Newspaper Page Text
THURSDAY, MARCH 20, 1952,
Coming
“Events
The Coming Events Column
is designed to supply the pub
lic with facts concerning or
ganizational and otner meet
ings, times, places and events
only. Contributors to this
column are requested to limit
their coming events to these
facts to insure the brevity and
clarity of the varfous items in
the column
PUBLIC LIBRARY
Recent paintings by George
Heidler are now being shown in
the Library.
Antigues from the collection
of Mrs. Susan Lacy-Baker are
on display in the library.
Children’s Story Hour each
Saturday in children’s room
from 10 until 11 a. m.
Library story itime over
WGAU each Friday, 5 p. m.
Opening hours: Monday
through Friday, $ a. m. to 9 p.
m.; Saturday, @a. m. to 6 p m.;
Sundays, 3 p. m. to 6 p. m.
American Cancer Society is
sponsoring “Sengs Feor Ameri
ca” each Wednesday afternoon,
5 p. m., over station WGAU.
Tune in and listen to this pro
gram which will be featured for
the next five weeks.
WCTU HOUR
Over WRFC the following will
be heard on the Woman’s Chris
tian Temperance Union hour
each Monday meorning during
the month of March from 11 to
11:15:
March 24, Rev. H. E. Wright.
March 31, Mrs. William J.
Russell. \
Over WGAU the following
will be heard on the Woman's
Christian Temperance Union
hour each Tuesday afternoon
during the month of March from
5 to 5:15:
March 25, Baptist Student
Union.
Lenten devotions at St. Jo
seph’s Church every Sunday,
Wednesday and Friday at 8 p.
m. Children, Friday, 2 p. m.
WCTU will hold the regular
business and social meeting
Friday, March 21, 3:30 at Young
Harris Memorial Church. The
Rev. G. M. Spivey is the guest
speaker. Vieg-presidents of all
churches are asked to call their
members,
Due te Spring Holidays this
week the regular Demonstration
School PTA meeting for March
has been postponed until March
27. The Executive Committee
meeting will be held Tuesday,
March 25 instead of March 21.
Entre Nous Club will hold its
reguiar weekly meeting Thurs
day night at 6:30 at the YMCA.
Extension Wives Sewing Club
wiii meet Friday March 21, at
10:30 o’clock, in Memorial Park.
Mrs. Hugh Inglis, hostess.
Athens Home Demonstration
Club will meet Monday, March
24, 8 p. m. in room 308, Dawson
Hall. Miss Irma Hicks is to talk
on Children’s Clothing.
Pre-school Child Study Group
will meet Wednesday, March 26,
8 p. m. with Mrs. Herbert Hen
derson on Fortson Drive. Rubin
Gotesky is to be the guest
speaker.
On account of the Spring holi
days at the University, the Geor
gia Museum of Art will be closed
Saturday, March 22, and Sunday
March 23.
Athens Chapter No. 268, Or
der of the Eastern Star, is spon
soring a fish supper March 22,
\% %
“SOCIAL WHIRL”
iParty-goer or ¢ity para(ler...}'our
}cvery spring entrance will come
%maml n(]m;rfng attention in this ‘ j“{
sideswent sling! Hig]l or m;(]-heel ] g ;jz
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Blue Calf 512 95 AT
Honey Cobra e
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Shoe Salon - Street Floor.
from 6to Bp. m. at the Masonle
Temple on Melgs street. Tickets
are SI.OO.
Athens High School will pre
sent annual Swun; Night in Fine
Arts Auditorium on Monday,
March 24, 8 p. m. Admission is
35 cents for students and 50
cents for adults. Tickets may
be purchased at the door or
from High School students.
Athens High PTA
Held Supper
And Family Night
The Athens High School PTA
sponsored a spaghetti supper and
Family Night at its meeting March
13th. After a delicious’ supper in
the cafeteria the large erowd as
sembled in the gym where several
hilarous stunts were performed by
the parents and student body.
Kennth (Abdul) Eberhart stag
ed a hairraising fire eating act
which was followed by several
novelty wresteling' matches with
such well known personalities as
J. C. (Lard Mountain) Carter and
“Diainty” Donald Carmes particip
ating. Another interesting act was
the pet show: The winner of this
event was ‘Great Dane’ Hugh Ing
lis.
