Newspaper Page Text
PAGE SIX
THE AMERICUS TIMES-RECORDER
ESTABLISHED 1879
Published by THE TIMES-RECORDER CO., (Inc.) Arthur Lucai,
President; Lovelace Ere. Secretary; W. S. Kirkpatrick, Treaauror.
THE WEEKLY TIMES-RECORDER.
BILLY JUSTICE, FREE ON
PAROLE, FLEES TROUBLE
PM. B» KIRKPATRICK, Editor; LOVELACE EVE. Businosa Manager. When members of a local church
on® day last week went to find Billy
Justice, Jocal auto mechanic, to take
him to a church social to help the
Sunday school orchestra, of which
he was a member, furnish music,
they couldn’t locate him. and the
social had to proceed without him.
The reason they couldn't find him
was that Sheriff Harvey nnd Police
Published every afternoon, except Saturday; every Sunday morn.
lay, and aa weekly (every Thursday) ■
OFFICIAL ORGAN FOR:—City of Amerlcus, Sumter County, Rail
road Commission of Georgia for Third Congressional District, U. S. Court.
Southern District of Georgia.
SUBSCRIPTION RATESDaily and Sued — by mall, $6 per year
In advance: by carrier. 15c per week, 65c per month, $7.80 per year.
Weekly Edition, tl.KO per year in advance.
Entered as second-class matter at the poatoffice at Americus, Geor-
gls. according to the Act of Congress.
National Advertising Representatives:
FROST. LANDIS £ KOHN
jf Brunswick Bldg„ New York. Peoples Gas Eliv„ Chicago.
MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS. The Associated Press is exelu-
’ sively entitled to the use tor publication of all news dispatches credited to
it or not otherwise credited in this paper, and also the local news pub.
I lished herein. All rights of republicatibn of special dispatches herein con-
t [ blued are also reserved. _ T
A FEW days ago the Times-Recorder received a copy of a booklet
k” entitled, "A Statement From Governor Hugh M. Dorsey as To
The Negro in Georgia." Attached to it was a note from Rev. M.
Ashby Jones, of Atlanta, chairman of the inter-racial committee
of the state, requesting that Sunday papers publish the governor's
P Statement in full. The booklet was a report to a "conference of piti-
zens called to meet" in Atlanta April 22. The booklet was divided
into four sections ns follows: "Negroes Lynched." "The Negro
Held in Peonage." "The Negro Driven Out By Lawlessness. I'he
Negro Subject to Individual Acts of Cruelty."
"Under these four headings," the governor's repoit says, "in the
following pages I have grouped 135 examples of alleged mistreat
ment of negroes in Georgia in the Inst two years."
* *
TIMES-RECORDER is not going to reprint this report. It
considers the booklet one of the most unfortunate compilations
possible for an official to make, nnd constituting one of the blackest,
if unintended, libels against the name of our state possible to per
petuate. We says this because we believe the charges made against
Inc people of Georgia in the booklet are foi* the most part untrue.
In the pages not a name is used, and in no case is it stated by the
< governor that the charges are true or that they have even been in
t Vestigated to his knowledge and found to be true.
t i , Alr f ady We nre finding ,hat some °f (he alleged law violations
Of the characters presented by the governor ns received by him and
I P ,f S 1 , °P “ '™ e , ar , c n °‘ ‘rue m any particular. In the end we
shall probably find that few if any are true as presented.
hi? i b ?. ck ’, IIe became a mem-
bqr of the Sunday school orchestra
and active in church social affairs
•*• • wan-ant was taken
,r M, l , m i a *.Mf™ 11 of an unpaid
hoard bill but this was settled by a fa w -a
him and he continued as before. After Vl8lt
Then came the alleged theft from Here. Tells Of Crr*»L
Richardson and the warrant, taken ri . .. * eat
before Justice Carter. The. warrant UlPDOrtUflltieS
THURSDAY, MAY 12, 1921.
