Newspaper Page Text
I“”n' MAY 29, 1930.
-
dhes of Christ
2
World-Wide
Radio Broadcast
gy DATTY with plans for
E. le to attend 1s
P jarty with twentieth
¥ oportions. The ' local
! ¢ Christ’ in this city is
- its full part in
“ fd- ing memorial.
_— 11 to speak of it
" et the assembly is in
' th neteen-hundredth
©of the Chureh of. Christ
QIS Sunday, June 8,
b {he si milliong wvartici
|
s pains like headaches 4
ediately relieved by Bayerl
[ millions of people know. |
" atter how suddenly 2|
i, may come, one can al|
-be prepared. Carry the
n of Bayer Aspirin with |
wp the larger size at home.
¢ proven directions for pam,{
IS, neuralgia, etc.
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[ffl is not palatable and does
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150 m' e ’ B
160
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' discourages drinking and
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T :
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Water Snourp Be Coorep To A
SATISFYING T EMPERATURE [ [l
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Of H HBO
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5 260
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the GENERAL ELECTRIC BOTTLE PRSI
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R.GIA
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POWER ;r%j COMPANY
4L . :
! CITIZEN WHEREVER WE SERVE
paling zu‘g from all lands and will
not he assembled in one crowd,
yet they are all planning to be
100 percent in attendance in one
place, and® that place is at the
communion service. They are to
be with one accord and to have
one program in-over twenty thou
sand churches around the world.
Birthday of Church
In preparation for this unpre
cedented attempt at g wor.d
girdling service on June 8, a
chain radio broadcast will take
place one ' week before, giving
;final suggestions to all members
lin all lands as to their part and
'participatiou in the world around
of the following Sundfiy. The time
lof the broadcast will be, Sunday,
June 1, 4 p, m. Eastern Standard
Ltime; 3 p. m. Central Standard
time; 2 p. m. Rocky Mountain
time; 1 p. m. Pacific Coast time.
The broadcast will be over the
Columbia Chain of New York,
and will have over forty stationq
in the hook-up, covering all North
America and carrying by short
wave length, around the world.
The churches in Europe, Asia,
Africa and Australia are planning
to use short-wave sets to pick up
the broadcast. The nearest sta
tions of this hook-up for local
pecple are: Ashevillee N. C,
WWNC, 570 K. W.; Chattanooga,
Tenn.,, WDOD, 1280 K. W.: Bir
mingham, Ala.. WBRC, 930 K.
W.; Washington, D. C., WMAL,
630 K. W.; Nashville, - Tenn,
WLAC, 1470 K, W.; Little Rock,
Ark., KLRA, 1390 K. W.; Dallas,
Texas. KRLD, 1040 K. W,
Plans of Local Church
The plans of the local Christian
Church and of all the Churcnes u.
Christ in America are practicaliy
@eixtica’lfl‘[héy ‘plav te have avery:
member of their churcl 2v/ Bible
School at a radio receiver, for the
broadcast of June 1. They then
urge attendance of all members 2,
communion service on June S.
Unidentified and visiting members
are urged to attend. All peope
are most cordially invited.
Cables have been received giv
ing assurance that the plans are
working perfectly in other lands.
A cable from Russian Christians
gives assurance that, with all of
their present difficulties, they are
planning to be present at the
communion service June § 100
percent attendance.
Wor'd-Circling Plan
The service will start at 11 a.
'm., Sunday, June 8, in the Church
es of Christ in New Zealand. That
will. be 5p m. Central Standard
time, Saturday, June .7, in North
America.. Then with the same
songs used, the same Scripture
lesson and the same theme, the
service will move westward hour
by hour, encircling the earth, all
Churches of Christ participating.
and closing twenty-four hours la
ter in the Church of Christ in
Honolulu. The plans are unique
and bid fair to fulfi’l the highest
expectations of those . who are
participating.
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One of the five new coaches which will be substitut ed for stret cars in Athens on May. 31 or June 1
“TUNING IN” }
WITH M. F. B. }
THURSDPAY, MAY 29
(By the “Associated Press.)
Programs in° Eastern Standard
time. P. M, unless otherwise in
dicated.
154.3—WEAF New York—66o
; (NBC Chain)
s:3o—Phil Spitalny.
6:oo—Midweek Hymn Sing, Mix
ed Quartet,
6:3o—Half Hour in Capital.
7:oo—Sunshine Hour, Rudy Val
« lee G:chestra.
B:oo—Birthday Party.
B:s3o—Melody Moments.
9:oo—Soloists ard Shilkret Or
chestra,
10:00—Great Love Scenes in Mu
sic.
