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WITH THE STARS
Edna Best, English actress, is return
ing to the American screen after an ab
sence of five ears. She will appear in
“Intermezzo,” with Leslie Howard and
Ingrid Bergman ... ,
Florence Rice will replace Lena Turner
as the feminine lead in “A Day at the
Circus,” with the Marx brothers . . .
Joan Crawford’s next picture will be
called “Park Avenue Models.” It was
formerly announced for Hedy LaMarr,
under another title . . .
If Jeanette MacDonald signs a new
contract with her studio, she will prob
ably co-star with Nelson Eddy in a r--
make of Noel Coward’s “Bittersweet.”
Lew Ayres has been given the leading
romantic role in “It Can’t Happen
Here.” This is his first assignment under
his new contract with Metro . . .
Henry Fonda will probably play the
part of Tom .Toad in John Steinbeck's
novel, “Grapes of Wrath.” a story of
dust bowl rdfugees . . .
The studio has assigned Robert Taylor,
Spencer Tracy and Margaret Sullavan
to parts in Remarque’s new novel about
Jewish refugees in Germany. The story
is “Heroes” and will be mad' in the ear
ly autumn. Screen rights to the novel are
rumored to have cost Metro $55,000 . . .
Henry Fonda and his wife are spend
ing a six weeks’ vacation in Miami and
on an airplane tour of South America ~
Alexander Wdollcott is expected to
leave New York sometime during this
month for Callendar, Ont., where he will
write and appear in a two-reel picture
with the Dionne quintuplets . . .
Douglas Fairbanks is planning to re
sume production of his pictures next
year and his first will be “The Californ
ian,” based on the life of Lola Montez . .
James Stewart and Margaret Sullavan
will co-star in "The Shop Around the
Corner” . . .
Boris Karloff will appear in four pic
0— ri n i ■"i"p i;i mini n ■■■ t: mi i.: ! ' i o —i n ti tj ■— ir?
I I
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j Two Times I
| “THERE ARE two times when a man
shouldn’t gamble,” said Mark Twain, “first, x
X when he can’t afford it; and. second, when
he can.” Why gamble on your security when
adequate insurance will guarantee to pro
tect you?
I Summerville Insurance Agency j
| Office: 109 N. Commerce SI. j
Phone 371 Summerville
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>«■»■< >««■►<)«■»< >«■»< > 111 < >«■»!
FRANK WATERS
RADIO SHOP
Now Located On ;!
SOUTH COMMERCE ST. ]|
TO MY FRIENDS AND CUSTOMERS ! ’
I have moved my Radio and Refrigera- ;!
tor Business to my new location at my ;!
home and am prepared to give you better ;>|
and cheaper service than ever before.
I will continue to repair radios and serv- !;
ice refrigerators, and have new cheap <[
prices on Tungsol tubes, and will continue ; !
to sell G. E. Appliances, R. C. A. Victor <!
and Philco Radios. ! I
Your Patronage Will Be Appreciated
JUST RING TELE. 360-2 AND I WILL I;
CALL FOR AND DELIVER RADIOS
REPAIRED. ! i
tures centering around Mr. Wong, the
detective . . .
John Trent will appear in four Tail
spin Tommy pictures . . .
Myrna Loy doesn’t like the idea of
being typed when she first entered pic
tures she was always cast as a slinking
oriental. Later on she bebame known as
the perfect movie wife; now she has a
part in “The Rains Come,” as the ruth
less Lady Esketh. When she finishes that
she will make another ‘Thin Man’ story
with William Powell . . .
SALE OF LAND FOR PARTITION.
GEORGIA. Chattooga County:
Pursuant to an order of the Superior
count of said County, and a writ directed
to us by the Clerk of said court on the
third day of June. 1939, we, the under
signed, will sell at public outcry to the
highest bidder for cash, before the Court
House door of said County and within
the legal hours of sale on the first Tues
day in July. 1939. next, and as the prop
erty of Willie L. Smith, G. W. Smith.
Richard James, Frank Janies and Mrs.
Lila Sway, the following described land :
A tract ot 65 acres, more or less, of land
in Lot of Land No. 34 in the Sixth
district and Fourth section of Chattooga
County, Georgia, located in said Lot of
Land and bounded by lines, as follows:
beginning at the original Northwest cor
ner of said Lot of Land, No. 34; thence
running South on the original West line
of said Lot of Land to the point where
the same is intersected by the north line
of Dawson’s tract in said Lot of Land ;
thence running Eastwardly on the North
line of said Dawson tract to Chattooga
River; thence running up said river to
the original north line of said Lot of
Land. No. 34 ; thence running West on
said original north line to the point of
the beginning.
