Newspaper Page Text
PAGE FOUR
{ Published Every lvenlu Except Saturday and
Sunday and on Sunday Morning by Athens Pub
| lishing Company, Entered at the Post Office at
| Athens, Ga., as second class mail matter.
| i:B. BRASWELL ........ Editor and Publisher
i C. LUMPKIN .............. Associate Editor
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Aet et e
- DAILY MEDITATIONS
TN AN Have you a favorite Bible '
verse? Mail to—
@b A" ;, ::} fiolly Heights Chapel.
g A. F. Pledger,
e R e i
Pure religion and undefiled before God and
the Faiher ic this, to visit the fatherless and the
widews in their afiliction, and to keep himself
urspoiiei before the world.—James 1:27.
GOP Experts Say Old Guard
It's Not 0
Could Come Back; lt's Not Out
‘ BY PETER EDSON «
PMILA Washington Correspondent
CHICAGO —(NEA)—The Republican Old Guard,
licking its wounds after the battle of the stock
yards amphitheater, is also counting its numbers.
A careful mwuster made by the Republican Party
experts in & position to know its inner workings,
comes up unofficially with an estimate that the
Old Guard is still a powerful factor. It is down, but
not out. Itscould come back. '
The best place to4measure this strength is said to
be on the new Republican National Committee. It
is now rmade up of 138 Inembers. It is divided
roughly a 8 75 Eisenhower Republicans and 63 Taft
Republicans, for lack of better classification.
This count may not be absolutely accusate. It was
not made on the basis of an actual poll of the
National Committee members. It represents a check
on their known sympathies and the voting record of
their state delegations in the recent Chicago con
vention. i
The old National Committee was made up of two
members—a man and a woman—from each of the
48 states, the District of Columbia and the four
territories— Alaska, Hawaii, Puerto Rico and Virgin
Islands. Tota! membership, 106.
To this have now been added the 32 Republican
state chairman from the 32 states that have Repub
lican governcrs and /or a majority of their congres
sional delegations made up uvf Republicans.
PRO-TAFT MEN AUTOMATICALLY MEMBERS
Thirty-gix members of the old National Commrit
tee retired or failed to win re-eleétion by their
state organizations. To say that the 36 new mem
bers who replaced them, plus the 32 new state
chairmen represent the Eisennhower strength on the
National Committee does not present the whole
picture.
Some of the old members who stayed on have
been for General Eisenhower right along. Included
in this list are Sinclair Weeks of Massachusetts,
Harry Darby of Kansas, J. Russell Sprague of New
York and others, They were, however, a minority
of the old committee.
Also, not all of the 32 state chairmen, who auto
matically became members of the National Com
mittee, are Eisenhower supporters. Men like Ray
Bliss of Ohio, Wayne Hood of Wisconsin and others
have been counted in the Taft ranks. The break
down on these 32 state chairmen is roughly 20 for
Eisenhower, 12 for the Old Guard.
The 36 retiring members of the National Com
mittee are, however, largely from the Old Guard
ranks.
Four members of the old executive committee,
all from the Old Guard, won’t be around any more.
They are: James F. Dewey of Vermont, John E.
Jackson of Louisiana, Cyrus L. Phillip of Wiscon
sin, and Murs. Charles S. Hickman of lowa.
HARD CORE OF 50 VETERANS REMAINS
Other Old Guarders retired from the scene in
clude such party wheelhorses as Ezra Whitla of
Idaho, Harry Sommers of Georgia, Werner Schroe
der of Illinois, Mrs. Bertha D. Bauer of Illinois,
Harrison Spangler of Jowa, Jacob France of Mary
land and Raiph Cake of Oregon.
" There still remains on the Republican National
Committee & hard core of 50 veterans of the Old
.Guard. They have stood their ground firmly and
faithfully—most of thenr for a good many of the 20
long and lean years the GOP has been out of power
in Washington.
Included in this list are such men as Clarence
Buddington Kelland of Arizona, Ralph F. Gates of
New Jersey, Perry Howard of Mississippi, Guy
George Gabrielson of New Jersey, Rep. Clarence
J. Brown of Ohio, G. Mason Owlett of Pennsylvania,
Rep. B. Carrcll Reece of Tennessee, George T. Han
sen of Utah and Walter S, Hallinan of West Virgin
ia, to name few of those most prominent.
The choice which now faces this Old Guard lead
ership is whether it will join General Eisenhower’s
new crusade. The alternative is to sit by, almost
hoping thai thenew crusade fails so that the Old
Guard will again gain control of what has been its
exclusive, conservative club.
