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GEORGIA BAPTISTS TO HEAR
DENOMINATION'S LEADERS NEXT WEEK
ON BAPTIST 75 MILLION CAMPAIGN
DR. L. R. SCARBOROUGH. DR. GEORGE W. TRUETT, HON.
J. H. ANDERSON, MISS MALLORY AND OTHER WELL
KNOWN BAPTIST MEN AND WOMEN TO MAKE TOUR
OF ENTIRE STATE. BEGINNING SUNDAY.
By Louie D. Newton.
The most remarkable aeries of gath-
rings among the Baptists of Geor
gia in the history of the denomination
will begin Sunday morning, Septem
ber 28, and will continue through
Thursday.
Dr. L. R. Scarborough, director gen
eral of the Baptist 75 Million Cam
paign, and veil known leader among
Baptists for a number of years, Dr.
George W. Truett, recognized as the
greatest preacher of the denomination
in the South; Hon. T. H. Anderson,
president of the Tennessee Baptist
Convention, and leading laymen;
Miss Kathleen Mallory, Corresponding
Secretary of the W. B. M. U. of the
Southern Baptist Convention, Dr.
Arch C. Cree, director of the cam
paign in Georgia and secretary of
the State Mission Board. Ben S.
Thompson, chairman of the Laymen’s
Missionary Movement for Georgia,
and Mrs. Kate C. Wakefield, director
of the W. B. M. U. of Georgia, will
be the principal speakers for the tour.
Every one of these men and women
are leader and their addresses on the
campaign will furnish opportunity to
every Baptist in the state to come in
close touch with the biggest thing
Baptists have tackled.
THE TOUR
The tour will begin at Gainesville
and Home Sunday morning at eleven
o’clock, with Dr. Scarborough speak-
Ung at Gainesville and Dr. Truett at
Rome. The people from northeast
Georgia are to attend Dr. Scarbor
ough's address at Gainesville. The
Bapti ts of Gainesville will provide
liinch at the church for the out of
town visitors, and following the lunch
there will be a workers’ conference
at two o’clock, to which all the cam
paign officials will go. Rev. J. Fred
Eden will conduct the conference. The
same program will be followed at
Rome. Lunch will be served by the
Baptists of Rome to all visitors and
then a workers’ conference at two
o’clock conducted by Rev. Carl A. De
Vane. t
The chairman of entertainment at
Rome is H. J. Arnold and at Gaines
ville James W. Merritt. All Baptists
who expect to attend will send noti
fication to these chairmen. Church
and associational officials of the cam
paign will be entertained at every
point of the tour without cost.
MONSTER MEETINGS IN AiLANTA
Sunday afternoon at four o'clock
there will be two meetings in Atlanta.
The men will assemble at the Baptist
Tabernacle, where they will be ad
dressed by J. H. Anderson of Knox
ville, Tenu.; Ely R. Callaway, Ben S.
Thompson and Dr. M. Ashby Jones.
It is expected that there will be three
thousand Baptist laymen at the Sun
day afternoon meeting.
At the same hour in the First Bap
tist Church of Atlanta, Miss Kath
leen Mallory and Mrs. Kate Wake
field will address the Baptist women
of the city and surrounding towns.
Sunday night will see the largest
gathering of Baptists in the history
of Georgia. All of the Baptist
churches of the city will close and
the churches within a radius of fif
ty miles of Atlanta will ciose and all
will assemble at the Atlanta audi
torium for a mass meeting to hear
Dr. Truett and Dr. Scarborough. Dr.
Truett will speak at 8 o'clock and Dr.
Scarborough at 9 o'clock, i his meet
ing will break all records for at
tendance and enthusiasm, it is be
lieved.
TWO SECTIONS ON MONDAY
AND TUESDAY.
The tour breaks into two sections
HAS YOUR WIFE THESE CON
VENIENCES?
Every kitchen should be arrang
ed for convenience and shelves
and racks provided for the kit
chen utensils. Then an oil stove
and tireless cooker should he pro
vided. Probably the most impor
tant labor-saver of all is a small
gasoline engine fitted up with a
line shaft to furnish power for the
washing machine, the wringer,
the churn, the separator, the va
cuum cleaner, the dynamo, the
pump and so on. This is an age of
power machinery rather than hu
man muscle, and our farm women
must fall in line.