I. M. HENDERSON,
D. P. HENLEY.
J. L. M'GINNIS,
Commissioners
4t -Ju n 29
THE SUMMERVILLE NEWS: THURSDAY, JUNE 8, 1939
ANYTHING BI T THAT!
(An Editorial from the Rotarian
Magazine)
Cherished among the many legends of
the Spanish-American people of New-
Mexico is the story of San Ysidro.
It seems that San Ysidro was plowing
his garden one spring day, when an angel
appeared and said to him: “The Lord
wants to see you, Ysidro. Come with me.”
Y’sidro plowed on. “I can't go now',” he
answered. “You tell the Lord that I'm
late in getting my corn planted and that
I’ll see Him later when I’ve finished.”
The angel nodded and disappeared.
Soon another messenger hovered about
San Ysidro’s plow. “The Lord wants to
see you right now,” he said. “And if you
don't come at once, the Lord says He'll
send hot winds and drought to wither
your corn.”
Y’sidro paused only long enough to
wipe the sweat from his brow. “I’ve had
hot winds and droughts before, and they
don’t bother me.” he said. “I can carry
water from the river. Tell the Lord I
can’t come now, but will see Him when
I have my corn planted.”
Baffled, that angel, too, vanished.
A few' moments later a third angel,
larger and sterner than the other two.
tapped Ysidro on the shoulder. “The Lord
doesn’t like your attitude,” the heavenly
courier said. “He says if you don’t come
with me right now He'll send a plague
of locusts to devour your corn from the
top and a plague of cutworms to eat its
roots.”
"That doesn't frighten me,” answered
Ysidro, turning his plow and starting
back. “I’ve had plagues before, and with
fires and hoeing and hard work. I've
saved my corn. You tell the Lord I’ll see
Him tomorrow.”
And so the third angel flew aw’ay.
San Ysidro had plowed several furrows
before the fourth messenger glided to
earth.
“The Lord isn't going to argue any
more,” the angel announced, flapping his
winds hard to keep up with the stubborn
plowman. “He simply said that if yon
don’t come with me right away, He'll
send you a bad neighbor.”
Instantly San Y’sidro stopped his mule
and wrapped the reins around the plow
handle. For the first time there was fear
in his eyes.
“A bad neighbor!” he shouted, “No,
no ! I can stand hot winds and droughts,
locusts and cutworms—l can stand any
thing but a bad neighbor. I'll go with yon
right now.”
THE ANSWERS
1. Yes; from light rays.
2. Some experts think so.
3. 5.700.000 seniors and 9.000,000 jun
ior members.
5. According to the official Catholic
directory for 1939, 21.406.507.
6. The bleeding, it is newly reported,
can be stopped by an intravelous injec
tion of oxalic acid.
7. Estimated: $62,000,000,000.
8. No: it will require loans of sl.-
778.000.000. \
9. About 300.000.
10. Wholesale commodity' prices are
ibout 4 per cent, lower than a year ago.
Expansion of Farm
Market System Seen
ATLANTA, June 6 (CNS).—Many-
Georgia cities and towns are still seeking
the establishment of a state farmers’
market, officials of the state department
>f agriculture state. Such markets not
only furnish a quick outlet for farm
products but tend to stabilize farm prices,
it has been demonstrated.
Since the state farm market system
receives no assistance from the state
reasury in any way, and is dependent
upon its own revenues for operation and
■xpansion. it is unlikely that funds will
be available for new construction until
provision can be made for erecting a new
market in Atlanta. The profits of the At
anta market finance the operation of the
ystem. since the smaller units generally
FREE
ENLARGEMENT
With each 8 Ex. roll
of film finished
MAIL
Your Film To
DUDLEY Studios
Chattanooga, Tenn.
Send 25c with each
8-exposure roll to be
finished.
-I-™—a-———
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in its merit? Record of the fa
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users queried say CAR DUI
helped them. That figures 93 out
of 100! What a record!
