of the sun, and absorb
its beneficial rays.
What your dried complexion
neods is a vitamin diet—one that
will beautify, moisten and firm
vour skin. Happily enough, a new
{ distinct type cream has just
Leen developed that will -« leave
vour skin smoother, younger and
ccling wonderfully firm and fresh.
This unusual beautyv preparation
combines Vitamin A, the very
«~me vitamin found in butter,
nilk, eream and green and vellow
veoectables, and Vitamin D, the
“synshine vitamin.”
The skilled blending of these
two important vitamins coupled
with other active moisture-giving
clements in the cream soak into
vour skin without leaving an oily
residue.
Application of the cream is sim
ple. All you have to do is massage
it over your face and throat with
sentle upward strokes. Leave it on
for several hours, and- overnight,
if possible.
Pecause of the vitamin content
in this preparation, it will serve
.s an essential beauty aid if you
are dieting. This is true because
while you diet it is often necessary
to cut down on dairy products,
thereby, starrving your complexion
of its principle source on nutrition.
But regardless of whether you
are dieting or not, if your skin is
dry and lifeless, this is the cream
that will make a big and important
difference.
prepare your skin for spring
with the help of a vitamin-rich
cream that will lubrieate and
beautify your complexion.
1f yvou want a nicely browned
top on a finished custard pie, add
two tablespoons of butter to the
milk before it is scalded for the
filling.
Suppose Your Chiid Needs Aspirin
~ln The Middie Of The Night?
EHow good te have St. Joseph Aspirin For
Children handy for instant use ! Approved by
ghousands of doctors, Your child will like its
orange flavor—you'll like not having to break
or cut tablets—each is ¥4 adult dose. Don’t
wait, be xwed—buy St. Joseph Aspirin
For Childreh today. S 0 tablet bottie 39c¢.
@m
®
Special!
ALL NEW! SPRING DRESSES
Printed Crepes & Nylons
Friday & Salurday
’ Only
|
f 10.95
Sizes 9-15, 10-20.
’ The Fashion Shop
e ] (4 a 8 0115 it
% ”N,/’:”"’ ////y = > i o, % R i
et 7o NIhL 2
b Wiy —— 7 i GlOl (5
» R her i SSR | .
P 8 Bhiy N e i ]
bRI .e IR RRE
=a, | ,"‘ K X“r" N 3 "’/’f g M"fiq; ' .’:""",’{” Y g
% CORERR Lo /{m,/ o piay Lok
(g '_““\\,‘, ‘fh;_.:g [m;,\n‘ %B o, 'lf"!ffl!’{“”_’h“"‘;q‘{w!_"ff‘: . 77%7 v‘. ‘.,_x ; i B R EAD v
B Sy L P : e
' L N eRS e
| “\%l‘“} v f‘|‘l'=ii“:‘ifi“jf”flv.‘im'x‘i"?“"\;“l“s“-‘ % L aieES . w?%t%%’}“u v
\ ‘ e TR S g
N S e il Rit i,
e es T B ¥ Io oiner sporreping
- Ri e N S PR sy s L
. L 7‘*“fefil"rfi\?in“M\s‘l g s - Uses Ut butiar
Pick the Loaf N, ooEEEEYT 0
i R e .
with the Butter Yellow end NG g
A Richer Better Tasting Bread
It costs no more! Yet it is a better white bread . . . better to
taste, better to toast . + . higher in quality. Southern ALL
BUTTER BREAD is made only with butter . . . no other
kes shortening is used. It’s richet, more nourishing than ordinary
® re i
#éS ‘d‘,':::::nuce it bread. And it is, of course, & finer value for you.
