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Clarion-Ledger from Jackson, Mississippi • Page 14

Publication:
Clarion-Ledgeri
Location:
Jackson, Mississippi
Issue Date:
Page:
14
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

PAOE FOURTEEN DAILY CLARION-LEDGERK JACKSON, MISS. FRIDAY MORNING, MARCH 20, 1936 TRIAL OF NEWTON MRS. BOURNE WILL EAST'S HIGHWAY (Pike), Wright (Leflore), Wrigh (Sharkey). TOTAL 94. NAYS: Armstrong (Carroll), Ar DAVIS SERVICES SET FOR TODAY MARKET BULLETIN HAS NEW SUBSCRIBER IN GERMANY nold.

Bacon, Bailey, Bell, Bellamy Brown. Carter. Coats, Cockrell PATRICIDE RESET LEAVE POSITION (Continued Prom Page One) Cook, Day, Eakes, Early, Ethridge, Evans (Leake), Hopkins, Jan-is. Lee (Lauderdale), Little, Lumpkin. May second floors in some places, was Second Hearing ol Murder (Simpson); McCoy, McGrath, Mc Graw.

McWilliams, Mitchell. Morri under martial rule and almost de serted. Prominent Pelahatchie Phy High Re- Telephone service continued on Secretary of State School Supervisor signs Place Here an emergency basis. Thousands of son, Nabors, Owens (Itawamba), Sanders, Sessions, Sillers, Smith (Alcorn), Swango, Upchurch, Waits (Washington), Wolfe, Woolfolk, Case to Be Held at Decatur Monday sician Dies at Memphis Hospital per cent in cotton acreage this year. "In conformance with the supreme court's decision," the president said, "the farmers' production control programs have been stopped, but their chronic surplus problem goes on." The cotton carry-over remains, he said, but although production control has gone, "farmers are not entirely at the mercy of unbridled competition with their fellow producers, as they were in the year preceding 1933." "The new farm act." he said, "provides for financial assistance by the government to those farmers who, heeding the warnings contained in the intentions-to-plant reports, wish to shift from the production of unneeded surpluses of soil-depleting crops to the production of needed soil-building crops." couriers were despatched from Red Cross headquarters to carry Wynn.

TOTAL 40. help to the afflicted. Absent or those not voting: Floyd, The search for bodies went on as' workmen feverishly sought to Knox. McKay. Sullivan, Armstrong (Continued from Page One) Another sought to require the appointment of skilled engineers as highway commissioners.

An amendment was offered to strike the enacting clause from the bill, which would have left the measure headless. Two amendments sought to change the time for which the appointive plan shall remain in effect. Representative Owens of Itawamba county sought to write into the bill a provision that the appointments shall be made by the governor "by and with the consent of the qualified electors of the various A similar proposal was made by Representative Eakes of Newton county, who offered an amendment providing for a commission of seven members, one from each congressional district, and re DECATUR, March 19 A special Funeral services will be held at clear away the mud and slime de of Mr. Speaker. TOTAL 6.

venire will be drawn from which to posited in the streets by the flood. Pair: Sullivan (tor) ana Arm select a jury to serve in the second trial of Howell Motley, which is set strong (Copiah) (against). 3 o'clock this afternoon for Dr. G. C.

Davis, 48, prominent resident of Pelahatchie who died soon after the bill was passed Police said fruit cars were being looted in an inundated produce market. One' hundred carloads of provisions were ready to enter the on the docket for next Monday hv t.hp house. Governor White Thursday morning in a Memphis For seven and a half years secretary to the state supervisor of high schools, Mrs. Mary Bourne leaver her position this week-end to make her home in Columbia where her husband, C. Bourne, has gone into business with his father.

Bourne, known hundreds of school men all over the state for her-courtesy and efficiency, will be told newspapermen that he con Motley, a middle-aged father of several children, was tried last spring for the murder of his father city. panorama of D.D.D. sidered it "a nice vote of confidence" in his. administration. The governor never did admit that in April.

