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About Athens banner-herald. (Athens, Ga.) 1933-current | View Entire Issue (March 12, 1934)
PAGE FOUR ATHENS BANNER-HERALD Published Every Evening Except Saturday aad Sunday v.)pad‘og Sunday Morning, by Athens Publishing, Co, Earl B Braswell . .. Publisher and General Manager L es i e T o _l__rxtn €. Lumpkin ...........-......Managing Editor i Naticonal £dvertising Representatives Chas H, Eddy Cofhpany, New York, Park-Lekington ng; Chicago Wrigley Building; Boston Old South 3 J. B, Keough Rhodes-Harvey Bullding, At. lanta Ga, Say . Members Of the Associated Press The Associated Press is exculusvely entitled to the use fm‘ republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otflerwlse credited in the paper, also to all local news blished theremn, All rights of republication of spedial fifltcheu also reserved, Full Leased Wire of the Associated Press with the Lead . ing Features and Comics of the N. E. A. ‘ By BRUCE CATTON The modern world has not often seen anything like the spectacle which Hitler's Nazis put on in Germany the other day. More than a million men raised their hands and swore unquestioning fidelity to Hitler—a demonstration of loyalty and discipline almost without parallel. Now, it is easy enough to point out that Hitler 1s a product of the post-war turmoil, to recite the sickening list of his party’s atrocities, and to dem onstrate that his program means trouble for his own people and the rest of Europe. But to do that is to miss the point, \ " His reception by German youth, and this amazing Mspla)' of loyalty to his person, are symyptomatic of a very gieat change that has come over men's minds in the last few years. . To understand it, listen to a few of the remarks made at thiy most recent demonstration. Baldur von Schirach. chief of the Hitler Youth Movement, is speaking. He says: ““The will of a single man—Hitler—directs our n‘;grt;h. The Hitler youth knows it has no privil eges, only dvties. Days of romantic dreaming are over .We want a young Sparta. Voluntarily, the whole of young Fermuny submits to a single law— that of Hitler. _YAII of us differ in many ways. We are equal in one thing—we are all ready to die for Hitler.™ : _That kind of talk is not listened to by men who belleve that they are masters of their own desti nies. It can be applauded only when there {s an almost universal conviction that the old ways of elf-help, self-determination, and self-reliance are :ggipietely done for, “Uerman youth, in other words, has become con vinced that those great old words. freedom and democracy, huve lost their meaning in the modern world. They have stopped believing that men can handle their own affairs properly; henceforth they ask only to be led, and they promise in advance to g 0 blindly and without questioning. ‘How does that affect us, 5,000 miles away The ansgwer is clear; it is a challenge and a warning. We &till have the blessing of democratic freedom. It is up to us to prove that it still is workable. "'l‘h'e world trend is away from it. If we cannot save it—if we cannot show that a free people can meet and solve the greatest of problems without ?y'inz aside its freedom—then it is apt to vanish rom thé earth. It isn't likely that the name of the late John Mc- Graw will find its way into very many history Bhpks.‘Ne\’el'Lheless, the man’s career symbolized a whole-era in American life. He came to fame in what you might call the rowdy era—the old, far-off day when baseball was a rough, tough game, the one great diversion of the masses, played by lads who ignored the finer points of behavior, but who did know all there was to be known about throwing, hitting and catching base - That was the day when a game between two small-town teams was apt to break up in a free for-all fight at any time; the day when it was smart tv subsidize the umpire, if you could get at fime day when a visiting team might expect to hiivé to run for the train through a: barrage of briekbats, if things went wrong. iMeGraw, of course, was a big leaguer, removed