Newspaper Page Text
State—County
And Local
Happenings
VOL. 52; NO. 11.
TALMADOE OPPOSES
SENATOR GEORGE IN
SENATORIAL RACE
ALSO REPORTED THAT GOV. E.
D. RIVERS WILL SEEK THE
NOMINATION.
ATLANTA, May 17 (GPS).—AII
speculation on former Gov. Eugene
Talmadge’s future political plans has
been put to an end.
The ex-govenor has announced his
candidacy for nomination as United
States senator in the Sept. 14 dem
ocratic primary.
Talmadge opposes Senator Walter
F. George, who already has indicated
he will seek nomination. There also
have been reports that Gov. Ed Rivers
will enter the senatorial race, but
no statement has been forthcoming
from him on his future plans.
In -announcing his candidacy, for
mer Gov. Talmadge said Georgia and
other states were facing a “crisis”
that has. put millions of people on re
lief rolls, and charged Senator - George
was “very smart—a great constitu
tional lawyer, and was a power in
the senate for big business.”
“Whatever the rights of the peo
ple were involved our senior senator
spoke on one side and voted on the
other —making himself a joke and ri
diculous in the eyes of all thinking
people,” Talmadge asserted.
No direct mention of the New Deal
was made in his statement, although
in the past Talmadge has been one of
President Roosevelt’s severest critics.
The Talmadge statement ,however,
did say:
“We must revivify business in this
country. We must encourage hones
ty, hard work and saving, by mak
ing it possible for those three virtues
to earn a reward in the shape of
profits for the comfort of their fam
ilies and protection for themselves
in their old age.”
The former governor said he would
devote his entire attention to the
senatorial race “without any atten
tion or suggestions as to any candi
date for any other office in the
state.”
- The Talmadge announcement offer
ed a fbur-point platform to remedy
America’s troubles:
1. “Free land built America, and
free land must save American.”
2. Education of “our boys and girls
to handle' the resources of this coun
try.”
3. Improve the CCC camps,”
4. “Stop waste. Stop graft, and
stop corruption.”
A stormy figure' in Georgia poli
tics for more than ten years, Tal
madge left the governor’s office in
January, 1937, after serving two
terms.
Unification Fight
Has Just Started
(Newspaper Features, Inc.)
ATLANTA, May 17.—The fight to
prevent unification of the Northern
and Southern Methodist churches did
not end at Birmingham a few days
ago when the general conference of
the Southern Church voted for it
and the judicial council of the con
ference subsequently ratified it. A
group of Methodist layment and lay
women opposed to unification obtain
ed. a charter in Fulton superior court
under the name of “Loyal Southern
Methodists” and are formulating
plans to extend the membership of
the association or society throughout
the territory of the Southern Meth
odist Church.
It will, its leaders announce, “pre
serve at all hazards the Methodist
Episcopal Church, South, with all of
its property and glorious achieve
ments for the advancement of the
Kingdom of Christ.”
It will conduct an intensive prop
aganda in all available channels, in
cluding the employment of speakers
to take the field, addressing Meth
odist congregations from the Chesa
peake to the Rio Grand.
Four Georgia 4-H
Clubsters Awarded
Trips to Washington
Two boys and two girls, outstand
ing among Georgia 4-H club mem
bers. have been awarded free trips
to Washington, D. 0., for the twelfth
annual national 4-H club camp, to be
held June 16 to 22.
G. N. Cunningham, state 4-H club
leader, announced in Athens this
week that Georgia will be represent
ed by John R. Minchew, of Waycross,
Ware county; Troy Manning, who
lives near Alamo in Laurens coun
ty; Miss Venice Hegwood, of La Fay
ette, Walker county, and Miss Jeanne
Patterson, of Savannah, Chatham
county.
The state 4-H leader said the na
tional camp is held each year for
the purpose of acquainting club del
egates and extei*.ion farm and home
demonstration agents with the work
of the U. S. department of agricul
ture, as well as to provide an oppor
tunity for conferences on 4-H and ex
tension service plans.
The Georgia delegates are select
ed each year on the basis of leader
ship qualities, Cunningham said.
Complete records on one boy and one
girl in each county are submitted by
the county farm and home agents,
and the winners are selected from
this group,
SiuiuiuTinlh* Nms
Local Office For Reliance
Opened In Summerville
The Reliance Life Insurance com
pany has appointed Rowland B.
Wheeler for the local agent, offices
on the second floor of Selman build
ing.
