Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWO
Funeral Notice
DANIEL.—Died Tuesday, Novem
¥aer 27th, at her home in Wat
kinsville, Ga., Mrs. Ella Ema
line Daniel, wife of Mr. Ed T.
- Daniel. She is survived by her
husband; four daughters, Mrs.
Huland Arthur, Mrs. Johnnie
Wilson, Mrs. Bill Self, Watkins
ville, Ga.; Mrs. Chester Arthur,
Athens; two sons, Mr. Carlton
Daniel, Athens; Mr. Eddie Tho
imas Daniel, Jr.,, Whitehall; three
sisters, Mrs. Onie White, Win
der; Mrs. Azzalee Coulter, Mrs.
Audrey Connally, Athens; three
brothers, Mr. Earl Fowler, Mr,
Morgan Fowler, Mr. Dewey
Fowler, Athens. The funeral
was this, Wednesday afternoon,
November 28th, at three-thirty
o'clock fromr Bernstein's Chapel.
Nephews served as pallbearers.
Rev. M. H. Conway officiated.
Interment was in Lester cemc
tery. Bernstein Funeral Home.
FOWLER.—The friends and rela
tives of Mr. and Mrs. Sidney
Fowler, Comer, Ga.; Mary
Elaine Fowler, Eva Ray Fowler, ‘
Barbara Sue Fowler, Sandra
Gail Fowler, Mr. and Mrs. E. F.
Fowler, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Sat
terfield, Mrg. Renie Pierce, Miss
Geneva Fowler, all of Comer,
Ga.: Mr. and Mrs. Newt Scog
ins, Wrightsville, Ga.; Mr.
Robert Fowler, Comer; and Mr.
and Mrs. A. C. Fowler, Wrights
ville, Ga., are invited to attend
the funeral of Mr. Sidney Fow
ler, Friday afternoon, November
30th, at two o’clock from Comer
Baptist Church. Rev. J. T. Bates
will officiate. Interment will be
in Comer cemetery. Bernstein
Funeral Home.
Hares have long ears and long
legs. They are born with a well
developed coat of fur, and with
their eyes open. ¥
De you have a good photo por
trait of your Mother and Faih
er? For Christmas give your
own children your own por
tralt as they know you now.
GATES STUDIO
235 N. Lumpkin St.
Your New York Photographer.
i
[y
gLa
Bl
S
BARGAIN!
@Wa
1950 FORD Business §
flConpe—Original grey
finish, good heater,
excellent tires, V-8 motor.
Spotless throughout, .. 1375.00
19506 FORD Custom
Fordor Sedan —- Ori
ginal Hawthorne green
finish, WSW tires, radio and
heater plus other accessories.
Driven only 11,000 miles. An
immaculate car ...... $1595.00
| 1947 CHEVROLET
“Fleetline” 2 Dooy Se
dan—Sparkling black
finish, excellent tires, radio
and heater, seat covers and
back-up lights. Re-newed and
guaranteed. ......:.... 1065.00
1949 FORD Tudor Se
dan—Culver blue fin
ish, radio and heater,
seat covers, excellent tires,
thoroughly reconditioned. A
real bargain at ..... $1,195.00
1941 FORD Cenverti
ble Club Coupe, Good
black finish, excellent
tires, heater, mechanically re~
conditioned, sound top. Looks
and runs good. ........ 465.00
MANY OTHER CARS AND
TRUCKS TO SELECT FROM
CREDIT AND TERMS
HANDLED IN OUR OFFICE
Ed Rock — Mac Mewborn
Bill Swain — Dan Dupree
Clarence Anthony
Broad at Pulaski Phone 1697
sce the cor
you Sant
before It'; geno!
News Of Fires,
Accidents, And
Police Action
’et X TONE SN s
George H. Nail, of Kent, Ala,,
was arrested last Saturday night
at a local hotel for suspicion of
lpassing bad checks, said Police
Chief Clarence Roberts today.
| Upon further investigation it
'was found that he had passed
checks at Gunn'’s Clothing Store,
Walter R. Thomas Jewelers, Fick
etts Jewelers, Holman Hotel, and
Brooks Shoe Store here. He also
passed a bad check at Paul Butts
Grocery in Arnoldsville, according
to Chief Roberts.
Warrants were sworn out for his
arrest by each party involved.
