Newspaper Page Text
Church Services
METHODIST
SUMMERVILLE—Sunday school
10 a.m.; worship services, 11
a. m. and 7:30 p. m. Henry
Walker, Pastor.
LYERLY—Fourth Sundays, wor
ship services, 11 a. m. and 8
p.m.; second Sundays, worship
service. 7 p.m. Sunday school,
10 a.m. and Youth Fellowship,
6 p. m. every Sunday. Loran
Parker, Pastor.
OAK HlLL—First and third Sun
days, worship services, 11:30
a.m. and 7 p.m. Sunday school,
10:30 a.m. and Youth Fellow
ship, 6 p.m. every Sunday
Loran Parker. Pastor.
8 O'U T H CAROLINA CAMP
GROUND —Worship service, 11
a.m. every second Sunday.
Loran Parker. Pastor.
MENLO—Sunday school. 10 a.m.
every Sunday. Worship serv
ices. 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. on first
and r ourth Sundays. G. E. Er
win Pastor.
MACEDONIA Sunday school i
10 am every Sunday. Wor
ship services, 11 a.m. ard 7
p.m. second Sundays. G. E Er
win, Pastor.
BETHEL Sunday school. 10
a.m.: Yotith Fellowship. 0:30
p.m . every Sunday. Worship
services. 11 a.m. and 7 p.m.
third Sundays. G D. Erwin.
Pastor.
BAPTIST
SUMMER VILLE. FlßST—Sunday
School, 9:45 a. m., Curtis
Meacham, Superintendent;
worship, 11 a. m.; Training
Union, 6:30 p. m„ Claude Bag
ley, director; worship 7:30 p.
m. Sundays. Mid-week prayer
service, 7:30 p. m. Wednesday.
Ira C. Frazier, pastor.
LYERLY Sunday school, 10
am.: worship services, 11 a.m.
and 7.30 p.m.; Training Union,
030 p.m.; mid-week prayer
service 7:30 pm. Wednesday;
Youth prayer service, 7 p.m.
Thursday Rev. Caldwell, Pas
tor.
PENNVILLE— Sunday school, 10
a.m.: worship services 11 a.m.;
Training Union, 6:30 p.m.;
evangelistic appeal, 7 p.m.;
special study, Romans 11, verse
by verse, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday.
Paul E Goodner, Pastor.
MENLO—Sunday school, 10 a.m.:
worship, 11 a.m and 7:30 p.m.;
Training Union. 6:30 p m Pat
Brock, pastor.
WEST SUMMERVILLE— Sunday
School, 10 a. m.; worship, 11
a. m. and 7.45 p. m.; Prayer |
service at 7:45 p. m., Tuesdays
and Fridays. Early Carson
pastor.
SOUTH SUMMERVILLE BAP
TIST—Sunday School, 9:45
am.: worship, 11 a. m.; BTU,
6:30 p. m ; worship, 7:30 p. m.;
mid-week prayer service, 7:30
p. m., Wednesday. W. M.
hteele, Pastor.
CHELSEA: Sunday School, 10 a.
m. every Sunday; worship ser- j
vice, 11 a. m. every first and i
third Sunday; B. T. U., 6:30 p. 1
ri. every Sunday. Midweek
prayer service, 7:30 p. m.
Wednesdays. Virgil Blalock,
pastor.
BETHLEHEM —B. C. Bowman,
pastor, Sunday School, 10 a.m.;
worship service, 11 a. m.; B.
T. U., 7 p. m.; worship Service,
7:30 p. m.
CALVARY: Sunday School, 10
a. m., Richard Bailey, Supt.; I
Worship, 11 a. m. and 7:30 p. \
m. every Sunday, Sidney!
Dooley, pastor.
CHURCH OF CHRIST
SUMMERVILLE—BibIe study, 10
a.m.; wor hip services, 11 a.m
and 7:30 p.m.
fFJ ON—Sunday school. 10 a.m.;
worship services, 11 a. m. and
7:30 p. m. Sundays. Prayer
service, 7 p. m. Wednesday.
