Tuesday, September 8, 2020

The Evergreen Courant's News Flashback for Sept. 8, 2020


24 YEARS AGO
SEPT. 12, 1996

Evergreen weather observer Harry Ellis reported 0.05 inches of rain on Sept. 2, 0.80 inches on Sept. 4, a trace of rain on Sept. 5 and 0.23 inches on Sept. 6. He reported a high of 90 degrees on Sept. 8 and lows of 67 on Sept. 4 and Sept. 5.

The 16th Annual Conecuh Heritage Festival, sponsored by the Conecuh Heritage Committee and the Evergreen-Conecuh Chamber of Commerce will be held Sat., Oct. 19, in downtown Evergreen from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Opening ceremonies will begin at 9 a.m. The winners of the 1996 Miss Heritage Pageant will be presented at this time.
Activities for the day include arts and crafts, food booths, live entertainment and children’s activities.

Runoff election is next Tuesday for District One: Only part of the citizens of Evergreen will return to the polls next Tuesday for the runoff election. All races but one were decided in the election held in August.
Residents of Evergreen who are in District 1 will vote in the race between incumbent Councilman Jerry Caylor and Evergreen businessman Homer Chavers.
Polls will again be open from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. and everyone in District 1 is encouraged to get out and vote.

Residents who live on Lee Street and on out County Road 42 are being detoured as of Wednesday morning at 7 a.m. The county closed the road so this bridge can be replaced. The replacement of the bridge should take between 30 to 45 working days.

50 YEARS AGO
SEPT. 10, 1970

Samuel Sapp holds this monster rattlesnake which his wife killed early Thursday morning in their yard. The rattler had 13 rattles and a button and was well over five-feet long.

The Fall Term of Circuit Court for Conecuh County will open here Monday morning at nine o’clock with Circuit Judge Robert E.L. Key presiding. Trial of civil cases will be held with cases set each day through Thursday. There are 13 cases on the docket.
Judge Key will also empanel the Grand Jury Monday morning. District Attorney Ted Pearson of Monroeville and County Solicitor Henry J. Kinzer will assist the jury in its deliberations.
Circuit Clerk Leon A. Salter released the following docket, listing cases as set by days with plaintiff and attorney listed in that order…

Jerry Sasser is improving after accident: Jerry Sasser, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Sasser, is reported improving after suffering critical injuries in a freak accident on Sept. 1. He is tentatively scheduled for surgery Friday at this time, according to his father.
Jerry was working for his father at the Lone Star Service Station when the accident occurred. He was changing a tire and as he put air into it, the bead separated and the tire blew out. The rim was thrown into the air, striking Jerry in the foreheard.
His father said that he talked to Mrs. Sasser around 9:30 Tuesday night and at that time Jerry was feeling much better. In fact he had been allowed to sit up.

69 YEARS AGO
SEPT. 13, 1951

The schools of Evergreen will open with appropriate exercises Friday morning. W.P. McMillan, principal, announces that the Evergreen City School will open with a program in the auditorium at 8:30 Friday morning. An enrollment of around 300 is expected.
Evergreen High School will also hold its opening Friday morning. Principal Jack Finklea expects a record enrollment of nearly 500.

With the completion on Sept. 7 of Joe F. Walters Contracting Company’s contract for the surfacing of the Belleville to Castleberry road, there was added 10 more miles of all weather roads to this county’s Farm to Market System.
Road mileage in Conecuh County totals 805 miles, 165 miles of which are paved. There are 124 miles of state and 681 miles of county roads.

LECTURE: H.L. Blount will lecture on the subject, “Evolution and the Bible,” Sun., Sept. 16 at 401 Magnolia Ave. Everyone welcome.

George Hendricks Jr., student at Auburn, spent his vacation at home.

Cpl. Temple Millsap was appointed a supervisor last week, the only noncommissioned officer ever appointed to this place at Keesler Air Force Base.

Pfc. Harold Crawford, the son of Mr. and Mrs. A.J. Crawford of Evergreen, who was stationed in Ft. Jackson, S.C. with the 31st Infantry Division has been shipped to Korea.

75 YEARS AGO
SEPT. 13, 1945

John Thomas Gaillard Passes On Friday: Evergreen suffered a great loss on last Friday in the passing of John Tom Gaillard, which occurred at his home on Bruner Avenue, after a few days illness. Mr. Gaillard was city clerk, an office he filled most efficiently, always ready to help, listen and furnish help. He was a courteous gentleman.
He was born in Camden Sept. 15, 1878 and it was with no small degree of modesty, he always spoke with deep affection of his old home, Camden, Wilcox County. He was proud of his lineage. His parents were the Richebourge Gaillards. He father was a graduate of law, from Yale, and his mother was Annie Caldwell, of distinguished South Carolina families.
He served as Cadet in the Spanish American War, and as First Lieutenant in World War I. It was a source of great regret that he could not serve in World War II.

John Hunter Thornley Is New City Clerk: John Hunter Thornley, well known and popular young man of Evergreen, was elected by a unanimous vote of the City Council Monday as city clerk of Evergreen to fill the vacancy caused by the death last week of J.T. Gaillard. Mr. Thornley assumed the duties of his office Tuesday morning. He has held a position with the post office here for the past several months. Prior to this, he was chief clerk at the War Ration Board. For a number of years, he held a responsible position with the AAA here.

84 YEARS AGO
SEPT. 10, 1936

Willie J. Simpson, age about 30 years, was instantly killed at 10 o’clock Saturday morning when for some reason or other he stuck his head under the automatic press at the gin of the Evergreen Manufacturing Co. The press caught his head and literally crushed it, causing instant death. Witnesses state that he never moved after he was struck.
According to reports, just before the fatal accident occurred a fire had broken out at the gin caused by a match which had been left in the cotton being ginned. However, the blaze had been extinguished before the accident. It is thought that Simpson was looking into the press to see if all the fire was out. He had climbed up the walls of the press and turned back a screen door which is there to protect employees of the gin from the press head. Some fellow workers warned him of the danger and it is said that he jumped clear of it the first time it came down but the next time it caught him.

All arrangements have been completed in preparation for the opening of the schools of the county on Tuesday of next week, according to an announcement given The Courant by Supt.-elect H.D. Weathers, who will become superintendent Sept. 14, succeeding Prof. M.A. Hanks, who will assume duties as principal of the Evergreen High School next Monday.

Richard Brassell, eldest son of Mrs. Carnella Brassell of this city, was awarded the scholarship made possible by the late Maj. W.O. Parmer, native of Butler County, but who was a resident of Nashville at the time of his death

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