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PAGE TWO
Henry Youngman Is Known Around
Broadwav As A Naturai Born Comic
By HAL BOYLE
NEW YORK —(AP)— Henry
youngman is known along Broad
way as a man so funny that even
other eomedians regard each oth
er in terms of larceny rather than
laughter,
But this “comic’s comic” ‘is dif
ferent from most of the breed,
who <are given to private melan
choly. He not only has spen* his
life making fun. Fun is his life.
Henny, now 46, is one of the
nation’s top night club entertain
ers. Some connoisseurs of the in
dustry say he is the equal of
Groucho Marx, Fred Allen, Bob
Hone or Milton Berle. He is often
a puest star on other shows, but
has never had a national television
L) "
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Monthly “Nerves” Are Easy To See W el
You, tOO, may not be able to hide that tired, f_# & % e
nervous, jittery look each month no matter how a 8
much “make-up” you use. Keep your secret safe ST
during “those” days - don't be the one girl in RSk A
three who shows the strain from tell-tale nerves oCo .
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thousands of women, girls to help insure against *§F VEAINEIEERE
“nerves” and other signs of monthly 'm A % - SN
little Cardui each day heifls build S 0 Yeam oo S
resistance may be greater each month, nervousness PR R
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« Many scientists estimate that at some time during life W <
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CA\R DU v ' Monthly Cramps « Change of Life
ST EEEEN CROW’S FOR LOW DRUG PRICES (iR
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THIS WEEK TWIN-PACKAGE SAVINGS CLOSE OUTS
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T . “PO.DOH Raé'os § now ]8.95
o covs /) /F Shaving Cream POP-UP—REG. 11.95
Percolators .... 1.98 7{ RO/ A e Bruskiess Toasters, now 9.95
INGRAHAM '/ i {2’s // 2 Fn— 69¢ REG. 25¢ ,
Alarm Clocks .. 1.69 S crocma ot s low pric) Goblets . . now 19¢
Erm' ".’”D Il 3.95 T D HAIR——REG. 6.95
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gl [Satis > Y Dryer.... n0w5.95 }
Heating Pads .. 2.69 =) vm"’“ woy 1
PLASTIC 9 , !’\\7“\'\4‘:' Lamps . . now 1.19
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PERK—Large & Small Contains Chlorophyll Reg. 49¢Wal. ot Plat 1
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WALGREEN—FuII Pint DEODORANY VABLETS AT :
Alcohol .. .. ... 29c § "2 298¢ 1770 2i 5O fpemrrea I LUI U
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Dish Cloths .. ... 7c B¢, yrina. a 2 N 4 \// Q%;Q ’*@ °§\
MULTIPLE [Je 1 | L L] |
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PHOTO SPECIALS Botle of 25 included 3% ' Pen Set Billfolds Compacts
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show of his own.
Wants Own Show
“After 20 years of knocking
around the country, I'd like to
have my own show,” he said. “If
I don’t, I guess the only way I'll
get rich is through my feet.”
He explained he had “radioac
tive toes.” And his theory of gain
ing wealth through them is “to
walk barefoot through Canada
until I hit a uranium mine.”
Comedians stuck for a sure-fire
fast line or a quip often come to
Youngman for help. And he al
ways has one handy-—or makes up
one on the spot. He is a walking
fil2 case of thousands of jokes, old,
middleaged, and new ones ready
to be born.
“I need a lot,” he said. “For a
six-minute show I have to have
| 40 good jokes.”
Gives Away Jokes
The course of Henry, whose
habitat is Times Square and who
lopes around it like a polar bear
in a brown coat, is that he gives
away jokes as fast as he can think
them up.
“Just a minute,” he says, stop
ping a friend, and begins throwing
l a jest a second. All free.
! Al libbine is so natural with him
he can't quit. Naturally he likes to
‘ get paid. But he has been known to
| waste SIO,OOO worth of fresh ma=-
| terial ad libbing while at liberty
with a few cronies around a res
taurant table.
i One of the things Henny does
to brighten a dull world is to send
] a weekly gag to a circle of buddies
across America.
| “Anything to get a laugh, and
let people know you're alive,” he
~said.
| One week he mailed out dol'ar
| bills with a sign, “Hold on to this
'green piece of paper. It may be
worth a dollar someday.’
From Miami Beach he dispatch
ed perfume bottles full of sand
bearing the label: “This cost me
S3O a day to sit on. Thought you
might like some.” From the Thun
derbird Hotel in Las Vegas he
mailed pairs of four-inch-square
dice “for near-sighted crapshoot
ers.”
To be a professional comic to
day, Henny says, you have “to
have nerve and gall, a great mem
ory, and the ability to take stock
jokes and give them a twist that
makes them sound alive. You have
to be equipped to joke on any
subject.” |
. \
Motorists, remember: The Geor
gia State Patro] says speeders of
ten lose control, lose the race with ]
time, and lose their lives. Slow |
down or lose—which do youi
choose?
