'WITNESSES' IN JAIL FREED BY CA U. S. JUDGES Fate Deferred, but Those in Jail Ordered Out at Once. KY. LAW UNDER TEST Federal Tribunal Sitting at London Holds 'Seditious' Literature Case Open to Dec.
26. Special LONDON, To The News Ky. Nov. 30-A special three-judge Federal court withheld judgement here on whether members of the Jehovah's Witnesses sect are guilty of sedition in distributing their literabut it has ordered State ture, Hubert Meridith to see that jailed members of the sect who have not been able to post bond, to be released, at once. A on the question two- the constitutionality Kentucky's law under which had been various Jehovah's Witnesses arrested Harlan County, was concluded late yesterday, and the until Dec.
to file briefs judges gave attorneys for both sides before final judgement is given. Can Pass Dodgers in Harlan Members of the three-judge court, Judge Elwood Hamilton, of the Sixth U. S. Circuit special of Appeals, and Federal DisCourt trict Judges H. Church Ford and Mac Swinford, instructed members of the Jehovah's Witnesses to return to Harlan County pending final ruling on the case, and said but warned enter any they could distribute, literature, home unless invited.
Comments by the judges from the bench the arguments late Friday indicated they would hold the Jehovah's Witnesses be guilty of trespass in might some of their activities, but that they were not of sedition. Sect Challenged Law The question was taken into Court by members of the Federal sect who had been indicted in Harlan County. At the last term of Circuit Court the state asked in the trial, and the for a delay Jehovah's Witnesses then went to Federal Court with a plea for the injunction to bar a permanent further prosecution on the groundsthat Kentucky's anti-sedition law is unconstitutional. -More About- 24 CALLED TO ARMY -Starts on Page 1- here Dec. 13.
None of the boards today designated persons who will be substitutes for replacements those, those called, should any of called inducted at Fort Ogle- thorpe. How Order Reads While only a fraction of the persons who have volunteered were accepted for service in the calls being sent out today, boards instructions received by the volunteers who are physically fit will be taken in January. The order to report for induction mailed those selected for set service reads as follows: "The President of the United States, "To "Order No. "Greeting: "Having submitted yourself to a Local Board composed of your neighbors for the purpose of determining your availability and service in the armed forces of the United States, you are hereby notified that you have now been selected for training and service in the Army. "You will, therefore, report to the Local Board above at (address of board), at hour to report, on the 5th day of December, 1940.
"This local board will furnish transportation to an induction station of the service for which you have been selected. You will there be examined and if accepted for training and service, you will then be inducted into the stated branch of the service. Warn of Violation "TE you are not accepted, you will be furnished transportation to the place where you reported. Wilful failure to report promptly to this local board at the hour and on the day named in this notice is a violation of the Selective Training and Service Act of 1940 subjects the violator to fine and imprisonment. Bring with you sufficient clothing for three days.
"You must keep this form and take it with you when you report to your local board." Here follows the name of a member of the local board. Draft board offices today said many persons classified in "Class III-A" have caleld the draft office asking what they must do. Robert Carden, one of the board clerks, said those placed in this classification need not call or come to the office. All they have to do is keep the board informed of their addresses or change in dependency until further notice is received from the board. POLICE HURRY, BUT 'TWAS FALSE ALARM A burglar alarm accidentally set off shortly after 8 a.
m. today at Royal Jewelers sent a squad car and a detectives' car scurrying through morning traffic to the Gay Street store, The police radio had spoken of "hold-up" and the officers were prepared for the but the salesmen at Royal Jewelers smilingly explained that it was all a mistake. OPEN U. S. COURT MONDAY The December term of Federal Court will open here at 9 a.
m. Monday, THE KNOXVILLE NEWS -SENTINEL Want Ads 3.3131 Saturday, November 30, 1940 Tune In WNOX 10 GIVE 'BIG CHIEF' BRUCKMANN 'WAR BU Who said "big" game doesn't exist in these parts? Fred C. Bruckmann, treasurer of Bruckmann Brewery Co. of Cincinnati, offers proof it exists- and can be caught. Mr.
Bruckmann (left) stopped over to see Lester Denton, of Seven Springs Beverage here this morning, after a two-weeks hunting trip along the Tennessee-North Carolina border, out from Robbinsville, N. C. the front of his car were a 201-pound bear, a 176-pound boar, and a 207-pound boar -all shot during the two weeks. Mysterious Blood Malady Conquers Brave KHS Youth Gordon Tate Jr. Had Battled Hemorrhages From Childhood, Yet Had Pursued His Studies; Funeral Tomorrow.
