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About The Dade County times. (Trenton, Ga.) 1908-1965 | View Entire Issue (July 5, 1956)
WE NOW STOCK FROZEN FOOOS IN OUR NEW FROZEN FOOD COUNTER Frozen Chicken, Turkey and Beef Pies......... Frozen Strawberries................10 oz. Frozen Grape Juice.............6 oz. can... Dried Pinto Beans . .................. 46 oz. Delmonte Pineapple Juice ............ Pink SaZmon ...................... Number 2 can Tomatoes............... Ideal Dog Food................... 3 lbs. Snow Drift...................... -87 Peter Pan Peanut Butter...... 9^ oz. jar ... .35 KooZ-Azd................6 pkgs........25 Sugar \................. 5 lb. pkg........49 51 oz. Bush Pork’n Beans.......................29 WATCH THE DIXIE SAVINGS STORES AD FOR VALUES EACH WEEK IN THE CHATTANOOGA PAPER McBryar Bros. Grocery TRENTON, GA. o o o q o o o o o p o o a * qj ) A CLOSEOUT ON LAWN FURNITURE ALL LESS 20% Aluminum Chairs Aluminum Gliders Beach Chairs Folding Serving Tables Trenton Furniture Co. TRENTON. GA. WANT-ADS HELP WANTED—Lady to Stanley Home Products. furnish car. Good unity. Write Mrs. C. D. 914 Grand Avenue, Fort Payne, Alabama. DR. G. K. MacVane Chiropractor and Naturopath 720 N. Gault Avenue Ft. Payne, Ala. HIGHEST prices paid for and poplar logs. See us if you have any to sell. Dyer Company, Trenton, Ga. 1950 Oldsmobile 88 ... 1952 Pontic ............ 1950 Hudson .......... 2 1941 Chevrolets See at Walls Service Station in Trenton AMERICAN LEGION POST Second and fourth night 7:30 P. M. every month. Legion Hall. Jake Smith, Commander Don Gross Adjutant. THE DADE COUNTY TIMES, TRENTON, GEORGFA, THURSDAY July 5, 1956 MORGANVILLE HOME D. The Morganville Home stration Club met with Mrs. R. Ryan on June 21st. Mrs. W. H. Patterson was in charge of the devotion and the business ses¬ sion. Mrs. Joe Light was elected to as secretary. A very in¬ teresting report on her trip to Rock Eagle was given by Mrs. Jules Case. Our next meeting will be held in the church basement with members bringing a covered dish. We plan to meet early and con¬ struct our scrapbook. Mrs. Ryan and Mrs. Patterson served re¬ freshments to five members. Mrs E. S. Oliver SALES TAX AND SCHOOL BUILDIING Did you ever stop to relize that thhere was absolutely no state school money for the building of schoolhouses before the three cent sales tax? When ewer you hear somebody com¬ plain about the sales tax, take him to window and point to your fine new school 'building over there in the hollow. r ■ •* . , * 2038 * . .v. psgf BMP® r u S SiSi* &**«**+ -flte (t/wcCf WHEN A FREIGHT CAR rolls down the "hump” at our new $14 million Citico Yard at Chattanooga, Tennessee, even the wind resistance of the car is automatically measured. * While the car is rolling, a radar device instantly picks up and evaluates all the many factors that affect its reliability—weight, speed, size, wind, weather and others. Then the magic brain of an electronic computer regulates the retarder brake in the track under the moving car so that it will couple safely and gently to another car standing far down in the yard below. SOUTHERN RAILWAY SYSTEM WASHINGTON, D. C. 3 LIFE JNSURANCE Also complete coverage ©o fire and accident insurance. H. F. ALLISON INSURANCE — REAL ESTATE Times Building Trenton, Ga. -BJ.____ ■“ - H - U ~ ~ AIR CONDITIONED Telephone Oliver 7-4100 Trenton, Ga. Ice Cream Headquarters Sundries — Sickroom supplies — First Aid Needs This is a new kind of railroading. You’ll see it at work in countless ways on the Southern today—at Citico, and in our other multi-million dollar push-button yards at Knoxville, Tenn. and Birmingham, Ala. And still another ultra-modern electronic yard to cost $13 million is now under construction at Atlanta, Ga. Yesteryear railroading is "gone with the wind” on the Southern. Today’s modem railroading means better living for all in the South. V fmUmt