Newspaper Page Text
\'L.lugsoAv. JULY 25, 1933.
JUESDR L 1 =it
WantAc
[ e
| RATES
FOR CLASSIFIED
ADVERTISING
Daily Rete Per Word For
| Consecutive Insertions
One Day, per word * sese .02
Minimum Charge.....e.... A 0
| Three Insertion 2 fOr: -.\ s 100
‘ \o ADVERTISEMENT will be
‘taken for less than 40c. Ad
vertisement - ordered for .
one iime rate, Name and ad
dress must be counted in.the
Lody of the advertisement.
IF AN ERROR s made, The
Bannel'—”«’l'uld is responsible
tor only the incorrect .inser
tion. The customer is respon
gible for subpequent Inser
- tlons. The, advertiser should
not'fy immediately it any cor
rection 18 needed.
, sLL discontinuances must be
made in person at THE BAN
NER-HERALD OFFICE or
py letter. .Phone discontinu
ance are NOT valid. :
ALL WANT ADS are payable
| in advance.
5 WANT AD 75
7 PHONE
FOR SALE
\ (EW SHIPMENT Fall Felt Hats,
$1.95 and $2.95. We Clean and
Re-block old Hats, 50¢ and SI.OO.
THE STYLE SHOP. §260
OR SALE—Art metal roll top
desk and chair; also large Mos
ler safé."Phone 1299 or 1951.
j23c
OR SALE — Sherwin-Willlams’
Paints are cheaper, because they
‘ go farthef, last longer, and look
] better than ordinary painrt.
Christian Hardware, Broad
l Street, Phone 1300.
; OR SALE—Kiowa Ready Mixed
Paints, all colors, per gallon
$1.50; Columbia Brand Prepared
Paints, all colors, $1.65 per gal
\ lon; CWK Kczlsomine, all shades,
per package 38c. Christian
7 Hardware; Phone 1300, Broad
steet. ju2ic
A OR SALE—One baby bed, and
one gas stove. Cheap for cash.
Phone 1118-W. j2sp
OR SALE "at greaf reduction,
practically + new lawn mower,;
)-foot - ~hose; electric = stove;
ind other . household furnish
ng Phone 1816, j26¢
. OR SALE—Five room house, hall,
sleeping porch, lights and water.
450 Ruth street. Will exchange
for residence close in. "Address
Box 114, Gray, Gas: < i2sp
FOR RENT
OR RENT—Seven room brit'kE
bungalow, Catawba avenue. J.|
K. Fatrick. Phone 88. j2sc |
OR RENT—Four roems and lmth-l
625 Pulaski St. BE. D. Sledge. {
j27c [
e ——————————————————
'OR RENT—Three or four-horse |
farm on .Jefferson road. Mrs.!
L. H. Nichols, Athens, Ga., R. |
F.D. & . jZGc,
WANTED ';
—— ]
ighest Price Paid For
old Gold and Silver |
J. BUSH, Jeweler ;
I Y |
165 E. Clayton Street |
‘e will ‘keep your WATERMEL- |
ONS in cold storage for fivei
cents each, Atlantic Ice & Coal |
Co. jly 25¢ |
s |
1
Railroad Schedules |
SEABOARD AIR LINE F
Arrivaj and Departure of Trains |
Athens, Ga. |
To and From South and West |
RRIVE— -—-DEPART i
¢:l3 pm Birmingham 6:18 pm |
1:30 am Atlanta 4:16 am
Atlanta {
New York-Wash. |
%:03 pm * B-ham-Mem. 2:20 pm|
Te and From North and South |
2:20 pm Rich.-Ngrfolk 3:03 pm,
4:15 pni” Rich.-Norfolk 10:18 pm |
New York-Wash, {
0:18 pm Birmingham 6:18 am |
GAINESVILLE-MIDLAND ‘;
SCHEDULES 5
Leave Athens ;
0. 2—for Gainesville— 7:45 &mi
'O. 12—for Galnesville— 10:45 am: |
Arrive Athens |
o.ll—from 'Gainesville—lo:oo an !
