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SPORTS SHORTS £
By BUSS WALKER.
As the Southern league race grad
ually begins to itgke shape it is be
coming more and more apparent that
it is going to <be a tight four-team
finish down the home stretch. The
Nashville Vols are out in front in
spite of the fact that most of the
other managers agree that there are
at least three other earns in the
league better than they. Their lead
is gradually being cut down by Mem
phis and Atlanta. The Lookouts are
just now hitting their stride and will
be contenders before many more
moons. 'Cuyler has a team, at least
one third of whom have been sitting
on the bench before joining the Chat
tanooga outfit and are just now be
ginning to loosten up. Olsen has been
out with a game leg. McAdams has
had a smashed finger all season.
Letchas, Chapman and Bolyard have
seen very little actual playing before
reporting to Cuyler. Al Baker hadn’t
pitched a ball in a regular game. Ev
ery one who has seen the team in
the last few days agrees that it is
much stronger than the one that won
the pennant last -year. The pitchers,
since getting some baseball weather
are going the route and taking their
regular turns in the box, which means
that the team is clicking again and
with the hurlers getting their four
days rest it is only a matter of time
until the Lookouts are up in first
division and once more in the flag
chase. And too, there’s Ki Ki Cuyler.
He is a quiet, serious, Christian gen
tleman in every sense of the word.
His team and the fans respect him.
The writer second guessed Ki all last
season. But not any more. The man
has plenty of reasons for every move
that he makes. He knows more prac
tical ba.sebal than any manager we’ve
ever talked to except maybe Raw
Meat Bill Rodgers and then, too, how
are you going to criticize a man’s
: T. J. ESPY, JR. ;
!; Attorney-at-Law
; Summerville, Georgia. ■
; Office over Mcffinnis Drug Co.
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judgment who won a pennant last
season with what every one knew
was a fifth place club? All season
Engel was burning the wires and
midnight oil trying to get the man
that Ki needed, but it was one of |
those seasons when nobody had any- i
body they could spart that would
help a team in this league. So Cuy
ler took the material that he had,
figured his best way to try to win a
pennant with them and worked along
those lines. In spite of being han
dicapped in certain departments, he
nlayed his strongest cards and won-
It has been said that he backed into
the pennant, but our answer to that
is that he played the same number of
games the other teams did, but man-1
aged to win more of them. Don’t
sell Cuyler or the Lookouts short. Ki
always has something left up his |
sleeve. The Lookouts play a double- (
header in Memphis next Sunday and
come home the following Sundas,
June 16, for a double-header with
them. The day has been set aside
also as Sequatchie Valley Day to
honor the friends of young Hillis
Layne, who is nursing a game leg
just now.
GOOD TIDINGS
By THOMAS D. LYNN. *
Subject—The Day of Wrath
What will 'be the result of the
European situation? Men are being
rushed into battle, women and chil
dren are being driven from their
homes which have been destroyed by
German bombing planes, and are
walking the roads of Europe seeking
refuge from the enemy.
Sunday, June 2, was set as a day
of fasting and prayer for world
peace. But let me itell you that the
rider of the red horse (Rev. 6:3) has
taken peace from the earth and all
the peace that man will ever enjoy
will be found as recorded in Rom
ans 5:1. Therfore, being justified by
faith, we have peace with God thru
our Lord Jesus Christ.
I will give you a portion of Scrip
ture found in Dev. 6:12 to 17. And I
•beheld when he had opened the sixth
seal, and ,10, there was a great earth
quake; and the sun became black as
sackcloth of hair, and the moon be
came as blood; and the stars of heav
en fell unto the earth, even as a fig
tree casteth her untimely figs, when
she is shaken of a mighty wind.
And the heaven departed as a,
scroll when it is rolled together; and
every mountain and island were
moved out of their places-
And the kings of the earth, and the
great men, and the chief captains,
and the mighty men, and every bond
man, and every yree man, hid them
selves in the dens and in the rocks
of the mountains; and said to the
mountains and rocks, “Fall on us, and
hide us from the face of him that
sitteth on the throne, and from the
wrath of the Lamb: For the great
day of his wrat his come; and who
shall be ab’e to stand.
