Newspaper Page Text
* 1V r P\Xr> ‘
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Mr. and Mrs. Jim Parker, Mrs.
Madelyn Morrison and Miss Jean
Parker spent Tuesday in Gad
sden.
Miss Tamora Thompson, of
Chattanooga, spent several days
last week with her aunts, Miss
Mary Thompson and Mrs. How
ard Bohanan.
Mrs. Nevin Climer and daugh
ter, of St. Louis, who have been
on an extended visit to Mr. and
Mrs. B. E. Neal, left Friday for
Jackson, Tenn., to join Mr. Clim
er. They will make their home
in Jackson. Mr. Climer. who is
employed by Greyhound Bus
Lines, has recently been trans
ferred from St. Louis to Jack
son, Tenn.
Mrs. Graves Myers. Jr., re
turned Friday from Grand I
Prairie, Tex. She was accompa- (
nied home by Mrs. Graves Myers j
111 and daughter, Lynne, who
will spend the remainder of the |
summer here.
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Channell j
and son. Jimmie, of Yazoo City,, ■
Miss., were guests last week of i!
relatives here. i;
Mrs. Duckett will come next
week to spend her vacation with ;
Mrs. Sizemore and family, also; 1
to vacation with Mr. and Mrs.'
Austin T. Moon and family, of 1
Tampa, Fla., who will arrive on '
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Singleton <
and little daughter, Sara Varner, 1
of Atlanta, were guests last week (
of their parents, Mr. and Mrs. 1
John Agnew.
Mrs. W. D. Martin and Mrs. (
Gordon Wheeler have returned 1 j
from a three-week stay in Cloud- 1
land. <
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Adams,
of Rome, visited relatives here <
Sunday. 1
Mrs. Bessie Lee and little
grandson, Lee Orr. of Birming- .
ham, are guests of Mrs. Anna <
Boling. i
Mrs. D. T. Espy, Mrs. Gardner
Bryant and Mrs. Hoke Groce,.
Doug Bryant, Davey and Carole,'
Espy were in Rome Tuesday.
Miss Charlotte Orr, of Car- I
rolton, spent last week with Miss !
Mary Meadows.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Baker were;
guests Monday night of Mr. and j
Mrs. P. B. Willingham in Cloud
land.
Mr. and Mrs. Hardie Dean and
children, of Centre, Ala., were
guests Sunday of Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Elrod.
Mr. and Mrs. Burdell Scog-|
gins, of Atlanta, were guests on!
Thursday of Mrs. W E. Dun
away.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Rogers, of
Atlanta, were guests Wednesday ;
of the Rotary Club.
Miss Mary Meadows is able to
be up part of each day, to the de
light of her many friends.
ON SALE
100 DRESSES, SLIPS, BLOUSES, SUMMER
PAJAMAS
REDUCED
50% 70%
New Shipments
OF FINE MERCHANDISE COMING IN
EVERY DAY
DRESSES BY L'AIGLON, MYNETTE, SEVEN
TEEN DOROTHY HOBBS, SERBIN, JUNIOR
HOUSE
BERKSHIRE HOSE, MISS ELAINE AND CAPRICE
SLIPS, PANTIES, SATIN GOWNS AND
BED JACKETS
NEW SUMMER TROUSERS FOR MEN
SIZES 28 TO 44
Bohanan ’s
Formerly The Thomas Shop
Mrs. Eugene Taylor, Miss Ade
i line and Gene Taylor are on a
- motor trip through the western
states and in Canada.
f L. T. Burnley has returned to
s his home in Crawfordsville after
s a visit with his sisters, Mrs. T.
-| M. Booth, Mr. Booth and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Hall Tyler an
_ nounce the birth of a daughter,
I Cheryl' Ann, at the Summerville
-1 Trion Hospital.
• Mr. and Mrs. Griffen Pledger
■ I are in Atlanta today.
>I Mr. W. O. Little is recuperating
; from an illness at the home of
; his niece, Mrs. Baker Farrar,
and Mr. Farrar.
Mr. and Mrs. Wyatt Ransom
and Mr. and Mrs. Willis James
who have exchanged houses
I moved Tuesday.
| Mrs. John K. Thomas and son,
| Kelly, of Senatobia, Miss., are
I guests of her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Fowler.
Miss Grade Lee Kelly, of At
i lanta, spent several days this
! week irr the home of the Allens,
j She left Wednesday morning for
| a stay in Miami. Fla.
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Rackley
and family are vacationing in
I the Smoky Mountains this week.