1934; he was convicted and Outside 'of Pittsburgh, the" state sentenced to the penitentiary for Thomas Weatherall and John hospital after a short Illness. The rites will be held from the Pelahatchie Baptist church with Rev. J. H. Foreman and the Rev.

Mr. Estes officiating. Interment will be in the Pelahatchie cemetery. The body will arrive here this morning from Memphis and will of Pennsylvania was a panorama the measure was an life. His case was reversed and re of desolation 'and- 'disease.

manded, however, by the supreme succeeded by Miss Daisy Woods, a Many communities still were iso tion bill" but during the past two days all pretext of disguising his anxiety for passage of the court of Mississippi last January. lated and the extent of their cas He has been incarcerated in jail commercial teacher of several years experience. Last year she was located at Forest as a member of the quiring thai they be appointed with the approval of the senators from ualties was unknown. for a total period of twenty-three be carried to the Wright and legislation was dropped by aa-ministration, leaders in the house The second -Johnstown flood was Ferguson Funeral home where It high school faculty. months, pending the outcome of his trial.

He is of a prominent family. subsiding and the refugees were their respective districts. Would Increase Bonds Two amendments sought to in Mrs. Bourne has served in her capacity as' secretary to three straggling back from the sur Appropriation Bills While the house was thus engaged in passing control of an will be held until time for the rites in Pelahatchie. Dr.

Davis was a native of and much interest is being manifested in the case in Newton county. Hitler or no Hitler, war threats or not the Mississippi Agricultural Market Bulletin is going into Germany to a regular subscriber from now on. request from a German farmer was received at the offices of J. C. Holton, state commissioner of agriculture, yesterday, requesting subscription rates or cost of some sample copies of the Bulletin.

Since the publication is mailed free to all farmers in 'the state and many in other states, it was promptly decided, that the German might as well be on the mailing list. The letter, written in a clear hand but naturally with a trace of German formation of characters, was as follows: "Please you for full Information upon subscription rate of Mississippi Agricultural Market Bulletin or for one or more sample issues. "Which other bulletin pub-licieren (publication) you upon other farm progress as grain, fruits, dairy, and other bulletins. Please for lists. Which farmers newspaper is a good.

"Is farm acreage or farmers available to keep or rent. What cost a acre farmland without building and what with a home." The request was from Rein-hard Walther. "farmer." Gers-dorf post Gorlitz, Germany. A bundle of bulletin-; was mailed to the German farmer, along with a letter from Mr. Holton.

referring him to the state extension department for actual farming practices in the state. LOAN ASSOCIATION rounding hills to reclaim their state supervisors of high schools crease the bonds required of the mud-filled homes. The death toll Two other murder cases wjlll be other major department to 'the Frank Jenkins, now direc Rankin county and had spent commissioners from $50,000 to here may reach 16. governor, the senate drove through tor of teacher training and certifi cation, Duke Humphrey, now pres 000 and $100,000, and another sought to strike paragraph four of a number of biennial appropria The Potomac river, galvanized most of his life in that section. He had been practicing in Pelahatchie for the past 12 years and was widely known in that sec tion bills already- passed by the by heavy rainfalls, surged toward ident of Mississippi State college, and the present supervisor, Sam B.

the bill, the paragraph giving the governor foe power to appoint the house, including the general ap Washington. Behind" It' "stretched a hundred mile trail of devastation tion. commissioners. Hathorn. Mr.

and Mrs. Bourne were mar propriation measure carrying upwards of a million dollars for in Maryland. But it was of no use. The top- ried five years ago. the support of the governmental Besides his wife, his survivors include a son, William Davis, and two sisters Mrs.

W. J. Davis and While Presdient Roosevelt watch departments during the next two ed the situation closely, the nation's capital -gathered itself to heavy majority of the house membership was determined to pass the bill transferring from the people years. No important changes were tried in this term of the circuit court, which was convened last Monday by Judge D. M.

