Newspaper Page Text
fiore Future Farmers
Initiates Members
BY BILL KING.
Thursday night, October 13, the
Gore chapter of Future Farmers of
Ameiica held initiation ceremonies
lor the boys who wished to become
either a Green Hand or a junior
farmer in our F. F. A. chapter.
To be eligible for initiation into the
Green Hand degree a boy must be
regularly enrolled in a course of
vocational agriculture and have a
satisfactory project program for the
coming year. The following boys
were eligible and were initiated into
this degree. Jesse Grigsby, Roy
Johnson, Gordon Johns, Thomas Mc-
Collum, Harry Perry, James Selman,
C. B. Fulton and Herbert McClain.
The Junior Farmer degree is the
second and highest degree that can
be received from a local chapter. To
be eligible for initiation into this
degree a F. F. A. boy must have
satisfactorily completed at least one
year of vocational agriculture. In
this year he must have made a profit
Welcome To The Fair
Golden Guernsey Farmers & Merchsnts
MUk ' Bank
Produced By /;(F H MAKE OUR BANK YOUR BANK
Riegeldale Farm ij> Vj ' i r.. use blue checks
Phone 57W Trion, Ga. I™ »
Compliments get the |OW Compliments Os
ROY s — Pau l Weems
nichols N "~ ■ oSfjSSfi'i Wi“
Rep _ FORONLY J WTnmjlr™ -* Funeral Home
SI. a. 'Y'cfitr I Jf i i * IBs HL
W. S. Gentry Furniture I Jma a4 w y PHONE 446
DURING THE FAIR! I »" J jgffr
Company ■
t *. The Merchants and Business Concerns listed on this page ex- . ■ , a 1
! Make Our Station Your Head- ten( j you a spec j a | invitation to come to the Chattooga County Fair an I*V Ce
iftH't/l' H quarters During the Fair. make t heir Siore yuur headquarter.. To Make Our Store Dry C ] eaners
thl! Thursday, Friday and .Saturday, Oct. ZZ-ZiJ Headquarters
• MORE OFIT-JwW STANDARD - —— Phone 361-3
JrW Service Station Meet Y ° Ur FriendS Where PriC€ We Appreciate Your Patronage
j rtfSll ____ and Quality Meet. and Are Prepared To Give
Essolube and Esso Motor r | f I You 1-Day Service.
Oil JL Lie JL iLOLL L_yV|JL* Taylor Merc. Co. All Work Guaranteed
Road Service-Phone 410 The Store of Friendly Service Called For and Delivered
t Store
** TRIMBLE McGinnis Drug Co.
Service Station C OLirtt S\ •• ♦ visit The R exa ll store
24-Hour Service SetVlCe Myrtle’s
Vpood y I iSlt Olli StO) € VUYLTIQ
II I Beauty Shoppe I
Sinclair Products Trion, Georgia. Pho. 404 Opposite Postoffice the Fair
Royal Crown Bottling Company Road Service
1803 N. Broad, Phone 2046, Rome.
J. G. ALLEN Echols Dry J«. R. Jackson Summerville Coal
HARDWARE CO. Cleaning Company &_ Son _
Brick, Farm Implements. Stoves and RelMle Druggists COmpaUV
General Hardware. Agent for JOY’S Blowers Visit Us During the Fair
Make Our Store Your Headquarters Phone 426 Agent for Nunnally’s—the Candy Phone —:— 392
. ~ t, . of the South.
During the Fair.
HARLOW SERVICE The Bargain Store I compliments of I L.. YANCEY I
HARDWARE AND FARM Cash btore
® IMPLEMENTS. GROCERIES, FEED
H A ROSS
WOCO-PEP GAS-TIOLENE OIL Follow Those Who Shop ■ I I AND MEATS
We Will Be Glad To Have You Drive and Save ordinary Agent: John Deere Tractors
, By While Attending the Fair. The Bargain Wav a " d &,uipn,BM - phone " 402
of at least $25 on his project. The
boys who were initiated into this de
gree were Sidney Gordon, Gordon
Johns, Travis Mills, James Perry, W.
