Newspaper Page Text
MONDAY, TULY 14, 1552,
"aty Takes Oath
Caty @
-
By JiM THOMASSON
ATLANTA, July 14 — (AP) —
nr. Raymond R. Paty, Atlanta ed
qeator, will not be entering an
| tirely new field when he be
mes a director of the Tennessee
valley Authority this week.
I'o his new job he takes more
ihan 30 vears of administrative
| serience which includes some
| rk with almost every phase of
[vA’s complex activities.
And he is well acquainted with
[ -nnessee’s mountain areas. For
i was there that he launched his
career in 1921 as founder and
.veloper of = the Cumberland
\ountains school.
recently appointed by President
rruman to a nine year term on the
throe-member TVA Board, Paty
<lid in an interview this weekend
e would go to Knoxville Sunday
and probably take his oath of of
fice there Monday. He will attend
his first Board me_eting in Knox
ville Tuesday. i
He plans to move his family to
Knoxville as soon as possible.
While declining any specific pre
lictions as to TVA’s future “even
hofore I've been sworn in,” Paty
did express hope for “continuation
[ the manifold developments that
\re under way.”
ie regards TVA as a major con
iributor to the entire economic and
industrial develpment of the
south. But particularly, he said the
Agency has been in, the forefort
tilization of minerals, forests and
farmlands, and expansion of
.surces of electrical energy.
gy ¥ IR = 7y
ies Mamic
¥ E
Cats Dang Style
A 4 P :
CHICAGO, July 14 —(AP)—
Thanks to Mrs. Dwight D. Eisen
hower bangs are now a high-style
yair fashion.
The wife of the Republican pres
idential nominee has worn some
vorsion of bangs for more than 30
yoars. She now considers therh
“My=trade-mark.”
Through the years “Mamie and
her bangs” have been a topic of
conversation among Army wives.
Some wanted her to let them grow
out, but she wouldn’t. She would
let halrdressers curl them this way
or that, cut them a little shorter
perhaps, but bangs she insisted
upon.
It is almost as though, instine
tively, Mamie Doud Eisenhower
was determined to remain a defi
nite personality in her own right
instead of just a wife overshadow
ed by the increasing fame of her
husbhand:
She realizes that at gatherings
she gets pointed out as “the wo
man with bangs.” Easy to spot
easy to remember. Those who
know Mrs. Eisenhower well regard
her as a clever women even
though she might seem to work
at not appearing so.
Although Mrs. Eisenhower has
held to bangs, regardless of wheth
i they were in or out of style, she
lilkes elothes right up to the minute
in fashion. She delights in shop
ping, and she does so with an eye
on the price tag.
she especially likes hats—main
ly small—and some of them are of
the type that causes a man to feel
so superior because he couldn’t
imagine wearing such a headpiece.
Pians For O
v.ans ror
s l' h
S
Vel In Cline
5
Counfy Disclosed
WAYCROSS —(AP)— Another
oil well project in Georgia was
disclosed Saturday.
Director H. A. Stallings of the
State Oil and Gas Commission an
nounced that Brady Belcher of
Alabama and associates will drill
a test well in Clinch County soon.
Last week, Stallings reported
that Texas interests plan” explor
alory wells in five Georgia coun
ties in the next 12 months. He
listed the counties as Clinch,
Mitchell, Liberty, Telfair and
Grady.
stallings identified Belcher’s
associates as John Noble, W. C.
Jacger and Arthur Williams. Bel
cher said his group will make tests
In-a 100,000-acre block in south
tastern Clinch County bordering
the Okefenokee Swamp and ex
tending into Florida.
vince 1945, 24 wells have been
drilled in Georgia, none of them
producers, The state offers a
SIOO,OOO reward for the first com
merzial well.,
CITADEL COMMANDER
CHARLESTON, S, C.—(AP)—
Codet Hampton J. Walker ~of
Waycross, Ga., has been appoint
ed cadet colonel! and regimental
commander at The Citadel, South
Caroling Military College, for the
19°2-53 session.