The new office will represent the
first active agency established by the
company here, although it has over
one million dollars of insurance in
force in this territory.
With assets exceeding one hundred
million dollars, the Reliance Life In
surance company has more than 450
million dollars of life insurance in
force, and never has merged with or
purchased another company, its
growth having been due entirely to
its own efforts.
Included on the board of directors
for investments of the company are
such men as these: Andrew W. Rob
ertson, chairman of Westinghouse
Electric & Manufacturing company;
Frank R. Phillips, president of Du
quesne Light company; William L.
Morris, president of the American
Window Glass company, and George
H. Clapp, director of the Aluminum
Company of America.
Mr. Wheeler, having over three
years of underwriting experience, is
fully qualified to serve present and
future policyholders in this territory.
WINNERS IN TRION
HISTORY CONTEST
JUDGING TASK NO EASY ONE
DUE TO GENERAL EXCEL
LENCE OF PAPERS.
We are glad that we can announce
the winners of the Trion history con
test this week. Miss Alice Stokell, of
Chattanooga, was in charge of the
judging and she writes tnat the task
was no easy one due to the general
excellence of the papers. After care
ful reading and re-reading the pa
pers turned in the judges announced
that the first prize will go to A. Mc-
Millan Myers; the second to Miss
Mackie Tate, and the third to Mrs.
Jessie Carroll Trammell. If these win
ners will come to the library they
can claim their prizes of $5, $3 and
$2, respectively.
We want to say again that all the
papers were good, and that everyone
who turned in a paper has done their
community a real service. All these
papers will be kept in the library as
historical documents and the time
will probably come when they will be
very rare and valuable.
Last week the first item about the
history of Trion appeared in the two
papers. Every week there will be more
and we are asking most urgently
that everyone who has any slight
fact to add to what they see publish
ed, or any correction, send their in
formation in to the Trion Civic Li
brary. -We are anxious to get as com
plete history of Trion ana its neigh
borhood as it is possible to get.
Next week there will be more his
torical facts given, watch for this,
and see that the old settlers of the
county read it so they can add more
information to it or make any neces
sary corrections.
FOR SALE—Three hundred bushels
good sound dry Corn.—B. H. Ed
mondson.
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH.
Preaching service at 11 a.m.
Sunday school at 9:45 a.m.
Wayside at 3 p.m.
Young people meet at 7 p.m.
“The Flapper Grandmother,” three
act Wayne P. Sewell musical comedy,
will be presented Friday night, May
20, at the Berryton Community house
under the auspices of the Berryton
school. Snappy songs and dance rou
tines. Forty members in the cast.
Every line a laugh.
Trion Red Cross Chapter
Has An Enviable Record
The Trion chapter of the American
Red Cross heads the list of all chap
ters in the United States in percent
age of membership to population.
This is indeed a most remarkable
and enviable record and Chattooga
county, as well as Trion citizens, are
very proud of this excellent record
of really enrolling 52 per cent, of the
population of Trion in the Red Cross
roll call.
This shows, beyond a doubt, the
wonderful co-operative spirit among
the Trion residents.
EYES EXAMINED: Have your
eyes examined and fitted with prop
er glasses by Dr. Sapp at our store
Friday, May 27 (one day only). Pri
ces reasonable. McGinnis Drug Co.
Georgia Exports
Increase In March
(Bv Georgia News Service.)
March exports from the Georgia
customs district were valued at sl,-
582,498 as compared with February
figures of $882,638.
Imports for March, 1938, dropped
to $1,087,791 as compared with sl,-
192,923 last year.
Among the leading exported arti
cles from Georgia were . textile fi
bers and manufactures, with a value
of $611,791, according to W. H.
•Schroder, district manager of the
Atlanta office of the bureau of for
eign and domestic commerce,
SUMMERVILLE, CHATTOOGA COUNTY, GEORGIA, THURSDAY, MAY 19, 1938.
PRIZE WINNERS IN
WOCO-PEP CONTEST
CARROLL E. COOK IS WINNER
OF $250 PRIZE IN DRIVE
SAFELY CRUSADE.
Carroll E. Cook, of 301 Tenth St.,
N. E., Atlanta, was the winner of the
first prize of $250 in the Woco-Pep
drive safely crusade slogan-writing
contest for April, according to an an
nouncement made here today by A.D.
Littlejohn, Woco-Pep agent in this
territory.
W. A. Mason,- of 201 Log Cabin
drive, Macon, was awarded a second
prize of SIOO, and Lee W. Blitch, of
210 W. Cranford avenue, Valdosta,
won third place and a prize of $75.
