Newspaper Page Text
6
Holland News
By Mrs. Mark Strawn, Lyerly, Ga., Route 2
Mrs. Dora White of Rome and
J. F. Clark were married at the
home of Rev. and Mrs. J. A.
Smith in Summerville last
Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Clyde
Stephenson, Mrs. Clyde Bennett.
Mrs. John Edge, Mrs. Kathrine
Knighton, and Mark Strawn
were present for the ceremony.
Mrs. Sanders Ratliff and Mrs.
Eob House entertained Saturday
afternoon for the bride, Mrs. J.
Freeman Clark. There were 33
present for the miscellaneous
shower. Games were played and
pictures taken. Many useful and
lovely gifts were received by Mrs.
Clark. The hostesses served
cookies and soft drinks as re
freshments. Guests were from
Rome, Cedartown, Lyerly, Gore
and Chattoogaville.
Mrs. Martha Bishop of Lyerly
visited Mrs. Minnie Holland
Thursday. Mrs. John Edge and
Mrs. Mozelle McCarson visited
her Saturday.
Mrs. Clyde Bennett spent
Thursday with the James
Stephensons.
Mrs. Mattie Worsham and Miss
Eva Worsham were spend-the
day guests Thursday of Mrs. Roy
Worsham in Summerville.
Mrs. Mark Strawn entertained
the Holland Home Demonstra
tion Club at her home last
Thursday. Miss Wiley's demon
stration concerned pressing of
clothing while sewing, and other
helpful hints about sewing. Mrs.
Clyde Stephenson presided over
the meeting. Mrs. Gordon Green
presided at the piano and the
group sang “Sweet Hour of Pray
er.” Mrs. Lois Barker gave a
beautiful devotional, including
part of a graduation sermon she
heard recently while on her trip
to Tennessee. Mrs. Strawn served
salmon salad, crackers, home
made cookies and punch to 12
guests.
H. L. Abrams and Paul Ban
nister visited Miss Miriam Hol
land Saturday.
Mrs. Willard Jackson had
lunch Saturday with Mrs. Mark
Strawn.
Mrs. Walter Hensley and Mr.
and Mrs. R. C. White visited
Mrs. R. A. White last Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Strawn
and Gail, and Miss Miriam Hol
land visited Mr. and Mrs. J. P.
Adderhold in Centre, Alabama,
last Friday.
DAP GOES FOR THESE S
FATHER'S DAY VALUES
MEN’S COTTON
SPORT SHIRTS
A new shipment just re
ceived in Dan River
plaids and solid colors.
All sizes. A $3.00 value.
— SPECIAL —
*2.19
OTHER
Sport Shirts
AND
Dress Shirts
— SPECIAL —
*1 lo ^2.98
Men’s Broadcloth
PAJAMAS
All sizes.
*2.93
Make your father happy with a gift from our store
MEN'S TIES
And Bow Tics.
— SPECIAL —
59c to 98c
Men’s
WORK CLOTHES
Our Usual Low Prices!
On the II ay — 300 Pairs
Ladies' Beach Sandals
OK FLOPS
All sizes.
79c pr.
One Group of Ladies’
and Children’s
Sandals, Flatties
and Dress Shoes
All size s of different
styles. Values to $2.95.
CLOSE OCT
•’LOO |>r.
THE FAMOUS STORE
Summerville, Georgia
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Brison’s new
I daughter, born June 12, has been
named Julia Ann in honor of her
i grandmother, Mrs. R. P. Brison,
| and a maternal aunt.
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Garner and
Charlene, and Mrs. R. P. Brison
spent the week-end here. Mrs.
Brison is much improved in
health.
Pamela Hubler of Lyerly spent
Saturday night with Gail j
Strawn.
Rev. Isaac Duffy and Rev.
Doyle McDaniel held services at
New Hope Baptist Church Sun- [
day. Miss Eva and Frank Wor- :
[ sham and Miss Martha Green
entertained them for lunch.
Mr. and Mrs. Maxwell White
and Mr. and Mrs. Gladstone
Burnett enjoyed Sunday dinner
in LaFayette.
Mrs. Mozelle Kilcrease and
■ children of Texas are visiting her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Kel
lett.
Dr. and Mrs. Charles Herndon
! of Montgomery, Alabama, visited
Mr. and Mrs. G. S. Holland Sun- ;
day. They were returning from
New York City where they ac
companied their daughter,
Sylvia, to embark for a several
months tour of Europe.
Miss Patsy Stump of Atlanta
is guest at the Bob Brisons.
Mrs. Luther Van Pelt, Mrs.
Harold Elrod, Misses Eunice and
Janice Elrod and Mr. and Mrs.