U. S. MINE CHIEFS | DR. BOND TO BE
LAUD GA. CLAYS
AND BAUXIT
time before that he had started -
sprint that carried him out of their
sight and reach. At last accounts,
he was still being sought, the war
rant being unsolved. The charge is
larceny from the house, n warrant
having been taken out by Win. L
Richardson, night clerk at the Cen^
tral station, charging him with steal
ing $15 from his trousers pocket
while he slept during the day in his
room at Mrs. Harrow':, rooming
house. According to Richardson's
story, lie was awakened by Justice
whom he found in his room in the
net of hanging up the trousers, from
which the money was missing.
two took place. „„„„„„„
effected, however, ond orders were veloped. is tho" atatemenTof Dr lit
f °«IM» T. Itali, chtef of tb.*Bu-
S,Fv* ~*
5him trip’^f inspection iind a'^pbr"
S afo /? / . he the auto he apiod eluding tliose of Sumter county.’ He
, i° r lcers and a swift chase took was accompanied by W M Weiirel
place through Rylandei’s alloy where director of the recently establish-'
ed «mSreteb| C n ,rr iono“^d d rt PP<! ‘ r k ' “f 3 ° utbea3 ‘ c ‘" experiment Staton
„ _.™ , p .. .o ly ’_, lon 5 “ nd thorough Of the Bureau of Mines, at Tusca-
oi me laei tnai justice, n The grips were taken to the nolicr
oung man. was under parole from station, where one was found to com
u- Sumter county clmingang, where | tain clothing and the other a cornel
c was serving a term for robbery I which he had been Ji..!
because of the fact that Justice,
voung
!h “
fe„™’w.. S i? rvinir n . t * rm ! or jobbery [which he hadbecTT blowing' ,
r f I’illv ‘l? < ’""n ty ,". ndt ' r the name Sunday school orchestra. Both w .i,
Esiis?--
rhurei, people, who were familiar! PUtnmnVtake 1 Rgli'l act “on‘to company, near
* , “" , rpd to help! cover the instrument.
with his (
• and who des
JF THIS BOOKLET could be kept within the bounds of cur owr
state, ita harm would probably be little. Georgians know Geor
gia conditions, and they know pretty well what to believe and
what not to believe. But. unfortunately, it cannot be kept inside
our boundaries. It undoubtedly already is in the hands of the
racial mischief makers and the sectional fanatics, from which tve
shall soon hear. The booklet, although containing only "allega
tions. as the governor admits, has gone out to the world as 135
dilions found on the Williams farm—conditions which shocked
gn as deeply as the outside world.
Georgia needs to clean up. But those who have gone about It
to reform scnt.ment and practices tn Georgia have adopted a course
hat IS already reacting and is tending to aggravate the conditions
they intend, d to correct After all. it is the end accomplished, rather
han the end sought which counts. A cure that kilis the patient
•lasn t much value. Perhaps we need some laws to keep the reform
ers from running amuck. •
THINGS are looking up. Signs of hopefulness arc more material
than they have been, and they are multiplying every day.
1 he Atlanta Federal Reserve bank has dropped its rediscount
ate. 1 hat is because its reserve has piled up and it now has money
o fend. Loosing its puisc strings will ease up the situation cventual-
y all along the line.
white
£ hccia cs5**$!3S of tii.
No settlement w posits that could profitably be de
Dr. Stull is considered the lend-
|nn authority in Amenta on ceram
ic problems, nnd his enthusiastic en-
loraement of the oporf unities in this
the section will mean much toward’ the
were development of the territory.
