Newspaper Page Text
)ioNDAY, JUNE 16, 1952.
ey
NEWS .
w—"'_r'b e
(herokee and Southwest Dis
ts, Boy Scouls, camping to
., returned Saturday from a
1 week of their annual
camp at Rabun Beach, on
rabun, in mountains of
ast Georgia.
-n Directors, Col. O. J. Tol
and Simon Smith, Fields Ex
vc, report that many of the
and Explorers completed
. in courses which gain them
cement in rank and merit
swards leading to the final
- of an Eagle Scout.
Camping were 53 Scouts of the
lwest, composed of Walton,
sinneit end Barraw, and 128
- outs' of Cherokee District com
od of Jackson, Clarke Ogle
je. Oconee, Morgan and Gre
ne LOUNUES, .
he troops and posts represent
-4 with their leaders were:
151, Mr. Bennett, Loganville;
41, Dan McDonald, Monree; 135,
vernon Weldon, Monroe; 83, Har
id Davis, Monroe; 156, L. A.
Braselton, jr., Winder,
Cherokee Distrcit: 4, Sam
Chambers, Athens; 158, F. C. Gil
bert, Jefferson; 8, Glenn Jackson,
Statham; 22, Lauren Coile, Athens;
19, Sam Chambers, Athens; 110,
Skinny Vanghan, Crawford; 150,
prince Watkins, Athens; 222, Sam
my Wyatt, Greensboro; 1, Upshaw
Eentley, Athens.
All the Scouts and leaders slept
in tents and enjoyed eating their
meals on crude tables and benches
under large tarpaulins which ser
ved also as class rooms and meet
ing places. Skits and camp songs
were enjoved in the Camp Fire
period, and there was an interest
ing lecture and demonstration on
sypnosis by William Wall, from
Rabun Boat House.
Besides the classes in Scouting
IF YOU ARE FAT
TRY ANARO IT WORKS
Mrs. Sarah C. Morse of Savannah
Ga. writes us, “Five i'ea.rs ago I had
a major operation after which it has
been most difficult to keep m{nvévexght
down. I have tried many things but
as I like to eat dieting was hard for
me. Then I read an ad in the paper
for Anaro Concentrate and decided
to try it. I am very pleased with ‘the
results for thanks to the safe Anaro
home recipe 1 have gone from 140
Ibs. to 130 and am onlg 5 lbs. away
from my normal weight. I fla.n to
continue with Anaro until I reach
my goal.”
Beyond the Call of Duty |
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@ Disregarding his personal safety, Telephone Man H B
Kilpatrick crawled 150 feet through a storm sewer to save a
child from drowning. For his “prompt, intelligent and coura
geous action”, Mr. Kilpatrick was presented the Vail Award
for outstanding service. He was one of 23 Southern Bell men
'and women who received recognition last year for service
beyond the call of duty. -
Telephone People Serve in MANY Ways
As Good Citizens: Telephone people serve their
communities in less dramatic ways—in civic and
church activities, in Red Cross and other com
munity drives. They’re good citizens.
Behind Your Telephone: Their first job is to keep
your "phone service good and growing, and 58,000
Southern Bell employees are working hard at it.
This is especially important today when telephone
service is so vital to national defense. )
SOUTMIRN BEL
BELL TELEPHONE £ AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY
&
B .
ek di oo s aaiaees ases AANAIONIBINS 2NN M MASMAIORSAGRIRACNNNS " ATS 1S 00K
and boating and swimming, soft
ball, horse shoes, skeet shooting
and speed boat rides kept the
Scouts busy, After rou:: days of
swimming and boating instruc
tion, Water Front Director Jerry
Keleski put on a water carnival
Saturday morning, Troop one
came out the winner in these
events,
The Order of the Arrow, the
honorary society in Scouting, at
the final bon fire meeting, tapped
for membership Scouts, Explorers
and scouters as follows: Ray Cox,
Athens, Ga. John Ray Bell, Mil
ledge Avanue, Athens, Pete Me-
Commons, Greensboro, Tommy
Daniel, Athens, Tom Crenshaw,
Monroe, Guy Biggs, Athens; F. C.
Gilbert, Jefferson; Glenn Jackson,
Statham; Tom Launius, Monroc;
Guilford Gulley, Elberton; Louis
West, Athens; Billy Mitchell,
Logansville; Sam Chambers, Ath
ens; Wayne Storey, Athens; D. A.
Robinson, Athens; and B. B. Vau
ghan, Crawford,. &
The Campers, both Scouts and
leaders, gave a vote of thanks to
D. A. Robinson and his wife, for
their effeciency and untiring ef
forts as Commissary Director, and
Mr. Bud Embry as Program Dir
ector. Everybody enjoyed the
cooking of G. G. Alexander and
his kitchen staff.
Space does not permit listing
the names of all the campers,
many of whom will appear in the
motion pictures taken of scenes in
the camp.
The following weeks will see
Board River District, then Chat
tahoochee District, then Piedmont
and Mountian District combined
in camp at the same place.
The first football coach in the
history of Colgate University was
a man named Samuel Colgate.
That was in 1890.
Dave Fuller, head baseball
coach of the University of Florida,
played three years of baseball,
basketball and football for Wake
Forest.
Thousands have discovered this
amazing, simple home recipe to be
the safe economical way to reduce.
