AUTOMOBILE CLUB TO HEAR TALK OF MOTORS IN WARFARE Capt. Hazzard of Fort Oglethorpe Wil Be the Speaker. The part motor-driven vehicles play in modern warfare will be the subject of an address before the Chattanooga Automobile club at its regular meeting tonight at the Hotel Patten by Capt. O. P. M. Hazzard, U.S.A., commanding the Tenth and Eleventh recruit companies at Fort Oglethorpe. An invitation has been extended to all automobile owners in Chattanooga, as well as members of the club, to hear this address. The recent Associated Press dispatches announcing that various automobile, tire and accessory manufacturers had tendered the government the use of their large plants in case of war, and the numerous magazine articles emphasizing the importance of the automobile and truck for military service, has aroused considerable local interest in the subject. A committee from the club, composed of W. R. Long, Emmett Newton, Maj. W. J. Bass, John Lovell and V. D. L. Robinson, called on Capt. Hazzard at the post yesterday afternoon and requested that he talk to them on this subject. As Capt. Hazzard, with all of the other army officers, has been giving considerable thought and attention to the subject of motor transportation, the address will be of special interest to all motor enthusiasts. The directors of the club will be the guests of President W. R. Long at dinner at 5:45 at the Hotel Patten this evening, when business coming before the board will be discussed. The directors' meeting will adjourn in time for the regular meeting at 8 p.m. Co-operation with Marion county citizens residing on top of Cumberland mountain will also be up for discussion. An invitation has been received by the club from 'Squire E. Graenicher, president of the Cumberland Mountain Dixie Highway association, to participate in the road-working "bee" which will be held near Monteagle Wednesday, April 4, when the residents of the Cumberland plateau will formally commence work on the construction of the five miles of the Dixie highway from the Franklin county line east of Sewanee through Monteagle to the point where the Battle Creek road comes out on top of the mountain. The funds for this work have been raised by private subscription. The residents of the mountain are highly enthusiastic over the prospects of the completion of the Dixie highway between Nashville and Chattanooga. By early summer Franklin county will bring a completed road to the Marion county line, which the residents of the mountain will carry on to the brow of the mountain where the Battle Creek road starts down toward the Sequatchie valley. As Hamilton county has made ample arrangements for the completion of the Dixie highway, the residents of the mountain do not believe Marion county can afford to have their section of the road the only gap in a well-surfaced road between the two Tennessee cities.