Newspaper Page Text
PAGE EIGHT
Teen Talk
AP Newsfeatures
Vacation time is the season
when many a nice girl goes
estray. She meets new friends,
different. from her neighborhood
pals, She visits new places, un
like those to which she has been
accustomed. Unless her parents
have alerted her to some of the
l_itfle dangers which might be lurk«
ing In unexpected waysides, she
mizht not sense it until she is en«
tangled in an undesirable web.
Most summer heartaches evolve
from a handful of missteps. If a
girl would just make a clear ap
praisal of any proposition that
hasn't been encountered before,
asking herself whether there are
any drawbacks, he’d have noth
ing to worry about. Here are some
su 7gestions:
*. It doesn’t pay to waste time
w' h married men. And don’t be
lieve ’em when they say their
v ves want them to have fun. So
what? While you're flitting away
time with an older man, you'll
probably pass up a nice young
man your own age.
2. Even if your family permits
f‘{gu to have cocktails at home,
n't drink with strangers. If you
are partying with a group and it
seems like the thing to do, accept
a drink, sip it occasionally, if you
like, but don't think you must
drink to keep up with a crowd.
3. Things are likely to get very
eozy at summer resorts, People
have been known to scurry back {
and forth to each others’ rooms.
The first thing you know you are
likely to be partying in a gay
wolf's room in the wee hours of
the morn. Of course he’ll look
harmless, at first — they all do.
Make a rule not to visit boys
rooms.
4. Ilf you are asked to go for a
moonlight sail, make sure you
have company that 1s trustworthy.
It is not enough that other young
girls are being paired off with
young men. You should know how
well these girls know their male |
companions, and you should be
very well acquainted with your
own date. Unless you are a super
swimmer you'll need the coopera
tion of the captain to get back |
home from a canoe, rowboat,
power or sailboat trip.
5. Picnics are fun. But don't
go to out-of-the-way picnic areas
with strange companions. That
“darling boy” you met last night
can be just as fiendish as any
drug store cowboy. If you plan to
go picnicking with a new beau,
suggest another couple whom you
know well to accompany you.
6. If you are on a two-weeks
vacation or working at a resort,
don't tie up with one man—that's
one way to spoil your summer.
Men seem more attractive in sum
mer and girls are likely to be
more romantic than at other sea
sons of the year. Moonlight and
nature’s other enchanting props
can hexmal a girl's heart away. |
When she arrives back home and
sits by the telephone waiting for
that devoted summer swain to
call, changes are she'll be disap
pointed.
7. If a young man suggests you
go away for a weekend with him
or-his erowd, discuss it with your
family. They should know where
you plan to stay and with whom,
and If arrangements are being
made for the gang to stay at a
hotel or inn, be sure you write
for your own reservations and get
a confirmation so that everything
is in order before you leave home.
8. If anything goes wrong on
your blg adventure away from
home write, wire or telephone
your family for money so that you
? can leave the vacation resort un
der your own steam. Be indepen
dent and you'll have nothing to
fear.
KINDERGARTEN KIDS COUNT
ST. PAUL, Minn.—(AP)—Are
kindergarten children one-half a
pupil each or one-quarter? Min
nesota Education Commissioner
Dean M. Schweickhard asked this
question of state Attorney Gen
eral Burnquist when it came to
determining a basis for compu
ting tax levies.
The attorney general ruled
‘each kindergarten pupil attend
ing half-day sessions throughout
the school year constitutes one
half pupil unit.”
SR UIC K- DISSOIVING 7 FAS T.ATTINGERTR
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“STEAMROLLER?” tactics of Taft partisans are burles
qued by Faith Johnson of New York City’s Youth-for-
Eisenhower group.
Young Korean Orphan Discovers
Home With Dead Friend's Parenis
SAN FRANCISCO July 10—
(AP)—Victor Beauchamp was so
anxious to greet his new ‘“‘son”
that he used a launch to reach the
liner President Wilson.
Abmard, he located Kim Yoon
Joong, 16-year-old Korean war
orphan.
uestioning eyes looked into shy
brown curious eyes. .
Beauchamp extended his hand.
