Newspaper Page Text
HOOKER
Bv Mrs. Thelma Bell
(Written for last week)
Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Getz of
Nashville, Tenn., were
guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. V.
Harris and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Barnes an¬
nounce the birth cf a sen
ber 21. The baby has
named William Edward.
Guests of Mrs.
Sunday were Mr. and Mrs.
Morton of Chlckamauga.
"Mr. and Mrs. Fred
and Mrs. Annie Barry of
anee, Tenn., visited Mr. and
Mrs. Hayden Strawn Sunday.
Henry Clyde Kilgore has
ceived his discharge from
Navy and returned to his
here. We are all glad to wel¬
come him home.
Eddie Brasiield, small son of
Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Brasfleld,
Is 111.
Mr. C. M. Carroll underwent
an opera'ion at Tri-County
Hospital Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. J. V. Harris
and family attended Quarterly
Conference at Mcrganville Sun¬
day night.
Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Wood and
Miss Edith Bleckley of Chatta¬
nooga were dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs. J. V. Harris
Sunday.
Mrs. Milton Lyle of Chatta¬
nooga visited Mr. and Mrs. J
E. Strawn Sunday.
Mr. Hayden Strawn has gone
to Jackson, Miss., on a business
trip.
Guess of Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Pendergrass Saturday were: Mr.
and Mrs. Jimmie Bentley and
children and Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Clark and children of Chatta¬
nooga.
ONE STOP SERVICE
RED’S CLEANERS
PHONE 311 TRENTON, GA.
DRY CLEANING
LAUNDRY SERVICE done by Star --------Weekly
HATS Cleaned and Blocked by Acme __ Service
SHOES REPAIRED by Belcher -------
LET US HAVE YOUR RUGS CLEANED
Open daily 7 a. m. to 5 p. m.
□CEE
PREACHING CHRIST HIS BLOOD —
HIS PREMILLENIAL RETURN
TfT P»”"V enpirc R/ipT!$T CHURCH
Rev. JESSE C. MITCHELL, Pastor
SUNDAY SCHOOL 10 A. M.
MORNING WORSHIP 11:00 A. M
"GRACE FROM A KING”
EVENING WORSHIP 7:30 P. M.
1 GRIEVING THE FATHER'
COME, PRAY AND WORK
*
• ■
AUTO SAVINGS
LOANS ACCOUNTS
BANKING
BY
MAIL
'
-
BUSINESS TRUSTS
LOANS AND
' Jv - ‘ - ESTATES
Main Office St. Elmo Branch
Market & Eighth Sts. 3734 St. Elmo Avenue
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
THE DADE COUNT? TIMES, TRENTON, GEORGIA, THURSDAY NOVEMBER 3, 1355
RISING FAWN
(Written for last week)
j Mrs. Haley Bean suffered a
split thumb Saturday when her
j hand was caught in a closing
car dcor while at the Dade
County Fair. She was taken to
the Trenton Clinic where five
stitches were taken. Latest re¬
port is that although painful,
the cut Is healing nicely. .
Mrs. Glen Smith and chil¬
dren have returned to Mariet'a
after spending several days with
Mrs. J. D Gassett. The baby,
who has been ill, Is much im¬
proved .
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Whit¬
field and son Jerry visited Mr
and Mrs. Charles Ray in Gad¬
sden over the weekend.
We hear that “Smckie” Me
Mahan and “S nny” Chambers
have joined the Navy, “Smokie”
leaving last week and “Sonnv”
this past Monday..
George Wilson and Don Ke-
nimer went to A’lanta Tuesday
for examination for induction
into the Army.
anToair'hare Mr. .and Mrs. "returned Hershel Dean
two-wek vacation, during which
time they visited Mrs. Dean's
father in Pigott Ark i
L. M. Allison Jr. is suffering .
from a severe cut on the lip re- j
reived while playing football
last Friday night Dion Brad-
lord broke his leg during foot- j
ball practice Monday afternoon, j
Mr. and Mrs. James McMa-
han were visiting Relatives at
Plsgah, Ala., Sunday.
W L Fannin was called to
Fort Payne Monday because cf
the illness of his grandmother, j
Rev. Jimmy Ball motored to
Lake Junaluski the first of the
week with District Supf. E. D
Worley. The pair attended a
meeting there, returning
nesday.
r - T
Column
which will be judged in
Chattanooga Area Improvement
Con est early in November, has
been busy all summer getting
things all “spruced up” for
judging. One of their more im¬
portant projects will be for the
benefit of old and young alike.
It Is their community house,
which will be the hub o f all
activities from now on. Built
of concrete blocks, the building
is a comfortable size, with mod¬
ern metal windows.