The following won prizes of $25
each: G. D. Goodman, Decatur; J. S.
Etheredge, Albany; Miss Dallas Du
mas, Atlanta; W. Comer Davis, At
lanta; F. Keating Pugh, Atlanta;
John R. O’Brien, Savannah; Miss
Earle Alexander, Commerce.
The following were awarded $lO
each: D. S. Hosea, Atlanta; C. F.
Bruce, Atlanta; Robert Booth, Man
chester; Odessa Harrell, Pelham; H.
W. Hill, Columbus; Ivan L. Lester,
Dublin; I. C. Langford, Atlanta; Has
kell O. Upshaw, Carrollton; W. H.
Fletcher, Carrollton; John F. Wilson,
Crawford: Mrs. Jimmie Cantrell, At
lanta; William Macomson, Lavonia;
T. R. Christmas, Atlanta; Q. C. O’-
Neal, Macon; E. G. Dick, Atlanta.
The following won $5 prizes: Mrs.
E. A. Ferman, Scott; H. D. Haynes,
Columbus; Justen H. LaCombe,
Brunswick; James A. Miller, Smyr
na; Mrs. C. A. McLendon, Atlanta;
James H. Osborne, Brunswick; D. C.
Roberts, Gainesville; J. M. Samples,
Macon; W. H. Wallace, Lindale; Ray
mond C. Wilson, Atlanta; Jack Tubbs,
Atlanta; Mrs. J. L. Williams, Ideal;
Lucile O. Adams, Riverdale; R. E.
Munday, Doraville; Mrs. J. M. Flani
gan, Atlanta; Mrs. G. L. Turner, At
’anta; Hollis H. Whitman, Atlanta;
J. R. Griffin, Eatonton; John Gil
bert, Suwanee; Chas. Garbutt, Ly
ons; Mrs. A. T. Ramsay, Atlanta;
R. D. Craig, Atlanta; Jack Carroll,
Atlanta; Victor Hollis, Macon, John
Ramsaur, Atlanta; J. W. Wright, At
lanta; J. W. Hancock, Jr., Macon;
Mrs. J. A. Lindsey, Atlanta; Arthur
'Fort Hammond, College Park; H. N.
Dean, Atlanta; Mrs. L. S. Bond, De
catur; Bert Best, Atlanta; H. H.
Best, Rome; Robert Brown, Colum
bus: Edward Dodson, Forrest Park;
Tames Gatlin, Sr., Atlanta; G. C.
Hosch, Avondale Estates; R. H. King,
Atlanta; R. R. Miles, Columbus; Mrs.
NT. P. Cox, Atlanta; I. V. Rainwater,
Waynesboro; R. A. Sheridan, Gaines
ville; F. G. Woodruff, Atlanta; Miss
Jessie Allen, Atlanta; E. O. Hooker,
. aeon; Mrs. John Fairey, Atlanta;
□ . M. Collins, Macon; Ralph Clark,
LaGrange; Robert P. Crawder, Sa
vannah; C. C. Bruker, Augusta.
The April slogan-writing contest
vas one of a series of contests being
conducted by Woco-Pep dealers in
connection with their big Woco-Pep
rive safely crusade. The May con
:es.t in which seventy-five more prizes
zill be awarded to Georgia motorists
’s well'under way. Full information
and entry blanks may be obtained at
Woco-Pep dealers, sl,ooCi will be
awarded each month of the crusade.
Monopoly and Its Practices Endanger
Democratic Government, Says F.D.R.
Declaring that “concentrated pri
vate economic power” is struggling
to “master our democratic govern
ment,” President Roosevelt, in his
message to congress on monopoly,
made it plain that he is not begin
ning “any ill-considered ‘trust-bust
ing’ activity which lacks proper con
sideration for economical results.”
The president called for “a thor
ough study of the concentration of
economic power in American indus
try and the effect of that concentra
tion upon the decline of competition”
and asked for $500,000 to finance a
study of the problem. He also re
quested $200,000 for the department
of justice “to provide for the proper
and fair enforcement of the existing
anti-trust laws.”
Borah Approves.
Senator Borah, who recently con
ferred with the president on this
subject, approved the investigation,
but feared that it might “string along
and finally reach the desk or the up
per shelf in the form of ten or twen
ty volumes which few will ever con
sult.” The Idaho senator asserted
that “we know that monopoly exists
in this country” and that it is under
mining our whole economic and so
cial structure. “The president’s state
ment of facts,” says Mr. Borah,
leaves only one question for study—
that is how to deal with the subject.”
