Newspaper Page Text
gU DAY, JULY 8, 1952.
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DOUBLE-DUTY LICENSE PLATE—With the addition of the
“I Like” tag, the license plate of former New York State Senator
Isaac B. Mitchell not only identifies his auto, but also tells the
public who he hopes wili win Republican presidential nomination,
Radio Clock
1340 AM -995 FM
SUNDAY MORNING
6:50-—silgn On.
B:ss—News.
7:oo—Sunday Morning Serenade.
8:00—CBS News.
B:ls—The Gospel Light.
B:4s—Yesterday, Today and
Tomorrow.
9 00—"TThe Bible, the Book to
Live By.
9:ls—The Gospel Messengers, i
9:4s=News, ‘
10:00—~Forum Class Discussion.
11:00—Music to Please.
11:18-==Talmadge Heights Baptist
Church.
SUNDAY AFTERNOON
12:15—The Home Worship Hour,
I:oo—This Week in Politics.
I:ls=Music for Sunday.
2:oo—String Serenade (CBS).
2:3o—Boulevard Baptist Church
Choir,
B:oo—Maslerworks of Music.
4. 00—Main Street Musical Hall
CBS). |
4:3o—Band of the Day (CBS),
s:.oo—King Arthur Godfrey’s
Roundtable (CBS). |
§:3o—Admiral’s World News
(CES). |
S:3S—CBS News. |
SUNDAY EVENING
B:oo—Treasury Bandstand
(CBS). :
B:3o—Byncopation Piece
(CBS). : g
7:oo—December Bride (CBS).
7:3o—Amos 'n Andy.
B:oo—Frank Fontaine Show
(CBS).
B:3o—Phillip Moris Playhouse
(CBS).
9:oo—Sßereen Guild Theater
(CBS).
9:3o—My Friend Irma (CBS).
10:00—Inside Athens.
10:05—Convention Coverage
(CBS).
11:00—CBS News and the World
Tonight (CBS).
11:15—Music America loves.
12:00—CBS News.
12:05—8ign Off.
MONDAY MORNING
6:2o—Sign On. :
B:2s—News,
6:30-—Btrength for the Day.
6:4s—Hillbilly Time Down South,
7:oo—Harmony Time.
7:ls—Good Morning Circle.
7:3o—World News Briefs.
7:3s—Community Calendar,
7:4o—The Scoreboard.
7:4s—Breakfast Edition, WGAU
News,
8:00—CEBS World News Roundup
(CBS).
8 15—Market Calls.
B:36—Music Shop Parade.
9:OO—CBS News of America
(€BS).
9:ls—Hymns of All Churches,
9:3o—Woman’s Whirl,
9:45-—Btar Gazing.
10:00—Arthur Godfrey (CBS).
11:30—Republican National
Convention (CBS).
3:3o—Joe Emerson Hymn Time,
3:4s—Rillbilly Matinee.
4:30-—Ring the Bell.
4:45—1340 Platter Party.
3:4s—Curt Massey Orchestra
(CBS).
" Connecticut Tour
s o——— S A P e A
L VERTICAL‘
1 Short sleeps
2 Russian river
3 Head (Fr.)/’
4Speck
5 Ran away to
RELY %
6 General (ab.)
7 Loads
8 Straightens’
9 Rubber tree.
10 Grooves [
11 Iroquoian,
" Indian &
12 Lecture (ab.)
18 Capital of #
& Connecticut,
21 Flower .
22 «ae Univere
| sity is in 1\
. Connecticut
IK)ILHK)N'I‘ALI
| Conmecticut is
called the &
o State”
7 The mountain
e 18 the
state flower of
Connecticut
13 Smali space
14 Entice :
15 World War 11
¢ genersl 1
18 Pertaining to
¢ diet .
17 Shambey 1
18 Fowl 1
10 Harden>, P
20 Expunge g
32 Affirmative g
L reply :
23 Drone bee . _
26 Bargain events
31 Gramdparental
33 Streets (ab.)/
35 Apple eentet,
36 Italian coin /
87 Newt.. ~
38 Journey
39 Nullify { .
41 Boat paddle -
43 Dine A
4 Connectlent it
NOT 8w
.
