Newspaper Page Text
Page 2
NN C T K
JUNIOR-SENIOR BANQUET
The Junior-Senior banquet was
held in the Summerville High
School Library Friday, May 3, at
7:30 p. m. The class colors of red
and white were carried out in
the decoration of the library.
The toastmaster, Mr. Adams,
presided. Toasts were given by
members of the Junior and Sen
ior Classes.
Entertainment was provided
by vocal selections rendered by
Mrs. John Paul Jones, accom
panied on the accordion by Mrs.
George Dunagan. An interesting
talk was given by C. B. Akin,
speaker of the evening.
Gifts to the Senior Class, name
bracelets for the girls and mono
grammed handkerchiefs for the
boys were presented by Kathryn
Phillips.
After the banquet, a dance was
held in the gymnasium, which I
was attractively decorated as an :
outdoor garden. Music was fur
— |
WAKE VP ,
AND LIVE. 1
Get that *“Red Blooded"
Feeling Today
Why *drag around, ‘feel run
down, ’depressed, ‘dog tired,
•discouraged with‘poor appetite
Don't have that •nutritional fa
tigue, from simply needing V-T.
V-T Tonic is the one scientifically
compounded with, iron, (needed
in the building of rich red blood),
AND other IMPORTANT Min
erals, PLUS Vitamins and PO
TENT Liver Extract, to give a
more balanced action for more
OVER-ALL results. If you are not
THRILLED with the satisfaction
of V-T after only one bottle, your
money back. Ask your doctor
about V-T’s valuable formula.
BAmazinj KOH. '
VITAMIN "in!
MINERAL TCI! i
i - I
McGinnis Drug Co.
The Rexall Store
Summerville, Georgia
We Have a Very
Limited Supply of
Kitchen Cabinets
New Shipment of
2-Pc. Living Room
Suites
Your Choice of Fast Colors
We pay highest prices for
Used Furniture.
See Us Before You Sell
Hair Motor Company
Furniture Department
nished by Roland Gray’s orches
tra.
♦ # *
WE WONDER
WHY:
Everyone was so sleepy Satur
day morning? Was it because of
the Junior-Senior banquet and
dance?
Don Gross changed partners at
the dance?
Two couples left the dance
early to head toward the lake
in Tennessee. Closed, waddin’ it?
Charles Tribble was so blue
Monday? Could it be because
Doris quit school.
WHERE:
A certain crowd went so often
Friday night.
Johnnie Martin's truck went
I so oiten last week?
Mrs. McGinnis dressed for the
dance?
WHO:
Escorted Sue T. to the dance?
Took Bettye Sue home Friday
night?
Ate chicken with their fingers?
HOW:
The Sophomores liked serving
at the banquet and then getting
to dance afterwards?
The Seniors like their gifts?
The Juniors decorated the gym
so nicely?
* * *
BETA CLUB
The Beta Club met Wednesday,
April 24, to elect its officers. Of
ficers were elected from the
Senior Class to serve the re
mainder of this year. At the next
meeting, officers from the Jun
ior Class will be elected to serve
for the 1946-47 term.
Members of the Beta Club
were chosen on the basis of
their grades and attitude. The
following are members of the
Beta Club:
Betty Alexander, Mary Espy,
Florence Flanagan, Ada Margaret
Duff, Margaret Meadows, Char
’ lotte Moore, Wylene Perry, Bet
i tye Sue Gaylor, Leo Hartline,
Bobby Housch, Bettye Earle Lee,
j Ann Williams, Imogene Scoggins,
! Rose Nell Weems, Mary Housch,
Kathryn Phillips, Walter Wil
■ liams, Madeline Wilson, Frances
| Palmour, Glenna Waters and
j Johnnie Allison.
1 The officers are: President,
Imogene Scoggins; vice presi
dent, Rose Nell Weems; secre
tary, Bettye Earle Lee and, treas
urer, Bobby Housch.
* * *
HITS OF THE WEEK
Favorite Color: Pink.
Favorite Movie: “The Lost
Week-end.”
Favorite Actor: Ray Milland.
Favorite Actress: Jane Wyman.
Favorite Saying: “Thanks,
thanks a lot, but no thanks.
Favorite Song: “I’m a Big Girl
Now.”
Favorite Couple: Harry Foster
and Mozelle Parker.