from such plebeian demonstrations. Nevertheless— traculent, aggressive, dictatorial—he typified that era. It is gone, now, and so is McGraw. American life has changed very greatly in the w‘sengmuon. His carcer was one of those that bespoke the change. ! (&"fl!e tragic crash of that big passenger liner in the Utah mountains is a sharp reminder that not all of the recent disasters to army mail planes have been due to the incapacity, = inexperience, or poor equipment of the army flyers. It probably is perfectly true that the ecivilian pilots are more skillful at the mail-carrying job than are the army pilots, They're used to it, they're spueially trained for that sort of work, their planes g‘;flbetter adapted to it. _ But the fact remains that the army flyers got what probably was the worst bit of weather in the m\w years to make their bow as malil pilots. - The weather sent several of them to their death— and it ako destroyed u great ship manned by a civ m;-cvew. ¢ - NEW YORK STORIES @; By PAUL HARRISON o “ NEW YOLK.—For a good many years the thea fl world has been beating a path to @ house on SlXty-gecond street, past the French butler and up four luxuriously furnihsed floors to the studio of Frances Robinson-Duff. She is the lady to whom fw d Belasco always referred as “The Great ; ;_‘r"——umi the capitals are his. ~ Bhe teachus actors and actpgsses how to° breathe, then how to acl—wimkx'liu?,('nunciation. gesture, ; ture, evervthing. Helen Hayes, Dorothy Gish, Ru Chatterton, Frieda Heifipel, Constance Ben nett, Clark Gable, Billie Burke, Peggy Joyece, Mary Pickford, anl Cornelia Otis Skinnet have gone to ; ,_'_: The whole list, though, would inelude practi cally all the great names of the stage and many of the screen. Ina Claire has taken lessons for thir teen years, and is still going. Katharine Hepburn Peceived all her theatrical schooling under Miss Robinson-Dutf, and during her recent return to flw Broadway stage had two or three appointments a day. i The atmosphere of the whole place is exciting ?«f@@fi'ln\pl‘essivv. All during the day the little office ‘m its two secretaries overflows with students L until they are sitting on the stairs outside - reading 3%3:; the‘ir legson scripts. One at a time thclgy are ’M‘: ed 1o the Nile green, skylighted, Louis Seize . studio and the imposing presence of the famous s‘ atic coach. At one end of the room is a little ‘Mfi? o 1 with a sort of red throne on which Miss " Robinson-Duff sits to hear and watch her pupils. . *NO on€ who can face her with assurance need }’n about breaking down before a first-night au . dience. She is so critical that some actresses have { said their names were in big lights on Broadway ~ before they realized they were making any progress 4it all. Her poise and personality are‘so dominant “that it is hard to select personal details, such as . that she is 2 large woman with big eyes and a nice smile and such a voung face that the length of her eareer almost defies belief. | & Her mother is Sarah Robinson-Duff, who was one ‘the great vocal teachers of Paris. Mary Garden 8 one of her star pupils. About 80 now, she lives _on the second fioor of the Sixty-second street house # still gives a lesson occasionally. ' : ‘-’:j@fif-«"w o be a drematic coach, in Paris studied with Sarah Bernhardt’s teacher, P CRStOnps f2NOOO, SDeW . gXprybody, of- @ o REVIEWING THE 1929 CRASH The memorable financial cgash which occurred in October 1929, will long be re membered by the people of this country as well as the people in all other nations. With the exeeption of those on the inside of the stock, bonds and financial interests, the average citizen was ignorant of its ap proach. ; In reviewing the brokers controversary and the large amount of money the cor porations poured into the stock market during the period of 1926 to 1929 attract ed the attention of the publie, even in of ficial Washington, where President Cool idge showed much concern, the Christian Science Monitor, comments: | “This type of lending had two unusual |features. One was the size of the loans. lThey