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IN THIS
ISSUE
VOL 49
Rewards Total $l,lOO For
Slayer Os Officer Skelton
Heavy Reward Puts Many Officers
On Trail of Lincoln Jackson—
Was Aided In His Escape
A total of $1,100.00 as a reward
for the capture of Lincoln Jackson,
c ol„ has been offered by the State
and county authorities, and every ef
i fort is being put forth to bring the
murderer to justice.
Jackson left shortly after he had
killed Officer Snow Skelton and
seriously wounded Deputy Sheriff
Britt Brown on Sunday night Novem
ber 2nd, and although bloodhounds
and officers from several counties
rushed here to aid in the hunt for
him, he escaped with the aid of other
parties to Toccoa, where the officers
lost track.
The reward was increased last
week by Governor Walker from $250
to $750.00 by the State; $250 is of
te sered by Hart county and the balance
by other parties.
Thousands of cards giving a de
scription of Jackson, who is a despe
rate character, have been mailed all
over the country.
The negro is said to have shot two
men before coming to Hart county.
A description of Jackson, follows:
About 35 to 37 years old; 5 feet 11
inches tall, weight 170 pounds; ginger
brown color; wide nose and nostrils;
two small scars over one eye; broad
shoulders; stammers sometimes; a
bit knock-kneed, and walks wing
-footed.
REED
AGRICULTURAL DISPLAY
AGAIN WINS FIRST PRIZE
Reed Creek stuck another feather
in her cap and that of Hart county
last week when their splendid ex
hibit at the Anderson County (S. C.)
Fair took first prize amongst all the
j various community exhibits at this
sbig annual exposition.
' The blue ribbon was awarded Reed
Creek first from a standpoint of
quality,—for Reed Creek has learned
that quality and looks are vital points
in preparing things for exhibit and
sale on the market.
Quality counted 50 per cent in the
contest between the community con
tests, and Hart county is proud of
the fact that these Reed Creek folks
won over even the communities right
there in Anderson county.
? Everybody was loud in their praise
of the work of Mr. P. N. O’Barr in
the construction of the model home.
The quilt shown by Mr. O’Barr’s
mother received many compliments.
Mr. D. P. S. Mackey had two of
the best watermelons at the fair. The
splendid spirit of co-operation and
willingness to assist in putting on
the exhibit, shown by the citizens and
High School pupils of Reed Creek no
doubt explains the success of the ex
hibit.
In addition to the community ex
jMhibit several first prizes were won in
.in the individual exhibits. The most
important of which was the three
stalks of cotton shown by Mr. P. C.
Robertson. The fact that Mr. Robert
son has won first place in cotton
stalk exhibits at the Hart County
Fair, the Reed Creek Community
Fair and the Anderson Five County
Fair proves his ability as a champion
cotton grower and especially his abili-
U ty to select stalks of cotton that re-
Avresent a desirable type for use under
® bollweevil conditions.
In addition to the above exhibits
the Reed Creek Pure Seed Associa
tion had on exhibit quite a bit of the
pure corn and cotton grown during
ihe past year by its members. Hun
dreds of South Carolina and Georgia
farmers manifested their interest in
the seed being offered for sale. The
pure seed exhibit at the Anderson
lair last year and this year has won
t' r the Reed Creek Pure Seed Asso
ciation many friends and customers
in our neighboring state of South
NORTH GEORGIA METHODISTS TO
GATHER IN ATLANTA NEXT WEEK
I Meeting Lasts For Six Days Will
Be Held At Wesley Memorial
Church Beginning Nov. 19th
The North Georgia Conference of
"Jit- Methodist Episcopal Church,
•''' uth, will convene at Wesley Memo
r:al church in Atlanta next Wednes
day November 19th, and continue
igh the following Monday, when
“"e appointments will be read.
delegates from the Elberton Dis-
I tnct are as follows: T. J. Maxwell,
J Z. C. Hayes, Sr., C. E. Adams, S.
s R. Jolley, J. H. Gunnels, Mrs. W. W.
I nson, Mrs. J. H. Barton, and Miss
M inters, members of various
in the District.
B 1 h<- pastor of the Hartwell church,
I r J- H. Barton, will carry to the
I ference a full report; under his
I ! rship the church has shown
I endid progress in every depart
■ ®ent.
