Newspaper Page Text
Cave Springs News
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Wood-
yard, of Savannah, Ga., and Mrs.
W. H. Killingsworth of St. Elmo,
Tenn., are guests of Mr. and
Mrs. R. L. Little and family.
Mrs. George Bailey of Miss¬
issippi, is visiting Dr. and Mrs.
D. S. Middleton and Mrs. C. C.
Hale.
Mr. and Mrs. R. P. Fricks and
daughter, Mary Katherine, spent
Sunday with Mrs. Pattey Tucker
in Chattanooga.
Mr. an dMrs. Allison Blevins
and children of New England,
spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
Ben Castleberry and family.
Billy Smith of Mobile, Ala.,
was the week-end guest of his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Will
Smith and other relatives.
Mrs. C. C. Hale is visiting Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Cantrell and
children at Etowah, Tenn.
Mrs. Joe Wallen is seriously
ill at her home here.
Mrs. Jake West and Mrs. Ruth
Boren of Chattanooga, week-end
guests of their mother, Mrs. Asa
McMahan and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Forrester
and daughter, Imogene, of Birm¬
ingham, Ala., spent the week-end
with Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Wal-
raven and Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Castleberry.
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Smith of
Savannah, Ga., are guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Wilmer McNair and
Mr. and Mrs. Will Smith.
Little Miss Patsey Jane Lassit¬
er has returned to her home in
Chattanooga, after spending a
week with her grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. C. W. Hitt.
Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Simmons
announce the birth of a daugh¬
ter, Lois Katherine, April 1st.
Mr. and Mrs. Jess Adkins had
as their week-end guests, Mr.
and Mrs. George Gifford of
Trenton, Mr. and Mrs. Jim Gif¬
ford of Messa, Ariz., and Mrs.
John Brown of Chattanooga.
Mr. R. L. (Uncle Bob) Cagle
is visiting relatives in Chatta¬
nooga.
Mrs. Walter Gotherd of San
Diego, Calif., is the buest of her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. A.
Tidwell.
Miss Ida Lou Arnold of Ross-
ville, Ga., was the week-end
guest of Miss Carol Kenimer.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Brown and
children of Ft. Payne, Ala., and
Red Cross Donations
HOOKER
J. E. Strawn, Worker
Mrs. Elmer Hunt $ 1.00
H. H. Strawn 1.00
Ruby Scott ........................ 1.00
Joe Paris................................. 25
Elmer Hunt 1.00
Clarence Roberts 1.00
Ora Scott ............................ 1.00
Georgie Roberts 1.00
Miss Claudie Winfrey 1.00
Mary Roberts .................... 2 .00
Freddie Scott ........................ 1.00
Mrs. Mary Lee Rigsby 1.00
Lorena Watley ...................... 1.00
Mose Scott ....... 1.00
Edna Mae Scott 1.00
..................
Total $15.25
COLE CITY HOLLOW
Ernest Waldrop, Worker
Mi's. Amanda Jenkins $1.00
C. C. Miller ........................... 1.00
Mrs. Ernest Waldrop 1.00
Mrs. Bessie Stults ....................1.00
Mrs. Roy Jenkins ....................1.00
Jerry Jenkins ............................25
Mrs. Midred Becheres ............1.00
Donald Jenkins ........................25
Otha Waldrop ............................25
Opal Waldrop ..........................25
Garnet Waldrop .......................25
Andre Waldrop ..........................25
Ernest Waldrop .......................1.00
Total......................$8.50
WILDWOOD
J. H. Cooley, Worker
Paul W. Panzer $ 5 .00
................
Mr. and Mrs. F. N. Belk 40.00
Unknown ................................ 2.00
'When EXHAUSTION leads
to Headache
Don’t let headache double the mis¬
ery of exhaustion. At the first sign
of pain take Capudine. It
quickly brings relief, Boothes
nerves upset by the pain. It is
liquid—already dissolved—all
ready to act—all ready to
bring comfort. Use only as di¬
rected. 10c, 30c, 60c.
CAPUDINE 5
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Davis of
Chattanooga, were week-end
guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. D.
_
Gossett and Mr. Brock Dean.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cantrell
and children of Etowash, Tenn., i
were week-end guests of Mrs. C.
C. Hale and Dr. and Mrs. D. S.
Middleton.
The Home Demonstration Club
will meet Thursday afternoon
April 20th, at 3 o’clock at the
Rising Fawn M. E. Church.
Everyone is cordially invited
to attend this meeting.