reached a high record for all time jon Oct. 1, 1929, of $8,549,388,979. (The figure last week, by way of comparison, was $853,000,000.) The other feature was the participation of corporations in the lending. Funds of New York banks and trust companies in brokers’ loans showed little permanent growth during this lperiod. They fluctuated back and forth ’at about $1,000,000,000. Loans of out-of town bankers increased from $900,000,- 000 to about $1,750,000,000 early in Oec tober, 1929. However, {other lenders,” namely corporations and private individu als, advanced their offerings, from less than $600,000,000 early in 1926 to almost $4.000,000,000 early in October, 1929.” While the banks complained of out siders lending money, yvet the wave of the} crash had taken on such momentum, its course could not be checked nor did it sub side until the last vestige of prosperity had been swept into the wake of a financial and commercial disaster. The banks warn ed the public of the danger, but the cor porations having no responsibilities for the money market, would contract their loans, even more rapidly than they had ex pended them. : Continuing in its review of the 1929 crash, the Monitor, says: : i “The recall was almost an overnight af fair. From $8,549,383,979 on October 1, brokers’ loans fell to $6,108,824,868 on November 1, and further to $4,016,598,- 769 on December 1-—a deflation of $4;- 532,785,210 in two months which was heard around the world.- The corporations rather than the banks were responsible. In fact, while the corporations were pulling out of the market, the New York banks were trying to fill the hole, at least dur ing those first tumultuous weeks of the crash.” Since that time, however, legislation has beén enacted as well as rules of the stock exchange which prohibits such acts on the part of the monied corporations of this country. CONDEMNING COURT PRACTICES - The American Bar Association has in augurated a program, which, if carried out, will, in a great measure, improve the conduct of practices which have grown to be objectionable in many of the courts. of the country. lln fact, it is alleged that procedures in the trial of cases in many of the courts are responsible for the growing feeling "of disrespect for the law and the courts. , ) One feature, in particular, practiced “in the courts, has received the attention of the members of the American Bar Associ ation that if eliminated, will go a long way towards creating confidence in the courts. A report adopted by a committee, repre senting the association. condemns ‘“‘the growing prevalency of the use of expert witnesses, with their conflicting testi mony.” This referred particularly to the use of alienists in criminal cases, where it is alleged that experts can always be se cured to testify that the accused is insane, provided the client has the money to em ploy them. ? If the members of the American Bar As sociation are concerned over the proce dures as now practiced in the courts of this country, certainly they will be able to bring about material changes for improve ment. Not only as lawyers, but as legis lators they have the opportunity and the power to improve court procedures and to enact laws that will restore much of the loss of confidence formerly held by the public in trial of cases. The responsibilitv of law enforcement rests lareoely upon the lawyers. If hicker ’ings and delays in the trial of cases could 'be eliminated, the reduction in crime would show a marked decrease. The hardened criminal, with money, defies the laws and the courts through the aid of ’technicalities of the laws, and the services of shrewd and able lawyers. Often these criminals are allowed new trials on grounds of tecHnicalities that should not be permitted by the courts. In fact, many of these criminals escape punishment by wearing their ®ases out in court. - These are matters, however, for the law vers, legislators, judges and the law en forcement officers of the courts. 