Anderson, of Newton. One of the cases involves Marshall Solomon, Willie Solomon, and Horace Dixon, Choc-taws from the Indian Reservation at Cinehatta, who are charged with having murdered wilmon Thomas, another Choctaw, in January of this year. The other murder trial involves Uilie Mallard, a negress, charged with having murdered her husband, Otho Mallard, in October, 3934. She, likewise, was tried and convicted, with the case reversed and remanded by the supreme court last December. meet the watery onslaught.

UCIFIXION CR made in the general bill, passed An army of 1,500 relief work to the governor the right to name the highway commission which will Mrs. J. R. Edwards, all of Pelahatchie, arid a third fcister, Mrs. G.

A. WiUey of Goshen Springs. Active pallbearers will be Dr. E. A.

Gordin, A. J. Glaze, J. H. Warnack, A.

Britt, A. N. Adams ers threw sandbag barriers tojielp by the house several days ago, ex supervise the expenditure of the cept that the senate amended It protest $100,000,000 Worth of gov ernment buildings and historic (Continued from Page One) $46,000,000 road paving fund, and their was absolutely nothing the Clark Love, both of Kosciusko, were business visitors to Jackson number of days ago. LEGAL NOTICES THE CHARTER OF INCORPORATION OF WOODSON- TENENT LABORATORIES OF MISSISSIPPI, INC. 1.

The corporate title of said, company is Woodson-Tenent Lab-, oratories of Mississippi, Inc. 2. The names of the incorporators are: P. F. Woodson, Postbffice, Memphis, Tennessee.

A. II. SorreUe, Postofflca Brownsville, Tennessee. Mrs, Mary B. Woodson.

Post-office. Memphis Tennessee, 3. The domicile is at Jackson, Hinds County, Mississippi. 4. Amount of capital stock and particulars as to class or classes thereof: $10,000.00 Common Stock.

In 109 shares of $100.00 each par value; No Preferred stock. The corporation to begin business when $5,000.00 cash paid in. 5. Number of shares for each class and par value thereof: $10,000.00 in 100 shares of $100 each, all common stock. No Preferred stock.

The corporation to Ettmeor business when $5000 cash paid rn. 6. The period of existence (not to exceed fifty years) Is Fifty years. 7. The purpose for which It Is created: To own and operate aa analytical and Chemical laboratory, to make chemical or other analyses and tests of all type of shrines.

and H. H. Fox. so as to provide that the administrative cost of operating the state department of education and minority could do about it. Honorary pallbearers, all nep- The sandbags were piled 19 feet The amendments were killed and hands if somebody drove nails into its several- bureaus and depart high in a line from the Washing Jiews of Dr.

Davis will be Claude WUley, Dr. Lois" WiUey, Alvin the bill was hustled along to its ton Monument grounds to a ments shall be paid from the general fund of the treasury Willey, Earnest Kirsh, Alvis Kirsh, them. He said he could stand it, and then he talked about how he could report we found him nailed final passage. Roll Call Listed point near 21st street and Con stitution avenue. Neither the Cap- rather than from the equalizing fund already appropriated for the Paul Edwards, William Edwards and Jonathan Edwards.

No changes having been made in tal nor the White House was in to the cross while we were on the vu danger. way to work the measure as it came from the senate, there is no necessity for the The floods were expected to James neighbor and He insisted that there is politics in every governmental function. senate taking it up again. The cover a large part of Potomac friend, "found" Timmerman in a Park, parts of the Navy Yard, wooded section near his house yes measures goes back to the senate however for enrollment and then it Representative Bailey took a TAKING REQUESTS Anacostia Flats, Boiling Field and terday as he was on his way to shot at the lobbyists who he said, have "helped to put this bill must be signed by the lieutenant the Naval Air Station. work on the canal project.

White was placed in jail and held for in governor and the acting speaker of the house. After that it goes to Homes Abandoned Houseboats and riverfront homes through these last few days." 1 vestigation, but no formal charge Governor White for his approving were hastily abandoned. The was lodged against him. faces on this floor in the last few Applications tO Be Received signature. ig "chain bridge" connecting the Against Timmerman's story that days," said tne iormei speaker, Following is the roll call on final capital with Virginia was closed.