The prosecutors, in a Justice of
the Peace hearing this morning,
agreed not to press the charges on
condition that he make good the
checks and get out of town.
Lt. Hardy, Sheriff Tommy Huff
and Chief Roberts made the ar
rest.
Recorder’s Court
In Recorder’s Court, a man for
feited a $201.50 bond and his dri
ver's license was suspended for 60
days when he was found guilty of
operating a vehicle while under
the influence of intoxicants.
The city is still putting the
pressure on those auto owners
who have not registered their cars
under the city ordinance. Three
persons were fined $6.50 in Recor
der’'s Court for failing to register
their cars under the motor vehicle
ordinance.
Cliff Dotson, colored employe of
Hodgson Oil Refining Company,
last night lost a leg.as the result
of an accident at the plant about
8:15 o’clock. o
Dotson’s leg became entangled
in a cotton seed conveyor and
Bernstein's ambulance was called.
The crew of the ambulance, work
ing with emp®yes of the plant,
managed after an hour-and-a-half
by using hydraulic jacks, to free
Dotson.
He was taken to a local hospital
in the ambulance, and it was
necessary to amputate the leg. His
condition was reported today as
“good” by hospital attaches.
Four-Alarm Fire
In Washington
WASHINGTON, Nov. 28— (AP) |
—An early morning !our-alarm‘
fire swept through gne business
building and damagag another to
day in downtown Washington —
only a stone’s throw from govern
ment buildings and two large
hotels.
The fire department estimated
damage at SIO,OOO.
Firemen bpattling the flames in
below-freezing weather confined
damage to two Eleventh Street
buildings across the street from
the Washington Evening Star, and
around the coner from FBI
headquarters.
A fireman, Pvt. Andrew -Gold
smith, was seriously injured when
an air blast from an exploding
third floor window blew him off
a 40-foot ladder.
One three-story building oc
cupied by a dance hall, a billiard
parlor and a pawnbroker ex
change was gutted. A second hous=
ing a chain drug store, watch re
pair shop and a photographer’s
studio was damaged.
~ Nearby are two large hotels —
the Raleigh and the Harrington —
‘and several department stores and
government buildings. The latter
include the Jutice Department and
Post Office Department.
+ The Evening Star, one of the
city’s largest newspapers, is locat
ed just across the street. The As
sociated Press offices are in this
building.
Eighth |
(Continued From Page Oue)
ing that “as of this date tirere is
no cease-fire in Korea.”
The ground war was su quiet
that:
Chinese soldiers played volley
bal! along one stretch of the west
ern front while Allied outposts
looked on with interest.
For the first time the U. S.
Eighth Army communique an
nounced the exact hour of the few
small actions that broke out along
the 145-mile provisional cease-fire
line.
. But the Army issued this state
i ment: “As of this date there is no
cease-fire in Korea.
“There is hope, but that hope
must not be sabotaged by wishful
thinking.”
The 14 Chinese volleyball play
ers made no attempt to hide their
movements, AP Correspondent
Milo Farneti reported. He said
Allied units made no attempt to
break up the game.
Apparently the Red and United
Nations front line fighting men
alike were enjoying the pause in
battle that developed suddenly
after the agreement on a provi
sional cease-fire line was reached
st Panmunjom Tuesday.
Farneti said special Allied pa
trols into enemy territory were
called off on the Western front
| Wednesday after line commanders
got word not to attack for the
present.
The word filtered down Tues~
day night through various head
quarters to hold the main line on
the hills. 0
A division officer said Allied
artillery observers made several
sightings of Red troops Wednesday
but that the U. N. guns were kept
bsilent.
l An inch of rainfall on a'; acre
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water.
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PROPOSED TAX IS LAST STR A W _Enraged at prospect of new autobahn tax,
West German motorists prophesy that soon the enly things on German roads will be camels.
Japs Hope For Early
Treaty Ratification
BY EDWARD E. BOMAR
WASHINGTDN, Nov. 28.—(AP)—Prime Minister Yo
shida voiced hope today that Japan’s World War II foes
will quickly ratify the Japanese peace treaty and make his
country “an active and useful member of the family of
nations.”