A modern system, a bathroom,
a septic tank and a private elec
tric lighting plant make the farm
.residence a real home. The cost of
such equipment varies, but thor
oughly reliable equipment of this
kind may be installed at a cost
well within the reach of many
thousands of prosperous farmers.
Monday and Tuesday. Dr. Truett,
Mr. Anderson, Miss Mallory and Dr.
Cree will leave for Savannah Sun
day night, where the second day'of
the tour begins Monday afternoon
at five o'clock, with Mr. Anderson
addressing the laymen in one audi
torium and Miss Mallory the women
la another place. Dr. Truett will
speak at six o'clock and lunch will
be served by the Baptists of Savan
nah at 7:30. Dr. Truett will address
a mass meeting at the city auditorium
at nine o'clock that night.
Dr. L. R. Christie, pastor of tha
First Baptist Church of Savannah, will
be chairman of entertainment, and
will be in charge of the Savannah
meeting.
Dr. Scarborough. Mrs. Wakefield
and Mr. Thompson will go to Colum
bus Monday and follow the same
schedule of services as those at Sa
vannah. Dr. Scarborough will ad
dress the big mass meeting at 8:30
that evening. Chas. S. Davis is chair
man of entertainment at Columbus.
Tuesday takes the Truett party to
Augusta. The Baptists ot' east Geor
gia will assemble at the First Baptist
Church at five o'clock Tuesday after
noon for addresses by Mr. Anderson
and Miss Mallory followed at six
o’clock by the address of Dr. Truett
with iuuch at 7:30. served by the Bap
tists of Augusta and at nine o’clock
the address to everybody by Dr. Tru
ett. Miss Dorothy Lehman is chair
man of entertainment for Augusta.
Communications should be addressed
to her.
The Scarborough party will go to
Waycross Tuesday morning and be
ginning at ten o’clock with addresses
by Mr. Thompson and Mrs. Wakefield
and followed by an address at eleven
a'clock by Dr. Scarborough the en
gagement there ends with lunch at
12:30 and a workers’ conference at
two o'clock. Dave M. Parker is chair
man of entertainment at Waycross.
Rev. H. N. Massey will conduct the
workers’ conference.
Tuesday afte noon the Scarbor
ough party moves on over to Val
dosta and begins the program at six
o’clock, closing that evening with the
rliass meeting at 8:30 addressed by Dr.
Scarborough. W. L. Fender is chair
man of entertainment at Valdosta.
TRUETT PARTY AT MACON
WEDNESDAY.
The Truett party will reach Macon
Wednesday morning, October Ist. Thu
will be one of the biggest days of the
tour, although it is ‘ moving” day. The
committee on entertainment in Macon
is making full provision, and A. J.
Johnson, the chairman, states that he
is already receiving many requests for
entertainment.
The night meeting, when Dr. Truett
speaks, wil he held at the city audito
rium. It is estimated that there will
be five thousand people to hear him
in Macon. Mr. Anderson and Miss
Mallory will speak in the afternoon
hours.
Albany is the last lap of the cam
paign. Thursday the Truett party will
begin at Albany and follow the same
schedule of hours as at the other cit
ies. W. E. Carter is chairman of en
tertainment at Albany. A big crowd
is expected at this point. Lunch will
be served as at the other places.
This tour promises to eclipse any
thing of the kind ever put on by
the Baptists of Georgia and the people
from every part of the state are cor
dially urged to attend one of the meet
ings. All campaign officials, church
and association, are espeeialy urged to
attend one of the meetings.
There are many water supply
systems that may fie used iu the
farm home. Avery simple and in
expensive system consists of a
sink in the kitchen with a drain
pipe to carry the water away. A
force pump is placed at the well
or cistern which is so connected
that water can fie drawn at the
well or cut off there and the water
forced into the house. A pipe'con
ducts the water from the
to an elevated tank. Water may
fie piped to different parts of the
house from thetank.—The Pro
gressive Farmer.