The second-ranking cadet will
be Lt Col, Paul M. Fox .of
Charleston, Cadet Lt. Col. Jack
K. Berry of Savannah, Ga., will
be regimental executive officer.
ne
LEHARO WORKS
TELLS HOW TO IIEDI.ICEr
“After taking my first bottle o
Anaro Conoentrate’l was delighted
ko find that 1 had lost an inch around
fuy waist line, By following the safe
Inexpensive Anare home recipe I
bave now lost 8 g, never feit botter
Bnd am wel pleased. There unofluni
frastic about Anaro, It is pleasan
#0 take ang reasonably priced. I rec-
PMmend Anare to my friends and,
Bhall continye with it until I reach
My norma) weight.” 80 writes Mrs.
;‘:‘ - Robinson of 1624 Coleman Ave. s
1 n, Gg, :
Rool S 2mazing how quickly you can
Loe unsightly fat a¢ home. Obtain
uid ANARO gt your druggist,
ha Mih grapefruit juice as directed
Bnd teke two tablespoonfuls twice a
®°Y- That's all there is tg it. I.tgxsu
§.. 000 lose weight with the very t
Ottle just return 1t to the maker for
o money back, You need mever
e & hungry moment while ge-
Gucing with ANARO,
Re ey e ePR AR R h A .l | 1. . //7
e s\i 7 e < \ Twenty thousand people roared hysterically. Bryan was nom- /
p I 159, hungry BEEESY \ Q g e, . , " | The speech of a 36- "\, inated, his platform adopted. Though he lost the election to -
hordes of unem- SEEEEERRN \ 3 year-old delegate at- Ohio Gov, Williom McKinley, “Full Dinner-Rail” candidate, *,
ployed marched R\\ o tending his first con- 9 Bryon had, with a single speech, established himself os the
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backed with (il Te e G \ L 0 iy “You shall not press ) R ) Ays eB R
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Religious Educator Says Students
Show Rising Interest In Theology
By HAL BOYLE
IOWA CITY, la. July 14 (AP)—
College students today are getting
more Godminded.
That is the conclusion of a pio
neer religious educator at the Uni
versity of lowa here.
“Interest in religion on the part
of college students is rising,” said
Dr. M. Willard Lampe. “It is a
questioning interest — a genuinely
yearning interest.
“It doesn’t take the form of a
mass movement. It is more on an
individual basis.
Seek Philosophy
’ “Young people are searching
for a philosophy of life that can
give an inner peace and security
against the outward confusion and
turnoil of the times. The cynical
point of view, as compared to a
generation ago, has declined both
among students and prefessors.”
Few educators in America are in
a better position to assess the reli
gious interest of college youth
than Dr. Lampe, 68-year-old dir
ector of lowa University’s famous
School of Religion.
Twenty-five years ago, Dr.
Lampe, a Presbyterian minister,
conceived the idea that even in a
state supported university reli
gion should be taught “not indir
ectly or surreptitiously, but unap
ologetically, comprehensively, and
in line with the best educational
practice.”
Helped by a $35,000 Rockefeller
grant, Dr. Lampe worked for sev
eral years to get churches of dif
ferent denominations to provide
facuity members for his mnew
school and underwrite their salar
ies. His idea was that in addition
to stock courses in the history of
comparative religion students at
state colleges should be able to
study the specific faith of their
choice.
Seven - Man Faculty
Today -the school has a seven-*
man faculty, including four prot
estant, two Jewish and one Ro
man Catholic clergyman. It has
become so popular that in a re
cent year more than 2,000 students
—one fifth of the enrollment in
the College of Liberal Arts—elect
ed to attend religious classes.
“Many of our students go on to
become clergymen themselves,”
said Dr. Lampe. “But that is not
our primary goal.
“There is a real interest on the
part of students in finding out
about the faiths of others as well
as their own. Often they are less
interested in orthodox forms of
religion, however, than they are in
finding the meaning of life in sat
isfying ways.”
But to Dr. Lampe this eager
student quest for a basic meaning
to existence is a sure sign of the
religious instinct.
Since he quietly instituted the
“Jowa plan” other tax-supported
educational institutions across the
country have adopted it as a pat
tern for their religious schools. He
likes to #eel that it has been a
formula that has encouraged reli
gious tolerance.
Religious Text
“One of our former students has
written a textbooks on religion
which he hopes will be acceptable
to Jews, Protestants and Cath
olics,” Dr. Lampe said.
“We are living in a world where
an idea like this, even when well
started, will not perpetuate itself
automatically,” he added in dis
cussing his school’s first quarter
century. “It will always have to
fight its way against prejudice,
against misunderstanding, against
cynicism and indifference, even
against a false sense of security on
the part of its friends.”