Mrs. Howard Pless and Miss ,
Florence Flanagan were in Rome
Tuesday. '
Dr. and Mrs. Cnarles Henry, of |
Chattanooga, were dinner guests !
last Thursday of Mr. and Mrs. i
Olney Meadows and family and ’
Mrs. B. A. Powell.
Chaplain and Mrs. Carl R.
Cheek, of Atlanta, will be the
guests Thursday and Friday of
their brother, Charles N. Cheek,
and Mrs. Cheek.
Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Myers, of
Clover, S. C., spent the past week
with relatives here and in Trion.
Mr. and Mrs. Gardner Bryant
and son, Doug, were guests Sun
day of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Bryant
in Lyerly.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Espy, of Mi-
J ami, Fla., are visiting relatives
here.
Mr. and Mrs. Billy McCollum,
lof Rome, visited their parents,
Mr. and Mrs. D. T. Espy, and
i family Sunday.
Miss Jean Morton is a guest of
relatives in Chattanooga this
week.
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Nunn, of
Trion, spent Sunday with Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Doster.
Misses Ann Allen and Mary
i Sue Williams are guests of Miss
i Mona Leland in Chattanooga.
Mrs. W. E. Bynum, Mrs. Louise
Hollander and daughter,
’ Blanche, were guests of Mrs. Fred
I Elrod Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred League and
daughter, Gloria, have returned
, to their home in Dalton after a
two-week visit with relatives
here.
THE SUMMERVILLE NEWS: SUMMERVILLE, GEORGIA
Mrs. W. E. Dunaway and Hil
ton were guests Sunday of Mr.
and Mrs. J. C. Parker.
Mrs. Bonnie Eleam and daugh
, ters, Patsy and Joyce, are spend
. ing their vacation in Warner
Robins, Ga.
Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Millard vis
ited Jerry Hill Mize at Battey
State Hospital in Rome Sunday.
Jerry is doing nicely.
Mrs. H. H Carl, of Eatonton,
is visiting in the home of her
sister, Mrs. T. M. Booth.
Mrs. Walter Sturdivant, of At
lanta, is spending this week here.
Miss Mildred Perry
To Wed E. W. Keeton
Mr. and Mrs. George Arnold
Perry announce the engagement
of their daughter. Miss Alice Mil- I
dred Perry, to William Keeton, of
Summerville, son of Mr. and I
Mrs. R. E. Keeton, of Chattanoo-!
ga. The marriage will take place
the afternoon of Aug. 17 at the
Unity Baptist Church.
The bride-elect is the sister of
Miss Ima Jean Perry and George
Arnold Perry, Jr. She is a grad
uate of Gore High School.
Mr. Keeton’s brothers are Wal
ter Keeton, of Chattanooga, and
Thomas Keeton, of Chickamauga, i
Mrs. Clifford Walters. Mrs. Roy,!
Carson, Mrs. R. S. Tucker ana
Miss Viola Keeton, all of Chat
tanooga, are his sisters. He is a
former resident of Chattanooga,
a graduate of Tyner High School
and at present holds a position
with The Summerville News.
Service and Hospital Chairman
Miss Mae Earl Strange tn Serve
As Legion Auxiliary Home
The American Legion Auxiliary
to Post 129 in co-operation with
the American Legion program,
announces that Miss Mae Earl
Strange will serve as general
fund chairman. This will include
raising funds for Battey Hos
pital Streptomycin general fund,
community service and war or
phans’ educational program.
The Auxiliary will hold the
July meeting Tuesday, July 22,
at 8 p. m. at the American Le
gion Hall. All members are urged
to attend this meeting. The
Auxiliary also contributes to
Hospital 48 for veterans in At- i
lanta.
Chattooga Garden Club
Meets Today at 3:30
The Chattooga Garden Club
will meet today (Thursday) at
the home of Mrs. J. L. McGinnis
at 3:30. Guest speakers are Mrs.
Henriette Pigotte, interior dec
ertor of Vancouver, Canada, and
Mrs. C. J. Smith, educational di
rector of Centre, Ala. Invited
guests are Mrs. Glenn William
son and Mrs. J. A. Shamblin, of
Centre, and Miss Jewell Poole
and Mrs. John D. Bankson.
FARMALL B tractor for sale,
with turning plow, planter and
cultivators. Cheap for quick sale.
See Bob Gamble. ts
IT'S AIR CONDITIONED
Dft Dlf theatre
j wB Dickeyville, Ga.
