Newspaper Page Text
Social News
Mrs. Leon Gamble, Society Editor Phone 362
BYERS—HOLLANDER.
Mrs. W. E. Bynum announces the
marriage of her daughter, Louise
Byers, to Clarence Hollander, of
Trion, Ga. The marriage was solem
nized Saturday afternoon at 5:30
o’clock at the Baptist parsonage in
La Fayette, with the Rev. Reed offi
ciating.
Mr. and Mrs. Hollander will make
their home in Trion.
McCUTCHEN-WHEELER.
The following announcement is of
much interest to the many friends ofi
the young groom-to-be here:
“Mrs. C. D. MeCutchen, of Dalton,
announces the engagement of her j
daughter, Annie Laurie, to Russell l
Douglas Wheeler, of Chattanooga, j
formerly of Summerville, Ga., thej
marriage to take place in the early!
fall.”
Mr. Wheeler is one of the popular
younger sons of the late J. V. and
Mrs. Nannie Wheeler, very prominent
citizens of this place.
BIRTHDAY DINNER.
A very enjoyable occasion was the
surprise birthday dinner given Mrs.
W. R. Stephenson by her children,
Sunday, Aug. 30. Those present were
Mr. afld Mrs. Eli Stephenson and son;
Mr. and Mrs. John Ellenburg and
Shirley and William; Mr. and Mrs.
Don Groce and Wayne and Joyce; Mr.
and Mrs Roy Steph.enson and Jo
Ann; Mr and Mrs. Will Stephenson.
Many nice present were received
by the honoree.
F. W. Broom, of Alamo, Tenn.,
spent the week-end here.
* * •
Miss Helen Webster, Miss Lorene
Murray, Miss Pauline Hardwick, John
Knox Kennedy, John Gamble and
John Lester Edward visited Bob
Jones college last Wednesday.
• * •
J. T. Parker, Jr., and Walter Stan
sell, of Berry school, Rome, spent
the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. J.
T. Parker, south of town.
* * *
The friends and relatives here of
Bob Allen, of Stephens, Ark., regret
ted to learn of his recent stroke of
paralysis, but he is some belter this
week.
* * *
Mrs. F. W. BroOm, Mary Rayford
Broom and Miss Mildred Fowler were
in Chattanooga Thursday.
• * *
Miss Pauline Hardwick left Tues
day to attend Bob Jones college.
• * *
Wanted: An unmarried man a«
gardener. Apply Lyerly school audi
torium, Thursday or Friday nights,
Sept 10-11, 8 o’clock.
• # •
Miss Gladys Parker, of La Fayette,
spent Saturday with Miss Madeline
Parker.
• • •
Mr. and Mrs. Pete Thompson were
guests Sunday night of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Johnson in Cleveland, Tenn.
• * •
Mr. and Mrs. T. M. Van Pelt and
Mrs. George Smith and children, of
Holland, were spend-the-day guests
Thursday of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Harlow.
• • •
Mrs. John Cleghom, Sr., returned
home Tuesday after an extended vis
it in Coalmont and Monteagle, Tenn.
* * 9
Mrs. George D. Espy, Mrs. George
Verden, Mrs. 0. J. Espy and Wood
row Espy were in Rome last Thurs
day.
• * *
Mrs. Oscar Parker spent last week
with her mother, Mrs. Ida Reece, at
Lyerly.
• • •
Dr. M. K. Sapp, eyesight special
ist of Atlanta, will be at the H. P.
Burney Jewelry store, in La Fayette,
Ga., Saturday, Sept. 12. See him about
your eyes. Examination free. Glasses
fitted at very reasonable prices. One
day only.
• • •
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Harlow ac
companied Robert Harlow, Jr„ to
Milledgeville Wednesday, where he
will enter Georgia Military college.
m 9 9
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Ervin, of
Chattanooga, were week-end guests
of Rev. and Mrs. Sterling L. Hunter.
* * •
Mr. and Mrs. Clovis Fisher were
spend-the-day guests Sunday of Mr.
and Mrs. F. M. Fisher.
For Bad Feeling
Due to Constipation
Get rid of constipation by taking
Black-Draught as soon as you notice
that bowel activity has slowed up or
you begin to feel sluggish. Thou
sands prefer Black-Draught for the
refreshing relief it has brought them.
Mrs. Ray Mullins, of Lase, Ark.,
writes: ' ! My husband and I both take
Thedford’s Black-Draught and find
it splendid for constipation, bilious
ness, and the disagreeable, aching,
tired feeling that comes from this
condition.” With reference to Syrup
ttf Black-Draught, which this moi'ner
Sires her children, she says: "They
Hko the taste and It gave such good
results.”
BLACK-DRAUGHT
William Pitner, of Chattanooga,
was visiting relatives here Monday.
