Newspaper Page Text
VOL- 1
LOCAL BOARD GALLS 210 AAOIL
10 BE EXAMINED IS WEEK
Many Claim Exemption But Belief Prevails
That Quota For Bartow County
Will Soon Be Reached.
The local board last week issued a
ca li for an additional two hundred
n , eil for examination for army service
in or der to make up Bartow county's
ollot a of 209 soldiers. These were sum
moned to appear Wednesday and
Thursday of this week, at which time
those who claim exemption will file
their applications.
The call was made necessary be
cause of the large number of exemir
tion claims aud those who were dis
charged because of physical deficiency.
The following is the list with their
order number and serial number with
their address:
4HI r>24 Claud Henderson, Carters
ville, Ga.
4;r 911 Jerry Kincaid. Carters
ville, Ga.
a.l 1172 Robert Jewell, Cassville.
4532 Noah Wills, Stilesboro, R.
F. U
4:;; 1517 John T. Johnson, Kingston.
494 1851 Walter Abernathy, Carters
vllle, R. 4.
1924 Winfield Polk Cline, Tay
lorsville.
420 n::9 Marion Whltener, Cass
Station, R. 1.
1214 Ben Grisham fnrtersville,
R. F. D. 5.
42‘ 1536 John Keith, Atco, Ga.
429 1952 Thomas Clifford Sorreil.
Aragon, R. 1.
42ii 212 Joe Bibb Bowdoin, Adaivs
ville.
HI 1357 Sam Ballard, Cartersville,
R. F. D. 1.
422 49 ylasper Alex. McMichen.
Allatoona.
423 8 Andy Roseo McCurley, Car
tersville. R. F. U.
431 1707 Warren Nesbit, Rydal.
425 2039 Ernest D. Satterfield,
White, R. F. D.
420 1 160 Charlev C. Holden, White,
R. F. U. 2.
[427 ll 92 Dock Cline, Cartersville.
R. F. D. 5,
?::s 1660 John Stark Hunter, Din
wood .
439 2,05 Thomas Windsor, Atco.
140 U 43 Early A. Franklin, Cass
Station, R. 1.
44/ 557 Andrew Conner, Cass Sta
tion.
I ! 42 1652 Junius Grome Welch,
Adairsville, R. F. D.
14 1 433 B D. Abernathy, Kingston,
R. F. D. 2.
444 1640 Quillian Manson Darnell,
Linwood.
445 1798 John H. H. Swanson.
Stilesbor
446 622 Benjamin Felton Canty,
Cass Station.
D7 585 David Reuben Parker,Atco.
44s 1464 Homer Jimerson, Rome,
R. F. D. 10.
|449 1257 Henry Collum, Emerson.
45ii 1077 Richard King. Cartersville,
R. F. D. 2.
451 1961 Milton Dabbs, Taylorsville.
' "2 7SI William Henry Lumpkin,
Cartersville.
- 1415 Shelton Payne, White, R. 2.
45; 1035 John Tippins, Cartersville.
455 1634 Glenn Francis Herod, Lin
wood
U 95Si William Wright, Carters
ville.
L 7 323 George Holcomb, Atco.
's 1343 Russell Cannon. Kingston,
R. F. D. 2.
1 1439 Leßoy Sampson. Kingston,
R. F. D. 2.
1804 Clifford S. Taff, Stilesboro.
I'J 857 Tom Watson Gatlin. Stiles-
I boro, R. 1.
I- 1554 Dock Hall, Kingston.
B' 1401 Adran J. Adcock, Adairs-
I ville, R. 3.
B' ; 1 12,0:; Felix Rpy Bailey, Kings-
I ton, R. 2.
■ 963 Walter Williams. Carters
| ville.
■ M ‘ (3s Henry Horace Crow’, Car
■ tersville.
■''' s 7x Charlie H. Martin, Carters
■ ville.
■ 1059 Luther F Harper, Carters-
I ville, R. 2.
p 4*l William Mavs, Carters
■ ville, R. 2.
r* SMI Walter William Horn-
I- ... buckle, Cartersville. R. 1.
I. ;1 < 6 Harrison Palmer, Rydal.
■ William B. Bradshaw,Atco.