Farris Baird, Pastor.
PRESBYTERIAN
SUMMERVILLE—Sunday School
at 9:45 a. m ; morning serv
iee, 11 a. m.; evening service,
7:30 p. m. Harry Foster, pastor.
MENLO— Sunday School, every
Sunday, 10 a. m.; worship, sec
ond Sundays, 11 a. m. and 8
p. m.; fourth Sundays, 11 a.m.:
Union services with Metho
dists, 8 p. m. Community Pray
er Meeting, every Thursday, 8
p. m. S. K. Dodson, Pastor.
BEERSHEBA Sunday School,
every Sunday, 10 a. m.; wor
ship services, first Sunday, 11
a. m.; third Sunday, 8 p. m. S.
K. Dodson, Pastor,
CLOUDLAND Sunday School,
every Sunday, 10 a. m.; wor
ship services, third Sunday, 11
a. m.; first Sundays, 4 p. m. S.
K. Dodson, Pastor.
ALPlNE—Sunday School, every
Sunday, 10 a. m.; worship serv
ices, every fifth Sunday, 11
1 a. m. S. K. Dodson, Pastor.
>
FENNVILLE GOSPEL TABER
NACLE—Rev. S. G. Stanley.
Pastor. Sunday School, 10 a.m.;
worship service, 11 a. m.; pray
er service, 5 p. m.; Young Peo
> pies service and Bible study,
6:30: evening worship service,
■j 730 p. m.; mid-week service
each Thursday night, 7:30.
CHURCH OF GOD
DICKEYVILLE: Sunday School,
■j 10 a. m.; worship, 11 a. m.:
evangelistic, 7:30 p. m., Sun
day. Prayer meeting, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday; WMB, 7:30 p. m.,
Thursday; VLB. 7:30 p m,
j Saturday.
f :
i THERE i
HERE 'N ;
i
Herman L. Copeland, fireman,
USN, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lee
Copeland, of Route 2. Lyerly,
who is serving aboard the light
cruiser USS Hunington, took
part in amphib'ous manuvers
against Vieques, an island eight
miles east of Puerto Rico.
The largest maneuvers since
the end of the was involved 100
ships and 35.000 men and in
cluded an assault by Army and
Marine personnel against the
island.
Vieques, supposedly a strong
ly-held enemy island, was at
tacted by ground forces which ;
were put ashore by Navy trans
ports. Other Naval surface j
units “softened up” the island
for the troops with intensive |
shore and aerial bombardment, I
■ _
Cpl. Thomas R. King, of Rome,
Route 1, is now serving as a dis
patcher with the 79th Engineer
Maintenance Company Motor
Pool, an organization of Head
quarters First Corps, located in
Kyoto, Honshu, Japan.
The 79th Engineer Mainten
ance of all heavy construction
equipment, such as bulldozers,
4*/ 2 ton trucks and cranes for
all of central Honsnu, the larg
est of Japanese home islands.
Corporal King has been serv
ing with his present unit since
March 15, 1948. He joined the
I Army in September, 1946, at
Fort McPherson, and after re
ceiving his quartermaster basic
I training at Camp Lee, he was
sent to Japan In January, 1947.
From 1945 to 1946, he was a
member of the United States
Navy.
His parents, Mr. and Mrs. H.
A. King, reside in Rome.
The Rev. A. N. White, of Trion,
will speak at 2:30 p. m. Sunday
at the Chapel Hill Baptist
j Church.
A revival will begin at the j
Church of God in South Trion j
Sunday night, March 20, to con- I
tinue through April 3. Services I
will begin each evening at 7:30
o’clock.
Evangelist Mrs. Julian Ben
nett, of Augusta, will speak. Mrs. j
Bennett is an outstanding Evan
gelist and singer.
