Newspaper Page Text
10
Menlo Notes
By Miss Lena Baker, Menlo, Georgia
Mrs. Lula Cleckler is visiting
in Chattanooga to be at the bed
side of her son, Martin Cleckler,
who underwent major surgery
last week in Erlanger Hospital;
Mr. and Mrs. O. L. Cleckler vis
ited him Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. Sell McWhorter
spent Sunday with the Harry i
Dodds in Scottsboro. Ala. Mrs. !
Margaret Moody and Irene,
of Summerville, accompanied
them.
The Home Demonstration Club
met Monday night at the School
Cafetorium.
Mrs. W. H. Hammond and sis- .
ter, Miss Edna Perry, were week- ;
end guests of Mrs. Paul White
head in Mentone. Ala.
Mrs. D. C. Mitchell and boys,'
Mrs. Dovie Majors and Mrs.
Pluma Trice visited Mrs. Ollie 1
House, (who is a patient in Floyd
Crossword Puzzle
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ACROSS
1. Sent out
7. Brags
13. Wigwam
14. In a line
15. Argon:
" chem.
15. Either
17. Unit of heat
18. Big cat
20. Failure:
slang
21. Egyptian
river
22. Gaelic
“John”
23. Weary
25. Dandy
26. More lucid
28. Radium:
chem.
30. Suffix:
collectively
31. Declaration
34. Exclamation
36. Musical note'
37. Settling,
as a bird
40. High peak
42. Cairies
:44. Neither
45. Springs
47. High: music
48. Sicilian
volcano
Answer to Puzzle
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( SENSATIONAL SHOT!
( HAVE YOU BEEN
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GRIN OFF \ GRINNING’) IDOTOSMART /POOR FUGGY ( OUTSIDE VIITW NOUR X MEASLES?) x. PAL' ./
NOUR FACE' )\THAT!S MV J ALECS? I PUNCH /11$ IN \wERSLES PUGGY'/ X_ -^Z/lT
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; County Hospital) Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Hall vis
, ited her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
G. E. Townsend, in LaFayette
Sunday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Majors and
children spent the week-end in
Atlanta with relatives.
Preacher Roger Stone was din
| ner guest of the J. T. Copelands
Sunday.
Miss Nanci Welch left Sun
; day for Reinhardt College, in
1 Waleska. Her parents. Mr. and
; Mrs. G. W. Welch, and Mr. and
Mrs. Adies Holliday accompa
| nied her. Mrs. W. R. Chappelear
went far as Rome with them to
I see relatives.
I Circle No. 1 Presbyterian
Ladies met Monday afternoon
with Mrs. Sell McWhorter. Nine
1 were present. Refreshments were
I served by the hostess.
19. Singles
(20. Government
body
123. Character
istic
24. Gown
27. Siamese
coin
29. Insect
: 32. Intersect
33. Color
34. Minces
.35. Very high
38. Immaturity
39. Rasper
41. Out of date
43. Having
paddles
46. Nailhead
48. Pitcher-
50. Mineral
51. Eggs
54. Type of
current
55. Neon: chem.
49. Past events
51. Exclamation
52. In
53. Make certain
54. Revenge
56. Sowed
57. Profession
DOWN
1. Sloping type
2. In a series
3. Selenium:
chem.
4. On
5. Ever: poetic
6. Prefix:
reverse
7. Grass leaf
8. Grease
9. Soon
10. Type:
cross stroke
11. Suit maker
12. Drowsy
17. Presently
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Evans and
I children, of Rome, were dinner
guests of her mother. Mrs. Dovie
Majors, Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry M. Murphy
■ accompanied the Loy Murphys
|to attend the funeral of Mrs.
I Marion Dodd (Mrs. Loy Mur-
I phy’s mother) below Rome, Sun
day afternoon.
Miss Ollene Watson was din
ner guest of the Dodd girls, Tom
and Roy, Sunday.
Mrs. Annie Tucker visited her
son, George, and family in
Chattanooga the week-end.
Mr. and Mrs. “Bud” Tucker
and children and O. P. Tucker
were dinner guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Charlie Culpepper, near
Fort Payne, Sunday. Mr. and
Mrs. Tom Tucker, of Jamestown,
accompanied them.
Messrs. Guy Patterson and G.
W. Welch made a business trip
to Kentucky Friday night and
Saturday.
Sorry to report Herman White
is a patient in Chattooga Hos
pital, also J. R. Wyatt. Several
friends, besides homefolk, visited
them Sunday. We wish both a
LAFF OF THE WEEK '
♦
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“This IS a new one! . . . Spaghetti and peanut butter!”
HALF-PAST TEEN -
C* / KW// THOUGHT
TZZZJ THIS PLACE SERVED Lx
/ A/ I JUST HAMBURGERS.
( \ HERE'S A STEAK
' \\. FOFO ^ LY 72^7 J
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THE SUMMERVILLE NEWS
speedy recovery.