,-‘? ‘ \
R
.\*? ¢ \\\ |/ 7/ _ Columbla Baking Co,
V:’S‘I"S S \\ ALL -~ Bakers of
"V el e ;.\ ; # Southern Bread and Coke
57?:“ DA "E \ . :
B » ®
Southern @ j(oFe 1
W
G . Py
e
‘ § & E g
s‘*\' o
S %., g g i
Ry SRR ORI k 4 AR
) g.{._w' .;:-: 3 L
R &
Piepare your skin for Spring
with the help of a vitamin-rich
cream that will lubricate and
beautify your complexion.
Six Perish In
Tragic NY Fire
WALKER VALLEY, N. Y.,
March 13.—(AP)—The wife of a
lumberjack and six of her nine
children perished Wednesday in a
fire that destroyed their frame
home in this hamlet. :
The fire apparently started from
a kerosene stove explosion while
the family was sleeping.
The father and two children
were in a hospital with burns, the
father in critical condition.
State Police identified the dead
as Mrs. Evelyn Polhamus, 39;
Norman, 12; Lawrence, 11; Stan
ley, 10; Donald, 6; Theresa, 4, and
Rita, 2.
Harry Polhamus, 43, the father,
and Rose, 15, and Henry 5, were
taken to Middeltown Sanitarium
at Middletown, N. Y., by neigh
bors in private cars. Louis, 13, was
uninjured.
For hours after the fire, there
was a report tha. a motorist was
enroute to the sanitarium with an
other child but this apparently
was confused with one of the chil
dren already- taken there.
The family lived in a two-fam
ily, two-and-one-half story frame
house. A family in the other side
of the house escaped unharmed.
Sh 1 1 R N B
ort, dStraight nows best
D e . R " TR S
R "»‘«k\.;f‘\:‘\:‘ AT N RS B
R S 8 N
N 3 Ny i R N R ‘%{ e
i TN o S e 3 3 SR S SUSRERE
ppengl LR S L AR % foo
g Sl A R SR R R Y T PO % B
\\g@vs o 8 w\% SRy \\3‘7;_&@&\%3‘\‘@; AR R SR |
'8 3 N LR N 2 AR [N SR R
8 TR, B e T R
i\ )ok PR .‘&c‘& “_,u:;‘;-‘&g §,k:{§\&t}3§3}3§ R R ’i‘,fi\\s P SRR
SRR TN - B e
SR RO s S R§s AL R TR R
SRR TR o Bt Vi \e-*;‘\\\\}f?\xf.\- RLR RL e e
S NS S 4 \\Q‘\& RR R Y RTR Sl
Y :LR 5 B ‘\,\‘ SR B \-\,“{s\;‘?‘; SRR N %) _‘\\\{\g_,v_ 3
i SRR G I ‘%\: N SR g SRR R ORN
eLG R e o
{\\ ~ \\ 3 Y \ : £ »\\’_-{&i\\:ic;h\z*\ R N :\» ¥ Q‘\k‘—%’"‘ 3
SR 3Ԥ E L ARN R R e
BRI RSN Fon i N A S A NOTRAN GSR
S h:;?}‘!&_‘ g &\\ et AR R Re R e
NSEE | SR N AR ST e R R L R A
R N SR Rg T i
eSN e W L TR TR TR
R SRR SR RR i T !
) '., T ke N SByb -~ \'~ .‘.\‘ TR ‘\v“‘» \i
Bagepiis S N 3 o ¢ N
‘RN S g W N T ‘ 8 % : i
! % \ : . TR - ‘«g W‘ e 5 s . ‘:
3 » % RO ¢ Stn . . R
Gy R L | S S SRR N
INPRoPRL S e N Py <
TRRRY N RIR Rt T QAT Y
RN Al R : 22 5 S |
N e SR i A {
A R 4 PR s Lot NSRRI - Y £
FSN R VLA MR, SHIMCRRIR GGtLR e it |
Measure Rows Exactly, to Make Them Straight and Parallel.
In small Liberty gardens there is
a definite advantage in planting
vejetables in short rows, 25 feet or
less. In an oblong garden, where
the short dimension is north and
south permitting rows to run in this
direction, the owner is fortunate.