VIDHOAD ‘SNAHLY ‘'TTVIIAH-YIANNVE THL
.
' B.E. Keithls
Named To Head
.
\Wool Associates
; NEW YORK, June 5.—E. Brad
ford Keith of Walker Top Asso
ciates, Boston, has been re-elected
president of the Wool Associates
of the New York Cotton Exchange,
Inc. Also elected were Philip B.
Weld of Harris Upham & Com
pany, New York, for first vice
president, and Freeman E. Maltby
of MacDonuld & Maltby, Inc.,
PBoston, for second vice-president,
and Frank J. Knell for treasurer.
Elected to the Board of Gover
nors were: Alpheus C. Beane of
Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner &
Beane, New York; Eliot Bicknell,
Boston; Elict W, Brown of Dewey,
Gould & Company, Boston; Ed
ward L. Burnham of Draper Top
Company, Boston; Russel C. Estey
of Houghtorn Top Company, Bos
ton; Arthur N. Gorham of Greene
& Gorham, Inc., Boston; Bradford
E. Haley of Nichols & Conrpany,
Boston; W. Gordon McCabe, jr., of
J. P. Stevens & Company, Inc.,
Greenville, S. C.; George M. Thur
mond of Thurmond & Company,
Inc., Boston: Francis W. White of
American Woolen Company, Inc.,
New York; and John M. Williams
of Royce & Company, New York.
These new officials of the Wool
Exchange took office Wednesday,
June 4, 1952 for a term of one
year.
HOUND ADOPTS COUGARS
PORT ALBERNI, Canada —
(AP)—Three cougar kittens or
phaned by the gun of hunter Har
ry Brown have a new mother—
one of the hounds which led him
to the kill of a.female cougar.
Brown took the kittens home and
one of his trained hounds has
adopted them.,
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OLDTIMERS . .. Among members of the “Three Score and O’er”
Club of Atlanta are (left to right): front row, Mrs. Homer Car
michael, second vice-president; Mrs. J. C. Mellichamp, president;
Mrs. B. M. Boykin, first vice-president; back row, Mrs. Carpenter
Jones, Mrs. J. E. Mcßee, Mrs. Louisa Stubbs and Mrs. Clara B.
Garrison,
Oldsters In Atlanta Organize Club
Limiting Age To Three Score Years
By MARGARET PRICE
AP Newsfeatures
ATLANTA—A sweet little lady
won a blue ribbon for a silk quilt
a‘tew months ago and thus in
directly began a club movement
for women “three score and o’er.”
Such a club had long been a
dream of Mrs. William Guy Smith,
president of the Fifth District,
Georgia Federation of Women’s
Clubs, but it took the blue ribbon
to push the dream to reality.
Last fall she suggested that a
neighbor, Mrs. W. L. Lyon, a
spry 89, enter some of her needle
work in a contest at the South
eastern Fair in Atlanta,
Mrs. Lyon protested that her
work wasn’t nearly good enough
but Mrs. Smith finally persuaded
her to enter. Mrs. Lyon sailed
through the first judging, winning
first prize for her lovely quilt
and, eventually, the blue ribbon
grand prize for the entire contest.
To Mrs. Lyon, who had some
times felt, well a little left out
of life, it was wonderful. Her
son said she quickly used up the
prize money calling all her out
of town relatives to tell them the
news.
Seeing what a bit of recognition
could do and knowing there are
thousands of older women who
felt left too much to their knit
ting, Mrs. Smith decided to take
time in her busy life to found a
club for women past 60.
She knew there are clubs for
such age groups elsewhere but
hoped the one in Atlanta would
be different in that from it would
spring a network across the nation
affilated with the National Fed
eration of Women’s Clubs.
Volumes have been written in
recent years about the aged a
steadily growing group. There
mflm “efforts to meet their
problems but most social
workers agree the efforts have
; begn pitifully ‘nadequate.
| rs. Smith felt that what little
has been accomplished stemmed
from individuals who = decided to
‘help'in their own small way.
~ So she called some older women
she knew and helped them found
the “three score and o’er” club.
Twenty charter members attended
the first meeting. None was under
70 and nearly half were in their
eighties. Some were driven to the
meeting at the home of one mem
ber by their children, who were
' glad their mothers were finding
' new interests.
Others, like Mrs. S. R. Dull, 88,
author of “Southern Cooking,” a
book widely used by housewives
‘|£or years came on busses.
\ Mrs. J. C. Mellichamp, also 88,
] was elected president and prompt
ly set the tone of the meeting
|with the theught. “You are not
| old until regrets take the place
of dreams.” Another member sug
gested the group consider as a
motto. “Not add years to our
lives but life to our years.”
i The club has held the first two
of its montly meetings now and
the list of those interested in
joining has grown so fast other
local clubs may be formed. The
women plan to take turns discus
! sing hobbies and are considering
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presentation of some sort of l
“playlett.”
Some of the women are wealthy,
others are not. Some suffer from
such complaints as arthirtis,
others are as active as their
grandchildren.