Women all over the South are
eager to tell of their experiences
with CARD UI. They were
weak, rundown, nervous. Those
are symptoms of functional dys
menorrhea due to malnutrition,
which CAR DUI helps to re
lieve by stimulating appetite and
digestion and building physical
resistance. Try CA R D UI!
BIBLE QUESTIONS
By THOMAS D. LYNN.
CORRECTION.
In last week's Bible Questions there
is a slight error : Please not the Scrip
ture (Mark 11 :15,16) should read
(Mark 16:15,16.) T.D.L
Q. What noted Bible character was
called the dreamer?
A. Joseph.
Q. What was his father’s name?
A. Jacob.
Q. Where was Joseph born?
A. At. Padan-Aram.
Q. Did Joseph’s brethren love him?
A. No. They hated him.
Q. Why did his brethren hate him?
A. Because his father loved him more
than they. (Gen. 37:2,3.)
Q. What two dreams did Joseph dream
that caused his brethren to be angry
with him?
A. He dreamed that he and his breth
ren were binding sheaves in the field and
his sheaf stood upright and their sheaves
bowed to his sheaf.
Q. What did they say about this dream?
A. Shalt thou indeed reign over ns?
or shalt thou indeed have dominion
over us?
Q. Did this dream come to pass? Is
so, when?
A. Y'es. When they went down to
Egypt to buy corn, they bowed to Joseph,
the governor of Egypt.
Q. What other dream did Joseph
dream?
A. He dreamed that the sun, the moon
and the eleven stars made obesiance to
him.
Q. Was this dream fulfilled? If so,
when ?
A. Yes. When his father, brothers and
their families went down into Egypt.
(Gen. 47 :12.)
Q. How did Joseph's brethren re
venge?
A. They sold him into slavery to the
Midianites.
Q. To whom did the Midianites sell
him?
A. To Potiphar, an officer of Pharoah.
Q. Did Joseph find favor with Poti-
A. Yes. And he was made overseer in
Potiphar’s house. (Gen. 39:1-6.)
(To Be Continued.)
THEY SAY
“An ounce of mother is worth a pound
of clergy.”—Spanish Proverb.
Modern life with its crowded schedule
has caused many a woman to delegate
her motherly responsibilities for her chil
dren to other persons and agencies. Con
sequently, many children are being rob
bed of life's greatest asset —a mother’s
care and guidance.
Some one has said that since God could
not he everywhere. He made mothers.
(Os course, God is omnipresent, but not
anthropomorphically so.) B ut how light
ly the responsibility resits upon many I
Too often the child is turned over to
the hired girl, while the mother enters
the race of modernity. There is no re
flection on the hired girl. The reflection
is upon the mother who imagines that
there can be another person in all the
world who can fill her place in the life
of her child.
Not even a school teacher, nor a Sun
day school teacher, nor a pastor, can
itone for the neglect of a mother who
has been disloyal to the most sacred trust
ever reposed in a human being; namely,
the love and care and guidance of a son
or daughter.
Shall we say that schools and Sunday
schools, churches and clubs, are not im
portant? In the words of the Apostle to
the Gentiles, “God forbid I” But this I
must be faithful to say: If a mother’s
esponsibility to her child is not fulfill
ed, pretty soon we will not have any
schools and Sunday schools, churches
and clubs, worth very much. “If the
foundations 'be destroyed, where will th<
righteous stand?” What can a teacher or
preacher do for a child or a young per
son, try as hard as he may, if back of
that child or young persons there is not
lie love and care and guidance and DIS
CIPLINE of MOTHER?
are operated at a small loss to the de
partment.
Enactment of a measure providing for
a farm market authority, thus permitting
the department to secure federal funds
for construction of the new Atlanta proj
ect, would enable the department to build
from two to four new markets annually
in other towns with profits from opera
lions on the Atlanta market, department
experts estimate.
Doctors From Three
States Plan Session
ALBANY, Ga„ June 6 (GPS).—Medi
cal men from three states —Georgia. Ala
bama and Florida —will gather at Radi
um Springs, near Albany, for the thirty
ninth meeting of the Chattahoochee Val
ley Medical asociation July 11. 12 and
13. More than 200 doctors are expected
to attend.
An interesting scientific program has
been arranged, together with entertain
ment including a golf tournament, a ban
quet and dance and a bridge party for
the women. The Dougherty County Med
ical society will be host at the barbecue.