Death has ended the don Tate 17-year-old had suffered from a blood GORDON TATE GORDON TATE -More About- WAR ROUND- UP -Starts on Page: 1- Birmingham, and targets in almost lifelong fight for life of GorKnoxville High School junior, who malady, since died last early night youth. at General Hospital shortly before 6 p. three years to the day since he had been given up for dead with a similar attack of hemorrhages. Physicians had previously saved the youth from death with blood transfusions. Each time he recuperated, he went back to school to continue his.
studies. Gordon was studious, and spent a great deal of time with his hobbies of building airplane and automobile models. He had pictures of automobiles tracing their progress from the earliest ones to the late models. Had Major Operation When he was 9 or 10 young Tate underwent a major for the removal of the operation. Physicians hoped to find some cure in this way for the blood malady, but the hemorrhages came again.
The blood malady from which the youth had suffered is somewhat a puzzle to physicians. It is known as Bantais disease, but as yet no cure has become known, physicians said. The family lives at 2605 East Fifth Avenue. The youth was taken to General Hospital Tuesday, He had been anxious about the outcome of the KHS-Central football game on Thanksgiving Day. He was a member of the Fifth Avenue Baptist Church.
To Lie in State Funeral services will be held at 2:30 p. m. tomorrow at the Fifth Avenue Baptist Church with the Rev. Frank Wood officiating. The body will lie in state at the church an hour before services.
Burial will be in Lynnhurst Cemetery. In addition to he is survived by a sister, Billie Caroline Tate, and a half-sister, Mrs. Clara Lee Wiser, both of Knoxville. Pallbearers: Dr. G.
L. Keith, Henry Ammons, J. J. West, Ralph Mills, H. L.
Harbin and J. 0. Chamberlain. Honorary: John Chamberlain, Fred Cagle, Dan Thomas, Maurice Irwin, John Townsend, Harold Line. The body was to be removed from Rose Funeral Home to the family home at 3 p.
m. today, SCOREBOARD TO RING QUARTER ENDS IN '41 installed on the scoreboard" lathe Shields-Watkins Field by next football season, to sound automatically at the end of each quarter, the U-T Athletic Association announced today. And pennants of each of the twelve schools in the Southeastern Conference will be placed along the top of the stadium, six pennants on each side, to fly during the games, and other neighboring capitals not particularly friendly to the Rumanians. In the Far East, Japan signed a new treaty with the Japanesesupported regime at Nanking, headed by Wang Ching- Wei. The new treaty, described at Tokyo as launching the Japanese bid for a new order "the Asia, granted Japan control of Yangtze Valley, North China and Inner Mongolia.
It also Japan, Manchuria and the Nanking regime in a defensive bloc against Communism. The treaty was denounced by the Chiang Kai-shek government at Chungking and there were threats of trouble by king elements at Shanghai, where antiChinese constables in the International Settlement went on strike for higher pay. in United States Marines were ordered on the alert for outbreaks in the Settlement, In French Indo-China, where Japan has been pushing steadily southward, there, was a new burst of fighting Siamese frontier. Siamese planes bombed, rious points o' soil, was reported from Bangkok, and French officials in Siam ordered by their nationals to prepare to depart. LABOR WILLING TO CO-OPERATE IN U.
DEFENSE But Views With Alarm Big Corporation Profits, Union Speaker Says Here. Labor views "with alarm some of the tremendous increases in profits already shown by corporations," according to Mark Starr, educational director of the International Ladies Garment Workers Union. Speaking last night at a Market Hall meeting sponsored by the union's locals at the Appalachian Mills and Standard Knitting Mills, Mr. Starr pointed out that labor has shown its "willingness to co-operate wholeheartedly in the work of the National Defense Advisory Council." "Both AFL and CIO unions have demonstrated their willingness to place themselves at the disposal of the Government for the purposes of national defense," Mr. Starr said.
Social Security Needed "However, labor thinks there should be equality in sacrifice. It views with alarm some of the tremendous increases in profits already shown by corporations. "For example, the first 100 corporations reporting their profits for the first half of 1940 had an aggregate net income of 658,828, an increase of 60.5 per cent over 1939. Outstanding among these corporations was the Republic Steel which showed an increase in its profits of nearly 500 per cent." Mr. Starr pointed out that is no case for abandoning there, 40-hour week while mass unemployment continues.
