Newspaper Page Text
PAGE FOUR
THE BANNER-HERALD
f ATHENS, GEORGIA
Published every evening during the week excent
Saturday and Sunday, and on Sunday morning by
The Athens Publishing Contpany, Athens, Georgia.
Earl B. Braswell...Publisher and General Manager
IR I i i bl sVee s s ROISDE
Dan Magi11......................Managing Editor
it —————————————————————————————————————————————————
National Advertising Representatives
Chas. H. 'Fddy Company, New York, Park-Lexing
ton Building; Chicago, Wrigley Building; Boston
Old South Builaing.
Member of the Associated Press
The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to
the use for republication of all news dispatches
ezedited to it or nct otherwise credited in the paper,
and also ta the local news published therein. All
rights of republication of special dispatches alsc
reserved.
- THE NEW SONG IN DIXIE
. By ALLEN RAYMOND
- (in New York Herald-Tribune)
" The exciting symphony of modern industry is
ow heing played in Dixie. New songs are singing
to take the place of “Old Black Joe.”
:The clamor of Chambers of Commerce, the se
ductive propaganda of city and state industrial de
?figs'bpment bhoards, the rattling knives and forks
jnd pepful joliities of Rotarians, Kiwanians, Lions
Md Exchanze Clubs are filling the erstwhile lan
gurous wistaria-scented air with such a din these
gus that every visitor must recognize immediately
a land of business progress.
;2f Underneath all these lighter notes of the boos
?Ms yuns the grand diapason of factories where
millions of wheels are turning; the dull bass roar
?l applied electric power; the thunder created by
gfi;mn energy and vision fabricating raw materials
into salable goods and riches.
~ Most of the Southern factories are new, as
compared to those in other American regions, The
@ommant theme of industrial ambition itself is new
;&\kl‘his gunny area, where for many years the typi
eal symbel of toil has been a patient Negro, driv.
%g a mule, and marching endlessly behind a plow
g crops which never quite brought freedom from
seonomic slavery.
.The very land itself seems new to a Northern
‘T,“_hitor. with its vast resources scarcely tapped, with
its mile after mile of cheap, fertile land and fast
owing forest; with skyscrapers lifting their peaks
foward the sky in semi.rural centers, and With
‘4nd ney country clubs dotting the landscape,
“‘ereon newly affluent citizens play golf in emu
tion of that Southern young demi-god who plays
wigh the Prince of Wales.
"In Birmingham, Alabama, on a recent trip, the |
z ter saw the home of a millionaire whose bank
‘balance dates only from the nearer side of the World
"War, and in that home were rooms built line for
4 Brick for brick after such homes as that
‘of Cardinal Wolsey at Hampton Court, which is now
% useum for the agmiration of Britain. That even
{ p the gifianddaughters of ‘plantation owners were
playing ir{’ costume at being Venetian princesses in
,“b legs than three years old which out.Deau
jilles Deauville in luxury and color, and they were
5” squired by gallants in an atmosphere dupli
q“' pg: the. “Ritzier” portions of Westchester.
" | Within the memory of an adult generation there
‘wag no such city as Birmingham, Alabama. The
place wasia wilderness valley between two sparsely '
fif"n' rg}fl‘ggmmmtains, Then came a discovery that
:" __txj;ase mountaing was largely iron ore and!
_that the pther was largely coal, and that all around
‘; ‘of limestone. The result is a secondl
_;,'f}~ manufacturing steel beneath a canopy
:}_y’amqke.'j with a veritable grove of black smoke
| stacks, flowering at their tips with flame, and dol
dags by millions as fruit for perennial picking.
L "In some respects, then, the old Southeast .is a
‘fresh, new, scorcely exploited country, where indus
‘trialists aye pioneering on the grand scale, and
Where new cities are rising out of villages or open
‘Mfields. Insanother respect it is a sad, old ruin of a
civilization which was based on aristocratic
f‘).gulturé. The old age passes and the new ar-
Mg,_jwi@h a speed to which the rest of the country
{8 scarcely awake.
B dlate in Aprils Governor C.° Max Gardner of
" Carolina called upon the Governors of six
“other Southeastern states and a small group of bus
leaders from each of them to meet with him
‘a vegional economic conference 'at Asheville,
_3#*!3.{ to"form a permanent economic council for
| the industrial development of the area. The gath
;_i_ttng met without festivities and with a minimum
;il-'orutor)’: 1t transacted the business which it was
_gdlied upon to perform and departed.
\ % * = =%
odeled after the New England Council, with
] aannual' economic conferences, a Southeastern
| ‘conncil is now being formed. The meeting at
ffiahefllle may be a milestone of history in South
e stern development and it may be a transitory in
,ent of scant importance. It was one thing, cer
-' gnly. It was an indication that the Southeast has
E u to talk in terms of economics.