Some of the mothers then parad
ed in a beauty review, they were
escorted to the mike by William
Auld, where they were interview
ed by Master of Ceremonies Bill
Auld. The winning beauties were
Clara Bow (Mrs. H. L. Farmer)
and Shirley Temple (Mrs. Walker
Word). Throughout the program
the crowd was intertained by the
antices of a clown, in the person of
Sam Hale.
¥ ® %
Special Services
Tonight At
Friendship Church
An Installation-Prayer Meeting
Service will be conducted tonight
at 8 p. m. in the Friendship Pres
byterian Church by Rev. Cook W.
Freeman for the newly elected
officers who will serve another
Church.
The officers elect are as follows:
Mrs. Willard Kilpatrick, presi
dent; Mrs. Dempsey Brooks, sec
retary and treasurer; Mrs. Roland
R. Harris, chairman of Church
Extension Committee; Mrs.
Charles Ivy, chairman of the spi
ritual Growth Committee, and
Mrs. Steve Conger, chairman of
the Assembly’s Special Causes.
The officers are elected for a
period of two years, and those
offigers which will serve another
year are as follows: Mrs. Cook W.
Freeman, vice-president; Mrs.
Otis E. Cross, chairman of the
World Missions Committee; Mrs.
J. Swanton Ivy, historian; Mrs.
Tilden Young, Stewardship Com
mittee; Mrs. Oscar Montgomery,
Annuities and Relief; and Mrs.
John Allgood, Education commit
tee.
The first part of the service will
center in the installation of the
new officers and the last part will
be a prayer service for the work
of this fine organization of the
church.
Colbert Baptist
Church To Hold
Cottage Prayers
The Men's Brotherhood of the
Colbert Church is sponsoring
three cottage prayer meetings at
8 o’clock Friday evening in pre
paration for the Spring Revival
which will begin next Sunday.
Prayer services. are to be held
simultaneously in the home of
three members of the layman’s
organization, Messrs H. G. King,
Calhoun Adams, and Wyatt Ben~
ton.
Rev. William F. Crowe, the
pastor, will open the series of
services on Sunday morning at 11
o’clock. Services will be held
each evening through the week
at 7:45. The public is extended a
sincere invitation.
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FHA District 111
Plans Convention
For March 29th
Future Homemakers from the
high schools in Banks, Barrow,
Clarke, Dawson, Elbert, Fannin,
Forsyth, Franklin, Gilmer, Greene,
Gwinnett, Habersham, Hill, Hart,
Jackson, Jasper, Jones, Lincoln,
Lumpkin, Madison, Morgan, Oco
nee, Ogletharpe, Piekens, Putnam,
Rabun, Stephens, Taliaferro,
Towns, Union, Walton, White and
Wilkes county will come to Ath
ens March 29 to attend the spring
district convention of District 111
gs their organization.
Sessions will be held in the
Fine Arts Auditorium of the Uni
versity of Georgia. Mrs. William
Pickens, homemaking teacher at
Benton, will be chairman of the
local arrangements. This is the
last of four spring district meet
ings which have been held over
Georgia during March. More than
a thousand girls attend each meet
ing. :
Mrs. J. M. Barber of Athens,
who has been state adviser for
the Future Homemakers since
their organization in 1945, has
been working with the girls and
their teachers and-school princi
pals in getting ready for the Ath
ens meeting.
Peggy Tarpley of University
High School, Athens, is state vice
president for District 111 and will
call the meeting to order at ten
o’clock. Registration will begin at
nine, The Future Homemakers,
who will represent chapters in
thirty-three counties in this sec
tion of the state, will come in
school busses and bring a picnic
lunich which they will spread at
noon. They use this picnic hour
to get acquainted with high school
girls in other sections of the state.
Mrs. C. B. McCullar, editor of
Georgia FHA News will be the
speaker on the Athens program.
Linda Bragg of Ila is program
chairman and Barbara Wolfe of
Cumming is district secretary.
She will be in ¢harge of roll call.
A spring fashion show will be
given by chapters from North
Habersham, Crawfordville, Daw
sonville, Blairsville, Carnesville,
Royston, Norcross, Lilburn,
Greensboro, Grayson, Eastanollee,
Bowman, Elberton, Monticello
and Maysville. It will be narrated
by Mrs. Mildred Bunch of Jasper.