Lewis McWhorter and children
were visitors at Mr. and Mrs.
Grady Howell’s Saturday.
Mrs. Mark Strawn and Gail,
Pamela Hubler, Mr. and Mrs.
Harley Bandy and Jo accompa
nied Miss Miriam Holland to the
Chattanooga airport Sunday so
she could emplane for Washing
। ton, D. C.
Mrs. Lois Barker. Misses Sara
and Mary Barker, and Miss
Mamie Smith attended an art
show in Centre, Sunday. They
visited Mrs. Lula Clark in Cedar
: Bluff and Mrs. Daisy Bell near
: Gaylesville.
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel White
and girls of Rome were visiting
Mrs. R. A. White and Lester Sun
day.
Mrs. Lexie Hooper, Mrs. Dora
■ Taylor, Mrs. Inez Greer, Mrs.
Della Moon, Mrs. Jacqueline
: Duprey visited Mrs. Minnie Hol
land and family Sunday. Other
visitors at the Hollands during
Men’s Endicott Johnson
DRESS OXFORDS
And Sandals.
*3.99 to *7.98
Men’s
Canvas Oxfords
And
Leather Sandals
All sizes.
— SPECIAL —
*2.98 pr.
Men’s Nylon Stretch
DRESS SOX
— SPECIAL —
39c & 49c
Pair
Men’s Dress
STRAW HATS
All sizes. Waterproof.
A $2.95 value!
— SPECIAL —
: *1.98
One Group of Ladies’
and Children’s Cotton
DRESSES
Values to $2.98
CLOSE OCT
94k-.
- < I
• - J
zr
Quinton Ash In
Army Training
Pvt Quinton Ash, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Ed Ash. of Route 4,
Summerville, has been assigned
to Company A. 3rd Battalion, Ist
Training Regiment at Fort Jack
son, S. C., for eight weeks of
basic combat training.
Upon arrival at Fort Jackson,
he was issued clothing and given
a complete physical examination
and a comprehensive battery of
aptitude tests.
As part of his basic training 1
he will be taught rifle marks- I
manship under the Army’s
new TRAINFIRE program. In
TRAINFIRE, he will learn to use
an M-l Rifle by firing at pop
ups on terrain which duplicates
combat areas.
He will also be taught drill,
tactics, camouflage, military
courtesy, first aid and other
basic subjects. He will learn how
to throw a grenade, fire in pitch
darkness, crawl under barbed
wire with machine gun fire over
head, and defend himself in
simulated chemical, biological
and radiological warfare situa
tions.
During his seventh week of
training, he will march 13 miles j
with full field pack to a bivouac
area to spend a week living in
the field and learning to inte
grate the skills he has been
taught.
After completing basic train
ing, he normally will receive a
two-week leave before reporting
for his next assignment.
Stroke Victims
Look to Local
Research Aid
A senior medical student,
training in Atlanta, will be a vis
itor to doctors in Chattooga,
Dade and Walker counties this
summer.
John R. Lovvorn of Atlanta,
working under a Georgia Heart
Association fellowship grant
from the Elfred S. Papy Fund
for Community Research, will be
asking local physicians about
( their problems and needs in the
field of stroke rehabilitation.
Five additional medical stu
dents will enter into a similar
[statewide program.
The student conducted survey
is a preliminary step in a Geor
gia Heart Association national
pilot study concerning educa
. tional and community service
aspects in the field of stroke re
[ habilitation.
Basis aim of the new program
will be to develop effective and
practicable ways of enabling
families to care for stroke vic
tims in their homes.
Interviewing by Lovvorn be
gan this week and will continue
through July and August. He is
a student at the Emory Univer
sity School of Medicine.
; There is no need for an im
। mediate choice between the
Army's Nike-Hercules and the
i Air Force’s Bomarc missiles.
President Eisenhower has told
: top Republican congressional
I leaders.
I The relative merits of the two
i missiles have been debated
[ openly by military leaders in re
cent congressional hearings.
the past week were: Mr. and
Mrs. Grady Howell, Mrs. Paul
Cook. Mrs. Tennie Smith, Mrs
Lay and Mrs. M. S. Clay.
^4
When your registered pharmacist fills a prescrip
tion for you, all of the ingredients specified by
your doctor arc measured with the utmost precision.
We put of your doc
tor’s command al)
the vast technical i
set-up of modern I
drug manufacture. *
Ready always!
Jackson
i “Reliable Druggists”
I Phone 100
Local Ell A Delegates . . .
M' ¥ . 1
I I W
*
k ui 1
t *
&: - A
y * ■
. \
—Staff Photo by McConnell
Three local members of the Future Homemakers of America were in attendance at a leaders con
ference at Jackson Lake, near Covington, this w?ek. Shown shortly before departure from the
local high school arc, left to right: Nellie Jo Jackson, Patricia Strickland, Nancy Light, and Mrs.