POSTMASTERS
NEWESTRUMOR
Hardwick And Watson
Both SupDordner Him,
and , 7 J C 1 3tocl: '» showing marked act-'vity. This means
that industries of various kinds are showing or promising to show
nereased earning?, and men witn money to invest arc disposed to
take advantage of the low prices of good securities
Loiteri ships are again clearing for Europe. The exporting of
' >aa bce . n a fiemendous slump, but the War Finaifce cor-
pov-
even
faTt P, ^o 0 y««'ov ma, ih Crim '! aRainst the negro in Georgia in the 2" ation “ a « ain functioning, credit is being arranged^ enable'
im!ldT * , the signature of the governor of the state. There V ty o '" ckerl Europe to buy our staple, and buying has b^gun
could be no stronger evidence in the mind of any outsider as tc hougl1 on ° small scale. 8 °“ un
the absolute truth of every statement in the book, regardless of * * *
the falsity or distortion of fact. A stack of affidavits ten miles high. H ERE in Sum ‘e‘ county we are noting or • , , -
h “» —— a. jy-lr
« a , do P L Ihc d " nd JI °J of ., hia = ot . ton °* Ae market figurecouW not
JT IS A MOST DEPLORABLE ACT of a well-meaning governor. am the n^kc" so Thatlke^M 1 whTnow wi,S nd
° P Ut f s°iee U h" do irr *P ara hle harm to the state. ’ ,aco, ' on > 3 ab ' 3 ‘o find a buyer at the current price. The «sil
• j L ‘ * ee how some of these cases passed on by the governor I , } some coll °n « now going onto the market « result
BEtali. they^can'for
-—- Assise
wl, cl, is farhidd „ “ " egTO ,0 L r . app y,n * an e Pilhet to whites J f put , in circulation now probably pays a
tl «“ rpl3 t*nn the letter of the judge and aoliei- a ND , * # mmod,ty.
I P'aches nre bringing
tor to tlie governor:
“W K “ EC f T0 ACKNOWLEDGE receipt from you within the past
° k f an “""‘Kned copy of a communication which you write
iSLTr /noteta* r mincn ‘ CitiZeR ’ 0f Ta,lafprro roua ‘ y - a "J we ‘n,
fi'SarA's:esar^-smar.—
* * - •«» ••
;write anonyrasus letters, or insist that thelr l ^ |X ' k onR " ho clthor
to us, anil we. therefore, beg to b ° not rrvi ’ alc<l
Sd&at ^*7~srLs^
and an excellent yield l sta,e 3 P ro, peHty. With prices good
into Georgia and Sumter coumy'tha't wiirmak°% 'ifn Ca>K
a* never before. The cash will L ^ , ! 3C, ( fe,t ,h “ year
otton or otehr field n °. t , b ? 03 w,del y distributed as when
is receive it. if Ri, n', y °“ hi>VC ° ny evidcnc ® ut this, wc will be E i a< ]
ji ttEsr ,incc wc d ° not »
ilo S«t existing in te" coum’y "h you'L”' * ‘ Crribl<! COndi -
>it«m#ions, and they constitute vfolation, of ' S " y CVide " Cc ° f
the character of its citixenx. 'no b«t* ^ T * linfcrro c °unty, and know
■ “••jtody-hidignsnt at the aspcrsions'cMt 01 * * ' n C ' orRi a and they
any law of Georgia,
not anonymous,
been getting alont: wdt'b"oT.iV'* CXpec * ali ° n * 3 ,h “t the-public has
It behoove, every merchant, every business interest of Am,,;
r d ' ,y “
*tl_ _• , . - - e ,n eaat is now streaking with pink,
J* 8l T°(. d f Wn ia . b r kiQR ' Tbc nVw day f 3 ' upon
an, f •*—' -aLe hope with its coming.