The public is invited to attend
; each service, according to J. C.
I Palmer, pastor.
A regular convocation of Tri- !
’on Chapter 19, Royal Arch
Masons, will be held at 7:30 p.
i m. Saturday March 19. All Royal
Arch Masons are invited.
I
Corpora! Claude M. Rickett,
I son of Mrs. Ruth Rickett, who
i resides at Summerville, has been
assigned to Headquarter Battery
. 52nd Field Artillery Battalion, a
, unit of the 24th Infantry Divi
sion. The 24th Division, popular
' ularly known as the “Victory”
! Division, now occupies the en
i tire island of Kyushu, third
I largest and southermost of the
: Jananese home islands.
I Corporal Rickett who lived at
- | Summerville, enlisted in the
• I regular Army in March of 1948.
’j He has been serving overseas
■ ;in the “Victory” Division since
' November, 1948, in Headquarters
Battery of the 52nd Field Ar
tillery Battalion. His present job
is as a radio operator.
Hide water spots and other
stains on handbags of smooth
leather with shoe cream or
wax polish, either colored or
clear.
"Spring Look"
Combines Many New
Fashion Trends
The spring look is made up of
a number of different style
trends—a slightly shorter skirt,
slimmer lines, giant pockets,
shantung, the plunging neckline
and the ensemble, among others.
In McCall’s for March, Marian
Corey tells you about these
changes in the fashion picture
for spring:
“The spring look Is a blue
look: navy, royal, medium, light
blue, pale blue, ice blue, tur
quoise, peacock, and any other
blue that you can think of. It |
is a shorter skirt look. Maybe
an inch. If you wear your skirts
at 12 inches from the floor and
that suits you and looks right
in your long mirror, stay that
way. If it feels draggy, change
to 13.
“The spring look is a slim skirt
look. Slim for suits, day dresses,
some soft dresses. Even skirts
with back fullness . manage to
look slender. Evening gowns and
young clothes are the excep- ■
tions. Shoulders will have a more ;
natural look. When we say na- i
tural we are visualizing beauti- I
fully shaped natural shoulders.
If yours don't make the grade, i
continue with pads—thin pads.
“The spring look is a suit look.
This spring it is apt to be a navy j
gabardine suit look. Any suit at
all, whether tailored or soft. It is
also an ensemble look. A prin- ■
cess coat in wool, a printed dress '
to match: or a redingote ensem- j
ble.
“The spring look is a printed '
dress look. It is a big polkadot
spring. The plunging neckline
and the bare neck will be promi
nent. The ‘plunger’ is usually ac
companied by a narrow shawl
collar which makes it seem
sharper and deeper than it is.
The wide-open neck will soon be
everywhere.
“The spring look is the shan
tung look. Silk shantung and
rayon shantung for tailored
dresses. It is also the giant pock
et look. Oddly enough they do
not enlarge the hipline quite
the contrary.”
Lon’sia's teller
Dear Louisa:
My husband and I have re
cently moved to this town
where he has a new job. His
i boss has tried to be nice to us
as has his wife but I do not like
either of them.
My husband vants me to act
like I do like them and enter
tain them in my home but I
think that is playing the part of
a hypocrite, don’t you?
I have always been very
plain-spoken and let people
know exactly where I stand.
Don’t you admire that quality
in people?
WIFE—IOWA.
Answer: .
If there is one sure recipe for
becoming unpopular, it is that
of being plain-spoken and
thinking you have a right to
broadcast your, dislike of peo
ple who do not happen to ap
peal to you.
And it is certainly nothing to
admire in people that they care
so little about hurting other’s
feelings that they sound off
•whenever they get a chance to
make disagreeable remarks and
comments on others.