0. I—from Galnesville— 6:15 plr |
GEORQIA RAILROAD i
raln 51 Arrives Athens 7:45 an |
Daily except Sunday 1
Train 50 leaves Athens 11 am i
SOUTHERN RAILWAY |
LULA—NORTH—SOUTH
tlanta—Wuhington — New Yor]g
epart— —Arrive |
6:50 am 11:40 an |
1:30 pm 4:35 pr |
TELEPHONE 81 |
- L. Cox, Asst. Gen. Frt.-Pa* i
: Agent i
CENTRAL OF GEORGIA }
Departs {
Daliy (except Sunday) 7:00 amw ;
and 4:00 pm |
Unday only 7:50 an. and 4:00 P
Arrives Athens Daily }
12:%8 PM.and _9:16 pm l
READ ‘
WANT ADS !
Special on Psyllium Seed
I-Ib. Black, 39¢
1-Ib. White, 33¢
5-Ibs. Black, $1.49
MOON-WINN
DRUG CO., inc.
1931 Model
CHEVROLET
BARGAIN!
PINSON - BRUNSON
MOTOR CO.
TRUCK AND AUTO
REPAIRING
T. G. Tiller and C. A. Gaines,
our mechanics, are experts.
LET US WASH AND GREASE
YOUR CAR AND TRUCKS.
HIGH GRADE MOTOR OILS,
JOE SHEPHERD
INTERNATIONAL TRUCKS ©
AND TRACTORS
P‘hone 997—393 E. Washington
HOUSES FOR RENT
396 Boulevard, 8 Rooms
297 South Hull, 9 Rooms
156 Grady, 6 Rooms
254 Oakland Avenue, 6 Rooms
153 Milledge Terrace, 5 Rooms
225 Milledge Circle, 8 Rooms
223 Boulevard, 7 Rooms
834 Hill St., 5 Rooms
749 Thomas St., 3 Rooms
1680 S. Lumpkin, 6 Rooms
1557 S. Lumpkin, 6 Rooms, Heat
H. 0. EPTING & CO.
Announcing Our
Appointment as
~ United Motors
~ Service Station
* (General Motors)
COMPLETE STOCK OF
REPLACEMENT 'PARTS AND
UNITS FOR ALL AUTO
ELECTRICAL REPAIRS
—PHONE 986—
Athens Battery &
Service Co.
Clayton and Thomas Sts.
|
! USE US
@ FOR THAT
| EMERGENCY
OUR CONVENIENT
{ PAYMENT PLAN
| Per Month Loan
j $ 5.00 Repays ~ . . . SIOO.OO
: $ 6.00 Repays . . . . 120.00
! $ 7.00 Repays . . . . 140.00
i ) SIO.OO Repays . . . . 200.00
; $15.00 Repays .. . . 300.00
i Other Monthly Repayments
| in Proportion to Amount Bor
i rowed—Plus Lawful Interest
B FAMILY FINANCE
? COMPANY
102-104 Shackelfod Bldg.
215 College Avenue
i
4-DRAWER STEEL $1 5
Non-Suspension Drawers
BUY NOW—BEFORE PRICES — ]
ADVANCE! ]
4-Drawer—Lock controlling ! ‘
all drawers...... .... ...-$19.50 | _fj :
4.Drawer—Heavier Weight..s2o.oo
4-Drawer, Heavier Weight, a | :
lock controlling all drawers $25.00 |
4.Drawer Legal Cap Size, o
Heavy Weight.... s s DN [:l g
4-Drawer Legal Cap Size,
Heavy Weight, with 10ck..530.00
4-Drawer Letter File, Heaviest E
Weight, Suspension Arms $38.00 g
4-Drawer Legal Cap Size File, ” )fitfif
Heaviest Suspension Arms $44.00 il
(Add $7.00 to each of the last two W |
Ziles for lock controlling all draw- “
ars.) g I
25-Division Manilla Leter gl %‘
Size Guides.... ......50c per set A E
25-Division Pressboard Let i I
ter Size Guides....sl.3o per set - 1
25-Division Manilla Legal AS |
Size Guides.... .... 80c per set
Medium Weight Letter Size \
Manilla Folders.... $1.20 per 100
Heavy Weight Legal Size
Manilla F01der5....52.45 per 100
Write for Prices on Filing Supplies and Equipment of All Kinds.