§ The “economic thinking” is something new for
;,Somh, Dr. E. C. Branson, professor of rural
“eepnomics, in the University of North Carolina, told
; ,writer. He and other Southeastern leaders were
ined to blieve that thought and action along lines
economic progress might hold more hope for the
S ¥@la South,” with all its new potentialities and
‘ blems, than has the political thinking of the last
| geperation.
“}Yhat Bas brought this new “gconomic thinking”
ol v;’o',xvxeing:? The rise of industry in an agricultural
Cslump, T
Ww figures on industrial development and out
| put_in thé seven states of the new regional coun
§dlskill sgogv the factory tide Nas been rising. The
s%gs are. Alabama, Florida, Georgia, North and
Swph Catg)lina, Virginia and Tennessee.
E s N .
e * i
. iThe vaine of manufactured products in Alabama
| haw risenfrom $145,000,000 (in round numbers) in
1610 to $850,000,000 in 1929, and the investment in
?lwhnuiact?ing from $173,000,000 to $456,000,000.
. The mamufactured products of Florida were
| valned at 73,000,000 in 1910 and at $218,000,000 in
929, and the investment in manufacturing rose in
| thase yearsifrom $65,000,000 to $206,000,000.
IR A sR B sl sRt L]
PROSPECTING FOR THE FALL
At this time, the prospects for bumper
{erops and increased business for this fall
| were never brighter or more encouraging.
1 Unless some unforseen calamity arises,
the farmer will harvest the largest and
|cheapest grown crop of any in the last
decade.
It is no time for pessimism or com
plaining over the business outlook. Busi
ness may be expected to be slack during
the summer months, just as it has been
during all these years, and as it will be in
years to come. Conditions would be ab
normal, if otherwise. The merchant that
advertises and keeps his stock of mer
chandise full and complete is bound ‘o
secure business. There is just as much
money now in the country as there ever
was, but the consumer is more conserva
tive in making purchases. However, the
necessities will be bought as freely as
ever, even though the purchase of luxu
ries may be curtailed.
Crops are advanced and an earlier har
vest than usual will be the result, conse
‘quently, the fall trade will open much
earlier than in_ former years. From a
survey made of the various business
houses of the city, it is shown that busi
ness has been up to former years and in
many instances, sales have shown an in
crease over that of the same period of
1928 and 1929. .
. Instead of complaining and being pes
cimistic, practice cheerfulness and opti
mism; it will not cost any more and at
the same time, it will bring about a bet
ter feeling and help to restore confidence.
After all, confidence is the secret for suc
cess in all lines of business.
Mark the prediction, 1930 will be the
most prosperous year experienced by our
people in the last decade.
CONSERVING FRUITS AND
VEGETABLES
The refrigeration plan for saving the
surplus fruit and vegetable crops will
mean the saving of millions of dollars for
the growers each year. A plant is now
under course of construction at Montezu
mA which promises to be equal to provid
ing sufficient space for the freezing of all
s;u'plus crops grown in that section of the
state.
The Columbus Ledger in discussing the
project, says:
“The plan of taking fruits and vegeta
bles from the orchards and truck farms
and indefinitely holding them in storage,
at the same time retaining all the flavor,
texture and color of the fresh product,
gives promise of a new era in the growing
of fruits and vegetables in Georgia. Every
year thousands of carloads of peaches
and other fruits, berries and vegetables
are not sent to market because of condi
tions that make shipnient unprofitable.
The new process which is described as
one of pre-freezing, will save this enor
mous loss and at the same time stimulate
greater production. It will provide fresh
fruits, berries and vegetables throughout
the winter when prices are most attrac
tive to the producer and packer. The
Montezuma enterprise will have the best
'wishes of all Georgians for its complete
-success.”
Heretofore, thousands of dollars worth
of fruits and vegetables in this state have
gone to waste on account of the markets
being glutted. Under the refrigeration
gystem, all surplus crops can be preserved
for the winter season when fresh fruits
and vegetables are impossible to secure.
The method of freezing fruits and
vegetables and holding them for the mar
ket after the season is over, is no new
preject. It is true that no organization
has ever been formed until now for this
purpose, but such a plan has been talked
of and written about a great deal in the
past.
The fruit will be frozen in special
waxed paper, according to the Ledger,
and held until the market warrants ship
ment. The new plant, no doubt, will be a
success from the beginning and provide
an agency that will enable the growers of
fruits and vegetables to dispose of their
surplus crops without loss.