He is sure of one thing: The
student atheist is no longer an
intellectual hero on the American
college campus.
QUICK CHANGE
WINTHROP, Mass., (AP) — A
street sign reading “Taft Avenue”
was found covered Saturday by
a crudely-lettered board reading
“Ike Avenue.”
Neighbors reported seeing sev
eral small boys with a paint pot
in the area.
“IKE” GOES UP
HASTINGS, Neb., — (AP) —
Hastings haberdasher advertised
today that his “I Like Ike” neck
ties, regularly priced at $1.59, are
now three dollars.
A SOOTHING DRESSING [rive rou:
ey |BURNS
[V [ed Lo BE | o smer:
seTROLEUM JELLY [T T cm
VIC FLINT
IR TRIES TO GET OUT WHILE THE WELCOME, GROWLIE, ARINT! ) WELL, GNVE ‘EM CREDIT FOR TRY-| |MEANWHILE., LOUIE THE LETTER:
GETTING'S GOOD--BUT IT'S BAD/ YOU PON'T KNOW X WE T[ ING. THEY WERE JUST TOO BOX HOLD'S DOWN VIC'S SWIVEL
d |HOW GLAD I WERE|| DUMB. IF THEY WEREN'T DUMB N ey
I'VE GOT Hez, MOVE IN READY TO | |AM TO seesou SCARED || THEY WOULDN'T BE CROOKS/ p
INSPECTOR! L\ SHOOT, BOYS! R\ 7y LT 1 oar ‘ CREDITORS, KEEP OUT. BUT IF,
' )WA FINISHEDZ < l—~ .@ PERCHANCE, YER A MILLION=
) . %’3 YOu OFF/ 'E’ e 0 MK AIRE CLIENT, STEP ‘
A | f 5. 7/ ~ AR RIGHT IN. “ll "\
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.' . / | iy 5 opr. 1952 by NEA Service, Inc T. M. Reg. U. 8. Par. O, A iy g 5_,;:;;,1' T :_.4
ALLEY OOP
CAN'TCHA HURRY \ CUT IT OUT, [/ HEY, OOP, COME LOOKIT e
THAT MACHINE, |WILL YOU? | HERE NOW...TH' RIG PN
DOCT OOOLA'S / YOU KNOW \ OOOLA'S WEARIN' 15 ®
REALLY IN ™ DOIN' TH' )i REALLY A WOW! ;
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THE BANNER-HERALD, ' THENS, GEORGIA
Convention Sidelights
Geis By With
Saying Anything
“Groucho Marx ought to be
funny,” Eddie Cantor said recent
ly. “He practices twenty-four
hours a day.”
Recently Groucho broke cff a
discussion with his friend George
Jessel, “You're not to be trusted,”
he snarled, tilting his long cigar
at Jessel’s long cigar. “I've been
felling people that for year, Now
I believe it.” .
August Esquire article, “My
Life In Finishing School,” says
that Groucho Marx can get away
with saying anything he wants to
because there’s never any malice
in any of the insults.
Groucho is a shy, thoughtful,
worrying man who early in life
wanted to be a doctor. ‘He is 61
years old, and a little sensitive
about his age; but he looks 45 and
acts a good deal younger. He's
proud of his figure—he’s five feet,
eight inches tall and weighs 155
pounds—and he keeps in trim by
playing golf and being the first
T. ‘ R o vw‘\w-\-n a Illl' %'
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THE CITIZENS & SOUTHERN NATIONAL BANK
ATHENS . ATLANTA . AUGUSTA
MACON . SAVANNAHN . VALDOSTA
to leave cocktail parties. He reads
constantly, dreams of playing
Shakespeare, sings Gilbert and
Sullivan to his own guitar, and
writes.
He can be serious—and charm
ing, too—but it wouldn’s pay. His
business is effrontery.
Referring to contestants on his
NBC radio-television show, Grou
cho says, “Once we get 'em on the
program, we demand they speak
up. If they don’t come clean we
take them over to Eagle Rock and
shoot them as a warning that they
can't use that kind of language
NOTHING FASTER
For HEADACHE RELIEF
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on!! MEBBE SHE JUST UP /ALL RIGHT, , \-
B 9 MYGOSH, \ AN' THROWED 1T [ BOYS, C'MON, :
SHE MUSTA | ‘AWAY...BUT WHAT | TH' MACHINE'S v K i
LOST HER SHE'S GOT LEFT HOY o
MIND / 1S PLENTY OKAY! i g \
I
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(T o Pne ¢ 8
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‘ 4\3}’ ; R+ Conv 1952 by NEA Service. loc T M Re P
on the air.”
