Newspaper Page Text
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 19, 19352,
* Dr. Logan’s Wis
X 20° Ur. Logan’s Wife
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K- \ ,% Zfi% *By Diana Gaines
Iy ' n.:;: Copyright 1981 by Diang Go Used
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XXXIX
» weeks passed, spent on
{ of fear and de
\ and security, i and
Nere were times when love
1( rh and there were times
€ n love did not ease th
o! of Peier’s exile from
Uunwilling to live on
> money, Peter had taken
in the experimental division
wision firm. They assured
( that it was only a tem
v measure, but the days went
as, New Year's, Jan-
W half gone, and they had
v an unpalatable irony that
1t moment when her own life
assumed a greeting-card ful
. Peter's should have lost
further irony that she was
ywerless to restore it to him as
empowered to award 1t to
her, Pecter had changed
pum
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154 W. Hancock Phone 1487
everything. He had transformed
her from child to womdn, and she
took a fierce pleasure in her wom
anly tasks, She did her own house
work now — Ingrid, unable to
transfer allegiance to a new mas
ter, had gone—and under Jennet's
familiarizing dust cloth, vacuum
cleaner, scruo brush, the house
lost the animistic tyranny with
which she had moodily imbued it,
became a functionally pleasant
place in which cne did one’s liv
ing. She had ceased play-acting
the role of mistress of the house,
had, by virtue of her new seniority,
reduced the house to service. The
white picekt fence was no longer
a confinement bu: an embrace,
In the way of women whose hus
bands are not watchful of money,
Jennet had become not only prac
tical but thrifty, instituting of her
own accord economy measures
that once would have caused her
to feel abused. She did her own
laundry, prided herself on the
mastery of ironing Peter’s shirts.
The phone rang.
At Angel’'s Hospital, the row of
past presidents‘ portraits striped
the well behind the long confer
ence table. The black and white of
garb and faces was repeated in the
white mattinhggs’a.ud black frames,
and below th®m, the dark-suited,
whit2-shirted members of the ros
pital executive committee rayd out
in two paralll lines, living exten
sion of the dead.
To the left of the chairman, op
posite the superintendent, the
younger man in Gus Logan’s seat
moved restlessly under the felt eye
of Walter Pelletier, who was in
deed at that moment looking
through the young man to see the
benign ghost of his predecessor.
When the signal came—“ Any
new business or unfinished old
business?” — Walter Pelletier
sprang up.
“Mr. Chairman!”
His voice firmed as he read
aloud. “‘happy to report,” he
read, “ ‘that the FBI has thorough
ly checked the character and moral
standards of Dr. Peter Surinov and
they find that he is entirely satis
factory without reservation. We
are therefore instructing our office
to approve your budget request for
your project and you will receive
payment in quarterly installments
When he had finished reading
the letter, Dr. Pelletier folded it
and looked up. The faces were al
most flatteringly attentive. More
than attentive, they were alert. He
slapped the letter against the table
edge. “This letter,” he said, “is
from the Division of Biology and
Medicine of the Atlomic Energy
Commission. The experiment to
which it refers will, if successful,
protect human beings from the
damage of atomic bombing.”
He paused, glanced at the super
intendent’'s drumming fingers
which had begun to beat the table
with the frenzy of a Geiger coun
ter put to pitchblende. The fingers
stopped then and Dr. Pelletier con
tinued.
“The idea for this piece of work
is Peter Surinov’s. The work was
started here last May by Peter
Surinov. The United States Gov
ernment says it may be continued
by Peter Surinov. And frankly,
gentlemen, I say it must be done
by Peter Surinov or not at this
hospital at all. In view of the con
fused and tragic circumstances un
der which Dr. Surinov was re
leased from Angels some months
ago, I want to get this committee’s
approval before re-appointing him
to my department staff.”
* * *
Maxwell Cota shot out of his
seat. “Mr. Chairman, this is an ad
ministrative matter. Administra
tion is my job. Dr. Pelletier is out
of order bringing this up as com
mittee business!”
“Tt was this conmmittee that fired
him!” Dr. Pelletier bellowed. “How
technical can you get? This is a
medical board, not a court of law.”
“The firing was different,” Cota
retorted. “The loyalty oath in-
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A LIFT'FOR THE “VOICE' —This captive balloon being readied at Washington, D. C., gives a
l.:lt to the Voice of America’s floating transmitter, the USCG “Courier.” The 69x35-foot bag, hold
( Ing 150,000 cubie feet of helium, lifts an antennae from which programs will be beamed behind
the Iron Curtain.