THE McGREGOR COMPANY
PHONE 77— ATHENS, CA.
4
| Mother of Edward
. .
Aligood Will Fight
| For Custody of Child
i (Continued from page one.)
1
[preventing the release of the body
|to Mrs. Petropol, was described by
{Mrs. Cox as “u sweet girl, a mi
%llt;l‘, who has been misguided by
|an Atlanta lawyer.” Mrs. Cox
| placed the blame for the Allgood’s
'st'p:‘u'nt}nn on neighbors of the
imnple in Atlanta.
% INJUNCTION SOUGHT
ATLANTA, Ga.—(AP)—Buripl
lof Mrs. Lillian H. Allgood, who
Wwas shot by her husband here
lSuturday ,was held up by court
{order Tuesday when a sister of
Mrs. Allgood obtained a restrain
ing order against the undertaking
lcompany preventing the release of
|the body to Allgood’s mother, who
ilives in Athens,
!; The mother, Mrs. John Petro
{pol, of Athens, had planned to
|bury Mrs. Allgood and her son,
{Who turned the pistol on himself
'Jlft('l' shooting his wife, side by
| side., ,
Injunction also was sought to
prevent Allgood’s mother from ob
taining custody of a child of the
Joung couple. i
I‘MICHAEL’S WIRES
PRESIDENT IT IS
FOR ENTIRE PLAN
! \(Continued from page one.)
‘l'-vu.é said that General Johnson,
chief of national recovery adminis
tration, has not sent information
concerring what the administra
ition expects communities to do to
{ ward cooperating in the recovery
!program. I.gst week Johnson
| wired the chamber of commerce
;urging the cooperation of all busi
(ness and civic interests, and the
officers announced as soon as the
administration furnishes its plan,
the chamber of commerce will get
behind the movement.
General Johnson was wired by
President R. R. Gunn and Secre
| tary Jeol A. Wier that the cham-
Ibm‘ of commerce is wholheartedly
{ for the program.
| Special 2-Quart
- FOUNTAIN SYRINGE
| Or Hot Water Bottle
i 49c¢
| PHONE 1066
| CITIZENS PHARMACY
'New Deal! New Goods!
% New Prices!
.~ $1.50 Coty’s Dusting
| Powder, $1
$1.50 Houbigant’s Dust
| ing Powder, $1
. Coty’s Toilet Water, $1
'3s¢ Glazo Nail Polish, 25¢
150¢ Glazo Nail Polish and
' . Remover, 40c
| REID DRUG CO.
'MILLEDGE PHARMACY
DR. W. F. McLENDON
VETERINARIAN
PHONE 194-W
AUTOMOBILE
INSURANCE
Phane No. 9
SMITH & BOLEY
SEEDS — FEEDS
CANS
Love Birds and Pet
Supplies
CLARKE COUNTY
HATCHERY
265 BROAD STREET
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
REPLIES, POURING IN
BY THOUSANDS, BACK
UP ROOSEVELT'S PLEA
(Continued From lage One)
noting most particularly the reae
tion of the smailer employers to
bis monday night appeal. Upon
them he believes now rests th 2
hig burden -of carrying through
the campaign for mass re-employ
ment and increased purchasing
power. 3
Arrangements to dispatch copies
of the federally-devised “general
code” to 5,000,000 employers as
rapidly as possible proceeded
apace in a number of quarters.
Not the least of ¢hese was the
government printing office having
the gigantic task of addressing
the agreements.
Government trucks scurried
through the business section of
the city borrowing every electric
envelope addressing machine
available. The set-up at the huge
printing places resembled war
time activity.
Hardly had he finished Monday
night the plain-worded, direct
call for patriotic and unquestior
ing acceptance of the voluntary
and individual employer-pledges
to raise pay and shorten hours be
fore the answers began to come
in. Within an hour 300 promises
had come, a few more minutes
and the number doubled and still
there appeared no end to the flow.
