Newspaper Page Text
SUNDAY, JUNE 15, 1952,
Radio Clock
wWGAU-CBS
1340 AM -99.5 FM
SUNDAY MORNING
6:so—slgn On.
6 55==News.
7.oo—Sunday Morning Serenade.
8:00—CBS News,
g 15=The Gospel Light.
g 45—Yesterday, Today and
Tomorrow,
9:oo—"he Bible, the Book to
Live By.
9:ls—The Gospel Messengers.
9:4s—News.
0:00--Forum Class Discussion,
I:oo—Music to Please,
I'ls—West End Baptist Church.
SUNDAY AFTERNOON
12:15—The Home Worship Hour.
I:oo—This Week in Politics.
1-15—Music for Sunday.
2:oo—String Serenade (CBS).
2-30—Boulevard Baptist Church
Choir.
3.oo—Masterworks of Music.
4 00—Main Street Musical Hall
CBS).
2:3o—Band of the Day (CBS).
s:oo—King Arthur Godfrey’s
Roundtable (CBS).
s:3o—Admiral’s World News
(CBS).
S:SS—CBS News.
SUNDAY EVENING
6:oo—Meet Millie (CBS).
6:3o—oOur Miss Brooks (CBS).
7.oo==December Bride (CBS).
7:3o=Amos 'n Andy.
B:oo—Frank Fontaine Show
(CBS).
B:3o—Phillip Moris Playhouse
(CBS).
9:oo—Screen Guild Theater
{CBS).
9:3o—My ¥Friend Irma (CBS).
10:00—~Inside Athens.
10:05—Leaders Who Serve.
10:15—~Show Tunes.
10:30—Syncopation Piece (CBS).
11:00—CRS News and the World
Tonight (CBS).
11:15=Music Amrerica loves.
12:00—CBS News.
12:05—Sign Off.
MONDAY MORNING
6:2o—Sign On.
6:2s—News,
6:3o—Strength for the Day.
6:4s—Hillbilly Time Down South.
7:oo—~Harmony Time.
7:ls=Good Morning Circle.
7:3o—=World News Briefs.
I:3s—=Community Calendar.
7:40—-The Scoreboard.
7:4s—Breakfast Edition, WGAU
News. k
8:00—CBS. World News Roundup
(CBS). _
§'ls=—Market Calls.
8:30—-Music Shop Parade.
9.OO—~CBS News of America
({CBS).
9:15--Hymns of All Churchies.
9:3o—Woman’s Whirl,
9:4s—Btar Gazing.
9:535—L0cal News. :
o:oo—Arthur Godfrey (CBS).
I:3o—Ring the Bell.
I:4s—Rosemary (CBS).
2:oo—~Wendy Warren and News
(CBS).
MONDAY AFTERNOON
15—Mid-Day Roundup of
News.
30—Romance of Helen Trent
(CBS).
{s=Joe Emerson Hymn Time.
00—Big Sister (CBS).
15—Ma Perkins (CBS).
30-Young Dr. Malone (CBS).
45—The Guiding Light (CBS).
00—Grady Cole (CBS).
00—Second Mrs. Burton
(CBS).
15—Perry Mason (CBS).
30—Nora Drake (CBS).
45—The Brighter Day (CBS).
00—For 'Those Who Gave Most.
15—This I Believe.
20—Music For You.
30—Lucky Radio Serial
Number Contest.
15—Hillbilly Matinee.
30—1340 Platter Party.
45—Curt Massey Orchestra
(CBS).
falo Raceway at Hamburg,
~ will spensor two SIO,OOO
' money stakes this season—
uffalo Anniversary Trot and
Village Farm Pace.
