Early County news. (Blakely, Ga.) 1859-current, May 28, 1953, Image 5

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EARLY COUNTY NEWS. BLAKELY. GEORGIA P Hk TRADE-IN w m \ § % ATLAS : i At GRIP-SAFE AND CUSHIONAIRE FIRST LINE TIRES **> to Y > ^ . * % ___________ L \f% m X o f All 0 *»*c e ro. You * 010 n*« Hi? ATLAS for- SI ow Ai 6.00 x 16 6.70x15 PLUS TAX AND PLUS TAX AND c o* p OLD TIRE OLD TIRE ? i H AT THE EOLLOWm STANDARD DEALERS REAR YOU OIL r Davenport Motor Co. m t I ■ * Lady's Aid m fry. 1 i i; m , (great for yy- A i m 7/ ‘ 111 ms Hy i .$3 the gentleman, L : - i? ^ I x. ^ -X 4# too) A Lk 4 1 ? m> | h ,y •.'• - i ,11 OLDSMOBILE POWER STEERING jtffi d ilia * i .1 :-=;:ii| &ta •jag ill ^ Meet the little ladv with the ", two-ton touch"! Nonchalantly wheeling that big Super "88” Oldsmobile into a tight spot at the curb. “ snarl ,, Gracefully maneuvering through a of X-' ✓ traffic. Serenely cruising the highway with all the confidence of a veteran chauffeur! * What’s her secret? Power Steering*! The kind of Power Steering that lets you control two tons of automobile with just finger-tip pressure. The kind that takes out the effort - yet leaves in the "feel of the wheel”. The kifcd of Power Steering that Oldsmobile offers . . . along with Power Brakes*, Power Styling, and the 165-horsepower "Rocket” Engine. /X See us soon . .. for your "Rocket Ride”! 9 These Potver Features and new Autronic - esmm _____ ... Eye are optional at extra cost. i iv I k 1 SSL • as.. ; ■ : ■ Wmm % *>• \ k I \ COUPE' w«K' SUPER "88" HOLIDAY § W\y •••:•: r # 1 i r <4 General Moldrs Value 1 'ro out’ engine MAY IS "SAFETY-CHECK” MONTH . . . SEE YOUR OLDSMOBILE DEALER Tompkins Chevrolet Co. South Main St. ■_L“^r OUR OLDSMOBILE DEALER ALSO FEATURES TOP VALUES IN SAFETY-TESTED USED CARS*— TTF'TTF v % y Ll? fa, mm® tom 1 f t^SKr ^ C3 L WL H| 'sc. .InV&S. Oscar Whitchard Distributor Buck Alderman Sales and Service BLAKELY, GEORGIA DR. WHALEN L. GEORGE CHIROPRACTOR 209 S. Main Street Telephone 4434 Blakely, Ga. Closed All Day Thursday HOME DEMONSTRATION NEWS ANN SMITH, Home Demonstration Agent Empty space in the home freezer is no economy, so one good rule for thrift and convenience is: Keep the freezer full! Freezers use just as much electric ity on vacant spaces as on frozen food that could be occupying them. When food supplies are low that’s the best time to defrost and wash the freezer, take inventory and repack, placing the oldest foods on top to use up first. Now is a good time to fill freezer vacancies with beef because it is so plentiful and somewhat down in cost, too. Baked goods or cookie dough put in a freezer 'now will pro vide plenty of goodies for serving summer company and save you time to visit instead of cook when you do have guests. Homemakers often ask if the freezing of food doesn’t run up elec tric costs considerably. The motor runs little more to freeze than to hold frozen foods. Operating costs show that more than 90 per cent of the electricity used annually by a freezer is to hold foods at zero F., and less than 10 per cent is for freezing. The savings in freezing home-produced foods, or foods that can be purchased at low cost, more than offset the cost of current used for freezing. Another economy point freezer owners need to understand is that the more food that goes through the freezer, the less the operating cost per pound. It’s using, not saving, food in the freezer that pays. Fam ilies who arrange to “live out” of the freezers as much as possible, and thus have a rapid turnover of frozen food, make the most economical use of this appliance. Dry litter should be kept in the brooder houses, according to poultry speciaists for the Agricultural Ex tension Service, to prevent eoccidio sis. DIVORCE CITATION, George Washington Anderson vs. Evelyn L. Marshall Anderson.