Prof. Ellington, teacher of
French and Spanish in the Win
der Public School, spent last
week-end with his parents at Ox
ford. fla.
Miss Annette Hamilton, who
has been spending sometime with
her grand-mother. Mrs. Perry,
left for her home in Atlanta yes
terday.
THE BARROW TIMES, WINDER, GEORGIA.
Petition To Reinvest.
Georgia, Barrow County.
After four weeks’ notice pursu
ant to section 3065 of the Civil
Code of Georgia, a petition, of
which a true and correct copy is
subjoined, will be presented to
the honorable Andrew 5. Cobb,
judge of the Superior Court of
Barrow County, at Athens, Ga..
on the 25th day of October, 1919.
Alvin C. Willaims, guardian.
State of Georgia.
County of Barrow.
To the Honorable Andrew J.
Cobb, Judge of the Superior
Court of Said County-
The petition of Alvin C. Wil
liams shows:
1. That he i.-- the natural guar
dian and the duly appointed
guardian of Mrs. Mamie Williams
Giles, Moses McConnell Williams
and Ara Williams, all ol whom
are now of age and are ready to
demand and accept a settlement
with petitioner.
2. That he is likewise the guar
dian of the following minors who
arc his children, to-wit: Carson
Williams, age 19. Claude Williams
age 17: llovt Williams, age 13 and
Eileen Williams, age 10. That all
of the said minors are residents of
Barrow County and that petition
er. their natural and appointed
guardian was at the time of ap
pointment a resident of Gwinnett
County in that section of Gwin
nett County now incorporated in
Barrow County, and in fact he
now lives where he did at the time
of oppointment, and the trust es
tates are administered in Barrow
County. ,
3. That he invested funds be
longing to the said wards in the
sum of *1925.00 in the following
lands: That property in the town
of Carl ill said oountv of Barrow,
now occupied by petitioner and
his minor children bought from
the estate of Ethridge, known as
the George Ethridge borne place,
and invested other individual
funds of petitioner in the said
property, containing seven and
half acres, with ten room house
thereon, bounded on the north by
right of way of Seaboard Airline
Railway, on west and south by
lands of Airs. Bagwell and llardi
gree and on east by lands of
David Meadow and .Tames Dun
can.
4. That petition desires to make
final settlement with the three
children named as being of age
and desires to invest the remain
ing funds of the minor children in
other property or to loan the same
on real estate as security.
5. That the described property
will not rent for enough to pay
interest on the investment outside
of the taxes, up-keep and insur
ance and that it is to the best in
terests of the estate of the minors
that the sale be made and it is ab
solutely necessary to make the
sale'so that the three adult wards
can be paid off.
6 Petitioner desires to make the
sale and to use the proceeds there
of belonging to his wards in the
manner specified and to reimburse
himself for the individual funds
invested therein.
7. Petitioner shows that the
deed to said lands was taken in
Ids own name but that the funds
of said ward paid for same m
part and is to that extent a trust
estate.
S. Petitioner shows that notice
of his intention to make this ap
plication has been published once
a week for four weeks in '1 he
Barrow Times, the news paper in
which the county advertisements
of Barrow County are usually
published, as is required by law.
Wherefore petitioner prays that
he be granted the permission to
make the sale as prayed and for
the other relief asked for in this
petition. October first. 1919.
G. A. Johns,
J. C. Pratt,
Attorneys for petitioner.
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Total Resources more than l,00(M)0D.00
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DIRECTORS:
W. C. HORTON President S. P. HIGGINS
W. L. JACKSON V-President W M. HOLSENBECK
W F. HUBBARD Cashier W. C. HORTON
E. A. SIMS Asst. Cashier W. L. JACKSON
DIRECTORS CLAUD MAYNE
A A. CAMP M. R- MAYNARD
J. T. STRANGE JNO. W. MILLSAPS
M J. GRIFFETH C. 0. NIBLACK , j
W. L. DELAPERRIERE W. T. ROBINSON
A Y. EAVENSON L F. SELL
T. C FLANIGAN w H TOOLE
A. J HARDIGREE R - L. WOODRUFF
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2