Newspaper Page Text
Dade County—
The Pick of
Georgia’s 159
NO- 7-- -VOLUME 41.
FORMER DADE CO.
FARM AGT. KILLED
iN AUTO ACCIDENT
John R. McDaniel
Killed on Highway
Near Macon
The people of Dade County
shocked to learn of the
were John R. McDaniel,
death of Mr.
former Dade Farm Agent, who
was killed in an automobile ac¬
cident near Macon Saturday.
Mr. McDaniel was Dade’s first
County Agent and put the pres¬
ent farm program under way in
-his county. The McDaniel fami¬
ly has a host of friends in Dade
and throughout this section,
who will regret to learn of his
death. transferred
Mr. McDaniel was
to Wilkes county and later to
Madison, where he was County
Agent at the time of his death.
He was recognized as one of the
most efficient farm agents in
Georgia. County at¬
Several from Dade
tending the Farm Bureau meet¬
ing at Macon, talked with Mr.
McDaniel there, and O. G. Ari-
ail, Dade County Agent, was
notified of his death Saturday
by wire.
Following is an account of
the fatal accident, as it appear¬
ed in Sunday’s edition of The
Atlanta Constitution:
MACON, Ga., Feb. 7.— (JP )—
Four Georgians were killed
and a fifth was seriously injur¬
ed in two middle Georgia acci¬
dents late tonight.
The dead are:
John R. McDaniel, Madison
county agricultural agent, of
Danielsville.
Clyde L. Carson, of Daniels-
ville.
H. J. Arrundale, of Colbert.
Mrs. Elizabeth Perkins, of
Columbus.
The injured man was identi¬
fied as J. Gordon Epps, of Col¬
bert.
The four men were returning
home in one automoble from
the Georgia Farm Bureau Fed-,
eration convention here. The
car was sideswiped by a truck
trailer one mile outside of Gray.
Sheriff Hawkins, of Jones
county said the accident near
Gray resulted from the “jack¬
knifing” of a heavy trailer be¬
hind a cotton truck.
Carson was killed instantly,
he said. Arrundale and McDan¬
iel died in a local hospital.
Journal of Labor
Praises Former Gov.
From The Journal of Labor
Politics will soon begin buzz¬
ing over Georgia, for there will
be an election for a number of
important posts in the state.
One race which we predict will
create a lot of interest and en¬
thusiasm is that of Governor,
and unless all signs fail, the
type of man who will be elected
will be one demonstrating full
sympathy and sincere coopera¬
tion with the National Admini¬
stration. A person who in reality
believes in a program of build-
ms up actual security for the
common people of Georgia will
be very hard to defeat. Senti¬
ment among our citizenry brings
to mind what a mammoth pro¬
gram of this nature Former
Governor e. D. Rivers establish-
’ wll ile in office. It was he who
made it possible for us to ob-
free school books for our
children. The aged, blind and
ependent children, through ef-
s hi s administration, were
to receive Social Security
Refits, 0rts that it was also through his
the State Employ-
Ser vice was set up in the
, e thereby making it conven-
* for out of work people to
‘°‘ e easi ly find employment,
R -aidless of
what might have
sa ' d an d things developing
'"hich have all earmarks of
„ suiter-snipe
* politics, the fact
m ni ema his that Mr. Rivers
mtmned a record while Gov-
nc wh’ ^ irom U the ^1 he hard to e-
0 believe minds of those
in social justice.
,1 afc {fmmii) times
Devoted to The Best Interests of Dade County and Georgia. Published Weekly — Since 1901. Dade’s Only Newspaper.
The Times Enlarged
To 8-Column Size
Here’s the first copy of your
nlarged home paper — eight
"olumns, the largest in page
size ever published in Dade
County.
Back several years ago, The
Times was published in five
column size, later six, and since
about a year ago, has been a
seven-column. Speaking o 1
“several years ago,” the Editor
“rolled ink” for Mr. Joe Morris
back in 1916 when a five-col¬
umn was published weekly and
a few years later, set type for
Mr. Lauren Noble on a “six.”
Anyway, we are bringing the
size of The Times up to the
maximum size to make way for
more news and advertising.
We greatly appreciate the co¬
operation of everyone in our ef¬
forts to publish a respectable
newspaper, and we shall con¬
tinue to strive to make it more
interesting.
Dorothy Robinson
Represents The Times
Miss Dorothy Robinson, daugh¬
ter of Mr. and Mrs, J. T. Rob¬
inson, of Rising Fawn, is now
special advertising and circula¬
tion representative of The
Times.