BIG SHOWS—LITTLE PRICES
FRIDAY NIGHT JULY 18TH
On Our Stage
TANI ALLEN and His
"COFFEE CJP HAWAIIAN'S"
—PIus—
"SONG OF SCHEHERAZADE"
SATURDAY, JULY 19TH
Two Features
"LAND OF THE LAWLESS"
V/ith Johnny Mac Brown Plus
"THE JUNGLE MAN"
With Buster Crabbe
Ser.al and Cartoon.
LATE SHOW—II P. M.
"ROMANCE OF THE LIMBERLOST"
MONDAY-TUESDAY, JULY 21-22
"WHEN THE DALTONS RODE"
With Randolph Scott, Andy Devine
"DARK HORSE"
With Phillip Terry and Ann Savage
WEDNESDAY, JULY 23
"THE HOUSE OF FRANKENSTEIN"
With Boris Karloff and Lon Chaney, Plus
Chapter 3 Tarzan Serial
Lumber Industry
Information In U.S.
To Be Out Soon
Important information on the
lumber industry in the United
States in 1946 will be developed
from figures collected in the 26th
annual canvass of sawmill opera
tions now being conducted by
the Bureau of Census in co-op
eration with the U. S. Forest
Service and the Tennessee Val
ley Authority.
Sawmill operations in every
county of Georgia will be covered
by enumerators working out of
the southeastern forest experi
ment station, Asheville. N. C., and
Norris, Tenn. Work has been
started in northern counties and
will progress southward through
the state.
The 1946 production of hard
wood and softwood lumber, shin
gles and lath, crossties, as well
as information on gross stocks
of lumber, will be asked of saw
mill operators. The figures will I
show production by species. For I
the first time information will be
obtained on the source of saw- j
logs by county, which will fur- i
nish useful statistics on the 1
source of various kinds of saw-1
timber.
The information developed !
from the canvass will tell how
much lumber is produced, where,
in what species, and by what
size-class of sawmill. Compiled
by counties, the canvass provides;
lumber buyers and consumers
with a better knowledge of 10-I
calities where lumber can be ob
tained.
All figures submitted by indi
vidual operators to representa
tives of the Census Bureau are
held in strict confidence. No
revelation is made which will
identify the operations of indi
vidual firms. The Census Bureau
is exclusively a service agency
and information submitted to it
cannot be used for purposes of
regulation, investigation or tax
ation.
VACATION BIBLE SCHOOL AT
LYERLY MOST SUCCESSFUL
The Vacation Bible School
.just completed at the Lyerly
Baptist Church was most suc
cessful. Eighty children were en
rolled with an average of 70 for
the 10 days. During the 10 days
the children gave $27.26 for for
eign missions. Two children also
! were converted.
———————
I
Lumber Wanted
We are in the market for
inch No. 2 Common and
Better Poplar and inch
No. 1 Common and Better
Red Cedar, both direct
from the saw or dry, by
truck or railroad delivery,
trucks unloaded by me
chanical lift. Good prices,
accurate grade and meas
ure.
Cal or Write:
James M. Alexander,
Cavalier Corp.
Chattanooga, Tennessee
TELEPHONE 6-5161
RURAL FRONT DIGEST
• Several varieties of perennial
wheat, which yield harvests dur
ing two or three years without
resowing, have been developed in
Soviet Russia.
• A good rule in forest thinning
is to thin when the operation
will pay for itself in the material
removed.
• Natural Farm Safety Week will
be observed during the week of
July 20-26.
• Experiments with DDT dust
and dips indicate that they are
highly effective in controlling
poultry mites.
• A 94 per cent infection rate
in swine exposed to influenza
; virus has been reduced by sub
cutaneous vaccination with in
activated 4 swine influenza virus.
• When the average dairyman
tests his herd, he usually finds
after the first year that about
a third of his cows needs to be
culled out.
• Gutter cleaning devices have
gradually been improved. Today
they offer the quickest and eas
iest method of cleaning the I
stanchion type barn. It elimi- [
nates the manure fork and the 1
I wheel from stable cleaning.
• T.tose who are interested in
! growing herbs for pleasure and i
profit will do well to read “In a
TRION THE A™
Continuous Shows Daily—Open
12:45 p. m. Monday, open 6:30
p m. Saturday, open 12 noon.