His appeal was terse: b
“We'are not going through an
other winter like the last.. . .
it 1S tume tor ciurageous action,
and the recovery boill gives us the
means to congquer unemployment,
“The proposition is simply this:
“If all employers will act to
gether to shortem hours and raise
wages we can put people back to
work. No employer will suffer,
because the relative level of com
petitive cost will zdvance- by the
same amount for all. But if any
consideraole group should lag or
shirk, this great opportunity will
pass us by and we will go into an
other desperate winter. This must
not happen. . . . .
“l 1 ask that even before the
dates set in the agreements whicki
we have sent out the employers
of the country who have not al
ready done so—the big fellows and
the littke fellows—shall at once
write or telegraph to me personal
ly at the White House, expressing
their intention of going through
with the plan.”
They did, big fellows and little,
One of the big ones was Harvey
S. Firestone, who pledged to put
the program into effect imme
diately.
While the mass movement was
on, beating the gun on the cam
vaign which gets under way of
ficially Thursday and seeks to
have six million men re-employed
by TLabor day, with increased
wages for those who now have
jobs, Johnson and a corps of lieu
tenants worked away at a collec
tion on difficult problems—con
tinued and new hearings on gen
eral codes of fair competition for
ooil, lumber, wool weaving and
rayon weaving industries: com
plaints of . widespread discrimin
ation by industries against union
'sympathizers: puzzling requests
for interpretations of the blanket
re-employment agreement.
Price-fixing, a principal issue in
the divided petroleum industry,
was on the boards for thorough
‘discussion in TMarsday’'s resump
tion of the oil hearing.
At the lumber hearing the same
price control idea was still an ag
gravating point, jut Dudley Cates,
assistant to Johnson hoped to
close the public »ession Tuesday-
The rayon weaving industry
brought in a code practically iden
tical with that for cotton now in
force proposing minimum wages
of sl2 and sl3 in south and north
and a 40-hour week.
Discussion continued on the
wool code, which proposes mini
mums one dollar higher, against
a labor demand for $lB weekly and
40 hours.
The administration’s labor ad
visory committee sought John
son's cousent to issuing a public
warning to employers who dis
¢riminate against and discharge
workers cf union tendencies.
- To deal with demands for clari
fication of the “klanket code,” a
special committec headed by Gen
etal Thomas H. Hammond, new
directcr ¢f ! the re-employment
campaign was set up Tuesday-
Questions should be sent direct to
him, and will be answered person
ally. : ;
The President's address served
clear warning that selfish interest
is not going to be let stand in the
way of the re-employment drive,
and that he is satisfied the blan
ket agreement is fair to all.
“There are, of course, men, a
few of them, whe might thwart
this great common purpose by
seeking selfish advantage,” he
said. “There are adequate penal
ties in the law but I am now ask
ing the co-operation that comes
from opinion and from conscience,
These are the only instruments
we shall use in this great summer
offensive against unemployment.
“But we shall use them to the
limit to protect the willing from
laggared and to make the plan
succeed.”
With this statement he joined
the following:
“You can look on every employer
who adopts the plan as one who
is doing his part, and those em
ployers deserve well of everyone
who works for a living. It will be
clear to you, as it is to me, that
while the shirking employer may
undersell his competitor, the sav
ing he thus makes is made at the
expense of his_ country’s wel
fare.”
It was a deliberate urging to pa
tronize only estahlishments on the
“roll of honor.” Those that have the
right to display the blue eagle
with the legend: “We do our
part.” ¥
The President heeded a number
of requests for a word to labhor
against stirring up strife:
“While we are making (thk
great common effort there should
be no discord and dispute. This
Fast Pace Shown
Today as Stocks
.
Rise on Markets
BY VICTOR EUBANK
Associated Press F nancial Writer
NEW YORK — (AP) — Stocks
pressed forward Tuesday at a fas.
pace, apparently intent on crowd
ing into the abbreviated sessior
all of the latent rally vigor that
ordinarily would be spread over the
customary five hours.
The noon opening found prices
of many of the leaders up I to s
or more points with the so-callec
“wet” issues again out in the lead.