If George Franklin Derden,
■ Acworth. R. F. D.
I- W Fears Lee, Cassville.
■: 4i Oscar A. Fallis, Atco.
■ lss l John David Crowe. Fair
mount.
■ M. l/bran Hughes, White,
K f R. F. D. 2.
■ Henry Andrew Massey,
■-, Taylorsville, R. F. D.
■ ' !J Benj. Franklin Harbin,
■ , Cartersville, R. F. D.
Bf Henry Little, Cartersville,
■ R F. D. 5.
K 11 |X lohn Brvan Brock, Tav
■ lorsville. R. 1.
I Walter Milton Brook*, •*r-
H tersville.
■ Robert Henderson. Car
■ - . _ tersville. R. 2.
■ ,4 ' Willie Trammell Bradford,
■- . Rydal.
■ Herman Louis Cagle,
■1: ](MI1 R°nie. R. F. D. 10.
IF en J West, Cartersville,
R. F. IX 2.
■ 442 Arthur Lee Dover. Tay-
V lorsville.
THE BARTOW TRIBUNE
THE CARTERSVILLE NEWS
(TRIBUNu e 7, NO. 25
488 715 Sam Ralph Atwood, Car
tersville.
489 961 Lonnie Graveley, Carters
ville.
490 539 James Henry Nicholson,
Cartersville.
491 349 Walter A. Thacker, Atco.
492 1596 Jim Henry Smith, Cass
Station, R. 1.
493 562 Wilbur James Ham, Car
tersville.
494 1407 Weston A. Wright, Adairs
ville. R. 2.
495 501 John Henry Hamilton, Car
tersville, R. I.
496 102 Gid Comer Hall, Adairs
ville, R. 4.
497 2025 William I.ee Walker,
White.
498 1915 James Peek, Taylorsville,
R. F. D. 1.
499 1411 Arthur L. Bozeman, Rydal.
R. F. D. 2.
500 1979 Henry Grover Cleveland,
Taylorsville, R. 1.
501 875 Roy Everett Guyton, Car
tersville.
502 1780 Albert S. Trulock, Stiles
boro.
•503 714 Charles Wallace Howard.
Cartersville.
504 1 528 Alex Kerr, Kingston.
505 86 J. W. Davis. Adairsville.
506 1997 Ira Erwin Gaines. White.
507 1024 Oscar Carter, Cartersville.
508 1291 Henrv Godhigh, Kiugston,
R. F D. 2.
509 871 Sam M. Howell, Carters
ville.
510 1341 Jess Hubbard, Kingston,
R. F. D. 2.
511 1 556 Willie Yarbrough, Kings
ton
512 1043 Eule E. Buford, Cass Sta
tion.
513 1606 Ernest Carter. Kingston.
514 1934 John Lindsev, Stilesboro.
R. F. D. 1.
515 71 William Plezzie Fowler.
Acworth, R. 2.
516 1520 George Henry Diltbeck,
Kingston.
517 1972 Weston Bennett Tinsley.
Taylorsville, R. 1.
31. x 1690 Dixie Fowler, Fairmount.
519 1156 Lewis E. Harris. Cass
Station, R. 1.
520 1393 James Alford Garlen,
Adairsville, R. 3.
521 1593 Jesse James, Cave, Ga.
522 1850 Dock R. Summey, Carters
ville, R. 4.
523 2013 Joseph Arthur Griffies,
White.
524 555 James Ivory Moon. Car
tersville.
525 978 Herman Albert Smith.Car
tersville.
526 1260 Thomas Banin Duckett,
Emerson
527 54)6 Thomas Craig, Cartersville
528 1588 Richard Crawford, Kings
ton.
529 1591 Nathaniel Finley, Kingston.
530 1909 James Elz<> Shelly, Tay
lorsville.
531 1686 John Hayes. Rydal.
532 1391 John Clark, Adairsville,
R. F. D. 3.
533 1272 Tom Milner, Emerson.
534 1523 William Meyers,
Kingston.
535 877 Harry L. Osment, Carters
ville.
536 435 John Henry Tucker, Car
tersville, R. 4.
537 681 George Earl Tyner, Car
tersville.
338 713 Grover Cleveland Cham
bers. Cartersville. R. 1.