I Rev. E. 0. Vickery, of the Hart
" ait, composed of Mt. Zion, Lib-
I Hill, New Harmony and Cand-
I Chapel, will carry a report of
■ - ual interest this year. The mem-
| under Rev. Vickery’s guidance,
■ a new parsonage in the course
■ section, and otherwise have made
■W - a ble progress during the year.
■ *ne membership have expressed
■ ■ -Ives as desiring the * return
THE HARTWELL SUN.
Have You Joined?
Hartwell and the county have re
sponded willingly and gladly this
week to the annual Red Cross “Roll
Call” enrolling many of the old-time
members as well as a large number
of new ones.
While the county, under the lead
ership of Special Chairman A. N. P.
Brown, has tried to put over the
drive in a short time, there are still
many who should enroll as Red Cross
members both in town and county,
and it is never to late to help in this
great work.
Hart county knows what the Red
Cross does from actual experience.
Chapter Chairman I. J. Phillips,
Sr., states that the reports so far are
very encouraging.
o
MILL STOCKHOLDERS TO
MEET NEXT TUESDAY
The annual meeting of stock
holders of the Hartwell Mills will be
held in the offices on next Tuesday,
November 18th, at 11 o’clock, ac
cording to notices sent out by Presi
dent Jno. H. Cheatham and Vice-
President Sam W. Thornton.
The Hartwell Mills, Inc., owns the
mill here and one at Toccoa, the
latter known .as Hartwell Mill No. 2.
■■ O-- ' >
FOOTBALL DOCTOLOGY
WITH DOC
The game Friday sure did have
the thrills, didn’t it?
Everybody expected Hartwell to
beat Lavonia at least 20 point—some
said 35 or 40.
You must remember that Shiflet
was out and Sid was hurt.
Time, in everything, is sure valu
able. Had the game last only one
more minute, the score would have
j been—l 2-0, instead of 6-0.
The Gainesville team continues
her rampage. She ran over Toccoa
last Friday.
An account of this game said “The
Gainesville team didn’t play so well,
the back field wasn’t working, just
right”—we call it pretty good work
ing to pile up a score of 61-0.
It’s tough—for the ball to be on
the three-yard line and to hear the
final whistle blow.
In my opinion the Athens-Gaines
ville game will be as hard-fought and
tight as the Tech-Auburn encounter.
Athens plays Lavonia this Friday—
wonder what the score will be?
The writer of this column would
predict the score of the Athens-La
vonia game to be 28-0, in favor of
the former.
A defeat for Athens at the hands
of Lavonia would just about put
Hartwell on top. Many a time has a
little feared team jumped up and
whipped a much larger and stronger
eleven.
o
Railroads of the United States
handled 70,000,000 pieces of baggage
during the year 1923.
Two royal tombs from the Valley
of the Kings will be erected in the
Field Museum of Natural History at
Chicago. Each tomb will contain
several rooms and in each burial crypt
the genuine mummy of a king and
queen will be placed in a sarcophagus.
Carolina. Then rapid increase in the
use of the seed being sold by the
Reed Creek Pure Seed Association
is proving the popularity of the kinds
of cotton and corn being grown in
the community.
And to cap the climax a citizen
of Reed Creek, Mrs. Mary E. Os
borne, drew one of the Ford touring
cars given away by the Fair asso
ciation, holding the lucky number
last Friday. They gave one car away
each day.
I of these good men to their work here
another year.
Dr. Horace S. Smith, of Elberton,
is Presiding Elder of the Elberton
District, and has won for himself a
warm place in the hearts of the mem
bership of the various churches.
Unification and a number of other
important discussions will make this
year’s Conference one of unusual
interest. „ „
Bishop U. C. V. Darlington will
preside over the session beginning
next week.
A large number of laymen both
from town and county will very
likely attend the Conference.
Up-town headquarters for the Con
ference will be at the new Henry
Grady Hotel, which has been reserved
a« a whole for the delegates.
AT OLD CANON
There will be an afternoon singing
at Old Canon church Sunday, Nov.
16, 2:30 o’clock p. m. All singers
and lovers of music are invited.
... -o
The United States has an area of
3 026,789 sqaure miles, which, com
bined with Alaska and her island
territories, is slightly larger than the
Sahara Desert.
HARTWELL, HART COUNTY, GA., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1924
WATER’S FINE
City Water Supt. Hoyt Baker a
report first of the week from Dr. H.