SARAH ANN’S
COOKING CLASS
The salad offers ample oppor
tunity to the hostess for display
ing originality and delicacy of
taste. The ingredients must be
fresh and thoroughly chilled.
I During the warmer months, the
I salad is ideal for the first course
of every well-planned dinner. Be
sure to serve a light salad for
dinner. The heavier salads, such
I as chicken, lobster, etc., are ex
cellent for luncheon or supper.
Celery and Carrot Salad
Cut celery stalks in inch
lengths. Mix equal amounts of
grated cheese and grated carrots.
Moisten slightly with mayon
naise. Add a few chopped nuts.
Fill stalks and serve on crisp let
tuce with French dressing.
Vegetable Bouquet Salad
Place your preferred mixture
of vegetable salad on a lettuce
nest. Top it with cooked cauli
flower. Circle that with carrot
slices cut in stars, surround with
green peas. Lastly, have a circle
of tomato sections or diced beets.
With a sprig of the cauliflower,
you have an old-fashioned nose
gay.
Lobster Salad
Make a marinade of y 2 cup
vinegar, y 2 cup oil, the juice of
two lemons, one teaspoon salt
and y 2 teaspoon white pepper.
Put tnis over the lobster meat
i and set in a cold place for sev
eral hours. Press the marinade
mixture from the lobster and to
I one pint of lobster add the fol
lowing ingredients: Three hard
boiled eggs cut lengthwise and
across, three olives cut fine, three
pickles cut fine, y 2 tablespoon
of smallest capers, y 2 tablespoon
minced dill pickles. If celery is
desired cut two stalks into nar
row, thin strips and leave out one
of the eggs. Toss this mixture
lightly together and add mayon
naise enough to moisten the in-
THE SUMMERVILLE NEWS: SUMMERVILLE, GA.
gredients. Do not stir the salad,
but move it lightly with a wood
en spoon.
French Potato Salad
Boil potatoes with their jack
ets until they are done but still
firm. Peel and slice them while
t hot; mix with a French dressing
to which a little chopped olives
has been added. Cool and let
. them chill. Pile'bn crisp lettuce
, and sprinkle with paprika. Serve
with stuffed eggs and boneless
1 sardines.
Pear Salad
Marinate pear halves in French
dressing and chill thoroughly.
Fill centers with guava jelly.
Serve on crisp lettuce with a
dressing made of two eggs, juice
of one lemon, two tablespoons
sugar and 1 tablespoon butter.
Beat eggs until light, add lem
■ on juice, sugar and butter L%.'ad
; ually, stirring constantly. Cook
until mixture thickens. Cool and
‘ fold in y 2 cup whipped evapor
• ated milk or cream.
Jennings Assigned to
L 4th Field Artillery
MANILA. P. I. Technician
Fifth Grade Dwight L. Jennings. I
of Chattanooga, has been assign- |
ed to the Fourth Field Artillerj’
Battalion of the 86th Division,
according to a press release from
the division’s public relations of
fice.
T/5 Jennings, whose wife and
daughter reside at 2110 Union
Ave., was inducted in February,
1945, and shipped overseas in
August where he was stationed
on Leyte and Luzon, successively,
with the 97th Field Artillery Bat
talion. He wears the Asiatic-Pa
cific theater and World War II
victory ribbons.
His parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wil
liam M. Jennings, live at Sum
merville, Ga.
Handle With Care
Observing that a repair man
who had fixed a tire for him was
rolling it the length of the ga
' rage, a motorist yelled: “Hey,
pick that thing up! What d’ya
want to do, wear it out?”
I 1
■ ■ ’ E
■ ■ . l _ T
M ,
’ 'Of 1 5 * -1 w
■ ’ S4iiWSßF.£'' : ' :; ' 'Z
(•® V-- ; -> s > ’ O . .. ?W- K ■: 4 i - i JB—F
* * : w wlm !• 4 .. *WI V ' '
i ; : ' ■■■<■ ' : *'WsXX •■ ■ '■
jMil -1| * 1 ••' vj
■< FO : a:< wt A K ■>■- ■■* ■■■■
WE HAVE A
COMPLETE LINE OF
CANDY
Mother’s Day
May 12 th
PLEsF REST AUR ANT
Arnall Lauds New
Book on Georgia
By Fact-Finders
Terming facts “the first requi
site for any program of state im
provement,” Gov. Ellis Arnall
has endorsed a new reference
book released this week by the
Citizens Fact - Finding Move
ment and urged Georgians to
“use it actively in making their
plans” for the future.