Have you ever heard of a
trait called tact? Well, tact is
something that every cultured,
kind person tried to develop. It
doesn’t mean that you have to
lower your standards or change
your principles but it does keep
you from saying mean or cut
ting things, unnecessarily. It
makes you pleasant to people
even if you do not care for
them and, in ymir case, there is
certainly need for it unless you
need to be a mill-stone around
your husband’s neck and hinder
him in his work and chance of
promotion.
Do you know that many peo
ple who do not appeal to us at
first are much nicer as we come
to know them better? You say
that the boss and his wife have
! tried to be nice to you? If such
ibe the case, it certainly is
i nothing but courtesy on your
i part to return their hospitality.
llf you accept courtesies, you
should expect to make a re
turn.
Be nice to these people. This
doesn’t mean that you have to
become intimate. You can be
pleasant to anyone and do stop
bragging about being plain
spoken. Some of the most dis
agreeable people I’ve ever met
prided themselves on being
■ crude enough to insult other
! people.
LOUISA
Dear Louisa:
I am a girl of seventeen and
get very lonesome at times. My
father objects to me going out
j with boys and now won’t even
1 let them date me at home so I
am staying with an aunt.
I have a boy friend whom I
love very much and who wants
to marry me soon. He was away
about three months and while
THE SUMMERVILLE NEWS
Old Hand's Tips
On Landscaping
You don’t have to be a pro
fessional landscape gardner to
make your yard livable. A rough
plan of how you want your ter
race and lawn arranged, and
shurbs. shade trees, and flower
borders are all you need to
start, says F. F. Rockwell, an
old hand with gardens. Writing
in McCall’s for March, he tells
you how to go about beautify
ing your yard:
“First a don’t. Don’t plant all
around your terrace so you
can’t walk easily to your lawn.
You’re going to want to get out
on the grass fo r lots of things—
sunbaths, games, maybe hang
ing clothes or outdoor cooking.
“First make a little plan.
Don’t matter how rough it is,
but scale it out on paper. Make
a list of the things you like to
do and then put down a place
for each one. If you want to
keep an eye on the sandbox,
for instance, put it inside the
kitchen window.
“The shade trees are next
and they'll be your biggest ex
pense. Maybe a flowering Crab,
a Dogwood or a Japanese Cher
ry—something that won’t get
too big but will give color. Keep
them well watered.
“To connect terrace and
lawn, you’ll want a few dwarf
ever-greens for winter color—
say a Pfitzer Juniper, dwarf
Yew or Mugho Pine. Along the
edge put in low, pot-green an
nuals, such a-s Petunias and
Verbenas.
“For plants on the terrace,
get some of those new-fangled
self-watering porch boxes; fill
them with Geraniums, Lan
tanasop Petunias. But don’t for
get about leaving space for get
ting onto the lawn.
“Now for flowers on the edge
of the lawn. Make curving bor
ders and plant perennials there
and bulbs for spring. After the
bulbs have stopped blooming,
tie up the foliage to make room
for the annual flowers you’ll
want to transfer to take their
place latter.”
A if
-■ - i
By Lyn Connelly
Dorothy Lamour is consider- i
ing a plan to open up a shoppe !
in Hollywood where she can de- |
sign and sell sports clothes un
der her own label . . . Henry
Fonda, one of our better actors,
intends to stay with his Broad
way hit, “Mr. Roberts,” for at
least another two years . . .Wal
lace Berry has more film years
to his credit than any other
prominent Hollywood actor . . .
Incidentally. Wally is the only
man ever to knock out Clark
Gable, the accident occurring
during the filming of “China
Seas.”
PLATTER CHATTER
Capitol: Jack Smith’s record
ing of a bright little ditty called
“Lavender Blue” should please
his fans . . . The flip side offers
his arrangement of “The Mata
dor,” a rhythmic number with
a Latin air . . . For something
clever, try Alvino Rey’s “Mama
Blues” in which he coaxes his
guitar into speaking . . . “Guitar
Boogie” is on the reverse . . .