539 1478 Alva Wofford Taylor. Tay
lorsville.
340 1929 William John M. Byrd,
Tavlorsville.
541 935 Jefferson J. McEver, Car
tersville.
549 1121 Olin E. Young, Carters
ville, R. 2.
543 1150 Middleton T Maxwell.
Cass Station. R. 1.
544 450 John Lewis Miller. Car
tersville, R. F. D.
545 1390 Henrv Gradv Scott. Adairs
ville,'R. 3.
546 113 Emery Burton Shelton,
Adairsville.
547 1658 Arthur Franklin Hanks.
Adairsville, R. 4.
548 1472 Cornelison Neal. Rome, R.
F. D. 10.
549 725 1. Y. Rucker (or S. V.L
Cartersville, R. F. D.
550 1004 Holland Wright Smith.
Cartersville.
551 1975 John Paul Dabbs, Stiie--
boro, R. 1.
552 1521 George W. Childers. Kings
ton, R. 2.
553 156 Charles Edgar Floyd.
Adairsville.
554 1034 Fletcher Edgar McElroy.
Cartersville.
555 80S I,oyd Keith, Cartersville.
556 1604 John Lewis-Cowart. Cave.
557 1571 Harry Gore, Kingston.
558 780 Jerry Miles Hopkin. Car
tersville.
559 1971 William M. Vandivere,
Taylorsville.
560 1183 Vergil George. Emerson.
561 267 Fately Frank Teems,
Adairsville, R 3.
562 1550 Oza Johnson, Kingston
563 567 Benjamin Franklin Den
man. Cartersville, R. 3.
564 1218 William James Ross. Em
erson.
CARTERSVILLE, GA., AUGUST ML 1917
LEGISUtTII QUITS
BUT MAI COME BACK
Appropriation Bill Cause
Of A Big Row At Close
Of Session.
The Georgia legislature reached the
hour at which it automatically should ;
adjourn Wednesday night, but due to I
a conflict between the senate and
house 011 the appropriations bills, the
house was still in session, the hotise
dock being turned back so as not to
reach the hour of twelve midnight on
Wednesday. Just what was done on
Thursday morning is not yet known
in regard to it. If the house does not
recede from its position, as extra ses
sion will be enevitable, to be later
called by the governor, the senate hav
ing already adjourned. It is not yet
learned, at the hour of going to press,
just what was done with the new
charter for Cartersville, but the belief
cn Wednesday was that the proposi
tion would be put through without any
opposition in legislative halls.
The last bill passed was one ex
empting college endowments from tax
ation. This is a measure of great im
portance to higher educational institu
tions and one which was strongly sup
ported throughout the state. It will
necessitate ratification by the people
before becoming a law, the election to
be held sometime during the fall.
Both Representative Johnson and
Representative Trippe, of Bartow coun
ty. made enviable reputations in the
house for intelligent, active and ener
getic service. Representative Johnson,
having had previous legislative ex
perience, added much to an already
fine reputation as a legislator, while
Representative Trippe impressed his
associaie members with his rectitude
is well as sound common sense, and
business judgment.
Very few bills of state wide impor
tance were passed by the legislature,
and those of a local interest related
only to the Cartersville charter bill,
if it succeeded in running the gamut
of legislative procedure.
r.6T> 421 Paul Ralph Hilburn, Car
tersville.
566 ITuO Hardy Briton Hughes
Fairmount, R. F. D.
51> 7 940 Andrew Bruce, Carters
vi lie.
568 1222 Kato Henry, Emerson.
569 1254 Bill Lattner, Emerson.
570 169 Martin L. Mayfield, Adairs
ville.
571 426 James .Mays, Cartersville,
R F. D. 2.
572 1477 William Thomas Morgan,
Taylorsville.
572 396 Nathan Dial, Cartersville.
574 1633 Sherman McMichen, Hin
wood.
575 989 Duffy Howard, Carters
ville, R. F. D.
,76 1702 Robt. A. Adair, Bine Hog.
577 1304 William Goode, Kingston,
R. F. I). 2.
578 1107 Cliff Johnson, Carters
ville, R. 2.
579 1270 Harrison Jenkins, Carters
ville, R. 5.
