Newspaper Page Text
Thursday, April 28, 1955
Richmond Hill
News
Mr. and Mrs, James Gill and
daughters, Rebecca and Cynthia,
visited relatives in Ogeechee, Ga,,
Sunday. Mrs. Blanch Jacobs, of
Ogeechee, Ga,, vigited her mother,
Mrs. Gill, Friday.
Mrs. Dollie Rimes spent the
weekend with Mrs. W. B, Mikell
in Savannah, :
Mrs. Daisy Duggar left Satur
day for Savannah to visit Mrs,
Gladys Smith after a week’s visit
with Mrs. Maggie Gill,
Mr. and Mrs. John Meeks and
Mr. Briger Brown, were dinner
guests of Mrs. Maggie Gill Thurs
day evening,
Nine out of every ten pergons
here, went to see “The Man Call
ed Peter.”
Mr. and Mrs. M. M. Jones, Billy
Jones and Annett Smith, visited
Mr. and Mrs. George Shuman last
week,
Mr. Willie Smith and Mr. J, B.
Clark of N. J, spent the week
end at home,
Mr., and Mrs. John Rucker of
Savannah, visited Mr, and Mrs, J,
A. Smith over the weekend,
Mr. and Mrs, Brantley MeManusg
and daughter, Elaine, visited I, N.
Smith in Kellar.
Mrs, Alvin Harn and children of
Savannah, visited relatives in Kel
lar Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Mack Jones, Billy
Jones, Mr, and Mrs. Carlos Jones
and Keith, visited relatives in
Brooklet Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Harden
and Mr, and Mrs, Ira Wellg and
family, visited relatives in Bruns
wick Sunday.
TB QUEEN, TALENT
TO BE CHOSEN AT
BLACK CREEK MEET
The first step in the Farm
Bureau annual queen and talent
contest will be taken by the Bryan
County chapter next Thursday
night, May b, at the regular Black
Creék Farm Bureau meefing.
The queen and talent numbers
to represent the county will he
chosen at the meeting. Winners
will compete in the district' elim
ination at Georgia Teachers Col
lege in Statesboro on June 10. The
entrants in both events must be
children of active Farm Bureau
members. The talent number must
include at least two people in each
team.
The committee from the Bryan
County chapter to work out de
tails for the Black Creck elimina
tion is Mrs. C. F. Warnell, presi
dent of the home demonstration
council, Mrs, J, T. Stubbs and Mrs.
A. V. Anderson,
Supper will be served at the
meeting Thursday night.
' OS Ohea tre
Night Shows Start at 7:15 P.M.
MON., TUES., MAY 2-3
Matinee Tuesday at 3:30 P.M.
“BLOWING WILD"
with . |
GARY COOPER |
BARBARA STANWYCK
Also Fox News Reel
WED.,, MAY 4
MATINEE and NIGHT
“TANGANYIKA"”
(In Technicolor)
With
VAN HEFLIN
RUTH ROMAN
HOWARD DUFF
Also Walt Disney Cartoon
And
CHAPTER 11
“ZOMBIES OF THE
STRATOSPHERE"”
" THUR., FRL, MAY 5-6
Matinee Thursday at 3:30 P.M.
“PHANTOM OF THE
~ RUE MORGUE”
(In Technicolor)
with
KARL MALDEN
PATRICIA MEDINA
CLAUDE DAUPHIN
Also Color Cartoon
SAT., MAY 7
DOUBLE FEATURE
Continuous Showing
from 2:00 P.M.
‘BADMAN'S TERRITORY’
With
RANDOLPH SCOTT
GEORGE GABBY HAYES
And
“MEET ME AFTER
THE SHOW”
(In Technicolor)
BETTY GRABLE l
MacDONALD CAREY
EXTENSION AGENTS
RETURN FROM MEET
AT SAVANNAH BEACH
Bryan county’s two extension
agents spent the first of the week
at Savannah Beach attending a
district meeting of county and
home demonstration agents.
During the two-day meet Mrs.