f Arkonsas Traveler |
3 Point e 4
4 Former .we
Russian ruler
5 Feminine
+ appellation
6 Dinner course
7 Erects
8 Conjunctions
9 Quoting
10 Sharper
HORIZONTAL
1,7 Capital of
Arkansas
11 Concord §
12 Iroquoian
Indian
13 Split ¢
14 Flower
16 Dined
AV Viial pyci
13 Dibble
15 Rot flax by
5 exposure
3 Half anem .
24 Arabian
25 Clamp J
26 Mine shaft hut
27 Dry
MWian . o
30 Scottish alder
17 More |
uncommeon 3
19 Sufflx h 2 $
20 Through ... |
21 Abstract being:
22 Seine ;
23 Posture
27 Agricuture
(ab.) :
28 River (Bp.)
20 CH e
FIYTEr EEEE)
FrititiELLL
Tt ri e
T e
s g T
TP [T
I P
I me
P T
T P
TP
FOr e
e P
] PO
<7 Ibbon
31 Mimig
32 Silkworm
33 Tennis stroke
85 Arkansas is
X thQ “"——!
~ State'
88 Evcrsr«i\;’;
9B wa
41 N::,' &’m,...
port
43 Friend (Fr.y
44 Modified in
color
47 Russian
communily
48 Stair
32 Sk
Orientgd
w.
B 4 Py
24 Fillip
5 Laslaty A%
4+ VERTYCALR
(e ha of
o ity
2 Inset 7700
SUNDAY MORNING '
6:3o—Sign On.
6:3o—Folkx Music (Hillbilly),
7:00—Good Will Choir,
7:3o—Amazing Grace.
B:oo—The Sterchi Trio.
8:30—Good Tidings Broadcast,
9:oo———Harmony Trio,
9:3o—Central Baptist Church,
10:00—News,
10:10—U. § Ofticial Weather
Report,
10:15—01d Favarites,
11:00—Meditation,
11:10—News.
11:15—Church Services
(First Baptist Church),
SUNDAY AFTERNOON
12:15—Rev. C. E. Vaughn,
I:oo—News.
1:10—U. S. Official Weather
Report.
I:ls—Souvenir Songs.
I:3o—Silvey Sunday Serenade.
2:oo—Major League Game of the
Day (Boston at Chicago—
American).
4:oo—News.
4:ls—Revolving Bandstand,
SUNDAY EVENING
6:oo—Proudly We Hail.
6:3o—Special Father’s Day
Program. . 3
7:oo—Candlelight and Silver,
7:3O—UN Story.
7:4s—Sunday Summary.
B:oo—Church Services—
First Baptist Church.
9:oo—News Check.
9:ls—Curtain Calls.
10:00-—Concert Favorites.
11:00—News in a Nutshell.
11:05—Make Mine Music.
12:00—Stardusting.
12:25—News Nightcap,
12:30—Sign Off.
MONDAY MORNING
s:3o—Sign On.
s:3o—Reveille Roundup.
5:55—G00d Morning News.
6:oo—Reveille Roundup.
6:4s—Ford Farm Time.
7:oo—News.
7:os—Glory Bells.
7:3o—Red’s Almanac.
B:oo—News.
B:ls—U. S. Official Weather
Report.
B:2o—The Musical Clock.
B:ss—John Conte Little Show.
9:oo—The Morning Devotional.
9:IS—WRFC Trading Post.
9:3o—Song Surprise.
9:3s—Evelyn Knight.
9:4s—The Feminine Agenda.
10:00—Anything Goes.
10:25—News.
10:30—The Blessed Hope.
11:00—-W. C. T. U. .
11:15—The Chuck Wagon.
MONDAY AFTERNOON
12:00—Whitmire Harmony Time.
12:15—Today’s Headlines. A
12:30—Leon and Red. -
12:45—Smiley Burnette.
I:oo—News.
I:OS—U. S. Official Weather
Report.
I:lo—Major League Game of the
' Day (Pittsburgh at Phila
delphia — National),
3:oo—News.
3:os—Record Room.
3:4s—Hive of Jive.
4:30—-The Record Room.
s:3o—The Lone Ranger.
BIBLE CHAPTER MISSING
RICHMOND, Va.—(AP)— The
Rev. G. Houston Patterson of
Bluefield, W. Va., found a chap
ter missing in the Bible—much to
his embarrassment.
He was conducting the bacca
laureate service for the graduating
class of Union Theological Semi
nary. For several minutes, he
thumbed the massive Bible in the
pulpit while the audience waited
and watched. 3
Finally, he said: “I will read
the 23rd Psalm.”