The advantage of short rows is
secondary in importance to the dis
tribution of sunshine, however, and
where the long dimension of the
garden space is north and south, it
is best to run the rows that way,
breaking the length~ by a path,
every 25 feet.
Commercial growers cultivating
with power machines favor long
rows, because it lessens the time re
quired for turning machines around.
But the home gardeper gains no
such advantage; and when a row is
longer than is required for a single
planting of a vegetable, he must di
vide a row between two crops, which
is inconvenient, or fill out the row
with one, and thus overplant.
Indeed, much of the waste of gar
den space and effort caused by over
production, may be traced to the
twin temptations, to ‘‘use up the
packet,” when half of a packet of
seed would produce_the required
crop; or ‘“fill up the row,” when
half of a garden row would be suf
ficient.
Short rows have another advan
tage, which is real, though it may
seem trivial. In cultivating you nat
urally take one row as a stint, and
rest when you finish it. With short
rows, you take it easy, as you
Rearrange Your
' Kitchen Make
{ 3
' Your Work Easier
By DOROTHY ROE
Associated Press Women’s Editor
If mom suffers from backache,
bad temper and housemaid’s knee,
it might be a good idea to send
her to an industrial engineer in
stead of a doctor. ;
Instead of a tonic, she probably
needs a work simplification course
An expert in these matters is
Dr. Orpha Mae Thomas, associate
professor of Home Economics at
Teachers’ College, Columbia Uni
versity, who combined household
science with engineering for her
Ph. D. and now teaches future
teachers how to do things the
easiest way.
Dr. Thomas believes that every
household should be organized on
an assembly line plan, and de=-
monstrates how it can be done
with a list of “10 commandments
for housewives”:
I—Make a list of your house
hold jobs. Check those most tiring
and time consuming and figure out
which can be eliminated, rearrang
ed, simplified or combined., For
instance, says this expert, new
detergents make it possible to eli
minate dish-drying. Stainless steel
tableware for every day use eli
minates silver polishing. Seersuck=
er and terry cloth fabrics cut down
ironing.
Work Centers
2—Survey your kitchen and re-
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
should; and break up the garden
work with frequent rests. With long
rows it is more likely that you will
become tired of garden tasks, and
:Eis in turn may result in neglecting
em, .
An exception to the rule for
straight rows may-he made in hilly
country, where the wash of soil may
be checked by contour planting.
Here rows should run at right angles
to the slope, but they should still be
parallel, though on rounded slopes
‘they will be curved,
Serpentine, slanting or uneven
rows will deuble the work of culti
vation, and give an appearance of
incompetence to the garden.
Rows are spaced according to the
needs of the crop, and the conve’r}-
ience of- cultivation. In rich soil
vegetables may be spaced more
closely than -in poor; but when
spaced too close together, it is diffi
cult to cultivate between the rows.
For crops growing twelve inches
tall or less, rows may be spaced
10 inches to a foot apart and culti
vated with hand tools. For cultiva
tion with a wheel hoe, eighteen
inches is likely to be found a mini
mum distance, since it is necessary
to avoid disturbing the roots of the
vegetables, whatever tool is used.
Taller vegetables, and those that
make vines, large bushes, or have
a sprawling habit, must be given
more distance between rows. In
small gardens, 4 feet will usually
be the maximum distance, given
only for such crops as bush squash
and cucumbers.
arrange it in work centers. You
will find you have a mix center,
where most of your baking and
food preparation is done; a cook
center, ngich is the stove; a clean
up center, which is the sink unit.
If you can’t move the big equip
ment, at least move small tools
and supplies to the center where
they are used, Your electric mixer,
bowls, flour, sugar, shortening,
spices, mixing spcons and pack=
aged mixes should be stored at
the mix center, preferably next
to the refrigerator, where you are
in easy reach of milk, butter, eggs
and such. Cooking and baking uten
sils, of course, should be stored in
or near the stove.