Officials feared it might be swept a band of men set upon him, sewed his lins together with-twine and as he glanced up to the galleries where a galaxy of highway com passage of the dictator bill: by Farm Credit Administration in State away any minute. YEAS: Allen, Austin, Autry, Bick- mission employees and friends nailed him to the cross despite his physical resistance, Sheriff Thomas All plane service was halted. were watching the show. erstaff, Blewett, Bolen, Britton, common schools. The cost of administration under the bill is estimated at and an effort was made when the bill was before the house of representatives to make the same change the senate voted yesterday without much trouble.

In addition to this increase the senate revised certain salary schedules upward causing a net increase of approximately $20,000 in the total general appropriation. This increase, with the amendment adding the $36,000 educational administration cost, makes a total increase of around in the bill as it passed the house. The measure was received In. the house late yesierday for concurrence in the 'senate amendments and the appropriations committee likely will call the measure this morning, recommend non-concurrence and invite a conference on the matter. Having spent most of its day on financial matters, the senate Boats cruised over the flooded said there wasn a scratch upon "Yes, I have seen them pass Brumfield, Bull, Bollard, Calcote, airport.

back and forth across the floor Callicott, Callon, Chadwick, Chat On its way downstream the Po of this house and I am quite Applications for emergency crop nr-rA Timmerman, and there wasn't even a button missing from his clothing to indicate he had any tussle as he claimed." ham, Clark, Clinton, Conn, Corley, sure it was not 'sweet nothings' Moans for 1936 through the emer- 1 rUr nc' crwi Cowden, Davis (Jefferson), Davis they whispered into the ears of I gency crop and feed loan seoUon vll (Montgomery), Dees, Douglas Sheriff Thomas said he learned the members of this house." I cf the Farm-Credit Administra-1 JJL Characterizing the plan under tion. are being received at of- 1 Timmerman formerly gave entertainments as a "human pincushion" (Continued from Page One) and loot taken from the place were the only clues. The investigation was necessarily dropped a short time later when no new evidence could be found. It was not until a year later that Deputy Sheriff Leon Weir at Greenwood learned that Robert Alsop had been heard to say he had killed a man in Grenada. Caught burglarizing a.

store in Greenwood, he had been convicted and sent to the state penitentiary. Officers were notified and Alsop was questioned. His brother was located in Greenwood and the cast made from the partly eaten apple was compared his teeth. When it was found the cast corresponded to the negro's teeth, their investigation was pressed further. After close questioning, Robert Alsop confessed to the crime, vindicating his brother.

He claimed that, interrupted in burglarizing the store, he had shot at a shadow on the glass of the door, then they both fled. Broken parts of two shotguns and a revolver, taken from the commissary, were found at the AIsop's place in Greenwood. The negro was ultimately convicted and sentenced to die, the decision upheld after an appeal to the supreme courts. Draughn, Evans (Jones), Ewing, Felts, Ford, Fox, Gex, Gore, Green, Grennough, Guider, Harris, Henley, the dictator bill as "neither an fices in all county sites of this I t-. elective or an appointive system, state, it was announced yesterday a-, nSnerals.

etc on which but a hybrid system," Mr. Bailey by waiter D. Turnbough, state I iJSrJZ. vT Hickman, Holloman, Houston. Hull, by sticking needles into his flesh and subjecting himself to other physical torture.

Jaggers, Johnson, Jones, Kelly declared, that the legislation "sus- supervisor. Ved7to 1 (Lee), Kelly (Yazoo), Ladner, La No bones were or injured mar, Large, Lee (Fanoia), Leggett, pends the bill of ngnts 01 tne 3 ta the pt, he said, the se- produce, manufacture, and pro-peopie ana wamea me cay win -ly or an emergency crop loan cess disinfectants, chemicals, soaps. by passage of the nails through the man's hand and feet. Livingston, Long, Loper, Lott, Loving, May (Tallahatchie), McGowan, tomac flood swept Samuel S. Cad-dik, 65, to his death at Williams-port, Md.