A bit red-faced, he then added:
“I am reading this psalm today for
a very special reason. It is one
with which I ho* you will never
be confronted. I find myself with
a Bible from which the 23rd chap
ter of St. Luke is unaccountably
missing.”
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h«ODROPOTES INERMIS: Out
of the Korean brush, a wierd
Marines Find
Fang-Toothed
Deer In Korea
By NEA Service
WASHINGTON —(NEA) —Ko
rean geports that Leathernecks
had encountered ‘“‘sabertoothed” or
“fanged” deer had Marine Corps
Headquarters here worried for a
bit.
But Dr. Henry W. Setzer at the
U. S. National Museum confirmed
that the long-toothed deer were
found in Korea as well as in the
Yangtze River Valley of China.
And Ernest P. Walker, assistant
director of the National Zoolo
gical Park in Washington, showed
live specimens to Marines to
prove the stories from the fight
ing front.
The toothy deer—Hydropotes
inermis — is known as a water
deer or swamp deer. It grows as
large as a big sheep dog, and the
buck bears tusks curving down
ward from the upper jaw in lieu
of antlers.
Capt. Richard W. Cline, of
Orange, Calif., reported bagging
one of the deer while stalking
pheasants in the Po-Hang area of
Korea. When the animal sprang
out of the underbrush, Cline, an
avid hunter, dropped it at 30 ?et
with a load of number eight shot.
He and other Marine fliers
were urged by Korean farmers to
kill the deer. The animals are
great crop destroyers and the Ko
reans have a superstition that the
deer’s bite is fatal.
In any event, the Marines were
glad: to be forewarned of any deer
inn Korea that <can bare their
teeth. So can the Marines,
Georgia Quest
For Maid Of
Cotfon Begun
This year, through county and
district elimination contests, Geor
gia will select a-qualified young
lady to represent the state in the
Maid of Cotton finals at Memphis,
Tennessee.
County cotton committees are
now busy making plans to hold
county, contests to select the local
winner who will compete in her
congressional district for the dis
trict contest. Each district will
send a contestant to the state fin
als in Alanta in late October.
The girl selected in Atlanta as
Gedrgia Maid of Cotton will make
a good-will tour of the principal
cities of Georgia before competing
in the national finals in Memphis
in late December or early Janu
ary. She will also receive coaching
and training before she competes
in the national finals.
The Georgia Unit of the Nation
al Cotton Council is sponsoring
the contest in Georgia this year
with the entire Georgia cotton in
dustry as a group supporting it.
According to Mr. Frank Pope,
Chairman, Georgia Unit, National
Cotton Council, “The Maid of Cot=
ton Contest is more than a Beauty
Contest. The judges will be re
quested to consider three points in
making their selections: (1) Beau
ty, (2) Personality, and (3) Back
ground and Training, Mr. Pope
added.
In commenting on these re
quirements, Mr. J. E. Moses, Sec
retary, Georgia Cottonseed Crush
ers Association, and State Com
mittee Chairman, said, “We know
Georgia has a girl that can win the
1953 Maid of Cotton title, and
through county and district and
state contests, we hope to be able
to find a girl that will win.
Must Be Photogenic
“The 1953 Maid of Cotton must
be photogenic, because tens of
thousands of people will see her
in print, on television, and in
movie reels,” continued Mr.
Moses. “She must have a good
figure. We are not necessarily
looking for Veénus, and the Maid
will not be photographed in a
bathing suit, but she will be pho
tographed in play suits, dresses,
and sport clothes, and she will
need a figure that will make her
and the garments she wears look
good,
| * “She must be potentially a good
' model. The Maid will appear with
professional models in the most
fashionable style shows in the na
tion, at a eongressional reception
in Washington, and before. fash
jonable audiences in Paris and
other cities on the continent.
wghe must have the sort of per
sonality that will make people like
her. She must have audience ap
peal, and she should be easy to
manage and easy to get along
with,” Mr. Moses emphasized.