C. Woodfall, of the State Board of
Health, in which he stated that Hart
well’s water was excellent.
The various figures as to the num
ber of bacteria before and after :
treatment by the machinery in use
here show’ed that the outfit was work
ing tip-top.
So, don’t hesitate to drink Hart
well water.
o
TRIP TO CHICAGO GIVEN
HART CO. HOME AGENT
Miss Frances A. McLanahan, Hart
county’s popular and efficient Home
Demonstration Agent, will leave
within the next few days for Chi
cago, 111., where she will attend the
national session of Girl Club workers
and Girl Club members. Miss Anna
Milford, of Sardis community, Hart
county, will represent the Club Girls
of the state of Georgia.
The trip is a present from the
Club Girls and people of the county
and the Kiwanis Club, the latter
having contributed $50.09 toward
her expenses at the session last Fri
day.
Hartwell and Hart county appre
ciate the work of Miss McLanahan
as evidenced in this trip they have
given her to Chicago with all ex
penses paid.
o
THE RED CROSS EMBLEM
A foreigner, traveling with his
wife, became violently insane on a
South Carolina train recently, be
tween Columbia and Florence,
jumped from the moving cars, and
disappeared in the swamps. All hands
immediately gave chase, capturing
him four hours later.
At the next station, a special car
was added, in which the man was
placed with a doctor and nurse.
Then fresh difficulties arose. Ef
forts to induce the wife to go back
in the car with her husband brought
staunch resistance from her. She re
fused to move a peg. As she could
understand no English, she thought
the train officials were trying to put
her off, and was determined to stay
with her husband.
The train was being further de
layed and those in charge were on,
the point of giving up in despair
when a Red Cross worker sought the
distracted woman and spoke to her
.kindly, showing the Red Cross em
blem.
The effect was electrical. When
this woman, a stranger in a strange
land, saw the emblem of the Ameri
can Red Cross, she threw her arms
around the w’orker and wept. In a
few minutes she went quietly into
the special coach and sat down re
assured and composed.
MINISTER CALLS
FOR BETTER
LIVING
Calls On Church People To Quit
Supporting Bootleggers—Real
Citizens Will Obey the Law
Says Methodist Pastor
In a strong and most appropriate
sermon last Sunday, Rev. J. H. Bar
ton, pastor of the Hartwell Metho
dist church, called upon the member
ship to stand squarely to the fore
front in the fight against the liquor
traffic that exists in Hartwell and
Hart county.
Calling for a higher respect for
laws amongst church people, he
brought home some truths that stirred
every hearer.
His sermon should have been heard
by every man and woman. In part,
his remarks were as follows:
“We have an amendment to the
Constitution of the United States j
and law on the statute books of the
statte of Georgia, which prohibits the |
manufacture and sale of spirituous >
liquor and penalties for the offence
have been designated by the state
and nation. Whether you agree with
this law or not makes no difference
in the matter of your duty thereto.
Every citizen of the United States
who claims the protection of the
Government and enjoys the benefits
derived therefrom, is honor bound to
support its Constitution, and the men
who fails to do so is a dishonorable
citizen and unworthy to be called an
American.
“The tragedy of last Sunday even
ing, the killing of County Officer L.
S. Skelton and the wounding of
Sheriff Brit Brown by a negro
crazed by liquor, has served, in the
minds of some, and should arouse
every true citizen of Hartwell and
Hart county to a counciousness of the
fact that there is a need for a rigid
enforcement of the liquor laws.
“We are doing every thing possible
for the apprehension of the negro
who did the shooting and to bring
him to the bar of justice and this is
commendable. He should be captured
and made to suffer the penalty of
this most horrible crime. But the
negro does not bear alone the guilt
of this murder. There are others
involved. Should we begin a search
for all the guilty parties, we would
find some of them walking the streets
of Hartwell, under the guise of re
spectable citizens.
“Every person in Hart county, whe
operates a still and turns out whiskey
is, before God, guilty of Snow Skel
ton’s death; every man who buys and '
sells whiskey has his Jiands stained
with the blood of this murdered man; ]
every man who buys and drinks it,
CITY ELECTION
DECEMBER 3RD
The annual election for the City
of Hartwell will be held on Wednes
i day, December 3rd.