He said that industrial experience has demonstrated that the lengthening of the work week does not mean an increase in output. Wants Equal Sacrifice "Labor believes that measures of social security must be extended and improved a as measures of national Mr. Starr said. "That wages must be increased i in many instances to give purchasing power to the masses of the United States. That the work day and the work week must be reduced commensurate with the increase of productivity.
"In order to secure freedom from industrial disputes business should recognize the necessity for dealing with the unions to settle all problems as they arise. "The settlement of recent strikes show that organized labor and the organized employers can get together and clear away misunderstanding. The Vultee strike was caused by the low wages paid the workers there and the runaround given to their representatives in the protracted negotiations." -More About- FOR'S CRUISE -Starts on Page 1. spection tour. Mr.
Roosevelt told his press conference yesterday that he was preparing to leave early next week on an inspection trip that may take him beyond his self-imposed 12- hour train radius from the capital. He would not disclose his destination but the mysterious operations of the Tuscaloosa, which sailed from Norfolk, yesterday, lent strength to reports that he plans to cruise into the Caribbeansibly as far as the British West Indies. The President and his White House aides refused comment. Have Plane Handy On his projected trip, Mr. Roosevelt expects to keep an airplane close at hand which could get him back to Washington quickly in event of an emergency, War department sources revealed that an Army transport plane, with a capacity of 21 persons, has been fully equipped with ramps and special gear required by the President, to be ready should Mr.
Roosevelt decide to utilize that means of travel. May Cruise to Culebra Speculation over the the President's projected detense tour centered on the possibility he may cruise to Culebra, between the Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico, to witness maneuvers of the Atlantic squadron about Dec. 7. Secretary of the Navy Frank Knox already has an- I nounced that he plans to fly to Panama for an inspection of naval defenses in the Canal Zone and then to join the Atlantic squadron for the Culebra maneuvers. The proximity of British West Indies islands where the United States was granted the right to establish defense bases in exchange for 50 World War destroyers, suggested that the President might extend his cruise to inspect the new sites.
Thus he may go to Kingston, Jamaica; St. Lucia, Antiqua, or even Trinidad, off the coast of South America. Into War Zone Such a cruise into the Caribbean would take him into zones where Britain is conducting a sporadic naval with German raiders and submarines. The Tuscaloosa, with Mr. Roosevelt aboard, undoubtedly would be escorted by two or more fast destroyers, with gun crews on duty night and day.
Last spring, a similar system was established when the President cruised aboard the Tuscaloosa to Panama, transited the Canal, and visited Cocos and other islands in the Pacific. That tour combined fishing with inspection of remote islands as possible defense base sites. COVERING UP WHAT? By United Press NEW YORK. Nov. 30 Der Deutscher Weckruf und Beobachter, official organ here of the German-American Bund, explained Italian reverses in Albania.
"The whole thing is a feint," it said. -More AboutTVA EMPLOYE -Starts on Page 1-- tered the National Guard and served 1905 to 1908 and received an honorable discharge from the Pennsylvania Guard. I supplied that to the courts in taking out naturalization papers, and it, too, was lost in the file. I was a too old for the World War draft. Here in Twenties was in Knoxville in the early twenties.
I was with R. F. Graf Son, the March architects, signed the E. B. Undertaking Co.
building, the Sterchi Bros. building and several residences on Kingston Pike. "I took out my first naturalization papers in Watertown, New York, in 1911, and the second papers in New York City in 1917. The reason I did not complete naturalization then was that, during the World War, the Government held up naturalization cases. "Then, last June when the TVA regulation requiring all employes to be American citizens was applied, my misfortune came.
"During the years I worked in America--and covered practically every state--I built up a fortune amounting to more than $80,000. I lost it after I lost all my first family by the flu epidemic during the World War. "I finally got on my feet again, and went to work. I accumulated more money and invested $30,000 with Louis Kamper, architectural firm in Detroit. In the depression, this firm went under and with it my investment.
For More Than Year "For more than a year I had been with TVA when my suspenson came. I worked on the Chickamauga dam and other dams then under construction. "I dont' know anything else I can do to recover my naturalization papers. We have searched the U. S.
Court records in Watertown, N. Y. and in New York City, They write me that these records have been transferred for some reason to Cincinnati. I have written authorities there, but with no success. "My second papers were taken out in the U.