Engineerg are testing a device that absorbs
shocks better than anything heretofore known. It
ought to be hitched up to intepnational relations.
Only aroused citizens can end those evils that in
creaseingly grow itno real threats to our country.—
General Eisenhower.
You'd think all I'd ever done was sing “Some
Enchanted Evening.”—Singer Ezio Pinza.
I have po doubt Germany will be reunited in
true freedom.—British Forcign Secretary Anthony
Eden,
I we (France) outlawed the Communist Patry,
wa would only help it because many non-Commun
iste would favor the prosecuted.—French UN dele
gate Jules Moch.,
Democracy can no more be genuine in our mod
ern day without socialism than socialismr can be
genuine without democracy.—Socialist Party vice
presidential candidate Samuel Friedman.
You can live on cracked wheat.—Health culturist
Bernarr McFadden.
ATHENS BANNER-HERALD
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Daily and Sunday by carrier and to Post Office
boxes in the eity—
L DVRBIE oo soso dane ooos oesb ues 25
. 1 Month ~ SONN SHEN SRR SANN Send 1.05
3 Months .. SEEN Sane BONE AN Bans 3.18
Soo 50ci obbi aany sins name Tl
TR IRNIIE . ioiisnii vins aseniinia TOOD
Subscriptions on R. F. D. Routes and in Towns
within the Athens trading territory, eight dollars
per year. Subscriptions beyond the Athens trad
ing territory must be paid at the City rate.
All subscriptions are payable in advance. Pay
ments in excess of one month should be paid
through our office since we assume no responsi
bility for payments made to carriers or dealers.
i sk i it Thle ot
.
Defections In De Gaulle Part
Raise Hope For French Poliiicys
One of the healitlnest developments in recent
French politics has been the spliting asunder of
General De Gaulle's People Rally Party.
A short time back about 55 of the 118 Gaullistss
broke away to support Pramier Antonine Pinay’s
moderate government. In April, 25 of them had
joined in giving Pinay the vote of confidence he
needed to get started. ,
What precipitated the break of the 55 was a dis
ciplinary move by the Gaullists against those who
had backed Pinay in April. The dissidents have
formed a new party, and presumably will continue
their enlarged support of the present premier.
Normally it could hardly be counted an advan
tage that France had gained another new party.
The multiplicity of splinter parties in that country
has long been a contributing factor in the instabili
ty of French Governments.
Because most of them ar2 so small, they can only
govern in coalition, and the government topples.
But in this instance, the sizable defection from
DeGaulle’s party ranks serves actually to strength
en an existing coalition. It serves, indeed, to shore
up the government that in many ways seems the
most promising France has had since World War
II ended.
More than that, the action throws into active
political circulation 55 French deputies who here
tofore have been cast in a sterile, do-nothing role
by De Gaulle’s policy of opposition to everything
except his own near-sigthed program.
With De Gaullists, the Communists and most of
ten the Socialists declining v join in constructive
programming for France’s future, it has been ex
traordinarily difficult to compose and sustain coa
lition governments,
The attitude of all these groups has been “our
way or nothing.” No one would expect anything
else from the Ccommunists, of course. But the blind
rejection of all compromise, the complete unwil
lingness to improvise triumphant political combina
tions, has thrust the Gaullists and Socialists into
the same damaging category.
Now we have 55 Gaullists who believe that coun
try comes before party, Frenchmen who are less
concerned with saving principle than with saving
France.
Foreign bystanders cannot help but voice the
hope that the example of these patriotic deputies
will be followed by others of their party, until per
haps the immovable De Gaulle is left in solitary
grandeur, hugging tight his principles and his poli
cy of inaction.
Governor Caught In The Dinghy
Ever since Pennsylvania’s GOP delegation was
caught caucusing in 1940 when Wendell Willkie was
nominated, the Republicans of that state have been
highly sensitive about “missing the boat.”
They suffered in 1948, too, because, while they
played a key role in the nomination of Governor
Dewey, he lost.
“This time”, they said, “we must be right.”
Well, Governor Fine did indeed declare for Eisen
hower. But by the time he got around to it, the con
test was all over but the formal voting.
It is hard to say that Fine made the boat. More
properly one might say he made the small dinghy
tagging along behind the main vessel. Pennylvania
didn’t do it again.