Citizens desiring to vote have from
now until November 28th in which
to qualify and register with City
Clerk J. L. Teasley, the books closing
five days prior to the election, ac
i cording to announcement in this issue
I by City Clerk J. L. Teasley.
The registration books are at Mr.
i Teasley’s office in the new Hailey
i building.
An ordinance of the .city also re
quires candidates for the offices to
be filled to announce in The Hart
well Sun ten days before the Decem
ber election.
This year there will be two mem
bers of the Board of Aidermen elect
ed, the terms of Messrs. S. W. Thorn
ton and R. E. Matheson expiring.
There will be two vacancies on the
City Board of Education, the terms
of Dr. Geo. S. Clarke and Mr. Mc-
Alpin Thornton expiring this year.
Those desiring to vote should see
City Clerk Teasley at once and
qualify.
Mercer Glee Club
Here Night of 20th
The 1924-25 organization of the
“Greater Mercer’s Greatest Glee
Club” will play in the Hartwell high
school auditorium Thursday evening,
November 20.
A chorus of twenty voices, four
end men, an orchestra of ten pieces,
and a number of extras making a
total of more than 36 men, will make
the trip. Two Hartwell boys, Elmer
Alfbrd, baritone, a member of the
chorus, and a member of the quar
tette, which proved to be so popular
last season, and Julius Johnson,' first
yeas man with the Glee Club who has
been selected to handle one of the
bass ends of this years chorus, Mr.
Alford also is filling one of the most
important roles in the comedy skit
entitled “The Glee Club in Turkey.”
For the past two years the Mercer
Glee Club has heen hailed the South’s
greatest and for this reason some of
. the best songsters of the South have
joined the organization. Dr. B. I*.
Richardson and R. L. Hurst, directors
of the club, say that the program of
this year will far surpass that of any
organization that has ever represent
ed Mercer University behind the foot
lights. The comedy skit, which was
written by Roy L. Hurst, formerly
of the professional stage well known
in minstrels and vaudesville and now
a minster, and who has served in the
capacity of Eudman, for the Mercer
club for the past two seasons, is said
to be a farce comedy full of sur
prises, song, and wit.
This skit promises to be one of the
best features of the program. The
four end men, including “Parson”
Chandler, and Roy L. Hurst, known
from last season, and “Sunshine”
McKoy, and Noble Arnold, who have
had considerable experience in the
amateur world but are playing their
first year with the Mercerians, are
gifted with the abitity to entertain.
The ten piece orchestra which will
accompany the club, will play for the
choruses and render special selec
tions. This is the same orchestra
of last season with additional talent
chosen from the ranks of the Fresh
man class. Dan Davis, director, will
slide the trombone, and Ralph Tabor,
Pianist Deluxe, will be at the piano.
It featured the program last season.
o
A new method of warfare has been
adopted by the Chinese in their civil
war. A trainload of firecrackers has
been supplied to the Kiangsu troops
for use in assault along the Shanghai
battle front. They will be set off by
way of camouflage, concealing the
real point of attack in the offensive.
o
j On the day of an eclipse of the
I sun the Hindu follows a strict sche-
I dule to purify himself and his be
i longings. lie takes no nourishment
of any kind during the eclipse and
throws away any cooked food or
drinking water he may have on hand.
Brass vessels are scoured and earthen
pots destroyed. Personal purifica
tion must be achieved by a bath in
some stream, preferably one of the I
holy rivers of India.
thereby making it possible for this ’
hellish business to be carried on, '
shares in the responsibility of this
murder and every citizen, who has
knowledge of whiskey being made or
sold and does not give that knowledge
to the courts, will have to answer to
his God for thus shielding a criminal j
who endangers the lives of innocent
people and corrupts the morals of the
community.
“Mr. Skelton said in my presence,
less than a week before his death,
that if the church members would
quit drinking the bootlegger would
have to go out of business. What
kind of a church member can he be
who makes possible a business which
strikes a death blow at law and order
and destroys not only human life but
the souls of mankind? Surely the
Spirit of Christ is not in him but to
the contrary he is an enemy to the
cause of Christ.
“It is high time when we should
take action and strike in no uncertain (
terms at the liquor buiness. Let us !
as Christian men and women go forth |
in the power of our God and be not
afraid to stand for the right even i
tho to do so may mean personal sac- I
rifices and dangers. The Master gave
His life for the salvation of mankind
and, ‘The servant is not greater than
his Lord’.”