TOO NEAR PERFECTION
A young man who is just learning a
new sport, a new art or a new profession
lis generally advised to watch the leaders
in that line and see how they do things.
Ordinarily that’s good advice; but it oc
curs to us that in golf there are times
when it doesn’t work. :
Take, for instance, Bobby Jones. In the
recent British tournament, Bobby teed off
on a 430-yard hole with a 300-yard drive
that landed plunk in a deep sand trap.
Then, unflustered, he proceeded to sock
the ball out of the sand, drive it to the
green, 130 yards away—and watch it
trickle into the cup. Despite the fact that
his drive landed him in a trap, he had
made a par four hole in two strokes!
The novice, instead of learning any
thing from a performance like that, is apt
to be just plain dismayed. Such a stunt
looks so super-human that the beginner
might well think that there was no use
even to try to copy the great Bobby.
e ——————
Lithium, the metal, is the lightest
known solid. It is only a little more than
half as heavy as water.
et .
In 1929, 225 severe hailstorms were re
ported in the United States with estimat
ed total damage of over $10,000,000.
e e
_ The only living relative of the giraffe
is the okapi, found in the Congo forest.
For a time it was thought to be related to
the zebra. . :
e e I
~ Owis are unable to roll their eyes, the
© PHE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
A DAILY CARTOON: Can He Make All the Pieces Fit?
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| DID IT EVER OCCUR |
| TO YOU |
][ A Little of Everything and Not f
Much of Anything,
\ BY HUGH ROWE !
Dr. and Mrs. H. B. Hey
wood and family left for.
Chattanooga. Tenn.. this morn~
ing where they go to be pres
ent at the graduation exercises
of the University of Chatta
nooga, at which time, their
son, Humphrieys will graduate.
Humphreys has made a most re
markable record in his studies,
graduating with honors. In ath
letics he excelled in football and
was the captain of last year’s
team, his team winning the con
ference title. This fall he will be
with Baylor University, Tennessee.
where he will coach and teach.
His many friends here will be
‘pleased to learn of his outstand
ing rank in both scholarship and
lathletics. .
The installation of traffic
signals and the passing of
“Ne¢ Man's Land” into a paved
thoroughfare. leaves a few
more improvements that
should be ocmpleted this year.
Qne of necessity is the widen
ing and paving of Lumpkin street
from Broad street to Milledge
avenue. Now that the street cars
have been abolished, this street is
one of the main thoroughfares in
the city and an important artery
leading to adjacent counties. This
movement should be taken up im
mediately by the mayor and coun
cil. The cost of the improvement
would not amount to a great deal
in dollars and cents, and it would
be a great convenience to the pub
lic.- The project is worthy of the
consideration 'of the mayor and
council and, no doubt, it will be
given attention at an early date.
Student (leaving college):
“Good-bye, sir. I am indebt
ed to you for all I know.”
Eros.; “Don’t mention such 2
trifle.””—Black-Blue Jay.
" The new coach service sup
planting street cars, is meet
ing with favor with the pub-
li¢. With faster schedule and
more comfortable seats. the
coech system is bound to
please. ¢
Many people are riding the
co2ches on account of the movelty
of the new transportation service.
It is to be hoped that the /coach
service will receive a better pat
ronage than did the street cars.
Unless the new service proves a
financial success, after the” two
vears’ franchise has expired, it
cannot be expected of the Georgia
Power Company to continue the
service. Everyone should extend
some patronage to the coach line
and aid that much towards the
maintenance of the service.
Hamilton McWhorter, Jr.,
prominent and well known
lawyer of Lexington, will be
offered by the people of Ogle
thorpe county of the Fiftieth
senaterial district as their can
didate for the office of senate.
The district embraces Clarke,
Oglethorpe and Wilkes counties.
this year being Oglethorpe coun
ty's time to nominate the senator.
Mr. McWhorter will be nomnaited
without opposition. He has an
nounced his candidacy for the
presidency of the senate. He is an
able lawyer and a splendid parli
mentarian and would grace the
senate as its presiding officer.
Following the primary in Septem®*
ber, he will commence an active
canvas of the- members-elect of
the 1931 senate for their support
of his candidacy.
ATHENS SEVEN/YEARS AGO
: Sunday, June 3, 1923. w
Cotton: 27 cents. 3 r
Weather: Clear and warmer. *
The diamond anniversary of the
Southern Mutual Insurance Com
pany will be celebrated here next
Tuesday, June sth.
Qa%N. H.: Two.thirds: of this
‘town was wiped ~out Saturday by
fire which caused the death of
one man, probably fatal injuries
to another and made.two hundred
persons homeless.