580 862 Albert Franklin Shelley,
Cartersville.
581 1638 Carl Chester Chamlee,
Adairsville, R. 4.
582 1406 John W. Bailey. White, R. 2.
583 257 Julius Marion Edwards,
Adairsville.
584 1824 Homer Earwood, Stiles
boro.
585 1109 Chester A. Edwards. Car
tersville, R. 2.
586 155 John Howard Hunt, Adairs
ville. ...
587 284 John Freeman, Adairsville.
588 133 Thos. Beni. Sutton, Adairs
ville.
589 807 Charles Claudius Fills.
Cartersville.
590 867 Will Lynn, Cartersville.
sC>l 930 Daniel L. Campbell. W htte.
R. F. D. 1.
592 185 Howell Clay Key. Adairs
ville.
ville. R. 3.
594 265 William Chester White.
Adairsville. .
595 285 Robert Trimble. Adairs
ville.
5Q6 1720 Lawson Parris. Ryda.
597 1785 Edmond Earls, StUesboro.
598 1313 Dennis Edwards, Carters
ville, R. F. D.
569 1602 Will Hawkins. Kingston.
R. F. D. 1.
600 1968 Sherman M. R f ’P‘r -
lors ville.
601 1119 A. Archie W T itt. Cass Sta
tion.
602 1864 Richard A McGhee.
tersville, R. 4
602 1963 Sherman Smith, raylors
ville. ...
604 1917 Fred Massey, Taylors\ il!e,
R. F D. 1. •
605 1061 Emory C. Pitman, Ca.s
Station.
606 560 Willie Dickson. Carters
ville.
6(V7 303 Charlie G. Parker. Atco.
RED GROSS BULLETIN
WITS BRICK ACTION
Headquarters Wires Coun
ty Chairman For Knitted
Woolen Articles.
The following telegram was receiv
ed this morning by the Cartersville
Chapter Red Cross:
2bn 1 Is jo 251 PAID. N. L. 8:40 \ M
Atlanta, Ga., Aug 15 1917. 6 extra
Jos. S. Calhoun,
Chairman, Red Cross Chapter,
Cartersville, Ga.
Red Cross has urgent call from
Major Grayson Murphy for enormous
quantity knitted woolen articles.
Cablegram from Major Murphy fol
lows. ' Last winter broke record for
ci Id <:tid misery among people nere. j
Inexpressible fin ad coming wade.'
finding t's witho 0 supplies to mel
sit.ua'Un. Urge you on behalf of our j
sddieis and those of our allies, who !
will suffer in th ii frozen trenches, '
a r, d •housamis of French and *VJ- !
giur re.ogees aut .: patriantes bei-.v
ret 11 ned throng- Switzerland T
France, every on, ere ooks to A er
ica. Begin shipping at once one mil
lion five hundred thousand each of
vanq !■ nitted woo’eu articles a ~cady
requested. They must come be.me
cold -leather, and in view of sh r a-’
of fuel and other discomforts, they
will be of inereditable value in both
military and civilian wear.’’ Signed
“Murphy.” Your chapter asked to f*ir
niih definite number of this require
ment. Your allottment is 200 sv raters.
2d. mufflers, 200 pairs of \vi stUus
Vie pairs of socks. Full instructions
f ■ ow in two days. Ask your members
finish ail knitting work now on hand
and clear decks for action. We want
every chapter to have chance to do its
part in making good on this call for
help from France. Chapter chairman
requested place copy foreign part of
this message including cablegram
from Major Murphy with all news
papers with request to give full pub
1 lirity to this first call, then get knit
ting committee together and line them
up for rush job.
guy e. SNAVETY,
Director Southern Division American
Red Cross.
In order for Bartow county to fur
i rush the allotment asked for above, it
j will be necessary to secure the nia’er
j ini to work on. A public meeting will
be held one evening next week for
this puri>ose.
Mrs. W. W. Daves is in Atlanta to
day to secure necessary information,
and will ascertain just what material
will be needed to fill our allotment.
All Cartersville and Bartow county is
called oft to respond.
608 563 David Carter. Cartersville,
R F. D. 2.
609 211 Albert Everett, Adairs
ville, R. 1.
610 1435 W. A. Van Meter, Taylors
ville, R, 1.