R S e T s
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NATO’'S FIRST CHIEF—Gen.
Lord Ismay has agreed to be
come the first secretary-general
of the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization, according to an
announcement by Lester Pear
son, chairman of NATO’s Coun
cil of Foreign Ministers. Lord,
Ismay, close friend and adviser
of Prime Minister Winston
Churchill, has been secretary of
state for commonwealth rela
tions since Churchill’s conserva
tive government regained power
in Great Britain,
volved hospital policy.”
“I want the matter cleared
through this committee,” Dr. Pel
letier insisted. “I’m not finicky
about points of order. There’s too
much at stake, Last time thesmain
issue of Peter Surinov’s loyalty
was lost in the explosion of a dirty
stick of homemade dynamite. It
killed our beloved colleague, Gus
Logan. I'm not going to let it maim
a great young scientist. Scientists
like Peter Surinov are rare birds.
Superintendents like Maxwell Co
ta are a dime a dozen!”
“By God,” Cota shrilled, “if men
like me are a dime a dozen, then
X-ray men like you must be sold
by the bunch!”
(To Be Concluded)
FARM WIFE ART.IST
PONTAIC, 111. (AP) — Mrs.
Hannah Gallup, farm wife artist
who never has had an art lesson,
dime store brushes and household
paint to put pictures on canvas.
Her work attracted attention at an
exsibit at the local armory. Her
painting is realistic to the last hog
house or broken fence-rail,
Once she painted an old barn
that a neighbor was going to tear
down. When he saw the painting,
he decided the scene was to pret
ty to mar, so the barn is still
standing,
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THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
AT THE MOMVIES
PALACE—
Wed.-Thurs.-Fri.-Sat. — “Love
Is Better Than Ever,” starring
Larry Parks, Elizabeth Taylor.
Born to Peck—Woody Woodpeck=
er. The Lady Marines—special.
News.
RITZ—
Wed.-Thurs.—“Gypsy Wildcat,”
starring Maria Montez, Jon Hall.
The Framed Cat—Tom and Jerry.
Diving Dynasty—sport.
Fri.-Sat. — “Frontier Phantom,"”
starring Lash La Rue, Fuzzy St.
John. Test Pilot Donald—Donald
Duck. So.you want to be a bache
lor—Joe Dpakes, Mysterious Is
land—chapter 6.
DRIVE-IN—
Wed.-Thurs. — “Love Nest,”
starring June Haver, William
Lundigan. The Helpful Geni—
Terrytoon. News.
Fri—“ Louisa,” starring Ronald
Reagan, Ruth Hussey. Audrey the
Rainmaker—Popeye.
Sat—*“Drums In the Deep
South,” starring James Craig, Guy
Madison, Barbara Payton. Bee on
Guard—Donald Duck.
Will Rogers' Pungent Comments
On Politicians Remain Timely
By HAL BOYLE
NEW YORK, — (AP) — Is the
belly laugh getting old-fashioned?
One way to judge a people is to
read what they laugh at. And there
are some who believe the Ameri
caln sense of humor is going down
hill. [
Many professional comedians
complain the nation is develop
ment an ulcer on its funnybone.
“People are too tense,” they say.
“People won’'t take the kidding
they used to. They don’t like to
laugh at themselves any more.”
An antidote to this trend in a
tense political year is provided
by editor Donald Day in a book
of selections from Will Rogers
called “how we elect our Presi~
‘dents” It is a handy little guide
' book back to sanity for both can
‘didates and voters who take them=-
selves too seriously.
Looking back at these many
years after his death on an Alas
kan Tundra, the humor of the gun
chewing cowboy still sands up
well. But the cutting quality of his
quips stands out more clearly now
that the grin that went with them
is buried. Will drew his lariat
noose tight on a lot of nonsense in
his time that needed strangling.
One wonders whether the states
men of today could hold thei tem
pers if they were the .argec of his
artful tosses. Would they have held
still for Rogers, who wrote:
Not One Backbone
“Ain’t it funny how many hun
dreds of thousands of soldiers we
can requirt with mnerve? But we
just can’t find one politician in a
million with backbone.”
Nominating himself for Vice
President in 1924, Will said:
“Another big reason why I
should be nominated is I am not a
Democrat. Another still bigger
reason why I should be nominated
is I.am not a Republican. I am
just progressive enough to suit the
dissatisfied. And Jlazy enough to
be a stand patter.”