S. District Court in Foley Square New York City. A Federal Judge Knox was presiding. My witness was William Ashe, an engineer, and I can't locate him. My case number in Judge Knox's court was 22795.
The case is recorded on the court docket. They sent me the case number, but they say the gone. That contains all the valuable evidence I need. "I have tried to get Social Security aid, but because I was a Federal employe, that is ruled out. Lost His Home "Because my income is gone I have lost the equity my home at Kingsport, which I bought when I was with the EastKodak Co.
man, the last two therans I have given $65 to the Community Chest, but the Chest has turned down my appeal." Mr. White said he has three children in the Knoxville schools, Clara Jean and Billy in Park Junior and Mary Katherine in Park-Lowry. He said his attorney has recommended ed that he take out new naturalization papers. "That I shall he said. "The examiner will be here Tuesday.
But even then, I can't get work at TVA for three months." "What my family and I will do the next three months for food and shelter and the other necessities is something I can't think of without almost losing my senses. Yes, I will accept help. A man as desperate as I am will accept help from any source." -More AboutNO SHULTZ RETRIAL -Starts on Page 1- his liberty under bond pending eppeal of the judgement to the Supreme Court also was rejected by Judge Stooksbury, Defense Attorney Hobart Atkins argued that Shultz was "entitled" to liberty under bond, but the judge declared bond was a discretionary matter with the court. "Shultz is a high man," Judge Stooksbury observed. "While this is not evidence in the case, I cannot close my eyes to the fact that a man mentioned in this case has been beaten up recently, and if Shultz is freed on bond he may commit another murder before the Supreme Court rules on the appeal.
The court is of the opinion that society is best served by refusing bond this instance." Shultz stood quietly, give scant attention to the proceedings, as Judge Stooksbury pronounced formal sentence. He walked from the courtroom without a backward glance and without saying a word. Sixty days were allowed in which to perfect the appeal. 5 INJURED IN CITY TRAFFIC ACCIDENTS Hospitals Busy Treating Cuts and Bruises. City traffic accidents yesterday bumped, bruised and cut five persons in four separate mishaps.
Mrs. Sarah Green, 63, of 1700 McCalla Avenue, was treated at General Hospital for a bruised knee and neck after she stepped out of a moving truck driven by her son, Dewey Green, near her home. Odell Coleman 25, 808 Vine Avenue, suffered a cut on the right arm and Eleanor Price, 24, of Tulip Avenue, suffered a cut over the right eye in an auto crash on Vine Avenue. They were treated at General Hospital. H.
H. Underwood, 62, of 108 Ogle Street, was reported to be in a "fairly good" condition at Fort Sanders Hospital today. He was (struck at Broadway and Caswell Avenue last night by a car driven by J. F. Robbins, 1717 Fairmont Boulevard, according, to police.
Howard East Cardwell Avenue, was treated for cuts and bruises at St. Mary's Hospital. Mr. Long was in an auto crash on Cardwell Avenue. Little Hope for 31 Trapped Ohio Miners from the main shaft entrance that 38, had been found and was being He was a resident of Cadiz and a brother of Matthem Speicher, personnel director for the mining One Body Recovered; No Sounds To Indicate Men Are Alive; Disaster Second To Occur This Year in Ohio West Virginia Fields.
By United Press CADIZ, Nov. 30-Rescue workers reported today they had recovered the body of one of the 41 men trapped by an explosion in the Nelms mine of the Ohio-Pennsylvania Coal near here. A rescue squad informed the mine office, some distance the body of Pete Speicher, sent to the surface shortly. NEA JEAN CHIAPPE BATTLE CATCHES CHIAPPE PLANE 4 Vichy Officials Downed in Flames Over Mediterranean. By United Press VICHY, France, Nov.
30. -A French plane carrying Jean Chilappe, missioner newly appointed high com- other to Syria, and three men, was shot down in flames in the Mediterranean by British plane between Marseilles and Tunis Wednesday morning, it was announced today. The communique said the plane, which sank, was shot down during a British-Italian naval battle, when it ran into a melee of planes from aircraft carriers fighting Chiappe, former director of Paris police, had been sent to Syria to succeed Gabriel Puaux as ranking official in that French mandate, one of the strategic regions of the Near East. He was a follower of Vice-Premier Pierre Laval. The communique said the plane's pilots, Guillaumet and Reine, had sent a radio message reading: "Being machine-gunned; falling." A search failed to locate the wreckage, the communique said.
