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About The Dade County times. (Trenton, Ga.) 1908-1965 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 6, 1953)
THE DADE COUNTY TIMES Entered at the Postoffice at Trenton, Ga., as second class MRS. CATHERINE C. MORRISON ........ Owner and SUBSCRIPTION RATES —IN ADVANCE: One Year, $2.00, Six Months, $1.25; Three Months. 75 Cents. Plus State 37, Sales Tax. Persons writing for publication are requested to furnish names, otherwise the communication will not be published. will be withheld on request, but ah communications must be Memorials, Cards of Thanks and articles of like nature will be charged at 50c and up for one insertion, payable in advance. Advertising rates will be furnished on application I LOCALS AND PERSONALS Newell Scruggs has a new Mone green. Dodge V -8 Mr Clyde Gass spent last Wednesday in Birmingham. Mrs Jo eph Baty Is visiting telatives here. Ernest Lawson has new Plymouth. i Miss Bess Cureton is on va •ation. i Mrs. Josephine Rogers Ls the guest of Mrs. Mae Combs. I Mr. and Mrs. Wade Brown and daughter visited friends in Atlanta recently. • Mrs Alline Sullivan spent she weekend in Chattanooga Ivith her father, who is ill. Mrs. Harold Gross suffered a badly cut hand several days ago. Two stitches were taken , Mr and Mrs Bob Chitwood (A’ere here over the weekend ,’isiting her mother. Lillian Renolds returned from Vfobile, Ala., after visiting re- tives there. Mr and Mrs. White Powell, Mrs. Horace Baty and Jerry ire visiting relatives in Texas. Mr and Mrs. Alvin Taylor ind boys visited in Atlanta iver the weekend. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Brandon njoyed an outing to DeSoto .'alls last Friday. Mr and Mrs. Bill Fulghum ind sons, from Chattanooga, jvere :ecent visitors of Mrs. vlattie Fulgum and family. Mrs Catherine Morrison and daughter Ellen returned from Maine, where they have vaca¬ tioned the past two weeks. : Mrs. John Bruner and chil¬ dren are visiting her mother, Mrs. Jim Pace and family, itfrom Fort Gaines, Ga. • The Garden Club picnic has been postponed until a later id.ite, due to the fact that the i lighting system in the Park ihas not been connected. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Brock deft recently for Berkeley, Cal., for a visit with their daughter, M’S Hugh Bishop and Dr. Bi¬ shop. Mrs. Wayne Williams enter¬ tained Misses Betty and Becky Wheeler and Harriet Ann Wil- lliams with a swimming party and picnic at Warner Park •last week. i County Agent L C Adams and Farm Bureau Director l\ alter Simp.on attended an ana meeting last Wednesday of membership committees of tiie Farm Bureau ) Mr. and Mrs. Walter B Nichols, Jr., of Bessemer, Ala. have moved into the Street (home near Moiganville. Mr. Nichols is employed as book- keeper at Dyer Motor Co. i Mr and Mrs. Glen Gray and son Steve have returned to •their home in Monfford, Tenn., afier Mrs. Gray and Steve vi¬ sited with her mother, Mrs. W. R Lacy for the past month. 1 Weekend visitors of Mrs. iGray were Mr. Dan Gray and children from East Lake, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gray and family of Trenton, Mr and ,Mrs. Sam Elder, of Chattanoo- ga. and Mr and Mrs. Bob Chitwood, of Louisville, Ga. Lucky winner of a vacation to Land of Lakes, Wise., is Henry Gross, who won the trip for selling L & II appliances. He will leave August 15, and ’after spending a week, will on to the Mayo Clinic in jehester, N. Y for treatment ian illness. ' Mrs. L. M. Allison, 4-H ad- 'visor, Mrs. R. P Fricks, IS IT INSURED? Complete Coverage On Fire, 1 Accident and Auto Insurance p H. F. ALLISON INSURANCE REAL ESTATE ^Building Trenton. Ga. THE DADE COUNTY TIMES, TRENTON, GEORGIA, THURSDAY, AUGUST 6 , 1953 Kathryn Fricks, Bessie Jackie Wilson, Sam County Agent L. C. and Assistant Agent C. L. Bigham are attending a th f„ St ' ate 4_H Gouncil Milledgeviile this week Miss Joan Gray has ed from Louisville, Ga., she spent a week with her Mrs. Bob Chitwood and Mr Chitwood. Mr and Mrs. wood, upon leaving Trenton Sunday following a | visit, took Misses with Evelyn them for Barbara Gray visit. i Ml * ^ IS Hershel i were recent guests of the esters, the Pat Baughs, and Blevins Cloverdale. While here, they received a te- 8 ram fr °™ their son, Bill, , in LaFayette, Ind., to i ci game P ate Bill ln an and ,^*~ his Sta wife f foot are ^ the a ( new parents of a baby son. Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Sulli¬ van and son are vacationing Florida The Sullivans are the owners of a new brown and tan Chevrolet.. The H C. Grays honored Glen Gray with a birthday din¬ ner on Lookout Mountain Sun¬ day. Those present were Mr. and Mrs. Glen Gray and son, Steve; Mr. and Mrs. Edson Gray and three children; Mr. and Mrs. Bill Martin and three children; Mrs. John Gray and six children; Mrs. Leo Manor and family, of Chattanooga; Seaman Jack White; Hubert and Mrs. W R. Lacy, and Mr. and Mrs. Archie Gray and fa¬ mily Thirty-nine were present. A get-together of the Morri¬ sons was held Sunday at Cloudland Canyon State Park. Those present were; Mrs. Frank Morrison, Mr. and Mrs. James Morrison and ; Mrs Fred Henderson and drien, from Montgomery, who are visiting here; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Morrison and fa- mily, of Marietta, week-end guests of his other; Mr. and Mrs. T. O. Weathers, of tanooga; and Mr. and Mrs. Duke Broome and Bobby, Chickamauga RISING FAWN Mrs Joe E Baker and daughter, Mary Ella and Mar¬ garet Ann, were the guests last week of Mrs. Baker's pa- j rents, Mr. and Mrs. T B Tarpley in Cleveland. 1 Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kirk announce the birth of their second son, Derrell Lynn, on j u iy 30 at Wildwood Sanita- i rium. Mrs. Park White and daugh- ter, Betty June, spent last week with the S. W Woodins. Miss Marlon Cureton has turned from the hospital and is reported as much improved. Mrs. Gene McMahan, Miss Nioma Steele, is visiting her parents and family here. Visitors over the weekend the M. R. Wilsons were Mr and Mrs. Bernie Holloway, Chattanooga; Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Slaughter and ter; and Mr and Mrs. from Rockwood, Tenn. Mrs. George Simmons returned from a hospital Fort Payne and has improved. Lloyd Seay is suffering a bruised leg and foot by the falling of a HOOKER Henry Clyde Kilgore has fin¬ ished a course in Radar at Treasure Island, California and is spending a leave with his parents, Mr. and Mrs Sam Kilgore, before returning to his Nava! Base. Mr. and Mrs. Roland Kirch- meyer and son were called to Cushing, Oklahoma, last week on account of the serious ill¬ ness of Mr Kirchmeyer’s mo¬ ther. Mrs. Billie Bumpus, daugh¬ ter of Mr. and Mrs. C. M jSmlth, underwent an opera¬ tion at Memorial Hospital last week. Private C. M. Smith, of jCamp Rucker, Ala., spent the i week-end with his parents, ; here j carl Durham, of Wildwood, sl>en ( (he weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Grady Bell, 1 Mr. and j^ rs Milton Lyle, of |St. Elmo, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. E . Strawn, Thurs day. They were returning home from a two weeks stay in Mia- ' mi F i orida i Glenda Mitchum spent the j weekend with Mary Iris Cole- (man in Chattanooga. Miss Rebecca Doub, of Appa¬ lachia, Virginia, is spending this week with Mr and Mrs. j Grady Bell and working in the Mission in Dade County. Mr. Larry Cor- nett a j s0 of Appalachicola an- I other worker, is a guest of Mr Jand Mrs. J. E. Brasfield. Mr. and Mrs. George Bal lard and children, of Trion, i Georgia, were recent guests of Mr and j^ fS gjjj Ballard. Messers. George Rogers, Sam Adams and Russell Puckett, of Jasmine, Ky., were guests 0 f Mr and Mrs. Pendergrass. (Intended for last week) Henry Clyde Kilgore, of the U. S. Navy is spending a leave with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Sam Kilgore. Private Wayne Tudors, who has been spending a leave with his parents, has returned to Fort Louis, Washington, for an |overseas assignment. Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow Isengale announce the birth of a daughter, July 31 at Doyle Currey Clinic in Chattanooga. Mrs. J. E. Tittle and Miss Elzada Tittle spent Saturday with Mr. and Mrs. Austin at Bridgeport. Mr. Chester Doub and Mrs. Ray Hudson, of Chattanooga, visited their niece, Miss ca Doub at the home of Mr. & Mrs. Grady Bell, Sunday. Re- becca was a guest of Mr. and Mrs Bell while working in the ~ ~ j PUT YOUR OWN PRICE ON YOU! PRESENT TRUCK F ON A BRAND-NEW Make your own appraisal... mail it to us! We’re anxious to trade and will do our level best to meet your price! No cost! No obligation! Best deal ever offered truck owners! Takes only a minute of your time, may save you hundreds of dollars. Here’s how it works: First, you decide what your present truck is worth. Write this figure on the appraisal form below. Add your name and mailing address, tear out the form and mail it to us. Or, if NEW DODGE you prefer, phone us and tell us what you think your present TRUCKS OFFER YOU: truck is worth. We'll do our very best to meet the price you put on your • 7 great engines with present truck. Chances are good that we can because we 100 through 171 h.p. believe we can offer higher trade-in allowances than any other dealer in town. But if we can’t get together, there s • Truck-o-mofic transmission available absolutely no cost or obligation. So mail in the appraisal lose in V4-, %-ton models for lowest cost, form today. You’ve everything to gain and nothing to no-shift driving in this sensational Dodge “name your own deal” offer! • Shorter turning than competitive makes "1 • Unusually low loading height • Completely rustproofed sheet metal I have a____truck, in (year, make, model) _condition. I think it is (good, fair, poor) Send in your appraisal today! worth $_ _in a trade. I understand that you are not obligated to meet this price, It may save you hundreds of dollars! nor am I obligated to accept it. FORM Name. D0D6EWTRUCKS (or information) 'phono in tho Mailing Address. DYER MOTOR CO., Trenton. Ga (Mailed from Korea May 30) ! With the 2nd Infantry Divi¬ sion in Korea Sgt. Charles J Bryant, whose wife, Martha, j lives on Route 1, Trenton, Ga recently graduated from the 2nd Infantry Division’s Non¬ commissioned Officers’ Aca- jderny in Korea. Sergeant Bryant, son of Mr. and Mrs. R W. Bryant, Route 1, Wildwood, Ga., is a tank gunner in Company C of the 72nd Tank Battalion. He entered the Army in April 1951 and received basic train¬ ing at Fort Knox, Ky. I The school is operated to in¬ sure adequately trained re¬ placements for personnel leav¬ ing the unit on rotation. While in the school, the men are taught battle techniques by combat veterans. (Mailed from Korea June 9i with the 45th Infantry Divi¬ sion in Korea — Pfc. William C. Reece, son of Mr. and Mrs. Grady Reece, Long Island, Ala., is now serving^ in Korea with the 45th ; r nfahtry Divi- sion. A squad leader in Company 1 of the 179th Infantry Regi- ment, Powell entered the Army October and received basic training at Camp Roberts, Ca- lifornia. The 45th Infantry Division, originally an Oklahoma Na- tionaI Guard unit > has been in Korea since December 1951. das Participated in numerous heavy combat actions including the battles for “T-Bone Hill” ‘last summer. Christian Witness Mission in Dade County. Mrs. Limbaugh and daugh- ters have moved into their new home here. | Mr. and Mrs. have Roland returned Kirch- meyer and son home from Cushing, where they were called on count of the serious