Various specialties also drew re
newed followings. At the end of
the first rour of speedy transac
tions some of the pivotal stocks
tended to ease off and follow a
rather narrow range. Grains at
Chicago were fairly steady, with
wheat, corn, oats nad rye up 2 to
3 cents a bushel. Barley was un
der pressure, however, and was
off about 5 cents a bushel in thé
restricted trading. Winnipeg wheat
was up more than 4 cents. The
dollar was somewhat lower in for
eign exchange markets. Cotton
amoved indifferently and silver fu
tures were a bit reactionary. Bonds
were steady to firm.
ATHENS COTTON
The Athens cotton market clos
ed at 10% cents Tuesday. The pre
'vious close was 101 cents.
; TRADING QUIET
NEW YORK.— (AP) —Trading
in cottun was quiet Tuseday. after
selling up to 11.06 for December
contracts during the early after
noon or about 13 to 19 points net
higher, the market eased under re
alizing and scattering liquidations
promoted by reactions n the stock
market.
Open High Low Close P.C.
July .. 10.50 10.84 10.45 10.59 10.42
Oect. . 10.97 11.06 10.67 10.80 10.71
Dec. . 10.96 11.15 10.77 10.87 10.91
MODERATELY ACTIVE
NEW ORLEANS —(AP)—Trad
ing in cotton was only moderately
active Tuesday and although price
fluctuationg were not very wide,
the tendency was still upward.
: New Orleans Table
Open High Low Close P. C.
July . 10.48 10.51 10.48 10.51 10.29
Oect. . 10.70 10.80 10.43 10.53 10.43
Dee. . 10.88 11.00 10.65 10.75 10.85
g CHICAGO GRAIN |
4 High Low Close
WHEAT— i
Y .. .. e 90 9114
je))t see as we R 83% 005
Deq T o e i RN (N
BERY ... .. 1.0%% 1.00% 1.01%
CORN—
Juke ... .. .. .50% .48y .49%
Sept She. 20 43 SO 38 .53%
~ .. .. 608 . BT% -58%
AR R T
OATS—
Y . .. AT BNy
(Mot .™0 L, oJas%n. BR 1K
fDec .al L4l RIK
May Sivs.. 0 45 A 3 .45%
TR ANttt
FARMERS OF DIXIE
- BEGIN PLOWING UP
" 1933 COTTON CROP
f (Continued from page one.)
agreements were being awaited in
}those states.
. Farmers have agreed to take
'approximately 10,000,000 acros «
iof production of cotton and the
United States government is to
pay them as compensation about
15100,000,000 in cash and give them
options on more than 2,000,000
‘bales of government held cotton.
' Many farmers wish to get their
)crops'plowed under early that
Ithey may replace them with food
and feed plantings.
~ Emergency permits were issued
‘to 1500 Franklin county farmers
‘Monday and plowing up Aacreage
began without delay. County
Agent E. K. Davis said within a
few minutes after obtaining the
permits farmers were in their
fields turning under growing cot
tons
Some of the farmers are turning
the cotton under with plows while
others are using mowing machines
ordinarily uytilized in cutting hay.
In this latter method the roots of
the stalks are to be plowed up
later,
Permits received at McDonough
authorize 1219 Henry county fra
mers to plow under acreage which
they contracted to take out of cul
tivation, It is planned to plant
peas. ,soy beans, or other improve
ment e¢rops in this acreage.
MACON FALLING IN
LINE FOR RECOVERY
(Continued From Page One)
August 1 was fixed as the date for |
‘the new code to go into effect. |
G. L. Walker of Griffin, Wasl
elected president of the associa
tion, and J. L. Owings of Macon,}
was chosen secretary and treas- |
arer. Representatives from shopsi
in Columbus, Macon, Athens, At
ianta, Newnan, Chattanooga, La-!