Yoshida’s message was delivered
by an envoy who turned over to
the State Department an official
copy of the treaty as ratified this
month by the Japanese Parlia
ment, and signed by Emperor Hi
rohio. Like a second document
delivered to the State Department
—a Japanese ratified copy of a
peacetime security treaty with the
U. S.—the peace treaty was bound
in velvet and impressed with the
imperial erysanthemum of Japan.
Noting that ratification was
voted by an overwhelming ma
jority of the Japanese Parliament,
Yoshida expressed Japan’s appre
ciation of “the initiative and lead
ership taken by the U. S. govern
ment” in bringing about the peace
settlement.
“T confidently hope,” he added,
“that ratifications by other powers
will follow in quick succession for
consummation of the peace and
for admission of Japan as an ac
tive and useful member in the
family of nations.” 3
Undersecretary of State James
E. Webb received the documents,
in a State Department ceremony.
He said that ratification by Japan
was ‘“an historic mark on the road
to peace in the Pacific.” Webb
said the U. S. will promptly notify
the 47 other governments which
signed the peace treaty that Japan
has now formally accepted it. The
ceremony was Japan’s final offi
cial act in making peace with the
non-Communist world war two
allies who defeated her.
(SC Announces
txam For Statham
Rural Carrier
The United States Civil Service
Commission has announced an ex
amination to fill the position of
rural carrier at Statham, Georgia
The examination will be held at
Winder, Georgia. »
Receipt of applications will close
on December 13, 1951.
The date of examination will be
stated on admission cards mailed
to applicants after the closing date
for receipt of applications.
Salary
On a standard daily route of
30 miles, the salarw of a rural
carrier is $3,158, with $20.00 per
year additional for each ‘hile or
major fraction in excess thereof.
Salaries on shorter routes or routes
with less frequent service are pro
portionately less.
Rural carriers whose services
are satisfactory receive regular
promotions.
Vehicle Equipment
All rural carriers must furnish
‘and maintain, at their own ex
pense, sufficient wehicle equip
'ment for the prompt handling of
‘the mails. They are allowed an
'equipment maintenance of 9¢ per
'mile on the basis of the daily
mileage scheduled (this amounts
to $823.50 per year for a 30-mile
route).
The examination will be open
only to citizens of, or persons who
owe allegiance to, the United
States who are actually residing
in the territory served by the Post
Office where the vacancy exists,
who have been actually residing
there for cue year next preceding
the closing date for receipt of ap
plications, and who meet the other
requirements set forth in Form
AN-1977. Both men and women, if
qualified, may enter this examina
fion, but appointing officers have
the legal right to especify the sex
-desired 'in requesting certifica
tion of eligibles.
Form ANMN-1977 and application
blanks can be obtained from the
vacancy office mentioned above or
the United States Civil Service
Commission at Washington 25, D.
C. Applications must be on file
| with the Commission at Washing
lton 25, D. C., prior to the close of
business on the date specified
'abovo.
i The most commeoen type of wind
s today is a steel sail wind-
Imill similar to that developed by
!Perry in 1883.
{ ot i Gt o
i Windmills first became comman
, in Germany, the Netherlands and
| the surrounding country.
THE n.am\'rm}_z‘-_!msfu_.p. ATHENS, GEPHGIN |
Prominent Harl
County Woman
Taken By Death
HARTWELL, Nov. 28—Mrs. J.
H. Skelton Sr. 80, prominent
Hart wellmatron and widow of
the late Senator Skelton of Hart
County, died late Tuesday in an
Anderson ,S. C., hospital, follow=-
ing an illness of six months.
Funeral services are to be held
in the First Baptist Church in
Hartwell at 3 p. m. Thursday.
Mrs. Skelton was a former
president of the Tenth District
PTA and was a member of the
DAR, UDC, Women’s Club and
the Garden Club. Her late hus
band served three terms as State
Senator from the 30th Senatorial
District.
Survivors include two daugh
ters, Mrs. W. L. Brown of Hart=
well, Mrs. E. McGurkin of Lynch
burg, Va.; seven sons, Emmet A.
Skelton of Atlanta; Col. J. H.
Skelton Jr., of the U .S. Army,
Atlanta; High Skelton of Atlanta;
Ralph T. Skelton of Decatur; Wil
liom Cary Skelton, solicitor gen
eral of the Northern Judicial Cir
cuit, of Hartwell; Lt. Cindr. Marion
L. Skelton, U, S. Navy, New Or
leans; a sister, Mrs. J. C. Cash
of Thomson and one brother, I
V. Thornton of Hartwell.
(Continued From Page One)
ing County.