Shyly, almost stiffly, Kim bowed
and said “I am very happy, sir.”
- Then they embraced. A grin
spread avross each face,
At the dock they were greeted
by Mrs. Beauchamp. She gave him
a hug and a kiss.
Long, Long Time :
“ It's been a long time, a very
long time,” she said.
The Beauchamps’ son, Victor jr.,
22, a machine gunner with the
Eighth Cavalry regiment, had met
Kim in Korea. He wrote his par
ents: “Kim is one of the smartest
kids I's ever seen.” Vic planned
to send his young friend to his
parents to be aducated. Kim’s par
ents had been killed in a Com
munist attack.
Young Vic was killed in action
last October. His parents tried to
locate Kim.
Several U. S. Troops
The young Korean became a
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LAST MOMENTS OF LlFE—Starting his suicide leap, Merle
Bibbs, 38, left, seems to soar from 130-foot tower at National Starch
Company in Indianapolis. At right, Bibbs, the father of four chil
dren, is seen at the halfway mark of his fatal plunge. Three hours
of pleading by police went unheeded by Bibbs. Indianapolis Times
photographer John Spicklire snapped these dramatic pictures. |
stretcher bearer and interpreter
with American troops and couldn’t
be located. Finally, a news story
of the Beauchamps’ search reached
Pvi. Jack Hoyt of Berkley, Calif.,
in Korea.
Hoyt found Kim. :
The youth arrived last night—
after a mountain of red tape, im
migration clearance, passage ar
rangements and such had been
cleared.
RAILROADER RAISFS
ANIMALS
LONG BEACH, Salif.—(AP)—
Retired railroader George Russell,
79, has gone into the animal busi=
ness.
On his acre of land, Russell
raises turtles, pheasanis, squir
rels, peacocks and even a raccoon,
Many of the animals were given
to the former railroad man by
friends.
The raccoon, Tootsie, came to
the Russell backyard after a
friend’s wife said she couldn’t
live in the same apartment with
it.
Bill Engelin, new umpire in the
National League, was once a bat
boy for the St. Louis Browns in the
days of George Sisler.
Regents Decid
ATLANTA, July 10— (AP) —
Horace Ward, an Atlanta Negro,
Wednesday was put on the same
basis as olhers seeking to enter
the University of Georgia Law
School in September.
The Board of Regenis ruled that
he, like other applicants, must
conform to ‘‘admission policy re
quiremrents.”” It turned down his
demand that he be excused from
recently instituted intelligence
and aptitude tests.
Ward, who has filed a court suit
to force his admission to the
school, hoids that he should be
spared the tests because they wére
adopted after he applied.
But the Regents adopted a re
port of their education committee
saying that to excuse him would
be ‘“discrimination against other
applicants.’
The Regents also decided to in
vestigate the establishment of a
television station as part of the
University System’s visual educa
tion program.
They took initial steps to convey
to the State Building Authority a
12-acre tract from the Medical
College campus at Augusta for the
new 14-story state hospital to be
erected there. They approved $12,«
350 for the South Geor%i]a College
at Douglas to purchase the 12-acre
Raymond-Richardson airport as &
site for living quarters for fac
ulty members.
THE BANNER-HERALD. ATHENR., GEORGIA
Rock Fanciers
Find Beauly In
BY EDMUND 8. KITCH
AP Newsfeatures
CHICAGO~If you like pretty
rocks - you might be a “Rock
Hound” enjoying one of America’s
most popular hobbies,
Rock Hounds have plenty of
company. It is estimated by Chi
cagoan J. L. Cunningham, an
amateur lapidary fan, that there
are a million rock fans in the U. S,
Rock hounds work with semi
precious stones. Rocks often are
those found along banks of rivers,
lakes, gravel pits, stone quarries
and on Western mountains and
deserts. Rock hounds cut and pol
ish agates and such. They shape
them for display or set them in
silver and gold jewelry. Many
rock fans spend long hours mak
ing a variety of objects from ear
rings to bookends,
Cpnninghnm has become an au
thority on the subject. He started
his hobby six years ago. He fig
ured he had a lot of spare time
after he completed 16 years of
study to get his master’s degree in
business administration at North=
western University,
He learned jewelry making at
one of Chicago’s Park District rec=
reational classes. Today, Cunning
hamr is president of the Chicago
Lapidary Club, a group he helped
to organize.
