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8D0GF00D......... .. 3cans 25¢
26 ©Z. CAN LIBBY'S
& SLICED PINEAPPLE .. .. .. .. .. 1% B
TALL CANS CARNATION OR s ;
® PETMILK (limitd)... .. 2for 23c
: BIG THREE POUND CAN b
{ CRISCO (limitone) .. .. ... 1%
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REMINGTON ELECTRIC SHAVERS '
& SHEAFFERSPENSETS .... .... .. s3.7suwp B 8
CICARS BY THE BOX—ALL KINDS
EASTMAN KODAKS — SHAVING SETS :
YARDLEY — OLD SPICE — HOUBICANT
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v 4% SOFT KLEENEX TISSUES <4
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FORMULA 9 and SHAMPOO . $2.00
FULL PINT EXTRA HEAVY
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GIANT SIZE AHLUR
CHLOROPHYL SHAMPOO .. .. .. 98¢
VACATION SPECIAL
GALLON THERMOL JUG .. ... $2.98
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B, AW i it 2
HOW RADIO STATION WAS SEIZED—Three Cornell
University students at Ithaca, N. Y., re-enact the way in
which they were held for eight minutes by ten masked
youths wh% seized a student-operated station and broad
cast a fake bulletin that European cities had been bomb
ed, and an air armada was approaching America. An
nouncers William Ellison of Niagara Falls, N. Y., (left)
and Harold Fishman of Brooklyn show how they were
held with their hands tied behind them while station
engineer Diane Deci (right), of Palmyra, N. Y., was re
quired to remain seated. Twenty-five Cornell students
have been suspended for a year as a result of the inci
dent.— (AP Wirephoto.)
| j ; &irceLo
=\~ Copr. 1952 by NEA Sarvite, Inc.
THE STORY: Private Detective
George Kendall, retained by the
wealthy Albert P. Sutworth to
prevent elopement of his daugh
ter with an ex-wresiler called
Chief Big Bear, disguises himself
and goes to Big Bear’s gymnasium
in the small ciiy of Seneca Springs.
George had planned to buy Big
Bear off, but when George enters
the gymnasium he discovers to
his dismay that it is for wom
en and Geerge barely escapes cap
ture as a trespasser.
* * -
Verna Denton stopped smiling
and looked sternly at George Ken
dall, her boss. “How about taking
off that loony looking mustache
and those eyeglasses,” she said,
shaking her head. “The police are
probably searching for you as a
Peeping Tom this very minute.”
George removed his disguise.
M’WW‘_
P o/ rem T ——— |
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Bll| Awning to Protect and
|| Beautify Every Home
2 ond Business Building
W
AN
N\
4 Concave Window Awning
3 (B-1) suitoble for most Homes and
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: i
i,
T
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AN
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:::&::4"1':"":" Heme and
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fromts.
: ?"lmzcw 58
l‘T we show you how little B cosin
to instoll permanent, trouble-free
Zephyr Awnings on your Home of
Business Bullding, €Cell or write
for free literature, estimate, ond
k sonsultation. :Q
PU. B RE PATENT NS, 51,008 =
5 "
Georgia - Carolina
VENTILATED
AWNING CO.
Box 508, Augusta
In Athens call
3379-)
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
“Now you're my kindly young |
employer again,” Verna said.
“Maybe the disguise isn’t per
fect,” George said. “This suit could
be recognized and if we go back
to Seneca Springs I might get
picked up”
“No confidence,” said Verna.
“But let’s worry about that when
it happens.”
She turned the car around and
started back to town.
“I don’t see any cops around,”
Kendall said as they reached the
Seneca Springs city limits. “Maybe
they didn’t even report the inci
dent at the gym.”
“Maybe,” Verna said, “but stop
worrying about it.” She pulled the
rented car into the curb in front
of a drugstore. “We can go in
here and check the phone book.”
“Good idea,” he said, but inside
the drugstore, as he started to
leaf through the phone book, he |
realized it wasn’t such a good idea
after all. Chief Big Bear. How did
you look up a name like that? He
looked under “Bear,” but found
nothing. He examined the listings
for Indian and that also proved
fruitless. In exasperation, he
turned to Verna. “Here, brain
storm. You look it up.
“Dectective, huh?” She turned to
the classified section at the back
of the book and found the listing
for Gymnuasium. There is was.
The Chief Big Bear Gymnasium.
There were two listing, one for his
place of business and the other his
residence. “It's easy when you
know how,” she said. “The ad-l
dress ig 264 Maple Drive.”
