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r AGE 4
A S. C.
WOOL PAYMENT
‘58 TO BE 70.3%
Wool growers of Dade County
will receive a payment of 70.3
cents for each dollar’s worth of
shorn wool marketed during the
1958 marketing year, Manager
Louise E. Wright of Dade Agri¬
cultural Stabilization and Con¬
servation office announced to¬
day.
The payment rate represents
the percentage nesessary to
bring the national average price
wool growers got for their wool
during the year ending last
March up to the established nat
ional incentive price of 62 cents
per pound.
The payment rate on unshorn
lambs to compensate for the
wool on them will be $1.02 per
hundredweight of live animals
sold. This payment is designed
to maintain the normal practice
of marketing lambs with the
wool on, rather than shearing
them to obtain the shorn wool
payment.
The 1958 wool payment rate is
the highest in the four years
the program has been in opera¬
tion, Manager Wright said. This
is the result of relatively low
prices received for wool in the
market last year. For 1955, the
first year of the program, the
shorn wool incentive payment
rate was 44.9 percent; for 1956,
it was 40 percent! and for 1957,
15.5 percent.
County ASC Offices expect to
begin making the 1958 wool pay
ments on July 1, to growers who
filed applications by April 30,
1959. The payments are for wool
and uhshore lambs marketed
between April 1, 1958 and March
31, 1959.
SPECIAL NOTICE :
The Slygo Methodist Church
proudly announces the forth-
eomming old Fashioned Reviva
. . . starting Sunday Night July
5th, 1959 and running until July
11th. There will be plenty of Old
Fashioned Gospel Singing and
plenty of good old fashioned
preaching . . . Rev. J. O. Ste
wart, Pastor will bring the mes¬
sages and Bro. E. T. Holmes
will conduct the Old Fashioned
Singing . . . our prayers are
that the Dade County Singers
will be a great part of this Re¬
vival . . . and there will be
many special’s each night .
Pray that we will have a great
Revival and many will be led to
Christ. . . Please come and be a
part of this great Community
Revival . . .
SEE YOUR
DRUG STORE
FIRST
You Will Find
What You Need For
Your Home & Auto
At
estern
A UtO
ASSOCIATE STORE
MARTIN A. NETHERY
Owner & Manager
TRENTON, GEORGIA
THE D ADE COUNTS Tl MfiS, TRE NTON, GEORGIA, THURSDAY, JULY 2, 1959
OBITUARIES
Joey Waiter Stallings
joey Walter Stallings, 2% day
old son of Mr. and Mrs. Roy G.
Stallings of Trenton, Ga. died
June 29 In a local hospital. Sur¬
vivors are the parents and one
brother, Roy Jr.; grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. D. V. Keeton and
Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Stallings,
Ider, Ala. Funeral services were
held at the Payne Gap church,
Sand Mountain, with the Revs.
T C. Nelson and Richard
Looney officiating. Pallbearers
were Bill Keeton, E. R. and Roy
Stallings and Leon Johnson.
Burial in the church cemetery
with Moore Funeral Home in
charge.
Thomas Borden Blake
Thomas Borden Blake, 57,
Sulphur Springs, Ala. died in a
Chattanooga hospital June 2 <
after a short illness. Funeral
services were held at Sulphur
Springs Baptist Church with
the Rev. Looney officiating.
Burial in the Sulphur Springs
Cemetery. Survivors his wife,
Mrs. Bonnie Cole Blake, Rising
Fawn, Route 1; a son, Richard
Blake also of Rt 1, Rising Fawn;
two sisters, Mrs. G. W. Blansit,
Chattanooga, and Mrs. J. C. Mc-
Elroy, Sulphur Springs; a bro-
t h e r, J. H. Blake, Sulphur
Springs; and two grandchildren
Rebecca Winters
Mrs. Rebecca Winters, 79, of
Trenton died June 3. She was a
member of the Baptist church
for many years. Survivors are
her husband, E. A. Winters, of
Trenton; 2 sons, Hatten Reeves,
of Covington, Ky. and Claude
Reeves of Walden, Ky.; a
daughter, Mrs. Raymond Jett, of
Ludlow, Ky.; a brother Fred
Boatner of Signal Mountain,
'Term.; a sister, Mrs. Charley
Wallace of Long Island, Ala.
Funeral services were held at
the Mt. Parron church with Rev
Bobby Cameron and Rev. Buck-
els officiating. Pallbearers were
Fred Woosley Louis Bryant, Win
ford Hartline, Wayne Winters,
Winters and Jimmy Win¬
ters. Grandsons served as honor
ary pallbearers. Burial was in
Ebeneezer Cemetery with Moore
Funeral Home in charge.
Jess Olyn Barnwell
Jess Olyn Barnwell, 4, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Walter E. Barnwell
of Bowie, Maryland died June
24. Survivors are the parents; 6
brothers, Willie, J. C., George,
Danny, Harvey and Benney
Barnwell; 4 sisters, Mrs. Vir¬
ginia Enos, Misses Rita, Joan
and Roselee Barnwell, all of
Bowie, Md., grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Dewey Smith of Tren¬
ton, Route 2. Funeral services
were held at the Ebeneezer Bap¬
tist Church with Rev. Charley
Bowen and Rev. Henry Smith
officiating. Pallbearers were El-
vin Smith, Jackie Smith, Ronnie
Smith and Fred Woosley. Burial
was in the Ebeneezer Cemetery
with witn Moorp Moore Funeral funeral Home Home in
"
‘
IN MEMORIUM
memory of Dale Smith who
departed this life 3 years
July 1st.
years have passed since
sad day.
called you our only son
we have one consolation,
God always knows best,
prepared here on earth,
that long heavenly rest
a iglad reunion day that
be,
we can be together for
eternity.