Many other chapters in the dis
trict will have parts on the pro
gram during the day, presenting
the devotional or skits about FHA
work or talent numbers and rec
reational relaxers.
The district has two state offi
cers who will attend. They
are Joyce Venable of Jefferson,
state secretary, and Barbara
Guest of Winder, state historian.
District 111- has had one of the
most active years in its history,
and is said by state leaders %o
have had a big part in the new
high record of membership which
has been attained this year. Fu
tuge Homemakers, an organization
which has more than six thous
and chapters in America, has 350
chapters in Georgia with a mem
bership of more than fifteen thou
sand high school homemaking stu=
dents.
Atttending the Athens conven
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
tion will be Miss Inez Wallace of
Atlanta, state supervisor of Home
making Education and chairman
of the Advisory Board, Betty Tate
of Atlanta, state president, Miss
Dora Mollenhoff, Athens, assis
tant state supervisor of Home
making Education, and Miss An
nie Stembridge of Edllijay, dis
trict FHA adviser and state vice
president of the Georgia Voca
tional Association,
Candidates will be named at the
Athensg convention to be present
ed for state offices when the state
convention meets in Atlanta May
2 and 8.
Famous Artists
Do Paintings
For Housewives
Taking a historig page out of the
Fifteenth Century when the old
masters created fabric designs for
the period, Michael's will today
show for the first time in Athens
decorative fabrics designed and
signed by famous American artists.
The idea of commissioning fine
artists to design fabrics was con
ceived by New York’s famed crea
tive group, the Associated Ameri
can Artists in collaboration with
Riverside Mfg. Co., 1nc.,,.-a leading
fabric producer.
Eight of Associated's most noted
artists, who participated in this
program aimed to give the bud
get-wise homemaker an opport
unity to own and hang “museum
calibre” works around their win
dows. They gave their imagina
tions free rein, and were inspired
only by good taste.
The first collection is based on
an “Americana” theme. Leaders
in home planning who previewed
the group, were impressed with
the new vitality in decroative tex
tiles. Leading interior decorators
are building complete room
schemes around the gay contrasts
and subtle harmonies of color.
Amo% the designs to be shown
in the ““Pioneer Pathways” series
is Doris Lee’s “Curio Cabinet”,
a sharp, clean pattern wihch stres
ses the functional lines. of modern
furniture. Produced by Luigi Luci
oni, with his genius for pastorials,
is & warm country scene with
traditional flavor, called “Ameri
can Splendor” Laura Jean
Allen recaptures the nostelgic feel
ing of the 1900’s in her utteriy
charming “Family Album”. An
ton Refregier’s contribution sug
gests the pioneering spirit of Paul
Bunyan and the quilting bee; it
invites coordination with knotty
pine, rich walnut. Wiltold Gordon
depicts the swerve and motion of
deep sea life as he plays shape
against shape for his “Shell Crest”.
Whimsical little flowers and play
ful plants, as at home in Dutch
curtains as on lamp shades or the
favorite chair, dance on “The
Nest” by Arnold Blanch. For
“Country Auction” Aaron Bohrod
collects familiar antique shop
trinkets, paints them vibrant col
ors, and produces a fascinating ef
fect. Grant Wood’s untimely death
in 1942 kept him from seeing the
verve of his ‘“Midnight Ride of
Paul Revere” captured on fabric,
but it’s now available at Michaels.
Associated American Artists see
this project as a stimulant to all
art appreciation. People who have
paintings, can coordinate them
with fabrics of the same tenor.
Those who cannot afford original
art, can now live with fine design.
Riverdale’s lustrous sailcloth and
bark textured cotton is guaranteed
washable.
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1 T e complexion to one which glows with new radiance,
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Y e :,: / M : *You never looked so healthy —so wonderful.”
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: L i than glowing, natural-looking radiance on
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W L i 7 gl w. TN 3 i rouges that leave a hard, painted look!
P "l'fi”y’"/’/’/ "T"l.fir j ”"nf "', v,v,,.':‘::;"“! .“"‘u ? ] ;
i i o |f; i Now, for the first time, Hazel Bishop Complexion
P jr— e ¥ g 7 Gl i heek ft, delicate blush
; @lsl, HAZEL BISHOP, ING, G Ve B ow glves your cheeks aBo t, elicate blus Of
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B T g color that’s so naturally lovely, it seems
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£ - : ; to come from within! Unlike tell-tale rouges,
I /7/326/ 5 Complexion Glow never blotches, cakes, streaks, or
' " B;Shop clogs—blends perfectly with your skin tone.