Miss Robinson, for the past
several months, has been time
keeper for the local NYA and
is beginning her work with The
Times this week.
Being a country girl and
devoting most of her time help¬
ing her parents, Dorothy man¬
aged to finish Dade High School
with an exceptionally fine rec¬
ord, and has shown a high rate
of efficiency in her duties with
the NY A.
From time to time; "she will
call on prospective advertisers,
subscribers and non-subscribers.
The Times now has by far the
largest subscription list of any
newspaper ever published in
Dade County. With our modern
equipment, we believe we are
publishing a paper that is be¬
ing thoroughly read and enjoy¬
ed by our hundreds of readers.
We want to keep our mailing
list growing. Wider circulation
means udder coverage for our
advertisers.
Though the prices of news¬
print and printing material
have advanced considerably
during recent months, we are
holding the subscription price of
The Times at $1.50 per year.
If you are not a subscriber,
we hope you will be, and if you
are not a regular advertiser.we
trust you will begin now—your
business is worthy of advertis¬
ing, and The Times will carry
your message to every com¬
munity in the county.
Watch out for Dorothy—she
will be around to see you, either
about an ad or a subscription.
We shall greatly appreciate any
courtesy extended her.
Thanks Citizens
For Cooperation
Since I have become connect¬
ed with The Dade County Times
as Advertising and Circulation
Representative, I appreciate
very much the cooperation of
those on whom I have called.
During the next few months,
I hope to see many of the sub¬
scribers of The Times whose
subscriptions will be in arrears,
those who are not on our mail¬
ing list and the heads of the
business firms of the county.
We are anxious to send the
The Times to every family in
the county and we are especial¬
ly anxious to have our enter¬
prising businesses represented
in its columns.
With your continued coopera¬
tion, I feel that I may be of
some worthwhile service not on¬
ly to our home paper but to my
community and county as well.
Thanks.
—Dorothy Robinson.
Rev. Wynn Crawford filled his
regular appointment at the New
England Baptist church Sunday
morining at 11 o’clock.
19 CCC CAMPS
ARE TO BE MOVED
OR ABANDONED
Only Those Able to
Aid in War Work
Will Remain Open
Nineteen of the 29 Civilian
Conservation Corps camps lo¬
cated in Georgia will be moved
to military reservations or clos¬
ed entirely, State Director Char¬
les A. Coffin announced Satur¬
day.
The camps to be abandoned
are those engaged in soil con¬
servation, reforestration, wild¬
life protection and similar ac¬
tivities, Mr. Coffin said. Those
to be continued and enlarged
are the ones located near mili¬
tary reservation and construca-
tary reservation and construct-
fields, and other necessary mili¬
tary installations.
There are five such camps
now near Fort Benning and
they will be increased to nine.
Four near Camp Wheeler also
will be increased to nine. Simi¬
lar camps are planned near
Augusta, Albany and Valdosta
air bases.
“The only work to be contin¬
ued is aid in war work construc¬
tion and development and pro¬
tection of natural resources in
time of war, Mr. Coffin said.
“Camps that fail to qualify
under either of these conditions
will be closed as rapidly as pos¬
sible.”
Another new regulation re¬
quires that CCC enrollees agree
to accept assignment to any
camp in the continental United
States where replacements are
needed, including the Pacific
northwest.
The February enrollment in
Georgia begins on February 10
and continues until the 25th.
Applicants are no longer re¬
quired to be members of fami¬
lies on relief. The age limits are
17 to 23 Vt years.
Local Rationing
Board Issue* Tires
Certificates for the purchase
of passenger and truck tires
and tubes were issued by the
Local Rationing Board during
the latter part of January, as
follows:
Martha E. Wright, one tube.
W. T. Lea, four passenger
tires and four tubes (obsolete).
J. D. Brown, two truck tires.
K. D. Wells, four truck tires
and four truck tubes.
Jack Ford, two passenger tires
and two passenger tubes (obso¬
lete) .
Newton Ryan, four passenger
tires (obsolete).
Dr. R. E. Ownbey, one pass¬
enger tire and one passenger
tube.
Names of those receiving cer¬
tificates for purchase of tires
and tubes during February will
be published next week. The
February allotment for Dade
County consisted of four pass¬
enger tires, three passenger
tubes, 12 truck tires and 21
truck tubes.
Attention! Farm
Bureau Members!