Mrs. C. R. Toles and Miss
Blanche visited relatives in ■
Henagar, Ala., Sunday after-1
noon.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert King and
Miss Sue are now in their new
home on Bth Avenue. They vis
ited Mrs. Leon Gamble in Rome
Sunday afternoon. Her mother,
Mrs. O. J. Espy, and Woodrow
accompanied them.
Mrs. H. E. Wyatt visited Miss
Emma Cavin and brother, Clyde,
in Chesterfield, Sunday after
noon.
Misses Nanci Welch and
Jeanette Baker accompanied
Roger Stone to Athens Friday
for the football game at the
University of Georgia.
Mr. and Mrs. Z. B. Ham and
children, of Chattanooga, spent
the week-end with her parents,
the Henry Lawless.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Chamblee
and children, of Tuscaloosa, Ala.,
were weekend guests of his par
ents, the R. D. Chamblees.
Several friends visited Mrs. M.
E. Phillips during her bereave
ment the past week.
'V.
Holland News
By Mrs. Mark Strawn, Lyerly, Ga., Route 2
fcsss r.» -
Miss Mamie Smith and Theo,
and Mrs. Bob House attended
the singing at South Carolina
Camp Ground last Tuesday
night.
The community was made sad
by the death of Mrs. Susie Hol
land last Tuesday. Those going
to Stevens Funeral Home in
Rome to view the remains last
Wednesday night included: Mr.
and Mrs. Clyde Stephenson, Mrs.
Grady Howell, Mrs. Maxwell
Miss Edna Perry and Mrs. W.
J. Hammond were in Rome Sat
urday.
Several students of Jackson
ville College spent the week-end
with homefolk.
Mr. and Mrs. Elton Wright;:
and Wanda, of Murfreesboro.
Tenn., visited relatives the week- ;
end.
_ TELL, ME
HOVJ OFTEN MAY THE DESIGN NaZHPT CAUSES P)N ECHO ?
ON UNITED STATES COtNS BE TV ^TTTrr
f AN ECHO RESULTS FROM SOUND
NOTHORE OFTEN THAN BACK AFTER THEV
ONCE IN 25VEARS HAVE STRUCK A REFLECTING
ACCORDING TO LRW' SURFACE! ECHOES PROVE THAT
ACCOKUINi? TO USW! SOUND TAKES TIME TQ TRAVEL !
How large are the parks Why do sailors wear trousers
IN THE ROCKY MOUNTAINS REGION? THAT PRE VERY WIDE AT TAE
_7 — bottom ?
"“.TFx
VERY LARGE! FoR EXAMPLE, SAN
S’Srffr^OFMF&qCHU^^^ To BM^BLE THEM, WHEN CLEANING
CP COL&AO&S " DECKS OR LANDING IN SHALLOW
?4a\ 6 lHt PA®, S-STp^K, IS “ P , ™ E ' R
iSj ABOUT SIZE OF RHUOt iSi-MND f Tkg>UsEK^> EASILY ?
Why we built two cars for 1960 . . .
as different as night and day
On October 2—for the first time in Chevrolet’s lf9-year history—you will be able to walk Into your
dealer’s showroom and see two totally different kinds of cars. ■ One is the conventional 1960 Chevrolet,
brand new in appearance and more beautifully refined and luxurious than you can imagine. ■ The
other is unlike any car we or anybody else ever built—the revolutionary Corvair, with the engine in the
rear where it belongs in a compact car. ■ We’d like to tell you why we built two such different cars,
how we built them—and for whom we built them.
Why two kinds of cars? Because
America itself has been going through
some big changes in the past few
years. Our cities have been straining
at their seams. Traffic is jam-packed.
Parking space is at a premium.
And our suburbs have spread like
wildfire. People are living farther from
their work, driving more miles on
crowded streets. There is new leisure
time—but more things to do. There’s
a new standard of living—and more
need for two cars in the family garage.
In short, America’s automobile
needs have become so complex that
no one kind of car can satisfy them
completely. That is why we at Chev
rolet, keeping tab on these trends,
have had a revolutionary compact car
in the planning stages for more than
nine years.
Thus, when we decided three years
ago to prepare for production of such
a car we were ready to build it the way
it should be built. There was no need
for a hasty “crash” program that
would create only a sawed-off version
of a conventional car.
That is why the two cars you
will see in your dealer’s showroom
October 2 will be two entirely
different kinds of cars. One is the
conventional ’6O Chevrolet—brand
new in beauty, with new space inside,
new spirit under the hood, a new
See all the new Chevrolets October 2 at your local authorized Chevrolet dealer's
JACKSON CHEVROLET CO., INC.
N. COMMERCE STREET SUMMERVILLE, GEORGIA
White and Nancy, Mrs. Claud
Ratliff, Mr. and Mrs. Gladstone
Burnette, Mrs. Mark Strawn,
Miss Mamie Smith, Mrs. George
Hubler, Mrs. Willard Jackson
and Miss Mary Holland.