Those turnip greens and col-
lards reslden s of the commun¬
ity planted s o m e t i m e back
should be about ready. Just the
smell of that good old “pot lik -
ker” should convince the jud¬
ges that New Home is worthy
of top honors.
The W. H. Brocks of Trenton
having the i-ocf t. f their
,rame budding on the square
re-tarred. Reports are that they
haVe 0 t h e r improvements in
mind.
_
Quentin „ Avakian . . .
Mr. and Mrs.
have had the grounds about
their new home in the Moun-
tain View Sub - Division land-
scaped, giving the modern house
a finished appearance.
Down at Byrds Chapel, the
W. C. Curetons have had the
chimney of their two-story
torn down. The lovely
in the living room
was left in-place, and the Cure-
will continue to heat with
as they have for the past
years.
Work on the Byrd's Chapel
church is progressing. When
completed, the n e w addition
will include several Sunday
School rooms.
Many visitors to the Fair last
weekend went up to the new
high school building, which is
nearing completion, for a look
around. They returned visibly
impressed with the project,
ROUTE 2 NEWS
By Mrs. Fred Cooper
(Written- for last week)
Rev. Parker preached the
morning service at Pleasant
Grove Church Sunday. The
message was a good one. Our
pastor Rev. Henry Williams
preached at the evening serv-
i ice. Our Sunday Schcol enroll-
j ment has increased a lot.
Bim Patten and his family
; visited his mother Sunday.
Mrs. Ruth Hand and chil¬
dren spent Saturday with her
mother.
Mr. and Mrs. Ottp J. Cooper,
f rom Chattanooga were out
Sunday evening visiting with
relatives on the mountain.
Girl friends, Gracelyn Roden,
Thelma West and Carolyn Wood
spent Sunday evening with Miss
Be'.ty and Ina Dean Hardeman.
| Von D:lan Young and Glenda
Childress DID NOT get married
as we were told. We hear
Charles West was married Sat¬
urday evening. He is a son of
Oscar West, Sr.
If anyone finds a female blue
tick hound with a large black
spot on her side, please let J.
L. Gilley know about it. She
was last seen at heme Oct. 16.
The W. D. Pattons have an¬
other Nash car. Mr. and Mrs.
Johnnie West have a new blue
two-tone ’56 Ford.
Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Wooten
made a shert visit to Florida.
She visited with her mother.
Elizabeth Cooper is visiting her
bro her in Chattanooga. The
Fred Coopers were in town vi¬
siting and shopping Saturday
evening. Miss Brenda West vi¬
sited with Edna Cooper Sunday
af:ernoon.
Mr. and Mrs. James Roden,
of near Atlanta, were visiting
friends on the mountain this
weekend. Mr. and Mrs. Archie
Tinker, of Chattanooga, visited
his father and sister Sunday.
The drink everybody
knows
I
!
The fresh, crisp air of fall has
many a Dade Countlan to
thinking along the lines of
clean-up and palnt-up.
The New Heme community,
The L. C. Smallwoods, former¬
ly of Walker Co., have
bought a tract of land in he
1 West Brow community near the
radar station atop Lookout
The Smallwoods are living in an
attractive pre-fabricated house
purchased at Fort Payne.
Sanders Clark has built two
very attractive homes south of
Trent-on, the most recent being
In the last stages of completion.
His daughter and her family oc¬
cupy the first one built, which
is covered with two shades of
green asbestoes siding. The
living room features a large
picture window which adds to
the appearance of the home,
The newest house is being built
to sell, according t o reports.
The sides of the house are cov¬
ered with a beige asbestoes
siding while the front is vertical
oak siding. The door with a
fan-shaped glass and the pict-
ure window make it one of the
more striking of new Dade
County homes.
The A. W. Pecks have had
some remodeling done on the
rock house Mr. Peck purchased
at auction earlier this year. The
house Is located on the Look¬
out Mountain highway just east
of Lookout Creek, and has been
listed for sale with a real estate
agency.
New bathroom fixtures have
been installed and a new tile
floor in blue and black has been
laid. The floors are being sand¬
ed this week throughout the
house and sheetrock has been
put on all the walls. The kit¬
chen beasts new built-in cabi
nets. The concrete back porch
has been partitioned off into a
utility room which could be
used as a small bedroom.
The double entrance doors
were removed and replaced with
a lovely modern door and out¬
side trim painted. With its
“new look,” the house is very
attractive and will make some¬
one a lovely home.
- DADE COUNTY
Farm Bureau News
Column
By Virginia S. Konrad, Secy.
