Newspaper Page Text
PAGE SIX
NICHOLSON
NEWS
'Rev.e;‘leman Folds of Center
preach here at the Methodist
Church on Sunday morning and
evening. .
Mrs. J. C. Brock underwent an
operation far appendicitis at the
Commerce Hospital Monday and
is resting fine to the delight of
frieney. - C e o :
Mr. and Mrs: Hubbard Barnett
of Athens were among the visitors
here on Sunday afternoon, guests
of Mr. and Mrs. O. T. Barnett.
Rev. Furman Mcllntire of Toc
coa closed a week’s series of serv
ices at the Congregational Holiness
Church, Sunday evening.
Joe Potts and family were vis
iting in Miami, Florida, over the
past weekend, where they were
guests of friends.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Howington
accompanied Mr, and Mrs. Grady
Smith of Commerce on a trip to
the mountains last Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Jewett Barnett,
Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Whitley were
guests of Mrs. Mattie Maddox
Barnett of Athens, Sunday after
noon.
Mrs. Tommy Morgan and little
son, of Commerce, was among the
weekend guests of relatives and
friends here,
Rev. D. E. Beauchamp will
preach at the Fire Baptized Holi
ness Church on Saturday evening,
Sunday morning and evening. ‘
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Waters of
Roswell announce the birth of a
daughter May 23, named Rebeca
Waters. The mother will be re
membered as the Miss Ethlyn
Palmer, of Nicholson.
Master Randall Chester is va
cationing in the mountains, the
guest of Mr. and Mrs, Clifford
Palmer, of Morgantown.
Mr. and Mrs. Hoyal Wynn of
Atlanta were visiting here over
the weekend, the guests of Mr.
and Mrs. O. L. Reynolds.
Miss Frances Evans of Royston
was among the visitors here over
the past weekend, the guest of
relatives ‘and friends.
Seaman Billy Duncan of the U.
S. Navy, Florida, was among the
gueste “of relatives and friends
here ever the 'weekend.
Miss Jean Minish of Commerce
was a visitor here over the past
weekend, the guest of relatives
and friends. '
Mrs. Morgan Evans and chil
dren of Royston, were visiting here
a while, Friday evening, the guests
of relatives.
Three large chicken-snakes were
killed here over the weekend, All
were in the same location and
measured around five feet in
length.
The Ladies Missionary Society
is sponsoring an ice eream supper
in the lunch room of Benton High,
Friday evening, the 20th. They
begin serving around eight o’clock,
so get In on the deal-—-tickets are
95-cents for cream and cake.
Prof. Cooper of Gillsville the
newly elected principal of Benton
High, has moved here, locating
just south of the city on the B. M.
Sailors’ farm, This family is given
a lasting welcome to the com
munity.
Goleconda is a fortress near Hy
derabad city in the Deccan which
gained the implication of fabulous
wealth associated with the name
because diamonds found in the
area were cut there.
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T T
Nation's Airlines Find Gold Mine
With New Aflantic Tourist Rates
By WALTER PARKES
NEA Staff Corrsepondent
NEW YORK — (NEA) — A
fnmade-in-America business prin
ciple seems to have hit the jackpot
again. It’s the old Henry Ford idea
of uncovering a new mass market
by taking less profit and selling
more. This time it’s the interna
tional airlines, with their new low
cost tourist fares to Europe.
Tourist service started May 1
and a quick look at initial current
and future bookings indicates a
pay-off on what a lot of people in
the business thought was pretty
much of a blue-sky gamble.
Inasmuch as Pan American
World Airways pioneered the
tourist idea against considerable
opposition it might be well to see
whether they're entitled to say
| “We told you so” or will have to
eat the few million words they
‘spouted for three years to get
l their pet project across.
. From the start of their “Rain
bow” (tourist) service on May 1
through May 24, Pan Am opera
ated 25 flights from New York
to points in Europe, carrying 1952
passengers. All together, the in
ternational airlines made 119
eastbound tourist flights in this
period hauling 7181 passengers.