11:00—Hour of Dance Music.
394.5—WJZ New ork—76o
(NBC Chain)
s:4s—Floyd Gibbons.
6:oo—Amos 'n’ Andy.
6:3o—Scores; Vincent Lopez
Dance O:chestra.
6:ls6—The Jesters.
7:00—B. A. Rolfe Orchestra.
B:oo—Hatters Orchestra.
B:3C ~-Harold Sanford Orchest:-a.
9:00—To Be Announced.
10:00—Slumber Music; Mellow
Melodies. .
10:30—Amos ’'n’ Andy and Poll
. (Second Broadcast)
11:00—B. A. Rolfe Grchestra
(Second Broadcast).
4128.3—WLW Cincinnati—7oo
6:oo—Organ; Concert; Talk,
7:ls—Variety; Orchestra; Dogs.
8:00—Home Towners (30 min
utes); WJZ.
"9:00 — Crimelights; Orchestra;
Hall.
10:30—WJZ (156 m. Brooke and
| Ross.
11:00—Vaciety and Dance (2 1.2
hours.)
398.8—WJR Detroit—7so
6:oo—Serenaders; Best Story.
6:4s—Cecil ard Sally.
7:OO—WJZ (30m.); Ed McCon
’ nell.
B:oo—Same as WJZ (1 hr.)
~ 9:oo—Symphony; Vocal Duo.
10:00—Features and WJZ,
11:00—News; Talk; Rev. Randall.
‘ll:3o—Darce Music (1 1-2 hrs.)
405.2—W58 Atlanta—74o
7:OO—WEAF and WJZ (3 hrs.)
9:oo—Half Hou: Feature.
10:30—Same as WJZ (1 1-2 hrs.)
12:00—Charles Sheldon, Jr., Or
gan, *
365.6—WHAS Louisville—B2o
7:oo—Hour from WEAF.,
8:00—Loan Association.
B:3O—WJZ and WEAF (1 1-2
hours.)
10:00—Adventurers (30m.); WJZ.
12:00—Dance Music Hou>.
461.3—WSM Nashville—6so
7:OO—WEAF and WJZ (3 hrs.)
10:00—Violin; Eeature: WJZ,
11:00—Hour from WJZ.
. . .
Begin Drilling
»
For oil Soon
»
At Carnesville
By HAROLD D. MARTIN
CARNESVILLE, Ga.—When the
borers’ drill bites into tlfe rich
loam of Aderhold’s bottoms next
June sth the final step in the ful
fillment. of the dream of a wan
dering Franklin county lad will
have begun.
John M. McCawley, veteran rig
ger and driller in the oil fields of
Oklahoma and Texas, and at pres
ent staking him time and experi
ence on the belief that Franklin
county contains oil in commercial
quantities, tells the story to a
Banner-Herald reporter.
“I was drilling in a big field in
Oklahoma in the fall of 1926 when
this lad, Aifred Adair, a laborer
on my crew, came to me with
stories of oil in his neighbor's
wells back in Georgia, of sluggish
streams blue-filmed with oil and
of lamps burning oil skimmed
from the surface of these streams.
He told me of an automobile run
ning on this skimmed oil that had
been, filtered through a chamois a¢
its oniy refinement. I was busy
and told him to go back to his
job. I wasn't interested in his
pipe dreams.
“Adair was plucky. He went to
the superintendent, Mont Carpen
ter, and told his story. Carpen
ter was - interested and had the
youth write back home to his
uncle, T. G. Hall, for a sampie 9.
this oil that tainted wells and
burned in cars unrefined. It came.
It looked like oil, it.smelled like
oil, it tasted like oil. It was oil
for chemical analysis showed a
gravity at normal temperature of
54 and a recoverable gasoline con.
tent of 92 percent. .
Were Interested )
“Carpenter .and 1 were inter
ested,” continues McCawley, “We
put the _vofingster threugh a bar
rage of guéstions and: he stuck to
his first . .‘We .gat in toiich.
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA. * a 0 -
they corroborated his story. We
questioned chemists who declared
that the sample was genuine crude
oil of a high grade., And we agreed
with old men in the game that
this was no doctored well, for if
a tank car of oil were poured into
streams and wells there would be
no trace of it within twenty-soar
hours, and evidence of upright
men showed that there had been
signs of oil near Carnesville for
vears. Carpenter was enthusiastie
and in a few days plans were
formed for me to go to this reg
ion, find out the truth and make
plans accordingly. But soon after
this the other two figures in this
plan died. Carpenter, the super
intendent, on a trip to California,
and Adair, the lad who dreamed
of the old red hills dotted with
oil derricks, when his oily clothing
ignited, and he was burned to
death, Lacking Carpenter's finan.
cial backing and Adair's optimis
tic insistence I put the matter by,
until one night several years later
a young Philadelphians, A. H.
