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IN LOVING MEMORY
As I am still thinking of my dear
old sister in Christ, Mrs. Lula Chap
pelear, who was called away on
Jan. 23 at her home near Menlo.
She was loved by all who knew her;
loved by all, near and far. She was
a good, loyal wife to her husband
and a loving mother and a good
Sunday school teacher. She did love
to be a teacher of God’s blessed
Word to little children. It grieves
their little hearts to give Sister
Lula up, but God knew best and
called her away from this wicked
world.
Dear little children, will you all
be good and live a true Christian
life like your blessed teacher taught
you, for you all know that Sister
Lula would tell you that God loves
little children and that He want
ed you to live true and faithful to
Him?
We are asking God’s blessings to
rest upon all her little children in
her class for we know she is in a
place of rest. Thank God, we can
go to meet her some sweet day and
I know she will welcome every one
of us at heaven’s open door.
Now we look back to the lonely
home she left; it was so sad to the
family, for there is a place in that
home empty and can never me fill
ed again. Children, listen to what
your mother taught you; we all
know that she has taught you to be
good an go to Sunday school and
church services; so let me ask you
out to church services, for mother
would be at church every Sunday;
the Lord saw fit for her to come.
She came with a smile for every
body and she welcomed us all out
to church with a warm handshake.
Dear children, will you live a
true life to God and be ready to
meet mother when He gets ready
for you? I know mother is singing
and shouting with the angels in
heaven, husband, don’t you know
that year dear, beloved wife is smil
ing on you from heaven and say
ing, “John, will you take God at
His word and live as He wants you
to, and meet me over the way, for
it is just one step to heaven, and,
John, I want you to come home for
I will be waiting at heaven’s open
door for you and all the children.
Go to church, John, tell the chil
dren to go and get ready for His
coming, for I know He will come
after you all some day.”
By sister’s daily walk we know
that she was doing God’s work and
we know that she is just over the
way. I know if sister Lula could
speak she would ask me to pray
for for her children as she did so
many times. I am still praying for
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SOUTHERN farmers, planning for more income in
**■* 1941, should carefully consider applying enough
potash in their fertilizer to meet the needs of their
crops. Not only is plenty of potash necessary to in
crease yields, but it is the plant food which improves
quality.
FOR COTTON, a recommended application at plant
ing time is 400-600 lbs. per acre of a fertilizer con
taining 6-10% potash. At chopping time, more can be
added in a nitrogdn-potash top-dresser containing the
equivalent of 50-100 lbs. of muriate of potash.
FOR LEGUMES, the high potash requirement should
be met by using 300-400 lbs. of fertilizer containing
8-10% potash either as a top dressing or when
seeding the crop.
FOR TRUCK, fertilizers containing 7-10% potash
should be used to meet the needs of these intensively
grown crops. Rates of application vary from 800-
2,000 lbs. per acre depending upon the crop and
fertility of the soil.
Ask your county agent or experiment station how
much available potash your soil will supply and
how much to add to carry your crops through to more
profit. Your fertilizer dealer will point out to you how
little extra it costs to apply enough. Write us for our
free booklet on how much plant food crops use
7 — 11 1 * B J
AMERICAN POTASH
Mvnf INSTITUTE, INC.
TllDli|U!UiP INVESTMENT BUILDING ' WASHINGTON, D. C,
Insurance Payments
During the past year more than
$3,800,000 was paid out to American
families every week in the form of
income checks or special install
ment payments, showing the great
increase in the use of the income
plan of benefit payments, which
has quadrupled in the past ten
years.
Payments by life insurance to liv
ing policyholders last year aver
aged about $33,000,000 a week, which
compares with $33,000,000 a montn
only twenty years ago.
Over 9,412,638 American boys and
men have been members of the Boy
Scouts of America since Feb. 8, 1910.
The Boy Scout movement health
fully and sanely offsets the disad
vantages which. civilization has
caused.
them, so you may look for me for I
will meet you just as soon as God
gets done with me on earth. Your
place is vacant down here but
think God, I’ll see you some bless
ed day.
Oh, there’s many a lovely picture
Hung on memory’s chequered
wall,
There is many a cherished image
That I tenderly recall.
The sweet home of your childhood,
With its brooks and singing birds,
The friends who grew beside you
With their loving looks and
words.
The flowers that bedecked the wild
woods,
The roses fresh and sweet,
The violets and hyacinths
That blossomed at your feet.
All, all are precious memories that
often come to you.
She has laid aside earth’s crosses
and the crown is on her brow.
She is clothed in robes of righteous
ness and walks the streets of
gold,
An aged saint forever within the
Savior’s fold.
No parting words can reach thee
there,
No grief is thine today;
Her mourning into joy is turned,
Her tears are wiped away.
Thou are waiting for us in that
home where the blessed angels j
wait;
In heaven, mother is waiting at the
gate.
Lula, you are gone but not for-1
gotten, never will your memory i
fade from your loved one’s here be-1
low.