3#o& m.i
¥ Augment
30 Conneetiout
was one of
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of:
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SUNDAY MORNING
6:3o—Sign On,
6:3o—Folk Musie.
6:s6—News.
7:00—Good Will Choir.
7:3o—Amazing Grace.
B:oo—The Sterchi Trio.
8:30—Good Tidings Broadcast,
9:oo—Harmony Trio.
9:3o—Central Baptist Church,
10:00—News,
10:10—U. 8. Official Weather
Report.
10:15—0I1d Favorites. :
11:00—Meditation.
11:15—Church Services
(First Baptist Church),
SUNDAY AFTERNOON
12:15—Rev. C. E. Vaughn.
I:oo—News.
1:10—U. S. Official Weather
Report.
I:ls—Souvenir Songs.
I:3o—Silvey Sunday Serenade.
2:oo—Major League Game of the
Day (New York at Phila
delphia).
3:3o—News.
3:4s—Revolving Bandstand,
SUNDAY EVENING
6:oo—Proudly We Hail.
6:3o—Land of the Free.
6:4s—Guest Star.
7:oo—~Candlelight and Silver,
7:3O—UN Story. :
7:4s—Sunday Summary.
B:oo—Church Services—
* First Baptist Church.
9:oo—News.
9:ls—Modern Masters.
10:00—Musie Appreciation.
11:00—News in a Nutshelil.
11:05—Make Mine Music.
12:00—Stardusting.
12:25-—News Nightcap.
12:30—Sign Off.
MONDAY MORNING '
s:3o—Sign On.
s:3o—Reveille Roundup.
5:55—G00d Morning News.
6:oo—Reveille Roundup. .
6:4s—Ford Farm Time.
7:oo—News.
7:os—Glory Bells.
7:3o—Red’s Almanac,
B:oo—News,
B:ls—U. S. Official Weather
Report.
B:2o—The Musical Clock.
B:ss—John Conte Little Show.
9:oo—The Morning Devotional,
9:IS—WRFC Trading Post.
9:3o—Evelyn Knight Show.
9:4s—The Feminine Agenda.
10:00—Anything Goes.
10:25—News.
10:30—The Blessed Hope.
11:00—W. C. T. U.
11:15—The Chuck Wagon.
MONDAY AFTERNOON
12:00—Whitmire Harmony Time.
12:15—Today’s Headlines.
12:30—Leon and Red.
12:45—Smiley Burnette.
I:oo—News,
I:OS—U. S. Official Weather
Report,
I:lo—The Luncheon Serenade.
I:2s—Major Lea%\ie Game of the
Day (Pittsburgh at Chica
go — National).
3:ss—News.
4:oo—Hive of Jive.
4:30—-The Record Room.
s:3o—The Lone Ranger.
Answer to Previous Puzzle
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slosE] EXER] INED
45 Idolize
46 Passage in
% the brain -
47 Sheltered inlet
48 Mohammedan
. priest -
51 Followers
52 Carry (coll.)
53 Bewildered
54 For fear that
56 Girl’s name -
57 Sardinia (ab.)
23 Wicked
24 Hindu 4
@& garment
27 Deed
28 Learning
29 Assam \
% silkworm’
30 Social group
32 Youth s
34 Male deer |
40 Puffed up
42 Venerate
Fillin For Bob Thomas Says
Movies Rediscover Great Talent
By JAMES BACON
For Vacationing Bah Thomas
HOLLYWOOD — (AP) — The
movies are up to one of their old
tricks—rediscovering an actor who
has always been great.
The actor is Eddie Albert and
the amazing thing about his re
discovery is that it came about in
competition with the actor who is
generally regarded as the world’s
greatest—Sir Laurence Oliver,
Albert is the brash, traveling
salesman of “Carrie” who woos
heroine ennifer Jones, an Oscar
winner herself, and then loses her
to the suave Oliver,
Good as Oliver and Jones were,
many a critic came out of the
press showing with comments
something like this:
“That Eddie Albert sure is a
actor. Where's he been lately?