evitably will—when * thp 1 TTnitrH I "cnnipromise candidate." ]■ -. , -—,— mac
State, must depend upon its "own I , A friend of Dr. Bond, and a man ti ‘ , “ P ”nfi f ° P ‘“h, mem-
clays, Georgia could and -hotild sun l a E0 ‘.P tl,e Hardwick and Watson „P e , C |! al mention should b(
oly eighty per cent of tint dcminS I councils, stated emphatically that If md'rll™ excellent omtlon dellv-
Thesc great deposits mske Geo^ia Geverpor.olect Hariwlck and Senate? the cla« v y ^edictertap y Uyd SuK3
the natural field, but the producers W“ ts « n eould get the place for him. Those receiving Htalom. t
must not rely upon natural reroutc- H’ 3 ' Uon< ' w»uld be the next post- C. Clemente Ann d fc“ '"Tj f'
es alone, but must study the prob-1 P|“ ter ot Americus, admitting that Ethridge Ed’ith Bui n d *i 8
lems, of the industry and meet the I bo ^ active in his behalf. Ola mIo Suras •ndULtoS^J?* 1 *’
renuiremcnta of the manufacturers. 0th ,er aspirants for the place, how- uggs and Lloyd Suggs,
| Otherwise their business might g r I ever, have not given up. C. A. ri f i,m vn
to the vast unexp'ored areas of the Ames, of the lily white branch of • t<LLAVlLLt,
w “‘i .... tbc Republican party, said Saturday . ELLAVILLE, May 7 Mr and
The industries know little about ‘hat he was still an acOve candidate. S?”’ K ’ J ’ Willlante onterUiSSd
£ la , ys v although they are IE. A. Locket and C. W. Carmichael J, ues day evening with a six o’clock
si«t‘e^ K i!If he SL from - t! :osc of othet I ^publicans, are also seeking the ? i ,P, ner > complimentary to Rev. J W
states by wide variations which lend place. , B lne Lilley, of Savannah, and Rev B tl
Sf““, Ive3 t0 8 multiplicity Of uses. The term of D. F. Davenport, th- Jord,n v ot Ellaville. The 'sitting
There 13 no question that these clays I present postmaster will not evni™ r °om where the guests were received
can be advantageously used in the until oarly nTxt voar and he i t '™ 3 ottractively dccor.Te d ,vm. „d
SWihtX’gr m
ine of Georgia clays. He I ?!?: ” «*PPOmtcd. having secured
imported clays and he must he ^afMT end »m«»ent8,
taught by whatever campaign of|{?„ f rart /’ on hie record
education may be necessary th!t the the D J ff S!' . . .
Georgia clays can bo selected and I r° nd * e " a r «»Went of
refined to meet his requirements. I Sumter county only for three years,
‘‘More than 50 per cent of the I hefe after t j, e eitablishment
white clays used in American Indus-Iff o OU JJ e t r „ Fl ®! d ** « member of the
tries are imported. The potter ha? I u# . 8, Pub,}c Health rervlce. «•
learned to rely upon them ond is not I not
anxious to make any change. One I m .® v 1 .
reason that he clings to them Is that IP 11 ** west "of the city. Hb is
tho English producer takes the ut-1 mother of Claude Bond, U. S mar-
TlinSL name In nci... ... > • I Ihnl tL. IT . . ■*
DR. POUND IS
LESLIEORATOR
Head Of State Normal
Delivers Diplomas At
Closing
LESLIE, May 7.—The Union
High School closed its first year’s
work last night «[ith the graduating
exercises in the auditorium of the
new "xchiyl building. Dr. Jero ' M.
Pound, of the Stele Noriusl School
at Athens, delivered a master); lit
erary addrese and presented tho
diplomas tc the graduates.
The attendance at the closing ex-
Gossip concerning tho Americus
psstmastership took on considerable
interest Saturday as a result of ru.
mors going the roands involvin’- a
candidate heretofore not publicly
mentioned and who, according to re
ports, now has the “inside track,” if
not an actual promise of -the nlace .
The new name is that of Dr. B.’ £ erc,3e * ®f Union High School" be.
Dsiidi at present county comntis- “P 3 ^ 3 . community « n awak-
sioncr of health, and during the last Si ln , tere3t educationally,
campaign an ardent supporter of „iX be 1 , 3r|re ““dHoriunr was filled
Hardwick and Watson. Dr. Bond is *L tb | P Ji r “I’ 3 and fiends of tho
known to have the support of both 8t tba 3evera commencement
self n, 0 n P "compromlMcandidate > ’ l ’ i Tn prmnled'by^the^music Y* 3
According to °on'c rumor, which dwTeretcld'Tnd"F&y'SSht* D?