He says there ase about 400
such clubs. The Los Angeles Lapi=
dary Club boasts the largest mem
bership.
Cunningham’s skill with color
ful rocks has earned him a spot
of distinction in the roeck hound
world. He has collected five gold
cups and a couple of dozen rib
bons in lapidary competition. He
created 375 cabochons of 166 dif=-
ferent gem materials, The mount
ed specimens were displayed at
Chicago’s Natural History’s Mu
seum’s special June exhibit fea=
turing itemns by amateur lapida
ries,
Rock hounds prospect for gem
material on field trips. Because
their know-how is akin to miner=
ology, rock hounds carefully iden
tify stone specimens. They call
rocks nodules and know where
they can be found.
The Western states produce the
most widely used lapidary mate
rial, California, Utah, Idaho, Mon=-
tana, Neva, Texas, Washington,
Wyoming and the Midwest’s Mis~
sissippi River Valley furgish a
wide variety of stones. There’s
jade, petrified wood and dinosaur
obsidian, malachite, variscite, iron
pyrite, rhodochrosite, and Mon
tana and Lake Superior agates.
Colors range from pink to brown
and green to blue, intermixed
with patterns of white,
A rock hound cuts a new-found
stone before he estimates its value
for cutting and polishing. He
slices off a slab of the rock with
a diamond edged saw. Then he
examines 1t for patterns. If they
are suitable, he shapes the stone
into matched settings for jewelry.
One of the interesting rocks is
the “Thunder ¥gg” found in Ore
gon. It is a nmruddy, potato-shaped
stone. It often produces delicate
shadings of translucent patterns
after it is cut.
“Rock hounds find friends any
where,” Cunningham said. h
The hobby attracts fans of all
kinds. A dcctor, an electrical en
gineer, a nurse, a housewife, a
secretary, a business executive
and a barber are among the mem
bers of the Chicago Lapidary Club.
They discuss the merits of petri
fied wood from Eden Valley,
Wyoming, for example, with equal
interest.
POTATOES BUT NO TOPS
CENTRALIA, Illl.—(AP)—The
potato shortage made Ben Buch
holz worry about the many va
cant spaces in his potato patch.
He dug down to see why his seed
had not sent up plants. He found
many potatoes as large as hen
eggs. Now he’s wondering if a
new topless potato has been ,de
veloped by a quirk of nature.
J. H. Atkinson was the first
Track coach at the University of
Florida. That was in 1923 when
the Gators won the only meet in
which they participated.
COMING !
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OUR BOARDING HOUSE MAJOR HOOPLE
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SHEIKH LOSES TITLE
DAMASCUS, Syria—(AP)—As
part of the reform policy of Pre
mier General Fawzi Selo, the Sy=
rian government recently abol
ished the title of Sheikh of the
Dancing Dervishes, deprived him
of contirol of the sect’s properties
and turned their mosque into &
public hospital.
The sheikh headed the rem
nants—about 60 members in Da=-
mascus and Aleppo—of the iu. ..~
lawi sect of dervishes (religious
NOW, TIDE WASHES CLOTHES
WHITER
THAN YOU CAN BLEACH THEM!
&£ -« than any soap or defergent
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o(| A Y, ¢ LTR It's a new Tide miracle!