Mrs. Bob Brison and chil
dren spent Wednesday night in
Telton. Ga., so the Priest girls
could be present at a birthday
dinner honoring their grand
mother.
Mrs. Lois Barker and Misses
Sara and Mary visited Mr. and
Mrs. Mark Strawn Friday night.
Grady Howell was sick and not
able to attend Sunday School
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Gladstone Bur
nette visited relatives in Fort
Payne, Ala., Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Maxwell White
and Nancy were Sunday dinner
guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. O. All-
feeling of sumptuousness and luxury
never before attained by any car in its
field. There is great V 8 power linked
with new thrift, plus Chevrolet’s
superb 6-cylinder engine. It is a
traditional car that comes even closer
to perfection—in silence, in room, in
ease of control, in velvety ride—than
any other car we have ever made.
The other is the Corvair, a compact
car that is astonishingly different from
anything ever built in this country.
It has to be—because this is a six
passenger compact car, with a really
remarkable performance ... a ear
designed specifically to American
standards of comfort, to American
traffic needs.
The engine is in the rear. Among
the basic advantages resulting from
this engine location are better traction
on a compact 108-inch wheelbase and
a practically flat floor. But to be
placed in the rear, the engine had to
be ultra light and ultra short. So
Corvair’s engine is totally new—
mostly aluminum and air cooled; it
weighs about 40 per cent less than
conventional engines. It is a “flat”
horizontally opposed six—so it is only
three cylinders long . . . and that
leaves a lot more room for passengers.
Another weight saving: like modern
airplanes, the Corvair has no frame;
the body-shell supplies it great struc-
mon in Summerville and in the
afternoon visited relatives in
Chattanooga.
Mrs. Dorothy Nour and Mary
Nell spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Kellett and Pamela.
The latter was ill and missed
two days from school last week.
Mrs. Bob House and Miss
Mamie Smith were in Lyerly
Saturday.
Lester White visited -his sister,
Mrs. Walter Hensley, and her
family at LaFayette Tuesday
night.
Rov Worsham spent a day and
night in the hospital last week
but has recovered and was at
church Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Milton Housch,
Miss Mary and Bobby, from
Pennville: Mr. and Mrs. Wiley
Holland and Sandra, of Rome,
and Mr. and Mrs. Mark Strawn
were Sunday visitors at Mrs.
Minnie Hollands.
Mr. and Mrs. Enoch High were
Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Clyde Bennett.
Mrs. Kathryn Knighton and
daughter, of Rome, were Sunday
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Free
man Clark.
Mrs. Leona Thomas, Miss Polly
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1959
Holland, Mrs. Rell Johnson, of
Rome, and Mrs. Dan Smith spent
Saturday with Harvey Holland.
Pamela Hubler had supper
Monday night with Mr. and Mrs.
Mark Strawn.
Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Adderhold
and Frank spent Tuesday night
with Mr. and Mrs. G. S. Holland.
Copper futures show sharp de
cline.
Boys! Pads!
Win! 40 Awards!
^Enter our J M
MonejrawiH
Model Building
2 Junior Divisions
Up to 1J Years
2 Senior Divisions
13 Years and Older
Enjoy double fun! Build a model,
then enter it in the Monogram
Model Building Contest which we
are sponsoring. Now 47 of these
firrfeasy-to-build models to choose
from—aircraft, ships, boats, cars.
AU-piastic, all-balsa and combina
tion kits, priced as low as 60 cents.
30 kits under sl. 40 beautiful
awards given, including four tro
। phies 10)4 inches high, medals and
medallions. Models not required
to fly or operate in any way.
Come In-Cet Kit—Free Entry Blank
★ Hobbycraft
Novelties
★ Toys
★ Magazines
City Hobby
Shop and
News Stand
Next to VanPelt’s
Appliance Center
SUMMERVILLE
tural strength . . . it’s a welded unit
that is virtually rattle-free.
The ride is fantastic. But to get it
we had to design independent sus
pension at every wheel; conventional
springing would give a compact car a
ohoppy ride. Right now we’ll make
one prediction: no other U.S. compact
car will ride so comfortably, hold the
road so firmly and handle so beautifully.
Now there are two kinds of cars
from Chevrolet—because it takes two
kinds of cars to serve America’s needs
today. If you love luxury—the utmost
in luxury—and if you want generous
interior space, breath-taking perform
ance, automatic drives and power
assists—then the conventional ’6O
Chevrolet may be your choice.
If easy parking, traffic agility and
utmost economy are high on your list
—then you should seriously consider
the Corvair. But the best thing to do
is to look these two new cars over at
your Chevrolet dealer’s ... take them
out for a drive. It may be that the
only logical choice for your family
between two cars like this is—both.
They make a perfect pair.