“Aren’t you ever wrong?” Geor
ge asked.
Her face was tilted toward his
and the corners of her mouth
dropped. “I was wrong once. I
thought I was working for a de
tective.”
~ There was an awkwaard silence
"and for a brief second he felt the
irresistible urge to take her in his
' arms and kiss her. But then the
- second passed and he said, “C’mon,
ilet’s get out of here.”
* - *
| The address, 264 Maple Drive,
amounted to a three-story brick
apartment building. “Maybe you'd
better go back to the hotel, Verna.”
| “What for?” f
. “Because if that was Big Bear
[who chased me out of the gym
nasium, he’s liable to see this car |
“Wish | Had a Girl”
VERTICAL
IGet up &
2 Bemoan g
3lnlay in a 5
pavement
4 Mine shaft
b hut
- 5 Within (comb.
- form)
8 Finished
" 7 Aged
8 Roisterer
9 Foray
10 Soothsayers
12 Go by
aircraft
13 Moths
18 Ventilate
21 Desires
HORIZONTAL
1 Wonderland
girl
6 —— Day
11 Indian
heroine
13 City in Illinois
14 Obstruct
15 Native state of
India
16 Body of water
17 Papal cape
19 Rocky
pinnacle ;
20 Covet :
22 Lubricant -
23 Afternoon “
social events
24 Year between :
- 12 and 20
'TIITE PRI
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26 Impede
28 Eagle (comb.
form)
30 Knock
31 College cheer
32 Diminutive of
Susan 5 ‘
33 Leased
36 Allowance for
waste . ..
39 Indites ¥
40 Narrow inlet
42 Abraham’s .
wife (Bib.) "
44 Fourth month
(ab.) .
45 Girl's mmatm
47 Second-best
* card in - ‘
pinochle
48 Rents :
50 Silver *u¢
52 Feminine %=
appellation 7
53 Card game ! |
54 Cubic meter
:'_&s Onagers .
and r~~ognize it. Anyway, it’s only
a cc » of blocks to the hotel and
I dc ~ind the walk.”
“Do 1 think you'll be all
right? . : asked.
“Surc, 't if I'm not back in
30 or 40 ‘uteg you’ll know that
somethin znt haywire.”
“What amn I supposed 4o do
then?”
“Better call the law, or some
body,” he said. “But don’t worry.
Nothing is gomna happen. I sot
a hunch that from here onm, it's
gonna be easy sledding.”
He had no diffieulty in finding
out that Chief Big Bear lived in
suite 3. The name “Chief Big
Bear” was typed on a tab along
side the doorbell for that suite and
under it was another name “Max
Arno.” He wondered briefly if this
meant Chief Big Bear or his body
guard. Well, he thought, gangsters
or not, here I come.
He pressed the button next to
the tab, but received no reply. He
pressed the button for suite 4, and
a buzzer sounded opening the
door. This was strict private eye
technique. George told himself
proudly. George entered and went
up the stairs to suite 3, which was
on the second floor to the left.
But, before he could knock the
door of suite 4 opened.
The girl in the doorway was
about 22 short, with brown eyes
and a funny little upturned mouth
that he found both provocative
and mischievous. She wore a black
satin cocktail dress, cut away at
the top, revealing the soft, deli
cate lines of her shoulders.
“Did you ring?” she asked.
“Uh—er—l'm calling on Chief
Big Bear, but I guess I punched
the wrong bell,” said George.
“He’s not home,” said the girl.
George tried to think of an an
swer. He couldn’t think of one.
“Cat got your tongue?”
* - *
George was behaving very un
like a detective of any sort.
“Where is he?” he asked. “I mean
Bear Big Chief—l mean Chief Big
Bear.” He was stammering, lous
ing it up.
The young woman was laughing
at him, but he couldn’t appreciate
the joke. She opned the door a
little wider. “He’s at work. Ex
cuse my chuckles, but haven’t you
ever talked to a girl before?” She
smiled now.
Of course, I have,” he said
with a new-found firmness is his
voice, “but I didn’t expect to see
a girl, that’'s all.”
“I wish I could make all men
speechless,” she said mischiev
ously. ; P
PR R
She could without trying, he
thought.
But this young woman was
gumming up the case. George
coudn’t stand here stuttering all
day. Verna was waiting down
stairs and she would grow worried
if George didn’t put in an appear
ance in 20 minutes, The girl was
speaking.
