Newspaper Page Text
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21,19f,7
SUMMERVILLE
DIRECTORY
BUSINESS - PROFESSIONAL - SERVICES
Marks Auto Sales
If you need a good used
car or auto parts, see us.
Rood Trades * Easy Terms
Ph. 383 Summerville
TOOGA GRILL
BEN MAXWELL, Owner
Old Fashion Pit BAR-B-Q
All Kinds Sandwiches
Short Orders • ?,oups
- - — I
BAGLEY'S
Standard Service
All Standard Products
—We Specialize in— i
Polishing
Washing - Greasing
DR. 11. M. BALLENGER
CHIROPRACTOR
Summerville Hotel Bldg. Hours
9 a. m. to 5 p. m. Each Day
Except Wednesday. Phone 497
I
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WE COME PROMPTLY!
to make TV Repairs
Guaranteed Workmanship
Phone 198 Day—Pennville
2283 Night
Giles Supply Store
Commerce Street
KRINGSBERG
STUDIO
401 South Commerce St.
PHOTOGRAPHS FOR
EVERY OCCASION
•
Phone 73 for Our
New Home Service
•
OLD PHOTOGRAPHS
COPIED and RESTORED
AT REASONABLE PRICE
YOUR WATCH NEEDS
* Cleaning and Oiling
* Any New Parts
* Crystal, Band or Strap
BRING TO
JOE HAMMOND
4 W. Washington St.
Summerville, Ga.
Federal and State In
come Tax Made Reason
able
HENRY POWELL
Office Next Door to Summer
ville Hotel
Hay Phone 497 Night 18
WALLACE J. CAMPBELL
Registered Architectural
Engineer
Plans to Meet FHA or GI
Specifications
Cloudland, Ga. Ph. Menlo 538
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■■ MOTOR COMPANY
*3OOO ^^i3oo martha srßtty hwy aoml.oa.
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INCOME
TAX SERVICE
Kathryn Story Mac Vane
Hours Wed. 9 a. m. to 9
p. m. Thurs. 9 a. m. to 1
p. m. Sat. 9 a. m. to 5 p. m.
Sun. 1:30 p. m. to 5:30 p.m.
Menlo, Ga. Phone 462
Look — Look
Glow Boy Gas Heaters Going
at Cost, As Long As They Last.
Making Room for New Models.
Pipe Cut anti Threaded to
Order. Free Estimate on All
Gas Jobs.
Payne Calhoun
SALES AND SERVICE
2’/a Miles North of Summer
ville, 2V a Miles South of Trion
on Highway 27.
PHONE 180-M
DR. MARLIN PAYNE
OPTOMETRIST
Summerville Hotel Bldg.
HOURS: 9AM. to 5:30 P.M.
Each Pay Except Tuesday
Trion Personnel Office
Tuesdays Only
THE ATTIC SHOP
Next to Park Theatre
Phone 2236
WE BCY AND SELL
GOOD USFD FURNITURE
GENE JUNKINS
INSURANCE
REAL ESTATE
If you have Real Estate for
sale list it with us. If you
want to buy Real Estate, we
wMI be glad to locate it for
you.
John Paul Jones
Phone 336 — Summerville
' ,
Dr. Emory Bowen
Chiropractic Physician
OFFICE HOURS
Daily 9-12, 1-6—Sunday 9-10
Saturday by appointment only
Phone 388
THOUSANDS
Os wall paper patterns to
select from. Free instruc
tions for do -it - yourself
hanging.
HALL'S
Decorating
SHOP
Next to Georgia Power
VAN PELT’S
Appliance Center
Ph. 437 — Summerville
“Where Your Business
Is Appreciated’’
FOR
PHILCC — GIBSON
RCA — SPEED QUEEN
News Report
From Washington
WASHINGTON — P r e s i d ent 1
Eisenhower is now serving his |
last term as President and his
next four years at the helm may I
be far more trying than the past
four. Looking at the situation
confronting the Chief Executive
at the present time, one can see
that the crossroads of his journey
as President of the greatest
I country in the world have been
reached.
This is the decisive hour for
Eisenhower and history. His
country is paused at the cross
roads, as far as the prosperity of
the nation is concerned. It lias
hesitated, and is now about to
undertake a very broad new
foreign policy.
The success of the President’s
efforts in these two fields, do
mestic and international, will de
termine the place his adminis
tration is to given by the history
books. And the task that forces
the former Supreme Command
er World War II might be equal
to any he has ever undertaken.