Bishop Warren Candler will de-
Jiver the commencement sermon
at Lucy Cobb Institute at 11:00
‘o’clock Sunday morning.
Mr. Perino Wingfield has re
turned home from the Augusta
Medical College to spend his va
cation with his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. S. B. Wingfield, '
Mrs. T. P. Vincent is the guest
of relatives in Decatur.
’ Mrs, Arthur Steadman of Atlan
ta, is the guest of Mr. and Mrs.
'W. W. Steadman.
[ ™ —
| 1001 GEORGIA VERSES
: No. 95
¢+ (Georgia, slow to ratify the
nineteenth amendment extending
‘the franchise to women, almost
immediately claimed distinction
under that amendment, the Gover
. nor appointing Mrs. Rebecca Fel
‘ton United States Senator to fill
an unexpired term—the first wo
| man, and the only one so far, to
| hecome @ member of that body).
Georgia expressed her chivalry
and more
In honoring a woman . . . Wigh
before
The ink had dried upon a new
made act
Geargia had realized in truth and
fact
The new condition, named a Wo
man wise,
And set the pace bhefore the na
tion’s eyes.
—D. G. 'B.
Mrs. Aycock Interred
Today at Farmington
Mrs. Cora Aycock, who died Sun
day at her home in Farmington,
was interred in Hardigree ceme
tery this afterncon at 3 o’clock.
Rev. A. Warwick; pastor of the
Methodist church, officiated. Bgrn
stein Brothers in charge.
Mrs. Aycock is survived by her
husband: Mr. T. R. Aycock, Far
mington; three daughters, Misses
'Ellen, Lillian and Dorothy Ay
cock; four sons. Melvin, Sanders,
Warren Chandler and J. T. Ay
cock; mother, Mrs. H. T. Aiken;
two sisters. Mrs. E. D. Druham
and Mrs, Cleve Anderson; and six
brothers, G. T. Aiken, L. H. Aik
en, W. H. Aiken, N. W. Aiken.
H. B’ Aiken and H. T. Aiken
Mrs. Aycock had lived in Oconee
county all of her life. v
Funeral Services For
Martin L. Adams Held
Tuesday at Princeton
‘Funeral services for Mr. Martin
Luther Adams, 74, were held this
afternoon at 4:00 o’clock in the
Princeton Methodist church. Mr.
‘Adams died Sunday afternoon at
his home on the Monroe road, fol
lowing an illness of two weeks.
Surviving Mr. Adams are, one
daughter, Mrs. H. B. Smith, of
Goohope, Ga.; two sons, Mr. F.
A. Adams, Maxeys, and Mr. P.
E. Maxeys, Bogart, and sixteen
grandchildren.
Rev. W. B. McDonald, pastor
of the Monroe Christian church,
officiated. Interment was in the
Princeton cemetery, McDorman
‘Bridges in charge. Pallbearers
were Messrs. Hubert Adams,
Ralph Adams, Foster Adams, F.
A. Adams, Douglas Smith and
Belk Smith.
Mrs. Ralph Newton
Dies in Atlanta
~ ATLANTA, Ga— (AP) —MTrs.
‘Ralph L, Newton, ' wife of the
‘fnews edijlo[ of The Atlanta Jour
bnal, died today. She had been in
il health for several years.
Qrs. Newton Wwas the daughter
of the late Sam J. Bowman, prom
inent Georgian, distinguished “Old
Rock” because of his indomitable
TR e gt
Gantt Says Oil
Well Venture at
* Carnesville Sound
By T. LARRY GANTT
We see from the Royston Ree
ord that a company has been
formed in Franklin ecountv +o
bore a test well at Carnesville to
settle the question as to whether
or not there is oil in that county.
the officers will be local people,
with the advice and counsel of
experienced oil men from Texas.
Pennsylvania and Canada.
We have faith in this effort.
When such strong indications of
oil were found in the Banks well,
the writer, with Dan Magill and
Charlie Martin, visited Carnes
ville to personally investigate the
rerort, saw skimings taken from
buckets of water drawn from the
well that readily burned when a
match was applied. A business
man of the town told us that he
filled the tank of his car with
this fluid and with it d-ove to
Tocecoa and back. Afterwards
when excavating for the abut
ments for a bridee near Carles
ville, a spring was found show
in~ still stronger indication of
petroleum. For a time there was
considerable talk of sinking - test
wells, but after Dr. H. C. White
publisher an article stating that
any such attempt would be a
wase of time and money, the
project was abandoned.