could n°‘be confirmed. Governor- Pound delivered averyn&e addrm'
elect Hardwick, who served in the Ke complimented in the hl/h„Yf'
senate with Harding and is his per- terms the splendid school splrit*thst
WMt f .Y 0nd ' rl ‘ C . ently . w ? nt t0 ‘h- h « f o>*" d here, Mying hg had heard
White House and made the request much of the Leslie School ptant but
of the president that Dr. Bond be the half had not been told. HistoUc
given the Americas postmnstershi- was safe and sane educational doe.
receiving in reply a nromise that his trine. Rich with the experience of
» , • - — i> vviupaiij, ucui wish would bo complied with. 30 years* successful school wnrir n mi
^U3dte°and °wb!te 3am ^r ° f i, th ‘' Dr ;. Bond '’•••terday refused to dis- 0 ke * n prophetic eye, his message
* and . w !* ltc , c l ay * rh °y have curs his candidacy, other than to say was of wisdom and insnimfinn
Stull sava" Cd ‘° ' bCU stallons - n r. that he hml assured Postmoctcr Dav- . [Die musical program showed skll-
Enau.k t r enport that he was not a candidate ‘mining as well as considerable
“There n f ?ni.Sr n ?hiV“ M | i I Wnst him, being in the race only if ul .* nt J” t3,t department.
■orgia to sunnte lb un » Cay 5 !! dmntrc ir tn ho m » d ''- He said he , In thc RraduaUng class composed
, — O--—-WIIIO. *113 Ullling
room had a touch ot yellow, lovely
yellow nastuntime forming tfie cen
terpiece on the table. The guests list
included sons of tho officials of th
Baptist and Methodist Chnrchca anu
the schools, and was as follows: Rev.
£..?• , C ^ rt *. r .’ Rev - B - L. Jordan,
Pto{ - 5 T. Hennr, Bible class teach-
Hi-n "I l . pri , ncl E, aI „ th * Ellaville
• „ . T „...v. uc i 3 High School; M. D. Herring, suner-
I mnvnH ?^ d ! nt Americus, having intendent of Methodist Sunday
moved a year ago to a farm a few 1u - • *
I miln VJA«f 'n# *U— _la •*.
most pains to assure uniform quali-l’h* 1 for thc Northern District cf
i ’ The American producer muai I Georgia, and represented h.’s former . . -
•corn .that lesson before he will be I home county. Franklin, in tho Gmr ' n ‘ f »-dent Schley county schools: A.
^9_ a I^o^dio” to compete with the for-1 kin legi: latum; resigning at the out* A - Arrington, chairmA board of
sign producer. English clays will break of the war toW into the {„ “ ‘ "
sot always be avai'ablo. If the pres I vice. * lnt0 tbc 3cr -
•nt demand continues the price wil
ro up as a matter ot course nnd thi
user will begin, to look for another
[WAREHOUSEHIT
BY $35,000 FIRE
school; Clarke Robinson, superin
tendent of tho • Baptist, Sunday
school; J T. Royal, assistant Biblo
class teacher; J. H. Stnhara. Baraca
fiC.JSfiSlr'i T ’..?‘ ewa3t ’ ?»P 33 ’
lource. Herein lies the great oppor-
tunity for Georgia clays os thc claj
deposit, of North Carolina ant
Pennsylvania (which are most simi
. to ‘he English clays) are limited
in extent.
M »ny Use. Open. ■.
George clays eould. well be until Uumpkin Farm Prnrl.icho
led to a much greater extent in thi R,J™ C’t * «OClUCt8
paper and oil cloth trade. Clay? I DUrn--F lames Kent
which are now mined and shippci I ' Jn Cfintrnl
raw, \vouid if washed and put it.I I.UMPKIN Msv? w
shape he used In thc manufacture ol termined octain y u Plrc of undc *
rubber, oilcloth, paper, pnints.i etc lo’elock thil *momln*o. d ta C °» V |f red i. a 5 2 We ” and th * *nWlfi» In all the
Hus. perhaps, affords the gfcHe't.^1 itonra waLKSI 1 "? , in , thc brlck
iimArfiintiiv fnw ...» : *1 ,1 _. ur °K*- warehouse bo]onfFin<» #« it,,.