LAST TIME THURSDAY:
"Till the Clouds Roll By" j
FRIDAY, JULY 18:
"The Ghost Goes Wild"
With James Ellison and Anne
Gwynne
Serial: “Jessie James Rides
Again”
Short: “Kingdom Wild”
SATURDAY, JULY 19
DOUBLE FEATURE PROGRAM
"Oregon Trail Scouts
With
Allen Lake and Martha Went
worth
• Also •
"The Crime Doctor's Man-
Hunt"
With Warner Baxter and Ellen
Drew
MONDAY & TUESDAY,
JULY 21 & 22:
"Boomerang"
With Dana Andrews and Jane
Wyatt
Short Subjects and Latest News
WEDNESDAY & THURSDAY,
JULY 23 & 24:
With
"Nora Prentiss"
Ann Sheridan and Kent Smith
Short: “Popular Science”
Also: Latest News
DAV AI THEATER
Ik kJ I Summerville
THURSDAY & FRIDAY: Box Of
fice opens at 5:45 p. m. Satur
day: Shows continuous from
1 p. m.
THURSDAY & FRIDAY:
'The Guilt of Janet Ames'
Rosalind Russell and Melvyn
Douglas
in
Also: Short Subjects
SATURDAY:
"Rainbow Over Texas"
Starring
Roy Rogers and Gabby Hayes
• Also*
Chapter 2: “SON OF THE
GUARDSMAN”
And Comedy:
“MICRO PHONIES”
THDCA THEATER
1 kJ VJkJ.T* Summerville
PHONE 201
Week-days: Continuous from 1
P. M. Saturday: Continuous
from 10:30 A. M.
THURSDAY & FRIDAY:
James Cagney in
"13 Rue Madeleine"
With Annabella and Richard
Conte
Also: News and Short Subject
SATURDAY:
GENE AUTRY
in
"Springtime in the
Rockies"
Also: Chapter 8, “HOP HARRI
GAN,” and Cartoon.
SATURDAY NITE, LATE SHOW
10:30 P. M.:
"The Ghost Goes Wild"
James Ellison and Anne Gwynne
in
Also: Short Subject, “PEACE
TIME FOOTBALL”
MONDAY & TUESDAY:
Tyrone Power, Gene Tierney,
John Payne and Ann Baxter
in
"The Razor's Edge"
Also: News
WEDNESDAY:
"The Return of Monte
Cristo"
Starring Louis Hayward, Bar
bara Britton and George
Macßeady
Also: Short Subject, “DOWSING
WAY”
Herb Garden,” by Annie Burn
ham Carter, Rutgers University
Press, New Brunswick, N. J. $2.
She deals with the legendary
and externally useful herbs, and
those of commercial value and
those grown for beauty.
• Common salt applied to beet
ground at rate of "from one to
two and a half pounds per 100
square feet results in increase in
leaf size, greener color and less
leaf spot.
* Cows are like people, says a
professional cow tester, “for it
takes some of them to keep the
others.”
Clay sees German recovery
fitting Marshall plan for Europe.
DAN 6Xe R S and
f\ HAZ A R D S
♦ KraS’Aj? *
INCLUDE THEM ALL
Nearly every property owner tries to protect him
self byi taking out insurance policies against the usual
sources of loss—but too often he overlooks some dan
gers and hazards which can cause a loss as great, or
even greater. See
Summerville tarsnee Agency
B. W. and J. L. FARRAR, Agents
Office: 109 N. Commerce St.
■
UNKLE HAN K SEZ
I Vbu KNOW |T3 A FUNNY
<HING-lU'MOSY WORRIN'
IS DONE OVEP dVIINGS
That never’ z ’
happen
1 ; ... ..,.s,L .c.tvv.s
Don’t worry over the possibilities of spending your
summer vacation at home, if your house is properly
furnished. Take a look around . . . does the old liv
ing room suite look shabby? Why not come to the
LOOP FURNITURE CO. . . . see how far your furni
ture dollars can go when you shop with us?
LOOP FURNITURE CO.
“We Sell for Less"
SUMMERVILLE, GEORGIA
£et’s talk
about
your farm
i
Maybe we can help you make your form more
productive, more profitable, more comfortable.
A talk with us may suggest practical ideas you
can put into practice with the
help of bank services. Come
in. You're always welcome.
Farmers & Merchants Bank
SUMMERVILLE, GA.
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
Thursday, July 17, 1947
TOO TIRED
Trieno restores pep to youngsters un
der 12 who ore "too tired to play"
because of faulty elimination. Prompt
relief for upset stomach and gas due
to constipation. Contains senna. Ef
fective,gentle. Delicious
prune-juice flavor.
Caution: use only as
directed. 30c, largo HM
sire, 50c. jj
ALL|ED DRUC
I PIPTI/l PRODUCTS CO.
1.1 Ak/A-AU. Chattanooga. Tenn.