“Well let's see, you wanted to
know where Max was, didn’t
you?” she asked.
“Who's Max?”
“Well, the Chief, of course, or
didn’t you know?”
(To Be Cont'=—>*
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THE CURE FAILED — Bobby
Spain, two, of Westgate-on-Sea,
England, took his first puff at the
age of one. Daddy thought it
would cure him of wanting to
smoke, but Bobby’s still puffing
away. He likes to smoke, and
his parents can’t object. It seems
to have improved his appetite
Answer to Previous Puzzle
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39 Dhak tree
41 Wings
43 Poker stakes
45 Remove
46 Genus of =
mollusks Q
49 Weight of
India
51 Aeriform fuel
23 Small candles
25 Tidy
27 Tense
29 —— Wright
33 Feel regret
34 Anger
35 Dilute (ab.)
37 Diners
38 Thirty (Fr.)
Pinay Experiment Boosts Ailing
French Franc To Work A Miracle
By CHARLES R. HARGROVE
NEA Special Sorrespondent
PARIS — (NEA) — In less than
three months, what Frenchmen
call “the Pinay experienment” is
proving almost too good to be true.
The man behind it is Antoine
Pinay, a small tanner from the
Loire Valley, who was chosen by
President Vincent Auriol to be
come premier of a nation on the
brink of another financial collapse.
Pinay had not been in office a
month before the climate of the
frane had begun to change com
pletely. Now the French are
wondering of Pinay, unknown
outside his home town and parlia
mentary circles until last March,
is following in the footsteps of
Raymond Poincare, who saved
the franc from perdition 25 years
ago. l
When Pinay became premier,
two governments had fallen in\
quick succession because parlia
ment refused extra taxation de
clared necessary to balance the
1952 budget.
'The treasury was so short of
funds it had to order the National
Bank to print money for it, and
so short of foreign exchange i®
had to get a SIOO million loan
from the European Payments
Union.
Imports were SSO million a
month higher than exports. There
was a rush to buy gold and for
eign currency, prices were threat
ening to run away, labor unions
were clamoring for raises, and‘
everyone, inside and outside
France, was saying the franec
would be devalued any minute. |
Since then, this is what has
happened:
Pinay persuaded parliament to
approve a budget that balances
because of spending for invest
ments and reconstruction have
been slashed, rather than because
of increased taxes.
The treasury has all the money
it needs at least until July—and
some prospect of being able to
repay its special loan. Ruthless
restrictions of imports, have cut
the trade deficit in half, easing, the
foreign exchange situation.
The dollar bill can be bought
for 400 francs in the offical free
market. Before the official price
wag 350 francs, the black market
price 480.
Prices stopped rising and are
showing a downward trend under
a nation-wide campaign recog
nized even by the labor union.
People are beginning to think
maybe the franc wasn’t so sick or
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Naturalizer Treasure Chest collection,,
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OUT OUR WAY
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alll }{Q;\, ANCOVET J A ITACAR KiLis ou!” | |
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l -THE K‘LLEK Copr. 1952 by NEA Servies, Inc. T. M. Reg. U. 8. Pat. OfL :
the government so rotten after
all — much to the dismay of the
Communists, who fare better
when things are bad, and Gen.
Charles DeGaulle, whose party
members have been voting for
the government against his
orders.
It is too soon to say whether
the Pinay experiment is going to
be another big miracle like the
one Poincare engineered in 1927,
At the moment everyone is
waiting to see how much gold
will come to the government from
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\‘J CRIMSON ‘
THIS OUTSTANDING DECORATION IS A MODERN AND
SIMPLIFIED INTERPRETATION OF AN OLD CLASSICAL
CHINESE PATTERN, .
Bew York
&
Norris Hardware Co.
131 E. Clayton Phone 57
SUNDAY, JUNE 1, 1952.
private hoards, estimated at ..
tween three and four thousan
tons, through subseriptions to ().
3% per cent 60-year loan.
Cautious observers point ot
that history never repeats itscit
exactly. They recall that whey,
Poincare’s miracle sueceede E
there were no Communists oy
side Russia, no two-loc cold war,
and the material damage of oy
onl{;, instead of two, world wers
to repaired.
But to anyone who left France
at the beginning of Mareh an(
returned in April, ag this writer
did the ' Pinay e:t(lperiment arleady
looks like a little miracle,
In one month, a typical mid
dle—cass Frenchman, shrewd,
straightforward and above all 1]
of common sense,
BY J. R. WILLIAMS