us. Let
citittfh* who are
not willing to sign their
i a 'prominent
p^th! SSSUL ^.ucTonZ^u' F Z k3 »'v and
Methodists Organize
For Educational Drive
-s°
gH^us>ther,lly „f that coun(y
•» one instance what
, ‘0 Taliaferro coum“.„d ca!” ,niU,,i " "> e «°vetno, has
*l.r injustice, have been done in fhe bookTctm b’ * U * P . eC ' ,bal * ; ' n
liave aofcbBrn proven or supported k k,ne cbar " k: L
At a cabinet meeting of the First
Methodist Church on Tuesday eve
ning, called by R. E. Allison, local
director, plans were made and the
urbanization perfected for the Mcth-
' ?t Educational movement, which
I actively open May 29 and con
tinue until June 8.
At ‘his meeting members
Drowninpr Brother Saved
By Cordele Merchant
elected to act a team captains, to be
composed or an equal number of !a-
injustices
e Woven'or wpported' b °° klC ‘ maki " g cbar V«~wHich
and o^^.‘hjvesti^tions* saTd 'it'had^invlaJ" M ‘ ,co " ln I’eonape
age rtir s; «hd only in one or two . ave3,,Ralcd a number oi peon-1 'ii, n ‘ I>0 'j 1 or an , l 'l«al number of
den, , to ivt.rr.nt thc finding of a truebiM T 1* U ' ficient «vi- fM? mC "' chown bl,n "
mors, tho j.csolution said: ,n d3a °uncinc the r "
* that this body dcclorci e n i j
i" itcvcrit is found to exist and futth' 11 j”*, * ny coadi ‘ i t" »f
thcrsltivc been » many unwaS^i ™ \ declorM ,,u ' «h.t
»«»>• State of Georgia evW c n« b7o
k Iviy^.they 'do not exist.’’ " br ° u,?ht out 3b ->‘ co„cl us -
“mi,:?:: c kl u ,? nou8b -
? n *- l3 r 9^ wild charges, which ih.. South-wrthou. the h,
*jcor-
eapin^
l „|-.:rt! tf ^ J . cllJI8a ' which the outside public h 'h -
^ ‘° ‘ he minU ‘ e “ detail ’ ' baa h« ‘o the damnable fom
CORDELE. May 7.—How S. A
Thompson, junior partner tn thc
mercantile firm of Lewis & Thomp
son of this city', on lest Sunday aft
ernoon plunged into water eight to
ten feet deep in thc lower end of
Limit fecit and saved his brother,
Koy Thompson, from drowning is a
stor > ‘hat has just come to light he-
were cause of the modesty of thc brolh-
3r V n , ‘ a i kln ir about the occurance.
It develops that Roy Thompson
while walking along thc banks of thc
Mrs. A. Littlejohn, Mr, John ! rln i. i Pr lo d , on . 3 slippery roclc and
Sncffieid. Mrs. Lorin Smith Mr, 1 It„L b " ad , fll ' a ‘ ln ‘° ‘he creek at a
(•■ R. Ellis, Mrs. R. I. McMat’h Mrs u ” 01 n i“, c 1 over his head, and not
weo”' S'TrV' 1 "' A - D <;aU ' : ‘“i- i!Y In I’-- h .i d - Bon fr down
wood, JIrs L G. Council Mrs George
Oliver John W Shiver. W E Taylor.
T O Marshall, H. B. Masliburn, W.
