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About The Dade County times. (Trenton, Ga.) 1908-1965 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 3, 1959)
TIIE D\DE COUNTY TIMES, TRENTON, GEORGIA, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1959 H. F. ALLISON AGENCY Representing Stock Companies In Fire and Automobile Insurance } Licensed Real Estate Broker TRENTON. GEORGIA Steffner’s Lookout Valley Drug Co, Tiftonia Phone TA 1-1541 Store of Friendly Service* Sam Steffner graduate pharmacist R R R IF YOU LIKE MONEY, YOU'LL LIKE BUYING J ! ’ SEASON ON NEW . IT’S BEST-BUY A SHEW NOW! CHEVROLETS RIGHT NOW . . . AND YOU’LL NEVER DO BETTER BY YOUR DOLLARS Stop by your Chevrolet dealer’s and see the season’s most wonderful money’s worth. Better make it soon! mmmmm YOU LIKE GETTING YOUP MONEY’S WORTH, YOU’LL LIKE CHEVY'S 7 BIG BESTS! surely the most wonderfully responsive engine available today at any price.” t&EST BRAHES STOP ON A and said that ". . . in its price class, BEST ROOM NO CRAMPED ... establishes high daring DIME AND GIVE YOU MORE Chevy a new in QUARTERS ... styling.” Chevy’s leadership in sales for Let’s take the official STOPS PER DOLLAR They’re bigger ’59 lot for its looks too! figures filed with the Automobile Manu¬ With ’em, Chevy out-stopped all savs a facturers Association. They show Chev¬ too. competitors in its field in a NASCAR*- BEST RIDE. CARRIES YOU AS rolet’s front seat hip room up to 5.9 conducted test of repeated stops from CAREFULLY . . AS IT PAMPERS inches wider thin in comparable cars. highway speeds. YOUR DOLLARS "The smoothest, Count on real comfort. * National Association foi Stock » Advancement and Research most quiet, softest riding car in its price BEST TRADE-IN YOU GET TREND . . . class.” That’s the wav MOTOR MORE DOLLARS BACK FOR magazine describes Chevrolet’s cream- YOUR CHEVY Last for example, ■ smooth ride. It’s way more fun to year, sample than to read about though. Get Chevrolet used car prices averaged up to in Chevy and what Full Coil SI28 higher than comparable models of out a see other makes. Just check the NADA* springs do. Guide Book. * National Automobile Dealert Association BEST ENGINE . . . YOU COULD SPEND JARSFUL OF JACK AND BEST ECONOMY. .. SOCK AWAY BEST STYLE...BEAUTY THAI NOT GET A V8 LIKE CHEVY’S YOUR CHEVY SAVINGS As sure DOESN’T DEMAND A BIG BANK Talking about our standard as well as as two Chevy Sixes won their class in ROLL The experts at POPULAR Corvette V8’s, SPORTS CARS ILLUS¬ this year’s Mobilgas Economy Run, get SCIENCE magazine looked them all over TRATED says, "Indeed, this device is ting the best mileage of any full-size car! * r * TTrTTr—- |bj f \ CHEVROLET Now there’s an Impala Sport Sedan ... one of Chevy’s full series of Impalas for ’59 See your local authorized Chevrolet dealer—you might as well get the most! M. & W. CHEVROLET CO., INC. Phone OL 7-3400 Trenton, Ga, Brannon To Compete In Marksmanship contest Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Brannon motored to Friendship, Indiana this week, where Mr. Brannon will compete in the National Championship Matches at the Walter Cline Range. He will 'enter the beginner’s competi¬ tion, as a first entry in the nationwide shooting festival. The event is sponsored by the National Muzzle Loading Rifle Assn, of which Mr. Brannon is a member. , OFFICIAL REMINDS FARMERS ABOUT CHILD- LABOR LAW Farmers who are hiring workers for harvesting the fall crop were reminded today that the Fair Labor Standards Act sets a 16-year age minimum for the employment of children in agriculture during school hours. The reminder came from Sterling B. Williams, regional director of the U. S. Department Labor’s Wage and Hour and Public Contracts Divisions, the agency which administers this law. Mr. Williams pointed out that children may lawfully work on farms before and after school hours or on weekends, but their place is in the classroom when school is in session in the school district where the child is currently living. He said the only exception to the law is the child working exclusively for his parents or guardian. I£T US DO YOUR JOB PRINTING THE DADE COUNTY TIMES “ HIIR SOU ★ OUR STRENGTH ~ D. E. Morrison, SCI) Supervisor Bv: Fred Brackin SCS Conservationist