First, the Administration has
not yet solved the problem of the
present higher costs and wages,
which is steadily increasing in-
1 flation. Yet money has been
I tightened to such an extent that
! the little man, and big business
[ too in many cases, are hurting,
i Where is Ike to go from here?
Will inflation and tight money
continue? Will money be eased?
| How can the price spiral be
stopped?
The President is staking much
on the hope that botli labor and
management will go along with
his sober warning to refrain from
pushing the cost of living up any
higher. Since he has been'
President, productivity has in
creased in industry but wages
[ have risen almost twice as much.
And, since industry finds bor
• rowing money for expansion and
greater efficiency, and thereby
lower unit-cost, hard to obtain,
plant expansions, modernization,
new equipment and other moves
toward greater productivity are
being curtailed somewhat. This
is causing some uncertainty, as
a result.
The President must answer the
question this situation presents
in the immediate future. It is
his number one domestic prob
lem.
In the field of foreign affairs,
the State Department is under
attack which has not been
equalled in Washington in some
time. The very competence of the
department and of the Secretary
of State, Mr. John Foster Dulles,
are being questioned, and by able
lawmakers, many of whom
have gone along with Dulles for
four years, wondering about his
actions, but holding off any all
out assault.
The President is taking a great
gamble with his new doctrine for
the Middle East. The doctrine
itself is not very clear. Congress
is somewhat skeptical. The area
of the world involved is certainly
a difficult one, inhabited by un
predictable peoples. And we are
already late in our effort to keep
Communism out of the area.
COMPARE
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See how the regular uie of Chilean Soda corrects acidity and maintains favorable
pH (left). Fertiliser used at right contained no sodium.
and you'll choose
CHILEAN NITRATE OF SODA
B rau« it’s a natural fertiliser, anti everybody known a natural fer
tilizer in an extra good fertilizer. Extra good for crop* anti for the
land, too; not juat lor today, hut for the years ahead an well. Chilean
Soria i* a rare natural combination of nitrate nitrogen, -odium and
minor element*. It* extra value* diMingui*h it from other nitrogen
fertilizer*, at fount for it* remarkable rfh> iemy, lor it* beneficial effect
upon noil fertility ami the production of fine crop*.
The effectiveness* of a nitrogen fertilizer for tnp-drroing and
aide-drewing depend* almost directly on the proportion of nitrate
nitrogen it contain*, in Chilean Soda, the nitrogen la 100 per cent
faM-acting nitrate—ready to work a* «oon aa you apply it. ruin or nhine.
But that’s not all. Chilean Soda han sodium and minor element*, too.
Sodium destroy* soil acidity, auhutitute* for poia*h and calcium when
necessaary, increase* the efficiency of nitrogen and help* plant* make
better u«e of other plant food*.
Where the noil I* too add; where polu»h I* deficient or
where the available pho«phule supply I* lows where the rrop
nerd* <|uick help: or where one or more of Ills* minor ele
ment* I* lucking. Natural Chilean Soshi ha* no equal.
Experience, they *ay, i* the beat teas her. and 100 year* of con*i*>
trolly »ati*factory experience with Natural Chil- &ip*
ran Soda have drmouMralrd that there i*
nothing to compare with it for your lop- A*^***.
dremdng ami *idrdre**ing requirement*. If . Sq «
you have any qucetlon*, we urge sou to try it, £ I
if only in a •mall way to begin with, and *re Agnuk^a^^ a
the difference lor ymirwlf. You'll find it I*
the moot economical and efficient nitrule *
nitrogen fertiliser you ever uted.
— <
LOOK FOR THE
BULLDOG ON TEI BAGI
THE SUMMERVILLE NEWS
According to most judges of
international political develop
ments, we have lost the first and
second rounds in the contest in
the Middle East. The Eisenhower
Administration can ill afford
to see its avowed intentions
thwarted in this area again. The
Eisenhower Doctrine will have to
succeed or this country might be
forced into employing the very
measures Great Britain recently
took — the use of military
strength.
Meanwhile, it seems that our
latest appraisals of President
Nasser have again proved melan
choly, for the Egyptian radio is
spreading very active anti-Amer
can propaganda in all the Mid
dle East. Once again, they say in
Washington, we are about to get
tough with Nasser. Critics of the
State Department say we are
guilty of getting soft and then
getting tough, too often, with no
consistent realistic appreciation
of the situation in Egypt. They
recall the Aswan Dain fiasco,
which precipitated the seizure of
the canal.
As the battle over our foreign
policy continues. Vice President
Richard Nixon and Minority
Senate leader William Knowl
and stand by. grooming them
selves for the convention battle
three and a half years hence.