I*. Dupr<>c r Rn&sfsli tic.eL i
opportunity for oxpan*ion! ?^at I SlnraTcYmM h n°v * A to ” ,b ® CklbovcuTp.' EVof"lSwMm;SyaJh'
tonnage could be made available foi I produce, incluibne !. V ° f farm £ d »Plondid sermon* Friday mid
use by a simple washing process to I velvet benn, ..T ii, P ""il^ 3 ’. corn ’ , Sundl| V evenings. Rev. J„ W: ill-
remove the fine grit. stored in ,uj uM,°, lher articles, wan ley. who ctmductcd ihe Kiylccs, has
“There are large fiefda of bauxHc I the flanioM° ^“ iId,n,f » ^}lch caused left for his home in Savannah,
winch could be profitably developed, [throughout the‘ entlJo'hSut rapidly / “i* ,Alice Aryl»gtqn 4«ft T»«*d*y
Many of the so-called bauxite clay: f With much ,lf/fl/nli. d j n *C , /, or Leslie, where idle wlMi>penl some
^n d . bc u mado ta P r,,duc< ' high-grade I work on the part^nfn, *"1 hcro,c i he *»•»* of her sister, Mrs.
oauxite by an inexpensive washing I control wa, j f ... Bremen, Ueriso. \
process. It is characteristic of many I and the fire* deMrim 6 .!^ 0 n * u . n ! , *{«• A.,J. Livingston has returned
of these deposits thot they lie almost I in keeping^ the fta^‘r, ‘ 3ucceeded to be J home In Headlend, Ala., after
on top of the ground and could hello ncarbv B frnm/i.?.iM: spreading a visit to.relatives here,
mined very cheaply. Another „ ju?„, l l uil<i j n ^: ! , «"• »•*"» Sto«rart._of Texas, Is
‘There Ls a a much larger area of I pj by the qi„i° n il* ^‘Wing own- visiting relatives in
second grade bauxite clays which by reinforced Com P any . built of vlc'-i'i.
simple refining processes could pro*-1 thc Wondrnff Cr *‘ c and occa Pl* d by Mrs. Annie King (nnmnn nnd Mrs,
duce high-grade bauxites These to nsm« ^rie?f r,,|?C ’ wa " dama '‘ cd Je,fle Kc "' y ’ of Headland. Ala.
clays will be drawn upon to supply! The toteMoL. / .a sOent thc pa-r wu»k in our city with
high-grade refractory products. Furl nanv is . - bc ? ln ** r c »m- ‘heir aunt, Mrs. T. J. Livingston,
instance there is an increasing de- MO OOO ,36 ’ 000 Mr3 k Gnrtne’, who lor the
mand for thc electric furnsm in it,-I ’ wl, b partial Insurance. past wsek has I teen tndisn
industries and highly aluminous Ra'1 regained her usual health t
Claye will be callcd-upon in thc man-1 '- ,e P r Ria Meteorite ll *t$ ot her many fHendfc
ufacture of material tor theae fur-1 AnaIv7oa an D.i- I Mr. and Mrs. Gull-;-. Jordan, of
naces, for fire brick and for similar! COkmr? . Iron Rhdoh. nltepil-d »ho funeral of their
purposes. Then again «n 'increasing nothing unu^J^“, y ’iT 11 " 1 the f a , 13 S.?"*' j Mr3 ' R 3 ' 3 ^ here
number of cities are putting in fil-lof th. sh^Sf 1 . the c ?m|H)«itlon Th"-sdav sft-rnoon,
tration nlsni. t- ™Jet. I!!.. *?« 'bower of meteorites which
trustees,, Ellaville High School; Ar
thur Hill and Rev. J. W. Lilly, who
b* 3 hern conducting the revival at ,
the Methoih-t Church.
The revival service* which were
begun here ten days ago ot tho
Mcthodi-t Cburelt. tl.;ed Wednes
day night. While the meeting did
n< :‘ r, j; ul ‘ In a large number uniting
with the church, much good was
done. Tho attendance at all the
services was splendid and tbc music
was greatly enjoyed. A large choir,
idenhip of '* — "
under the leadership of Mrs. W. O.