• • •
Miss Nancy Patterson, of Abing
don, Va., came Tuesday to be thej
guest of Miss Bolling Brown.
» m *
Mr. and Mrs. Duke Espy spent
Sunday in Ware Shoals, S. C., the
guests of Dr. and Mrs. L. L. Long.
Mrs. Espy remained for a several
days’ visit.
• • *
Notice: Are you bothered with
bugs in your garden ? See Prof, j
Catchbug Friday night Lyerly School
auditorium.
* * *
Mrs. Clyde Harlow is improving
after an illness of several days.
* * *
Mrs. Robert K. Johnson, of Cleve
land, Tenn., spent the week-end with
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. J. El-j
lenburg.
* * *
Miss Julia Walker will leave Sun
day to resume her studies at Bessie j
Tift college in Forsyth, Ga.
« * *
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas W. Rich, Jr., j
and son, Tommy 111, of Corpus Chris- j
ti, Tex., are visiting Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas W. Rich, Sr., and family and
Mrs. M. G. Mattox.
* * .
Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Reece and Mr.j
and Mrs. Eli Stephenson and son, Joe, j
accompanied Mrs. Don Copeman toj
her home in Detroit, Mich., for a sev
eral days’ visit.
* * *
Lost, strayed or stolen: Five eli
gible bachelors. One stutters, one
hiccups, one sneezes, one is a bug
catcher, one is a country codger. If
found return to five old maids, Ly- j
erly school auditorium Thursday and j
Friday nights, Sept, 10-11, 8 o’clock, j
• • •
Mr. and Mrs. George Verden made
a business trip to Chattanooga last
Friday.
• * •
Misses Ovelle Thomas, Margaret
Neal, Jamie Thomason, Nell Pilken
ton and Jo Baker were guests Sunday
of Miss Sara Fulmer in Cedartown.
• 9 •
Miss Julia Walker spent the past
week-end with Miss Fannie Jo Ryan
and Mrs. Ryan at their home on Jar
gan avenue in North Chattanooga.
9 • •
Mr. and Mrs. Euclid Callan and j
children, of Rome, were spend-the
day guests of Mr. and Mrs. Joe;
Brown Sunday.
« • •
Mrs. Lula Henry was spend-the-,
day guest Sunday of Misses Cora!
and Annie Gamble.
• • •
Billy Bradford left last week for
Albany, Ga., where he will study at
A. P. I. this winter.
* * *
Mrs. Gus Wright was guest Tues-j
day of Mrs. R. D. Jones.
* * *
Mrs. Joe Hammond has returned
home from an extended visit with her!
daughters, Mrs. C. M. Bagley, in
Frederick, Okla., and Mrs. H. L. Wil
liams, in York, Ala.
• • •
Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Nichols will ar-!
rive this week from Rockford, 111., to!
spend the winter with their daughter,;
Mrs. Harry Marks, and Mr. Marks.
• • •
Miss Bessie Bailey and Crawford
Bailey spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Bob Crawford at Taliaferro.
• • •
For Sale: Tickets —reserved seats
for the best production of the year,!
“Black-Eyed Susan,” Lyerly audi
torium Thursday and Friday nights,
Sept. 10 and 11; 8 o’clock.
* * •
D. P. Henley, Jr., and John Stubbs
left Monday to enter Presbyterian
college in Clinton, S. C.
0 9 9
Miss Ellen Edmondson, of Rome,
was a recent guest of her grandpar
ents, Mr. and Mrs. B. H. Edmondson.
* * *
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Marks, Mrs.
C. E. Harris and children and Miss
Eula Mae Mahan were visiting Miss
Mary Marks in Atlanta Monday.
* * *
Judge H. A. Ross spent Sunday
with Mr. and Mrs. John Veach above
Trion.
• ■ •
Mr. and Mrs. Moody Morgan and
children, of La Fayette, visited Mr.
and Mrs. Rice Morgan Sunday.
• * •
Alfred Cameron, of Chattanooga,
spent the first of the week with rel
atives at Pleasant Green.
* * *
Our eye specialist and optician,
Dr. M. K. Sapp, of Atlanta, will
again be at store Saturday, Sept. 12.
If your old glasses need changing or
if you are thinking of getting new
glasses, see Dr. Sapp on this day.
Examination free; satisfaction guar
anteed. One day only. Glasses at
prices you can pay. H. P. Burney,
Jeweler, La Fayette, Ga.
» • a
Mr. and Mrs. James Campbell, of
Atlanta, were week-end guests of
Mrs. Gus Wright at Tidings.
• * *
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Calhoun were
guests Monday of Mr. and Mrs. R.
O. McLeod.
THE SUMMERVILLE NEWS: THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1936.
Mrs. Martha Kane is visiting Mrs.
