Newspaper Page Text
gHURSDAY, JULY 3, 1952
L ——————————
Srewart Family
D|aa Reunion
1t Col. George B. Stewart, op
erational officer at Rapid City
yir Force Base, is in Athens and
wis wife will join him this week
end: Capt. F. X, Stewart of Fort
nrasg, N. C., will arrive on Satur
dav, as will Mr. and Mrs. T. M.
cowart, of New York City, and W,
onway Stewart and family of At
" ota. “They will be the guests of
(i parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. A.
glewart on Hall street for a family
¥ mion the second week in July
and their l‘utt:er‘.s 72 birthday.
Coming
Fvents
rhe Coming Events Column
is designed to supply the pub
lic with facts concerning or
ganizational and other meet
ings, times, places and events
only. Contributors to this
column are requested to limit
their coming events to these
facts to insure the brevity and
clarity of the various items in
the colummn,
The Georgia Museum of Art
will not be open or Sunday until
further notice in September.
PUBLIC LIBRARY
Children’s antique tea sets be
longing to Mrs, Murray Soule
are now being displayed in the
Library.
An exhibition of water colors
by Miss Mary Frances Carter is
now on display in the Library.
Children’s Story Hour each
Saturday in children’s room
from 10 until 11 a. m,
Library story time over
WGAU each Friday, 3 p. m.
Opening hours: Monday
through Friday, 9 a. m. 1o 9 p.
m.; Saturday, 9 a. m. to 6 p. m.;
Sundays, 3 p. m. so € p. m.
Tuckston WSCS will have the
next meeting on Tuesday July 8,
3:30 p. m.
WCTU HOUR
WGAU
Over WGAU the following
talks will be heard on the Wo
man’s Christian Temperance
Hour each Wednesday afternoon
during the moth of July from 3
to 3:15.
July 9, J. H. Logan.
July 16, Mrs. R. F. Thomas.
July 23, Mrs. H. A. Haygood.
July 30, Baptist Student Union.
WFC
Over WRFC the following will
be heard on the WCTU Hour
each Monday morning during
the month of July 11 to 11:15.
July 7, Mrs. A. E. Logan.
July 14, C. 8. Denny,
July 21, Rev. C. H. Ellison.
July 28, Mrs., William J. Rus
sell
Iniversity Demonstration
School Canning Plant on Boule
vard and Satula avenue will be
open each Tuesday and Friday
through out the canning season
after the fourth of July. For ap
pointment call 2697 during the
day and after 5:30 call 127-J.
Dorcas Class es the Prince
Avenue Baptist Church will
meet at the home of Mrs. J. B.
Parham, on Sunset Drive, on
Thursday, July 3, 8 p. m. This
is the regular business meeting
and all members are urged to
attend.
Winterville School Cannery
will open on Tuesday and
Thursday for the week of June
30 because of the holiday week
end, The Cannery will return to
the Tuesday and Friday sched
ule beginning the following
week.
J. E. Lowe, for twelve years
& member of the Georgia State
Patrol and now safety director
for the Simpson Trucking Com-
Pany, will address members of
the Clarke County Women Vot
ers at their regular luncheon
meeting in the Holman Hotel
Tuesday, July 8, at moon. Res
ervations may be made by tele
phoning Mrs, William J. Russell
o 1092-7.
The Bykota Class of the First
Christian Church will hold its
fegular meeting at the home of
Mr. and Mrs, Richard Threlkeld,
207 Dußose Ave., at 8 o’clock
text Monday night, July 7.
Wesleyan Service Gulid of the
Young Harris Methodist Church
will meet Tuesday July 8, 8 p.
M. with Misses Flo Oudia and
Odessa Willilamson. Members are
Urged to attend and visitors wel
come,
v Toitanie. &ik ty eof
The Woman’s Socie
Christian Service of the :";‘:"fi
Harris Memorial Chure i e
Mmeet Monday, July 7‘ alated
Church. The meeting is s
for 3:30.
