Newspaper Page Text
■p, e Houston Kome Journal, Perry, Ga., Thursday, July 4, 1943
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MISS JUDITH ANN SMITH
Miss Smith to Wed
James W. Golden
Mr. and Mrs. Horace Eugene
Smith announce the engagement
of their daughter, Miss Judith
Ann Smith, to James Winbon
Golden, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Miles Vincent Golden of Mil
ledgeville.
The bride-elect is the grand
daughter of Mvs. Homer Douglas
Gordy and the late Mr. Gordy of
Perry and Mrs. Robert Green
Smith and the late Mr. Smith of
Iriffin.
Miss Smith is a graduate of
Perry High School, received her
Batchelor of Arts degree from
the Woman’s College at Mil
ledgeville and was associated
with the Fulton County School
System for one year. She is pre
sently a graduate student at
Emory University in Atlanta,
where she will receive her
Master of Librarianship degree
in August.
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TALK ABOUT A COMBINE! |
i n
HARVESTS WORLD’S LARGEST |
I PEANUTS WITH I
LILLISTON 1500 COMBINE
INJ
I I
C. H. Trammell says
*
the Lilliston gets them all
I n
3
[gj
L C 1 r rammell (rignt) with L. K. Newlin, breeder |
I of Ki n s Giant, world's largest peanut.
I ve grown about every type of peanut j
; there is,” reports Mr. Trammell, “from I
* en s Giant to Spanish, and I’ve used the J
Liliist 0n 1500 pj C |< This combine |
I wili Pick any of them and get them all, |
or dry, in most any condition.”
nr V Mr. Trammell adds, “you don’t |
ha to stop to adjust the Lilliston, either.” |
Overwhelming testimony proves |
Lilliston first in the field.®
p
ave you seen the new Lilliston? |
Perry Implement Co.
PERRY, GEORGIA |
Mr. Golden is the grandson of
the late Mr. and Mrs. Henry Gol
den of Milledgeville, Mrs. An
el L. Hodges of Statesboro and
the late Junnie Roger Prosser
of Milledgeville.
He is a graduate of Georgia
Military High School and attend
ed Georgia Military College in
Milledgeville before entering the
United States Army and is cur
rently stationed at Fort Hood,
Texas.
The wedding will be August
24 at the Perry Methodist Church.
When applying an insecticide
around the home garden remem
ber it is effective only when
it reaches the insect, according
to Dr. Emmett Harris, entomolo
gist with the University of Geor
gia Extension Service.
New Bishop
Will Be Elected
Lake Junaluska, N.C.—A new
bishop of The United Methodist
Church in the Southeastern Jur
isdiction will be elected July
24-28 at Lake Junaluska, N.C.
Sixty-eight Georgians will be
among 534 lay and clerical dele
gates attending the Southeastern
Jurisdictional Conference, a nine
state body responsible for elec
tion of bishops. States include
Georgia, Florida, North Caro
lina, South Carolina, Tennessee,
Kentucky, Virginia, Mississippi,
and Alabama.
For the first time the body will
include Negro delegates. This is
because Negro annual confer
ences of the former ail Negro
Central Jurisdiction were trans
ferred this year into the formerly
white Southeastern Jurisdiction.
Delegates will represent
3,060,867 church members in
the jurisdiction. Os these
170,136 are Negro members and
32,199 are members of the form
er Evangelical United Brethren
Church. That church merged with
The Methodist Church in April to
form the United Methodist
Church.
Bishops are elected every
four years by secret ballot in
five jurisdictional conferences
across the nation. No nomina
tions are made, and all bishops
are elected from among ministers
in each jurisdictional conference
to be elected.
The Southeastern Jurisdiction
will elect only one bishop at
Lake Junaluska though two are
retiring. Retiring bishops are
Paul N. Garber of Raleigh, N.C.
and Walter C. Gum of Richmond,
Va.
Because of recently adopted
church laws, the Southeastern
Jurisdiction must receive two
transferring bishops from other
jurisdictions. One is Bishop L.
Scott Allen, formerly of the all
Negro Central Jurisdiction. The
other is Bishop Paul M. Herrick
of Dayton, Ohio formerly of the
Evangelical United Brethren
Church.
Bishop Allen, a Negro, will be
appointed to serve a predomi
nantly white area of the church
somewhere in the southeast.
All bishops are assigned for
four year periods. There are now
12 bishops on active duty in the
Southeastern Jurisdiction. All
of these will be reassigned at
the jurisdictional conference,
with some being sent to new
areas.
In order to receive the trans
ferring bishops and to elect one
new bishop, the conference must
create one new episcopal area,
or bishopric. It is expected to do
this. Tennessee is the largest
area in terms of United Methodist
membership, so a new area is
likely to be created there.
No bishop can serve more than
four quadrenniums, or 12 years,
in any one area. Bishop John
Smith has served the Atlanta
Area, which includes all church
es in Georgia, since 1960. He is
eligible to return for a third term
to serve through 1972.
In addition to electing bishops,
delegates will hear reports deal
ing with United Methodist work
in the southeast. also
hear a “state of the church ad
dress”, the episcopal message,
read by Bishop Roy H. Short of
Louisville, Ky. The message is
a joint declaration to delegates
from all bishops in the juris
diction.
AUBURN—Auburn University’s
academic deans have released
names of undergraduate students
whose grades for the spring
quarter were in the upper five
per cent. Students on the Honor
Roll from this area are: Corneil
ous L. Hardy, engineering, of
Perry.
Mary Jane Hunt, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Hunt, was
named to the Dean’s List at
Georgia College, Milledgeville,
for the Spring Quarter. Students
must compile an average of 3.5
or better on a scale of 4.5 while
taking at least 15 quarter-hours
of academic work.
Litter doesn't throw
itself away: litter
doesn't just happen
People cause it-and
only people can prevent
it. “People' means you
Keep America Beautiful.
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