Written by her sister in Christ,
MRS. £ULA HOWARD.
THE SUMMERVILLE NEWS: THURSDAY, MARCH 27, 1941
If Inflation Comes
(By Rev. Steve Cloud, Pastor, Menlo
Baptist Church.)
This is the title of a remarkable
letter prepared and sent out by the
renowned statistician, Roger W.
- Babson. His message is one of warn
ing. He foresees a finiancial debacle
and definitely states that “only a
Spiritual awakening of the nation
can prevent such a catastrophe.”
The only remedy, according to
Babson, is a revival. What a chal
lenge to the people of God! If we
want to save our nation, let us give
ourselves to prayer. In the private
prayer closet, at the family altar,
in the church prayer meeting, let
us pray for revival. Let the warn
ing message be sounded from the
pulpit with the preaching of re
pentance and judgment. “Thus,”
saith the Lord, “stand ye in the
ways and see, and ask for the old
paths, where is the good way, and
walk therein, and ye shall find
rest for your souls” (Jer. 6:16). We
must have an old-fashioned reviv
! al or our nation is doomed. It is
revival or revolution. We can take
our choice. If there ever was a peri
od in the history of our country
when we needed days and nights of
prayer, it is now. Will the believing
remnant pay the price and pray
through for revival? Are we, by our
lethargy, coldness, carnality, and
unspirituality going to allow the
nation to go down as other nations
have been destroyed in days gone
by? Let us pray with Isaiah: “Oh.
that, thou wouldst rend the hea
vens, that thou wouldst come down,
that the mountains might flow
down at thy presence, as when the
melting fire burneth, the fire caus
eth the waters to boil, to make thy
name known to thine adversaries,
that the nations may tremble at
thy presence” (Isa. 64:1-2).
God answered prayer in 1857
when our country was in the midst
of a financial depression, and He
sent one of the greatest revivals
in the history of the world. God
has answered prayer during this
century and has sent revivals tc
Wales, Korea and Norway. If God
can find a people who will go
deep enough in humility, confes
sion, self-sacrifice, and consecra
tion, the revival will come. “If 1
j shut up heaven that there be no
j rain, or if I command the locusts
to devour the land, or if I send
pestilence among my people; if my
people, which are called by my
i name, shall humble themselves
i and pray, and seek my face, and
| turn from their wicked ways; then
will I hear from heaven, and will
forgive their son; and will heal
their land” (II Chron. 7:13-14).
'Not only is our national well-be
j ing involved, but the eternal des
tiny of relatives and friends, of
i children and young people, is at
i stake as well. Unless a revival comes
j that makes people God-conscious
and brings conviction of sin sc
that they will turn to the Christ o'
Calvary and of the empty tomb,
many of them will be eternally lost
For the sake of never-dying souls,
we plead for prayer for a revival.
Let us meet the conditions of re
vival in our hearts, homes
churches and communities. Get a
rrayer group together in your
home. Let neighborhood prayer
meetings be held everywhere.
‘Bring ye all the tithes into the
storehouse, that there may be meat
in mine house, and prove me now
herewith, saith the Lord of hosts,
if I will not open you the windows
of heaven, and pour you out a
blessing, that there shall not be
room, enough to receive it” (Matt.
3:10). May God awaken, revive
stir and empower every reader!
“O Lord, revive thy work in the
midst of the years” (Heb. 3:2).
“Wilt thou not revive us again:
that thy people may rejoice in
thee?” (Ps. 85:6).
Give us a genuine, apostolic, Holy
Ghost revival that will melt, move,
and unify thy people and put them
on the firing line for God! Lord,'
begin now and begin in me. God
give us America or we die!
DR. ALFRED BLALOCK HONORS
DR. CRAWFORD W. LONG
ATHENS, Ga.—As the state of
Georgia honors Dr. Crawford W.
Leng on the ninety-ninth anniver
sary of his discovery of the use of'
ether as an anesthetic, another
distinguished surgeon will speak
at the University of Georgia on
Crawford W. Long day, Monday,
March 31.
Dr. Alfred Blalock, native Geor
ian whose recent appointment as
professor of surgery at the Johns
Hopkins School of Medicine and
surgeon-in-chief at the Johns Hop
kins hospital is but another dis
tinction in his brilliant career, will!
deliver the address at the annual
exercises on the campus of the state
university.
Dr. Long’s epic discovery of the
use of ether as an anesthetic actu-!
ally took place on Mar. 30, 1842, but!
inasmuch as that date falls on |
Sunday this year, the university is
helding its ceremonies on the 31st. |
Dr. Blalock was recently award
ed the research medal of the South- j
ern Medical association for his re
search in blood circulation and
shock.
Cuba was the most important
export market for United States
lard in 1940, buying 67.402.000
pounds or six times as much as in!
1933.