Another man died of heart disease in Cumberland, jsvhere approximately $2,500,000 damage was wrought. Practically every bridge across the river was battered down and scores of houses were swept away. Virtually all. of the valley towns were without power or heat. President Roosevelt, deferred his projected fishing trip in the south to keep abreast, of.

the. emergency. With Mrs. Roosevelt and Secretary Dern. chairman of the presidential flood aid committee, he personally inspected the overflow in the Potomac Park section.

The senate received a resolution authorizing tne president to transfer $10,000,000 from relief funds to aid flood-ravaged 'Pennsylvania. Sheriff said he learned came back yesterday afternoon to Mcllwain, McNeer, Mogan, Monk, will consist of a first lien on tne germicides, floor sweep and simf- crop financed. Landlord or others iar products; to own and acquire having an interest in the crop to such jeaj estate and equipment be financed will be required to as are reasonably necessary to waive their claims in favor of a the carrvins out of the said char- Montgomery, Morgan, Morrow, Mur- Timmerman recently bought nails frpm a hardware store here of the same type and size as those which phey, Newman, Owen (Union), Per pass a number of minor bills on the calendar, none of which provoked serious debate or controversy. Included in this class of legis ry, Phillips, Prine, Reed, Roberson pinned him to the cross. Similar (Pontotoc), Robinson (Madison), nails were found in Timmerman's Sandlin, Saul, Schelben, Sharron, car.

Shepard, Smith (Copiah), Spencer, "I'm" convinced it is all a fake," lation was an emergency amendment to the Natchez Trace Park Strait, Talbot, Taylor (Marshall), way legislation already enacted Taylor (Noxubee), Tyrone, Waits said Sheriff Thomas. "Of course, we'll continue to investigate the case, but there anpears nothing to at this session, writing certain (Webster), Walker, Walhs, welch, corrective phrases into the bill Williams (Grenada), Williams be accomplished." i authorizing the state highway commission to. acquire and trails-' 3 mi mi, fPr HiiTiin-niTin liiPff-'-- fer rights-of-way for the Trace. The senate passed the amend lien to the Governor of the Farm ter powers and the operation of Credit Administration until the the business hereinabove described, emergency crop loan is repaid. within the limits prescribed by Loans 'will be made only to law.

farmers who cannot obtain credit The rights and powers that may from any other source, as provided be exercised by this corporation, by regulations issued by the gover- in addition to the foregoing, are nor of the administration The those conferred by Chapter 100, money loaned will be limited to Code of Mississippi of 1930. the farmer's Immediate and actual 8. Number of Shares of eacrt cash needs for growing his 1936 class to be subscribed and paid crops and In no instance may ex- for before the corporation may ceed $200 to one farmer. begin business. Farmers will be considered in- 50 shares with par value of $100 eligible for emergency' crop loans per share to be subscribed and if they can borrow from an In- paid for before the corporation dividual, production credit associa- rnay begin business.

Con, bank, or other concern. They P. F- WOODSON, will be denied aid, too, if they H. H. SORRELLE.

have an application pending with MRS. MARY B. WOODSOS. the Resettlement Administration, Incorporator. have received assistance from that ACKNOWLEDGEMENT organization this year or are In- STATE OF TENNESSEE.

ments, requested by the federal authorities, without a dissenting vote when Senator James C. Rice of Natchez- explained that the defects in the original legislation were holding up $1,500,000 in construction work on the Trace project. Soon after the house of representatives passed the highway dictator bill yesterday. Representative Fielding L. Wright, of Sharkey county, introduced a concurrent resolution, proposing the submission of an amendment to Section X70 of the constitution, providing for the election of members of the highway commission beginning in 1938.

The amendment, if authorized by the legislature and ratified by the people in the election this will make the elections of the commissions concurrent with the congressional elections as at present. The first elections would be In November, 1938, and the commissioners elected at that time would take office in January, 1939, seven months prior to the general primary elections for the nomination of state officers. One of the chief arguments employed by proponents of the dictator bill passed yesterday was that the three-year "recess" In the election of the commissioners would throw their elections into the general primaries in 1939,. and thus eliminate the 5.0-called "scrub races" for highway commissioner. In fact, there is a provision in the "dictator bill" to the effect that highway commissioners shall be elected in November, 1939, and shall take office in January 1940, along with other elected state officials.