' wash
It is important that you >
tinware ang dry #t welf, imm:dti)!'
ately aftep using, Do not 'cm'i‘hey
Krape it with sharp tools, 23
May cause breaks in the tin eo ot
Mg and the metal base will rust.
- o e hop-
Vhen yoy gre refrigerator s
21g look for adjustable ’hd(;’”
that meet the varying day-by- g};‘
needs of different types of interi
loadiy g.
——
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GOVERNGCRS GET TOGETHER AT ANNUAL MEET
Three Southern governors chat amia
bly with Mrs. James F. Byrnes, wife of
the goveirior of South Carolina, during a
reception at Houston, Texas, prior to the
start of the annual governors’ conference.
Left to right are Governors Johnston Mur
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AAAAHH! COOL AT LAST! — With the temperature
104-degrees in the shade, Johnny and Jackie find
White’s Creek the coolest spot in their neighborhood at
Nashville, Tenn. Johnny, content to cool off slowly,
seems a trifle embarrassed as Jackie shoots the works at
full length and howls his delight. The 4-month-old pup
pies are owned by Marvin Stafford.— (AP Wirephoto.)
DURING SUMMER
By ALACIA HART
NEA Beautiy Editor
Watch out for the summer
cold. It can ruin your vacation,
spoil week-ends of fun with your
teen-age friends, and generally
make life miserable.
The best way to approach the
problem of the summer cold, is to
do everything possible to prevent
it. For one thing, don't get into
the habit of hanging around the
beach for hours in a wet bathing
suit. Keep away from people who
are already infected with cold
germs. Get enough sleep and eat
the proper foods. 5
But if, despite precautions, you
still find yourself a victim of
sniffles and sneezes, treat your
condition just as you would in the
wintertime,
First, take to bed for a day or
two so that your system will be
assured plenty of rest and quiet.
Citrus fruits and juices are abso-
Jutely essential to help you
through this trying period.
Bar any additional germs by
gargling frequently with a safe,
effective antiseptic. If you don’t
show signs of recovery within a
few days, better pay a visit to
your doctor. .
It certainly takes very little
effort on your part to prevent
colds during the summer months.
But how much more you will en
joy yourself, if you stay well.
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EIGHT-ALARM IN BROOKLYN — The
wall of an abandoned trolley car barn in
a crowded tenement section of Brooklyn
collapses as & raging fire guts the interior.
In the borough’s first eight-alarm fire in
a decade, the flames spread from the car
ray of Oklahoma, Byrnes and John 8. Bat
tle of Virginia. Gloomy Republican gover
nors forecast difficulties for their party in
November as warring Democrats talked
of civil rights which might let them win
the presidency.— (AP Wirephoto.)
Two Athenians
On Two Months
Tour Of Europe
Twenty seven college students
have just arrived in Europe for
a 2-month tour under the direct-
tion of Dr. John A. Downs, pro
fessor of French at the University
of Georgia, and Mrs. Downs.
The group, composed mostly of
Georgia students, will visit Eng
land, Scotland, Holland, Belgium,
Germany, Switzerland, Italy and
France. Dr. and Mrs. Downs are
veteran tour directors.
University of Georgia students
making the tour are Jean Moore,
Covington; Dottie Nowell, Mon
roe; Frances Ginn, Covington,
Eleanor Tillman, Athens; Julie
Maddox, Griffin; Mary L. Strick
land, Valdosta; Beverly Owens,
Albany; Dawson Teague, Augusta;
Lelia Dupre, Rome; Emma Car
ter, Daniel, Athens; Peggy Ash
worth, Columbus; Mollie Burdello,
Augusta; Nancy Neill, Columbus;
Patsy Ray, Charlottee, N. C.; Kit
ty Sibley, Augusta; Nancy Bob
bitt, Raleigh, N. C.; Ada Alice
Parramore, Valdosta; Jane Wright,
Chattanooga, Tenn,; Bob Cum
mings, Griffin.