Worth of Rare Books
Throughout the ages a self-perpetuating $64
question will be: Just what is an old book, manu
script or letter worth? The answer is, of course, ex
actly what an ardent collector is willing to pay to
add it to his library. To find the answer many a
dealer in literary rarities has been badly burned
by guessing wrong. 5
The death of Dr. A. S. W. Rosenbach of Philadel
phia, “Napoleon of books,” who made a business of
of buying and selling famous works in his travels
about the world to book auctions everywhere, calls
attention to the fact that some dealers have an al
most uneanny knowledge of what a future market
—a seller’s market, that is—will produce.
Dr. Rosenbach, a scholar, university teacher and
author, first came in to prcminence when, as an
undergraduate at the University of Pennsylvania,
he discovered and bought for $3.60 an original edi
tion of Dr. Johnson’s “Prologue” and a month later
was offered $5,000 for it. He became America’s
greatest dealer in rare editions and manuscripts, and
at one time he had the greatest collection in the
world. He knew that to the book collector there is
no such commandment as “Thou shalt not covet.”
In good tinres or bad the wealthy collector will
buy what he is eager to possess. But the ups and
downs of this precarious business of supplying that
urge were scarcely ever better illustrated than by
Dr. Rosenbach’s purchase in 1946 for $50,000 of
“Alice in Wonderland,” hand-lettered and illus
trated by its author, Lewis Carroll, just 18 years
after he had paid $75,000 for it and sold it at a
profit. %
Men may come and men may go, but rare books
live on forever. ’
I'm numb. It’s indescribable.~~John J. Manring,
when informed his wife might have quintuplets.
The activities of imbeciles in the states (panty
raiders) do not bother us as long as they do not
affect the supply of ammunition, beer and nrail.—
M-Sgt. F. T. Stoll€y; stationed in Korea.
Moral and cultural deflation these days cause
more foreboding than monetary inflation.—Rotarian
Webb Follin,
I can’t see how I could be interesting after the
honecymoon is over. I'd run out of jokes. Eachelor
actor 3coit Bracy.
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
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Russia’s New Canal Gives Moscow
Title Of “The Port Of Seven Seas”’
MOSCOW (AP) — At 1:55 p.
m. on May 31, two mighty Rus
sian rivers merged and the Volga-
Don navigation canal was born.
The next day at 5 p. m., Tow-Ship
306 set forth from Stalingard on a
historic voyage to the Sea of
Azov—the first ship to use the
new canal.
Next Sunday comes the gala of
ficial opening of the canal, which
will give Moscow the title of
“port of five seas.” By this canal,
the Soviet press reminds the pub
lic, Moscow becomes linked with
the White, Baltic, Caspian, Black
and Azov seas. In effect, it makes
an island of Europe, circling west
ern Russia with a continuous wa
terway. e
Pulled Out Stops
The Soviet press has pulled out
all the stops for this event. New
Times hailed it this way:
“The Volga-Don waterway is
ready: The intense labor of the
participants in the great building
of Communism is crowned with
glorious victory?!”
Pravda and Izvsetia trumpeted:
“With this day, the whole world
is given remarkable testimony to
the strength and power of Soviet
building of socialism.”
Full pages, along with huge
maps and pictures, are being de
voted to the official opening of the
canal, the result of three years of
labor.
Linking of the two great rivers
has been a Russian dream since
the days of Peter the Great. Mos
cow was once a land-locked capital
in the middle of a huge plain and
miles from any sea. Now one ac
count put it this way:
“Theoretically, one can soon
start out in a boat from Moscow,
sail north in the Raltic and the
Atlantic, go around the world, and
return to Moscow by the south.”
Press Notices
The press gives these details:
The Volga-Don eanal is 101 kilo
meters almost 65 miles long, with
13 navigation locks, three pumping
stations, 13 dams and dikes, seven
floodgates, eight bridges and two
maintenance and repair stations.
Ships coming from the Volga side
will elimb westward through nine
locks to the crest of the divide,
and then descend through four
more locks to the Don.
The linking of the two rivers
makes three huge lakes, the larg
est of which will be the Tsimlan
skaya reservoir. This is located
midway between Rostov and the
place where the ganal opens into
the Don. The man-made sea is
described as 18 miles wide in some
6OTA —\
SUMMER COLD
TAKE k“f'o?/
symptomatic
666
Railroad Schedules
SEABOARD AIRLINE RY.
Arrival and Departure of Trains
Athens, Georgia
Leave for Eiberton, Ham’et and
New York and East—
-3:30 p. m.—Air Conditioned.