No calorie counting or rigid diet
planning. Ask your druggist for 4
ounces of liquid ANARO CONCEN
TRATE. To this add enough un
sweetened T%rapetruit juice to make
one xt)int. en take two tablesgoon
fuls twice a day. If you are not sat
isfied with the results from the first
bottle return it to the manufacturer
for your money back. See your drug
gist today for ANARO and regain
your healthy normal weight,
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PART OF EUROPEAN ‘INVASION FLEET —l"ourocea\nliners.ha\rbh;'gerl:"j
A N or
of a record tourist season, make ready to carry 4,470 passengers to European ports from New *. }
Irene Dunne Takes To Comedy:
Finds Money Grows Oa Trees
By ERSKINE JOHNSON
NEA Staff Correspondent
HOLLYWOOD— (NEA) —Ex
clusively Yours: Irene Dunne’s
stepping off that Hollywood pedes- |
tal labeled *“Miss Prestige.”
It will be comedy, broad or sub- ‘
tle,. from now on for classic-faced
Irene, who's celebrating her 20th
year as a movie star.
“I'm through with those big
prestige pictures,” she fold me on
the set of Ul's “It Grows On
Trees,” in which she plays a zany
but believable character in the
tradition of her one-time comedy
hit, “Theodora Goes Wild.”
“My last two films, “I Remem
ber Mama’ and “The Mudlark”
were prestige movies. I guess I've
made more heavy epics than any
one in Hollywood. But time have
changed. I’'m sticking to comedies
from now on.”
“It Grows on Trees,” which Ar
thur Lubin is directing, is the story
of a housewife who buys two tree’
at a nursery, plants them in her
backyard and discovers that they
grow money. The one planted in
the shade grows $5 bills and the;
one in the sun $lO bills. |
There’s romance in the life of |
THE SANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
Jean Pierre Amount for the first
time since Maria Montez’s tragic
death. The lady’s name—Hilde
grade Neff .... Erol Flynn has
the years’ most fabulous percent
age deal with UI for the film
“Against All Flags,” in which he
co-stars with Maureen O'Hara.
Flynn and the studio will share
50-50 in the profits.
“SHOOT-‘EM-UP” Durante
Bette Davis’ guesting with Jim
my Durante on his TV show was
an eyebrow raiser. Bette made her
video reading the commerical
and then went into a comedy
sketch playing Jimmy’s wife.
There’s a big argument and Jim
my winds up shooting Bette'’s
eight Oscars off a shelf like ducks
in a shooting gallery!
Bidding for Jimmy’s life story,
by the way is hot and heavy with
four film studios trying to get him
on the dotted line. The movie will
be based on Gene Fowler’s bi
ography, which Jimmy has ap
proved except for Fowler’s in
ference that Jimmy is still self
conscious about his nose.
“That's ridiculous,” says Jimmy.
“I love, that nose.”
Hollywoood Reconaissance:
There’s no Ava Sinatra in the Hol
lywood telephone book, but a
Frank Gardner is listed.
The Ingrid Bergman - Roberto
Rossellini romance is more solid
than ever, with the ‘new baby
bringing them even closer to
gether. That’s the flash from Eirk
Blythe, a New York stage actor
who recently completed a top role
with Ingrid in “Europa, 1952.”
Erik’s now in Hollywood for “In
vasion, U. S. A.,” and reports:
“That man Rossellini has a way
with Ingrid. He’s got the smooth
est line of dialog I've ever heard.”
Cornel Wilde’s blushing about
that tropical growth of virile mat
ting on his chest on the billboards
for “At Swords Point.” Riding the
crest of the wave as a high voltage
star since his click in “The Great
est Show on Earth,” Cornel said:
“I guess I have an adequate
amount of hair on my chest, but
not for Howard Hughes. The
makeup department insisted on in
creasing the foliage.”
GOING UP:
Richard Conte suggested a cer
tain actor for a role in his new
starrer, “The Riding Kid,” but was
told by Ul's casting department
that the actor was too short to be
a sagebrush performer.
“So okay,” shrugged Conte,
“put him on an Adler elevated
saddle.”
It’s strictly in the don’t-breathe
a-word stage, but Hal Wallis and
Ezio Pinza have been confabbing
about “The Life of Chaliapin” to
lure movie audiences who went
hook, line -and sinker for “The
Great Caruso.”
Wanda Hendrix is still giggling.
She met a genuine sheik while
B Here is the
B answer so
Summer
& Swccisuness
& caused by constipation
B Don’t fool around with
untried remedies. Thou
sand® depend upon this
famous formula to make
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store re, . o o 108
better fast witg 666.
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| Q'Q“ ; ‘ L]
- COMPLETE !
PEST CONTROL
| ORKIN
EXTERMINATING CO ,
making “South of Algiers” in the
North African desert and_ he
tossed his only four English words
at her. Baby, pou slay me.”
The stately halls of England
dept: Douglas Fairbanks, jr., has
just bought a 19th Century man
sion in Kensington .... Orson
Welles, who's a whodunit all to
himself, is writing the last pages
of his first book—a murder mys
tery —— the censors are clamp
ing down on Peggy Castle’s way of
reading her lines as a sultry doll
in “Invasion, U. S. A.” Too Mae
Westish! :
Richardo Montalban has been
cleared by MGM to star in Budd
Boetticher’s independent, “The
Number One,” in Spain next
March. It's Boetticher’s follow-up
to “The Bullfighter and the Lady.”
Gotesky Speaks
At Emory Meet
Rr. Rubin Gotesky, associate
professor .of philosophy at the
University of Georgia, will speak
at a workshop on science educa
tion at Emory University June 18.
His subject will be “Science and
Philosophy.”
Dr. Gotesky is speaking at the
invitation of Dr. John I. Good
lad, director of the Division of
Teacher Education at Emory,
sponsor of the workshop. Director
of the workshop will be Dr. Phil
ip Johnson of the United States
Office of Education. Assisting him
are Dr. W. B. Baker, head of the
Emory biology department, .and
Mrs, Gordon M. Brown, science
coordinator of the Atlanta Public
Schools.
hond 018
fomods Lmily!
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R e
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PAGE FIVE