A. Perry, J. F. Selman, Bernard
Storey, James Young, C. B. Fulton,
Herschell Mathis and Herbert Mc-
Clain.
The state F. F. A. rally is to be
held in Macon Oct. 21-22. This rally
is held every year during the state
fair. At the rally delegates from
every F. F. A. chapter will meet and
conduct all necessary business. There
are also cattle judging contests,
which take in judging dairy cattle,
beef cattle and swine, seed and tree
identification contest which takes in
the identification of common seeds
and trees. The Gore chapter will be
well represented in each of these
contests and plans to be at the top
after the score cards have been
graded.
It has been necessary to elect a
new sergeant-at-arms and a second
vice-president. Herschell Mathis was
elected sergeant-at-arms and the
second vice-president is Bernard
Storey.
THE SUMMERVILLE NEWS: THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1938.
Egg Production
Greatly Increased
ATHENS, Ga.—Results of the 12th
Georgia National Egg Laying test
conducted by the University of Geor
gia poultry department indicate that
poultrymen throughout the nation
have greatly increased egg produc
tion in the last few years through
improved breeding methods, accord
ing to J. C. Bell, assistant professor
of poultry and manager of the test.
More than 100 of the hens entered
in the test this year were in the 300-
egg class for the fifty-one-week rec
ord kept on the birds. Since the be
ginning of the laying test at Athens
in 1926 there have been 10,682 birds
in competition and 492 of them have
finished their fifty-one weeks in the
300-egg class.
In the first years that the test was
conducted, Mr. Bell said, most of the
300-eggers were Leghorns. In this
last test a few of the heavy breeds
were in th 300-egg class, a sign of
general improvement among the hea
vy breeds which are needed to devel
op good farm flocks.
IN MEMORY OF MOZELLE CRAIG
On Sept. 19, 1938, the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Craig was made sad
when death took from them their
second daughter, Mozelle. The entire
community was shocked over her un
expected death. She was such a sweet
and loving child. She always had a
kind word for everyone. Mozelle will
be greatly missed not only in her
home but in her church and Sunday
school for she was an active church
worker.
She united with the Holiness church
in Summerville and was baptized by
the Rev. Thomas D. Lynn Easter
Sunday of this year. She was only
13 years of age, but was a real
Christian, never failing to pray, sing
or testify when at church. The past
February she won a prize in a Bible
class. She was on her way to church
when the sad accident happened, so
we feel like she is busy now, some
where, in some way, in Heaven just
where God wants her to be.
Besides her parents, she leaves four
sisters, Nellie, Lucy, Jessie and Fran
ces; one brother, Dillard, all of near
Berryton; her grandmother, Mrs. J.
ROOF FIXES ROOF.
Philadelphia.—August Roof plac
ed some tar on the kitchen stove to
melt so that he could fix three bad
leaks in the roof of his home. The
tar caught fire, spilled on him while
he tried to remove it from the stove
and set the kitchen on fire. He was
badly burned. Henceforth, some
one else will fix Roof’s roof.
CARD OF THANKS.
We desire to take this method of
thanking our friends for the kindness
shown us during the sickness and
death of our dear mother and grand
mother. Your expressions of sympa
thy will linger long in our memory.
God grant to each of you just such
sympathetic friends in your trying
hours.—Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Vernon
and Family, Mr. and Mrs. S. M. Rat
liff, W. C. Langston and Children.
L. Sentell, and a host of other rela
tives and friends.
Written by one who loved her,
MRS. EARL MILLER.
Traveling Exhibit Os
Children’s Books
Fifty-seven books are on display in
Summerville Public library to enable
librarians, library boards, teachers,
parents and children, themselves, to
see and examine the best of the new
books being published for children
and young people as a guide to wise
selection and purchase of books.
Most attractive in appearance, in
teresting content, good illustrations
and altogether the best for the
money. These books are loaned to the
library by Georgia Library commis
sion.
FIRST ARREST.
TIFFIN, Ohio.—A. B. Clouse, a
member of the grand jury, signed a
report while serving on the jury, in
augurating a drive to rid Seneca
county of gambling devices. It so
happened that he was the first per
son arrested in the drive, charged
with having slot machines in his gro
cery store and restaurant.