Hats off
the People who Produce
your Electric Light
and Power
The Charles A. Coffin Foundation
distinguished confers a special citation achievement for
wartime
on the
ELECTRIC LIGHT and POWER INDUSTRY
“Faced with unprecedented demands, the Electric Light and
Power Industry has met every war-production requirement
without delay and without impairment of its peacetime services
to the public. This achievement merits the appreciation not
only of American industry but of the entire riation .**
—FROM THS CITATION
npHIS CITATION is richly merited—for here is a
branch of industry that has done a remarkable
war job that has not been generally recognized.
Coffin Foundation? If electric power should fail, or if it be too little or
What Is the Charles A. too late, the disastrous effects would startle all America.
A. Coffin Vital machines would be motionless. Millions of homes
'HE PURPOSE of the Charles would be cold —and an eerie blackout would descend
* Foundation is to encourage and reward the land.
distinguished achievement in the electrical field over
by “prizes to employees; by recognition to light¬ Rut, electricity has not failed . Rather, in 1943 twice
ing, pow'er, and railway companies for improve¬ as much power was produced as in the year before the
ment in service to the public; by fellowships to war—with the minimum of new facilities—and despite
deserving graduate students; and by the grant large losses of skilled employees to the Armed Services.
of funds for research work at technical schools the words of J. A. Krug, Director, Office of War
and colleges.” In
Establishment of the awards was announced Utilities of W.P.B., “Power men—public and private—• provid¬
twenty-two years ago in a statement issued by should be proud of the job that has been done in
President Swope and dated December 2, 1922: ing power supply. Power has never been too little or too
“On May 16 , 1922, Charles A. Coffin in his 78th late.”
year retiredfrom the active leadership of the General We of General Electric, who have built a large part
Electric Company. Mr. Coffin has been identified of the electric equipment which generates, distributes,
with the development of the electrical industry since the electric of America, take pride in
1882. He was the founder and creator of the General and uses power
Electric Company, of which he has been the in¬ the way this equipment is standing up under the strain
spiration and leader for thirty years. of “forced draft” wartime operation.
“As an expression of appreciation of Mr. Coffin's Many of the men and women responsible for this
great work not only for the General Electric Com¬ remarkable record are your neighbors—the manager
pany but also for the entire electrical industry ami reader who lives the the girl in
with the desire make this appreciation enduring or meter across street,
to the accounting department who is in your bridge club,
and constructive as Mr. Coffins life an nor lineman with whom bowled last night. A word
have been, the Board of Directors of t e enera the you
Electric Company created on his retirement and of appreciation from you to them will lend added sig¬
, Chaties A ^
now desires to announce the . o nificance to this well deserved citation. General Electric
Foundation / ” President _ ., Company Schenectady , New York.
Gerard Swope, ,
iBvest in Your war Country’s bonds Future GENERAL ®) ELE CTRIC wt.M-m
—buy
Hear the General Electric radio program*: "The G-E All-girt Orchestra" Sunday 10
p.m. EWT, NBC—“The World Today" news, »yfTy weej^o^^!45j»jn 1 _EWT 1 _CBS fc
THE DADE COUNTY TIMES: THURSDAY, APRIL 13, 1944.
LOCAL NEWS
Mrs. F. W. Hager of Nashville,
and Mrs. Julius Kurzrock, of
New York, arrived Tuesday for
a visit with their sister, Mrs. W.
H. Brock and Mr. Brock. They
will also visit their mother, Mrs.
Annie Wright, and their aunt,
Mrs. Griffith, in Alabama, be¬
fore returning home.
Mi', and Mrs. Eli Wheeler and
Mrs. Ruby Brock were Sunday
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Dewell Breedlove and daughter.
Dewell returned to the U. S.
Navy at Sampson, N. Y., Sun¬
day night.
Mr. and Mrs. Dillard Cope¬ j
land, Miss Agnes Hubble of
Marietta, and Mr. O. R. Hubble
of Flat Rock, Ala., were recent
guests of Mrs. Kate Hubble in
South Trenton. j
Miss Lee Etta Stephens,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Chas.
Stephens, and Lawrence Chris¬
topher of Camp Atterburg, Ind.,
were married recently.
Mrs. Dan Carroll of Wildwood
visited relatives here Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Morrison
had as Sunday guests, Mauline
Morrison, Mr. and Mrs. Duke
Broome and son, Bobby, all of
Chickamauga, and Charles Mor¬
rison of Marietta, Ga.
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Wheeler
of Chattanooga, spent Sunday
with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
H. Wheeler, Sr.
J. R. Gifford of Messa, Ariz.,
has returned home after visit¬
ing relatives here.