8:48 p, m.—Air Conditioned.
Leave for Elberton, Hamlet and
East—
-12:15 a. m.—(Local).
Leave for Atlanta, South and
West—
-5:45 a. m.—Alr Conditioned
4:30 a. m.—(Local).
2:57 p. m.—Air Conditioned.
CENTRAL OF GEORGIA
RAILROAD
Arrives Athens (Daily, Except
Sunday) 12:35 p. m.
Leaves Athens (Daily, Except
Sunday) 4:15-p. m.
GEORG!A RAILROAD
Mixed Trains.
Week Doy Onily
rain No 51 Arrives 900 a. m
rain Nno 50 Departs 700 p ®m
places and about 110 miles long.
The Volga-Don project includes
a large irrigation system and hy
droelectric installations, some of
them still in the planning stage.
“To build the irrigation system,”
reported Ivan Sharov, member of
the Soviet Academy of Agricul
tural sciences, “more than 200
million cubic meters of earth have
had to be excavated. Suffice it
to recall that the builders of the
Suez Canal had to excavate only
75 million cubic meters.”
Long-Range Plans
The long-range program, with
the completion of other canals in
the area, is designed to bring by
1956 the irrigation of enormous
tracts of land in the great area
lying between the Volga and the
Don.
The Russians say when the wa
ter is availdble, the area will pro
duce huge yields of wheat, rice,
cotton, vegetables, and animal
fodder. The idea is to convert a
vast semi-desert plain to fertile
farmland, and to set up textile
and flour mills, cammeries and
other plants to process locally
raised raw materials.
The canal is bound to have an
impressive effect upon Soviet
transportation, which once was
considered a serious bottleneck for
this country’s economy.
The Volga already is connected
with the White Sea and the Arctic
Ocean, and to the Baltic by a
sedes of waterways. The link
with the Don connects the Volga
to the Black Sea and the Sea of
Azov.
The waterway will have the ef
fect of relieving Soviet railways
and other land transport of much
of their present burdens.
Trainees Under
Gl Bill Drop
The number of World War 111
veterans training under the GI
Bill has dropped below the mil
lion-mark for the first time in six
years, and chances are it will nev
er rise above that figure again,
Veterans Administration an
nounced today.
VA statistics for June 1, 1952—
the latest available—show a total
of 990,000 veterans taking GI Bill
training across the nation in
schols, colleges, on-the-job and
on-the-farm,
One of the reasons for the de--
cline, VA explained, has been the
GI Bill's cut-off date, which came
for most veterans nearly a year
ago, on July 25, 1951. Under the
law, only actually in train
ing at tha as well as those
whose traifMlg was interrupted
for valid reasons—have been per
mitted to go ‘ahead with their
courses.
Except for a scattered handful,
the law allows no newcomers in
to the program after that date.
The last time the number of GI
trainees stood at less than a mil
lion was in June, 1946, when the
veterans’ training program was
just starting to swell.
The peak came at the end of
1947, when more than 2,500,000
World War II veterans were en
rolled at Government expense.
The 990,000 veterans in train
ing on June 1, 1952, included 267,-
000 in colleges and universities;
475,000 in schools below the col
lege level; 69,000 in on-the-job
NL I T D
IT TASTES SO GOOD, IT
& STAYS SO FRESH, IT'S THE |
4 BEST BREAD YOU EVER
TASTED.
BEMSON'S
training courses, and 178,000 in
institutional on = farm training
courses, a combination .of class
room instruction and actual farm
ing experience.
Trade Moderale
At Cafile Mart
Livestock receipts at the local
sale Wednesday afternoon totaled
hogs. Cattle and calf receipts were
hoge. Cattle and calf receipts were
about 50 head larger than one
week ago, and offerings were less
attractive than usual. Trading was
moderately active, and demand
was fair for most classes on offer.
Compared with one week ago.
slaughter steers, heifers, and
calves sold about steady, while
cows worked mostly $1.50 mighér.
Bulls sold 50c¢ higher and stocker
cattle were about steady, but
calves sold SI.OO to $2.00 lower.
Hogs sold mostly 75 cents higher.
A few good slaughter steers
brought $27.50, while commercial
offerings sold from $24.00 to
$25.25. Utility steers and heifers
brought $19.75 to $24.00, while
canner and cutter offerings ranged
from $15.75 to SIB.OO.