'lf all of these agencies combine and cooperate in revising some of the laws and especially procedures of the courts, crime will soon be on the wane and the necessity for jails_ and prisons will be of minor importance. If all the spark plugs in use today were cleaned properly once a vear motorists would have nearly two billion gallons of gas. " The noise of the eruption of the volcane Krakatoa, in 1883, traveled around the world three times; and at 3,000 miles away it sounded like a roar of distant guns. Banana trees do not yield wood of much use; their stems or trunks consist of leaf stalks packed together. m"irginia wené Reg)lublican twice in the istory of the Republican party; once for Procifent: "@rmmt-n--1672 and- again for President Hoover in 1928. THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA A DAILY CARTOON :! &ty i 3 Olofj/ 4( 3 | X _ | = Ving | o v | W o \ W ~— i ) Q')) ] 7 R oy F ' 17 \ I N X : ( { A PN A 2 ,t N\\ QIH J @ 4 : Aty T A NN ) Lk : b e B RN 0 - /’L e RS & o\E7)‘ '4% l'.n‘n' E/d > 5 A _‘\ Loz 'f‘ 2'3 \ BN\ Xsk #2 GOSN T N ‘3’ s adA <& ( SACES TR sN R P REE TR o e TR R B T L s F2CS £Y . 4 ' byt 0 4'»‘; Be N [B 5 %_’ eEr S sTG hr’s§~r £ N (3)1:_;1 f” 2 R S., SRR TR Le A 3»’“";‘31& FFH LS i ""j F 4 & y { \ ~EARAS 2 L A o\ T ;{‘, ? "-rw—'. 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TAXPAYER %fsefi i o ,}vfigfic sA e : [~ A RsAT oI 4O O 3 _ o RO TR DaT s s S <ok Y o ® e K g ‘,{.gfj ’L,«.."#:)’ ;‘( P u,«"”"' t a 1 . s f%fi" F,/‘/ j“‘.'-’;?* TR “"::;,_ 3 eo R R W o 3 i : : 7 G sI O ':?“:'1&'"‘ DEAREL : . o s R e % i s WLt H’:E‘gac7 DID IT EVER OCCUR TO YOU - - A Little of Everything, Not Much of Anything It will soon be time for the sap to bogir‘ rising in the trees and then will follow a sprout~ ing of candidates for state house and local offices. ' The Atlanta Georgian carried a story Sunday - feeling ‘out the situ ation in this state, prognosticating future political | events, Frdm all indicdtions, the voters, will have an’ array of candidates willing to make the sacrifice for“the benefit of the dear pe;)ple., The ‘average citizen _is patriotic, espécially, when it comes to running for office. It may be depended that a sufficient number will be'on” the eligible list to afford the voters an' opportun ity "to ‘make a ‘selestion for eyvery office. In Clarke county, there ap pears’to be little interest, notwith standing a senator and ‘two rep- W P oB u / M ‘ l” R 3 READ THIS CERTIFIED iN & ; TERVI ‘ EW WITH B. V. FRIEDMAN OF DETROIT, MICHIGAN epat r ‘”,,V"'W~ \ : fie > "* e T ; o ~m:'f“" 3« B& § : {\l,?\ ;.:;_:?_:S:E:E:E:E:fiifiif ifi??*' _,;‘»:,: AR . Fadin '? ' g,.'.fi;?_-?.wd_ : B g \,§ % ¢ 3 3 ‘ 5 e R o 3 SRS F T Re 20 DKL 3 T 2 . Fo o - g RS TSRy | S o~ W s s 2 B B : " v b - ?,#;_-_,::,; -i S ’?%44. o o ossy T T 0500 SR 1 P ; > B %RR Rt p xEe Wfi % R {\' e % ”'\"‘ B \o:.‘ GB fl M “ Ti S 3 °¥(‘,‘ "‘u‘ B x e R fix\ R : ‘ : \ d & e L e, R ecsonssecce SN 3 S & i ¥ mk%*fs)"i\'g e g i wd i . — & : |;% A <1 : ,“?M%s& ? S HE B % . RO s e &7 DT - o 2 P : - 5 SR e & I& BB ooy 3 SR & 4 3 2 3 &',é-.'_vv'“t?"“'m“h\ PR TN T M g : e f |||&A Ry e N | RPRei o 7 % ‘ é“ . ; é . i, i : " Tot the other fellow drive withoul » N i < ; 2 ‘ “‘I was born in the ‘Motor City,’ 3 | 2 o worked in the sh : ty,’ and I've *““But just to mak ' " 100 . 71 S' /BOJ : e shops of ‘All Three.’ Yo eB L B me, Py el E}/fléflll/)ffi)fléfl d’ldd Sd_/ég A fc’é’ I know the low-priced cars inside out!*® oy g:hl::;lue?e:c‘huo;:rttoughr;oads. Be"e've 00l -t at on performance!’ @ 8 O S ORI -t eRS g o S 8 e ols 3 sadio apparas & A:@z;;;-:;r PR SRR Ny eey e ) S ‘ N]F sEARD THAT Mr. F riedman or injure the (i_, htatc radio appara WP R L N % ‘.:5.;: Fo S? T e SRR . 4 ’‘ . K dng e s car. R B N iS o AR HR IR B.RE ey ke s EA practicallv ligesin his car... tus he carries in his car el % R a:.?‘» b ;\z o SRR g R RN . . : . . & SR R 0 secovano o R R YL e LT A e averaging 150 milesa day in his busi- And, of course, any bfld,‘ %ho f eW{ > ,B oo s S : .'