Loved Circus Air
Will Rogers loved the circus
atmosphere of political conventions
and described politics as “the best
show in America.
“1 love animals and I love polit
icians, and I like to watch both
of ‘em play either back home in
their native state or after they
have been captured and sent to a
zoo or to Washington.”
Here are a few of his more re
memberable remarks, some of)
EASY. | JUST CHOSE FELTON- |
l SIBLEY DEKO. DEKO COMES IN | !
135 DECORATOR COLORS TO : e e
SUCH A BEAUTIFUL MATCH ANY COLOR SCHEME. fst
COLOR! HOW DID $ o
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OCONEE HARDWARE CO.
378 E. Broad Phone 2753
GEORG:A—
Tues.-Wed.—*“Man Bait,” star
ring George Brent. Ghost Busters.
Barnyard Babies. Papa's Day of
Rest.
Thurs.-Fri. — “Westward the
Women,” starring Robert Taylor.
News.
Sat.—*Dial 1119,” starring Mar=-
shall Thompson. Unknown World.
Time Gallops On.
STRAND—
Sun.-Mon.-Tues.-Wed. — “Ten
Tall Men,” starring B. Lancaster,
Judy Lawrence. Richard Himber
and Orchestra. News.
Thurs.-Fri.-Sat.-—*“Belle of New
York,” starring Fred Astaire, Vera
Ellen, Mouse Comes to Dinner,
Newlyweds House Guest, News.
HARLEM THEATRE—(CoIored)
Wed.-Thurs. — “The Day the
Earth Stood Still.”
Fri.-Sat. — Triple Program —
“San Quentin,” with Humphrey
Bogart. “Hills of Oklahoma,” with
Rex Allen. ‘Overland with KXit
Carson,” with Wild Bill Elliott.
Late Show Saturday, 1:15 p. m.
—“Black Raven.”
them as seasonable as ever:
“Ohio claims they are due a
President as they haven’t had one
since Taft. Look at the United
States, they haven't had one since
Lincoln,”™
“Corruption has supplanted the '
tariff as a national issue....it’s
hard to get people to believe a
thing as corruption when it’s some
thing that hag always been going
on .... it’s like the poor, it's
always been with us.”
“The more you read and observe
about this politics thing, you got
to admit that each party is worse |
than the other. The one that’s out
always looks the best.”
Just A Joke
“The Democrats take the whole ’
thing as a joke and the Republi- |
cans take it serious and run it like |
a joke. So there’s not much dif—’
ference.” |
“Harding is sending out his
speeches on the phonograph. Well,
us public will have one consola
tion—a record when dropped
breaks easily.” |
“Normalcy with me was when I |
owned nothing and paid no income
tax.”
What would Will have thought
television? well, he wrote:
“Personally, I think the camera
has done more harm for politics
than any other one faction. Every
body would rather get their pic
tures in the paper than their ideas.
What does the platform of a polit- ]
ical party amount to compared |
with a phetograph? l
it o esics o v g it v |
More than 110,000 men died
fighting in the Union Army in the |
Civil war as compared to 52,000 |
lost in Confederate forces. :
——————————— AA, AT AN ;
Creates Protective Warmth ¢ ’
ACHING
to relieve coughs and sore muscles |
Musterole instantly creates a won
derful protective warmth right |
where applied on chest, throat and J;
back. It not only promptly relleves |
coughing and inflammation but |
breaks up painful local congestion. |
|
RUB ON
MUSTEROLE NN
Atforney General Cook Says May 3
Deadline To Register For Primary
The last day for registration of
voters in the state Democratic
primary will be at the close of of
fice hours by the registrars on
Saturday, May 3rd, according to
opinion of Fugene Cook, Attorney
General of Georgia, rendered at
the request this week of Senator
Robert G. Stephens, jr., of Athens,
one of the candidates for repre
sentative fromr Clarke county in
the forthcoming primary., The
state primary will be May 14,
Mr. Stephens stated that a num
ber of people in the county had
raised several questions in regard
to registration and to their eligi
bility to wote and that he request
el l&'r. Cook to give an official
answer to the several questions.
The full text of Mr. Cook's
opinion is as follows:
“From a review of the pertinent
statutes relating to the registration
of persons desiring to vote in the
May 14, 1952, state primary and
the November 4, 1952, general
election, I reach the conclusion:
Registration Act
“I, That all persons who were
registered and qualified to vote in
the 1948 general election or the
1950 general election, or both,
would not be required to re-regis
ter under the terms of the 1949
“Voters’ Registration Act” (Ga.
