CAMILLA, Ga. (AP) - Howling wind and lashing rain were Eugene Lewis' only warnings in the minutes before a tornado tore his mobile home to shreds. "I was in bed, ready to go to sleep," he said. "Then I heard it." What he heard was Georgia's deadliest tornado system in more than 50 years. Lewis only had time to huddle his family and pray in Monday's predawn hours. No one in the house was seriously hurt, but other families weren't as lucky. The twisters killed as many as 22 people, according to reports from emergency crews, hospital officials and relatives. The state put the number killed at 19. The first of the funerals for the victims was scheduled Wednesday in Pelham, south of Camilla. A community memorial service is planned Thursday evening at the First Baptist Church in Camilla. President Clinton declared disaster areas Tuesday in four southwest Georgia counties, making federal funding available to help people and business owners recover from the storms.