Grange, Bast Point and Griffin|
attended the meeting. x
Lamar Walker, president of the
Georgia. Roller Cover company,
operators of a plant here where
rollers used in the textile trade
are oovere«‘ said the new code!
would call for a wage increase of |
from 35 to 40 percent and increasel
the number of employes. !
is no time to cavil or to question’
the standard set by this universal
agreement. It is time for patience
and understandinz and co-opera
tion. 3
“The workers «of thig country}
have rights under this law whichr
cannot be taken away from them,
and nobody will be permitted to
whittle them away but on the other
hand, no aggression is now nec
essary to attain those rights.”
3
WOODRUFF ISSUES !
(Continued from page one.) ;
mission adopting this rule, did I!
use the identification card andl
passes when on official -business. |
“I felt then, and I feel nuw,!
‘that I have done no wrong in this!
regard.” '
| Requested Pass ;
i Woodruff said there was v\'i-i
‘dence in the record that he had]
lrequested a pass for A. D. Junos,!
an inspector for the commissiun]
and director of the State Bureau |
of Markets under Talmadge :w!
commissioner of agriculture. ’
“This evidence is mislezlding,"|
he said, “in that it implies that Il
was interested in Mr. Jones re
ceiving a pass. Mr. Jones was‘
‘out in his territory at work and
asked me to convey the requesti
for him. This I did wihout any
concern as to whether the request
‘was granted or not.” Woodru(‘f!
said the orly cther charge he
cared to refer to in his statement
was that “my official acts were in
fluenced by the employment of myl
boy, Willlam Woodruff,”” who is‘
practicing law in Atlanfa, and that
1 “unethically suggested his em
ployment to people who had mat
ters pending before the commis-}
sion.” i
He said William appeared he
fore the commisison asking if
there was any reason why he
should not accept employment by
parties having matters before thut
body and was told there was none.
He said Willlam had appeared
before the commission and the
record would show he had voted
adversely on some matters in the
interest of William's clients.
“The charge spat I suggested
employment of William in order to
obtain a favorable vote from me,
I emphatically deny and denounce
and sya further that _it is wholly
unsupported by any evidence in
troduced in the hearing. There
was no evidence introduced that
I ever wrote anybody a Iletter
suggesting employment of Willianu
There was some testimony that
my son wrote some man - about
employment after it had already
been discussed with him. I have
never intimated to anyone, direct
ly or indirectly, that to employ
my son would influence my action
or that of the commission.”
(Continued from page one.)
ded last week when he resisted
kidnaping and authorities stili
sought the killers,
INVESTIGATION STOPPED
OKLAHOMA CITY.—(AP)—The
investigation of the kidnaping of
Charles F. Urschel, oil millionaire,
was at a standstill Tuesday as the
family called off the forces of the
law in an effort to encourage the
N .
§\\\\\ %
ST, . S o | il (R | R
o~ & [ K -
NSR S =\ P 7
Y B Rl e ‘\ 5% : //’/
'\ .: : ’i -~ :::C‘:f:" ) ;3\“ ‘/l " ""f/‘//
T e | Vo &
i B o =37
: s > ' oI g\e V. >
i 7 = w7B G
1B (T h ‘:’r;'t .
John Smith wanted to trade his radio for
“anything of value” He ran a classified
ad and was offered— ‘
Pearl-handled knives and forks . . . dia
mond bracelet . . . 1932 sedan . . . Sum
mer resort lot . . . first mortgage gold
bonds . . . fur coat . . . hotel furniture
. . piano . . . 12-guage shotgun.
He accepted a 40-acre farm tract in a
neighboring state.
Banner-Herald
WANT cAD SECTION
a 8
Says Textile Workers |
. age
"~ Who Testified Are
. .
! Fired Without Cause
; R
y (Continued from page one.)
|
! e
Ir'l\llil')l)llll of the administration’s
;l:,ln r advicory committee Tuesday
| said he would try to have an im
| mediate investigation.
| “There is no question but that
sis going on all over tne place,” he
‘;szxi«l.
j “I am going to try to have
| ‘omething done about it immedi
".‘ll(‘l‘\"”
| He will ask Hugh 8. Johnson,
!thv administrator, to lore no time
|in naming the three representa
' tives of the recovery administra
-Itinn who are to supervise applica
| tion cf the cotton code, so that
| they could take charge of labor
| complaints.
| e i
"5 000 Mcre Movi
9y ore Movie
| .