Marshal Philippe Petain had appointed Chiappe to the Beirut post a week ago. Wife Critically Ill Publication of Chiappe's death was delayed for 72 hours in deference to his wife, who is critically ill at her Paris home. Chiappe was removed -as police chief by former Premier Edouard Daladier a few days before the Paris riots of 1934. Subsequently he refused appointment as resident general of Morocco. His relentless pursuit of Communists had made him Public Enemy Number One of the former Popular Front.
A native of Corsica, Chiappe was 62. Fine Pilot Guillaumet, Chiappe's pilot, was France's best known air mail pilot since the disappearance of Jean Mermoz. He had flown across South Atlantic 105 times and the North Atlantic five times. 7 FINED IN TRAFFIC CASES, 4 MORE HELD Two Booked for Reckless Driving, Two for Speeding. Police booked four on traffic charges today and seven were fined on traffic charges in City Court.
In the 24-hour period ended at today two were booked for noon reckless driving and two were booked for speeding. Judge Bob Williams fined four for speeding, two for reckless driving and one for passing a red light in City Court today. Those listed on the City Jail blotter and the disposition of their cases if heard in City Court today: SPEEDING Jessie Thompson, Cleveland, Tenn. (fined $5). Frank Parks 417 Orlando Street (continued).
RECKLESS DRIVING Dale McClanahan, 214 Market Street (fined $3). J. F. Robbins, 1717 Fairmont Boulevard (continued), Other traffic cases heard today: SPEEDING Charles Peters, 1402 Grand Avenue (fined $10). Bernard Whitton, 212 Sheridan Street (fined $10).
Sherrill Lowery, 239 Thomas Street (fined $10). RECKLESS DRIVING William Cusick, 1019 McGee Street (fined $5). HIT AND RUN Russell Ogle, Gatlinburg (continued to next Saturday). PASSING RED LIGHT Ed Standifer, Pure Oil Co. (fined OCCUPANTS UNHURT IN CAR-TRUCK CRASH Occupants of a car driven by R.
H. Whitlock escaped serious injury just before 8 o'clock last night, county officers reported, when the car crashed head-on into a truck that had stopped on Asheville Highway because of motor trouble. The truck, owned by Burchell Pitts, of Strawberry Plains, stopped on the highway when motor went dead and Mr. Pitts was unable to start it. He left the truck to telephone to a garage and while he was gone the Whitlock car crashed into the rear of the truck.
The Whitlock car was damaged about $150, hurt. but The the truck. ocbadly damaged, was towed cupants were not to a garage, A machine for testing abrasive qualities of dental devised. powders and creams has been Haif-Size Paper for Half of Student Body company Violent Death Three state mining division officials who assisted in recovery of the body said it had been nearly decapitated by force of blast. The discovery inclined officials to th eview that perhaps all of th eburied miners were killed instantly.
As Speicher's body was brought changed weather conditions rescue work even more difficult. Snow began falling heavily and roads to the mine were fast becoming icy, Officials doubted that any could be alive. They said they probably had been suffocated if they were not killed by the explosion. It will be tonight or tomorrow before they are reached. The explosion occurred yesterday afternoon.
Its cause was not known, but officials suggested that a slate fall broke electric cables, creating a short circuit that set up a pocket of gas. There was no evidence that there had been a fire. Relatives Huddle at Shaft Wives and families of the miners huddled about the company yards, waiting for word from the searchers below. Through the night a glow from a burning slag pile and individual blazes that watchers had lighted in small buckets for warmth cast an eerie light over the mine entrance and the surrounding hills. Two full mine crews evidently were caught by the collapse of the tunnel that followed the explosion.
They were imprisoned about 500 feet below the surface and some 2000 feet off main shaft two miles inside the main entrance. Members of rescue squads led by Harvey Nelms, mine superintendent, estimated they had cut through to within 1000 feet of the buried men, but did not know to what distance the passage still was blocked. 150 Escape were at work in the mine when the explosion occurred, but those in other sections escaped. The company employs 600 men, working in three shifts. Searchers had heard sound to indicate that the trapped men were alive.
Approximately 150 other men The Orange and White, University of Tennessee student paper, consisted of only two pages today sides. sheet printed on At the top of page one, was this explanation: "Half student body goes to Vandy. This edition is halfsize for the remaining half of students." Answers to Today's Quiz QUESTIONS ON PAGE 9 1. Paul Whiteman. 2.
No. 3. Abolition of slavery. 4. Rockefeller Center, New York City.
