Newspaper Page Text
s Farmer’s Column
Chattooga County will have about
15 4-H Club boys and girls with ap
proximately 20 club calves to show
in the Fat Cattle Show in Rome,
April 2 and 3.
A series of community meetings
are being continued this week. Mon
day night a meeting will be held at
Subligna, Wednesday night at
Trion, Thursday night at Summer
ville and Friday night at Teloga.
All of these meetings are to be held
in the schoolhouses, except at Sum
merville, and will be held in the
courthouse there. C. C. Brooks, J.
K. Thomas and the county agent
will be at each of these meetings
to discuss the recommendation of
the farm program planning com
mittee and any other part of the
farm program that you are con
cerned with. All farmers and their
families are urged to attend.
The forms to fill out in order to
get the tax refund on farm-op
erated machinery is in the county
agent’s office. Please come by and
fill one out if you have a tractor
or other farm machinery that burns
gas.
Chattooga County farmers are
urged this week to develop their
pasture programs and to plant and
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What the Catholic Church Is and What
She Teaches
A statement of Catholic Doctrine Pamphlet mailed
on request.
Address: 2699 Peachtree Road, NE, Atlanta, Ga.
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improve their pastures.
Food and feed outlook empha
sizes the value of good pasture pro
grams, and that good pasture is im
portant, since it provides the cheap
est and best feed for farm livestock.
Timber and other growth inter
fering with pasture plants should
be removed. Grass or weeds and
leaves on the land should be worked
in the soil. After that, land should
be disked or plowed, leaving the
soil on top, and then worked into
a good seedbed by harrowing.
Lime and phosphate are impor
tant in pasture planting, and pot
ash and nitrogen are sometimes
necessary. Lime can be applied be
fore or after soil is prepared, but it
is best to apply fertilizer after pre
paring the soil.
Two thousand to three thousand
pounds of limestone per acre is
recommended. Good initial appli
cations of phosphate are 500 to
800 pounds, or 20 per cent super
phosphate equivalent per acre.
Pasture seed should be sown
evenly and covered lightly by har
rowing or by using brush or roller.
In either case, the area should be
rolled to compact the soil about the
seed.
Use seed of high quality and pas
ture plants that will give the best
grazing.
Farm Bureau News
MACON, Ga., March 19.—Edward
A. O’Neal, of Chicago, president of
the American Farm Bureau Fed
eration, will head the list of distin
guished speakers at a farm bureau
sponsored meeting to be held in
Macon on Thursday, April 4, when
leaders in the field of agriculture,
business and industry will magnify
the need for unifying the efforts
of all groups for the economic ad
vancement of the state.
Announcement of the Macon
meeting was made this week by H.
L. Wingate, president, and H. R.
Yandle, director of public relations,
respectively, of the Georgia Farm
Bureau Federation.
THE SUMMERVILLE NEWS, THURSDAY, MARCH 21, 1946.
The meeting will be one of the
most important held in the state
and will bring to the central city
3,000 to 5,000 farmers, industrial
leaders, business and professional
men.
Representing industry at the Ma
con session will be Robert R. Wa
son, of New York, president of the
National Association of Manufac
turers, and H. G. Hitt, of Atlanta,
president of the Associated Indus
tries of Georgia. Top-ranking of
ficials of the U. S. treasury de
partment will appear on the one
day program, according to GFBF
officials, whose addresses will be
the first public announcement in
the state regarding the activities of
the world monetary conference in
Savannah and its effect on agricul
ture as they relate to world trade.
The Mecon meeting will climax
a series of district conferences held
in 1945 by the Georgia Farm Bu
reau and the Associated Industries
of Georgia, at which time much in
terest was manifested by members
of both groups, and the general pub
lic in the sections where these ses
sions were held.
Leading bankers of Atlanta and
other cities in Georgia and the
south will be present for the April
4 meeting, as well as leading agri
cultural officials of the southern
states; United States senators and
congressmen, governors of the ad
joining states, and presidents of
farm bureau organizations of many
sections of the country. In addi
tion, there will be in attendance
representatives of both daily and
weekly newspapers of Georgia and
the south.