&"“"’*fl!:‘ -8 ness. We went out to see him. knows cars as he does 1s soid nnl o -‘s‘ = ':f;'i*:_ -jféi'?"f?:"""”mmw e e % Rla «~ A draulic Brakes and Safety-btee S BRSNS el e > s 38 s . g b ; B 2 s “look Al Hy draulic Bra 3 R e sTy ¢4 % il 5 g Vg kel .o|otPl It bgt Welow Te e R U g Three” before buying I'iymouti. drive without them,” he says, “but S e s et e RIS e S E : F G i LSS oA 10l N « I ooked atthem? ... Mister, I’e¢ ’'m taking no unnecessary chances. o EZ« bRN 3 v | ; L ; , e S eidta it s RS 4 B helped build Al Three! But just to There’s not much we can add to @’f Lo ”'15“"?"5‘-;'?;7?'?; : £ AR A‘ A':::;:-;E:‘ n)ake e I dm\-? caf"h of the low- M. ‘-‘ncdn].ln.h “‘n\,inqng story. "E:‘:?' S l ," s s. : 0 W. priced cars 100 miles. But we urge you to do this—*“Look o 4 £ : - " v3e;Ae : SR : S e This owner says he demands two at All Three before you buy.’ [his S _. : - ; = . Pt Gasad things in a car—comjort and safety! year there's a surpnsing d‘fiercnc,e e gfig _ ey g 5 ';! . - \U\\‘-[‘f‘ffd Gars. ;\'nd you dnn D ..;335;{-,:'.'_7_-\:;.::,\,\_- ‘._:-_. BEEKL it : R e e SRR % T . S Plymout.h s Floating r'o need to be a mechanic to se¢ it] o». s g f e E Y S K e '-jii;_;.j_;:j*‘ engine mountings and Individual De Soto or Chrysler . Bl E : = Bl Wheel Springing appealed to him. Any Dodge, De Soto or LhlyS - = P "8 No more engine vibration .- - and dealer will be glad to idemonstrate 8 , ShaE it o T - ‘ g o Ny h without obligation. B % S : PG eR SR no more bumpy rides to tire him out Plymout . 3, Avore-—D : S fi”‘*“;‘%”fihw’\w“? St ove—De Luze Plymouth 4-door S . T — edan, P 1 -:n ::l:t::::finn::i::’% A \;; b. factory, Detroit, oub’j:?‘::h 3 . Duplate Safety Plate Glass through- ’ out for low extra charge (only $lO on De Luxe Sedan). - 'T s r" E BEST ENGINEERED NEw P Y $ s.ract . mWY B 8 IVE F. 0.8. FACTORY WA A lio 4 Mol | €T ST B eA i x DETROIT y » ; fl el & s 285 § N R Fabs ; s B b e e resentatives are to be nominated and elected this year, : | However, before the time for closing entries has elapsed, in all probability, there will be | several candidates seeking the g offices, 3 At one time, this county had as much, if not*misre than any county in the state to ask of the legisla ture 'in " the way of u,miropniations.l but now that the plan hag heenl changed and approriations are wdé in one lump sum and al]o-l cated to the various educational | institutions, ‘the local representa- | tive is not caled upon for so much { concern as was the case in former vearg. But; even at that, Clarke' county should select the best men available as representatives emd' senator, | Visitor (to butler who is showing him through the pic ture gallery) — “That's a fine po'r‘znait! Is it an old master?” Butler—*'No, that 's the old mis sus:"—Washington = Labor. @?" Major Archibald T. Colley, who ‘for a number of years was head of the military de partment of the University of Georgia, has been retired by the War Department, _ln the Rambler’'s column, of the Sunday American and Georgian, They're Off! the fellowing interesting item ;ap peared: sk S “Major Anchibald T. Chiley has retived. 'WItR a fine record ‘of se’-l'- vice in' peace time and war, the Georgian, who served with distine tion duting the World ‘War and came home as commandant of the R. O. T. C. at the University of Georgia, now ]_ivbs with “his wife and daughter in Whshington, Ga.. Major Colley is gne of the most widely belovéd alumni of the state university. althhough he _obtained his degree only a few years ago heecause he went to West Point | while an undergraduate. Ah ac | complished ‘horseman and soldier, 'the major ‘was indulgent and be {lovod as a cavalry officer, althiough { his outfits never lacked diseipline, He followed the same principles at the university, where he remained ‘eight years. Major Colley’s most renowned work .was with the army cf occupation following the Ar ,mistice, where his work of rehabi { litation amorig ‘the Germans won the 'commendation of General Per shing and officials of Bsth the American and German govern ments. Major Colley only three years ago ' finished the necessary undergraduate work for his degree | at Georgia, althoudgh he finished | West Point high in his class.” ‘ it e | Seaplane Brings in 5 Per , sons