Sanford Allen, who accompanied the group.
Big Auto Sale Underway Here . . .
■ * -kJ W
■ -- /
.2 1 ■ ... •
- Staff Photo by McConnell
Wilson Motor Company here is conducting one of the largest automobile sales in the history of the
firm. Scheduled to run 10 days, the sale is pinpointed in special advertising in this issue of the
News.
' I
FORMER TRION
RESIDENT DIES
Mrs. Elizabeth Peppers Tilley ■
Knight, 67, died at the home of
her son, A. C. Tilley, in Atlanta
Tuesday night. Mrs. Knight was
a former resident of Trion.
। She is survived by two daugh
ters, Mrs. Donald Fifield, De-
, troit, Michigan, and Mrs. Geneva
Thonsend. Minneapolis, Minne
apolis; two stepdaughters, Mrs.
Flora Sweat. Atco, Georgia, and
. Mrs. Easter Bowman. Burlington,
, Iowa; four sons. William L. Til
’ ley. Douglasville, Georgia; Har-
lan C. Tilley, Opelika, Alabama;
James E. and A. C. Tilley, both
’ of Atlanta: two stepsons, John
. Knight and Grover Knight of
’ Atco; two brothers, Emory and
Lee Peppers of Chattanooga,
Tennessee: two sisters, Mrs.
Susan Parker and Miss Lydia
5 Ann Peppers of Chattanooga.
" Thirteen grandchildren and six
' great-grandchildren also sur
j vive.
j Funeral services will be held in
: the Chapel of the J. D. Hill Fu
neral Home today at 2:00 p in.
-I i with the Rev. W. J. Millsap of
। Hollie Springs, Georgia, offi
ciating. Burial will be in the
Trion Cemetery.
d
il Improve your skills by reading
s. books from the Chattooga Li
brary.
You can be sure
of getting "just what
the doctor ordered"
Drug Co.
Walgreen Agency
Summerville
THE SUMMERVILLE NEWS
H WHAT DO YOU WANT? |4
g I A NEW CAR AT A LOW PRICE! |~|
I | A NEW TRUCK AT A LOW PRICE! 11
———-—— gj|
II A USED CAR OR TRUCK THAT | g
| | IS IN A-l CONDITION! g^j
fl A LOW DOWN PAYMENT ON | I
fl ANY OF THE ABOVE! fl
f | LOW MONTHLY PAYMENTS ON ANY fl
l^| OF THE ABOVE! AND HIGH M
P| TRADE ALLOWANCE! | |
H WELL, STOP LOOKING f
fl YOU'LL FIND ALL THESE PLUS | I
f | CONVENIENT AT-HOME SERVICE AT f |
PI YOUR FACTORY AUTHORIZED 1J
L| FORD HEADQUARTERS- I |
4 LEONARD THOMAS FORD fl
Phone 130 Summerville, Go.
(SERVING ALL OF CHATTOOGA COUNTY)
| $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ |
County Agents Will
Get State Citation
Governor Vandiver Slated to I resent
Plaque to Selected Outstanding Agent
Chattooga County Agent M. H. Purcell will be included
when Georgia’s county agents and the Agiicultuial Exten
sion Service of the University of Georgia College oi Agricul
ture will be paid tribute at a meeting scheduled to be held
in Atlanta in July.
The meeting will be a lunch
eon affair on July 23. It will
feature the appearance of Gov
ernor Ernest Vandiver, who will
present a silver plaque to an
outstanding county agent, cho
sen by district agents of the Ex
tension Service.
The selected agent will rep
resent all agents in the state,
according to W. A. Sutton of the
Extension Service.
The luncheon and the plaque
will be tendered by the Agricul-
Toasts Bread
of All Sizes!
Smart New Toaster
by Westinghouse
Replace your old toaster with
this modern Westinghouse.
Precision mecha
nism insures per- Only
feet toast every t«AQE
time. Hinged
crumb tray, too,
foreasy cleaning!
you can sc SURE—ie it's
Westinghouse
STO-4203 °
Clement
V COMPLETE HOME FURNISHERS / J
SUMMERVILLE
THURSDAY, JUNE 18, 1959
! tural Division of American Cya
namid Company “to help make
! the public more fully aware that
! tax money invested in Agricul
tural Extension work is a gilt-
[ edged investment and that the
i county agent is a public servant
dedicated to the state’s pro
gress,” Mr. Sutton said.
More than 100 guests inter
ested in agricultural progress in
Georgia are expected to attend
the luncheon, which will be held
(Continued On Page 7)
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