The Dade County Farm Bureau
meets Friday afternoon, 3 o’¬
clock, Central War Time, at the
court house in Trenton. All
members are especially urged to
be present. The program for the
evening will be a report by the
members of the committee who
attended the Macon Convention.
_Gus Forester, President.
Special Notice To
Registrant* of Dade
The following schools have
been designated as places at
which to register for Selective
Service: Morganville,
Rising Fawn,
Davis Junior High, New Salem,
Wildwood, West Brow, Cole City
Hollow. Also, at the Local Board
office at Trenton on Saturday,
Sunday and Monday.
TRENTON, DADE COUNTY, GEORGIA, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1942.
(‘‘A Week of the War” sum¬
marizes information on the im¬
portant development of the week
made available by official sour¬
ces through and including Fri¬
day, February 6.)
President Roosevelt told his
press conference Pacific coun¬
cils coordinating the war effort
of the United States in the
southwest Pacific have been op¬
erating for about a month. The
military command in the ABDA
area itself, the President said,
is in the hands of Gen. Archi¬
bald Wavell, but strategical
problems are referred to Wash¬
ington and London. The joint
military and naval staffs sit in
Washington.
The Senate passed and sent
to the White House a joint
authorization for a $500,000,000
loan to China. President Roose¬
velt said the money will make
it possible for the Chinese to
purchase numerous war mater¬
ials, both in China and in oth¬
er countries. He said the loan
would be a definite relief for
the Chinese financial structure
strained by the long war with
the Japanese.
The White House announced
the U. S. through the RAF has
dropped a second pamphlet over
several occupied French sea¬
ports in the “biggest pamphlet
bombing job ever done.” The
first pamphlet, announced a
month ago, stressed the tradi¬
tional friendship between this
country and France; the second
told of the rapidly-expanding
IT. S. war production.
AIR
A Navy aviation training pro¬
gram designed to develop 30,000
of the toughest pilots in the
world annually for the Navy
and Marine Corps will be put
into operation by May 1. Navy
Secretary Knox announced. Ap¬
plications for training are now
being accepted. Mr. Knox asked
U. S. high school youth to aid
the Navy by prodfffting 500,000
aircraft models of 50 different
types of fighting planes to be
used in aircraft recognition and
range estimation in gunnery
practice and for training civil¬
ians in aircraft recognition. The
Office of Civilian Defense invit¬
ed college flyers and aviation
enthusiasts to participate in the
Civilian Air Raid Patrol which
is seeking to enlist 90,000 civil¬
ian pilots. Sixteen years is the
minimum age for enrollment for
ground service, and 18 for flight
duty. The Civil Aeronautics Ad¬
ministration reported a 60 per¬
cent increase in private flying
during 1941.
THE WAR FRONT
Gen. MacArthur’s troops in
the Philippines repulsed con¬
tinuous attacks by the enemy
throughout the week. Enemy
losses during the week included
11 planes plus an undetermined
number destroyed in the air
and on the ground in an attack
on Japanese-occupied Marshall
and Gilbert Islands, many fleet
auxiliaries, two transports and
probably” a third, and an ene¬
my warship torpedoed. U. S.
losses were 13 planes, two tank¬
ers and two freighters. The
Navy and Marine Corps report¬
ed 1,294 officers and men miss¬
ing or prisoners of war. The
House passed and sent to the
Senate a bill to continue the
pay of persons in the armed
forces and civilian employees of
the War and Navy for a year
after reported missing, captur¬
ed or interned.
NAVY
Congress passed the largest
appropriation bill in history of
nearly $24 billion in direct cash
appropriations and $4 billion in
contract authorizations for the
Navy. The Navy said 100,000
men have enlisted since the at¬
tack on Pearl Harbor, and the
Marine Corps has passed the
100,000-man mark in officers
and men, both reserves and
regulars. Three destroyers and
one battleship were launched
and two more destroyers and
one cruiser will launched today
(Lincoln’s birthday).
SELECTIVE SERVICE
Selective Service Director Her-
shey asked local draft boards to
aid deferment of apprentices in
essential war production trades
because there is a- mounting de¬
mand for skilled workers. Gen.
Hershey said a plan has been
proposed for allowances and al¬
lotments to release for induc¬
tion many registrants now de¬
ferred on grounds of dependen¬
cy. In World War I, he said,
payments up to $50 a month
were made. He said no figures
will be issued on the number of
men who register February 16.