Bobby Sherwood has some good
jive in ‘The Elks’ Parade” coupl
ed with an original, “Sherwood’s
Forest” ... Jo Stafford’s latest
is “In the Still of the Night,” an
oldie but the type of number she
does so well . . . “By the Way”
backs it.
Vicor: A new ablum by Elton
Britt offers some good country
music for a change . . . Recom
mended singles: Perry Como’s
smooth rendition of that favor
ite, “Melancholy Baby,” with
“When You’re Smiling” on the
other side . . . Betty Rhodes of
fers the up-n’-comin’ “Buttons
and Bows” (watch this song—
it’s going places) and “I Still
Get a Thrill” . . . Eve Young and
her Drug Store Cowboys have a
snappy arrangement of another
prospective hit, “Cuanto L e
Gusta” with “Say Something
Sweet to Your Sweetheart” on
the reverse.
Signatoure: Liberace, that;
versatile concert pianist gone i
popular, has two records that
should be best sellers— one is a
slightly terrific arrangement of
“12th Street Rag” with “Mal
aguena” on the other side. . .
The other, his coupling of “Tico
Tico” and “I Don’t Care” which
he composed and sings.
United States buys 10,000 tons
of Sumatra palm oil.
he was gone, another boy start
ed writing me and is still writ
ing to me. I wrote and told him
I was engaged. What will I do?
WORRIED L.—V A
Answer:
I think what you need is a
good job for if you were really
crazy about your fiance, you
would not be worrying about
what to do with this boy.
Get you a good job and try
to make a success of it until
you are certain who Mr. Right
is.
LOUISA
'lnvestigators' Find
1600 Cases Syphilis
In Georgia in Year
“Communicable Disease In
vestigators”, the shock troops
in Georgia’s war against syphi
lis, are rapidly whittling down
the number of infectious cases
in the state.
“In 1948, wih only 11 men in
the field, the investigators lo
cated and referred to treatment
over 1600 cases, of 387 of these
infectious stage”, said Dr. C.
D Bowdoin, director of the
Veneral Disease Division of the
State Health Department.
“By doing an on-the-spot job,
the CDI men have definitely re
duced the incidence of syphilis
in Georgia”, stated Dr. Bow
doin.
Immediate action is of prime
importance in the investigation
of contacts of syphilis, for each
contact who has become in
fected might unknowlingly
spread the disease to others.
As soon as contacts of known
syphilis are referred to the CDI
men, the investigation is start
ed. Within a relatively short
time, the investigator will have
located the contact and sug
gested to him that he be ex
amined by his private physi
cian or his local health de
partment.
If found infected, the patient
is interviewed for further con
tacts, and then referred for
treatment either to his family
doctor or to Alto Medical Cen
ter, state hospital for treatment
of venereal diseases.
On a recent visit, officials of
the Venereal Disease Division
of the U. S. Public Health Serv
ice were so impressed with this
program that they allocated
funds for the purpose of secur
ing additional investigators.
The State Department expects
to have a tota l of 30 CDI men
in the field by June.
WARM WEATHER
CAUSES LOSSES
IN PORK SUPPLY
While unseasonably warm
weather has meant savings on
fuel, this has not been the case
with home-cured pork, reports
from a number of Georgia
county agents indicated this
week.
Locker plants have been do-1
ing an increased business in,
curing pork but some of the
meat has arrived at the plants |
two or three weeks after butch-I
ering and already partially
spoiled.
Frank Hedden, State Exten- ■
sion Service freezer-locker spe-i
cialist, advised. “It will pay j
farmers to consider taking their i
pork to freezer-locker plants ’
"or curing at the time of |
butchering. The risk of' spoil- >
age is too great when an at-|
tempt is made to cure pork on'
the farm during unseaonable
weather.”
He explained that locker
plants maintain curing rooms
at approximately 35 degrees, ar
which temperature hams and
shoulders take two and one-half
days per pound to cure.
