Newspaper Page Text
MENLO NEWS
(Last Week’s Letter.)
Mr. and Mrs. Robert .Tones and son,
Bobby, and Mr. and Mrs. Otis Ward
law, of La Fayette, were guests Sunday
of Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Christopher.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Lawrence, of Chat
tanooga, spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Burr Polk.
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Webster, of Fort
Payne, spent Sunday here with relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Ballard and Mrs.
Joe Simmons spent Saturday in Rome.
Gene Wyatt, of Chickamauga, spent
Tuesday with Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Agnew.
Circle 1 met with Miss Helen Wyatt
and Circle 2 met with Mrs. Ralph Cham
blee Monday afternoon at the Presby
terian church.
Miss Ada Wyatt and Mrs. Leslie
Kling, of La Fayette, attended a mis
sion meeting in Augusta Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. John Taylor Leath and
George Lee Cleckler, of West Armuehee.
spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Scott
Cleckler.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Kling, of Chat
tanooga, spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. G. A. Kling.
Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Agnew and Mrs.
Ransom spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Fink in Summerville.
Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Smith spent Sat
urday in Chattanooga.
Mr. and Mrs. Lanier Harris, of Ring
gold, were week-end guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Kirt Laster.
Tom O’Bannion continues ill to the
regret of his many friends.
Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Thomas and fam
ily and Mrs. Tom Pickle spent Sunday
with Mr. and Mrs. Otis Rogers.
Miss Ruth Baker, of Knoxville, and
Mrs. Henry Miller, of Chattanooga, spent
Sunday with Mrs. T. P. Baker.
Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Cox and chil
dren, of Saginaw, Mich., spent the week
end with Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Allison, Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. Boyd and Mrs. Nola Wil
son, of Chattanooga, spent Sunday with
Misses Margie and George Thomas.
Mrs. Robert Deering, of Cloudland, is
visiting her daughter, Mrs. Luther Pled
ger, this week.
Mrs. W. J. Hogg was surprised with a
birthday dinner last week. Mr. and Mrs.
Jim Hollis, Mrs. R. H. Gaylor and chil
dren and Mrs. J. H. Hollis, of Lyerly,
were guests.
J. D. Eldrod, of Maude, Tex.; Mr. and
Mrs. Van Beaver, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Griffith, of Kannapolis, N. C., and Mr.
and Mrs. J. C. Tucker, of Round Moun
tain. Ala., were week-end guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Bert Crane.
Holland Thomas filled Mr. Parker’s
appointment at Pleasant Grove Sunday
night.
Several attended the young people’s
meeting at Trion Monday night.
Jim Colquitt returned home from the
hospital Monday.
Misses Margie and Georgia Thomas and
Louise Wilson are spending a few days
in Chattanooga.
Mrs. F. H. McWhorter and Mildred
McWhorter and Mrs. J. E. Kennedy
spent Saturday in Rome.
Mr and Mrs. Norman Garvin, J. E.
Kennedy, Mrs. George Welch, Sr., and
Mrs. Pax Jones attended the funeral of
Mrs. W. K. Beavers Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs Henry Lawless and Jes
sie Lawless spent Friday in Chattanooga.
Mr. and Mrs. Buel Smith were week
end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Homer Ab
ernathy, of Highland, Ga.
Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Smith spent Sun
day with Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Gaylor at
Lyerly.
Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Crane had as
dinner guests Sunday Mr and Mrs. Her
bert Griffith, Mr. and Mrs Van Beaver,
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Griffith and fami
ly and Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Griffith.
Miss Kathryn Rogers spent the week
end with her parents in Thomaston.
Mr. and Mrs. Hamilton Tucker, of
Cleveland, spent Sunday with relatives.
Miss Betty Magill spent the week-end
in Chattanooga.
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Jennings and Mr.
and Mrs. Ralph Jennings and children,
of Montgomery, Ala., spent Sunday with
Mrs. E. M. Jennings.
Mrs. O. L. Cleckler and Miss Mvrtle
Jennings are attending presbyterial in
Marietta.
Mr. and Mrs. Elbert Rider, of Chatta
nooga, were visiting relatives last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Baker are spending
a few days in south Georgia.
CHILD HIT BY TRAIN. UNHURT.
RICHMOND, Cal. —Seeing a child on
the tracks a block away, Engineer C. I.
Dalton applied the emergency brakes of
his Sante Fe transcontinental stream
liner and brought the train to a halt just
as the cowcatcher of the locomotive pick
ed the child, Beverly Lewis, 2, up and
tossed her into a pile of grass. She
wasn’t even scratched.
Bad Breath May Show
You Need This Help !
Bad breath is sometimes due to bad
teeth and often due to sluggish
bowels.
It offends. And to neglect it may in
vite a host of constipation’s other
discomforts: headaches, bilious
ness, loss of appetite and energy.
Don’t let constipation slow you
down. Take a little spicy, all vege
table BLACK-DRAUGHT tonight.
In the morning there’s an evacua
tii t that’s generally thorough. You
fi .1 fine again!