In the same period, all the air
lines flew 110 westbound tourist
trips, carrying 3873 passengers—
-747 on Pan Am’s 23 Rainbow
flights.
Before the tourist service went
into effect, five would get you 10
from the skeptics that k you
couldn’t dig up 7181 people in 24
!
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It's™a big, pastel 2 4
color Cannon face t-"f‘:':__r ,:: H, -ef:’,i.:? 8
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| yours today! /‘@ S
1 sy 3 P A‘:‘?.."‘
( gy v a o XD
- Sofp,white, nickar suds
l %MMMA
i
days with the time, money and
inclination to fly the Atlantie
without stealing them from the
airlines’ first-class passenger lists.
But there they are — and more
coming all the time,
For June Pan Am had 51 tour
ist flights scheduled, with 3840 of
the 4080 available seats booked in
advance. By June 1, 3596 of the
3840 seats on 48 July flights had
been booked; se had 38 per cent
of the 4240 seats tor. August.
F "
It was simply a matter of tap
ping a mass market that had been
there right along, waiting for
someone to give it the nod.
Apparently, the airlines have
found a new type of passenger.
What’s he like? Well, typically,
he has a SSOOO-tO-S6OOO-a~year in
come, has a two-week vacation,
plans to visit at least three coun
tries and spend less than SIOOO on
his entire trip.
Passenger lists show that if the
passénger i 8 a man he’s most
likely as a die-maker, a foreman
or other straw-boss or a salesman
or a small businessman.
Possibly an extreme case, but
one that gives you an idea of the
kind of people for whom low
trans-Atlantic fares are opening
new horizons is Carl Ziegler, 49,
"Anatomy Lesson
HORIZONTAL
1 Part of the
+ foot :
4 Parts of the
head
8 Right and «ee—
hands
12 Whichever
13 Expectoration
. VERTICAL
1 What a dog
s wags
2 Atop
3 Hair around
the eyes
4 Chemical fat
5 Mimicker
6 Washed lightly
14 Curved
* molding
15 Follower
16 Occupancies of
land !
18 Loungers
20 Kilns for ;
drying hops
21 What lungs ;
inhale 1
22 Wicked
24 Haze
7 Musical
' direction
8 Sectional |
[ 9 Shield
10 What we walk
on
11 Girl's
nickname J
17 Spread rumor
19 Metric
measure
TP lEPPI PP R
FIT TR T T T
L rL Tt
LT P 1
FEI T TIU Fr
AEEELR JELERE
SJEREAE JERREE
Hllafllfll Pl 1]
FPPFI I L L[T
26 Poems
27 Musical
syllable
30 Greek goddess
of wisdom
32 Approached
34 One who ogles
35 Figure to be
added
36 Measure of
type (pl.)
37 Stagger
39 Cereals
40 Seed vessels
41 Wile
42 Sum
45 Stain on metal
49 Primary forms
51 Prosecute
52 Chest rattle
53 German king
54 Go astray
55 Building
extensions
56 Kind of light
57 Observe
avas BANNER-MEERALD. ATHENS, GEOKGIA
of Chicago, a passenger on the
initial Rainbow flight. A window~-
washer, he was born in Berlin
and made the trip to see his ail
ing mother ancf his brothers,
whom he had"n’t ‘see‘n in 14 years.
If your tourist-rate passenger
is a woman, she’s apt to be a war
bride, returning to her . native
country to show the old folks
their new grandson or grand
daughter — or both. With the
closing of schools this month,
flocks of school teachers have
taken wing to Europe.
Typical among the GI brides
who made the inital flight, for
instance, was Mrs. John Wright,
of Alton, 111., wife of a printer on
the Alton Telegraph, who took
her son Terrence, two, with her.
She hadn’t seen her parents in
England in five years.
In sharp contrast was the group
of a dozen people from St. Louis,
who were traveling together. All
of German birth or background,
they were middle-aged or older.
They hadn’t seen the old coun
iry for many years and, most of
them said, would not have gone
on this trip except for the chance
of going economically by “tour
ist.”