In addition to membership in
numerous educational organiza
tion, he was a member of the Dal
las Baptist Church, the Dallas
Community Service Club and the
Masons. He was a leader and
participant in numerous civic un
dertakings in his communty, to
which he gave unselfishly of his
time and energy.
Mr. Fleeman is survived by his
wife, the former Miriam O’Kelley;
two daughters, Miriam O’Kelley
Fleeman and Lucy Ann Fleeman
of Dallas; mother, Mrs. C. G. Flee
man, Winterville; sister, Mrs.
Glenn Barnett, Atlanta; three
brothers, James W. Fleeman, Wil
liam J. Fleeman and Robert C.
Fleeman, all of Winterville.
Funeral services will be held
from Dallas Baptist Church Thurs
day morning at 11 o’clock and in
terment will be in Winterville
Cemetery at 3:30 o'clock in the
afternoon of the same day.
Viciory
(Continued From Page One)
P. Farrar, Mr. and Mrs. H. T. Cog
gin, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Crymes,
Mr. and Mrs. George Strother, jr.,
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Hale, Mr, and
Mrs. Clyde Fitzgerald, Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Fowler, Mr. and Mrs.
Nelson Hitchcock, Mr. and Mrs.
Durward Watson, Mr. and Mrs.
Walter Crawford, Mr. and Mrs.
H. A. Haygcod.
The dinner tonight will be held
by Commander Smiley Wolfe, and
Thursday night by Commander J.
C. Stiles. Church leaders are now
confident that when the dinners
are over and the follow-up visita
tion of those not present at the din
ners is completed, the needed
$140,000 will have been pledged.
FUNERAL NOTICE
(COLORED)
WIMBUSH, MRS. ROSA MAE—
-123 Plum Street, died Novenrber
26, 1951. The friends and rela
tives of Mrs. Rosa M. Wimbush,
Athens, Ga.; Mrs. Effie Remson,
Mrs. Ella Reeve, Polkton, N. C,;
Mr. and Mrs. George Stanton,
Monroe, N. C.; Miss Grace
Stanton, Mr. and Mrs. A. R.
Thomas, Mr. and Mrs, ‘W. E.
Davis, all of Polkton, N. C., are
invited to attend the funeral of
Mrs. Rosa Mae Wimbush, Fri
day, November 30, 1951 at Polk
ton, N. C. Rev. E. H. Martin will
officiate, assisted by other min
isters. Interment in the Williams
cemetery. McWhorter Funeral
Home.
Clarke Co. ACP
For 1931 Ready,
Says PMA Head
Notice has been received from
the State PMA Committee that the
eligible practices and rates of as
sistance available to Clarke County
farmers under the 1952 Agricul
tural Conservation Program have
been approved, according to C. A.
Ward, chairman of the Clarke
County PMA Committee. |
At a recent meeting here in the
county, the county and community
PMA committees, the county
agent the county SCS technician,
‘and local representatives of the
Forest Service, Farmers Home
Administration, and the Oconee
River Soil Conservation District
reviewed the 1952 State and Na
tional Agricultural Conservation
Programs and selected the practi
ces on which assistance is needed
in the county. The following prac
tices were selected and will be in
cluded in the 1952 county program:
Austrian winter, Dixie and caley
peas, crimson clover, button or
subterranean clover, ryegrass
seeded in the fall of 1951 and
| 1952; kobe and Korean lespedeza
on cropfnd; seeding pastures with:
Louisiana white clover, ladino
clover, lespedeza sericea, kobe,
Korean, common lespedeza, Dal
lis grass, Kentucky 31 and alta
fescue, orchard grass; kudzu; les
pedeza sericea; liming material;
mineral fertilizers, basic slag;
planting forest trees.