Good and choice slaughter
calves and vealers changed hands
from $26.75 to $32.25, while utili
ty and commercial offerings sold
from $20.50 to $27.75. Culls
krought $16.00 to $20.00.
A commercial slaughter cow
brought $22.00, while utility of
ferings sold from SIB.OO to $21.20.
Cutter cows ranged from $15.50
to $19.20, and canner cows sold
from $13.00 to $15.50.
Commercial slaughter bulls
brought $22.40 to $23.50, while
utility offerings sold from $17.25
to $21.50. Canner and cutter bulls
brought $15.25 to $18.60.
Medium and odd head of good
stocker steers and heifers brought
$22.00 to $27.00, while common
offerings ranged from $18.75 to
to $22.50. Good and choice stock
calves brought $27.00 to $31.50,
while common and medium offer
ings ranged from SIB.OO to $28.50.
Inferior calves sold from $15.00
to $19.00.
Medium and choice 180 to 240
pound barrows and gilts.brought
$21.00 to $21.50.
VESSELS NAMED FOR
EMPLOYES
‘"NEW YORK (AP) — Instead
of naming vessels after top com
pany officials; one marine com
pany (Freeport Sulphur Co.) op
erating in Louisiana is naming
them after loyal workers, it has
been’ reported here.
So far 26 employes, ranging
from drill crewman to chief en
gineer, have been so honored by
making the “floating honor roll.”
Most of the workers have been
with the company at least 30
years.
THREE TORTOISES
There are only three species of
tortoise in the United States. The
gopher tortoise is the most com
mon of these and is found in the
southeast, while the other two
cecur in the deserts of Arizona,
California and Texas.
'4B DODGE
Custom Sedan :
$1175
Radio, Heater, Excellent Con
dition, one owner,
J. SWANTON IVY, Inc.
AT THE MOVIES
STRAND—
All Week (Sunday through Sat
urday)—‘“Lure of the Wilder~
ness,” starring Jean Peters, Jeff
rey Hunter. Friend or Phony.
Cowboys. News.
GEORGIA—
Sun.-Mon.-Tues. — Double Fea
ture—*“Red River,” starring John
Wayne. “Tulsa,” starring Susan
Hayward, Robert Preston, News.
Wed. -Thurs, — “Bitter Rice,”
(Now in English), starring Silva
'na Mangano. Spooky Hooky,
~ Fri.-Sat. — “Oklahoma Annie,”
starring Judy Canova, John Rus
sell. Rocky-A-Bye Bear, News.
HARLEM THEATRE (Colored)—
(Free Parking)
Sun.-Mon.-Tues. — “Beware,”
with Louis Jordan and his Tym
pany Five, Milton Woods. Look
up, look out, look sweet, its the
maestro with a beat; and an out
standing colored cast—lo great hit
songs. More show: Chapter 10—
Perils of the Darkest Jungle. Dis
ney color cartoon and latest world
news.
Wed.-Thurs. — “Fight that
Ghost,” with Pigmeat Markham
and John Rastus Murry. A full
length colored cast feature of
thrills and chills, Added! A musi
cal extra: Ziggy Elman and the
Sportsmen. MGM color cartoon,
The Shooting of Dan McGoo.
Fri.-Sat.—“Fort Worth,” with
Randolph Scott in technicolor.
The Lone Star state split. wide
cpen was linked together with
lead. More show: Chapter 7, Pi
rates Harbor. Warner Bros. color
cartoon, Cheese Chasers.
Late Show Sat.—‘“Young Man
With a Horn,” with Juano Her
nandez, one of Hollywoods all
time great colored actors and Kirk
Douglah. Brought back by de
mand.
The Harlem is air conditioned
for your comfort.
Tamireff Sieals
ladd’s Scene
By 808 THOMAS
HOLLYWOOD, July 21— (AP).
Alan Ladd was the victim of
thievery, but he has failed to reg
ister a complaint.
The culprit was Akim Tamiroff,
character actor who has returned
to the screen after a four-year
absence, Using all the wiles he
iearned at the Moscow Art Thea
ter, the actor stole a scene right
out from under the handsome
Ladd profile. But Ladd failed to
squawk. In fact, he suggested a
line to pad out Tamiroff’s part.
“Aren’t you worried about hav
ing that scene thefted from you?”
I asked Ladd when he exited from
the set.
Not Worried
“Not at all,” he replied blandly.
“Tamiroff can do all the stealing
he wants to. If it makes the pic
ture better, that’s all right with
me.” .