5. Twenty-one. 6. Louisiana. 7.
Chinese. 8. Kremlin. 9. Republican.
10. No. ADDITIONAL DEATHS MRS, J. H. WEBB Word has been received here by P.
and D. Y. Thrower of the death yesterday in a McMinnville hospital of their sister, Mrs. J. H.
Webb. Mrs. Webb had visited Knoxville many times. She is also survived by a son, John H. Webb, Nashville: sister, Mrs.
J. A. Lassiter, McMinnville; adn a brother, H. A. Thrower, San Diego, Calif.
Funeral services will be held at 1 p. m. tomorrow at the Christian Church, in McMinnville. Burial in the City Cemetery. COLLEGE ORATORS COMPETE Special To The News-Sentinel GREENEVILLE.
Nov. 30-Tusculum College students tonight will compete in oratory for a first prize of $25. They include John Poggi, Irving Birdseye, George Moore, Elmer Smith. SCRIPPS-HOWARD Shutterbugs! Kent. Damage appeared to be considerable, largely due to fires, and the Germans said they had dropped 860,000 pounds of fire and explosive bombs on London alone.
Cologne Bombed Again The London Air Ministry said that British bomber squadrons made successful attacks during the night on German communications centers, shipyards and ports, with the railroad center of Cologne again the principal target. The invasion of Indo-China was reported officially from Bangkok, where the high command said that the Siamese had occupied three districts of the French colony after fighting and aerial bombing. Invasion by the Siamese followed Japan's action in recognizing the China regime of Wang Ching-Wei at Nanking, indicating that further southward expansion was to be expected in the "new order" in Asia. In Albania, the Greeks reported that stiff fighting was in progress all along the front and that snowstorms in some of the mountain passes were aiding their operations against the reinforced Italian lines. No specific reports on the battles were permitted through the Greek censorship, except for a report that Greeks had captured a heavily fortified plateau on a main road near Argyrokastron.
Italians on Defensive Rome's war communique said that Italian troops were on the defensive but holding their positions most fronts although in some sectors they made "effective" counter -attacks. Extensive aerial operations by both sides were reported, with the Fascists bombing many towns in Greece and British planes hammering at the Albanian coastal towns through which Italian supplies and reinforcements are moving. Reports of continued terrorism. murder, and fighting in Rumanian circulated abroad as the powerful Iron Guard organization, participated Bucharest in funeral for their slain leader, Cornelius Zelea Codreanu, whose bones were recovered from a prisonyard grave. Hundreds Killed Young King Michael was unprotective guard of German soldiers, according to one of reports circulated abroad without confirmation from Bucharest.
These reports said that strife which hundreds of persons were allegedly killed and Iron Guards of fought Rumanian troops had created almost a state of civil war, threatened the position of Premier Gen. Ion Antonescu and increased a the possibility of direct German intervention. Dispatches direct from Bucharest passed through official censorship and indicated a less serious situation than suggested diplomatic reports to Budapest Get your copy of the NEW YORK WORLD TELEGRAM CHRISTMAS CAMERA NUMBER (Issue of December 5, 1940) reviewing all the latest page news after, equipment in the page camera field! Send your name and address and 15c in stamps to cover postage for your copy today! Address: NEW YORK WORLD TELEGRAM A Scripps Howard Newspaper 125 Barclay Street, New York, N. Y. NOTICE! to announce the re-rating of We are pleased and residential property in Knoxville business the Tennessee Inspection Bureau.
New rates by will soon be effective, resulting in most instances in a reduction in the cost of Fire Insurance but will apply only to new and renewal insurance The only way to secure immediate adpolicies. vantage of the new rate is to cancel present policies and purchase new policies from the same for the same amount and for the same agent, length of time. KNOXVILLE INSURANCE EXCHANGE Hop Bailey Company N. E. Logan Agency J.
E. Lutz Company M. L. Brickey McClamroch Company Brown Brown Henry G. McMillan Co.
Claiborne, Lothrop McMillin Realty Company Sample Frank A. McSpadden Cooper, Coffman Brooks Mayberry Coile M. F. Flenniken Co. Morgan Hurley Fowler Insurance Agency Redding Roehl, Inc.
Hickman, Johnson C. Smith Company A. Simmonds Howard Sprankle Holloway Duggan Tate Bailey Company Wood Huff Roger VanGilder E. R. Keller Insurance Agency Wallace Wallace Victor Klein James B.
Wright Co..