“When a hog is butchered at
home it should be rushed to the
locker plant and chilled immedi
ately,” Mr. Heeden said. “At
the time of slaughter it should
be bled thoroughly to prevent
increased bacterial action from
the remaining blood. An ade
quate home meat supply is too
important to gamble on the
possibility of unfavorable meat
curing weather.”
ONE MINUTE SPORTS QUIZ
1. Do spiders actually fly?
2. Does any bird have teeth?
3. Do foxes climb trees?
4. What boxer recently whip
ped then champion Sandy Sad
dler featherweight?
5. What club finished last in
the National League last year?
THE ANSWERS:
1. No.
2. No.
3. Yes. The red fox seldom
climbs, but the gray fox often
takes to trees when being chased.
Occasionally the red fox will al
so, but usually he dies without
making a tree-climbing attempt.
4. Willie Pep.
5. Chicago Cubs.
Food Value of Chicken
Pound for pound, chicken is
equivalent to red meats in pro
tein. In thiamine it rates along
with beef but below lamb and
veal and cor"‘■'’’■ably below
pork. In the 01..__ 3 vitamins
chicken and other meats are
about the same.
Increase in Purchase Program
The Production and Market
ing Adminstration of the U. S.
Department of Agriculture has
announced a one-cent increase
in the basic price of blue lupine
seed under its 1949 purchase
program for winter cover crop
seed.
Comment On Sports
By Ed Sims
FISHING
WASHINGTON, D. C. Down
near the Suwanee River (which
Steven Fosternever saw), there
is a shack in the bank of another
Florida river. This river is larg
er than the Suwannee, but not
so famous. The fish you catch
in it, though, are about the same
as those in the Suwannee. Well
this shack is strictly a fisher
man’s shack. It is off from the
rah-rah of the city, the high
ways, and the railroads. There
are no telephones, no running
water, (except where there is a
private pump), and no noise.
No noise at all.
It’s less than fifty miles from
the Suwannee, and just a mile
or two up from the Gulf. For all
other purposes you might as well
be bn the Suwanee—the differ
ence is slight. Business men go
to this shack to forget their
troubles. Doctors call it heaven.
They are safe from that tele
phone terror. Though trips to
the shack last only a few days
on the week-end, men sit around
and do weeks of talking—on the
porch of the shack, or in the
boat, fishing.
Remember, there is no noise.
You can just hear the mild flow
of water moving toward the
Gulf. A fish jumps out of the
water every few minutes. A
motor boat can be heard miles
up the river. The tide brings the
water closer, and out of (he
channel, twice each 24 hours.
Men fish on the rising tide, and
on the turn, but not often on
the tide going out. The fish, yon
see. come up the mouth of the
river to feed among the marshes,
and in the creeks. When the
tide starts going out, the creeks
drain almost completely.
The tales these fishermen tell!
They're not too interested in the
fact that some are exaggerated. ;
They just like to hear someone !
spin a good yarn. The basis for
one tale, about an alligator, is
real, however. “Old Bill” passes
the fishing shack every morning
about dawn. They see him float
ing down stream. His hours
change very little, and only
slightly to accomodate the tide. ;
He looks like a piece of wood ;
or something—out there in the
stream floating toward the j
Gulf, since only his head shows
And this much of the tale is j
accurate. He has been seen by
many fishermen.
No one, however, has ever seen
Old Bill come back up the river.
Some say Old Bill is an alligator.
But others contend he is a croc
odile. Those who say he is a 1
crocodile say his head is trian
gular. (The alligator’s head is
flat and rectangular.) The argu- ;
ment has raged on for months.
The theory advanced by one in- ’
lander was that Old Bill had to
be an alligator, since he lived
in fresh water. But someone dis- I
proved that, and proved that i
alligators and crocodiles both'
live in fresh water.