Others are Audrey Dunn, Sav
annah; Meta Space, Savannah;
Louise Agee, Birmingham, Ala.;
Al Ledbetter, Rome; Frank Strick
land, Valdosta; Frances Marston,
Richmond, Va.; Markaret Wilker
son, Montgomery, Ala.; and Eliza
beth Hadden, Orange, N. J.
barn to damage ten more buildings, rout
ing hundreds from their apartments and
infurlng ten fireman. The trolley barn
watchman was reported misging.— (NEA
Telephoto.)
THE BANNER-HERALD, « THENS, GEORGIA
Citadel Given
High Rating
The Citadel has again scored the
highest possible rating in the an
nual Federal inspection, it has
been announced by authorities at
the military college.
Both the Corps of Cadets and
the military detachment received
a rating of superior. The inspec
tion was conducted in May by the
Third Army Inspector General.
Commenting on the results of
the inspection, Major General
William A. Beiderlinden. Com
manding General of the Third
Army with headquarters at Fort
McPherson, Georgia, wrote the
following letter to Col. John H.
Madison, Commandant of Cadets
at The Citadel.
" “I have noted with pleasure the
rating of “Superior” which was
achieved by the Military Detach
ment and the Reserve Officers’
Training. Corps, The Citadel,
Charleston, South Carolina, dur
ing the annual general inspection
conducted by the Third Army
standard of proficincy by both
of these groups is very gratifying,
and I wish to express my appre
ciation to all personnel concerned
for this outstanding performance
of duty.”
Col. Madison in a letter to all
cadets and military personnel at
the military college »said, “It is
with great pleasure and pride that
I add my thanks for a job well
done. The superior ratings re
ceived during the Annual Gen
eral Inspection, FY 1952, were
made possible by the conscientious
effort and outstanding performan
ce of duty on the part of each
member of this command.
“Such effort reflects admirably
upon each of you as an individ
ual and upon the unit as a whole.”
French Exhibit
To Open In
GaArt Museum
The Georgia Museum of Art will
be closed on July 4,5, 6, and will
not be open on Sunday until the
middle of September.
July 10, an interesting collec
tion of prints by a famous artist,
George Rouault will be displayed
in the Dodd Gallery for the bal
ance of July. These prints will be
varied so as to give the immense
versatility of this world renowned
artist: Balerines Pierrots, Notre
Dame Cathedral, The Wandering
Jew, Negro Porter, Street Women,
Savage Men; and Religious pic
tures are inciuded such as Christ
on the Cross, Adam and Eve and
many others,
The prints include in this col
iection, wood engravings, litho
graphs, color engravings acqua
tents, etchings, etc. It is an out
standing exhibitlon that will im
press art students as well as the
general public.
In the Memorial Gallery will be
an attractive selection of impor
tant paintings frem the Holbrook
PERSONALS
Mrs. Edna Parr left Wednesday
for Fort Valley to visit her neph
ew and niece, Mr. and Mrs. J. E.
Barnett, :
v * *
Mrs, Ike A. Helms, former Ath
enian, has many friends here who
will be sorry to learn that she is
in the Presbyterian Hospital,
Charlotte, N. C., for surgery.
* " *
Mr. and Mrs. H. K. Rumsey
have returned from a visit in At
lanta with their children, Mr. and
Mrs. Wallace Hardman, and in
Smyrna with Mr, and Mrs. Char
les Rumsey.
*® * "
Dr. and Mrs. R. C. Wilson, jr.,
and children are expected Friday
to visit Dr. Wilson’s parents. Dr.
and Mrs. R. C. Wilson on Hender
son avenue.
»* * *
Mrs. Arthur M. Hendrick and
daughters, of Canton, are visiting
her parents, Mr. and Mrs, B. R.
Bloodworth in the Milledge Circle
Apartments,—Louise spending the
time at the Y. W. C. A. Camp, and
Nancy and Martha in town.