Farm Bureau members in
Dade County will be receiving
statements of membership dues
in the near future and the
membership committee would!
like to urge each of ycu to mail
your membership dues promptly!
in order that we might have all
dues in by November 14. One
member, Mr. Chester McCarty
from the Cloverdale Commun¬
ity, came by the office this
morning for the purpose of pay¬
ing his dues. If all of our
members would do likewise our
membership drive would be a
pleasure.
Mr. Walter Simpson, who will
be our next Farm Bureau Pre¬
sident, (he is now our 1st Vice
President), attended the State
Farm Bureau Convention ini
Macon as a voting delegate.
County Agent L. C. Adams at¬
tended the convention also and
they reported that the Dicker-
son Trio from Dade represented
the Seventh District very well
in the State Farm Bureau Ta¬
lent Contest.
Blue Cross-Blue Shield in¬
surance, through your Dade
County Farm Bureau, is serving
109 families in Dade County.
Most of these people feel that
they could net afford to be
without this valuable protec¬
tion. if we had a total list of
all the services that Blue Cress-
Blue Shield has paid to Dade
County Farm Bureau members
—the figures would be stagger¬
ing.
Billy Pullen was the proud
winner cf the $50 Bond that
was offered by the Dade Coun¬
ty Farm Bureau for the Grand
Champion of the Shew in the
recent Fat Steer Show.
$50 in prize money has been
offered by the Farm Bureau for j
the three top producers in the
corn contest. The corn contest
prizes will be presented at the
Annual Farm Bureau Member-!
ship Meeting. Outstanding 4-H
Club members in the Coun y
will also be honored at this An¬
nual Membership Meeting which
will be held after the first of
the year. Mr. R. C. Thomas, F.
B President, will present the
awards.
i which will be a big step for-
I ward in the educational pro-
gram of the county when com
pleted.
Three nutrients of milk—cal¬
cium, protein and vitamin A—i
are believed to be among the'
mos L lacking In the diets of
Georgia families, yet only 15Ve ,
of the feed dollar was spent for
milk and milk products last
year.
That we never outgrow our
need for milk is a popular slo¬
gan to express the scientific
findings that the same milk
nutrients devised by nature for
the grewth cf infan s are equal
ly ideal for teen-agers and for
maintenance of a healthy, vi¬
gorous body throughout life.
According to a report from
the Bureau of Human Nutrition,
diet surveys show that women
have a poor record as milk
consumers, often drinking much
less than they need for good
healh. As a group, women
drink much less than men or
teen agers, older women drink
less milk than younger women.
We know now that -adults re¬
quire a great deal more calcium
than was formerly realized.
Some authorities believe that ail
the calcium in the human body
is replaced every few years. If
there is insufficient intake, the
body simply takes calcium from
bones and teeth. Such calcium
deficiency may explain a great
deal of poor health.
Often adults argue that they
get their needed calcium, pro¬
tein, and vitamin A from other
foods than milk. To get as
much calcium as is contained
in a quart of milk it would be
necessary to eat 10 pounds of
carrots or 27 pounds of pot?,-
WANTED TO BUY! l
Hickory Logs delivered to our Mills. High¬
est market price. For price and cutting spe¬ t
cifications, call at our office in person.
Charles D, Roberts Co.
STEVENSON, ALABAMA
Nearly Enough Power Lines
To Reach Around the World
To serve you and to serve you well, we operate
. 23,500 miles of electric power lines. That’s
almost enough to reach around the world. And
every year we build hundreds of miles more
of these lines.
During the 10 years from 1946 through 1955
we will have spent $300 million expanding and
improving all of our facilities for serving you.
And our planning engineers are at work right
now to see that you have plenty of dependable,
low-cost electricity when you want it and where
you want it in the years ahead.
Georgia homos pay 22 par cent lets than
H*o national average per kilowatt-hour.
GEORGIA POWER COMPANY
A CITIZEN WHEREVER WE SERVE
Home »j Uemonstration i\ ii*
Agent’s Column
By Naomi Hubble.
i toes; to get the same amount
Of protein as is in a quart of
milk‘it•"would be necessary to
eat five large eggs or 16 slices
of bread. It would take 13 large
apples or 38 grapefruit ;o give
as much vitamin A as you get
from one quart of milk.
Fastest!
Finest!
r •->
RAYETTE
WAVE
NOW we have it! Now
YOU can have it ... in
all it* lustrous perfec
tionl You’ll see youi
permanent more lively,
easier to manage, with
softer curls ... all in a
s
matter of minutes.
Sarah’s Coiffures
Trenton,