The women soon will have to
consider whether to admit one
applicant who called Mrs. Smith
to say. “I am not yet 60 but I
wound like to join the club. I want
to learn how those women reached
that age. And surely anyone who
has lived that long has much to
teach us.”
) THIS WEEK'S ¢
&| ) {
~ l";
91 DEFENSE |
@ st §)
N
(A summary of federal news af
fecting the southeast prepared by
the Information Division, Wage
Stabilization Boeard, Atlanta).
ECONOMY —A cost conscious
Congress is hard at work studying
the needs of the nation and the
requests for funds by the agen
cies of government for the next
fiscal year which begins July 1.
Substantial reductions_in the field,
forces of many agencies is antici
pated. All aspects of the defense
and energency agencies which
came into being as a result of the
Korean War (and its impact on
the American economy) are being
thoroughly scrutinized. Anything"
‘that can be dispenced with
out jeopardizing the national wel
fare, will be dropped—at least for
the time being the feeling is.
DEPT. OF LABOR—The Bureau
of Labor Statistics of this agency,
last week, announced results of a
| study of the cost-of-living in 12
Southern cities. This week, the
Bureau of National Affairs (a
private fact-gathering organiza-.
tion) developed these statistics a
bit further, The BNA says the av
erage city worker supporting a
family of four in a “modest but
adequate” manner needs a weekly
income of $81.52 per week. That’s
the national average—compared
to only $78.81 needed in Savannah
and $74.31 required in New Or
leans. However, not all Southern
cities are below the average—At
lanta, for instance, calls for a
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é \e‘ &) THE SHOE WITH THE BEAUTIFYL FIT
W, A\ ~- B Crisp and cool in beautiful linen to weat
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\% ' your colorful summer costumes. See our
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A Naturalizer Treasure Chest collection.
qgizil‘\_ 3 9.9 s
/
Street Floor. Shoe Salon
weekly income of $83.52,
FOREST SERVICE — National
Forest Supervisors from 11
Southern States will attend a
conference in Atlanta, next
week, (June 9-13) at the region
al headquarters of the U, 8.
Forest Service. The meeting has
been called by Charles A. Con
naughton, regiomal forester, to
develop plans and policies for
the protection. and. administra
tion of the 9,500,000 acres of na
tional forest land, the sale of 700
million board feet of timber and
assistance to owners of 150 mil
lion acres of private forest land.
PUBLIC HOUSING— Arthur R.
Hanson, director of the Richmond,
Va., field office of the PHA, re
places M. P. Satterfield (resigned)
as director of the Atlanta field of
fice, this week. -
DEPT. OF COMMERCE— Small
business firms in the Southeast
will be given an ec:i)portunity to
participate in the federal program
designed to expand industrial
projects related to the defense ef
fort through the granting of tax
amortization certificates. Certi
cates of necessity calling for ex
pansions to cost more than a bil
lion dollars in the Southeast have
already been granted to larger
firms. Now, the Defense Produc
tion Administration and the Small
Defense Plants Administration will
endeavor to hring smaller indus
trial establishments into the pic
ture wherever possible.
OPS — Producer-to-consumer
regulations concerning Irish po
tatoes have been drastically
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gatural choice for summer shoes;
™ to go with everything)
\ Y Light, lovely and oool‘-;
‘lm“lmb ‘.‘s .. . these graceful mesls |
b l“mm“' q ~Q and calf styles are the ;
SRITT RSN 3 newest designs in the |
b : summer fashion picture.’”
~% Y Wear them with any
~ LR lightweight cottons.
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SHOE STREET
SALON ] FLOOR
THURSDAY, JUNE 5, 1952.
tightened by the Office of Price
Stabilization. The mark-up on
sales directly from producer to
retailer has been required iden
tifying seller, purchaser, state in
which grown and sales price.
These steps were taken to strength
en enforcement and prevent diver
sion of potatoes into illegal or
blackmarket channels. Reduction
of potato acreage last year after
price supports were eliminated and
weather damage to this year’s ear
ly crop caused the present short
age. Conditions should ease as the
potato digging season extends into
more states,
WAGE STABILIZATION—Even
though the South does not usualiy
recognize Memorial Day as a holi
day, employers who granted a
“long weekend” (Friday to Mon
day) last weekend need not de
duct wages paid from any future
increases granted under the fed
eral wage program. The regional
WSB said the same is true of the
July 4th weekend, but the Satur
day off included in each case can
only be allowed workers who nor
‘mally work on Saturdays.
\ e
NPA — Allotments of eritical
metal for civilian production have
been boosted by the National Pro
duction Administration for the
third quarter of 1952. Steel, cop
per and aluminum may now ex
ceed previous allotments in precise
percentages for the manufacture of
television and radio sets, dish
washers, mtrigeratg,r\s selectric
fans and other hormé appliances.
No immediate upsurg in the pro
duction of these goow ' is antici
pated, however,