3—Simplify your work by buy
ings things needing a minimum
of care and preparation, such as
packaged mixes, frozen food,
platic lace mats, paper napkins
and so on.
| 4—Combine your jobs by using
equipment for multople handling,
lsuch as trays to carry a number
of articles at once, wheel tables
for transferring food and dishes
from kitchen to table and back,
i lJaundry carts and so on. Oven
[meals can cut cooking time and
; effort.
Take It Easy
' s—Do as much of your work as
possible sitting down. Adjustable
ironing boards make it possible to
sit while you iron. Kitchen coun
ters and work tables should have
! stools or chairs of proper height.
6—Have the utensils you use at
each work center within easy
i reach. Your knife rack should be
, on the' wall above your cutting
board. Store heavy equipment at
or near counter height. Saucepans
should be hung on hooks above
| and around the stove. 4
7—SBtore electrical equipment at
place of use. You den’t have fto
put everything out of sight. Your
kitchen is a workshop.
B—Duplicate equipment if you
use it in several places. For in
stance, have a measuring cup at
the sink and also one at the mix
center. Keep a broom, dustmop
and cleaning supplies upstairs as
well as down.
9—Do something with both
hands at once. Lift muffins from
pan two at a time, take two cups
at once from rack. If you are
cutting green beans, cut a whole
handful on your board. not two or
three at a time.
10—Arrange all your work to
progress in one direction—from
pan to mix center to stove, with
no wasted motions, Dishwashing
should be arranged on a produc
tion line basis, usually from left
to right, with counter for stacked
dishes, wash sink, rinse sink and
drying rack in a compact straight
line.
% # *
WIG BUSINESS NOW GROWING
ST. LOUIS, — (AP) — The wig
business is taking a trimming here,
.~ Mrs. Grace Anderson, who runs
a hairshop specializing in head
wear, says repeat customers are
procrastinating something awful.
Wigs (which cover the entire
head) and toupees (which don’t)
‘ordinarily should be replaced
every two years or so but IMrs.
‘ Anderson reports with everything
higher these days some wearers
are making the old tops do.
Toupee and wig prices here
range from $75 to about $125. But,
it’s not the initial Investment that’s
Ahe backbone of the business—it’s
the upkeep—hair-dos, cleaning
and replacements.
And that’s where Mrs. Anderson
says the economizing is showing
up.
Relaxafion Can Be Luxurious ;
In A Soothing Bubbleßath
By ALICIA HART
NEA Beauty Editor
Why let late afternoon wear
inees get you down, when you can
take a short-cut to new energy
in no time at all?
A ten-minute bubble bath is
the answer. Believe it or not, the
bath will work wonders for tan
gled nerves and tired muscles.
Tension will disappear, and you
will be ready for an evening of
activity.
To get the most from your bath
softener, (you may prefer oil or
bathsalts), pour a tablespoon or
more in the dry tub directly be
neath the faucet. Then, turn on
the water full force so that-the
softener is completely dissolved
and the room is filled wi‘h a love
ly fragrance.
If the water pressure is low in
your area, put your finger over
part of the faucet opening to make
the water come out more forcibly.
Once your water is softened, the
soap will lather lavishly,
Always remember, the water
should be pleasantly warm, never
hot. Too much heat can weaken
you, and leave you feeling un
comfortably tired.
After a thorough cleansing, pop
Nothing can comvare with the
luxury of a bubble bath. It
soothes and refreshes, and is
certainly a beauty essential.
out of the tub, and give yourself
a brisk rubdown with your largest
turkish towel, And don’t spare
your skin.
The brisk motions will help the
blood to race through your body,
bringing with it renewed vigor,
enerry and enthusiasm.
Youthful
i
, s
Designer New
| .