BLACK-DRAUGHT’S principal in
gredient is an “intestinal tonic
- lazy bowel muscles. Millions of
packages used yearly!
by Rice\
STREETS
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Legal Notices’
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TWELVE MONTHS’ SUPPORT
Chattooga Court of Ordinary—At Cham
bers—April Tenn, 1939.
The appraisers of Mrs. Carrie Nelson,
widow of said Jim Nelson, for a twelve
months’ support for herself and two mi
nor children, having filed their return;
all persons concerned hereby are cited to
show cause, if any they have, at the
next regular May, 1939, term of this
court, why said application should not
be granted. 4t-Apr27
H. A. ROSS. Ordinary.
NOTICE TO NON-RESIDENTS.
GEORGIA. Chattooga County.
Willie L. Smith vs. Richard James,
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THE SUMMERVILLE NEWS: THURSDAY, APRIL 20, 1939
Frank James, Mrs. Lila Sway and G.
AV. .Smith.
Petition for sale of land and division of
proceeds of sale among commons
owners.
Richard James, Frank James and
Mrs. Lila Sway, non-resident defend
ants in the above stated proceeding are
hereby required to take notice that after
sixty days from the 23rd day of March.
1939, the petitioner Willie L. Smith,
will apply to the Superior Court of
Chattooga County, Georgia, and the
judge of said court for and order ap
pointing three discreet persons of said
county and directing and empowering
them to advertise and sell sixty-five
acres, more or less of land in lot of
land, Number 34 in the Sixth district
and Fourth Section of said county,
bounded by lines as follows: Beginning
at the original northwest corner of said
lot of land; thence running south on
Roberts Resumes
His Efforts For
Farmers’ Market
ATLANTA, April 18 (CNS).—Com
missioner of Agriculture Columbus Rob
erts has resumed his efforts to enlarge
the effectiveness of the group of farm
ers’ markets under his direction. Con
templated in the plan is a larger market
in Atlanta and improved markets in oth
er cities of Georgia. The Atlanta mar
ket main source of income of this divis
ion of the state department of agricul
ture, could earn enough money at the
moderate fees now charged to finance
erection of an adequate and modern mar
ket and, at the same time, pay the cost
of maintaining additional markets over
the state until they can be brought to a
self-supporting levpl, experts of the de
partment believe.
Mr. Roberts, after consultations with
federal officials, sought authority from
the recent assembly for creation of a
market authority to secure federal grants
and loans to construct an adequate mar
ket in Atlanta. The necessary legislation
passed the state senate, virtually without
any opposition, and confronted no oppo
sition in the house, but died on the cal
endar in the closing hours of the session.
Since the close of the session, however,
Mr. Roberts has resumed negotiations
with federal officials, in an effort to es
tablish the new market under some lease
purchase agreement, similar to that un
der which Georgia now holds the prison
in Tattnall county.
While reticent on details of the plan
to seek federal financial aid, Mr. Roberts
is enthusiastic over the possibilities for
farmers as a result of an expanded sys
tem of markets, believing that proper fa
cilities for distribution of farm products,
especially vegetables, would mean much
in the way of increased income for Geor
gia growers.
the original west line of said lot of land
to the point where the same is inter
sected by the north line of Dawson’s
tract in said lot; thence running east
wardly with said Dawson line to Chat
tooga river; thence running up said
river to the original north line of said
lot of land; thence running west on
said original north line of the point of
beginning; of which said tr'act of land,
the petitioner alleges that he and the
defendants Richard James, Frank
James, Mrs. Lila Sway and G. W.
Smith are the common owners and that
the same can not be fairly divided be
tween said owners by metes and bounds.
Witness the Honorable C. H Porter,
judge of said court, this the 23rd day of
March, 1939.
JOHN S. JONES, Clerk.
4t Meh 23,30, Apr. 13,27.
-
a
■k-
I Potash
I APPLIED AT CHOPPING
I MADE THE DIFFERENCE
I I
ViF you did not apply enough potash at planting
i>3 time or if your cotton rusts, it will cost little
to apply more potash in a nitrogen-potash top
dresser. The increased yields, control of rust,
reduced wilt injury, and improved quality which <
will result from this extra potash will return the
■ small investment many times. Heavier bolls,
■ more lint per seed, longer staple, stronger fibers, *
and easier picking also result. An increase of
SSe a
sls to $25 per acre in the value of the crop due .
to the extra potash has been secured in practical
field tests and experimental work.
Your county agent or experiment station will
|| tell you whether you applied enough potash at
S planting time. See your fertilizer dealer or manu- :
f facturer about adding the equivalent of 50-100 lbs. .
of muriate of potash in a nitrogen-potash top
dresser. Keep your plants growing vigorously <
into the profits which you plan to make this year.
Write us for our
free booklet,
“ Greater Profits ■
from Cotton."
I American Potash Institute
INCORPORATED
INVESTMENT BUILDING WASHINGTON. D. C.
SOUTHERN OFFICE: MORTGAGE GUARANTEE BLDG,, ATLANTA, GA.