The PMA Chairman emphasized
|the new requirement that every
farm operator who desires to par
ticipate in the 1952 program must
designate the practices which he
believes are most needed on his
l farm so conserve and improve the
soil for sustained production of
needed agricultural products. The
practices which the farm operator
and the county PMA committee
agree upon as the practices most
needed and practical on the farm
will constitute the Agricultural
Conservation Program for that
farm for 1952. T
“The trained agricultural tech
nician can tell the farmer what
conservation practices his farm
needs,” the chairman said, “but
the farmer himself is the only one
who knows which practices he can
carry out. He must fit his con
servation work into his system of
farming so as to continue to make
a living. The farmer knows bet
ter than anyone else how much
money he can spend on conserva
tion next year. That is why every
farm operator is being asked to
decide upon the practices that are
most needed and that he can car
ry out in 1952 with ACP Assis
tance.
“Of. course the farmer should
make use of any plan that has
been developed for his farm with
the assistance of the Soil Conser
vation Service or other agency, in
deciding upon the needed practi=-
ces he will undertake to carry out
next year.”
Every person who operates a
farm in the county has received or
will receive in the next few days
a Jetter containing a list of the
practices and payment rates in the
1952 county ACP. To be sure of
qualifying for assistance, the farm
operator must return the list of
practices designated for his farm
to the county PMA office not later
than January 31, 1952. The funds
available for 1952 ACP practices
are limited and a farmer who
fails to meet the deadline will
have no assurance of receiving
pr;)dgram assistance, the Chairman
said.
Christmas Parly
To Be Given
All Athens homes in which there
are discarded or broken toys, are
asked to donate them for the chil
dren’s Christmas Party to be given
Christmas morning at the VFW
Club on Sunset Drive.
Members of the club will repair
and repaint the toys and other
wise put them in shape for the
Christmas tree.
Everyone having toys they are
willing to donate, is asked to tele
phone 3067 and a member of the
club will call for the toys.
Last year the VFW gave its
first Christmas party for the chil
dren who otherwise might miss
Christmas joys, and more then
100 chiidren were guests.
Mrs. Susie Amis
Thomas Passes
Friends are saddened to learn of
the death of Mrs. Susie Amis
Thomas, who died unexpectedly
Sunday morning at her residence,
140 Culver Street, Macon, Ga.
Services were conducted Tues
day by Rev. Mack Anthony at
Memorial Chapel of Vineville
Methodist Church, of which she
was a member,
Mrs. Thomas was formerly of
Athens, but had resided in Ma
con for the past twenty-nine years,
and at the time of her death she
was head of the Decorating De
partment of Dunlap Roofing and
Flooring Company.
She was a popular member of
the Macon Quota Club,
Surviving are her husband,
James A. Thomas, jr.; a son, James
A. Thomas 111, and a grandson,
James A. Thomas IV, all of Ma
con; her mother, Mrs. J. W. Amis,
and a brother Dean Amis, of Ath
ens; another brother, Paxon Amis
of Chattsworth, Ga.; one sister,
Mrs. Frank Hazel, Fort Pierce,
Fla.; mother-in-law, Mrs. J. A.
Thomas of Macon. Her sister-in
law, Mrs. Dean Amis, i connected
with the local Red Cross Chapter.
(Continued From Page One)
devoted to arguing over the U. N.
proposals against military build
ups and for joint Allied-Commu-~
nist inspection teams.
The Communists said the ideas
were “inappropriate and imprac
tical,” “fantastic and impossible.”
United Nations negotiators said
they were essential to preventing
a resumption of the war.
Vice Admiral C. Turner Joy,
chief of the U. N. truce delega
tion, said these two provisions are
the meat of the Allied proposal for
supervising a truce. He added:
A 1 3
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FIRE STRIKES, you may hear one
! b» alarm ... or two . . . even a third.
‘But the biggest alarm of all is the alarm
in your heart.
_ “Was anybody caught inside? Anybody
(T know . ... hurt? . . . burned? How'd it
start? How much loss?” ".
You burn up with unsatisfied suspense
and curiosity . . . until you see your news-,
paper.
" You grab your paper and all the an
"swers are there. First, in detail, full of
Jocal color —as it never is anywhere clse.
* It's there with all the other news that
‘matters . . . Plus 2 hundred things you'll -
( find nowhere else.
It doesn’t take a fire. You can be just as
‘wrought up about a plan in the town
icouncil to widen your street. You never
{ know what’s coming . . .s 0 you read your
paper every day.