With its "big moment" of the day the. dictator bill safely be hind it, the house tackled its general calendar and ipent the remainder of the afternoon in MUST VACATE debted to the Resettlement Ad- wuwiy or haywuou, ministration for an unoald loan. CITY OF BROWNSVILLE. the passage of a few corrective measures presented by the ways and means committee and defer red consideration of a complicated FDR Dealers Invited To Buy in This SALE measure dealing with tax collec This day personally appearejj before me. the undersigned authority P.

F. Woodson A. H. Sorrelle, and Mrs. Mary B.

Woodson, incorporators of the corporation known as the Woodson-Tenent Laboratories of Mississippi, who acknowledged that they tions until this morning. After laying that bill aside be cause of its complicated nature and controversial provisions, the (Continued from Page One) house took up its calen report issued by -the agriculture foregoing articles of incor- dar" and ran through with half OflGE! uepctrwiicuu wii wees poratlon as their act and deed on a dozen minor and rion-contro irom 1 arm ers xnoicatea this the 4th day of March, 1935, versial measures, adjourning short 'S following acreage Increases for ROSA HAYWOOD, ly after seven ociock until this 1936: Notary Public. morning. The routine of the house ses Spring wheat, 19 per cent; corn, fsnAT.i six per cent; rice 11 per cent; to- My com. expires Oct.

4. 1937. sions wras upset considerably yesterday by the dictator bill. Soon bacco. rune per cent, ana peanut Received at the office of the eignt per cent.

Secretary of State th! th 13th after the measure was taken uo. I tthh I xvir. ttooseven, saia privaie unuc i daws or March- A tnwt.hr the house ordered the question which shut off recess' and regret the step it is going to spuria mmraicu witn tne. sum or $30.00 deposited other motions until the final take this day. Local and Nationally Adv.

Food Products This sale includes our entire stock of food products Now is your chance, to stock up your pantry Our entire stock must be sold regardless of prices Buy now the wholesale way! LEGAL NOTICES vote was reached. Infest Corridors The number of amendments and Mr. Bailey said the lobbyists the debate of ten minutes on "have infested (I almost said 'in-each amendment prolonged the fee ted') the corridors of this capi- to cover the recording fee, and referred to the Attorney General for hi3 opinion. WALKER WOOD, Secretary of State, Jackson, March 14, 1936. I have examined this charter NOTICE TO CREDITORS Pursuant to the instructions cf process of enacting the bill and it tol" in their effort to destroy the the order of the chancery court was three o'clock before the roll riifhfc of the osoole to choose their I nr t.ht first.

rii.rfHrt of Hinds was -called on final passage. The own officials. County, Mississippi, rendered March of Incorporation and am of the house had had no lunch and it "The people sometimes make igth, 1936, in adniinistration cause opinion that it is not violative of was In a nasty mood but agreed mistakes," he went on, year number 22,121 Estate ol Simon the constitution and laws of this to recess until 4:30, when it re- in 'and year out their judgment s. Marks deceased, notice is here- state, or of the United States, turned to its work. is sound and it ousrht to pre- hv Given to all creditors of the GREEK L.

RICE, Debate on the dictator bill after vaiL" said Simon S. Marks ind to ail Attorney General. the amendments had been dis- Opening with the statement that claimants against his estate that B7 w. W. PIERCE posed of was limited to half an the legislature were left alone Dn the mornins of Friaav.