TAXES SLOW
“Practically all the cotton has been
picked in Hart county and yet only
about $5,000 has come into the
treasury of our county as her part
of the 1924 taxes,” said Tax Col
lector W. J. A. Cleveland this week
to The Sun representative.
The people generally have delayed
paying taxes this year and there will
be a rush when they do start perhaps.
At any rate, Tax Collector Cleve
land and his force have a busy time
ahead of them, as the books will re
main open only six more weeks, after 1
which time interest and other costs
are added by the Georgia law.
Business School To
Open Here
Representative of Atlanta Business
College Here Making Survey
of Field This Week
R. L. Williams, field vice president
of the Atlanta Business College, B.
Dixon Hall, president, and one of on
ly two accredited business colleges
in the state, is in Hartwell this week
making a survey of the county with
the idea of establishing a branch of
the Atlanta school in this city.
Mr. Williams has met with a great
deal of success in getting pupils for
the Hartwell branch and he stated
that there was hardly a doubt that
the branch school would be estab
lished here.
If the branch is established, day
and night classes will be taught thus
enabling young men and women who
are now employed to take the course
at night.
Mr. Williams states that exactly
the same courses given in the At
lanta school will be taught here, by
; just as competent teachers as are em
- ployed in Atlanta.
In speaking of the proposed branch
I school in Hartwell Mr. Williams said j
| to a Sun representative:
“The courses of study offered by |
■ this institution are standard and
every advantage found in any com- .
mercial college will be found right
here at home. It is a fine opportuni
ty and one that should not be over
looked by those who are trying to
make more of themselves.”
Continuing Mr. Williatns philoso
phized as follows on the tragedy of
young folks not preparing themselves
to make the most of their lives:
“There is no greater tragedy than i
that of a person who stays in a rut I
all their lives, when with just a little
effort they could bring success with-.
j in their grasp.
“What you have done with your !
time thus far in life accounts for ,
what you are today. What you do ,
with it today determines what you will ,
be tomorrow. Your hands cannot |
earn the money you need, but your
head can and will if you will but give |
it a chance. No matter what your
age, your education or your means,
you can get out of that old rut and
succeed in a big way if you will say
I WILL. Isn’t it better to start now
than to wait twelve more months and
then realize what the delay has cost
you?”
Any one interested may find Mr.
Williams at the Hartwell Hotel.
Commercial College Assured
“The Hartwell Commercial Col
lege is now an assured fact,” said
Mr. Williams Wednesday.
The enrollment is progressing
rapidly. Rooms have been secured;!
books, supplies and equipment have
COLUMBUS TO BE HOST BAPTIST
CONVENTION OF GEORGIA 18-20
- <
Many Important Matters Will Come
Before Denomination In Sesison
To Begin Tuesday Morning
The 103rd session of the Georgia
Baptist Convention will be held at
Columbus, beginning November 18
at 2:30 o’clock and continuing
through November 20. The conven
tion will be preceded by the annual
laymen’s and pastors’ conference,
which convenes at Columbus, Novem
ber 17, at 7 o’clock.
The convention will he called to
order by John I). Mell, of Athens,
who for the past 13 years has been
president of the convention. He will
most likely be re-elected this year
without opposition as Dr. B. D.
Ragsdale will be re-elected secretary.
Dr. Ragsdale, a professor in Mercer
University, at Macon, has been sec
retary of the convention since 1896.
Dr. E. J. Forrester, of Sparta, will
also be re-elected as treasurer.
Dr. Mell’s address is likely to deal
with the recent disturbance at Mer
cer University growing out of the
Fox case and will offer constructive
suggestions touching this and other
vital matters in the life of the de
nomination.
CREE REPORT ON FUND
Dr. Arch C. Cree, executive secre
tary of the convention, will make
his annual review of this year’s work
during the opening session on Tues
day afternoon, November 18. His
report this year will deal with the
closing of the Baptist, §75,000,000
campaign and the launching of the
1925 program.
Rev. B. E. Donehoo, of Talbotton,
will conduct the devotional at the
evening session on November 18.
That evening will be devoted to the
discussion of the missionary cam-I
paigns of the denomination. Dr.