SHIPPING
President Roosevelt told his
press conference emergency
shipping schedules make it al¬
most impossible to utilize full
cargo capacity of American
merchant vessels because war
developments often make it
necessary for the ships to sail
without advance notice. The
Maritime Commission said
through cooperative action with
American ship operators, im¬
ports of 10 important raw ma¬
terials increased about 200 per
cent during 1941. The Commis¬
sion maintained its ship-a-day
construction schedule by launch
ing 14 new vessels during the
last half of January. Eight
French merchant ships in U. S.
ports were requisitioned by the
Commission.
PRODUCTION AND
CONVERSION
The WPB announced it clear¬
ed contracts amounting to $3
billion in the week ending Jan.
21. The War Department an¬
nounced production of .30 cali¬
ber ball ammunition was nearly
doubled during the first three
weeks of Jan. 1942. over the cor¬
responding period last year. War
Department Production Director
Knudsen announced the Chrys¬
ler Corporation will construct a
$100,000,000 plant in Chicago to
turn out Wright 12-cylinder air¬
cooled engines.
War Production Chairman
Nelson announced adoption of
a system of daily progress re¬
ports to check production de¬
lays “anywhere along the line.”
He merged priorities and sub¬
contracting field offices in a new
Bureau of Field Operations to
orovide “faster, more efficient
service to business and indus¬
try.” The WPB asked the type¬
writer manufacturing industry
which produced 1,000,000 ma¬
chines in 1941 to cut its norm¬
al production 25 percent immed¬
iately and convert its facilities
to war production.
CENTRAL INFORMATION
SERVICE
President Roosevelt directed
the United States Information
Service to expand its facilities
“so that visitors shall have one
central place to which they can
go for direction and informa¬
tion.” The President said be¬
cause many businessmen and
other citizens “are coming to
Washington in increasing num¬
bers seeking information and
the assistance of their Govern¬
ment ... it has become more
and more difficult for those
coming A . on specific business
to locate the Government offi¬
cial who can give authoritative
answers to their questions. It is
now necessary that there be an
entegration of the various of¬
fices having direct contact with
the public, and that their ac¬
tivities be coordinated under the
direction of a central office.”
CIVILIAN DEFENSE
The Senate passed and sent
to the House a bill to create a
$1,000,000,000 fund to compen¬
sate American property owners
for war damages. The fund
would compensate for losseso th-
er than life or personal injury
to the extent of $15,000. OCD
Executive Landis announced
cities in target areas will not be
required to submit requisitions
for protective equipment in¬
cluding gas masks and auxiliary
fire-fighting equipment to be
provided by $100 million of Fed¬
eral funds. He said the equip¬
ment would be allocated to the
(Continued on Page Six)
James E. Morrison
At Training School
James E. Morrison, son of W.
F. Morrison, is attending a four
day training course being con¬
ducted in Rome, Ga., this week
by Capt. W. T. McKinney, 7th
Congressional District Chair¬
man of the Fire Department,
Civilian Defense Council.
Immediately upon James’ re¬
turn, a local Civilian Defense
fire squad will be organized in
Dade County for the purpose of
teaching a large number of our
citizens methods by which
proper rescue may be made,
bombs extinguished with sand,
fighting fire in absence of or¬
dinary fire equipment and nu¬
merous pther civilian duties
which fall within this category.
Defense Stamp Honor
Roll, Dade High
This is a list of those buying
Defense Stamps at the Dade
County High School this week:
First Grade: Francis Michaels,
Virginia Jo Keith, Betty Price,
Autumn Troxtel, Kenneth
Combs, Margaret Usry, Bert
Castleberry, Bruce Castleberry,
Bill Thompson, Mrs. Ersaline
Carroll.
Second Grade: Mary Eliza¬
beth Cooper, Martha Bell Cas¬
tleberry, Edna Iris Castleberry,
Miss Lola Moore.
Thij-d Grade: Robert Lowery,
Gene Gass, Roy Combs, Marion
Blevins, R. M. Morrison, Clyde
Puckett, James Mitchell, June
Prince, Bernard Keith, Vonnie
Taylor, Grace Pryor, Sarah Price
James Usry, Mrs. Thelma Bell.
Fourth Grade: James Howell
Tatum, Donald Wheeler, Mar¬
jorie Morgan, Janette Young.
Fifth Grade: Charles Pryor,
J. W. Forshee.
Sixth Grade: Ruth Justus, Bill
Tatum, Brownie Lee Wheeler,
Max Wheeler.
Seventh Grade: Myril Hibbs,
Neal Gray Virginia McCauley,
Betty Jean Cureton, Freddie
Morgan, Lillian Gatlin.