D. P. Henley.
a • •
Miss Margaret Neal, of Chattanoo
ga, was home for the week-end.
a • •
Mr. and Mrs. Robert King and
! children, of Menlo, were guests of
relatives here Sunday.
• • •
Hoke Echols, of Chattanooga, spent
I the week-end with homefolks.
Rev. and Mrs. T. J. Espy, of Ring
gold, were visiting in town Tuesday.
Henry Bradford, Jr., left last week
to resume his studies at Georgia Mil
itary college, Milledgeville.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hoy, of Fort
Oglethorpe, were guests Sunday of
Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Cleghorn.
* * *
Mr. and Mrs. Fred McCull and Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Eager, of Birming
ham, were week-end guests at Pleas
ant Green.
* * *
Mr. and Mrs. Glee Thompson, of
Atlanta, were week-end guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Penn Selman.
* * *
Mr. and Mrs. Lamar Hinton, of
Tate, Ga., spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. W. W. Hinton.
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Flannagan and
children spent the week-end with
relatives in Chattanooga.
Mr. and Mrs. A. T. Powell had as
their guests Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Powell and son, of Trion; Mr. and
Mrs. Ben Powell and sons and Mrs. I
Ewing, of Chickamauga.
Billy Farrar will leave Saturday to j
resume his studies at Duke university j
in Durham, N. C.
Mrs. Shelby White, of West Ar
muchee, is spending this week with
her sister, Mrs. C. S. Fowler.
Mrs. G. D. Espy is able to be out
after a recent illness.
$lO REWARD—WiII pay $lO reward
for information with proof to con-i
vict of the party or parties who
took set of silverware from my
home in Summerville. —Roy Pep
pers. Get in touch with Roy Pep
pers or W C. Hardy.
Railroads Cheer.
Class 1 steam railrodas are greatly
cheered by the fact that net operat
ing income during the first six
months of this year was $300,457,252,
or $78,902,460 more than last year.
Net operating income in July, cover
ing several railroads not in the ear
lier estimate, was $61,635,201, com
pared with $26,868,028 in July, 1935.
$5.00 REWARD for information
leading to recovery of my large
black Belgian police dog.—M. L.
Smith, Rep. Life & Casualty In
surance company. t
SALE NOTICE.
GEORGIA, Chattooga County:
Will be sold at public outcry be
iOre the courthouse door in said
county on the first Tuesday in Oc
tober, 1936, within the legal hours of
sale to the highest and best bidder
for cash the following described
property:
One 1935 Ford V-8 De Luxe 2-door
model, No. 48; Motor No. 1894596,
automobile.
Said property levied upon and will
be sold as the property of Claude
Barry to satisfy an execution issued
on the fourth day of February, 1936,
from the Superior Court of said
; county in favor of J. W. Tucker and
against the said Claude Barry, which
said Fi. Fa. was transferred and as
signed by Tucker to O. L. Cleckler
on Feb. 5, 1936.
This Sept. 2, 1936.
T. A. COOK. Sheriff.
Nerves:
I What is it that keeps hospitals open and doctors
I busy? NERVES.
I What is it that makes your face wrinkled and
I makes you feel old? NERVES
I Nine times out of ten it’s NERVES that make you
■ restless, worried, haggard.
Nerves^
Wh»n nerves are over-taxed, you worry over
trifles, find it hard to concentrate, can’t sit still.
Nerve Strain brings on Headache.
Nervous people often suffer from Indigestion.
There may be absolutely nothing wrong with the
organs of digestion, but the Nerves are not on the
job to make the organs do their work properly.
Nerves,
■ Vou’re cheating yourself and the man who pays
I you if you work when your NERVES are not
■ normal. , ,
I You can’t have a good time when you are nervous.
I You can’t make or keep friends when you are
I keyed up and irritable. You may excuse your-
I self, but to others you are just a plain crank, g
I Quiet your nerve* with
jfejgw 1 ,„. ’ mSk 1
jßgiigJJy ■]? ai cm iggl
JSflltfl Ikli
DEATHS
By MRS. F. W. BROOM.
C. A. Fortune.
C. A. Fortune died Sept. 8, 1936, at
a Trion hospital. He was 60 years of
age.
Surviving the deceased are his!
wife and daughter, of Trion; two
sons and one daughter, of Washing
ton, D. C. 1
The funeral services were conduct
ed at the Fellowship Baptist church
near Rome Wednesday afternoon,
with Trion Department store in
charge of arrangements.
Jimmy Ray Floyd.
Little Jimmy Ray, the infant son
of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Floyd, of
Trion, died Thursday, Sept. 3.
The funeral services were conduct
ed from the graveside Thursday aft
ernoon at 4:30, with Trion Depart
ment store in charge" Interment in
Trion cemetery.
COULTER-MEDLOCK.
