Newspaper Page Text
nAY, JUNI 39, 1952,
I'\"— ": “l 7‘-”
g u (\‘\"\“‘; i
b N AL Copyright 1951 by e
§i4 4:.&-4:3&-. LR Rondom Hewse, Inc
~E STORY: An unobtrusive
. man who might be a private
.ciive, Jack Duggan, dies after
.z poisoned apparently at the
Lone es Dr. Zimmer, a psychia
| where he had posed as Basil
. /iiling. Basil had threatened to
oz Dugsan, bué ke died before
s~ could explain. Dugzan’s lasé
words were “no bird sangz.” Basil
.1 Inspector Foyle question Dr.
-~ .mer and learn the names eof
yer puests, which incinde Kath
‘- e Shaw, @ blind woman who
. sarently mistook Basil for the
1] )‘.M. .
¥
| ong after midnight Basil Will
. told Fisela, his wife, the whole
v He had found her in a chair,
.. vasn't sure whether she was
,sleep or dozing over a book.
Vhat did Miss Shaw say?” she
o 4 when he had finished.
vas aiter midnight when we
. 7immer's. Miss Shaw is over
_ an invalid. Foyle did tele
' ne. Her nephew, Brinsley, said
-t Miss Shaw couldn’t possibly
o to the telephone — she had
.n a sedative and gone to bed.
~le asked Brinsley if he knew
er Jack Duggan or Basil Will
. without referring to the mas
_.rade or mentioning the fact
‘.t Duggan was dead. Brinsley
-~plied that he knew nothing and
od less «bout anyone named
j n or Willing. Miss Dean,
, \Palien, said that Dr. Will
-s a friend of Miss Shaw’s
that che had never heard of
7 Durcan, So Foyle made an
'ment to see Miss Shaw to
: ¢ little Duggan!” Gisela
1, “Did you know that he was
tonight?”
rre at this house?” Basil
y guessing,” she admitted.
' +hen I came home Juniper
.4 = man called to see you just
: vou went out—a small man
was disturbed when he
‘ ed you were not at home.
11~ didn’t give his name or leave
.ny message.”
3o that's why Duggan was in
this neighborhood.”
«put it's fantastie”! cried Gisela.
wihy should an mpostor call on
the man he’s jmpersonating?”
“[ots of reasons. Perhaps he
thought it safe to use my name
.« hile T was overseas. And tonight
h~ hears I'm home again. Se he
comes here to forestall exposure.”
“put why use your name at
all?”
“It does seem rather amateurish
for a professional detective,” ad
mitted Basil. ;
“Do you suppose he saw-you
come out of this house and fol
lowed you to the tobacconist’s?”
Basil shook his head. “No, I'm
sure he didn’t know who I was
until T told him and Mrs. Yorke
vouched for me.” :
a Qaleave 1-p ¢BS ......
“I euppose you're .right, but—
Mrs. Yorke interests me.”
o v %
Basil laughed. “She’s intrested
in vou. She asked me to take
you to se her. If you like, welll
¢co and you can ask her if she
imows of any place where%ho
bird sings.”
“No Eirds sing,” retorted Gisela.
“Sure?
Gisela rose to get her little
vellum-bound Keats.
“¢The sedge has withered from
the lake, and no birds sing . . . "
she read. *“Did Duggan misquote
i?”
“I believe he did.”
“He must've thought it signifi-
Spencer TRACY
Hatharine HEPBURN
BAT.mIK
Afflfifl . wn.':mn )
GEORGIA e
LAST TIMES TODAY
Michael Moore, Naney Gates
in “ATOMIC CITY”
TUESDAY — WEDNESDAY
Pk N u“ m
R £ S
¥ Soueasit rlo
muvluumd Puwwoent Ao
i Refrigerator Sale
VALUES
; BEITER TRADES
TERMS
BUY NOW -SAVE
¢ AUTO ACCESSORIES & APPLIANCE (0.
4 333 L. Broad ‘ Phone 1751
b=y- - s ;
as Basil Willing
By Helen McCloy
" gcchv Dresser, printed through permission of the publisher,
Distributed by NLA Service, ing,
cant” went om Gisela, “Or he
wouldn’t have wasted his last
breath on it. Perhaps he was try-
Ing to tell you about some ‘Belle
Darpe Sas Merci’ and to his wan
dering minc this quotation seemed
the quickest way to express the
idea of such a woman.”
“Was he quoting at all?” mused
Basil. “Or was he just telling me
about a place where no birds sang?
As he didn’t live to tell me about
the place—or the time.”
' “The time must be now, spring,
when you expect to hear birds
chirping,” said Gisela.
“And the place?”