From Cruiser, and I 4 From Derelict. ‘ ! MIAMI, FLA, —(®)—Nine per sons, missing on two fishing boats’ since Sunday, were rescued Mon-} day by the coast guard seaplane. Arcturus, after they had spent an] unconfortabe night aboard theh'j ’craft in cold, wind-swept walfilrs. | I From ‘the auxiliary cruiser D wn| which set out early Sunday for the| gulf stréam, and failed to return on schedule; the seaplane hrought‘ I. S. Copelan¥, his son, Billy 5, of Coral Gables and Mr. and Mrs.' John Calhoun and ther daughter,l Dorothy, 17, ,of Miami. Copeland is head of a soft-drink bottling company here. . ; Four Cubans were rescued from a concrete-bottom derelict, which 'lies in Biscayne bay a mile south least of the Miami river inlet, wherg they were stranded after their | [rowboat was stovein and sank. ‘ ls Survivor of the Dawn said they ecame stranded on coral flats | ;south of Cape Florida light and were | ‘unable to maneuver the craft free ’of the obstruction. They are af-' ixorded some protection from the «cold by the boat’s cabin, | The Cubang were blue with coldl when the Arcturus reached them. | Hunters of This Section to Meet Wednesday Night . A meeting of all hunters in thig gection - will -be held at the City Hall Wednesday night at 8 o'clock for the purpose of forming a per ‘mament group to further preser ‘vation of wild life, passage of ade ‘quate hunting and fishing laws by )fthe staté” legislacve bodies, and ‘the establishment of an' effective ‘hunting/ and fishing department 'for Gec‘rgia, . ‘ . - E. E. Lamkin who was e¢lect ed temporary chairman of the group ';at a ~meeting held by Lewis Wright of the state game and fish 'department last week, will be in charge 'of the meeting © Wednes day, and has sent over 300 in }vitati‘ons .to iuterested persons ' Satuday. Anyone who did not re ’ceive an invitation, and is inmrestl-:; ed in the meeting is cordially in vited to attend. A permanent chairman will be elected at the . meeting, it is ans ‘nounced. Tuesday Last Day to File Court Cases Here All suite in Clarke superior court mvt ‘be filed hy Tuesday night, the suits are to come to trial in the coming term, : 4 Superior court will ‘convene, as Lsual, on the first Monday in April, Wwhich is April 2, and a law pro vdes that all ‘suits tried jn super ior court must be filed at least 20 days before court begins. MONDAY, MARCH 12, 1534 v ~ THREE MINUTE; - When you have one of thos, ;lt’nt, nerve-racking headach, from inorganic causes, you can we 00th. \ ¢ " Noas ing reliet i three i ;'"z, Minutes I‘.’ | ki G ,r;“‘".»l_ MO " o reliabje 1 ’ £3( pleasum»[h.mk‘l | ame, WL remedy. B. 0» 1S prepareq 1, ¥ . 2gk e registereq Dhar. WLA macist, . s ";-;-.5:' nounded opt B differen; prineipj, L from most rejjer. :_jé:...-;{ giving agencieg f A GE in that it ONtaing kN several ingreg. R ients go blendeq and proportioned as to accompligy in a few minutes what we. he. lieve no one drug formujy Can do in 80 short a time, “B. (y* shoulg also be used for the relief of mys. cular aches. and pains, ommon colds and neuralgia; for reducing fever and quieting a distreggeq nervous system without ODiateg, narcotics or jsuch habit forming drugs. Get “B. C.” in 10c ang %e padkages, wherever drugs are sol —-Advertisemem - Attention Students! Account closing of University of Georgia after examination, Cen. tral of Georgia Railway train 73 Friday, March 16th, will be helg until 6:00 P.M., and will be oper. ated through to Macon on fagt schedule, strictly &as a passenger train, Coach fares, 1% cents per mile will be in effect. Sample one-way coach fares: To Macon, $1.59: to Albany. $3.09: to Waycross, $4.25; to Cordele, $2.56; 'to Savannah, $3.67, For further informatipn, ’phone 640 or 1046. CENTRAL OF GEORGIA RAILWAY Geo. T. Beeland, Commercial Agent 612 Southern Mutual Building g A ' 3 - " i 4 F e . .o 4 g “ ook W d s"V o, WL\ : 3 t\\.,»" : Listen in every Monday night at 9:30, beginning March 12th, to Penry.Bechtel and his Woco- Pepsters supported by a cast of outstanding vocalists, WSB . 9:30 PM. (Central Time) .. Monday Nights WOFFORD OIL (0.