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About The Dade County times. (Trenton, Ga.) 1908-1965 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 6, 1959)
PAGE 2 THE DADE COUNTY TIMES Entered at the Po^t Office at; Trenton, Ga., as 2nd class mail. I Mrs. C. C. Morrison, Publisher.) Subscription $2.00 a yr. plus tax LOCALS We are sorry to report Mrs. Myrna McMahan has had to 'leave us. We always enjoy read¬ ing her articles. Mrs. Claud Taylor is confined at her home sick. Rev. Lee Hill is the owner of a new blue Chevrolet station wagon. Mr. and Mrs. Neal Palmer and daughters are in Panama City. Fla. on vacation. We see the Bill keetons driv- isg around in a new yellow and white Nash Rambler. Rev. T. W. Schilds has re¬ signed from the Piney Grove Baptist church. Jimmy Pace underwent emer¬ gency surgery last Friday at Hutcheson Memorial Hospital. He returned home Sunday. Mrs. W. M. Willis and Mrs. E. J. Perkins of Bruton, Ala. are visiting their sister and daught- ter, Mrs. Nettie Jenkins. Mrs. Cordie Foster has a badly burnt foot and bruises re¬ ceived from an accident in her home. Mr. ond Mrs. R. L. Hadden and son will leave today for a visit with relatives in Michigan. IThey plan to get in a little ,'fishing. Mrs. I. H. Wheeler , Jr. and daughters, Sorita and Delilah Faye, have just returned from a For Your Every Hardware Need YOU WIND UP BETTER TO SEE US FIRST John L. Case Co., Hdw. & Appl. TRENTON, GEORGIA OPEN 88c Sale FRIDAYS UNTIL 9 P. M. • Socks, Boys and Girls - 2 for 88c • Blouses, Ladies & Childrens £ Boy's T Shirts, Sizes 6-16 • Girl's Shorts, Sizes 2-14 • Girls Panties - 3 for 88c • Ladies Belts Evelene Shoppe TRENTON. GEORGIA Bradford Bros. Awning Co. TRENTON, GEORGIA Aluminum Awnings • Aluminum Carports Siding • Baked on Enamel Storm Windows & Doors Phone OLiver 7-5460 If no answer call OL 7-4438 THE DADE COUNTY TIMES, TRENTON, GEORGIA. THURSDAY AUGUST, 6, 1959 New Home H. D. Club Plans Community Fair The regular monthly meeting was held July 21, at the home of Mrs. Madge Ballard. Miss Jane Ivey, a visitor, was with us to give her 4-H club demon¬ stration on canning green beans. Miss Ivey read the 24th chapter of Psalms ad led the Lords Prayer for devotional. Moved and seconded to have the club picnic at the Commun¬ ity House on August 21. A Com¬ munity fair was planned with Mrs. Madge Ballard in charge. There will be games and prizes. Each family is to bring a picnic supper to be spread at 5:30 p. m. Mrs. Margaret West was ad¬ mitted as a new member. The ^hostess served nice refresh¬ ments to those present with Mrs Linda Nixon assisting. RISING FAWN Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wood- yard and childen, David, Paul and Beverly from Cincinnati, Ohio, were week end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Smith and Mrs. Owen Woodyard. Miss Bess Cureton is in Natc- !hez, Miss, for a sight-seeing 'tour with her cousin. Miss Louise Dubrow. Mrs. J. Z. Bobo has returned from the hospital and is re¬ cuperating at her home. Mrs. and Mrs. Charles Hitt, Jr. and children, from Little Rock, Ark., are visiting his parents the Charles Hitts. Clyde Dulaney, of Athens, Ga. and Eddie McNair, of Oak Ridge, Tenn., have returned to their re spective homes after several weeks visit with relatives in Rising Fawn. Mrs. Bonnie York, Rising Fawn, is in a Chattanooga hospital. ROUTE 2 Mrs. Addie Moore was operat¬ ed on last Tuesday and remains (in the hospital at this writing. We hear Mrs. Naomi Kinsey was taken to the hospital last week for an operation, also Mrs. Brownie West. We hear Mrs. Joyce Scott is visiting her mother Mrs. Wiley Tinker. John R. Tinker is spend ing a few days with his daugh¬ ter Mrs. Fred Cooper. Mr. and Mrs. Archie Tinker and sons were visiting relatives last Sun¬ day on the mountain. Mrs. Lav- erne Laney visited her mother Friday. Mrs. Thelma Bynum vis¬ ited on the mountain Sunday. We hear Miss Betty Stewart spent a week with her aunt. We notice the A. L. Greens are