THE BANNER-HERALD,
0f Allocation
The Directors of the Georgia
Education Association at a meet
ing held June 6, after hearing re
ports from eleven GEA District
meetings held during May, voted
to oppose a return to a system of
allocation of State funds and au
thorized a campaign to inform the
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price tor the Buick GPECIAL ‘
9-doof, 6—pussengor gedan
MODEL 480 (ustrated) .
Op'\:;v\u‘ eauif ment, @ cossories: state ond tocal loxes, W e,
oddni')nu‘ prices ™ vary slightly n od\o'\nmg commuflh\os due \
to shipping charges: All prices subject to chang® withou! noticee
\
E put the price of this Buick in big type
; » because we're proud of it.
It’s the price of the six-passenger, two-door
SPEClAL—ready to roll.
When you put this price against the local
delivered prices of other cars that folks
usually associate with Buick—you’ll have a
hard time finding a single one as low. |
When you put this price against what you’ll
pay for cars with the reputation of being
“lower priced”’—you’ll find why this Buick
gives them such keen competition.
And—if you want to go in for extras—you can
still add up what goes on the bill of sale of other
cars and a Buick—you’ll find out that Buick'’s
an even greater buy.
We know that price is important to a lot of
folks, especially with the price of groceries—
and even baby shoes—where they are today.
But you also want some fun for your money—
and that’s where a Buick really shines.
Just wait till you give a gentle nudge to the
GEORGIA MOTORS INC.
““YOUR BUICK DEALER FOR 22 YEARS"
Warren C. Thurmond, President.
Broad and Lumpkin Phone 3141
OUT OUR WAY
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BORN THIRTY YEARS TOO SOON (Liiwv sot oTP |RI.3N /) THE SADDLE = |
ATHENS, GEORGIA
membership of the GEA the im
plications of a return to alloea~-
tions,
The GEA is taking the position
that all state income from all
sources should eontinue, as at pre
sen:i to be placed in the general
fund and that appropriations to all
departments should be made by
the legislature, fresh from election
by the people every two years.
GEA was represented on the
1945 Constitutional Revision Com
mittee which changed the method
of distribution of state funds from
allocations to the present method
of placing all funds in the general
BY J. R. WILLIAMS
treasury, and agreed to tv. up
allocations for education use
it felt the present method fair and
equitable.
In the November 4 General
Election, the people will vote on
an amendment of the Georgia
Constitution which would provide
that the appropriation to the high
way department would be not less
than the total income from all
motor fuel and motor vehicle
taxes for the year previous, thus
guaranteeing the appropriations
to the highway department, while
all other departments of govern
ment would not be so protected.
Want to try it? Why not P We're willing to let
this beauteous bundle of high-powered energy
speak for itself.
Equipment, accessories, trim and models are subject 4o ehange withoud
BOLICE
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
Shotld fhls eo affon prévis!
be voted the State funds teo the
county oommissioners for repalr
and maintenance purposes would
be Juarnntud while the State
funds to the éomgfiv and Ind:g
enflent Boards of Education for the
gayment of Teachers salaries and
us Drivers salariegs and the op
eration of the public sehocls would
not be guaranteed.
Hotace Lisenbee, pitching for
the Philadelphia A’s against the
White Sox in 1936, allowed the
Chicago team a total of 26 hits.
power that’s under that big, broad hood and
feel your shoulders sink back as this beauty
takes off.
You'll feel like the million dollars it cost to
perfect its ride, when you sample the steady
smoothness of its gait.
It’s eager, alert, alive—makes each mile a new
experience.
! Wheubettemutomeb;lescre T
Gure is
true
for 52
PAGE ELEVEN
| NEPAL DELEGATION
KHATMANDU, Ne m
Burma's Nopr'populn ’l.ll
send a goodwill delegation
pal, Nepall congress official® am
‘nounced.
~ The mission, under the
of the All-Burma Nepali w::
‘tlon, will bring greetings fropp the
600,000 Nepalis in Burma to "pa
lese leaders.
Although Bob Feller strugk out
18 Detroit Tigers in a game in
1938, his Cleveland Indians lost
the contest.
MAJOR HOOPLE