. Workers Go Out;
|
| 25,000 Affected
I HOLLYWOOD —(AP)— Motion
lpivzure studios a«ndeavered to
maintain the production of canned
enteriainment for American and
foreign movie patrons Tuesday as
5,000 more techicians struck.
Union workers who help make
i celiuloid romances for main
| street and the metropolitan railto
left their jobs; their spokesmen
said, because the studious Mon
day hired non-union men to re
place the 665 sound technicians
who struck Saturday mid-night.
PRESS ADOPTS CODE
ATLANTA, Ga—(AP)—A spec
ial committee of the Georgia Press
association “has aaopred a tenta
tive code of operation, adapted
from that of the National Edito
rial association, and it will be
submitted promptly to the mem
bership.
The committee acted under au
thority granted at a meeting of
the association in Rome, follow
ing discussion es the national re
covery act, recently.
abductors to communicate their
price for Urschel's safe release.
R. H. Colvin, chief of ‘the
United States Bureau of Investi
gation here, ordered a 24-hour re
cess in the hunt, commenting:
“Our only interest at this time
is the safe return of Mr. Urschel.”
This action was taken at the
earnest request of Mrs. Berenice
Sliek Urschel, distraught at lack
of word from the kidnapers.
“Through the press, she prom
ised the captors she was not in
terested in their prosecution but
“only in the safe return of my
husband.”
The family relied on Arthur A.
Seeligson, trustee with Mr. and
Mrs. Urschel for the huge oil
fortune left by Tom B. Slick,” her
first husband, to .conduct negotia
tions with the kidnapers.
TRADES RADIO
FOR
40-ACRE FARM
'World War Veteran
Dies Tuesday AM;~
. Dies Tuesday o
. Funeral Wednesday
!
{ John D. Williams, 33, World War
f\'vtu':m. die dat his home, in Wat
:kin:willv Tuesday at 7:30 aimm.,
lvt'ullu\\‘ing an illness of 16 months.
| Funeral services will be held at the
‘gr:n'«-sidr' in the Watkirsville cem
'i‘“t«-x';,-. Wadnesday afternoon at four
{o’clock with Rev. D. M. Joiner, of
lthe Watkinsville Christian church,
: officiating. MceDorman - Bridges
? in charge. ;
| Mr. Williams was born in Rome,
[Ga., but had followed the trade of
| blacksmith in Oconee county for
lthe past three years. He ehlts@eé
|in the World War at Fort Ogle-
Ithorpe, Georgia, and served din Si
iln-ri:n, and the Thilippine Islands.
{in 1922. He had been making his
He was discharged from the army
home with his parents in Watkins
ville, at the time of his death. =
Pallbearers will be Roy Tbrl%
er; D. B. Veale, W. I. luoles
Albert Jones, Roy Ward and Jm
Biggers. Mr. Will'ams is surviv
‘ed by his wife, Mrs. Eunice Wil-
liams ;one son, Ralph Dewey Wil
liams; his parents; Mr., and Mrs,
J. F. Willlams; and a brother, B
Rylee” Williams, Rome. = s/
T s T T T
America’s B
- Jester
He was dressed :
likeakingandhe .-
felt like an idiot.- ‘?—::}\,'
Fullof side-splitting 2> 8
laughter ;', i
/ ¥ oS
WILL /. 15}
e
in ) HAM 1
71 i’,3‘ 3
LR A
EARTH 7 4
B 0
with \)';/ Y
Dorothy /| 4}
joroan¥ W
irene RICH
Matty Kemp
Charley Chase
Comedy
TODAY ONLY
STRAND
The Barter and Exchange columns of the
classified pages are facsinating. You never
know what offers your Want Ads will bring
you. Besides, nothing is so self-satisfying
as a profitable swap! :
Try it yourself! In the garret or cellar
you'll probably find something that you
would like to exchange for other things of
equal value. It is more profi;ablo to M
them for exchange than to have them clut- é
ter up the home. (i i‘u}»!m &
PAGE SEVEN