* * *®
¢ Mr. and Mrs. Lee Bradberry,
of Moultrie, are expected tonight
for a visit to join their sons, Brad
and Tommy, who have been in
Athens for several weeks,—Brad
at Pine Tops, and Tommy visiting
his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Lee Bradberry and Mr. and Mrs.
B. R. Bloodworth. .
* * -
Mrs. Clarence Smith, of Blakely,
and her mother, Mrs. Evie Cody,
of Nashville, Ga., are visiting re
latives in Athens.
Miss Winston Stephens, daugh
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert G.
Stephens, jr., of Athens, is in the
Athens General Hospital, having
had an operation cn her knee last
Tuescay.
* L &
FF:And F.H.
Camps Open At
Lake Jackson
FFA Camp, Lake Jackson, Ga.,
—Trouble with most organizations
is that seventy-five per cent of
the members are “shirt tail riders”
Larry aylor, group dynamies éx
pert who has worked with ninety
three leadership groups during the
past year, told Georgians Monday
as the first Future Farmer-Future
Homemaker Leadership Confer
ence opened here.
“A few well-known names are
chosen for leaders and expected
to work out a program for the oth
ers. This group is about twenty
five per cent. The rest say ‘you
work out our program and tell us
what to do. We'll be right behind
you'. They don’t say how far be
hind. And they do not realize that
they themselves are also potential
| leaders, and that any good pro
gram must grow out of the needs
of the whole group.”
Mr. Taylor, who is on the facul
ty at Hillsdale College, Michigan,
is nationally known for his leader=-
ship counselling. He has enormous
faith in the ability of young peo
ple to learn the democratic pro
cess. He believes that if they feel
adults have confidence in them,
they will evolve effective work
| patterns for carrying on their or
| ganizations. :
| Marilyn Middleton of Blakely
| former state FHA treasurer who
| is being presented by the Georgia
! Future Homemakers as a candidate
i for national vice-president, and
| Gen Aiken, Covington, FFA
| treasurer, were members of a
| panel on camp organization held }
Monday afternoon. Bill Williams
of Beuna Vista, state FFA presi
dent and DeLoyce Strickland of
Moultrie, state FHA president, are
attending the Conference. Adult
advisers include T. G. Walters,
chairman FFA advisory board,
Miss Inez Wallace, chairman FHA
advisory board, T. D. Brown, jr.,
executive secretary Future Far
mers, and Mrs. J. M. Barber, state
adviser Future Homemakers, of
Athens,
J. D. Smith of Covington, di
rected a “get acquainted” recrea
tional program for the boys and
glrls Monday afternoon.
Rev. E. A. Callaway, pastor of
the Covington BRaptist Church, led
the vesper program on the open
night of camp. Vespers are held
each evening in the lakeside me
morial amphitheater,
Guests at the camp on opening
night for supper and the first pro
gram were members of the Miss
Florida Moore's Evaluation class
in home economics from the Uni
versity of Georgia. They were
Mrs. Carrie Williams, Macon; Mrs.
Catherine Burrell, Savannah; Mrs.
Helen McDaniel, Alamo; Mrs. An
nie Mae Burns, Ocilla; Mrs. Jer
ry Townsend, Fayetteville; Miss
Jacquelyn Roberts, Ocilla; Miss
Aline Cross, College Park; Miss
Mary Jarrett, Toccoa; Miss Wilma
Ivie, Cumming; Miss Saralu Car
ter, Eastonollee; and Mrs. Sue
Rowe, register. |
A daily camp council is being
appointed to carry on the camp
activities. -
T. D. Brown, jr., director of the
camp said Monday, “We got off to
a wonderful start with the Con
ference. The boys and girls have
just taken hold of things and car
ried out their responsibilities ex
cellently. So many young people
wanted to come to this Conference
that we have more than we had
counted on, but we have managed
to take care of them. We think
that our young cFeo;:le are getting
very practical ideas about leader
ship which they can carry home
ams put to work effectively in
their own local groups, and ihat is
the best of learning.”