Both men are regarded as cer
ta i n presidential candidates,
waiting to take up where Eisen
hower leaves off. The question
now is where will Eisenhower
leave off . . . on top, or some
where else?
Cook Says Tax Bills
Must Start in House
MENTAL PATIENTS
The National Association for
Mental Health reports that a
break has occured in the steady
increase of mental patients in
। this country. Some state hos
pitals have reported that last
year, for the first time, their dis
charges of cured or improved
patients was catching up with
the intake of new patients. In
11 9 5 5, mental patients increased
by only 6,000 as compared to an
average annual rise of 12.000 over
the last ten years. Some of the
progress was attributed to the ef
i fectiveness of modern treatment
such as psychotherapy, tran-
I quilizing drugs and electric shock
and the fact that more patients
are getting treatment instead of
i custodial care.
Watkinsville
Watkinsville was the County
Seat of Clarke County from
1802 until it was moved to Athens
in 1875. Her citizens indignantly
brought about the formation of
Oconee County that same year
and Watkinsville was named the
County Seat of the new county.
Ga. Historical Commission.
GA. RECRUITING
DISTRICT LEADS
IN SOUTHEAST
Chief Dana L. Raley USN, Of
ficer in Charge of the Rome Re
cruiting Substation, said today
that Georgia lead the 7 South-*
। eastern states in recruiting re- ;
I suits lor Ihe mouth of January,
1957, with 201 enlistments.
Allowing that manpower is now
! one of the nations most compet
tive markets, Chief Radley feels
that Navy enlistments will con
{tinue through the summer
months because of the tremen
। dous publicity now being focused
■ on training and education in the
nuclear-age-Navy by national
news mediums.
Still, the Chief concluded, ev
j eryone joining the Navy has to
| start by going through 9 week
, basic training course (“Boot
Camp" to old Salts) and the
i “Buddy System” which allows
‘ friends to go in and remain to
gether during this important
phase, is one of our most im
i portant incentives. “Regardless
1 of credit, the Georgia Recruiting
| District expects to stay on top
in procurement during the com
ing months,” said the Chief.
FARM PRICES, COSTS UP
The Agriculture Department
has reported that farm product
prices increased 0.4 per cent
during the month ended Jan. 15.
s This puts them at 238 per cent
' of the 1910-14 base average, com
pared with 226 per cent at the
! same time a year ago. However,
* prices paid for goods and serv
ices by farmers increased 066
I per cent over mid-December to
I set a new high.
Senate action on two tax bills
has been halted on the basis of
Attorney General Eugene Cook’s
ruling that all taxation measures
in the General Assembly must
originate in the House.
In accord with Mr. Cook's rul
ing, the two bills in question have
been restarted, this time in the
House. The bills, by Senator Asa
Kelley, of Albany, would reduce
auto tag prices to 1955 levels and
restore federal income taxes as
an allowable deduction on state
income taxes.
The unofficial ruling was made
at the request of Senator John
Langdale, Valdosta, Chairman of
the Senate Finance Committee.
. $20.00 to $150.00
kA DIXIE CREDIT COMPANY
P Ar Try our quick, confidential
r ।
it Why not come in today and
Ml I k learn all about our friendly
rS ■ * MF loan service
* Our auto loan department is now
y ready to serve you.
Across the Street from Post Office
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Long as the average living room (tndjurt as comfortable )
Thi» low, lean and lovely new Ford itretchei More leg room. There** more rela»int room for long /
out over 17 feet,.. with plenty of room on '*' l an d mw '' ‘^r l ' ^' out roww for ’hort one*. You 'll be sitting pretty in the
for headt, hips and long legs More tilting room. Now you can have true living- M tu/
Mheod«om.ThebJgnew’s7FaKlrt«KbJurtM rwm fom,orl ln ,he npw Ford * k|Nn nf kIJK U
in. nlxive utrret Im el yet has plenty of head room. Action Ted the *57 Ford today and see for yourself! A'”«*vT ■ W^i
FRED ALDRED, INC.
SUMMERVILLE, GEORGIA
Cherokee Presbytery
Adopts Annual Budget
Cherokee Presbytery met in
adjourned session, Friday, Feb
ruary 1, at the Atcooga Presby
terian Church, Dalton, Ga. Rui- ■
ing Elder Oscar decker, of Men
lo, Ga. moderator, presided. The •
Rev. T. M. Howze, pastor of the
Etowah, Ten n. Presbyterian
Church, was received from Knox
ville Presbytery, and a commis
sion appointed to install him
pastor of the Atcooga Presbyter
ian Church.