It is expected that the presence
of Mr. O’Neal in Georgia will in
sure a record attendance of farm
bureau members from every section
of the state, as well as county and
city officials. Mr. Wingate will
preside at the meeting and intro
duce the American Farm Bureau
Federation president, who is recog
nized as one of the most prominent
men in the nation.
Addresses of the distinguished
visitors will be broadcast, and the
April 4 conference promises to be
one of the most important ever
held in the south and attendance
is expected to shatter all past rec
ords for a one-day meeting in the
state.
Complete program of the Macon
session will be announced next week
and will appear in this newspaper.
John L. Teague underwent a se
rious operation at Erlanger hospital
in Chattanooga Tuesday. He is
known by friends as Lidge Teague.
UPSET STOMACHS
YIELD INCHES OF
GAS AND BLOAT
“I was so full of gas I was afraid
I’d burst. Sour, bitter substance
rose up in my throat from my up
set stomach after meals. I got IN
NER-AID, and it worked inches of
gas and bloat from me. Waistline
is way down now. Meals are a
pleasure. I praise Inner-Aid to the
sky.”—This is an actual testimo
nial from a man living right here
in Summerville.
INNER-AID is the new formula
containing medicinal juices from
12 Great Herbs; these herbs cleanse
bowels, clear gas from stomach, act
on sluggish liver and kidneys. Mis
erable people soon feel different all
over. So don’t go on suffering.—
Get Inner-Aid. Sold by all drug
stores here in Chattooga county.
. (Adv.)
Menlo Methodist Church
Rev. J. L. Caldwell, pastor, an
nounces the following services for
Sunday: Morning services, Sunday
school, 10 a.m.; worship, 11 a.m.;
evening service, 7:30 p.m. Union
services at Presbyterian church.
T. J. Espy, Jr.
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Summerville, Ga.
Office Over McGinnis
Drug Co.
Dr. J. H. Shumate, Jr.
DENTIST
Summerville-Trion Hospital
Telephone 199
QUICK’RELIEF.FROM
Symptoms of Distress Arising from
STOMACH ULCERS
due TO EXCESS ACID
FreeßookTellsofHomeTreatmentthat
Must Help or It Will Cost You Nothing
Over two million bottles of the WILLAR D
TREATMENT have been sold for relief of
symptoms of distress arising from Stomach
and Duodenal Ulcers due to Excess Acid-
Poor Digestion, Sour or Upset Stomach,
Gassiness, Heartburn, Sleeplessness, etc.,
due to Excess Acid. Sold on 15 days’ trial!
Ask for “Willard’s Message" which fully
saplaiua thia treatment—free—at sa
mcginnis drug co.
Lyerly:
DOSTER DRUG CO.
Now Is The Time!
To Furnish Your Home
Be ready for spring with new
furniture.
Visit our store today and make
your selections from our stock.
Agent for G-E appliances, also
Speed Queen Washers, Philco
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9
Furniture Department
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LADIES’ SILK RAYON SLIPS
Tearose. Sizes 34 to 42—One to a Customer
SPECIAL $1.05
Ladies’ Spring Silk PRINT DRESSES
Sizes 12 to 20
EXTRA VALUE $5.00
MEN’S SPRING DRESS SLIPPERS
Just Arrived—s4.9B and $5.95
LADIES’ SPRING HATS
$2.98 and $3.98
CHILDREN’S SANDALS
Sizes 6 to 11—Several Shades
Extra Value—sl.69 Pair
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LADIES’ WHITE MOCCASINS
All Sizes—s2.9B
LADIES’ SPRING BAGS
$1.98 to $4.98, Plus Tax
Children’s PRINTED CREPE DRESSES
Sizes 7 to 14
Extra Value—sl.9o
THE FAMOUS STORE