—Com plaint for Divorce. In Early Supe rior Court, July Term, 1953. To Evelyn L. Marshall Anderson: You are hereby commanded to be and appear at the next term of the Superior Court of Early County, Georgia, on the third Monday in July, 1953, to answer the above stated complaint. Witness the Hon. W. I. Geer, Judge of the Superior Court of Early County, Georgia, this 15th day of May, 1953. BERT TARVER, Clerk. FOR CHILLS '■! 8FFVERO ^ DUE TO MALARIA -- 666 QUININE made with NOTICE! I If you have a Home Locker and buy meats in quantity, see us—we will save you money. We sell it, we cut it, we pack it, we freeze it. If you want one or all of these services, we invite you in to see us, we sell wholesale cuts only. Pure Pork Hick ory Smoked Sausage a specialty. Call your groceryman for sausage made by Blakely Freezer Locker. Blakely Freezer Locker Blakely, Georgia Grain Bins! Stop by and talk with us about our top quality GRAIN BINS. They range in size from 1000 to 3300 bu. Why not take ad antage of PMA’s storage plan and get a top price for your grain? HILL IMPLEMENT CO. Blakely, Ga. Phone 3174 Barbecue And PTA Minstrel Show At Hilton Saturday; Everyone is looking fonward to the double attraction at Hilton school on Saturday, May 30—the Barbecue and the P.-T A.. Minstrel Show. 1. Delicious barbecue plates will be served continuously from G p. m. until 10:30, and if you enjoy meat well prepared and wonderful Bruns wick stew, then this is the -time and place for you. 2. At 8 the curtain for the P.-T. A. Minstrel Show will go up and a period of hilarious fun will begin. The minstrel will be held in the school auditorium, so come early, enjoy your supper and get a good seat for the show. The cast is com posed of local talent, featuring Roy Smith and Vernon Bankston as End Men with A. D. Wiilkerson as Inter locutor. A strong supporting cast in cludes Mesd-ames Da,n McLain, Bab Jordan, Curtis Smith, Roy Smith, Ver non Bankston, Oscar Knighton, E. L. McLendon, and many others. Furnishing music for the show is John Millard Still and Harold Weems, and many specialties such as guitar numbers, dances, etc., wll be given. The role of minister, as portrayed by A. Boyett Hayes alone is worth the price of admission. You simply can’t miss a trip to Hilton on May 30 to dine and be entertained by this live ly group of entertainers. The P.-T. A. agreed to turn the money remaining in the treasury over to the new officers as a nest-egg to be added to the money cleared on the minstrel and banbeup, this mon ey to be earmarked for refurnishing the Home Economics Department. Following the regular business of the meeting, officers for the year 1953-54 were installed. Officers in clude A. D, Wilkerson, President; Mrs. Dwight Harris, Vice President; Mrs. Ivey Chambers, Secretary, and Mrs. Vernon Bankston, Treasurer. —REPORTER, METHODIST VACATION CHURCH SCHOOL TO BE HELD JUNE 5-14 Plans have ben completed for Va cation Church School at the Blakely Methodist Church beginning June 5 and closing on June 14. Mrs. D. L. Maxwell, director, in vites all children from kindergarten age through the ninth grade to at tend. Sessions will be held each morning from 9 to 11:30, each morn ing being divided into two one-hour periods and a half-hour recess period. The folloiwing instructors will as sist in conducting the school: Kindergarten (4-5 year age group) Mrs. Lizzie Strickland, Cbm., Mrs. Lester Shoemaker, Mrs. Felix Davis, Jr., Mrs. T. S. Chandler. Primary Department: Mrs. James DuBose, chm., Hrs. Frank Gilbert, Jr., Mrs. William Cox, Mrs. James Davis, Mrs. Oscar Powell. Junior Department: Mrs. Bert Tarver, chm., Mrs. C. P. Jenkins, Mrs. R. D. Grist. Intermediate Department: Mrs. R. D. Hodges, chm., Mrs. C. R. McKib ben. Miss Ann E. Smith. Dairymen for the Agricultural Ex tension Service, University of Geor gia, say to control flies by regulav sp raying.