‘Rage Of Paris
|
AP Newsfeatures
PARIS—The “find” in the Paris
fashion world is 25-vear-old Hu
bert de Givenchy, next tc Dior
the most talked about designer in
Paris this spring.
“T never dreamed it would be
this way,” the gangling, six-foot.
six-inch designer with rumnled
blond hair and grev eyec< keens
saying. “We've been literallv
swamned ever since openirg
night.”
All the maior American huyers.
as well as those from Italy and
other countries, have heen buving
from Givenchy's first collection.
Alreadv he has had to rent extra
spacé to expand his workrooms.
He has bad to abandon his
{' modest plan to run his house like
a department store, open to all
comers with models disolayed on
dummy maneaguins. Daily parades
by live mannequins have hecome
a fixture—by nonujar deman, .
i To others he mav be a talented
| youngster, but Givenchy dosen’t
consider himself a t{yro.
| “I've been designing vrofes
sionally since 7 was 177, he
. points out polite'v.
| ' Givenchv wes horn at Beauvais,
. in the north of France, where his
grandfather was director of the
famous Beauvais tanestrv works.
His mother was of English origin
(but her son spesks no English),
| and his' family wanted him to be
| lawyer. He rebelled, choosing
! the sc-00l of Beaux Arts in Paris
instead.
After three years there, he left
to work for fashion designer
Jacques Fath. Terms with Lelong
Piguet and Schiaparelli followed.
A R TR ok Vo s sy TTR AN, 7. !
{ .‘:‘? —; l
i :
WE BELIEVE--- |
3 The individual members of the Citizens Commit-
B 8 tee have widely differing views concerning some
A 8 aspects of public housing. Some of us are for public
#1 housing—some of us are against public housing—
B 9 some of us are ‘“‘on the fence.” But all of us are '
B agreed that the question of public housing is not §
| B the issue in the present situation in Athens. '
, We are agreed in opposing the expansion of pub- %8
j’? lic housing on the sites originally selected for both {8 ‘
| @ the white and colored units, which sites were dis- 3§ i
B 8 cussed at the open hearing last October. : i
i “ We are opposed to the selection of these sites for |
B 4 many reasons, some of the most important of which 3 '
‘%@ were stated by the Athens Housing Authority in
$3 their resolution published in the Banner-Herald on &8 !
|8 October 19, 1951, as follows: i |
”_’{ “ . WHEREAS, .. . a large number of -;'
‘ families would have to be displaced to carry
8 out present plans to enlarge low rent housing N
b facilities in Athens, and; i
; “WHEREAS, approximately two-thirds of 1
these families are home owners, and ; L
£ “WHEREAS, these home owners cannot re- |
i place their homes elsewhere for the amount |
ii of money which the Authority can offer them ki |
P for their present homes, ,
i “THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED, we, the !
| & Commissioners of the Athens Housing Author- l
ity, . . . do not believe it is to the best interest
; of the community to displace so many home ; t
: owners for the erection of tenant property ...”
, The situation described by the Athens Housing §
B 8 Authority Commissioners last October is unchang- §8
! ed, and we deny that the supposed benefits to be |
o gained by the construction of these projects at ’
b 4 the expense of injustices to so many of our citi- |
‘ zens can in any way be in the best interests of our f
! = community. o |
! i We are agreed that the members of the Athens j§ |
| Housing Authority are public officials exercising |
' governmental powers and that the public is inti- '
mately and vitally concerned with their plans, poli- '
cies and actions. We therefore believe that a public
hearing on the plangs and policies of the Athens
Housing Authority should be held before any defi
nite site commitments are made. |
J. N. HARTFORD, Chairman, !
A Citizens Commi
izens Committee of Athens
i ; :
\ ¥ ’
e
*@\\“\“ H ® Pir B
R A
s
i SRR . k}
i B ‘:"5“ N u. :l'. RN XY el
e \\g
T e RN
Nothing can compare with the
luxury of a bubble bath. It
' soothes and refreshes, and is
certainly a beauty essential,
i When friends asked how he
dared start a new fashion house
in such unpropitious times, Gi
'venchy said stubbornly, ‘“People
'need good-looking but less ex
| pensive clothes. They've no time
, for couture methods, I mean to
'give them the same quality for
less money.”