Make use of the earring that
wasn't lost by clif)ping it to the
bow of a black velvet ribbon and
tieing it around your wrist.
" Brief summer foot coverings
should be washed after each wear
ing—for sanity reason and for
comfort,
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SHE STILL CAN'T BELIEVE IT—Miss Stella Kahn, of New
York, prepares to count the $855 that’s now all hers. Stella found
S2OO on Fifth Avenue on one day, and on the next, found $655 in
a package on a taxi seat. She turned it over to police, but nobody
Woman Doctor Says “Teacher’s Pet”
Is Child Who Shou!d Be Watched
WASHINGTON—It's the good
little boys and girls—the teachers’
pets—society should be most con
cerned about, NOT the kids who
raise the roof and fail in school.
That’s the opinion of Mrs, L. E.
Schneider, clinical psychologist of
Duluth, Minn., a member of Gov.
C. Elmer Anderson’s Commission
on Children and Youth in Minne
sota.
Mrs. Schneider said doctors and
parents alike are finding the
“proper” youngsters are most like
ly to turn out to be the mentally
ill. “They are introverted by na
ture, shy, too anxious to please,
and because of all this, they re
press their general emotions, she
explained. “They bottle them
selves up, have no way of getting
rid of their frustrations and begin’
to live into themselves, instead of
living in the world of people who
get along with each other.”
So-called mischievous children
who get into occasional trouble are
just using normal outlets in get
ting rid of their feeling of annoy
ance’ by kicking back overtly at
society. “You will find that the
public at large is beginning to
Ex-Child Star’s lilusions Gone,
She Puts OK On Comedy Roles
By ERSKINE JOHNSON
NEA Staff Correspondent
HOLLYWOOD '— (NEA) —
Guys and Dolls: Fear of how Hol
lywood would usz her 55 a grown
up star, Mitzi Green confessed,
kent. her off the screen until this
year.
With roles in “Abbott and Cos
tello Lost in Alaska” and “Blood
hounds of Broadway” to her credit
now that she’s over her jitters
about Hollywood, the one-time
child star told me:
“I had to break down some illu
sions about myself. I'd been a
child star. And I'd been a star
after that — in night clubs and on
the stage. I think I saw myself
as a Carole Lombard type, Now I
know better. I'll be very happy
just to get good comedy roles.”
Mitzi to the “Did you make a
fortune as a child star? question:
“I made S4OO a week at first.
Then $650. But just when I was
ready to hit the big money, $1250
a week, they let me go. I was too
old! I was all of 11 years old.”
SINCER TURNED ACTOR ‘
Keith Andes, the ladies’ new
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will be ciosed
Friday and Saturday
July 4 and 5
beginning Monday at 9:15 sharp!
Store Wide
SALES
all over the store
on every floor
you ll find bargains galore
claimed either “bundle.”
realize there's something wrong
with the teacher’s pet,” she said.
“Parents are doing a better job
than in my day,” she said. “Today
more parents are taking kids with
problems to psychiatrists, trying
to attack their problems positive
ly and constructively and in terms
of keeping children mentally and
physically well.” .
And, she added: “Someone
ought to compliment juvenile court
officials and probation officers for
thinking in terms of keeping chil
dren well by using psychiatric and
mental hygiene facilities freely,
rather than in terms of length of
sentence and type of punishment.”
Mrs. Schneider, attending a
meeting of the American Associa
tion of University Women here,
said youthful :law-breakers in
Minnesota are committed to the
Youth Conservation Commission
for a complete diagnostic going
over before the' courts make any
decision as to what should be done
with them. The commission, set
up seven years ago, is patterned
after a California plan.
“The rate of committments has
gone down considerably,” she said.
heart throb — he plays Marilyn
Monroe’s boy friend in. “Clash by
Night” and just about steals the
film—has shelved his singing ca
reer to manhandle movie dolls.