Davis, did the singing. Miss Gladys
d# Zi 8n , B3al,lt ed with thc music by
rendering violin selections nt nearly
every service. Many special songs
tration plants to soften and purify {fell in thi, secHoo”*^ 0 \ wl L lch
their water supplies and arc usinglthit th- J?-.* . recently, but
slums in large P q P uantUi n es. meL„ Cban,C , t * ri !, tic
aayLyjajw gfe r:;y? ^
ssrasA sssfJt m se-ia.‘UFauayr
c# u •' Russell Branch and
Stepuhen Pace.
These team cantatas will meet at
the church on Monday night, nt
1.4.1 o clock to select the members
ot their teams and perfect other
necessary arrangements.
twice, before his brother, who was
Drobably fifty yards away when he
fell in .the creek, came to his assist
ance, plunging into the water with
out a, much as taking time to re
move his hat.
It was
meteorites. which W-. nnd Mrs. Kenrv Kinard, of
Ooeliks. Ale . attended the funeral
"ere of their grandmother, Mrs.
is de-1 R*‘»ey.
ade by Mis, Vera Jordan, of Andrew
Atlanta Chapel, wa, the guest Wednesday
i. •<( Vis, Doris Arrington.
D. ”'rrirur made a business
ghiy refractory Georgia clays. ISg , °—”■.*"* 10cal taboratorics of i ‘ r, “ »o iV'umbus Saturday.
"Then- is an unlimited buppIv of I th Tho°YtJP'i . - , I. Ml «» Cleone Collins and Miss
sand, admirably adapted fo^build' tcoTitc ,h .°? 3 tb *‘ ‘he me- y "uise Collins left Thnrsdey tor
ing. for febresivc purposes etc For ron with h ' S 1 a ‘ k '*f l '^ PUKent Columbus, where they will visit
example in Taylor county the sand sutahM. and . ™ ■ u| P bld « 3 - Sand fri-nd, for s /ew -Urs.
appears to be sufficiently nure to be niJt.i ..j" d a ,01aU •mount of „ R|,v - *nd Mrs. J. E. Charnel, of
suitable, after washlng ^ml ' shing b^e manf ' 3ne * e «mP»»e the H-gen. are the euArt. «Ht week of
for thc manufactue of window-glaav | • Relatives here, having been called
plate-fflaFs, bottlc-crlaiut, etc I machinerv At tk« . .. ^ ***' 31 fno*ner,
“It Is a matter of some surprise I percent of the notteir " nvaS'o P ' ^1'u a ‘ n< t T 'nr u r’j.1 mnj
that southern capitalists and south. America is manuf^tureJ ’• « Mr ' TW" W ’ M-Cortilo and
cm developers, who are so alert and cinity of East Liverpool andV^wlL' ti’"n Mr3 ’ l- i n u° n
!t!5*.ig~ ■aq'jajjs: S’aft’in.’Wp Atjr
Methodist
Hydroelectric power is available.
sPST-f" xszTESffz Ws '?£'
. T ^”«.TLS±?, is -6S s±H£.2!?l5? “ S^ P T
revival at tho
-. . , nmn, ibcs iiMirw Choreh
.P"*™*'">™ r “ 3 «?"prtt*.r-|ufactaring wZ^nntU^towynr^Sl vilta'" " ,H '-
Wrlehte-
Ith ‘
ies rely entirely upon hand wort- «nfl„iT 0 New^gf.^W **2 vl "" •« ds~, with b-r
manship. Up ta ,he%re*ent no .« the ^t °mtaeT.f at ‘ h “
seema to have snent cither time orlother advantages set'tarth .tT nu - u ir n.i 1 wv.il.ij ke, vnlnrn.
money in developing automatic nw-l would not^wm'n m‘ih °Dredleti°oif Tn
eh nerv for Tho mnnn?nn»„rn nnl.l—. #1... *!*" .PWOMtlOn tO
slats swratfjp-SS
W-7 HwIsowfii Tholk-M h*% wtam-
r.» Vo- In Wo-»v **m****
•ff»- n f*~* r 1 -"-* w*-i» her daugb-
'•r. Mr-. W T Tnrulco.
P-J—’Irt- «- • T.»Kg-
rlnim** tn more then half I mil
lion members.