! This is a new trend, he declared
just before his opening. “My
clothes will be simple, chic
skirts, sweaters, tops and jackets.
! Above all, I want then to be worn
and worn."” :
Givenchy made good his pre
opening boast that “I can make
a smart dress out of material
‘that costs 60 cents a yard.” Or
dinary cotton shirting was the
success of his show. It was used
even for a multiple-tiered, ruffled
romantic evening cape.
! The young designer:is indignant
at reports that he raised his
prices after his opening-night
gsuccess, and that he tacked on
|a fee to viewers at his showings
|as an afterthought. There have
| and false reports about his prices,
he says, but he still has blouses
|for as little as sls, and dresses
| and coats for little more than
half the usual high fashion prices,
As for the viewer's fee, he ex
plained, “some of my friends ad
vised me not to charge anything,
as a new house in its first season,
but I decided to do so anyway
| before my opening.”
| He said that, unlike other
!houses, he charges French buyers
" the same as foreign buyers—=6s,ooo
francs (about $180). Older houses
charge about S3OO, to apply
towatrd purchases, or be forfeited
if no purchases are made,
70-Year Old
Saves Aged .
CLINTON, Mo., March 13.—
(AP)—A 70-year-old blind man
Iled nine women, many of them
i elderly, to safety early today in a
| fire that destroyed a three-story
|bri(-k building in the business
| district, -
As smoke filled the building,
Clete Rellisime, guided the women
'; from their apartments down the
' halls outside. During his long res
| idence there, he had become ac
i customed to the hallways. He op
| erates a concession stand at the
chm'y county - courihouse. The
building was destroyed.
AT THE MOVIES
STRAND-—
Thurs.-Fri.-Sat, — “Model and
Marriage Broker,” starring Jeanne
r(irnine, Thelma Ritter, Old Mill
ews,
GEORGIA—
Thurs.—“ Free For All,” starring
Robert Cumming, Ann Blyth. T.
Brewer and Firehouse Five Plus
Two. News.
Fri.-Sat.—“Comache Territory,”
starring Maureen O’Hara, Mac=~
Donald Carey. Fifth Freedom.
Music Circus.
HARLEM (Colored)—
Wed.-Thurs. — “I'd Climb the
Highest Mountain.,” Filmed in
North Georgia with William Lun
digan and Susan Hayward in tech
nicolor. Tom and Jerry cartoon
and Spiritual Songs of America.
Fri.- Sat.—Triple Feature Pro
gram-—" Painting the Clouds With
Sunsihne,” in technicolor, star
ring Virginia Mayo. “Quick On the
Trigger,” starring the Duranko
Kid—Charles Starrett. Also:Chap
ter 2 “Overland With Kit Carson,”
starring Wild Bill Elliott, and
color cartoon.
Late Show Saturday—lo:ls p.
m.—‘“Monster Maker.”
Man has found only a few uses
for reptiles such as the use of
turtles and turtle eggs for food
and alligator skins for leather.
s , .
\ ‘; 52
o [}
: TR
' MmARCH 13!
