|T. Woody Miter Dies
Ifront Auto Injuries
] Former Edenton Couple
Run Down By Auto
mobile In Riverdale
I -a _____
T. Woody Killer, father of Mrs.
Watson Bell, passed away in a hos
pital nt Riverdale, Md., near Wash
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THE GHOWAN HERALD, EDENTON, M. C, THURBDAT, DECEMBER 23, 1948.
inffon, D. C., Saturday near mid
night. Ur. Miller’s death was
brought about as the result of an
accident a week earlier when he and
i his wife were run down by an auto
\ mobile while crossing a street in
Riverdale. Me never regained con
sciousness after the accident. Mrs.
I Millet was also seriously injured and
is still confined to the hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Miller formerly lived
in Edenton but left about 26 years
ago. The couple had planned to
celebrate their 50th wedding an
niversary on Monday of tips week.
Surviving the deceased are his
wife, Mrs. Lola Haste Miller; two
daughters, Mrs. Watson Bell of Eden
ton and Mrs. Montfez Clarke of River
dale, Md.; two sisters, Mrs. T. C.
Brown and Mrs. Rosa Miller, both
of Colerain; and two brothers, Char
lie Miller of Washington, N. C., and
J. Frank Miller of Edenton.
Funeral services were held at
Riverdale Tuesday afternoon at 2
o’clock.
St. Paul’s Divided On
Kind Os Restoration
(Continued From Page One)
came hecessary. This I thought un-
sound and extravagant.
The new plan proposes substituting
a flat ceiling for the present barrel
ceiling. This, in my opinion, is the
most destructive change advised, and
would completely destroy the beauty
and devotional feeling of the interior
as shown in the picture. The church
would look like a hail with nothing to
suggest a church but the memorial
window. That, I understand, was a
concession by the architect to the
congregation, but looks out of place
in so secular an interior. In all the
great churches and cathedrals I can
recall in America or abroad there is
a Gothic, or barrel or vaulted ceiling. ,
It seems to be the expression in
architeetare of the devotten, the
aspiration of man. It was Ruskin, I
believe, who described the Gothic
architecture as a prayer in stone. A i
flat ceiling in a church with a spire
and a pointed roof is, indeed, an in
consistency. The architect confesses ‘
to certain inconsistencies in his de-j
, sign. But he condemns the present]
. interior of the church for its incon-i
. sistency, which is, indeed, an incon-!
s'sistency in him.
1 1 If I admired the changes proposed
i for the church I would disapprove
saddling future generations with a
debt they did not incur and of ignor
ing the wishes of the living minority
who do not approve i the restoration,
and I would disapprove, as I tried to
aay at the meeting, of spending so
great a proportion of the funds of
the church unnecessarily on the build
;ing of the church, which are needed*
ifor its life—its activities: Missions,
] seminaries (teaching) and relief at
(home and in foreign fields. This is
■the Living Church for which the Son
iof God Himself made the supreme
sacrifice.
MRS. MARY L. ANDERSON WOOD.
PAGE FIVE