“Almost anywhere. Even in a
city you hear sparrows and pig
eons eariy in the morning before
traffic noises get too loud. If only
you knew where Duggan had been
the last few days ...”
~ Basil closed his eyes wearily and
leaned his cheek against her knee.
Her fingers touched his hair.
“Didn’t you say Duggan was ut
terly unlike you, physically and
-mentally?”
~ “I hope sO.” He opened his eves
- with a grin.
“Then how did he expect t
) convinee other people that he was
you?” :
“He must have known that the
people he was dealing with didn't
know me by sight” said Basil.
“So he trusted to gambler’s luck
that he wouldn’t run into anyone
relse who did know me by sight
| while he was with them. Tonight
rhis luck ran out. Even without
| me, Mrs. Yorke would have
known him for an impostor the
[ moment he said he was Dr. Basil
| Willing.”
Gisela spoke softly. “Perhaps
that was why he had to'die to
night.” :
. “You're very suspicious of Rosa
mund Yorke.”
“I'm probably jealous!” con
fessed Gisela. “But she wasn’t the
‘onl_v one with an inkling of the
truth before Duggan died. When
he was announced as ‘Willing’
both Zimmer and Miss Shaw
must’ve realized something was
wrong since both thought they had
greeted Willing aiready and only
12 guests were expected.”
* * #
l The noon sun shone brightly on
their breakfast table. Gisela
| poured coffee and Juniper laid an
early edition of the evening paper
beside Basil’s plate. He glanced
through the latest story of a sen
ator calling a cabinet officer a
Communist, skimmed through a
book review of the greatest novel
of the century—the fifth this
month.
His glance crossed the obituary
headlines and paused. His mind
hardly took in the words as his
eyes read them:
“Miss Katherine Shaw dies in
sleep. . . Head of old New York
family.” ’
(To Be Continued)
Demand Is Poor
At Cattle Mart
Livestock receipts at the local
sale Wednesday afternoon totaled
199 cattle, 180 calves, and 177
hogs Cattle and calf receipts were
about the same as one week ago.
Trading was only fairly active and
demand was poor. Cattle and calf
prices were SI.OO to mostly $3.00
lower, and hog prices were most
ly 50c lower.
Few good slaughter steers
brought -$27.50, while odd head of
commercial offerings sold at $25.-
00. Utility steers and heifers
brought $19.00 to $23.00, while can
ner and cutter offerings sold from
$15.00 to SIB.OO.
Good and choice slaughter
calves and vealers changed hands
from $27.50 to $32.00, while utility
and commercial offerings ranged
from $19.50 to $27.00 Gulls sold
from $14.25 to $19.50.
A commercial slaughter cow
brought $21.00, while, utility of
ferings sold from $17.00 to SIB.OO.
Cutter cows ranged from $15.00 to
$17.50. Canner cows brought $13.00
to $16.00.
Commercial slaughter bulls
ranged from $14.00 to SIB.OO.
Cdmmon and medium stocker
settrs and heifers brought SIB.OO
to $25.75. Good and choice stock
calves sold from $26.75 to $30.50
and common and medium offer
ings ranged from $17.75 to $26.50.
Inferior calves sold down to
$14.25.
Medium and choice 180 to 240
pound barrows and gilts brought
SIB.OO to $19.40.
LOOT RECOVERED
PENANG, Malaya—(AP)—A
robber’s loot - S2OO in cash wrap
ped in tin foil - was recovered
from a refuse cart on its way to
the incinerator after police an
swered the victim’s call for help.
The police, noticing a fleeing
man, chased and caught him. The
culprit probably had thrown the
cash into the refuse heap in a bid
to free himself.
OF AMERICA ORIGIN
The present form of the game of
poker originated in the United
States early in the 19th Century,
according to the Encyclopedia
Britannica.
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Tale of she "Well-Stacked” Captain —
Captain John G. Bradley is “well
stacked,” in the sense that he occupies one
of the most unusual living quarters
afloat. Bradley, veteran of 34 years’ serv
ice with the Cunard Steamship Company,
has his livimg accommodations in the for
ward funnel of the line’s “Alsatia.” The
funnel, which improves the lines of the
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Captain Bradley plots the course in the chariroem which shares
funnel space with radio room, wheelbouse and his quarters.
The article follows:
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Life in a funnel can be very comfortable. The captain’s steward, Ronaid Giles, brushes cff a uniform
in the 20-foot-wide room, An observation bridge is located atop the dummy installation.