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4 You'll Love Hazel Bishop 3 e | i Came el b :
| No-S Tiusetah 'oo ey, L 3 flattering shades! “Pink Glow” for light skin,
8 No-Sme stick, ! SR 9 : s ; =\ b
y (Yo-OSmear Lipstick, 100 s, yX/ “Coral Glow” for medium skin, “Rose Glow
‘Won't Eat Offl Won't Kiss Off! Won't Smear Off! § s, for dark skin.
No wonder It's America’s Largest-Selling Lipstick! s fi)w i slso'
€reamy-smooth! 7 Flattering Shades. sllo* AN~ ¥ SMARP ECONOMICAL BOUDOIR SIZE
\"Zfil Convenient-to-carry purse flacon sl*
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You Can Say “Ch It" at Michael’s!
y arge It"" at Michael’s!
Wedding Plans Of Miss Nell Oliver
And Mr. Robert A. Hall Announced
The wedding plans of Miss Nell
Oliver and Mr. Robert Adams Hall
have been completed. The cere
mony will take place on Saturday,
March 22, three-thirty in the af
ternoon at the First Presbyterian
Church. Dr. Harmon B. Ramsey is
to cfficiate.
Jim Bearss, organist will pre
sent the nuptial musie.
Robers McKibben is to serve as
best man and ushers include J. P,
Wellington, jr., of Crawfordville,
and Bill Davis, of Columbus.
Miss Jane Obiver, sister of the
bride-elect, will be the maid of
honor and only attendant,
The bride is to be given in mar
riage by her brother, Sherrill Oli-
PERSONALS
Mrs. J.© B. Carson and little
daughter, Joan, who have been
visiting parents and friends in
Athens and Social Circle left
March 18 for Key West, Fla., to
join her husband.
W® % .
Sanford Butler, jr., Bert Sams,
jr., Tommy and Bee Tillman, who
are students at Baylor School for
Boys in Chattanooga, Tenn., are
spending the spring holidays with
their parents in Athens.
% & &
Miss Rosalyn Oldham is im
proving after a weeks illness at
her home on Franklin street.
* * &
Friends of Mr. J. M. Fulcher,
of the Boulevard, will be sorry to
learn he is a patient at the Ath
ens General Hospital. :
® % »
Miss Ruby Rumsey who is a
teacher in the High School at
Jackson, Ga., is {1 at the home of
her sister, Mrs. William Russell
on Highland avenue.
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Friends of Mr. Harvey Doster
will be glad to know he is doing
nicely following ar operation at
the General Hospital.
* ® %
Friends of Miss Geneva Flem
ming will regret to learn that she
is a medical patient at St. Mary’s
Hospital but will be glad to know
that her condition is much im=-
proved. Miss Flemming is a stu
dent at Athens High School and
has been in the hospital several
days with a strep throat condition,
st * %
Friends of Miss Virginia Hale
will regret to learn that she will
be confined to her home for sev
eral days because of a severe at
tack of virus flu.
* L I
Frinds of A .B. Tuck will regret
to learn that he continues ill at
St. Mary’s hospital.
SEWING AID
A new type of curtain heading
simplifie¢ the making of cafe
style or brise-bise curtains. Loop
attachments are sewed right into
the decorative curtain tape. Once
width and fullness have been de
cided on, the trimming is sewed
to the curtain and it is ready to
slip on a rod, eliminating the ne=
cessjty of attaching metal rings.
Mrs. Oliver will entertain at &
reception, following the ceremony,
for the wedding party and guests,
to be held at the annex of the
church.
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Athens High Plans
Annual Stunt Night
Athens High will present its an~
nual stunt night Monday, March
24, in the Fine Arts Auditorium at
8 o'clock.
Admission will be 35 cents for
PAGE THREE
students and 50 cents for adults;
tickets may be purchassd at the
door, or from high school #tudents,
BATH MITT e
Use soap scraps to fill the hid- |
den pocket of a handy hath mitt =
that can be made from worn-out |
bath towels. ]