Miss Mary Jenkins spent Sun¬
day night and Monday as the
guest of her brother, Claude
Jenkins, at Soddy, Tenn.
Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Fleming
visited her uncle, Andrew Jenk¬
ins and Mrs. Jenkins in East
Lake, Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Womack
and son have gone to Chatta¬
nooga to reside.
FOR SALE—Bed and Mattress,
like new, $15.00; also a Cot, good
as new, $11.00. See RUSS
THOMPSON, Trenton, Ga.
The Times, $1.50!
Mrs. Ona G. Dean, 63,
Dies At Rising Fawn
Mrs. Ona Grigsby Dean, age
63, wife of J. M. Dean, died at
6:10 o’clock Saturday night at
her home at Rising Fawn.
She is survived by her hus¬
band; a daughter, Mrs. Mildred
G. McCarson, of Detroit, Mich.;
two sons, Herschel P. Dean, De¬ j
troit, and Cecil L. Dean, Dun¬
lap, Tenn.; a granddaughter,
Mildred Floy Dean, Dunlap; also
a host of relatives and friends.
Funeral services were held at
Rising Fawn Methodist Church
at 3 o’clock Monday afternoon,
Rev. T. J. Smith officiating,
Interment was in the Hannah
Cemetery.
Active pallbearers were Wil¬
liam Brown, W. H. Smith, Noah
Blevins, William Burkhalter,
Jack Davis and J. D. Gossitt;
honorary, Walter Cureton, Al¬
fred Steele, Tom Pangle, Robert
Cagle, R. P. Fricks, W. A. Wal-
raven, Dr. D. S. Middleton and
Milton Wilson.
Arrangements were in charge
of J. Avery Bryan Company.
Save Food!
Save Points!
Apply NOW to your
Ration Board for the
•xtra sugar allotted
you, so that you can
can as much of this
season's fruit and her-
ry erot' as possible.
KEEP ON......
* ^aoki*fftiu.-AttSude/ •
• WITH WAR BONOS •
Ga.-Tenn. State Line
News
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Bryant of
Knoxville, Tenn., were visiting
his brother, Wallace Bryant, and
family this week.
We are glad to see Lila Clouse
out again. Although she isn’t
able to walk, but can get around
in a car, after a long stay in the
bed.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Drew and
children visited friends on Look¬
out Mountain and St. Elmo,
Sunday.
Howard Strawn was badly bit¬
ten by some dogs while deliver¬
ing the evening papers, Monday
afternoon.
Mrs. Joe Daffron is very ill at
her home here. Her daughter,
Mrs. Jacobs of Hot Springs, Ark.,
is here visiting her; also, Mrs.
S. J. Hale of Hale Town, Tenn.
We wish for her a speedy re¬
covery.
Mr. and Mrs. Roberts had as
their Sunday guest, Mrs. Robert’s
grandson, who is serving with
the U. S. Army.
R. L. Lomenick and sister, Peg¬
gy, of Rosville, Ga., spent Easter
Sunday with Goldie Wallen. They
saw many old acquaintances.
Mrs. Bertha Whisenant, of
Camp Campbell, Ky., is here vis¬
iting her sister, Mrs. Thelma
Thacker, who has been on the
sick list for the last few days.
Mr. and Mrs. Sarah Barker of
Chattanooga, were visiting Mrs.
Besaiie Duncan and Bill Nabors
Sunday. Bill has been on the
sick list this week.
We are glad to see Eugene
Hartman able to be out again.
He says he is feeling very well.
June Goins was the wee-end
guest of her sister in St. Elmo.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Wilson
and son, Mrs. Ernest Wilson and
children and Mr. and Mrs. Goins
were visiting in Jasper Sunday.
Gene Carver was out visiting
friends Monday afternoon.
Mrs. Bessie Guinn and Mrs.
Besaiie Duncan visited Mrs. Ellen
Steele Saturday.
Mrs. Carl E. Rigsby and Mrs.
Dan Richardson were visiting
Goldie and Mrs. Dora Wallen
Saturday night.
After a brief stay with Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Griffith, Mrs. Geor¬
gia Deakins has returned home.
Mrs. Lillian Wallen and child¬
ren, also Mr. and Mrs. Bertha
Wilson were visiting Mr. and
Mrs. H. C. Tittle Sunday.
Mrs. Jim Massey and Mrs. El¬
len Steele were visiting Mrs. Joe
Dafron this week.