Ora C. Payne and D. E. Medders
‘had technical demonstrations and
‘a short course in copper enamel
‘ing and tooling, Those attending
‘were from the Southeast Georgia
District,
The delegates were housed at
‘the Chatham County 4-H Club
camp, Among those present were
‘Mrs. Mel Linda Lanier and
Carolyn Warnell, both formerly of
Pembroke,
BCHS FHA DELEGATES
TO STATE MEET WILL
HEAR IRIS BLITCH
The two delegates from the
Bryan County High School chap
ter of the Homemakers Associa
tion who will attend the state con
vention of the Georgia Future
Homemakers in Savannah will
hear Mrs. Iris Bliteh, Homerville,
Georgia congresswoman., Mrs,
Bliteh will speak to the group at
the banuuet on Friday night.
Named to represent the chap
ter at the tenth annual state con
vention were Patsy Walker, presi
dent-elect, and Jackie Wester,
,
The Greater the need
for High Octane
The Greater the need for T(P
' BRYAN OIL. COMPANY, LANIER, - GEORGIA
THE PEMBROKE JOURNAL
next year’s member-at-large.
The girls will also her an ad
dress by William A. Early of
Savannah, a past president of the
National Educational Association,
as well as other nationally known
speakers, The site of the conven
tion will be the General Ogle
thorpe Hotel.
Both Miss Walker and Miss
Wester are ninth grade students.
Other officers named for next
year are Shearer Shaw, vice-pres
ident, 10th grade, and Joyce Ma
son, secretary, 10th grade.
Eight hundred delegates are ex
pected to attend the convention.
The local delegates will be accom
panied by Mrs. Wynelle Purcell,
homemaking teacher, The meet
ing will adjourn Saturday.
SERIES OF PLAYS 3
GIVEN AT BLACK
CREEK FR. NIGHT
A series of entertainments, one
of the most outstanding being a
Tom Thumb Wedding, will be pre
sented at the Black Creek School
auditorium Friday night. The oth
er plays are “The Circus Star’s
Migtake” by the fifth grade and
“School’s Out at ’'Tater Ho]ler’"
hy the fifth, sixth and seventh
grades, |
Between acts John Stubbs and
Richard Polk will be featured in
a blackface skit.
Admission for the entire even
ing is 16 and 25 cents. The cur
tain will go up at 8 o’clock.
| ’l:)day’s engines deliver more power than ever
_ before—and with greater economy, too!
' They’re high compression engines. They’re
built to squeeze more power out of every drop
of the high octane gasolines they require.
" But high octane alone will not keep these
engines delivering their full power. They must
‘be protected against the harmful effects
of deposits that build up in combustion
chambers.
The reason is this: ]
When your engine warms up, these deposits warm ’
up, too — glow red hot. And these glowing particles
"act like hot coals—ignite the gasoline mixture ahead
‘of time . . . before the pistons reach proper firing
position. This is called pre-firing and means that
power works against you instead of for you.
\\ In addition, these same deposits have another
FFA LIVESTOCK
JUDGING TEAM :
GOES TO R'VILLE
Tuesday afternoon the livestock
judging team from he Bryan
County High School chapter of
the Future Farmers of America
went to Reidsville to compete
against 59 other teams from the
southeast district.
The contest was held at the
state prison farm near Reidsville.
Tuesday night a barbecue supper
was served and a string band from
Blackshear entertained the future
farm boys. Donald Clark, first
vice-president of the state FFA,
from Mount Vernon, addicssed the
delegates. ¢
The teams from the Pembroke
school was composed of Eugene
Duggar, Eugene Bazemore and
Milton Dowd. W. S. Rice of the
agricultural department was the
judge., Winners of the event were
teams from Jesup and Odum,
C. N. McGee, agricultural teach
er at BCHS, accompanied the boys
to Reidsville.
MRS. WILLIAMS GIVES
STUDY OF BOOK AT
CIRCLE MEETING |
Mrs. G. B. Williams led the
study of the fifth chapter of “Pil
grimage to Brazil” at the meeting
of th Amelia Burgess Cicle of
the Woman’s Missionary Society
of the Pembroke Baptist Church,
Only Shell Premium Gasoline
has both TCP and ng}l Octane!
The meeting was held Tuesday
noon at the home of Mrs. L. M.
Anderson, with Miss .Lula McGa
hee, circle leader, presiding. The
devotional was given by Mrs. w.
W. Curl, Jr.
During the business session the
group pledged to work towards a
successfu] revival which beging in
the church on May 1.