The president’s message pointed
out that the liberty of a democracy is
not safe if private power grows to a
point where it becomes stronger than
the state itself. Moreover, this lib
erty is not safe if the business sys
tem does not produce employment
and produce and distribute goods in
such away as to obtain an accepta
ble standard of living.
Concentrated Power.
Asserting that a concentration of
private power “without equal in his
tory” is growing in this country, the
president cited statistics.
In the year 1935, he said, one-tenth
SOME INTERESTING
FACTS ABOUT AIR MAIL
WINNERS ARE ANNOUNCED IN
THE ESSAY AND POSTER
CONTESTS.
Adventure and romance have al
ways been integral parts of the
United States postal service. The post
office is a part of our history and
an influence on our nation’s destiny.
A united colonial postal service, with
Benjamin Franklin as its chief, was
the forerunner of a more perfect un
ion of independent states. The mails
moved west with our pioneers and
ever held its distant areas in contact
even at hazard of life itself from
savage men and savage nature. Stage
coach, pony express; the first, and
latest, steam cars all carried the mail
through to its appointed destination,
in spite of storms, flood, and black
h’ours of civil strife. Then the mail
acquired wings. Adventure rode with
the first mail bag aloft. Now it has
gone abroad.
Our country’s foreign air mail sys
tem upholds the traditions of the
service. It serves a vast area, distant
and strange countries, with people of
other races, and brings them to our
very doors, helping to make them our
good neighbors and friends. The sys
tem contracts our widespread net
work of domestic air mail routes at
Miami and Brownsville. One route
’ies southward through the repub
lics of Central America and Mexico,
another across the Caribbean to the
Canal Zone. A third follows the is
lands to Trinidad. From there the
routes join to make a great 11,000-
mile loop around three coasts of
South America, north, east, and west,
far to the southward fly across the
mighty Andes and the pampas of the
Argentine. Recently the system has
reached outward east and west across
our bordering oceans, eastward tent
atively to Bermuda, and westward
across the Pacific to the mainland of
Asia. This very month service is be
ing inaugurated in Alaska.
The area these routes cover is a
land of glamour, the Spanish Main,
the towering Andes, lush tropical
jungles, the lands of the Incas, the
Aztecs, and the Mayans, Havana,
Lima, Santiago, Rio de Janeiro, and
now the far reaches of the Pacific,
greatest of oceans. Over these storied
places fly the clipper ships of the
air, refiving an old American tradi-
(Continued on Last Page.)
5,435 Unemployed
In Georgia Given
Jobs During April
(By Georgia News Service.)
ATLANTA, May 17.—A total of
5,435 unemployed Georgians were
given jobs last month through the
state employment service, working
in co-operation with the federal em
ployment service, it was revealed.
Registrations at both services during
the month totaled 9,048, which was
a decrease of 5.6 per cent, compared
with the preceding month.
of one per cent, of all corporations
owned 52 per cent, of the assets of
all corporations.
Less than 5 per cent, of the cor
porations owned 87 per cent, of all
assets.
In regards to corporate incomes,
one-tenth of one per cent, earned 50
per cent, of the net income of all;
of the manufacturing corporations,
less than 4 per cent, of them earned
84 per cent, of all the net profits of
all of them.
In 1929, three-tenths of 1 per cent,
of our population received 78 per
cent, of the dividends distributed.
In regards to the distribution of
the national income, in 1935-36, 47
per cent, of American families had
incomes less than SI,OOO for the year
and “at the other end of the ladder,”
less than one and one-half per cent,
of the nation’s families received in
comes equal to the total incomes re
ceived by the 47 per cent, at the low
er end of the scale.
Power In the Public.
These figures, in the president’s
opinion, do not measure the actual
degree of concentration of control of
industry. Various corporate and fi
nancial devices are used to maintain
control over large areas of American
industry. While anxious to secure
the advantages of efficient industrial
growth, the president insists upon
competition and declares that “if the
nation’s business is to be allotted by
plan and not by competition” the
power shall not be vested in any pri
vate group or cartel, but in the pub
lic through its democratically respon
sible government.”
Space does not permit us to take
up each of the subjects discussed by
the president, who feels that one of
the primary causes of our present
difficulties is to be found in the dis
appearance of price competition in
(Continued on Laet Page.)