Ladd’s attiture is not complete
ly altruistic. He has more than a
passing interest in the film, which
is one of those North African
things called “Desert Legion.”
He'll take half of the picture’s
profits and the other half goes to
the studio, Universal-Internation
al.
It's a sentimental return for
Ladd. He got his screen acting
start on the lot back in 1933.
Talent Hunts
“Universal had a fine program
in those days,” he explained. “The
studio had talent hunts all ove
the country. They’d take kids cw%
of college and bring them to the
studio for the summer. The young
sters would have two months of
extensive training and put on a
show every week for the execu
tives. We didn't get paid any
thing, but it was great experi
.ence.”
Ladd suggested that the studios
should institute such programs
now.
“Hollywood will have to do
something about finding new
talent or the industry will be in
serious trouble,” he remarked,
ANCIENT POTTERY FOUND
KINGSLEY, England (AP) —
Roman pottery dating back to the
first century was recently dug up
near here by laborers laying the
foundation of a new house.
Other finds include a rotary
corn-grinding stone, a quartzite
pounding stont and several iron
‘agecpieces dating from 100 to 50
5. L
- Driendly, One-Visit Service
UP TO S2OOO
, ‘ON YOUR SIGNATURE ONLY l
-
ISELECT YOUR OWN REPAYMENT PLAN
PHONE 1371 TODAY
LOAN & INVESTMENT CORPORATION
Shackleford Bldg., Rms. 102-104-215 College Av
Athens, Georgia Telephone: 1371
- Seruing the South for 25 Years
COMMUNITY INVESTMENT CERTIFICATES PAY 3% PER ANNUM ___
MONDAY, JULY 21, 1952,
PALACE—
Sun.-Mon.-Tues. — “Washin .
tgn Story,” starring Van Johne.,
atricia Neal, Louis Calhery, I|’
1y Mouse’s Akwakade—Terryt),
News.
Wed.-Thurs.-Fri.-Sat. — “w,,
East On Beacon,” starring Geo,-.
Murphy, Finlay Currie, Virginia
Gilmore. Good Housekeeping _
cartoon. News.
RITZ—
Mon.-Tues. — “Hitler's Cantiyo
Women,” starring Gail Patric)
Nancy Kelly. “Slaves of Sovi.
true story. Teachers Are Peoplc
Goofy cartoon.
Wed. - Thurs. — “Sugarfoof»
starring Randolph Scott, Adele
Jergens. Droopy’s Good Decq
Droopy cartoon. They All 1,
Boats—Sport.
Fri.-Slt.—-“Vanishing oulpv)s‘.."
starring “Lash” Laßue. Lun,
with a -Punch—Popeye cariog,
Don Daredevil Rides Apaiy_
chapter 10.
DRIVE-IN—
Mon.-Tues. — “The Marryin-
Kind,” starring Judy Holiday, /|-
do Ray. Destination Meathal] _
Woody Woodpecker. News.
Wed. - Thurs. — “The Wi]q
North,” starring Stewart Granoe-
Wendell Corey, Cyd Charisse
Temperamental Lion — cartoon
News.
Fri. — “Mara Maru,® starring
Errol Flynn, Ruth Roman, Drippy
Mississippi—screen song.
Sat.—“The Longhorn,” starriy«
Wild Bill Elliott, Myron Heale
Of thee I Sing—cartoon. Tamin.
of Snood—Buster Keaton.
Black and Whita
" SKIN Qintment contzing
EN one of the best
BROK infection clearing
n agents knov y
relieve itch of
.out with Acne, Eczema,
Tetter. 25c, ¢
ITC'I“NG 85c. Use 1;,:-;; and
ACNE White Soap, tco.
a .
Heovordy Horsy
awaits you / ;";7
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DIRECTLY ON THE OCEAN
* a 7 +® You'll have a wonder-
H s ful Bme .. . all the
‘ time! Dance nightly
T V¥- beneath the siars at
T the Marine Patio 2«
swim every day!—lls
just a hop and skip
from the hotel to the
booming surf of the
blue Atlantic!
;l!r ATTENTIVE
& SERVICE
I DELICIOUS MEALS
s Enjoy golf, beach
&eca, Sports, tennis, horse
s back, and fishing. Plan
% now so spend a happy,
/% carefree, truly memor
ey able honeymoon at the
beautiful Ocean Forest
- Hotel,
WriTe FOR e ;_ >
avsTRaTED —— ',‘.}9
FoLper Ane TARFT e
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