Asked why he constantly kept
that long black cigar dangling
from his mouth Groucho replied,
“I smoke. More than that, I've got
sentimental reasons. This is the
cigar that said, ‘What this coun
try needs is a good five cent nic
kel.” Besides, I'm not through with
it until I throw it down, if that’s
why you're still hanging around.”
The Romaris seenr to have be
lieved that tin was a variety of
lead.
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“BC” Powders, 10c & 25¢. “BC” Tab
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saving bottles of 50 and 100 tablets.
“BY MICHAEL O'MALLEY
BY V.T. HAMLIN
SALE
USED CARS & TRUCKS
I 3 Down - Up To 24 Months l
COME NOW-—Prepared to
TRADE FOR A BARGAIN
‘m
1951 FORD CUSTOM CONVERTIBLE—OriginaI
mist green finish with light top—plenty of
extras—driven only 15,000 miles. $1975.00
1951 HENRY ] DELUXE “6"—Original black fin
ish, radio, heater, seat covers, 7,000 miles.
Clasn ssapht .... .... ...« s PIETN
1951 FORD DELUXE *“6’’—Carnival red metallic
finish, radio, heater, seat covers, turn indica
< tors, windshield washers. A low mileage one
-0wnercar...............'....5|675.00
1951 STUDEBAKER CHAMPION 2-DOOR—Ori
. ginal blue finish, heater, overdrive, excellent
rubber. Its been cared for ... .... $1575.00
1948 FORD CLUB COUPE—New maroon finish,
- radio and heater, matching interior. A-1 me
hatdeally . ... o .viiviiienvnns DTN
1950 FORD DELUXE TUDOR “6” — Original
Sheridan blue finish, excellent tires, heater.
Tip top mechanically. ......... $1397.00
11939 PLYMOUTH 4-DOOR—Clean black finish, 4
‘ new tires, heater and seatcovers. Very sound
l mochenically .... .... ........ $2950
1949 STUDEBAKER CHAMPION CONVERTIBLE
—New bronze finish, light top, radio, heater,
overdrive, and WSW tires. A snappy job.
! $1095.00
1947 MERCURY 4-DOOR—Original tan finish.
Very clean throughout. Radio, heater and
WSW tires. Extra nice .......... $897.00
1946 LINCOLN COUPE CLUB—Original blue fin
ish, WSW tires, radio and heater. A sound
performer that’s bargain priced. .. $593.00
1941 DODGE CUSTOM 4-DOOR—Nice bronze
finish, heater, fluid drive, very good tires. See
ittoappreciate ............... 391 N
1947 FORD CLUB COUPE-V-B—Original grey fin
ish, radio, heater, seat covers, good tires, re
conditioned mechanically. Try it out your
ool ... i eDS
1940 MERCURY CLUB COUPE—New blue finish,
good tires, nice interior. Motor just over-
Rouled. ... ... i iiaivss i BN
1941 PLYMOUTH SPECIAL DELUXE 4-DOOR—
New green finish, radio and heater, excellent
tires. Reconditioned engine. ... ... $418.00
1951 DODGE "2 TON P. U.—Original black finish,
clean cab, excellent tires and low mileage.
: $1197.00
1948 FORD "2 PICKUP—New black finish, 5 ex
cellent tires, heater, tip-top mechanical con-
B ... st
1948 FORD-F-7 2 TON — Like new green finish,
excellent 900x20 duals & fronts, 5 forward
speeds, heater and seat covers. A rugged
hauler that’s mechanicaily “right”’.
$1375.00
1946 FORD 172-TON CHASSIS CAB—CGCreen fin
ish, leather upholstery, 7:50x20 duals and
fronts. Ready to work .......... $575.00
YOU ARE INVITED to come into our Used Car Re
conditioning Shop and see our specially trained
crew—Preparing cars for safe and dependable serv
ice. THERE IS A DIFFERENCE.
C. A. Trussell Motor Co.
Repair Your Car and Pay On Monthly Budget Plan!
PAGE FIVE