WOMEN SAVE $250,000
BY ADOPTING BETTER
CLOTHING PRACTICES
Georgia farm women and 4-H
girls brought about considerable ac
complishments in clothing last year
by carrying improved practices with
an estimated saving of a quarter
million dollars, a clothing specialist
of the agricultural extension serv
ice asserted this week.
Miss Leonara Anderson, extension
specialist in clothing, said that
some 37,000 women and girls were
enrolled in clothing projects in
1940 and that these people through
the projects contributed to the
family income in cash and in kind
as well as to a more satisfying and
happy farm life.
Special demonstrations were held
in ninety-four counties to teach
better practices in intelligent plan
ning, selection and buying of mer
chandiis'j. Clothing construction
courses were conducted in sixteen
counties carrying clothing as an
mphasis project, she said.
During the year educational sew
ing machine clinics were also held
in the sixteen counties and some
130 machines were reconditioned.
Directions for making the mattress
tick in connection with the cotton
mattress program were included in
clothing assistance offered Georgia
farm people, the extension special
ist added.
FISH NOT BITING?
DON’T PULL THAT ALIBI,
SAYS CASTING CHAMPION
A trout is always hungry and will
take whatever he can get with the
least effort, BUT “you have to find
out what he is eating as his regular
diet when you are calling on him,”
declares (“Dick") Miller 1 , world
champion distance flycaster, in the
current Rotarian magazine.
Experiments with “tame” fish
show that they will rise to a lure
the same as they are eating at the
time, but will ignore one that dif
fers in color or general appear
ance. And trout are pretty pernick
ety, so fit the fly to the feeding
habits at the time, warns Miller.
“Improve your casting and you’ll
improve your fishing,” Miller as
serts. “No matter what your pres
ent ability may be, you can double!
your catch!” Yep—but if you are!
already catching the limit, look out
for the warden! '
The United States in 1939 im
ported from outside the western
hemisphere about $200,000,000 worth
of tropical and non-competitive ag
ricultural products that could be
produced in Latin America.
A REPORT
to America
The Ford Motor Company’s
business has always been to
serve the needs of the American
people. In providing them with
low-cost transportation for the
past 38 years, we have devel
oped one of the country’s larg
est and most useful industrial
units. During a national emer
gency, we feel that these facili
ties should be devoted without
reserve to our country’s needs.
Toward that end we started
rolling months ago, with these
results:
1A $21,000,000 Ford airplane en
gine factory, started only 6 months
ago, is nearly completed. Production
will start with an initial order for
4,236 eighteen cylinder, air-cooled,
double-row, radial engines.
2 We are building a new SBOO,OOO
Ford magnesium alloy foundry,
one of the few in the country. It is
already producing lightweight air
plane engine castings.
3 Army reconnaissance cars mili
tary vehicles of an entirely new
type are rolling off special Ford
assembly lines at the rate of more
than 600 a month. We have produced
Army staff cars and bomber service
trucks.
4 The government has given the
"go-ahead” and work is now
under way for the fast construction
of an $11,000,000 Ford plant
to produce bomber airframe
assemblies by mass produc
tion methods.
FORD MOTOR COMPANY
WORKERS FOR DEFENSE JOBS
In the next twelve months thou
sands of additional workers will be
required to carry on the defense
projects of the nation. There will
be a strong demand for machinists,
mechanics, carpenters, and other
skilled labor, as well as common
labor.
“Every worker entering a new
job should apply immediately for a
social security account number
card if he does not already have
one,” declared Knox Smartt, man
ager of the social security board’s
office in Rome. The age of the
worker does not matter. He needs
this card even if he is under 20
years old or over 70.
Many young ladies may replace
men in stores, offices and facto
ries. Women in commerce and in
dustry must have a social security
account number card, just the same
as men. The age of the woman does
not matter. The fact that she is
working in some store, office or
factory or other place of business
where her employer is required to
report her wages to the government
determines her need of a social
security card.
Social security account number
cards may be secured from any
field office of the social security
board. The office serving the coun
ty of Chattooga is located in the
West building, in Rome.
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5 Several months ago work was
started, on our own initiative, on
an entirely new 1500 horsepower air
plane engine especially designed for
mass production. This engine is now
in the test stage and plans are being
developed for producing it in large
quantities when and if needed.
6 A Ford aircraft apprentice school
has been established, to train 2000
students at a time.
That is a report of progress
to date.
The experience and facilities
of this company can be used
to do much of the job which
America now needs to get done
in a hurry.
Our way of working, which
avoids all possible red tape, en
ables us to get results and get
them fast. This benefits users
of our products and workers
who produce them.
We are ready to make any
thing we know how to make,
to make it to the limit of our
capacity if need be, to make it
as fast as we can go, and to start
the next job whenever our
country asks us to. And to this
end, we know we have the full
confidence and loyal
support of the workmen
throughout our plants.
CHATTOOGA
INSURANCE AGENCY
"The Best Insurance"
JNO. D. TAYLOR
Summerville, Georgia
Kidneys Must
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