Eighth Grade: Sybil McGuf-
fey, Irene Allison, Elizabeth
Brown, Martha Ann Morgan,
Thelma Pryor, Jimmy Tatum.
Ninth Grade: None.
Tenth Grade: Sue Porter,
Martha Porter, Lolita Bird, Zel-
pha Gray, Grover Moore, Billy
Wright.
Eleventh Grade: Shirley Mc-
Guffey, Mrs. M. R. Wilson, Mrs.
J. L. Fricks.
NATION TURNS
CLOCKS AHEAD
FOR WAR TIM E
WASHINGTON, Feb. 8.— (JP)—
The nation put its clocks on war
duty Sunday, moving them one
hour ahead of standard time to
save electricity for war factories
and to give more daylight for
the outdoor tasks.
“War time”—the designation
of President Roosevelt—came
while most of the nation slept
at 2 a. m., standard time in
each of the zones across the
country.
The transition was made with
little flurry. Most urban house¬
holders pushed the hand ahead
one hour when they wound the
clock and put the cat out Sun¬
day night. Railroads, air lines
and communications systems
had to be more precise about it.
The new time comes by vir¬
tue of congressional enactment
and will remain in force until
six months after the war ends.
Legally, it can be applied only
to common carriers, the Federal
Government and the hour at
which acts or orders of the Fed¬
eral Government are effective.
In practice, it is being accept¬
ed by most individuals and
business firms—but the act
makes no specific privisions for
either enforcement or penalties.
Mr. J. P. Carpenter, manager
of “Herb” and stock farm in
Slygo, was in Trenton Tuesday
on business. While here, Mr.
Carpenter came by and sub¬
scribed to The Times. Thanks
to him.
STATE SCHOOLS
ARE COOPERATING
SELECTIVE SERVICE
Work Not To
Interfere With
School Hours
L. M. Allison. County Superin¬
tendent of Schools, received the
following letter regarding the
registration for Selective Ser¬
vice, from State School Superin¬
tendent M. D. Collins:
In the new registration under
the Selective Service Act, which
is scheduled for Monday, Feb.
16, our school people will not
have quite the same degree of
responsibility that attended the
previous event. For at that time,
October 16, 1940, the facilities
and personnel of the schools of
our State were used to register
420,210 Georgia youths for arm¬
ed duty In the service of their
country. This time, however, the
primary responsibility for con¬
ducting the registration will be
in the hands of the chairman
of the local Draft Board.
At the same time we have
been advised that the officials of
the Selective Service organiza¬
tion will heartily welcome all
the assistance we can render
them, and Governor Talmadge,
by official proclamation, has
called upon all of us as good
citizens to aid in this work.
Without interruption of the
normal school work, therefore,
but as an extra act of patrio¬
tic service, I feel that we should
cooperate with the local Draft
Boards. May I urge that you
maintain close iaison with the
local Draft authorities and be
prepared to render every assist¬
ance and facility within, your
power?
I The contributions already
made by the school officials of
our state to the National War
effort have been a substantial
and I know that this approach¬
ing event of February 16 will
prove no exception.
With kindest regards, I am
Sincerely yours,
M. D. COLLINS,
State Superintendent of
Schools.
Mr. Allison earnestly requests
the cooperation of all the teach¬
ers of the county. The work,
however, is not to interfere with
regular school hours, Mr. Alli¬
son said.
Defense Stamp Honor
Roil, N. Dade High
“We’re helping to Lick the
Japs by ‘Licking’ Defense
Stamps.”
This is a list of those buying
Defense Stamps this week at
the North Dade Junior High
School:
First Grade: Jaunema Faye
Turner. Betty Sue Hixon, Jackie
Fugatt, Aaron Wallen, James
Lee Webb, Annie Lou West,
Gloria Jean Hancock, Christine
Simms, Janie R. Haswell, Norris
D. Simms, Merrill Smyth, Paul
Gaither, Carolyn Joyce Hartline,
Frances Guinn.
Second Grade: Bobbie Fugatt,
Ruth Wallen, Ray Humble.
Third Grade: Miles Koger,
Walter Griffith.
Fourth Grade: Miles Murphy,
Jimmie Bird, Nelson Davis, Cyn¬
thia Moore, Charles Nix, Johnny
Wallen, Milton Price, Jayne
Griffith.
Fifth Grade: Lorene Humble.