* * *
Shepherds of the party were
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Henne. Mrs.
Henne came to the U. S. in 1927
and hadn’t seen her 77-year-old
mother in Tuebingen, Germany,
gsince then.
There were others, but these
examples, ‘which could be dupli
cated on almost every planeload,
are enough to indicate definitely
that a new type of passenger will
support the tourist-rate plan.
Main objection of all U. S. and
nearly all foreign international
airlines to the plan was that it
would kill the first-class trade.
Just the opposite seems to be hap
pening. Since the low-rate flights
-started in May 1, Pan Am’s first
class booking are up five per cent
over last year.
Main attraction of the new serv
ice is, of course, the money it
saves. For the first time, a per
son with an average income can
afford to spend his two or three
week vacation in Europe. A
round-trip tourist-class flight to
London costs $486 against s7ll
for first class. This is during “the
season” —April through October.
OQut-of-season trips cost less.
The airlines do it by cutting
out the expensive first-class frills
and carrying a lot more passen
gers, They cut out the cocktail
lounge, the crew’s “day room” up
foward, reduced the baggage
space — and put in more seats.
The- specially - designed DC
Super - 6 Clippers on the Rainbow
run can carry a maximum of 85
passengers against the 56 on first
class flights and the 44 carried
on the deluxe sleeperetee planes.
Frills like free de luxe meals
with champagne are out. You
pay a norminal charge for the one
or two meals you eat on the trip.
Qutside of that, tourists-rate air
travel to Europe isn’t much dif
ferent from first class.
Answer to Previous Puzzle
ICIOIN[R|AID] INIAIG[E]L|
AIRIECILIE] IR[E[VIE[RIE]
Sl lalPlE[S] =T RINE]
BEBRZZEENZ7ZNEE
. FIEIS|T|E[R|S
SRERNEZNNRNEERS
st
ESISEINIC[&E] 1S T|E[T|S]
R[E/H[E(alT]s]
BRNZ%Z EOMMZ %G 55
EEEBE Ol [E[A]T[E]
ORI [EIN[T] IN[O[RIM[A[N]
IN|E|S TS| GlUE[s[T[S]
23 Easily bribed
24 Masculine
25 Ledger entry
26 Rowed a boat
27 Learned .
writings
28 Lease
29 Augments
31 Orange
blossom oil
33 Decorate
38 Property
40 Boy attendants
41 Malicious
burning
42 Ripped
43 Spoken
44 Money drawei
46 Singing voice
47 Certain .
48 In this place
50 Not {prefix)
"Fairy Tale"
LOWELL, Ind. June 168 (AP)—
A week end of reeriminations over
money traced this picture in the
ashes of a one time “fairy tale” ro
mance!
Mrs., Barbara (Bobo) Rocke
feller, honey-haired “Cinderella”
bride of a, millionire four years
ago, still loves her estranged hus
band, Winthrop, and hopes for a
reconciliation:
In New York, Winthrop spoke
through an attorney. His prepared
statement said he is anxious for
“the companionship of his son” and
eager to make a financial “ar
rangement to assure” it —nothing
about love or reconciliation:
Rockefeller announced through
lawyer Timothy N. Pfeiffer that
he had set up a million dollar
trust fund for his son, born in
September, 1948, to him and his
St. Valentine’s day bride. -
Pfeiffer said the trust fund was
set up after “repeated but unsuc
cessful attempts to discuss’ the
boy’s financial future and cusody
with Mrs. Rockefeller. She and
their son, Winthrop Paul, now live
on the farm of her mother and
step ather, Eva and Peter
Neveckas, five miles south of
HURRY! HURRY! HURRY!