The 44-year-old Albert he looks
much younger was a popular mo
vie star before the war. He started
off strong in “Brother Rat,” the
same role he had played on Broad
way.
Then came a hitch with the U.
S. Navy in the South Pacific, and
Hollywood soon forgot. His post
war career never quite hit the big
time.
I thought I'd find out from Ed
die why Hollywood, constantly
searching for neéw faces, just as
constantly overlooks its own pro
ven performers.
Wrong Day
I picked the wrong day, it
turned out. I looked up Eddie at
a local television station where
he has been a 25-hour-a-week
disk jockey on a daytime program.
It was his last day an the show
before a summer layoff. He was
leaving for Rome the next day.
Willie Wyler, the director who
made “Carrie,” had just signed
Albert to make “Roman Hoiliday”
with Gregory Peck and Audrey
Hepburn. A studio source consid
ered this bit of news significant.
Wyler, is seems, seldom uses the
same actors irn two consecutive
pictures.
Midway in Albert’s TV stint, an
old movie is shown. This gives
him an hour’s break—long enough,
1 had hoped, to learn what I want=
ed to know.
He dashed from the TV set,
grabbed me by the arm and head
ed for the parking lot.
“Come along to my lawyer’s of
fice with me. I have to sign my
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R R e oY S R T
YOU’LL discover a lot that you like in this
neat, fleet and nimble traveler the first
mile you drive it.
Such things as cushions broad and deep—six
passenger room unsurpassed by any car in
America—fabrics rich, soft, harmonious.
As you take it through traffic—breast a hill or
two—try it out on back roads—you’ll find that
you handle Dynaflow Drive* as if you had
always used it—your ride is serenely level—and
a great tide of power comes surging up as you
need it.
"This, you will say, is very Super indeed.
But no one-time sample can tell you the deep
down enduring thrill that is yours when you
own this great middle series Buick.
THE SANNER-HERALD. ATHENS, GEORGIA
will.”
Red Tape
As we drove along, he quipped
about all the red tape incident to
a European trip.
“How do the people who can’t
afford a lawyer make a trip to
Europe?”
His lawyer gave him a copy of
the will.
“It’s so legal. I can’t understand
it.” He signed it.without reading
it.
He grabbed my arm again and
soon we were riding along in the
car.
“Eddie,” I began, “now that...”
He interrupted with: “wait a
minute. I have to stolgehere and
pick up my watch. I already have
;5,000 in a watch that only cost
40.”
Two more stops and we were
back at the TV station.
“Let’s sit here.” Eddie pointed
OUT OUR WAY
: fiMiill -/ NOT OFTEN YOU NO, HE DON'T LIKE IT
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i b[T SO THEY CAN GET AN' TH' DAY GOES |1
EH b T BUSY AGIN--THEY FASTER/ I NEVER 'y
e 1 MUST LOVE THEIR )| COULP--AN' IVE {h
i, ‘ WORK.! /| SPENT A HUNDRED \\3id
i 1. YEARS IN THIS SHOP J'S
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W # i TRWILLUAMDS
Lve v o THE TIME KILLER o
GEZORGIA MOTORS INC.
“YOUR BUICK DEALER FOR 22 YEARS""
Warcen C. Thurmond, President.
Broad and Lumpkin Phone 3141
to a before and after sofa, half
of it beaten and worn, the other
looking brand new.
“One of my sponsors is a re
upholstering firm,” he explained.
“Eddie,” I began again, “now
that Hollywood has re-discovered
yo . "
Two stagehands picked up the
yofa. Another assistant handed
Eddie a rebuilt vacum cleaner, He
was on,
“Gosh, that hour went fast,” re
marked Eddie, shaking hands.
“Hope you found out what you
wanted to know?”
Shows America
To Foreigners
By JANE EADS
WASHINGTON — What does
American life really look like?
That is something the State De
partment for a long time has been
trying to show people of other
countries.