On Sunday, Sept. 6, Carl Coulter, f
a prosperous young farmer of the
Haywood district, was married to
Miss Eunice Medlock, of near Gay
lesville, Ala.
The ceremony was performed by
Esquire G. W. Jordan in the pres
ence of a few friends of the young
couple.
We wish these young people much
happiness as they journey through
Foreclosing.
The HOLC and the FCA are be
ginning to foreclose on the farms
and homes of borrowers who ignore
their obligations without cause and
congressional pressure is expected to
ease the condition of the loans.
ROYAL Theater
PROGRAM:
THURSDAY AND FRIDAY:
Warner BAXTER & Myrna LOY. in
“To Mary. With Love’’
To you—with pride, we present
those “Broadway Bill” and “Pent
house” sweethearts in the best love
story the Saturday Evening Post ev
er printed! Making love lightly, yot
loving deeply! Laughing off what
they really feel! Hiding the hurts
and holding back the tears —living
life gallantly and splendidly! If they
only knew what the years could do!
Years together bittersweet with
hurt and happiness! Things done —
words spoken—‘tears shed —hearts
broken! What of the love they pledg
ed forever?
Also Selected Shorts.
SATURDAY ONLY:
TIM McCOY in
‘Man From Guntown’
with Billie Seward and Rex Lease.
Also Comedy and Last Chapter of
“Adventures of Frank Merriwell” se
rial.
MONDAY AND TUESDAY.
“36 Hours To Kill”
Brian Donlevy and Gloria Stuart.
He traps his deadliest enemy—he
meets his greatest romance —aboard
the hurtling transcontinental express,
America’s ace undercover man packs
a lifetime of thrills into one day and
night!
Also Selected Short Subjects.
ON THE STAGE:
Tuesday Only:
RED & RAYMOND
And the Boys from “Ole Kaintuck”
Complete new show direct from
WSB. A laugh a minute! Singing,
yodeling, dancing, fiddling, banjo
playing, etc. Don’t miss it!
► Do they torture you by day?
Keep you awake at night? '■
Do they make yoo Cranky,
► Blue—give you Nervous Indi
gestion, Nervous Headache?
Do they interefere with your
work; ruin your pleasure; drive
•way your friends?
| What’s A Mugwump?
!• Had you heard this one over the radio? The fellow
jl said: “A mugwump is a little bird that sits en the
;I fence—with its mug on one side of the fence and its
«; wump on the other.”
We think it is best to come off the fence and take
sides, but to always try to take the RIGHT side. We
know we are on the RIGHT side in using every care
!; in protecting the deposits at our Bank. Fireproof
!■ vaults, burglar insurance, careful management, a
MODERN Bank in every particular.
4
j! Deposits Up to $5,000.00 insured Under FDIC.
Chattooga County Bank
WiV/AVA%WMVD , .V//AVrVMVAV«V.VAWArViVAV,
> : ..%.x~x‘*x~x-x~x~x~x***x"x**x~x~x~x~x~x~x~x~x~x~x“x“x“>
| Taylor Mercantile Company
;t* ' ■—
MONDAY SEPT. 14
X
| We will have with us REX WOOD
i representing the Storrs-Schaefer Tail
? oring Co., and invite you to see the Fall
| Showing of Men’s & Young Men s in
'•{ dividually tailored clothes.
| Also a COMPLETE LINE of Suits
j- Top Coats for Ladies.
Men’s new Fall Suits, Hats, Shoes,
I Shirts and Ties.
| Ladies’ new Fall Shoes & Oxfords.
| COMPLETE OUTFITS for the BABY
| Children’s Print Dresses _ _ 50c, 75c, $1
Junior and Ladies’ Sizes $1 and $1.95,
| beautiful quality, well made.
| Children’s Silk Dresses __ $1 & $1.95
| Misses’ and Ladies’ Silk Dresses,
J $1,98, $2.50, $3.50, $4.50 and $6.95
£ Ladies’ New Fall Hats —sl to $2.95
i COTTON PICK SACKS
, X M X-X-X~X~X*'X“X* , X“X“X“X“X“X“X‘*:-*“:~X"X~X*<“
| SEE
| ‘Black Eyed Susan’
3-Act Musical Comedy
c Thursday & Friday, Sept. 10-11; BP. M.
f LYERLY’S NEW AUDITORIUM
| 100 New Costumes - Beautiful Lighting
f Gorgeous Scenery - Snappy Songs
! Clever Plot - Clever Dialogue.
Over 50 In Cast; Lucky Ticket Wins Prize
| —_
Admission 15 & 25c, Reserved Seats 35c
| Under Direction SARA JO BERRY, Atlanta. Ga.
————
BATTERY SERVICE
GREASING . . 50c
WASH ... 50c
QUICK AND EFFICIENT SER VICE
HAIR MOTOR CO. Inc.
Summerville, Georgia.