611 1784 William T. Hammett,
.Stilesboro.
612 2002 John Thomas Peace,White.
613 11*63 Will (Man) Dobbs, Car
tersville, R. 2.
614 1989 Walter B. Jolly. Taylors
ville.
615 1933 Arthur Flavius Jackson,
Stilesboro, R. 1.
616 146 George Ervin W. Rogers,
Adairsville.
617 843 (’has. Mathew McEwen,
Cartersville.
618 1050 Sam W. Ward, White, R. 2.
619 1376 Henrv Gradv Barnett,
White, R. 2.
CARTERSVILLE BOYS WIN
TRAINING CAMP HONORS.
J’lie people of Bartow county will
be pleased to learn that in the accept
ance nf students in the officers' train
ing camp, recently finishing their
course, were three Cartersville hoys,
one of whom was given captain’s place
and the others accepted as second
lieutenants.
James Bennett Conyers was award
ed the rank of captain and ordered to
report for duty to the commanding
officer at Ft. Gordon on August 29th.
James H. Akerman and Joel A. Fite
were awarded the rank of second lieu
tenant, each instructed to report to
the fifty-fifth infantry at Ft. Ogle
thorpe, Chickamauga, Ga.
These honors were well won by
those upon whom they were conferred
and each will furnish evidence of his
proficiency and fitness for the respon
sible duties as commissioned officers.
(NEWS VOL 34, NO. 34)
DEV. ARTHUR MOORE CLOSES
BREATJABERNACLE MEETINE
A YY onderfui Sermon Preached Sunday
Stirs Audience To A Sense Of
Patriotic Duty.
After two weeks of the revival ser
vices at the Sam Jones tabernacle,
the meetings closed Sunday with three
splendid services at which time the
seating capacity of the tabernacle was
taxed with the crowd.
Sunday morning at 11 o’clock Rev. ;
Arthur Moore delivered a patriotic
masterpiece. He si>uke for more than
an hour but held his audience spell
bound with the strength and convinc
ingness of his argument.
After reading Joshua 24-1-14, he
took for his text; “And I have given
you a land for which ye did not labor,
and cities which ye built not and ye
dwell in them; of the vineyards and
olive yards which ye planted not, do
yt eat. Now therefore fear the Lord
and serve Him in sincerity and in
truth; and put away the gods which
your fathers served on the other side
c.f the Hood, and in Egypt; and serve
ye- the L rd." —Joshua 24-13-14.
He said in part:
•This is a crucial hour in the world,
a crucial hour in America, with wars
and rumors of wars-—with a world’s
people facing a period of stress and
responsibility such as nations of the
world have never faced before.
“As we view our own nation of peo
ple, the great people of our United
Liates, does our mind go back to the
time when our ancestors did not live
in a land where democracy reigned
supreme but where they were slaves
with no political, religious, or finan
cial freedom but were driven as slaves
at the bidding of nionarchs and rulers
to whom tiiev were subjects?
"Does our mind go back to the time
when our ancestors, after reaching the
shore of our own country that was to
give them a freedom they had never
dreamed of, when they conquered the
savages who greeted them on the
frozen shores of anew and unfamiliar
land that gave them the opportunity
to press into its depths though they
marched through frozen lands, wilder
nesses—filled with wild beasts and
the savage rednian, through hardships,
dangers and trials that our minds can
not conceive, until today their mem
ory says to us: ‘I have given you a
land for which ye did not labor?’
“All we have, all we will ever have,
all we know, all we will eevr know,
comes to us through no effort of our
own, but is the result of sacrifice and
love and tears, through centuries ol
painful striving worked out that we
might enjoy today the results.
“Americans are prone to brag, are ,
anxious to remind you of the great- j
ness of our country, of its great re- :
sources and unlimited jiossibilities,— .
but as we boast, do we realize that its !
greatness is not a result of our labor
or achievements, hut ours in its won
derful greatness because our ances
tors shed blood of sacrifice that thjs
greatest of world’s civilization might
be ours today, and we possess it be
cause it was bought, with toil, danger
and self denial and sacrifice that it j
might be ours in the years to come,
and God is saying to us today, ‘and 1 j
have given you a land for which ye j
did not labor, and cities which ye
built not and ye dwell in them, of the
vineyard and oliveyards which ye
planted not, do ye eat. everything you j
have God gave you?’