Another theory that no croco
diles exist in U. S. waters was 1
disproved when a Floridian
proved that one of the three j
species of crocidiles inhabiting I
tropical America is sometimes:
found in Florida. The Floridian
explained that crocodiles have a ;
protruding fourth tooth on each
side, alligators do not, and that
crocodiles have many more webs
on their toes than do alligators.
But the question couldn’t be
solved. Then one day Old Bill
settled it.
Waiting for his at dawn was
a group of city slickers. They
were going to shoot him—of all
tilings—to find out. But they
never saw Old Bill That evening
as they were relaxing on the pier
they heard a loud, bellowing
noise. Awe-struck, they saw Old
Bill gliding back up the river—
on the incoming tide. That noise
—the first they ever heard him
make—was the bellow of the
Florida gator. And that settled
it, and saved Old Bill. He still
floats down the river every
morning.
Sanitary Garden Practices
Sanitary garden practices
such as cleaning up breeding
places are important in keeping .
down the number of insects and I
diseases. The main element of
success in insect and disease
control is to be on time with the
proper materials and equip
ment.
All fat and meat trimmings
should be kept off the floor
during butchering to prevent
hazardous falls.
Attention Farmers and Sawmill Men
If you use more tFian 2,000 gallons of gaso
line per year, we can furnish you with skid tank.
BULMAN OIL COMPANY
Summerville-Trion Highway
—WHOLESALE AND RETAIL—
Thursday, March 17, 1949
Local Honor Guard
Highly Praised
The Military Honor Guard of
the local American Legion and
V. F. W. Posts has been given
special praise by officers of the
Wallis Funeral Home of La-
Fay ette
In making a contribution to
the building fund of the Me
morial Home which is nearing
completion, J. D. Wallis said:
“May I express my deep appre
ciation for the beautiful service
you have rendered on recent
military funerals here. Not only
I, but the families of these ser
vice men, have been deeply im
pressed Again may I commend
your splendid organization.”
The Honor Guard, which is
made up of members of the
local American Legion and V. F.
W. posts, is one of the few mili
tary details in the state that
turn out for military rites in full
uniform. They hold it as a spec
ial privilege and honor to serve
any family that wishes their
service when a comrade-in-arms
is returned to a last resting
Dlac.p in Chattooga or nearby
counties.
Fire Fighting Equipment
Fire fighting equipment that
bears the label of Underwriters’
Laboratories of Factory Mutal
Laboratories is generally re
garded as the most reliable in
the fire protection field.
Bob Jones
INSURANCE
<•*■**
FREEMAN PLUMBING;
& HEATING CO.
Plumbing and Heating ;
Contracting and Repairing i
PHONE 246 ;
NOTICE i
j
This is to notify the people;
everywhere that Chapel Hill J
is an organized Baptist ;
Church, and it was not built J
fbor a Community House. As;
you have heard, and I ask *
preachers to please not hold'
any services other than fun- *
erals at this church until ‘
you first see me the pastor.!
Rev. Wilburn Deolyj
TWO BIG
HEREFORD SALES
and
Duroc Hog Sale
NORTH GEORGIA
BREEDERS SALE
18 Bulls—s 2 Females
March 30
La Fayette, Ga.
Show—lo A.M. (C. S T.)
Sale—l 2 Noon (C. S. T.)
For Catalog Write
BURL F. HALL. Secretary
Kensington, Ga.
MOUNTAIN COVE
FARMS SALES
March 31
At the Farm
Kensington, Ga.
32 Miles South Chattanooga,
Tenn.
18 Miles S.W. LaFayette, Ga.
Duroc Hog Sale—lo A.M.
(C.,S. T.)
8 Bred Gilts, 15 Fall Boars,
18 Fall Gilts
Hereford Cattle Sale—l2:3o
P. M. C. S. T.)
6 Bulls, 30 Cows, 24 Heifers
For Catalogs Write
MOUNTAIN
COVE FARMS
GEORGE W. BIBLE. Mgr
Kensington, Ga.