Now groups of American club-
BY J. R. WILLIAMS
Hew easy it is to park in round-town driving,
especially if you have Power Steering.{
How relaxed you and the family will feel at
the end of a long day’s vacation jaunt — with
Dynaflow Drive to let you drive at ease on the
open road, without the tenseness of clutch
pushing in traffic—plus a Million Dollar Ride
to protect the comfort of the family.
That ride is something to talk about. More than
a dozen selected engineering features control
roll and wander on curves—snub dip and sway
before they get past the frame—carry you over
all kinds of roads with lullaby smoothness.
And that Fireball 8 Engine—man, what a docile
thunderbolt you'll find it to be! Here’s a high
compression valve-in-head that really wrings
miles from a gallon of gas.
women have come up with an ef
fective way of doing this , . . past=
ing up scrapbooks with candid
photographs of themselves and life
as it’s actually lived every day in
an ordinary American town -the
good along with the bad.
The scrapbooks, now being sent
abroad by the State Department
for use in U. S. information cen
ters and bookmobiles, show the
women, their families, homes,
jobs, schools, churches, their re
creations, the way they govern
themselves and what they try to
do to make their towns better
places in which to live.
Dr. Janet MacDonald, professor
of history at Hollins College, Roa
noke, Va., and president of the
Virginia branch of the American
Association of University Women,
thought up the project. “The ori
ginal idea was to send the books to
foreign federations,” she said, “but
when the first set was completed
in 1951 associates in Washinton
showed them to the State Depart
ment. Now other state groups are
intrested in helping with the pro
ject—Wyoming, Texas, West Vir
ginia, Florida and Oklahoma, to
mention a few.”
The State Department asked
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the women to be more personal in
their presentations. Dr, MacDo
nald posed for some snapshots
herself, in her own kitchen using
modern gadgets, shopping for gro
; ceries in a big food market, with
her cocker spaniel, beside her au
tomobile and teaching a class,
“Nell Walters, pricipal of a
Roanoke elementary school,
showed in snapshots odd duties
she had to perform, such as pul
ling dangling teeth, bandaging
kids hurt on the playground and
so on,” Dr. MacDonald said. The
Hampton, Va., branch showed the
town’s fishing industry, big-town
apartments and a floor plan of a
typical war-time constructed cot
tage as well as slum areas “of
which we are not proud.”
“Forty of these scrapbooks have
already been sent abroad, to Thai
land, Burma, West Germany and
India,” Dr. McDonald explained.
“The Army sent four to Japan,
and one was translated into Span
ish to be sent to Bolivia. More are
being translated into foreign lan
guages, but there’s one word we
can’t find a translation for—baby
sitter.”
OUR BOARDINGC HOUSE
10 other words, all the miles you travel in this
Buick are going to make you gladder and
gladder that you bought it — for comfort, for
fun, for thrill and for thrift.
What are you waiting for ? Come in and get
your sample today.
Equipment, accessories, trim and models are subject o change
without motice. * Standard on Roadmaster, optional at extra cost
on other Series. tNow available on Super as well as Roadmaster
—optional at extra cost,
Gure is
fia
for 32
e ——————————— e—— —————
Sets Meet Here
- 9
Bar Association
The Clarke County Bar Assocla«
tion will meet in the Superior
Court Room, Clarke County
Courthouse, at 11:00 a. m., Mon=
day July 17, for the purpose of ar
ranging a calendar for trial of
cases at the approaching term of
Superior Court which convenes
the second Monday in July.
Full attendance is requested by
Clerk of Court Elmer Crawford.
Uruguay won its independence
from Spain in the 1820 s and 1830 s.
Uruguay is the smallest of the
republics of South America.
Polar bears living on Arctic ice
floes prey on seals, fish and birds.
Some kangaroos live in trees.
The density of Jupiter is only
1.3 times that of water,
Lamps wer efirst widely used K
Greek homes about the Four
Century B. C: P
T G
SS R SRSS 37 ; 3 }
LT
PAGE ELEVEN
MA|JOR HOOPLE