Landowners and others con¬ cerned with conserving our soil in the Lookout Creek Watershed were given the measure of our failure at a meeting of the County Wildlife Club this week. In outlining the factors which h a v e contributed to make fishing in Lookout Creek less rewarding, the chief biologist ' or the Fish and Wildlife Ser¬ vice placed mud and silt at the very top of his list. Now I don’t propose that we go out and plant grass and trees on all these areas which erode just so the fisherman can catch more fish. But I suspect that this does show how much we need to do for more practical reasons —say to improve income and property values. Next time you notice the creek running red just say to yourself, “Well, there goes some body’s field, some income that could have come shopping in Trenton.” It was a real shocking indict¬ ment—one that concerns every person in the county in some way. Regular meetings Trenton Lodge No. 179 F. & A. M. the second and fourth \/(^V i Saturda y nights each /vyX m °nth at 8:00 p. m. J. B. Geddie, W. M J. M. Rogers, Secy. All qualified Masons invited. PAGE 3 Reserve Signup Told By ASC Office Mgr. Farmers should bring along the necessary information when they file a request for a basic Conservation Reserve rate at the County Agricultural Stabili¬ zation and Conservation Office, .according t o Mrs. Louise E. Wright, Manager of the County ASC Office. The deadline for re¬ questing that a basic annual rate per acre be established for Jand offered under the 1960 pro¬ gram is September 10, although requests may be filed at the County ASC Office as early as August 24. The county office has regular forms to be filled out when 'farmers apply for a basic rate. Information needed to complete the form includes a description of the acreage for which the basic rate is requested and the crop production history of the land. For each field, details will be needed as to the kind of crop and the yield per acre for the 5-year period 1955 through 1959. After the basic rate for a farm is established, the farmer will have an opportunity to file an application for Conservation. Reserve contract. Mrs. Wright also reminded farmers that land for which a basic rate is requested must be “eligible land”. To be eligible, land must have had a crop har¬ vested from it or must have been in regular rotation during 1959. In addition, tame hay land may be placed in the Conserva¬ tion Reserve provided it has a etand of perennial grasses or legumes normally established by land preparation and seed¬ ing. Tame hay land must also have had hay or silage harvest¬ ed from it in 3 of the 4 years 1956-1959. Any farmer who has a ques- tion about the Conservation Re- serve can get the answer at the County ASC Office, Trenton, Georgia. IF YOU WANT TO BUY, SFT.T. OR TRiADE, try our classified column for quick results. Dade County Times, Trenton Ga. CITATION IN RE: WILL OF MRS. ZELMA MASON McBRYAR COURT OF ORDINARY OF DADE COUNTY, GEORGIA PETITION TO PRO¬ BATE WILL IN SOLEMN FORM ORDER FOR SERVICE BY PUBLICATION AUGUST 3, 1959 TO: B. M. McBRYAR, SUR¬ VIVING HUSBAND OF MRS. ZELMA MASON McBRYAR :- Mrs. Lorene Williams having applied as Executrix for probate in solemn form of the Last Will and Testament of Mrs. Zelma Mason McBryar, of said County, vou as the surviving husband and an heir at law of said Zelma Mason McBryar, being a non- lesident of this state, are hereby required to be and appear at the Court of Ordinary for said County on the first Monday in September, 1959, when said ap¬ plication for probate will be heard, and show cause, if any you have or can, why the prayers of petitioner should not be allowed. Witness the Honorable A. W. Peck, Ordinary of Dade County, Georgia, this 3rd day of August, 1959. A. W. Peck Clerk of Court of Ordinary Dade County, Georgia CITATION GEORGIA, DADE COUNTY TO ALL WHOM IT MAY CONCERN The appraisers upon applica¬ tion of Mrs. Myrtle Brandon, widow of Eugene R. Brandon, for a twelve months’ support for herself, having filed their re¬ turn, all persons concerned hereby are cited to show cause, if any they have, at the next regular term of this court why said application should not be granted. This 29 day of July 1959. A. W. Peck Ordinary, Dade County, Georgia BUY U. S. SAVING BONDS