The W. J. Love Memorial address will
be delivered by Lr. M. S. Davie, of
Dothan. Ala., president of the Alabama
State Medical association.
Officers of the C.V.M.A. are: Dr. John
S. Turberville. of Century. Fla., presi
dent: Dr. Guy J. Dillard, of Columbus,
Ga., and Dr. C. R. Bennett, of Eufanl.i.
Ala., vice-presidents, and Dr. Frank K.
Boland, of Atlanta, secretary-treasurer.
NATIONAL DEBT LIMITS.
With the present maximum restriction
of $45.000.000;000 on the total national
debt and a §30.000.000.000 limitation on
i government bonds. Henry Morgenthau ex
plains that while the treasury can bor
row $43.000,000,000 more, it can devote
only $1,697,000,000 to government bonds.
While no legislation is now pending to
increase the total maximum of indebted
ness. Secretary Morgenthau urges the re
peal of the limitation on the bonds.
FARM BRIEFS
By WHITNEY THAR LN,
Extension Editor.
Farmers throughout south Georgia are
vitally interested in the sanitation plan
of producing hogs. Judging by reports
from Charles E. Bell, Jr., of Tifton, ex
tension swine specialist, the day is not
far distant when every hog-producing
county in that area will have one or more
demonstration farms on which the sani
tation plan and the year-around grazing
plan will be put into effect. These dem
onstrations are set up on the farms of
hog producers who agree to eo-operate in
carrying out the approved production
methods. The demonstration farms show
other farmers in the community just
what can be accomplished with hogs when
they are produed under the sanitation
plan and with a year-around grazing
system. The day may yet dawn when
Georgia farmers will agree that the filthy
mudhole which serves as a hog lot is ac
tually the breeding place of parasites
which rob him of his hog profits.
Director Walter S. Brown, of the Geor
gia Agricultural Extension service, this
week urged businessmen to focus every
possible effort upon solving the interde
pendent problems of agriculture and in
dustry and pledged “the extension serv
ice, as always, glad to work with urban
as well as rural groups in solving farm
problems for the benefit of all.” His
pledge followed a similar pledge by Reu
ben Brigham, of Washington, D. C.. na
tional assistant director of extension
work, in an address before the recent an
nual meeting of the Southern Commer
cial Secretaries’ association at Rich
mond, Va.
The agricultural adjustment adminis
tration has announced that aerial photo
graphs of 3.385 square miles of farm
land in thirteen Georgia counties will
be made this summer. Aerial photography
is used under the conservation phase of
the Triple-A farm program as a cheaper
and more accurate means of checking per
formance 1 on farms. To date. 137 of
Georgia’s 159 counties have been photo
graphed from the air. The photographs
to be made this summer will include the
aerial mapping of three counties, Appling.
I AUCTION SALE •
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| DATE TO BE SET LATER '
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Bacon and Evans, which have not prev
iously bet-n flown. The aerial photography
scheduled for the other counties is the
re-flying of areas which were air-mapped
three to four years ago. Changes in the
location of fields, building, hedge rows,
fences and other landmarks have made
new photographs necessary.
Produce people, farmers and others
have co-operated in opening a new mar
ket in Philadelphia especially intended
to remove the congestion on that market
for produce handled by trucks. This mar
ket. known as the “Philadelphia Fresh
Fruit and Vegetable Terminal.” will be
of interest to Georgia producers since
trucks from Georgia carried the equiva
lent of 23(1 earloads of produce to the
Quaker city in 1938.
Georgia farmers who are considering
plans for making grass silage this sea
son have been advised by G. I. Johnson,
extension agricultural engineer, to make
sure of the strength of their silos. Grass
silage put up with either molasses or
phosphate may contain considerably more
moisture than most corn silage and may
exert outward pressure from 50 per cent,
greater to double or more the pressure of
corn silage. Johnson said. Farmers with
stave silos. Johnson said, may find it
necessary to add supplementary steel
hoops to make safe for grass silage the
silos that have been strong enough to
care for corn silage.
Wanted— A Worker
An honest, industrious man wanted by
nationally known mineral feed com
pany for work in this locality. Duties
will consist of calling on farmers and
rendering valuable live stock service.
It doesn’t take high pressure sales
manship to do this permanent work,
and no special experience is needed.
If you have a car, you can do this
job. For full particulars send your
name and address to Box 310, care of
this paper.
Name
Address