Swashbuckling it as the bare
chested hero with Linda Darnell
as his lady fair in “Blackbread the
Pirate,” Keith dismissed his war
blir€ in a Broadway - revival of
“The Chocolate Soldier” and in
“Kiss Me Kate” with:
“RKO hired me as a singer but
I'm very happy about being turned
into an actor. After I'm estab
lished as an actor maybe I'll sing,
but I doubt it.”
Keith spent a year under con
tract to David O. Selznick with
out facing a camera. Selznick
spotted him in “Winged Victory.”
Then KRO signed him and another
year went by before he was cast
in “Clash by Night.”
- " -
If Jean Simmons wins her bat
tle to leave RKO this month, she
won't sign on the dotted line with'
any other studio.
Not for a year or more, anyhow.
“I want to free-lance,” gorgeous
PAGE THREE
Jean—with the shortest hairdo this
gide of Jerry on
o T s
sot. “I've 'r it to
studios since I was 14, I'd to
be free for a little bit—just to set
tle down and J‘“ my feet where I
want to put them.”
Some of his other co-stars may
not have liked Bob Mitchum, but
Jean's jumping for joy at the
chance to work with him and even
calls him “a great actor.”
“Why, the mug is wonderfyl in
comedy,” she gushed. “He’s a‘f(ind
of a Crosby actor—relaxed and
casual. And that’s the hardest
kind of actor to be.”
SHUDDERS AT KILLER ROLE
Richard Widmark's shuddering
about it, but he’s Tommy Udo
again,
Tommy, the maniacal killer with
the unholy laugh created by Wid
mark for “Kiss of Death” in 1946,
is back, but with another name for
one of the five O’Henry stories in
Fox’s “Bagdad on the Subway.”
Except for the name Tommy’s
the same—black shirt, white tie,
big teeth and that laugh.
“I didn’t want to play Tommy
again,” Widmark confessed on the
set of his new comedy-drama “Big
Man,” because it’s taken me so
long to escape him. Repeating a
character is not very effective. But
that it was only for a 20-minute
sequence and not in a full-length
feature.
“But this. I assure you, is the
end of Tommy Udo. I'll NEVER
play him again.” £
* -
It's getting tougher and tougher
on poor Maureen O’Hara — there
just aren’t enough derring-do lads
around to qualify as leading men
in her swashbuckling flickers.
Leaping, fighting, rolling Mau
reen, who's at the action stuff
again in “Cattle Kate,” makes
most male stars look about as en
ergetic as demonstrators of con
tour chairs.
And she’s complaining: *Mov'es
thrixed on stars like Doug Fair
banks, Ronald Colman and Ty
Power, who could take off their
shirts, swing on ropes, leap from
balcony to balcony and ride like
blazes. So many actors these days
can play in psychological dramas.
But they can’t do anything else.
“We had to hold off making
‘Against All Flags’ for two years
until Ercol Flynn was ayailable.
And do you know why? Nobody
else could handle the role.” '
£ * *
A movie kid who’s crazy about
submarines has named his Great
Dane “Periscope.” Goes around
the studio all day shouting to the
pooch, “Down Periscope.”
* » *
Good news for Belita in Paris.
Her French medicos say that her
brcken leg is now as good as new
and that she can skate agpin.
In the kitchen, interior decora
tion relies upon color and gleam
ing surfaces. A delicate shade of
clay tile often forms the eountinu
ous counter, drainboard and serv
ing center, as well as the splash
boards and floor. The serving cen
ter offers many opportunities for
the display of favoring flowers or
knicknacks.
Children should be taught the
necessity for finding out if there
are underwater obstructions where
they dive, and adults and children
alike should always observe water
safety rules.
If you are going boating or
canoeing( take the precaution to
step into the middle of the boat,
find a seat and keep it. If you
cannot swim, wear a lifepreserver
or stay ashore.
Be sure to rinse all your cottons
thoroughly to keep the colors
bright and clear.