Did the writer own property in
that part of Franklin county we
would unhesitatingly venture a
few hundred dollars on boring the
well,
And Carnesville is not the only
locality in this section where
strong indications of oil are
found. Before our Civil war at
Anthony Shoals in lowe: Elbert,
a thick skum of oil would collect
on pools of water oozing from
the ground. Some years ago the
business men of Washingtn se
cured an option or that propertv
and talked about boring for oil,
but nothing was done.
And even in Athens there are
indications of oil. Before our city
had waterworks, Mr. A. S. Dor
sey, a leading merchant and en
terprising citizen, had a deep well
bored on a part of the triangular
lot he owned, where the curb mar.
ket is now located. He struck a
hold flow of water but it smelled
and tasted so strongly of kero
sene that it was unfit for drinking
purposes. If the water was really
impregnated with petroleum it
could not be used to extinguish
fires. This well is, doubtless, still
available.
Captain H. H. Carlton devoted
much time and study to investigat
ing the mineral resources of this
section. He told the writer that
the section of Northeast Georgia,
from the borders of Greene, Wilkes
and Elbert to the North Carolina
line, was rich in all kinds of min
erals, and he tried to get to legis
lature to have a geological and
mineral survey made. Captain
Carlton said the counties of Madi
son, Franklin and Hart were ex
ceptionally rich in minerals, and
if this hidden wealth was devel
oped, land owners in these coun
ties would be the wealthiest peo
ple on this continent, 4
We shall watch with great in
terest the test made by the enter
prising citizens of Franklin, Petro
leum, like gold, is where you find
it. A -gentleman who has given
considerable study to oil and vis
ited Franklin county told us that
millions of dollars had been spent
in boring wells in far less invit
ing fields than Carnesville. He
said there is a great deal of guess
work about striking oil, and eyen
scientists are not infallible. He
told us that one of the best pay
ing oil fields east of the Missis
sippi was discovered in the Blue
Grass region of Kentucky. So
called experts ‘and scientists
strongly advised against sinking a
well“sayihg' it would Ye a waste
of money, but the land owners
went ahead and sunk a well and
Final Rites Held ‘
For Mr. J. Nash!
Funeral services for Mr. Jacobs
Daniel Nash, 33, who died at a 10-|
cal hospital Mondav, were held this '
afternoon at the Carter Groves |
cemetery at 3 o’clock.
Pall-bearers were: Messrs.
Robert Meadows, Dave Mansfield, !
Ed Meadows, Franklin Combs, Guy
Beasley and C, H. Beasley. Rev.
George Steed, pastor of the Bap-|
tist church, officiated. Interment
was in Carter’s Grive cemetery,!
near Rayle, Ga., with Bernstein
Brothers in charge. |
Surviving Mr. Nash are his wife,
Mrs. Lucile Nash and three chil
dren. Marion. Carolyn and Chatles
Nashn
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fi.‘zfi iy W’ Season from May 281tk to-September 15t
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v GROVE PARK INN }v"zz;:. ‘l\
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~ tains glow with color. Native 5
wild blooms whose infinite variety defies the botanist’s eata
logue and shames the artist’s palette . . . Pisgah, the Rat, the
Great Smokies, Mt. Mitchell and all the other age-old huskies
of the earth have softened . . . brightened to welcome
Summer days. Gaze upon them from the terrace of Grove
Park Inn, wilk about them, ride among them, drive along
the rock-churned streams that ripple at their feet, Never is
mature’s brush more {;odigal with color than when Summer
pays her visit to the Land of the Sky. For your less medita
tive, but just as joyous moments, there’s marvelous golf omn
the Asheville Country Club course, smoothly-rolling, emerald
green front lawn of the Inn . . . while cooling breezes play
- « . tennis, archery, canceing, swimming . + . take your
choice, Thrill to brilliant social life among genial sophisti
cates, past masters in the art of living « . . Serene on Sunset
Mountain, the Inn is a perfect setting for this pageant of lif>
and beauty. Accommodations leave mothing of luxurious
comfort -to be desired. Flawless service is rendered by =
world-famed staff. French chefs and Southern cooks mergc
their skill to maintain incomparable cuisine. Hospitality
rules . . , your every wish is gratified . . . especially when
you yearn for perfect rest, absolute and undisturbed. Cool,
sound sleep comes with the night—under blankets, becaus=
you need them. The Inn operates on the American Plai
throughout the year. Reservations are desired in advance.
. T. B. HORNER, Resident Managhr
. inest Fesost Hotel in fi@%{d
- |SUNSET MOUNTAIN ASHEVILLE. N.€.
TUESDAY, JUNE 3, 1930.
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WRIGHTSVILLE
BEACH, N. C. (Wilming.
ton) and return, sl2.y,
June 7th. Apply Seaboarg,
Ticket Agent,