George W. McDaniel, president of
the Southern Baptist Convention,
and Dr. Charles E. Burts, director of
the 1925 program for Southern Bap-
12,816,000 BALES
ESTIMATE
Over Three-Fourths Crop Already
Picked Georgia Will Produce
1,030,000 Bales Estimate
Hart county ginned 10,903 bales
of cotton from the 1924 crop to
November Ist, as compared with
8,949 bales to the same date in 1923.
This gives the county a lead of
1,954 bales over last year to this
time. Ginnings have been very
heavy since November Ist, and the
next report will likely carry the total
to 12,000 or more.
Washington. D. C., Nov. 10.—
Cotton production will be 12,816,000
equivalent 500 pound bales this year,
according to the department of agri
culture forecast. A fortnight ago
12,675,000 bales were forecast.
Os this year's crop, 9,694,920 bales
had been ginned prior to November
1, compared with 7,556,042 bales
last year and 8,139,215 bales for
1922 to that date, the census bureau
reported.
The forecast of production was
based on the condition of the crop
on November 1, which was 55.9 per
cent of a normal, compared with 54.7
on October 18 this year and 47.8 on
October 23 last year. Last year’s
production, according to final ginning
returns, ‘ was 10,139,671 equivalent
500 pound bales.
* The condition of the crop on No
vember 1 and the forecast of produc
tion by states follow:
Condition Foreca t
Virginia 49 33,000
North Carolina 49 770,000
South Carolina 44 715,000
i Georgia 51 1,030,000
Florida 66 27,000
Alabama 61 980,000
Mississippi 61 1,120,000
Louisiana 52 450,000
Texas 54 4,450,000
Arkansas 62 1,150,000
i Tennessee 59 365,000
I Missouri 56 190,000
‘Oklahoma 66 1,300,000
I California 73 65,000
Arizona 75 95,000
New Mexico 82 56,000
All other states 75 20,000
Ginning by State*.
Ginnings prior to November 1 by
states follows:
Alabama 815,593
Arizona 52,958
Arkansas 753,329
California 33,309
I Florida 17,348
! Georgia 812,813
Louisiana 418,174
Mississippi 887,405
Missouri 73,573
North Carolina 374,544
, Oklahoma 97,299
; South Carolina 526,735
Tennessee 203,543
Texas 3,784,328
Virginia 6,127
I All other states 27,532
n
TO PREACH AT MT. ZION
The pastor, Rev. E. O. Vickery,
will preach at Mt. Zion church next
Sunday morning at 11 o’clock. This
will bo the last service before the
North Georgia Conference in A anta.
Let the membership come.
Everybody cordially invited.
been ordered, and the college will
open next week. Interested parties
I will be advised by mail the date to
report..
o ——
tists, will be the speakers.
On Wednesday, November 19,
there will be many important reports
and discussion. The day will begin
with a devotional led by Rev. H. J.
i Arnett, of Sylvania. The report on
foreign missions will be read by S.
S. Mathis, of Savannah. The work
of the relief and annuity board and
also the work of the laymen’s mis
sionary movement will be discussed
that morning. At noon Dr. Charles
W. Daniel, of Atlanta, will preach
the convention sermon.
STATE MISSION WORK.
In the afternoon of the day there
will be a devotional conducted by
the Rev. George C. Gibson, of Toc
coa. Reports on state mission work
I will be heard. The report will be
read by Rev. G. W. Hulme, Hazle
hurst. Professor A. B. Greene, of
Blue Ridge, will conduct the devo
tional in the evening of the day and
there will be reports on home mis
sions, and Rev. M. H. Massey, of
Americus, will read the report on
benevolences.
Rev. J. G. Graham, of Camilla,
will lead the devotional on the open
ing of the third day’s session and
there will be reports of the Georgia
Baptist Assembly, Mary P. Willing
ham School and education. The re
port on education will be read by
Dr. J. C. Brewton, of Mt. Vernon.
In the afternoon of that day the de
votional will be conducted by Dr.
P. A. Duncan, of Cordele, and the
reports on schools and seminaries
will be continued until adjournment.
The holding commission report is the
last item on the proposed order of
business.
One of the important matters be
fore this convention will be th"
question of the enlarging of the
Georgia Baptist Hospital. It is un
derstood that a proposal will be made
to the convention by the hosnita)
commission suggesting the launching
of a building enterprise for the hos
pital.
W PAGES
IN THIS
ISSUE
NO. 15