* Everybody else is just like you. Every-"
body reads the newspaper every day. To g
‘The newspaper is always ‘first with the most” ,
‘This message prepared by BUREAU OF ADVERTISING,
American Newspaper Publishers Association
and published in the inferests
of fuller understanding of mewspapers by
The Athens Banner - Herald
(Continued From Page One)
tor will become the Tax Assessor
and he will also be responsible for
the evaluation of all inventories,
The present Board of Tax Asses~
sors will R;.:;ome the Board of
Appeals. ix:mk prot;;ides trained
personnel to e the assessment
and gives the citizen an oppertu
nity to appear before the Board a
Appeals if he is not satisfied with
his assessment. The City of Ath=
ens has certainly gone a long way
to equalize tax assessments during
the past three years. It is believed
that this amendment will strength
en and foster such equalization in
all assessments.
. “W. N. DANNER.,”
Caudle’s
(Continued From Page One) ‘
vision. |
Paul V. Doyle, Chief Office Dep
uty.
The paper said Daniel F. Cun
ningham, assistant chief of the
Seizure and Sales Division, was re
instated.
The Chronicle said also that the
fate of James Smyth, suspended
collector in charge of the office
here, should be known today.
Further Shakeup
In Washington, an announce
ment was promised today of what
officials described as a further
shakeup affecting some field of
fices of the Internal Revenue Bu
reau. Six collectors have already
been fired, suspended or resigned
and dozens of lesser employes
have been let out or suspended.
The new announcement, by Com=-
missioner John B. Dunlap, was
said to involve at least several of
fices,
Before Caudle, fired two weeks
ago by President Truman for “out
side activities,” was excused by
the House subcommittee yester
day, his testimony brought out
that:
1. He had been the guest on two
a housewife, the fire sale can be just as
important as the fire.
5» That's why when you have something’
to sell, the newspaper is the one place to,
reach all the people all the time.
In advertising, why deal in fractions? ...
i Magazines reach only fractions of your‘
market. Each one appeals to some peoplc:
—not to others. No magazine is read by,
' everyone who can possibly buy.
® Radio and TV programs reach only"
fractions of your market. Each one ap
peals to only a special audience — sports
fans, homemakers, kids, etc. And how‘
. many of these can listen at the time you,
broadcast? :
! 'The newspaper talks to everybody in’
town. All your customers read the paper
— at the time they choose, for as long 23
they choose.
Only the newspaper is first with the
most news . . . the most people . .. the
, Jnost advertisers!
HUStEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1951,
—;_l——-—-—_—.—______, .
occasions of a Charlotte, N. ¢,
Textile Machinery Manufacturer
on expenses-paid fishing trips t,
Palm Beach, Fla., while his host
was under investigation on tay
fraud. Caudle said he didn’t knoy
that then. -
2. Accompanying him on ope
trip was Charles Oliphant, chief
counsel of ‘the Internal Revenye
Bureau—a top policy official in
determining what tax fraud cases
are referred to the Justice Depart
ment for prosecution,
3. Caudle’s Host, Troy White
head, Charlotte, N. C., textile ma
chinery manufacturer, got “relief”
from his tax troubles from Oli
phant. Caudle asid he “may have”
asked Oliphant to remove tax
liens from Whitehead’s property.
Fowler Services
Set For Friday
Sidney Fowler, veteran of World
War Two, died in Lawson General
Hospital in Atlanta Tuesday night
at 11:40 o’clock. Mr. Fowler was
28 years old and had been ill for
several months.
Services are to be conducted
Friday afternoon at 2 o’clock from
Comer Baptist Church with Rev.
J. T. Bates, pastor of Clarkesville
Baptist Church ,officiating.
Burial will follow in Comer
Cemetery, Bernstein Funeral
Home in charge of arrangements.
Mr. Fowler is survived by his
wife, Mrs. Emmaline Patton Tow
ler; four daughters, Mary Elaine
Fowler, Eva Ray Fowler, Bar
bara Sue Fowler and Sandra Gail
Fowler; parents Mr. and Mrs. E,
F. Fowler, Comer; four sisters,
Mrs. Fred Sattesfield, Mrs. Renie
Pierce and Miss Geneva Fowler,
all of Comer, and Mrs. Newt Scog
gins, Wrightsville; two brothers,
A. C. Fowler, Wrightsville, and
Robert Fowler, Comer.
He was a mnative of Jackson
County and had been a resident
of Comer for the past five years,
being a member of the Comer
Baptist Church.