Walton, telling of past promotions
he had undertaken, aroused mYy
interest in the matter. We decid
ed to investigate.
“Soon afterward I visited Carn
esville. 1 saw the wells, oil film
ed. I talked to the man who
drove the Ford burning the unre
fined crude, and I tested and sam
pled and skimmed the surface of
o L
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~ best by using the genuine
GASOLINE -
It will improve the per- :
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Costs a little more—
~worth a lot more -
STANDARD Oi. COMPANY
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R T
...‘ L
oily ditches until I satisfied my
self that this was no pipe dream.
“So here we are, our derrick
built, our machinery is being rig
ged, Walton reports 7,000 acres of
land under five year lease with
10,000 more to be leased and our
stock company, .composed of
Franklin county people, is werking
smoothly. We begin drilling on
the fifth of Juné and we mean to
settle for once and all the long
debated question of the presence
of oil in Franklin. As for myself,
I can’t help but believe that the
dream of this wandering Adair
lad is going to come true.”
Mrs. Broach Graduate
Of Teachers College
Mrs. Ruth @ Tuck Broach was
among the graduates of the Geor
gia State Teachers College at the
closing exercises held yesterday.
Mrs. Broach received the degree of
Bachelor of Science.
WRIGHTSVILLE
BEACH, N. C. (Wilming
ton’ and return, $12.00.
June 7th. Applyl Seaboard
Ticket Agent.
Final Rites Held |
For Mr. Thompson
Thursday Morning
Funeml services for Mr. B. M.
Thompson. who died at a Jor-!
hospital Tnesday evenins e
Neld this morning at 11 o’clock in
the First Baptist church. Inter
ment was in the Comer cemetery.
Mr. Taompson, age 22, died
Tuesday after an illness of sixteen
months, .He has been living in
this city for the past ten years.
After graduvating from the Athens
High school several years ago, he
became connected with the John
son Oil company where he work
ed unti! his illness. f g
Mr. _Tfiompson is survived by
his mother. Mrs. N. B, Thompson;
three sisters, Misses Lillian, Mar
garette and Helen Thompson; four
brothers,” W. C. Thompson, Paul
L. Tkompson, Joe A. Thompson,
Ralph Thompson; grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. P. S. Rice; and a
number of uncles and aunts.
Dr. J. €. Wilkinson officiated.
Pall-beareis were: J. B. Wil
liams, Glenn Dillard, “Walley
Glenn, C'avton Crawford, Elmer
Carithers and Carl N. Chandler.
McDornwn-Bridges in charge.
Don't
Flit Kills o~ '
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s t- © 1930 Btanco Ine
PAGE FIVE
GOVERNOR GREEN}
NOT TO OPPOSE
SENATOR COUZENS
[ —— [ 7
* DETROIT.—(AP)—Oné passibla
source of opposition to Sésator
James Couzens, Republican, Bénior
United States senator from g
igan, in the September prim aries
was removed today with ann"ce
ment by Governor Fred W. Green
at Lansing that he will nog Be a
candidate for senator and that he
does not expect to take part in
the campaign.
UP, WENT H
Says He Could Not Stand Indiges
tion Any Longer.—Reliey
By Black-Draught, ‘
- Pulaski, Va—How a raiqufi en
gineer was reiieved of indigestion
was described by Mr. C. K. Nelson,
a Fourth Street resident u‘f?this
city, Mr, Nelson said: | %
“f was suffering from s‘t;ofiach
trouble in 1917, and had been®suf
fering for some time. I had a
tightness in my chest, a shdfness
of breath. There seemed to‘be a
heavy weight in the pit of my
stomach, and quite a bit of au
sea, yet I couldn’t vomit. e
different remedies, yet suffer@d on
just the same, When in @ West
Virginia, on a work train, I wais in
such a condition that I just jgave
up and came home. I couldn’t
stand to work, in my conditiofi.
“Some one told me about Black-
Draught. I started taking B in
small doses after meals. It helped
me and I went back to wor .
“One morning while on® my
engine I felt like I would smother.
1 stopped in a little town, behght
a package of Black-Draught, took
2 dose and later in the day ook
another-dose. It relieved me and
I have not had a bad spelllike
th2t in more than two and a*half
vears.” - e
Phedfords |
e vt UL
AT
indigestion, Bili:msl:ess'
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