Mandolin Joins |
Uke And Guitar |
Two years ago the ukulele came |
back. Last year it was the guitar. |
Today there are signs that the
mandolin is joining the comeback |
trail while the others continue |’
their popularity, according to the 3
American Music Conference. |
AMC was the first to note the |
sign of the ukulele’s comeback in |
Docember, 1949. It also called the |
turn in 1850 on the guitar boom in l
1951, f
Comes Out of Closets
Forced into obscurity by the rise |
of jazz and the tenor banjo, the | .
mandolin no longer languishes un- ‘
honored and unstrung. This once |
popular instrument is being hauled |
out of closets and attics where it
has slept under a blanket of dust
for 40 years, for the “mandolin
fever” that once swept the country
is coming back again and promises
to be as contagious as ever, AMC
reports.
The mandolin revival seems to | .
result from the great popularity of |
the instrument currently in Eu- |
rope. In France, Italy, Holland, |
Belgium, Germany and Denmark |-
the mandolin is featured in popu- |
lar orchestras on the radio, in mu,_ | .
sic halls and in theaters. Hun- |
dreds of amateur groups feature
the mandolin, too. |
Demand Is Solid
Devotees of the mandolin, such
as those in a Cleveland mandolin
club, AMC says, claim there is no
known cure for the disease. They
hasten to add that mandolin mu
sic it not a fad. The Clevelanders
deny that the current ukulele
e —————————
* HARLEM *
Sun. - Mon. - Tues.
“STREET CAR NAMED
* DESIRE” *
TAE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
10,750-ton freighter, would have no func
tion if it were not for the fact that it
houses Bradley’s quarters, the radio room,
and wheel house. An observation and
compass platform occupies the funnel’s
top. Accommodations are roomy, as the
funnel is 31 feet high, 20 feet wide, and
32 feet 9 inches in leneth,
boom has anything to do with the
rebirth of interest in the mandolin.
As one of the group explains: “The
ukulele has only four strings and
is essentially a rhythm instrument.
The mandolin, on the other hand,
has eight strings and is a beautiful
melodic instrument. It has a very
sweet sound, yet possesses a lot
of power for marches. It is too
good an instrument to die out.”
Like the rest of the country,
Cleveland’s interest in the man
dolin is not new. Around 1900
most of the German and Italian
clubs and some of the hotels in
Cleveland echoed to the strains of
the mandolin. It faded from pop
ularity during World War L
Citing the boom in instrumental
music in home, school and indus
try during the past five year, man
dolin enthusiasts say the time is
ripe for a revival of the instru.
ment.
Defends Bikini
By 808 THOMAS
HOLLYWOOD, June 30—(AP)
—The French bathing suit, which
has been denounced by many
glamor girls, today was upheld by
Marilyn Monroe.
If there’s anyone I'd like to see
uphold a Bikini, it's Marilyn Mon
roe, but that’s another matter. The
point is that this is. the season
when American women are shop=
MAKE THIS HOME RECIPE
710 TAKE OFF UGLY FAT
It's simple. It's amaszing, how
quickly one may lose pounds of
bulky, unsightly fat right in your
own home. Make this recipe your=
sélf, It's easy—no trouble at all
and eosts Ittle. It contains nothe
tng harmful Just go to your drug=
gist and ask for four ounces of
ll“:ld %NARO Concentrate, Pour
this info a pint bottle and add
enough grapefruit juice to fill the
bottle. Then take two tablespoons~
ful twice a day. That's all there
ia to it
It the very first bottle doesn’t
show the simple, easy way (o lose
Convention Sidelights
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P L
Captain Bradley waves from the
perthole in his funnel bedroom.
His quarters are ¢n the boat
deck level, above which is the
whesl house and radio room.
ping for bathing suits. Ever since
they made an appearance on these
shores, the French briefies have
been lashed by beauty experts and
| film stars.
Sample Opinions
For instance, I once sampled
opinions in Hollywood and got
| answers like these:
Esther Williams—“ Bikinis are
not flattering and they're im
practical; you can't swim in
j them.”
| Janet Leigh—*l like low-cut
| evening gowns, but the nudity of
French bathing suits isn't attrac_
tive.”
{ Betty Grable—“lf the French
girls want to show their navels,
it’s all right with me. I'll stick to
American swim suits.”
But now the Bikini acquires a
champion in Marilyn. Of course,
it’s possible that she is merely
anti-clothes. She’s the giri who
posed for those calendars in noth
ing more than a smile,
Likes Bikini
“I like the Bikini,” she insisted.
‘“They’re very comfortable. And
they’re very practical for sun
bathing. I think you should ex
pose as much area to the sun as
possible. As -a matter of fact, I
think nude sunbathing is the best
of all, but, of course, that is usual
| ly pretty hard to arrange.”