The Rev. Charles Moffatt, pas
tor of the First Presbyterian I
Church of Cedartown, Ga. and :
chairman of Presbytery's Coun
cil presented the Benevolent
Budget of $88,343 for adoption.
The Rev. Robert. C. Pooley, Stat
ed Clerk of the Presbytery pre
sented a comparative report
which revealed that Cherokee
Presbytery had a net increase
in members of 159 and a present;
j membership of 5,254. The pres- j
' ent Sunday School enrollment is j
4,620, with a net increase of 291 ,
lor 1956. The Presbytery, through 1
! its 30 churches gave $123,214 to
Benevolences. $293,634 to Current
Expenses and $90,677 to Build
ing programs, for a total gift of
$507,525. The Executive Commit
tee of Church Extension under
the leadership of Dr. S. Wilkes
Dendy, met following the close
of Presbytery.
The Women of Cherokee Pres
byterial have held several meet
ings in the past two weeks. On
January 24, the Marietta Dis
trict met at the Acworth Presby
terian Church, with Mrs. Harry
Evans, Chairman, presiding. The
featured speaker for this occa
sion was the Rev. Robert A. Mc-
Neill, pastor of the First Pres
byterian Church, of Columbus,
Ga. On January 31, the Rome
District, met at the Westminister
Presbyterian Church, with Mrs.
L. R. Scott, presiding. The fea
tured speaker was Mrs. Cundy
Bryson, of Rome, Ga. On Feb
ruary 3rd, the Business Women
of the Presbyterian met at the
First Presbyterian Church in
Marietta, Ga. under the leader-
I ship of Mrs. J. U. Jackson, of
Cedartown. On Tuesday, Feb
ruary sth, the LaFayette Dis
trict met at the Trion Presby
terian Church, with Mrs. B. H.
Dennis, presiding. The featured
speaker was the Rev. Roy Myers,
pastor of the Acworth Presby
terian Church. Mrs. Will Joe
Abbot. President of the Presby
terial, was presented at each
District Meeting and spoke brief
ly challenging the women to
greater consecration and service.
GA. CIVIC CLUBS
AID IN ENTICING
PLANTS-GRFFIN
ATLANTA,—(GPS) Civic clubs
in Georgia towns and cities have
contributed invaluable aid to the ■
state in the movement now be- :
! ing carried out to bring new in-!
| dustries to Georgia, Gov. Marvin ।
j Griffin told a recent meeting of!
the Atlanta Kiwanis Club. Said
I he:
“ It would be impossible for me *
| to tell just how much these clubs
' have helped us in this activity
because they serve in so many '
; many ways. They help find
sites for new plants, they some
times furnish auxilliary financ
! ing, they are on the alert at
all times to discover what in- ■
1 , w
d CONSTRUCTS X.
J AHEAD
a ATOMIC POW* R l^?X7
A plant; J
This is the site of the Enrico Fermi atomic
power plant, near Detroit, Michigan, one of
the places where atomic electricity is on
its way. The photograph shows foundations
more than half completed for the nuclear
reactor building.
The Georgia Power Company is cooperating
in this project with 17 other electric utility
companies, a group of equipment manufactur
ers and the U. S. Atomic Energy Commission.
Electric utility companies throughout the
nation are participating in a total of 10
atomic power plant projects. All of these
developmental plants are scheduled for com
pletion by 1962.
The United States, under the free enter
prise system, has achieved undisputed world
leadership in the production and use of elec
tricity. In fact, we produce more electric
power than the next seven nations combined.
The Georgia Power Company and the hun
dreds of other electric utility companies in
America welcome the challenge of helping
to develop the atom’s promise for you.
GEORGIA POWER COMPANY
A t!1! II N W H I K I V I K Wf t t It V t
dustries are interested in Geor
gia locations and they promote
improvement of local services
such as schools and utilities as
an added inducement to the
companies.”
Citing Georgia Deparment of
Commerce figures and other re
ports the Governor said 360 new
factories, large and small were
built in the state last year at
a cost of $165 million. They pro
vided 11.000 new’ jobs; increased
annual payrolls to the tune of
। $32 million. In addition, long-es
tablished Georgia firms carried
out expansions last year at an
estimated cost of more than $l5O
million. Over-all more than 2,000
new businesses were established
in the state during the 12-month
period.
SYNTHETIC FIBERS
The production of man-made
fibers in the United States last
year declined 4 per cent from the
; record 1955 level. Production
totaled 1.644,700,000 pounds coin
■ pared with 1,715.800,000 pounds
1 a year earlier. The decline in
production of rayon and acetate
• was partially offset by increased
। output of textile glass fiber and
■ 1 non-cellulois fibers.
11