illness of Mr. Kirchmeyer’s mother. Mr. Larry Cornett, of Appa- lachia, Virginia, spent last week with Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Brasfied while working in the Christian Witness Mission in Dade County, Mr. and Mrs. William Dick- erson, of Sand Mountain are guests of Mr. and Mrs. Sam Kilgore. Tommye, small son of Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Carroll, was seriously injured recently at |the home of his grandmother (by falling on a glass jug. HEAD RIVER Mr and Mrs. Idas Payne, of Lakeview, Ga., spent last Sat- urday night with Mr. and Mrs R L Ross Mr. and Mrs. Raymond chambers, of Tampa, Florida. visited Mrs B w Holtzhow- er and family last week. Mrs Chambers will be remembered as Kathleen Holtzhower. Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Forester and children visited relatives in Lakeview last Sunday. Little Glenn Hodges, of Chat- lanccga, spent last week with Mrs. F:lts Schurch. Other vi¬ sitors during the weekend were Mr. and Mrs. v Marvin Dodd and children, of Ider, Alabama; Mr. and Mrs. Boyd Walker and children; Mis Imogene Schurch and Gordon Schurch, all of Chattanooga. Larry and David Mulkey, of Chattanooga, are spending a few days with Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Barnes and family. Miss Shirley Salmon, also of Chattanooga, was their Sunday guest. Mr. and Mrs. Robert John¬ son, of Greenville, Ga., spent last weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Roy Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Leon Johnson and children spent last Satur- da y night with Mr. and Mrs. Ben Flarity and children . Their son Ter ry is spending week with David, Faye, and Nancy Flarity, Mr. and Mrs. Ben Flarity and children visited Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Duff at j ame stown, Ala., Sunday. ______ Mrs. _. B W. . Holtzhower _________ and Mrs. L. E Holtzhower visited relatives in Chattanooga and Flint Stone last Saturday. Inducted To Service Those leaving for service in the United States Army Mon- daj . August 3, were: Granvel i eon Culpepper, William Ed- ; W ard Clay, and Troyce Hay- wood Burrell, CRISMAN i Up-To-Date Line of Hardware >11 Market St. Phone 7-1114 Chattanooga, Tennessee WE SELL typewriting paper, white and yellow second sheets, thin paper marked “copy” and two sizes of mi- meo paper. THE DADE COUNTY TIMES LET US DO YOUR JOB WORK CARD OF THANKS Our heartfelt thanks and appreciation for the kindness and good deeds shown to us during -the death of our wife and mother, Mrs. Mary Jen- kins - J. B. Jenkins and Family. CHURCH ANNO UNC EMENT There will be an Ice Cream Supper Saturday night, Aug. 8 , at New England Community House. Sponsored by New Eng- land B. T. U. Mris. Joe Blevins. “We Gave a Hotfoot to a Million Potato Plants!” Says T. N. Bussey of Claxton “I wanted a million potato plants,” reports Mr. Bussey (above at left) “and I wanted them ready for transplanting by the first of April. That’s gaining a month on the calendar. Lowry Gillespie, Jr. (above at right) a Georgia Power Company rural engineer, answered my problem by designing an,installation of 10 electric hotbeds. “He not only provided construction plans but checked to see that the hotbeds were properly built, installed and operated. He made sure that the plants were ready when I wanted them. That’s the kind of extra service — provided at no cost — that an electric customer appreciates.” Last year our rural engineers made calls on 3,542 customers and planned 1,186 applications of farm electrical equipment. GEORGIA POWER MIRACLE HEARING AID Complete $19.85. Require batteries, cords n or ear button DR. G. K. MacVANE Chiropractor and Naturona.fi, 720 N. Gault Avenue Ft. Payne, Ala. AMERICAN LEGION POST 106 First and third Fridav every month, 8 P. M. Legion Hall C. Raymond .* 1 Street, Comm Manuel Avery, Adj.