“I don’t know why you can’t
swim in Bikinis,” she commented
in reply to Esther Williams, “If
the suit is fastened properly be
fore you go in the water, nothing
should go wrong. At least I've
| never had any trouble with mine.”
bulky fat and help regain slender,
movre graceful curves; if reducible
pounds and inches of excess fat
don’t just seem to disappear almost
llke magic from neck, chin, arms,
bust, abdomen, hips, ecalves and
ankles, just return the empty bot
tle to the manufacturer for your
money back. Follow the easy way
endorsed by many who have tried
this plan and help bring back allur
ing curves and graceful slender«
ness. Note how gquickly bloat dis
appears—how much better you feel.
More alive, youthful appearing and
active.
Mexico's Sure Bet For President Is
Unencuimbered By Political Ties
: By NEA Service
MEXICO CITY—Few candi
dates approach their country’s
highest governing office so {ree in
their own right as Adolfo Ruiz
Cortines, the tall, reserved eco
nomie planner who is considered
a sure bet to become Mexico's
next president in the July 6 na
tional elections,
It is said that all elements of
his party have accepted Ruiz Cor
tines because none have been able
to claim him,
One day shortly after his nomi
nation, a man of great wealth and
political influence called to offer
a campaigh contribution of one
million pesos.
Don Adolfo smiled in grati
tude, but his answer was charac
teristic: : &
“I thank you very much in
deed, but we cannot take it.”
Such actions have made Ruiz
Cortines a disconcerting figure to
the politically cynical, but a pop
ular one with th(‘e n:asses.
*
His ties with the people are
close ones. Despite the broad in
fluence he has wielded in top
Eosts, both state and national,
is manner and mode of living
are scrupulously conservative.
He has one personal indulgence
—expensive hats. He lives in a
modest three-bedroom dwelling
in a quiet suburb. Lack of pomp
has been a lifetime habit, “As a
boy, I was imperturbably poor,”
he says, “and I still am.”
Don Adolfo’s childhood pov
erty—he went to work at 14 to
support his widowed mother—is
reflected in his poliices. In the
field of education, for example, he
feels that schools and books are
necessary, but only if accompa
nied by adequate nutrition, hous=-
ing and clothing.
In the early days of Mexico's
democracy, when the strong men
were competing for control, he
was an ardent young revolution
ary. When peace came, he became
an administrator.
A L
After 11 years in the govern=-
ment’s lower echelons, he rose in
1934 to his first top post, assistant
secretary of the federal district
Holiday Closing Notice
IN ORDER THAT OUR EMPLOYEES MAY EN
JOY THE JULY 4TH HOLIDAY, THE FOL
LOWING LAUNDRIES AND DRY CLEANERS
WILL BE CLOSED '
July 4th. and Sth.
PLEASE PLACE YOUR CLEANING ORDERS
EARLY FOR DELIVERY BEFORE JULY 4TH.
Athens Pressing Club Gray Bros. Dry Cleaners
B & W Cleaners Industrial Laundry |
Chabe’s Sialane Clonert Charlie James Cleaners
e 0 Mew Way Laund.-Cleaners
Findley Dry Cleaners ¢\ rhan Cleaners
Georgian Laundry Whitworth Cleaners
during the regime of President
Cardenas. Then came a succession
of others—federal! representative,
Secretary General of Veracruz
and assistant secretary of the Min=-
istry of the Interior-—climaxed by
his election as Governor of Vera
cruz in 1944,
As Governor, Ruiz Cortines
gave first priority to public wel
fare programs and worked out a
budget dedicating 50 per cent of
the state’s revenues to raising
the standard of living and educa
tional programs.
When his term was up, he as
sumad his present post, President
Aleman’s Minister of the Interior.
He is considered an obvious choice
to carry out Aleman’s public wel=
fare programs, instituted when
the military tradition in govern
ment was finally abandoned in
favor of the civilian form six years
ago,
In his bid for the presidency,
Ruiz Cortines is virtually assured
of election. The party of Revolu=
tionary Institutions which sup=-
Doors
Open
12:45
TODAY — TUESDAY
Features: 1:00, 2:07, 3:14, 4:21,
*5:28, 6:35, 7:42, 8:49, 9:56.
ONCE A BAD MAN ALWAYS A BAD MAN!! |
THE NOOSE WAS THEIR ONLY FEAR! |
ZANE GREYS |
|
f 8 3 -2 |
; 4 i
VA & 00 !
.}(‘w g/ ");
: la\x:l.' "‘3"'"“ .:,‘;?sfisfl :
/BAD g Y
/ EN
'
'
Plus—Andy Panda Cartoon :
PAGE FIVE
portg him is by far the majority
party and always wins, and his
victory would probablih viewed
with favor by the U. S. State De
partment,
Perhaps the riost publicized of
his campaign promises is his
avowal to give women the vote.
This has drawn a divided reac=
tion, especially. among women,
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