Newspaper Page Text
THURSDAY, JULY 17, 1952,
Death Abroad
2 ;
Gets Relatives
Lump Payments
«survivors and near rélatives
i a person who died outside the
continental limits of the United
3tates during the period from De
cember T, 1941 through August 9,
1946 may be entitled to a lump
sum pa_\'l’flCflt under Old-Age and
g, rvivors Insurance,” A, B. Coch
ran. manager of the Athens So
oial Security office stated today.
“Claims for such benefits must
he filed prior to September 1,
1952,” Cochran continued. “If you
vait until Septgmbet 1. . 1952, it's
1o late—no action can be taken.”
“Please note,” Cochran added,
“that this limitation in filing date
applies only to those workers who
died outside of the United States
{uring the period from December
7 1941 through August 9, 1946 in-
Jusive, as stated above. Each
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mD wUPON FROM ANY QZE QACK Less than half price for these first quality Cannon guest
: towels! Usually sell at 35¢ each!
¢ i
¢ Famous Cannon quality! Thick-tufted, thirsty, Smartly
fringed. Handy guest size—ll" x 18",
! d Gay-as-a-rainbow colors! Lightning pink, Sun gold, Forest
3 o green. Mix "em or match 'em i any combination you
3 like! Each set of three Cannon guest towels—just 50c¢
and coupon from any size sack of PURASNOW En
riched Flour. Order several sets
”""‘ %’% % 0 4 Offer good only while supply lasts! Bargain offer made
Sibe oha - e g : .
m‘ P XA so ocqucm?' youhwnh PURASNOW Enriched Flour—the
y 5 proud choice of the proud cook. Try PURASNOW, Use
& R covpon inside sack to order your Cannon guest towels!
‘? ) CUPTHS RAR BN M 700 Y 7
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stk ' GENERAL MILLS, INC., Depariment 20 :
X " R 623 Marguette Avenve, Minneapolis, Minn, %
® Pleasesend me _________(number) set(s) of Cannon guesttowels. g
) ANOTHER FINE PRODUGT For each set of three towels, 1 enclose 50¢ (no stamps, please!) and one g
; ©F GENERAL MILLS ¢ @oupon from a sack (ani' size) of PURASNOW Flouz. I would like g
| o e . the following number of towels in each color: g
B Bokings we m::::;?:“’:;r Sy . Lightning pink —___ (number) B
& ; Sun gold it Ot} g
5 3 ! Forest green e (numberj :
K ;
- Offer E e
£ b
fpmm | U LR B ————
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Mitte. 00, ‘ : Order as many sets as you like, but ke sure to endlose 50¢ and the flour coupon for
each sef ordered. : .
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worker must have worked long
enough under Old-Age and Survi
vors Insurance to be insured.”
“For a worker who died after
this stated period an application
for a lump-sum death payment
under. Old-Age and Survivors In-
Surance must be filed within two
years of the date of death of the
worker,” Cochran concluded.
For further information contact
your social security office, New
Post Office Building in Athens,
Georgia,
Sl L
HALF A HOUSE SELLS
PASADENA, Calif.-~(AP)—At
tention real estate agents: If ‘a
home is too large to sell, saw it in
half,
The James L. Irvin grmann'o_n
was offered for sale, but because
of its large size there were no of
fers from buyers. |
‘Then the mansion was cut in
half, one home containing seven
rooms and two baths and the oth
er 10 rooms and three baths. Both
sold immediately, . . |
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Of PROVING GROUNDS, Army’s new Pattom 48 medium tank climbs ever three-foot wall with ease,
New Patton Tank Climaxes Natien's
Buildup Of Armed Forces Program
By DOUGLAS LARSEN
NEA Staff Correspondent
NEWARK, Del, — (NEA) —
America's tank program since the
Korean War started comes closer
to meeting original goals than any
other major part of the big arma
ment buildup.
’ Revelation by the Army here
‘that mass production is now un
der way in the Chrysler Delaware
!plant on the brand new medium
Patton T-48 climaxes this pro
gram. The new Patton’s revolu
tionary features are also expected
to put U. S. 'fround forces in front
of other nations in quality tanks
for the first time.