1y |
RR P GY s
slis VR *“‘?”“’”g‘/’}f d’?fi» v ‘
B 0 i 00 405 ’{' i ";: F SAIBRY B?, t@v”&&y&,’f’“’” ’?,iz‘,y‘, »oa ‘
L/ alkl g LRSIV e e 1
AR, DMWY '
> filfi WO il s
: _ : v .
g o
. g 1
e p@? LR
A _."é’/\,\;‘fl
! EE sLY S Yo » :.-:”
A A SRR
i A \‘,&%"
B e ;st L
- ,"\ : ~Q~ 'é s o -
;/ o XY T WSS
SR 'f P 15
| T N DS C e
. N Lo
'R e
A R e SRS
Ree : 5
E Gl N ‘/‘Tl‘ . s"’;;. -E. ‘V @‘s |t, ‘)
Ersmseaai Y\ay \e %17
i ;=T ) 3
! S ,{’l{\_‘4/ i
e b S
S A , e
J AN S ‘,,—.fi'—?
FO’ AS ll“’e “ _1 Ee .;_'v l :’ %,: " .4‘; ’
3= A ~QS Ty :.;__y;_;-_,;,.
o K * %% MR
\ R -:-./‘“\ A N N
4 ‘ «»\ /)/’ T
iy s g 2 AR N Y
2h o GS A ‘ =
2, ; b e 7
e ; A
B i b AR~ a&z‘f.;:r,‘,'l;»g/
iSBBe S e O =
=AT e
LETELT AP\ WP QT
L= - ';",// ';/// -&3 ST
~?‘//44»"11 St
= 3 \/; o - e = = R
- eAN ‘*\
= G
. SesEE g BN R =
For As little As BN AN ¢ S\iocaies
'::_:‘%_l:;;q"\‘\ \‘:fi, 3W = =
A Nfl =
23l B VBN, P :
2 A M N '\Xl’ ;/tj ‘9“l
\\ / e
pomtel W Y e R e RN AL
i A ')}, eR Y
e = IO
A 0 e e N 4 =
=== T
e e P\ e
i RTyN 8 p, X 5 X
==V R o
RLy W eTS :“\\"\\ \
CY AR e S PR NN\ )
A WEEK Sl SRR\
e N e RN\
e L @ = g ANy =
=AN RN e
Here's the smartest line- ESEaORg \\\ 4 \‘,*/:f' 2 A;f—r
up of watch values, ever! ”r";;(“\\\\ NP qu =
Brilliant modern styling SRS \\ .\,s')\)zfi"fi‘/4f e
in every line of the N \\\\‘ Von eDt S
smaller-size cases .. . ex- k ! w\)}f%{éff‘g = Gk
citing new ideas in dials, AP S EEs “Higc
crystals and bracelet i
bands. See the complete THE WATON WITR THE NEART
selection here, now! T"‘;L:'::::r"::“s
Prices include Federal tax DURAPOWER MAINSPRING
WATCH INSPECTORS FOR
FOUR RAILROADS
“Athens Leading Jewelers For Over 38 Years.”
PAGE FIVE
PALACE—
Wed.-Thurs.-Fri.-Sat.— “Bugies
In the Afternoon,” starring Ray
Milland, Helena Carter, Hugh
Marlowe, Forrest Tucker. Foxy by
Proxy-—Bugs Bunny. Last of the
Wildwest—special,
RITZ— ;
Wed.-Thurs. — “Drums In the
Deep South,” .starring James
Craig, Barbara Payton. The Two
Mousketeers-—Tom and Jerry.
Fri.-Sat.—*“Colorado Sundown,”
| Rex Allen, Slim Pickens. Cold War
—Disney. Mysterious Island—
chapter 5,
DRIVE-IN—
Wed.-Thurs.—“Winchester ’73,”
starring James Stewart, Shelley
Winters. Trouble Indemity—Mr.
Magoo. News,
Fri. — “Hong Kong,” starring
Ronald Reagan, Rhonda Fleming.
Destinaiion Meatball, Woody
Woodpecker. :
Sat. 15-—“ When the Redskins
Rode,” Jon Hall, Mary Castle. g%t
| of Scale—Donald Duck. Army {1
' American—sport.
OREGON TO HAWAII
Dugout canoes, used by the Ha
waiians in the last century, often
were made from pine logs washed
ashore from Oregon, thousands of
miles away.