It appears that the wrath of God
THE SUMMERVILLE NEWS, THURSDAY, JUNE 6, 1940
has already begun to be poured out;
upon the world of the ungodly. Peace '
has 'been taken from the earth, all
eyes are turned to the European sit
uation. The people are eager to see
the newspapers, why ?
They want to know what is going
on in Europe.
There is a fear upon the hearts of
all Americans. Why? The United
States is preparing for war. Men
are being called into service, bombing
planes and other necessities for war
are being manufactured at terrific
speed.
The vine of the earth must be
gathered and cast into the great
winepress of the wrath of God. (Rev.
14:14 to 20).
And the angel thrust in his sickle
into the earth, and gathered the
vine of the earth, and cast it into the
great winepress of the wrath of God.
And the winepress was trodden with
out the city,fl and blood came out of
the winepress, even unto the horse
bridles, by the space of a thousand
and six hundred furlongs.
(To Be Continued)
SUMMERVILLE PUBLIC LIBRARY
(At Court House)
Library opening hours for the pres
ent are: 12 noon to 5 p.m.—Mary H.
Adams, Librarian.
PETITION FOR ORDER TO SELL
GEORGlA—Chattooga County:
After four weeks notice pursuant
to law, the undersigned shall apply
and present to the Honorable Claude
H. Porter, Judge of the Superiors
Court of said county, at the Floyd
county courthouse in Rome, Ga., on
the 6th day of June, 1940, his peti
tion to apply for an order authorizing
private sale of the following describ
ed property, to-wit:
An undivided one-half interest in
and to all that tract or parcel of
land situated, lying and being in the
county of Chattooga, State of Geor
gia, described as follows, to-wit:
Lots Nos. 24, 25 and 26 of the J. P.
Holland estate subdivision as shown
by the plat of said subdivision made
by R. E. Smith, C. E., September,
1938, and recorded in Deed Book 7,
page 230, in the office of the Clerk
of the Superior Court of Chattooga
County, Georgia. Said property be
ing parts of Original Land Lots Nos.
212 and 213 in the 14th District and
4th Section of Chattooga County,
Georgia.
Said sale to be made for the pur
pose and intention of investing the |
proceeds therefrom in other certain
Personal property, as is more par
ticularly descnoed in said petition
filed in the office of the Clerk of the
Superior Court of said county.
This June Ist, 1940.
M. A. LACY,
Guardian of Beatrice Ratliff
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Hamilton Ralls
HOGANSVILLE,
Troup County Farmer
Announcing
for the office of
Commissioner of
Agriculture
FOR STATE OF GEORGIA
"Tho Farmer's Candidate"
Democratic Primary - Sept. 11th
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LITTLE MISS MARY POWELL
MEADOWS ENTERTAINS
HEI; SEVENTH GRADE
On Friday afternoon, May 24, Miss
Mary Meadows was hostess to her
seventh grade, Mr. Joe Ford’s class,
at the lovely home of her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Olney Meadows, of near
Berryton, at a very delightful after
no-"’i party.
Many outdoor and indoor games
were enjoyed by the twenty-two
ATTORNEY GENERAL
ELLIS G. ARNALL
Educated at Mercer and the Uni
versity of Georgia, and experienced
as a practicing attorney, Speaker
Pro-Tern of the House of Represent
atives, Assistant Attorney General,
and Attorney General, Ellis G. Ar
nail is by training and experience
well qualified for the post he holds.
Mr. Arnall has won 242 Important
Jases for the State and lost only 26.
None of the 914 opinions rendered
by him has been reversed by any
court.
The Economy and Efficiency
Committee of the House of Repre
sentatives reported that the State
Department of Law under Attorney
General Arnall is “operating effi
ciently and economically." The
State Senate by unanimous resolu
tion praised the services of Ellis
Arnall. The press and general
public have acclaimed the work of
this capable and energetic Attorney
General.
By consistent achievement, con
scientious, courteous and efficient
service, Ellis G. Arnall has gained
the right to a full term as Attorney
General of Georgia.
One Good Term Deserves Another
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JUNIOR CLASS ENJOY PICNIC
ON LOOKOUT MT. FRIDAY
The junior class of 1940 of the local
high school enjoyed an all day picnic
at Lake Head on Lookout mountain
Friday. Other guests were Mrs. Wil
lis James, Mrs. Harry McGinnis and
Rev. C. C. Cliett.