TRION MAY GET
NEW POST OFFICE
Trion was listed as one of the
ten Georgia cities that is eligible
for a new post office building, it
was revealed a few days ago.
The house appropriations com
mittee, introducing the new
spending-lending bill has includ
ed ten Georgia post office build
ings in the list of projects eli
gible for construction under the
proposed $60,000,000 appropria
tion for new federal buildings.
The Georgia projects listed and
estimated cost of each:
Ashburn, $75,000; Ball Ground,
$75,000; Bremen, $70,000; Camil
la, $75,000; Emory University,
$70,000; Lyons, $75,000; Mill
edgeville, $77,000; Rome, $280,-
000; Savannah, $185,000; Trion,
$70,000.
judgeTOenry
DIES IN CHATTANOOGA
WAS PIONEER NORTH GEORGIA
RESIDENT—FUNERAL WAS
HELD HERE TUESDAY.
Judge William Madison Henry, 85,
pioneer North Georgia resident, well
known jurist, died in a Chattanooga
hospital early Monday morning after
a short illness. He had been in fail
ing health several years.
Judge Henry was the father of Dr.
Charles R. Henry, medical director
of the Provident Life & Accident In
surance company, of Chattanooga,
and he had spent a large part of his
time in recent years with Dr. Henry
and Mrs. Henry at their home in
Dallas Heights.
Judge Henry’s first American an
cestor was William Henry, who came
to this country in 1733, and landed on
the east shores of Maryland. Later
he moved to what is now York coun
ty, South Carolina, and he and his
sons were engaged in the Revolution
ary battles of King’s Mountain and
Cowpens.
Jurdge Henry, born Feb. 10, 1853,
was a son of William Warren Henry
and Mrs. Mary Cleghorn Henry, near
La Fayette, Ga. His first wife was
Miss Medora Rudicil, daughter of the
late Dr. R. Y. Rudicil, who died in
1903. Os this union there were six
children: Mary Henry, who died in
early childhood; Col. William Rudi
cil Henry, field artillery, U.S. army,
Panama, C. Z; Dr. Charles R. Henry,
of Chattanooga; Mrs. E. Heywood
Brumby, of Atlanta; Miss Evelyn Mc-
Millan Henry, of Atlanta, and the
late Major Roy O. Henry, of the
Sixth cavalry, Fort Oglethorpe, who
died in 1934.
His surviving brother is Robert A.
Henry, Nashville, Tenn., and his sis
ters are Mrs. A. T. Powell, of Sum
merville. and Mrs. B. A. Powell, of
Berryton.
Judge Henry’s second wife was
Mrs. Evelyn Dimmock, of Ohio, who
died in 1929. There were no children.
Judge Henry received his first ed
ucation from his father. Later at
tended the county schools in Georgia,
the Dalton academy, and graduated
from the University of Georgia with
honors. He was a member of the Phi
Beta Kappa fraternity. He then
studied law and was admitted to the
bar at Summerville. He represented
Chattooga county in the Georgia
legislature for several years, and in
1894 he was appointed judge of the
superior court of the Rome judicial
circuit, which consists of Floyd, Chat
tooga and Walker counties. He serv
ed twelve years as judge of this
court.
After retiring from the bench he
practiced law in Rome and La Fay
ette and the courts of the circuit. He
had a keen interest in history. While
too young to participate in the Civil
war, he lived the sanguinary Battle
of Chickamauga and remembered
hearing the guns of that conflict and
knew intimately all its phases as
well as the history of the. markers
that were later erected to commemo
rate this struggle.
Judge Henry was a member of the
Presbyterian church, and a Mason.
Funeral services were held at the
Presbyterian church in Summerville
Tuesday afternoon at 2 o’clock by the
Rev. Taylor Mortpn. Interment in the
Summerville cemetery. Judge Henry’s
nephews were active pallbearers and
the honorary pallbearers were mem
bers of the bar of the Rome judicial
circuit.
Blind Survey to Begin
By WPA In County
E. L. Downing, of Marietta, area
supervisor for the blind survey, was
here today to assist Ellis Echols in
beginning a census of the blind in
Chattooga county.
This survey is state-wide and is
being conducted by the works prog
ress administration of Georgia at the
request of the state department of
public welfare.
The purpose of the survey is to lo
cate every blind person in this coun
ty, regardless of race, sex, age and
financial condition.
The results and findings of this
survey will enable the state depart
ment of public welfare to plan and
develop a permanent program for the
blind.