“All that we have and knew and en
joy today is a present to us from the
generations who came before us.
“When voji go to your home and
enjoy its beauty and see with love
your children as they play arcund
your fireside, do you realize that the
men who gave you this home had to
fight both wild beasts, savage people,
cold, starvation and privation that you
might today enjoy the peace and pros
perity that is yours?
‘ Daniel Webster, long after the
country was rid of the dangers of the
redmen and the forests, delighted to
rel! of the cabin which his father built
ii the east and when there was no
white man living between their home
and the court of New England: long
after the cabin had fallen into decay
and the chimney had crumbled into
dust, he would take his children to see
the place where his father had suffer
ed and sacrificed to give him and
them the country which they enjoyed.
“You and 1 today can view tnis
same land and enjoy its blessings and
know that it was a gift to us, simply
a gift from the generations gone be
fore.
“I have given you a land, for which
ye did not labor, in our natural life
all we have and enjoy came to us*
from them.
‘ We brag of our Hag, of our demo
cracy, which is the ideal democracy
of the world.
j "As Russia totters today turning
from a monarchal government, which
lias kept her in ignorance and dark
ness we point her to American demo
cracy.
“Bryan says of our dear republic,
‘Behold a republic where every one is
k*ng and no one cares to wear a
crown.’
j “Fred Smith, a missionary friend of
1 mine after visiting all the foreign
; mission fields, arrived in San Francis
co with his wife, and walking down
the street saw a dirty, ugly little
p/snlle dog and stooped down and
I picked it up, and when his wife asked
,hini what he did that for, he said: ‘E
| simply wanted to tell this poor, little,
( homeless dog that he had more chanc
es than any man we met while visit
ing the lands across the waters.’
“We are called the Promise Land
a land flowing with milk and honey,
and no people are so blessed as us.
We enjoy pleasure and ease. We have
more than two-thirds of the gold in
the world in our country. We have a
glorious civilization, an ideal demo
cracy— and where did it come from?
W hen did we shed one drop of blood
to make it possible? When did we ever
suffer for our flag? And yet, every
thread in its folds was woven with the
purity of purpose which colors thtr
vhite 4 the blood of sacrifice which,
gives it the brilliance of the red, and
the unselfish trueness of purpose
which colors the blue which sails
above us today, and you and I share
the protecting safety of which it. is
the symbol. When did you ever sail
bloody seas to gain for its the right
for the flag to wave?
“Our forefathers, tired of the tyranny
of the old world, gave up all and came
to the shores of our country and
landed on its frozen shores; went out
into forests: faced savages and wild
beasts; the men toiled and the women
shared every danger and toil to make
possible the ideal republic you and I
enjoy today.
"Their toil and labor gave us this
splendid country.
“Their brain gave us our splendid
school system.
“Their efforts gave us all that we
have that is worth while.
“You and I never shed one drop of
blood, we never sacrificed that it
might he ours.
‘‘Our ideal democracy, our glorious
flag, our fabulous wealth, our splen
did civilization is yours and mine to
day through no effort of our own, but
was given to us through a baptism of
blood by our forefathers.
“Today 1 stand here to warn you
that this ideal democracy, this glor
ious flag, this fabulous wealth, this
splendid civilization, which is mine
and yours, is in peril. A nation that
would tear up a treaty and call it a
scrap of paiter; a nation that would
march over a defenseless country and
destroy, blight and ruin it; a nation
that would so destroy and starve a
1 country, until the children under 7
years of age all starve and die: a
Kaiser that would pull God from His
throne and put himself there, who
says, ‘might is right’-—has long since
died to all that is good, has destroyed
every chain to love and civilization.
“The nation for which our fathers
died, our mothers sacrificed, the na
tion God has given us is in peril.
“No man deplores war more than
T. My nature is for peace, but I be
lieve ary man or woman who with the
light of reason in their mind, who has
the knowledge of conditions as they
are, who knows of the peril we face
and withholds their Influence, their
endorsement, their money, and, if need
be, their life, is unfaithful to God who
(Continued on page eight.)
NO. 20