R [\ BEI eTI ] Whiter washes — with no bleaching! §
N.J j AV !5 v = T 8 It'strue/ Tide—used all alone—will ;
oi \; J BN w._-v_ i actually wash your clothes whiter M
G | i o i I o L \*;% thanany other washing product with ¥
i ; 1. . * a bleach added. It’s washday’s big i
E— By 1 ’ z}*’y 2 news! Try it—and when you see b
5 4 i PRSI N eooosemmm oo R ‘ i %
&4 i 2 i 000 % how much whiter Tide alone gets 2
:} : . i 5 S et i your clothes, you’ll never want to 8
4 '/’ g b ;.,, y : : 4] putbleachin the wash water again! 8
; ‘- 5 r Lo . 4 *
i il o ” Wash with f| Cleaner clothes, too! When you i
& \ . ! DA : - 3 rinse out a Tide wash you’ve got “
. S é »—_.._-{ se, A AN OYH ‘R 3 1 Ith tha l". o
P TR, e.. 3 & cleaner clothes than any woman w %
! waSh Wlth '3“ : WASH[NG PRODUCT get with any soap of any kind. Mil- ‘;
T'DE ALONE :fiz _ with bleach added '8 lions of women have proved it. No
s eo S »( S Lo soap known will get out so much i B
f Sl ; S grimy dirt, yet leave clothes so free iB *
2 SRRI o 4 of dulling film! There’s nothing ' &
8 % like Tide for washday miracles!
The wash test proves TIDE washes whiter
— you can see the difference!
Take any soap or “detergent” you like—make your
suds and add your bleach—then wash a load of white
\ clothes. Wash a second load in Tide suds alone . . .
%aen compare the two loads. The Tide-washed clothes
will be so much whiter, you’ll be amazed! From now
on, you just needn’t bother with bleaching except for
stubborn stains.
TIDE is milder for hands than any other leading
i "
detergent.” So safe for washable colors!
YES! With all its cleaning and whitening action, Tide has an
amazing new mildness. Not even the mildest “detergents” made
especially for dishwashing are so kind to hands as Tide!
ACTUALLY BRIGHTENS COLORS! For dramatic proof of
Tide’s wonderful safety, watch soap-dulled colors come brighter
after just one Tide wash. Tide reaily cares for clothes and colors
just as it does for your hands.
AND TIDE IS SO THRIFTY TO USE! Such a little Tide makes
such oceans of rich, long-lasting suds . . . goes so far in hardest
water, it’s a miracle of economy.
B W “No more bleach for me!
. v 1 saw my wash come
R wiitr ith Tide aone!”
. e says Mrs. Helen D. Larsen
. of New Canaan, Comn.
i - “'\ “Wonderful Tide’s done it again!
. W R I couldn’t believe it till I tried it,
S \ E | but one wash proved it to me! I
PR % S saw my white things come whiter
S 3\ ST W with Tide alone than I ever got
it \»” 3 \A them before when I used a bleach
L NRT BOV in the wash water!”
fraternities) which was powerful
in Turkey before its abolition by
Kamal Ataturk, .who confiscated
its properties.
Among the Mawlawis, the zikr,
main devotional exercise, consists
of a monotonous chant accom=-
panied by a slow, whirling move
ment with eyes closed and arms
extended. The ceremony contin
ues until the participants fall in
to into a cataleptie state.
SOME CONSONANTS
WORRY SECRETARIES
NEW YORK —(AP)— If you
would like to be considered an
ideal boss by your secretary, you
should avoid slurring the spirants
and fricative consonants when
dictating.
Alexander L. Sheff, director of
the Speedwriting Institute, says
such consonants are apt to be in
words which give secretaries the
most trouble during dictation.
NO OTHER WASHING PRODUCT
CAN PROMISE ALL THiS!
WASHES CLOTHES = j ol
WHITER | o
THAN YOU CAN BLEACH THEMI ':} ‘
GETS CLOTHES ;_ "' - |
CLEANER |\g7&7™
il ¢oo O Vit e
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THAN ANY SOAP OF ANY KIND! RIRSINGY 3
FOR HANDS THAN ANY OTHER LEADING “DETERGENT"I '
NO WONDER TIDE IS THE WORLD’S
FAVORITE WASHDAY PRODUCT! I*s
OUT OUR WAY . BY ). R. WILLIAY)
N|===THlS? WHY, JUST A WHIFF it = =
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THURSDAY, JULY 10, 1952,
- Those consonants are character
{ e b 3 contnunbl sound e
Such words as “freeze,” “Joath »
“breath,” ‘“clothes” and “d}il;-
burse” are likely to be confusing
to secretaries.
it
When Grady Hatton hit 14 runs
in 1946, his first season with the
Cincinnati Reds, it marked the
most four-baggers by a freshman
on the ball club.