All civic, religious and fraternal
organizations are requested to co-op
erate in this survey, forwarding the
names and addresses of blind peo
ple to the department of public wel
fare in your county,
A Premier
• Medium For
North Georgia
$1.50 A YEAB
PHYSICIANS BELIEVE
THOUGHT IS A CAUSE
OF MUCH ‘DISEASE’
ASSOCIATION O F AMERICAN
PHYSICIANS REPORT RESULTS
FOUND IN TREATMENTS.
ATLANTIC CITY, N. J.—The ef
fect of thought on the human body
featured discussions at the fifty-third
annual meeting of the Association of
American Physicians, which closed
at the Chalfonte-Haddon Hall hotel
here recently. Physicians reported
that a large percentage of cases
which came to them for treatment
were produced by the thought of the
patient.
Dr. G. Canby Robinson, of Balti
more, said that in 80 per cent, of
the average run of medical cases ad
mitted to Johns Hopkins hospital in
Baltimore, Md., emotional factors
were present. They were directly re
lated to the illnesses in 66 per cent,
of the cases and in 38 per cent, were
the major precipitating cause, he
added.
Findings Checked.
Discussion from the floor brought
out that surveys in the Presbyterian
hospital in New York and at the
Boston Medical dispensary tally very
closely with this.
Dr. Robinson’s report covered 174
cases selected for the study as “a
fair sample” of the usual run of city
patients. In each case the study be
gan with an interview, going over
the symptoms in orders to sort out
those that were emotional, then go
ing into the “adverse social condi
tions” involved. Homes were visited
in 111 cases for further light. In the
end, there was a balance sheet of
physical and social assets and liabil
ities in each case.
Organize Cases.
“We found much to be traced to
emotional causes even in organic dis
turbances,” Dr. Robinson reported.
“Eventually these trace back to mal
adjustments of life and its problems.
There has been little systematic study
of disturbances of bodily functions
from such causes.”
Dr. Robinson said that “a large
proportion of the patients admitted
to the public medical service of the
hospital have adverse social condi
tions leading to their illness and of
ten entirely responsible.” This, he
declared, was convincing evidence
that there were compelling reasons
for greater onsideration and further
investigation of adverse social con
ditions in their relation to illness.
Georgia Will Have
28 C.C.C. Camps
ATLANTA, May 17 (GPS)—Un
der the revised CCC national pro
gram, Georgia will have twenty-eight
camps of the citizen conservation
corps in operation through the six
month period ending Sept. 30, it was
announced at the army fourth corps
area headquarters.
Previous orders for the discontin
uance of six camps in the state were
cancelled after congress recently au
thorized a $50,000,000 increase in the
CCC appropriation for the new fis
cal year.
Os the twenty-eight Georgia camps,
four will be attached to national
forest projects, seven to private for
est land, nine to soil conservation
projects, one to the bureau of biolog
ical survey, three to national monu
ments and four to state parks.
Thomas Seeks Re-
Election to House
Ross Thomas, of Trion, announces
in this week’s issue of The News for
re-election as representative of Chat
tooga county.
Mr. Thomas states that he is fa
miliar with the duties of the office
and is better qualified to serve as
representative than ever before.
Mr. Thomas will appreciate your
vote and influence in the coming
democratic primary Sept. 14.
YOUNG PREACHERS’ MEET.
On the fifth Sunday, May 29, there
will be a young preachers’ convention
at the Mentone Methodist church.
The following preachers are ex
pected to be present: Revs. Howard
Taylor, of Fort Payne; Gus Reed and
Rathburn Cash, of Summerville; Sam
McCord, of Bessamer; Frank War
ren, Raymond Brown, also four sons
of F. M. Crowe: Charles, of Fruit
hurst; Edmond, of Central, S. C.;
Finn, of Trion, and 12-year-old Rich
ard.
Rev. Williams, pastor of the South
Summerville Baptist church, is ex
pected to give the 11 o’clock address.
There will also be special music.
Dinner on the ground. Every one in
vited.
All-Day Meeting At
Court House Sunday
The Church of God of the Union
Assembly will have an all-day meet
ing in the courthouse in Summer
ville Sunday, May 22. The Rev. C. T.
Pratt, of Dalton, will be in charge.
He will preach on the last great con
flict during the day. The singing
choir of Dalton and other churches
will be present. .
Rev. G. E. Wiggs and Rev. L. L.
Coker, of Chattanooga, and other
ministers will be present
The public is cordially invited to
attend.