In a few months a total of five
major tank plants will be in op
eration in the country. And the
most significant aspect of the
whole program is that these new
plants will be capable of increas
ing output many times in case of
the need for tojal mobilization.
Creation of such reserve facilities
is the essence of the present over
all buildup of the services.
Cooperation of the big automo
bile firms with Army Ordinance
engineers has been a big factor
in making all of this possible.
Chrysler started from scratch
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHEN
after the Korean outbreak to aid
the Army in the development of
the new medium T-48. And de
tails of a new heavy, the T-43,
will soon be revealed. It will also
be produced in this new plant.
In Cleveland, 0., the Cadillac
company has been turning out the
lighter Walker Bulldogs in great
numbers for many months, And
the Ford and Fisher Body plants
‘have been conm’bm:o the gen
eral program by out hulls
and turrents in mass production,
As soon as construction of The
new Pattons increases, work on
the interim T-47 will be halted.
The T-47 is a makeshift combina=-
tion of improved turret and hull,
which the Army started producing
in its Detroit Arsenal plant soon
after the Korean war started.
The T-47 was a gamble that
paid off. It is better than anything
the Army had during World War
11, but falls far short of the new
Patton’s performance. However,
it did give the Army an improved
tank when it was badly needed.
* & =
U. 8. tanks have been consist
ently inferior to Russian and Ger
man tanks in several respects.
They didn’t have big enough can-
PEVTT. AAESSs SRV AWM WEEEL &
thick enough. And they were too
tall, making too easy a target.
However, U. S. tanks have al
‘ways been superior in speed and
maneuverability, And the T-48,
in an amazing demonstration of its
abilities, proved that those ad
vantages have been retained, plus
adding the other features.
It weighs between 45 and 50
tons. Speed is a secret but it goes
fast and travels on an especially
wide track which makes it good
Tor swampy or wet ground.
The turret, which turns com
pletely around fast and easily, is
cast in one piece. That, and the
one-piece cast hull are unique in
the T-48.
Special equipment also keeps
the big gun trained on the target,
once aimed, in spite of rough ter
rain it might be moving over. The
high wvelocity 90 mm. eannon is |
designed with an easily replace
able lining which can be changed
in the field.
An improved 50 caliber machine
gun mounted on top is designed
for reloading and firing without
the gunner being exposed.
Its designers boast that you
can't lay a foot-rule flat any
where on the hull or turret. This
curving surface deflects shells
which are fired at it.
Inside, it is roomy and comfort
able, and automatie driving mech
anisms make it extremely easy to
handle on any kind of road or ter=
rain.
These general, improved fea
tures are being incorporated in
most of the new family of tanks
being produced.
5 Y ; o - \ g: ‘
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f 1 _ir"'. ‘ ; N%j £ \ psieh 3: /@;
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A L 2 723,— O‘lb takgle ,
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WEL| 5 o’ 5 5¢ 0"
AR SIDE V£ '}
(AR 2\ Large, o (;'rsifl |
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- A= 15§ COUPON WORTH ¢ 154
1 TOWARD PURCHASE OF 2 LARGE OR 1 )
i :o') GIANT ECONOMY-SIZE NEW BREEXE Q K|
WASHES EVERYT""NG WH'TER, BR'GHTER ‘ E.g' FILL IN Ttms COU.I‘ON :u‘nl tluke it to vnulr(gmct:r,l‘”e will accept itk" lß‘f “'3 l
payment on purchase of 2 Large-size or riant Economy-size pac O
THAN ANY SOAP' IN HARDEST WATER’ Too ' ‘:" FC;‘;!AAQE:;”(K)ZE::”:I]|/r|lw':rx(le<m thie coupon for I"y£ onl pfr i ‘i‘)\. '
«+«WITH OR WITHOUT RINSING! Y diolyortrom anaged auchorize i riog by Lover Beather Compamy i}
K 3 ot F have oo with terms o s A
And you get a big 15 x 30-in. Cannon Dish Towel worth ' 1." eRy R (‘." l
25¢ or more in Giant Economy-size package. .. a fluffy : ’:"_ velos 1/20 of 14, Not teambable. $lO rewerd forini?xif?mm o‘:‘ '
11 x 11-in. pastel-colored Cannon Face Cloth in Large- | ',i) In sonviction of any pereon fraudulently using this coupon, ("; |
size package. Get new all-purpose Breeze today! { g’; oRS —— ‘.'fi |
MEW BREEZE IS GUARANTEED TO GIVE YOU MORE FOR YOUR MONEI | E',\ A O ittt g——— N |
New Breeze is guaranteed by Lever Brothers Company, New |;; City State Y |
3 York, N. Y., to give you more for your money than any rinse« | B gy e e e gT gt il
ATR RTRe B S O L S eBl | BSTY ST oo S S R PR R, P i N §
Poor Man’s Philosopher Remarks
On Danger Of Suffering Boredom |
o Rt . A eAR
BY HAL BOYLE
NEW YORK.— (AP) —What is
the most widespread disease in the
modern world?