Mr. and Mrs. Belk have re¬
turned home after visiting her
father, who is very ill, at his
home in South Carolina.
Head River News
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Jones and
family sepnt last Sunady on
Sand Mountain visiting his par¬
ents.
Raymond Ross spent last week
in Rome, Ga.
Mrs. Joe Powell is visiting her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Mark
Scruggs.
Miss Hazel Schurch spent
Easter with home folks.
Mrs. John Lee Forester spent
the week-end with her son, J. P.
Forester and family. They have
recently moved into our com¬
munity.
John Blalock of Benham, Ky. :
was called to the bedside of his
brother, Richard Blalock who
had a stroke last week. John is
visiting relatives on Lookout Mi.,
this week and reports his brother
improved some.
Maybelle Scruggs spent Mon¬
day night with her uncle, J. P.
Forester and family.
Garden Club Holds
April Meeting With
Mrs. R. M. Morrison
The Garden Club of Trenton
met on Thursday, April 6, at the
home of Mrs. R. M. Morrison.
A more beautiful or appropriate
setting could have been found
for the April meeting than that
of this palatial home, nestling
under the foot of old Lookout,
with a bower of na¬
tive woodland beauty.
The house was beautifully
decorated with dogwood gather¬
ed from the grounds.
The meeting was opened with
prayer by Mrs. S. L. Sells. The
hymn, “Christ Arose”, was sung
by all, led by Mrs. E. A. Ellis. The
legend of the Dogwood was given
by Mrs. J. L. Fricks.
A talk, “In an Old Hawaiian
Garden,” illustrated with beauti¬
fully colored pictures sent from
Hawaii by her son, was given
by Mrs. W. L. Wilkinson.
Mrs. Fricks read a letter from
the National Council asking all
Garden Clubs to contribute to
the National Council Scholar¬
ship Endowment Fund, which is
being formed. This fund will be
used for scholarships to boys and
girls desiring education in a
school of horticulture, agricul¬
ture or landscape gardening.
The Trenton club contributed
$5.00 to this worthy cause.
At the conclusion of the busi¬
ness meeting coffee was served,
accompanied by a dainty salad
course.
Associate hostesses assisting
Mrs. Morrison were Mesdames
G. C. Tatum, W. L. Wilkinson
and Martha Kuykendall.
The next meeting will held on
May 4th, at the home of Mrs.
W. F. Morrison.
Series of Meetings
To Be Held at New
England Week-end
A series of meetings, beginning
tomorrow (Friday) night and
continuing through Sunday
night, will be held at the New
England Baptist church, it has
been announced by the pastor,
the Rev. W. D. Crawford.
There will be three services on
Sunday, at 11 o’clock Sunday
morning, 2 o’clock Sunday aft¬
ernoon and 7:30 o’clock Sunday
night. Rev. Luther Hixon, of
High -Point, former pastor of the
church, will be present both
Friday and Saturday night, and
will bring along some singers
from his church and others, it
is announced. Also, speakers
from the various churches, will
be present during this series of
meetings.
A cordial welcome is extended
to all to come and help out.
Cole City News
Miss Geneva Smith spent the
week-end with home folks.
Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Smith and
Mrs. Luda Smith visited at Dut¬
ton, Ala., last week.
Mr. and Mrs. J. Wheeler have
name their infant daughter
Mary Emma.
Orvile Hunley, who visited his
father and family recently, has
returned to the U. S. Army.
Mrs. Daisy Rice and Noah
Cunningham visited Mrs. Ida
Carter Saturday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Stone visit¬
ed E. B. Stone and family last
week.
Mr. Roy Stone failed in his
physical examination for U. S.
Army service.
Mrs. Johnny Crumbie of New
England, visited on the Moun¬
tain Sunday.
Rev. Pearl Tinker preached a
very able sermon at Shanty
Town church Sunday morning.
J. D. Smith has returned to
Fort Bragg, N. C.
When you buy War Bonds your
money goes into action at once.
Where, we may never know. Maybe,
as shown above, to equip a company
of American Rangers marching up a
railroad somewhere on the Mediter¬
ranean. WTiether they come back de¬
pends upon the equipment we send.
Give your dollars action: Buy
More War Bonds.
U. S. Treasury Department
Renew your Subscription!
Service Complete
In Every Detail
We honor Mutual Savings,
Family Reserve, Emergency
Aid Burial Policies and ALL
insurance policies in Geor¬
gia.
Ambulance Day or Night.
McBRYAR
Funeral Home
PHONE 65
Fort Payne, Ala.
WAR BONDS
PAGE THREE