Laws 1949, p. 1204, as amended),
and such persons would qualified
to vote in the May 14, 1952 State
primary and the November 4,
1952 general élection unless such
persons have become disquzlified
to vote by reasqn of having been
purged from the list of qualified
voters or for any other leason
whatsoever. In this event, such
persons must, in order to become
qualified to vote in said primary
and general election, re-register
under the terms of the 1949
“Voters’ Registration Act.”
“2. That all men and women in
the military service of the United
States meeting the qualifications of
an elector, as provided by law, and
who were not registered and quli
fied to vote in the 1048 general
election or the 1950 general elec
tion, or both, may be registered by
the county registrars at any time
prior to the May 14, 1952 State
primary and the November 4,
1952 general election as a regist
ered voter, by such person or his
relative or friend requesting from
the registrars a registration card
and such persons desiring to vote
executing the same and returning
it to the registrars by ordinary
mail,
May 3 Deadline
“3. That the County registrars
of the various counties in 1852
cease their operation of taking
applications from persons desiring
to vote in the May 14, 1952 State
primary and the November 4,
1052 general election, exce?t as
to men and women in the military
service of the United States.
“4, That any person who after
application was unlawfully denied
theright to qualify as a registtered
voter, may have his name placed
upon the list of registered voters
upon gatisfactory showing made to
the, registrars that he is entitled
to register and qualify. The re
gistrars may hear any competent
written evidence or oral testimony,
under oath, concerning the re
moval of the disqualification of
any person whose name appears
on the list of disqualified wvoters,
and the names of all persons who
were not of age or who had not
resided in the State or County the
requisite time at the date of filing
UAIRY QUEEN
SPRINGTIME
THURSDAY and FRIDAY THIS WEEK
GET AN EXTRA %
SUNDAE, CONE Po NN
A
OR MILKSHAKE . Y
/ : i
DIRY
@-’?J :
- ey DUEEN
1c 25 “The Cone with
SALE N the Curl on Top”
1076 WEST BROAD STREET
Across From Silvey Motors.
12 Block West of Milledge on Broad
the application for registration and
%uum‘ication. shall be xlaced on
the proper. list prepared for any
election occurring after the date
when such person reached the age
of eighteen yars or has resided in
the State and County the requisite
time, provided such persons are
otherwise qualified.”
Courses Offered
In Medicine For
Army Reservisis
Two short courses open to Geor
gia Army reservists at the Army
Medical Service Graduate School,
Arnry Medical Center, Washing~
ton, D, C,, were announced today
by the Headquarters, Georgia
Military District. Reserve officers
may send their applications to
district headquarters at 699 Ponce
de Leon Avenue, N. E, Atlanta,
Ga.
The Dental Service Administra
tion Officer Couse will be con
ducted from May 9 to 24, Applica
tions for this course should be in
by March 30.
The Medical Aspects of Nuclear
Energy Course will be conducted
from April 13 to April 20. Appli
cations for this course should ar
rive not later than March 25.
Prerequisites for thees {wo
courses are to be found in the
Army School Catalog.
HOT SPELL
DRAWIN, Australia(AP) —The
temperature at Tennant Creek,
Central Australia, fell below 100
degrees on only 11 of 111 succes
sive summer days recently. On
most of the 11 days, it was over 98,
but one day it colled off to'92 de
grees.
Most trees on rubber plantations
yield four to five pounds of rub
ber a year.
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PAGE FIVE
DIET FOR DEER
MISSOULA, Mont. - (AP) A
proper diet is as conducive to old
age in deer as in humans, says Dr.
E. L. Cheatum who heads the state
fish and game department’s co
operative research unit here, Dr.
Cheatum stated that checks on
deer brought by hunters show that
good grass range enables Montana
deer to live ten years or more. The
grass also increases the animals’
preproductive rate to twice that
of those living on poor range.
RAFFY WELCOMES SEMINICK
CINCINNATI— (AP)— Gerry
Priddy, second baseman for the
Detroit Tigers, proved that he is
the best of the Tigers - in golf,
that is, For the second straight
spring Priddy won the annual
“Tiger Tournament.,” He shot a
72 to beat coach Dick Bartell and
pitcher Hal Newhouser by five
strokes. In the playoff for second
spot Newhouser basted Bartell,
Legally, a will or codicil may
be signed any day, including Sun
days and legal holidays.
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