Sixth Grade: Mary Sue Has¬
well, Elizabeth Wallen, Robert
Puckett, Clark Cole, Betty Dix¬
on, Charles Smyth, Nancy Bird,
James Ryan, Mary Jo Smyth,
; Frances Wilhoite, Franklin Nee¬
ly, Leona Lawson, Helen Porter.
i Seventh Grade: Earnest Law-
son.
Eighth Grade: J. W. Moore,
Faye Lea, Lois Bird, Maurine
Dantzler, Betty June Berry, El¬
ba Earl Cole.
Ninth Grade: Mamie Glenn
Cureton, Jimmie Hartline.
Mrs. Martha Derryberry is re¬
ported very ill at her home at
New England.
Register Now
For Civilian
Defense
$1.50 PER YEAR
REGISTER NOW FOR
CIVILIAN DEFENSE
IS URGENT CALL
Citizens May
Register at Schools
Of County
The powers with which our
country and its Allies are at war
have abandoned, not only the
code of honor, and civilization,
but the very rudiments of hu¬
manity. They are savages arm¬
ed with science and equipped
with modern tools and weapons.
They make no distinction be¬
tween military objectives and
undefended cities, nor between
armed forces and helpless civ¬
ilians, including women and
children. The Japanese at Ma¬
nila and the Nazis on their
raids in Europe have selected
shrines of beauty and worship
as special targets for their
bombs. Their purpose is total
destruction of homes, schools,
churches, hospitals and all pub¬
lic utilities, as well as war in¬
dustries and fortifications.
Against such enemies civilian
defense is scarcely less urgent
than armies and navies. Every
American city must prepare to
meet whatever peril or punish¬
ment the months and years a-
head may bring. They must
prepare now, and not wait until
emergencies are bursting upon
them. It is said that 20 min¬
utes of forewarning would have
averted the disaster at Pearl
Harbor. By organizing civilian
defense while there is yet time
for cool thinking and thorough
plans, we may save much prop¬
erty, many lives and many
heartbreaks. Organized defense
is the only defense that will
stand. None of us, nowever loy¬
al, courageous or efficient, can
render due service in time's
like these except in disciplined
cooperation with others. Thus
Dade County’s problem of civ¬
ilian defense, which is tied in
with that of the country as a
whole, calls for the earnest co¬
operation of each of us in one
capacity or another.
The needs of civilian defense
are so numerous and so various
that there is a place and an op¬
portunity for all who will vol¬
unteer. The important thing
just now, for all of us who wish
to serve, is to go to the office
of the Ordinary, or County Ag¬
ent, in the court house at Tren¬
ton, and register. At Morgan¬
ville, you may register with
Mrs. E. R. Wells; at Wildwood,
you may register with Mrs.
Ralph Bird; in Rising Fawn,
you may register at the par¬
sonage with Rev. F. B. Wyatt.
It will be decided by compe¬
tent director as to just what we
are best fitted to do and which
of the several courses of train¬
ing is best suited to our capaci¬
ties and time at our disposal.
When this is done the Civil¬
ian Defense leaders will know
definitely on just whom and on
just how many they can count
md- the program of prepar¬
ing Dade County for whatever
war crisis may come can get
fully under way.
Below is a list to date of
patriotic citizens of Dade Coun¬
ty who have registered for vol¬
unteer civilian defense activi¬
ties:
Judge J. M. Carroll, Ebb For¬
ester, L. M. Allison, W. F. Mor¬
rison, John W. Murphy, Graham
Hale, Grover C. Tatum, Will I.
Price, H. R. Sims, H. J. Rudder,
Max Forester, J. L. Fricks, O. G.
Ariail, A. J. Embry, Roy Moore,
A. W. Peck, Maurine Scruggs, J.
C. Ayers, E. F. Usry, W B. Dan¬
iel, Nina Ruth Peters, Glenna
Sue Porter, Lolita May Bird,
Dora B. Gold, W. F. Phillips,
Freddie Morgan, Loma Briley
Beaty, O. M. Reeves, G.A. Moore,
H. Grady Hawkins, Jr., Martha
Lea Porter, Geneva C. Allison,
Elizabeth Irene Forester, Clara
Belle Steele, W. C. Simpson,
Mar j ora Young Fricks, J. G.
Pace, Shirley Beatrice McGuf-
fey, Dora Lorine Moore, Lola
Moore, Lawrence Bryson, W. C.,
Dyer, Jr., James E. Morrison E.
G. Wright, Jr., Jim Murphy, Mrs.
(Continued on Pag# Four)