Mrs. Anderson served delicious
refreshments to the members at
tending which included Miss Daisy
Averitt, Mrs. Leona Underwood,
Mrs. W. W. Curl, Jr.,, Mrs. D. H.
Horne, Mrs. G. B. Williams, Mrs.
J. 0. Strickland, Jr., Miss Lula
McGahee and Mrs, Perry Par
rish.
PEMBROKE MAN IS
IN HOSPITAL ;
AFTER OPERATION ‘
An operation is keeping Mr. Joe‘
Bacon in St. Joseph’s Hospital in
Savannah, where he will probably
remain a patient for several days
to come,
Mr. Bacon underwent the sur
gery last week. His condition was
somewhat eased by the operation
and he appeared to be resting
more comfortably, according to re
ports.,
Mr. and Mrs. Bacon have a wide
circle of friends and relatives who
sincerely hope that Mr. Bacon will
soon improve enough to return to
his home here where he is deeply
revered.
power-wasting effect: They foul spark plugs, causing
your engine to miss.
Engineers will tell you there’s nothing more
wasteful of power and gasoline than pre-firing and
spark plug “miss.”
But there 1s an answer—there’s one high octane i
gasoline that gives you all the advantages of high
octane without the power-crippling effects of these
deposits—Shell Premium Gasoline with TCP*,
TCP, the Shell-developed additive, fireproofs thc;
deposits so that they no longer cause pre-firing. No
longer can they glow red hot and ignite the gasoline
mixture. And TCP stops spark plug “miss,” too.
Your spark plugs do the job they are supposed
to do.
Start getting the full power built into your eagine.
Get Shell Premium with TCP. It's the most powes,
ful gasoline yowr car can use!
* UkodbyiMcny % Cussed by Some % Read by Them All
4-H, FFA MEMBERS
ATTEND BREEDERS’
DEMONSTRATION
Four-H and Future Farmers of
America members from the Bryan
County High School attended a
purebred breeders’ demonstration
held for their benefit at the E. B.
Ham farm near Claxton. Other
counties represented were Bulloch,
Candler, Effingham, Jenkins,
Screven, Tattnall and Evans.
Among the interesting demon
strations witnessed by the boys
was a Cesarian section performed
by Dr. F. C. Randall, Glennville
veterinarian. Also seen was
Foundation Prince, a herd sire
that Mr. Ham bought for $2,000.
He is the highest priced Duroc
boar in the country. Exhibited
were different type farrowing
pens and shelters.
Attending from Pembroke were
F. F. A, members Clark Ander
son, Milton Dowd and Eugene
Bazemore, and 4-H’ers Donnie
Purvis, Seward Shuman and Lloyd
Collins.
BRYAN DIRECTOR
OF PCA ATTENDS
ANNUAL MEET
The Bryan county director of
the Savannah Production Credit
Association attended the annual
stockholders’ meeting which was
held Friday at the Municipal
Auditorium in Savannah.
T. T. Osteen, Pembroke, is a
long-time director of the associa
tion which is owned by farmers
in Chatham, Bryan, Effingham,
Liberty, Long and Mclntosh coun
ties.
A certificate of complete farm
ers ownership was presented to
the association by an official of
the Production Credit Corpora
tion.
MRS. BRANNEN HAS
STUDY IN ANNE
JUDSON CIRCLE
Mrs. Purvis E. Brannen taught
the study course Monday night at
the meeting of the Anne Judson
Circle of the Woman’s Missionary
Society of the Pembroke Baptist
Church. Using the book, “Sacri
fice and Song,” Mrs. Brannen’s
topic was “And the Children Re
joiced.” The devotional was given
by Mrs. W. W. Curl, Jr.
Leading the business session
was Mrs, E. W. Miles, circle lead
er. Visiting in the interest of the
revival to be held the first week
in May was adopted as a commun
ity mission’s project.
The circle was entertained with
delicious refreshments by Mrs. W.
W. Curl, Jr., in whose home it met,
Others present besides Mrs. Curl
were Mrs. E. W, Miles, Mrs. Pur
vis E. Brannen, Mrs. Roy Brog
don, Mrs. Thomas Williams, Mrs,
D. E. Medders, Mrs. John R. Joy
ner, Mrs. C. N. McGee and Miss
Dorothy Warnell.