The book the governor refer
red to is called “Georgia Facts
in Figures,” an advance copy of
which was presented him in At
lanta last Friday night at a pre
publication dinner held by the
Citizens Fact-Finding Movement,
the non-profit research agency
which prepared it. About 150 of
the state's leading citizens, rep
resenting the 17 civic organiza
tions that set up the movement,
attended the dinner.
“If we are to build soundly in
our state,” said Governor Arnall.
“we must know what we have
that is good, so that we can re-
I tain those things; we must know
| what things are bad so that we
can eliminate them; we must
know what we need so that we
can build them . . . The Citizens
Fact - Finding Movement has
done a splendid thing in collect
ing all these basic statistics in
one volume and thus giving us
a panorama of our state as it
exists today.”
“Georgia Facts in Figures” pre
sents a challenge to all Geor
gians, the governor went on;
“ * * * to take it today and read
it, use it in making our plans,
and then * * * in a few years
compare the new figures and see
whether we have done what must
be done if Georgia is to be great;
to see whether we have provided
a balanced economy for our peo
ple, improved their educational
opportunities, saiegaurded their
health, built their highways,
helped them to become farm |
owners instead of sharecrop-
i pers.”
Motor Plows, Flown
From Willow Run,
On Display Here
A new rototiller farm machine,
shipped from the Willow Run,
Mich., plant by cargo plane in
the largest simultaneous air de
livery of farm equipment, is on
display in the showroom of L.
B. Harrell Enterprises.
Mr. Harrell, owner of the lo
cal company, said that addition
al shipments of the revolution
ary tilling machine will follow
as production is increased at the
former bomber plant. Graham-
Paign Motors Corp, has sched
uled manufacture at the rate of
2,000 units per month in May.
Ten big cargo planes of four
Airport Thursday morning car
rying 200 rototillers to distribut
ing plants throughout the coun
try.
The five-horsepower roto-tiller
operates on a different principle
than the ordinary plow. Instead
of simply turning the ground
over, the new machine thorough
ly churns and crumbles it with a
series of rapidly revolving steel
“claws,” producing a more uni-I
form seedbed in one operation
than is obtained in several op - ■
erations with plow, disc and hor- i
row.
With attachments, the versa
tile tiller serves as planter, lawn
mower, field mower, snowplow,
furrower, cultivator and porta
ble power-plant to operate farm
machinery.
Jersey blouses do double duty
with full daytime skirts or long
evening skirts.
Nothing Else But
The teacher was attempting
to illustrate the meaning of the
word “perseverance.”
“What is it,” she asked, “that
carries a man along rough roads,
up hills and down, through jun
gles and swamps and raging tor
rents?”
I The class was silent. Then Wil
lie saved the day by answering,
I“A jeep!”
Thursday, May 9, 1946
OREGON, 111. Believe it or
not, but Henry Cotlow resigned
from his position as postmaster
to become a rural mail carrier.
His reason: He wanted to get out
in the open spaces. He had been
postmaster lor 13 years.
How women girls
may get wanted relief
Jrom functional periodic pain j
Cardui is a liquid medicine which,
many women say has brought relief
from the cramp-like agony and ner
vous strain of functional periodic
distress. Here’s how it may help:
1 Taken like a tonic,
it should stimulate
appetite, aid diges
tion,* thus help build re
sistance for the “time”
to come.
Z J’SSSSv O Started 3 days be
fore “your time”, it
\thlS 2-Waul should help relieve
1 help * J pain due to purely func-
JLggay tional periodic causes.
Try Cardui. If it helps, you’ll
be glad you did.
% CARDUI
L * ® tE L * BEL DIRECTIONS
IMI M i
’ Your child is suffering when
he’s irritable. Watch for a
\ coated tongue often the I«g
i sign a laxative is needed. Stag
(Faulty elimination often
I makes children sluggish and
I restless. Your child can get
I relief with Triena—the fam-
I ous laxative made with sen
| na. And children like to take
I Triena, because it’s flavored
I with real prune
I juice. Don’t up-
I set your child—
Ito give him
I medicine. Get n
TRIENA. // Im
I Caution, use Im
I only as di- l/H
I rected ! 30c,
I lar g e size /l M
!■ oniy 50c. g j/Q