A good case might be made for
that death in life, that ennui of the
spirit, called boredom.
It is the high price modern man
pays for having so much leisure
he doesn’t know what to do with
himself. It is peculiarly virulent
in civilized nations. Savages aren’t
so susceptible to the ravages of
boredom. They are too busy try
ing to stay alive.
Many physicians, if pressed, will
admit that perhaps one-third of
the patients who crowd their wait
ing rooms are suffering basically
from nothing but boredom. They
go there hoping the doctor will
find something wrong with them,
something to give them the ex
citement of a real worry. But the
medical profession so far hasn’t
been alle to concoct a really effec
tive anti-boredom pill.
“You are too tense—you need to
relax,” such patients often are
teld. This only encourages them to
feel more bored with it all. My
theory is it would be better if the
doctor said to them:
“You have a bad heart — you
may die at any moment.”
‘nmisnofivdngmatgehrid of |
boredom faster than the fear you
won't live to enjoy it. More peo
ple, weary of living, commit sui
cide in hotel bedrooms in peace
time than destroy themselves on'
the battlefields of war.
We do our children wrong in
educating them to believe freedom
from worry will bring thenr hap
piness,. A man with nothing to
worry about can only do two
things — become bored or {fall
asleep, That is the nature of the
critter, and human nature doesn’t
readily change.
Boredom strikes the very poor
as well as the very wealthy. Psy
chologists have found that the
Bowery bum isn’'t happy because
he has ducked his responsibilities
in life. He is even more bored and
frustrated than an idle rich man,
ATHLETES FOOT GERM
HOW TO KILL IT.
IN ONE HOUR,
If not pleased, your 40c back. This
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OFF the outer skin to expose
buried fungi. Kills it on contact.
Get Greaseless, instant-drying T
-4-L at any drug store. Today at
CITIZENS PHARMACY.
o AEREESENE ACRIRS PR B b pnd sodn g
who has at least one thing left to
fret over: he can't take his money
with him when he goes.
Most boredom seems to spring
from a feeling’ of lack of accom
plishment. The tedious tasks, the
routine of the daily rut that wear
out the lives of many people in
our complicated civilization, give
them too small a sense of import
ance, of being really needed,
I know one city dweller who
solved his boredom by buying a
fore ever teaching a parrot to eat
spaghetti.
“Everybody said I couldn’t do
it, but I did,” he said. *“I never
henrflotnnybodyintheworldbé—l
PAINT SAVE
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ON “MINNESOTA"” PAINTS |
With yeur purchase of twe gal- :
S Pecial Price PART o WOD IR PROMER '
UART € v 4
eDO maran vamm
QUALITY HOUSE PAINT TRIM/ ‘
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IT PAYS TO USE q
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QUALITY PAINT!
OFFERS EXPIRES JULY 31, 1952
BEDGOOD LUMBER & COAL (0.
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PAGE ELEVEN
fore every teaching a parrot to w
gpaghetti,”
Today he is & happy man. The
only bored member of his house~
hold is the parrot. Unless there is
a crowd around watching him eat
spaghetti he feels restless and un=-
happy.
T
| AR
| (%‘ Pitcher Full
P Y
, TGS ;¢ (359 _
/]
| KoolAte
| ORI ENEEYIZ: 4