April Assistant Attorney General. hour to the side. The time was to vote its honest convictions this nt iq26, at the county court A3? apportioned among the various bill would be killed, Mr. Sillers house in the first district of EXECUTIVE OFFICE speakers, with proponents divid- said he knew when he was licked Hinds County, at Jackson, Mis- JACKSON ing their 30 minutes among .12 in a fight and that the house sissippL the claims against the wlhin and foregoing Char-speakers and the opponents limit- was set to pass the bilL estate of Simon S. Marks de- ter Incorporation of Woodson -ing their list to five speakers, "The long distance telephone ceased will be taken up for ex- Tenent Labratories of Mississippi.

with Kepresentauves waiter bu- and teiegrapn wires irom wasn- ajnination and adjudication. AH I "fp'" lers, Jr, of Bolivar county, and ington have been busy for several claims against the estate even Jn testimony whereof, I nave Thomas L. Bailey, of Lauderdale days he declared, "and you are if now filed, must be hereafter nereunto set my nana and caused ooimtv. makine the principal croimr to nass this bill" fiwi wifb riprir of jsnid court the Great Seal of the State of speeches on the measure, talking The Bolivar solon declared that at Jackson by the said day of Mississippi to be affixed, this ten minutes eacn. I the lobbyists nave been out April 17th.

next hereafter. All oiauj vi wai xjo. Speakers Listed full force while the bill has been creditors mav attend said hear- HUGH WHITE, Speakers for the bill, allotted before the house. ins-, and anv creditor may then SEAL) two to five minutes each, were: "When I learned that the ce- and there object to any claim I B7 the Governor. Representatives Morgan.

Wallis, I ment bovs were here with a lot Urvi the noiirt will heai evidence WALKER WOOD, Ewinsr. Houston, Reed, Calcote, of persuasion: when. I learned in simnort of any objection and Secretary of State. Henley Evans (Jones) Chadwick. that the material men were, here; shall make allowances and re- McGowan ana oore.

un me when I learned that the poiiti- lections as may be equitable. A STATE OF MISSISSIPPI Office Of 'SECRETARY OF STATE Jackson other side were Representatives cians were all coming to Jack- claim, unless hereafter filed with Cockrell, lAiue, uaiiey son; when I found the highway the clerk aforesaid by the day and Sillers. bovs had traveled lone distances above named" for the examination Walker Wood, Secretary ol Our Fixtures Are Included in This Going Out of Business Sale The Latest Designs in Fixtures. Proponents of the measure made from their posts in the state: when and ad indication, shall not be al- State, do certify that the Charter FHZTHgnaias their conventional arguments for I found out all this was going lowed other than in accord with of Incorporation hereto attached the bill the plea that the pres- on, I knew the chances of thai the terms of Code of Mississippi entitled the Charter of Incorpora- ent elective highway commission people were slight." of 1930. section 1728.

now refer- tion of Woodson -Tenent Labors- has failed to give the state good Describing the bill as red to. tories of Mississippi Ino, was roads and that by giving the gov-1 sible," Mr. Sillers pointed out Witness our 'signatures at pursuant to trie provisions of MiianTaro ernor the power to name their that the measure provides for Jackson, Mississippi this March Chapter 100, Code of Mississippi successors in office "another safe- the appointment of the three 19th, 1936. A. D.

of 1930, Recorded in the Records guard" will be placed around the highway commissioners by the MRS. JOSEPHINE H. MARKS, of Incorporations in this office expenditure of the $46,000,000 governor only for the period dux- EXECUTRIX. Book No. 35-36, Page 128.

hiehway paving fund. ing which the highway paving I. E. MARKS. EXECUTOR, OF Given under my hand and the (1 i Cv3 mm Closing for the.

rrienos of tne program is under way. THE PROBATED WILL OF Great Seal of the State of Mis- Farish at Griffith bill. Representative T. N. Gore, of I "As soon as the 46 millions Is SIMON S.

MARKS. DECEASED. I sisslppi hereunto affixed this Quitman- county, expressed grave spent," hs said, "the Deople are I CHALMERS ALEXANDRER 1 17th day of March. A. D.

1936. Phone 6167 about the possibility of to get.it back. The people of the I F. jr. LOTTERHOS, (SEAL) takinff politics out of the com- state are not going to stand for Solicitors for the Executors.

WALKER WOOD. mission or the paving program. that sort ot March. 20-27, April 3-10. Secretary oX Stata-.

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