Sadly missed by mother,
daddy and little sister,
Sandra.
CARD OF THANKS
The Rev. and Mrs. J. O. Ste¬
wart wish to express with great¬
ful appreciation your very
and thoughtful expression of
sympathy in the passing of Rev.
Stewart’s father . . . your pray-
iers were heard — the flowers
were of much beauty and the
telegrams and cards were so
greatly appreciated .. . May
God share His richest blessings
cn you-all.
Rev. and Mrs. J. O. Stewart
AMBULANCE SERVICE
The following people were
carried to Tri-County Hospital
recently by Moores Ambulance:
Mrs. Omie Hall, Mrs. Amy Can¬
non, Mrs. Pearl Norton, and Mr.
Clifford A. Marshall. At last re¬
port all are improving.
ADVERTISEMENT UNDER
POWER OF SALE
GEORGIA, DADE COUNTY:
WHEREAS, heretofore on the
26th day of January, 1957, Lind¬
sey Langford did execute and
deliver a certain Security Deed
to Ernest Riddle and wife, Lou
Ellis Riddle, for the purpose of
securing the indebtedness
therein described, which Secur¬
ity Deed appears of record in
Deed Book 56, Page 1 & 2, Dade
County Deed Records, reference
to which is hereby made for its
terms, provisions and condi¬
tions: and
WHEREAS, the debt secured
bv the Security Deed aforesaid,
is unpaid and has become in
(default as to the principal and
interest,, and the holder thereof
has declared the entire indebt¬
edness owing thereon at once
due and payable,
THEREFORE, pursuant to the
provisions of the Security Deed
aforesaid, the undersigned will
offer for sale and will sell to the
highest and best bidder for cash,
on the first Tuesday in August,
1959 (August 4, 1959) between
the legal hours of sale, courthouse at public
outcry, before the
door in Dade County, Trenton,
Georgia, the following described
property, to wit: >
Part of lot of land lot No. 1 in
the 12th district and 4th section
of Dade County, Georgia, de
scribed as follows: BEGINNING
at a corner in the center of
Johnson Crook road which is
the southeast corner of the 39.5
acre tract described in deed
from Mrs. Mollie Amos, et al;
to Van E. Allen dated June 18,
1938, recorded in book 26, page
154 of Dade County deed re¬
cords; thence along the south¬
ern line of said 39.5 acre tract
South 77 deg. 30 min. west a
distance of 1456 feet, more or
less, to an iron stake corner on
the west line of said lot 325 to
the southwest corner of said lot,
& continuing on south along the
west line of lot No. 1 a total dis¬
tance of about 51 rods, more or
less, to the north line of the W.
C. Amos property; thence, east-
wardly along the northern line
of the W. C. Amos property a
distance of 54 rods, more or less,
to the center of Johnson Crook
road; thence northeastwardly
with and along the center of
said road about 82 rods to point
of beginning, said beginning
point being located in said lot
No. 325: said tract contains
about 30 acres, more or less, and
includes the 16 acre tract de¬
scribed in deed from H. G. Allen
to Ernest Riddle and wife, Lou
Ellis Riddle, dated April 15, 1950,
recorded in book 39, page 155 in
deed records of Dade County
and also the tract deeded by
r s. Mollie Allen Amos to
Ernest Riddle and wife Lou
Ellis Riddle> dated Peb 10> 1937|
recorded in book 39, page 157 of
the deed records of said County,
being the property upon which
Ernest Riddle and wife Lou Ellis
lived for several years.
This property will be sold sub¬
ject to any unpaid taxes.
The property will be sold as
the property of the makers of
said Security Deed or their as¬
signs, in bar of all equity of re¬
demption, and will divest all of
the right, title and interest of
the makers thereof, or their as¬
signs, in and to said property,
and shall invest such title in the
purchaser.
This 1 day of July 1959.
Frank M. Gleason
FRANK M. GLEASON, Attorney
for Enest Riddle and Lou Ellis
Riddle
FRANK M. GLEASON
ATTORNEY AT LAW
102 HOWARD STREET
ROSSVILLE, GEORGIA
We serve the best food obtain*
able at the lowest
prlees. Avakian’s f
We invite your inspection and
suggestions. Avakian’s
=5^
U H. F. ALLISON AGENCY I
Representing Stock Companies
In Fire and Automobile Insurance I
Licensed Real Estate Broker j
SU& TRENTON, GEORGIA •i
WE HAVE MOVED
PARKER FLOIUST
Now located at the home of Mrs. Leon Gifford
Mt. View Sub-Division
Phone: OLiver 7-4077
A rtificial Flowers
4
Potted Plants
Cut Flowers
Corsages
"
V
......
on the way
on schedule
OLIVER DAM, the Georgia Power Company’s
latest hydroelectric development, is nearing
©ompletion on the Chattahoochee at Columbus.
The $14-million project was begun only two
years ago. All of the dam’s four generating
units, with a total capacity of 60,000 kilowatts,
will begin production this summer ns scheduled.
At Plant McManus, a steam-eiectric gener¬
ating station near Brunswick, a new 75,000-
kilowatt turbo-generator began operation on
May 15, two weeks ahead of schedule.
Hundreds of miles of transmission and distri¬
bution lines are being built all over the state as
part of a $58-million construction program for
this year.
Other major projects are under way. Their
completion, on schedule, represents power in
reserve for a growing Georgia.
GEORGIA POWER COMPANY
* IIIIIIH w H I * f V £ * W t Slav l
I We have invested a sizeable
sum of money to give you a
clean, comfortable and pleasant
place to eat. Avakian’s,