building a new porch around their house which looks good. Miss Genevieve Cooper of Fabius, Ala. was married in Trenton Sunday to Rufus Park¬ er, we hear. They left for Vine- mount, Ala. Sunday p. m. Mrs. Maggie Cooper, Elizabeth and Mrs. Ada Tinker attended the wedding, also her mother Mrs Ed Riddle. AMERICAN LEGION POST 10« Second and fourth Thursday night 7:30 P. M. every month Legion Hall. WOW! WATCH US GROW! m-w.. b .m g aad« •v«ry day. Tn* nation’s bigraat eoliaaum, tha world’s moat modsrn mar- ohan di so mart, th* world's largoat motol ... all ars groins up all at oncal Tha sita is at th# margin? of U. S. 29 and U. S. 29 in suburban Atlanta Writs for Information. SOUTHEASTERN MERCHANDISE MART, INC. <89 W. Paachtraa St., Atlanta I, Ga. Phans TRlnity I-3J41 & Birihs Born to Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln R. Gray, of Route 2, Rising Fawn, a daughter on July 13. Born to Mr- and Mrs. M. E. Sulllivan, Trenton, a daughter on July 14. Born to Mr. and Mrs. John L. Gray, Rt. 2, Trenton, a son on July 14. visit with relatives in Big Stone Gap, Va. Colonel Douglas Morrison at¬ tended a district Soil Conserva¬ tion meeting in Charleston, S. C. this week. The Cleron Kyzers spent the weekend in Tuscaloosa, Ala. Mrs Howard Springer, a cousin of Mr Kyzer, and her children return¬ ed with them for a visit. Bobby Raulston, Rayford Hammond and Joe Lee Tatum Jr. are back from a motor trip to Wichita Falls, Texas. They were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Rauslton for two weeks. Many points of interest were also visited en route. Mrs. Helen Polly Hall and two youngest sons, George and Stacey, will arrive home from a year’s stay in Utah and Texas, August 18. Mrs. Hall’s oldest boy Eugene plans on finishing high school in Texas, where he is working in Adaiar Hospital. SEE YOUR DRUG STORE FIRST Chattahoochee County WORLD'S LARGEST INFANTRY TRAINING CENTER Chattahoochee County is named tor a soft red clay rock, located in the Chattahoochee River, from which the Indiana once derived pigments used in the making of war paint. Today, Chattahoochee County is the proud home of the major portion .of the world’s largest infantry training center, Fort Benning. The county seat, Cusgeta, today a thriving community, has been a hub of commerce since the days when it was an important Indian trading center. Chattahoochee’s agricultural economy is well-balanced with crops, forest products, and livestock eohtributing in about equal proportions to farm income. the In Chattahoochee County, and throughout Georgia, United States Brewers Foundation works constantly to assure the sale of beer and ale under pleasant, orderly conditions. Believing that strict law enforcement serves the best interest of the people of Georgia, the Foundation stresses close governing cooper¬ ation with the Armed Forces, law enforcement and officials in its continuing "self-regulation” program. aaBBgg£giB«g?,-ra- United States Brewers ° ]W Foundation o Georgia Division Suite 224 , 710 Peachtree St. t Atlanta , Georgia THIS BRIEFCASE is a tool kit for building tha Georgia of tomorrow. It’s carried by our indus¬ trial development representatives to distant cities where industries are looking southward. Its contents: carefully compiled information on towns — like yours — seeking to share in Georgia’s surprising growth. And this growth continues. In the first half of this year, 75 new industries* were located in the Georgia Power Company’s service area, and 39 plants expanded their facilities. These addi¬ tions represent nearly 5,000 jobs and almost $16 million of annual payroll. We gladly work for such results. Through the years, the company has coordinated its efforts with state agencies, chambers of commerce, and other business concerns. The common goal is a brighter future for Georgia and all its citizens. * Each industry represents a capital investment of $50,000 or 7710T6 (Hid employs 10 or thotc workers. GEORGIA POWER COMPANY A CITIZEN WHEREVER WE SERVE