o] DG eTR [ g
7 e o
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e T s ; i Tk A
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No Airflyte lines, but lots of dash, v ‘
B i 7medel | | o
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- 4 eing given away in easy i
BNy AR b . ’/"’,c’ . %
S Pure Oil Contest
MRy ! o
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S Ty rizes in a
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I 3 Yoo ol @ot of fok g : vy! Just identify 7of the 12
Bheat - B old cars illustrated on official entry blank b
(with clues like those shown here) and write, in 50 words or less;
“& ea , 't§ fun' f why you like to s;5 T
’' i i
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Enter as often as you like. Offi- [/ P X
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cial entry blank contains complete g% 7B gUfi " 3Besu re Wl'h P" re P
rules; offers helpful hints on how g}& S ” ‘9’ A IR Lo
to win. Contest closes midnight, ‘f‘}fi * J i
piin
July 1,1952. Prizes awarded by ‘%é &rg 4Yy /z; i
independent judges. g%:% " i j
A, Y awmaamey :
SRR R Py e
B e o
e s & T GET YOUR FREE CONTEST ENTRY BLANK
, r FROM ANY PURE OIL DEALER!
. s ' LN h, ¥ your dealer is out of blanks, write: The Pure Off Companyy
A B ’fig L W e Box 1359, Chicago 90
e F o Ad e
S N ke O THE PURE OIL GOMBANY
Lowell, |
Lives On A Farm
Bobo, who says she left swank
quarters in Manhattan for life on
a farm in Indiana because it was
financially necessary, said her
husband’s disclosure of the trust
fund “was in bad taste. I was
extremely ashamed that he sould
make ' public in such a way so
private a matter.”
“I do not want to appear vin
dictive,” she said in an interview,
“but the statement gives the wrong
impression. It sounds like Winnie
has a million dollars, Well, he‘ll
never see it.”
She said the million dollars is
invested and from this income the
boy “will get $750 a month until
he is 18, then $1.20 a month until
he is 30, at which time he will get
further support from the trust’s.
income,”
Bobo, a striking, 35-year-old
blonde, said she invited, Rocke
feller to the farm last Thanks
giving day, and again when she
and the boy were in Florida last
January, but he failed to accept.
, “He can see Winnie any time
he wants to,” she added. “We
have a guest room here, or he
can stay at one of the small
houses, or a hotel in Lowell, The
door is open to him.”
Remarks Challenged
Boho’s remarks on finances were
challenged by Pfeiffer.
“Since Mr. and Mrs. Rockeffer
separated in October, 1949, he
said, “Mr. Rockefeller has provid-
ed for the support of his wife and
their son more than $128,000, on
which Mrs., Rockefeller did not
have to pay any taxes. This does
not in¢lude any of the payments
to her for the child from the trust
fund.”
The daughter of an immigrant
coal miner, however, had the last
word up to now:
“That’s untrue. I'm absolutely
flabbergasted. Facts are facts and
there are no records to prove
these things. I can’t understand
why this was to be aired in the
press, It’s absolutely disgusting.”
The “wise men of Gotham” re
fers to the tradition that the men
of Gotham, England, by pretend
ing to be fools disuaded the king
from setting up a hunting lodge
near their town.
ill Pin-W
Kill Pin-Worms
Family Suffers
Pin-Worms may be passed on from one
to another so that the whole family often
suffers, Get rid of Pin-Worm misery with
Mother Gray’'s Pin-Worm Tablets, First sign
of Pin-Worms is.rectal itch. In children it
often results in loss of sleep, poor .p&etiu
and tiredness, Mother Gray's Pin-Worm
Tablets kill and clean out the millions of
intestinal Pin-Worms, They contain a
wonderful drug used by most Doctors and
Hospitals. Protect the health of your family
with Mother Gray’s Pin-Worm Tablets,
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 18, 1952,
TR ——»
M—"'——M__.,W -
Aspirin At Its Best
St. Joseph
ASPIRINT
WORLD'S LARGEST SELLER AT 10
——-'-—-—--——-—_:W.
‘No. 790
0.
| B! pl 0' EIRSI
Phone 790.
1260 South Milledge Ave,
Meets on 2nd and 4th Thurs
days at 8:00 P. M. each month
Free suppers, for members in
good standing from 6 to 7:45
n meeting nights,
Our dining room is open every
day except Monday, for Elks,
their ladies and guests.
P, S. JOHNSON,
SECRETARY