Newspaper Page Text
12
News Os Chelsea
By Ann Brown, Route 1, Menlo, Ga
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Sumner Jr.,
Gail and Ricky. Nell Bailey and
Mr and Mrs Hill Hall. Becky
and David, and Carol Hall en
joyed an outing at Lake Winne
pesaukah Tuesday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Garner and
Reba, and Elain Morgan spent
Monday in Scottsboro. Ala.
Mr. and Mrs. Hill Hall, Becky
and David. Mrs Huie Chandler,
Mr and Mrs Carl Sumner Jr.,
Gail and Ricky and Nell Bailey
visited the Great Smoky Moun
tains Thursday and Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. D. F. Colbert vis
ited Mr. and Mrs. Howard Bailey
Saturday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Carr. Mr.
and Mrs. Jimmy Mcßae were
the spend-the-night guests of
Mr. and Mrs Howard Bailey and
Mell Saturday night.
Mr. and Mrs Tom Gentry
YOU
CAN SAVE
MORE THAN 25%^
kon AUTOMOBILE^
^INSURANCE
-VI
Ik
NF
THE TRAVELERS
The Com/mny That Invented
Automobile Insurance
See us for complete information about The Trav
elers low-cost Automobile Policies that will suit
your needs.
Shropshire & Gul I in, Inc.
★ INSURANCE SERVICE ★
10 GEORGIA AVENUE SUMMERVILLI
JULY CLEARANCE SALE
| BEDROOM |
Regular $92.95 SEQ OR
Cedar Robe Z——L
Regular $239.95 Oak $1 A A Q R
3-Pc. Bedroom Suite lU’t.YJ
Regular $249.95 QQ QE
3-Pc. Modern Oak 107.7 J
Regular $269.95 QQ Q £
3-Pc. Wolnut Suite I 77.7 J
Regular $359 95 18th Cent. A Q E
Regular $154 95 >llO OR
3-Pc. Moplc Bedroom ■ 17.7 J
Regular $29.95 SIQQC
Twin Beds IY.Y3
LIVING ROOM
Regular $139.95 SQQ Q R
Early American Sofa 07.7 J
Regular $49.95 Qt
Early American Chair w“.7J
Regular $39.95 $0 O O R
Early American Tobies X 7.7 J
Regular $199.95 S7O Q R
Early Am. Love Scat • * .73
Regular $259 95 Bradlev SIQQ A A
Sleeper and Chair ■ 70.KJV
Regular $139.95 SQQ OR
Sofa and Chair
Regular $299.95 SIOOOR
2-Pc. Sofa and Chair 177.73
Regular $29.95 $1 Q Q E
Unfinished Desk J
Regular $1.98
Clothes Baskets ■ • W
Rug Remulamts . 50c
spent the 4th of July with the
Tom Garners.
Miss Nell Bailey was spend
the-night guest of Mr. and Mrs.
Carl Sumner Jr. and children
Wednesday night.
Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy Mcßae
visited Friday with Mr and Mrs.
Lonnie York in Rossville.
Carolyn Hunter was guest of
Brenda Baggett Sunday after
noon.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Gene Fin
ster and Thelma Finster were
Sunday dinner guests of Mrs. G.
A. Jackson and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Finster,
Beverly and Thelma toured Mo
bile, Ala., and Pensacola, Fla.,
last week
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Garner
and Reba enjoyed having as
their Sunday dinner guests Amy
Rogers, Mr and Mrs. Fred P< rry,
EASY
TERMS
UP TO
36 MONTHS TO PAY
1961 HEART FUND
SETS NEW RECORD
। Georgians contributed more to
' the Heart Fund in 1961 than in
' any prior year, according to a
year end report of the Georgia
Heart Association.
Chattooga County’s Heart
Fund drive increased from
$2348 in 1960 to $2632 in 1961.
I J R Jackson, Jackson Drugs,
Summerville, was chairman this
। year.
The final Heart Fund total for
Georgia was $473,857 81. This
compares with $415,464 in 1959
and $464,394 in 1960.
Results of the February Heart
Fund drive mean that an in
■ creased amount will be devoted
i to heart research in Georgia in
stitutions and that the stroke
rehabilitation program of the
association can be continued at
an accelerated pace, officials
said.
P. A. Clark, of Chattanooga. Rev.
Herman Hale, of Fort Ogle
thorpe; Pat Baggett and Misses
Beulah and Annie Garner.
Mr. and Mrs. Olin Brown and
Steve and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Wilson and boys vacationed in
the Smoky Mountains.
Mr. and Mrs. Wyndell Garner
and Charles, of LaFayette, vis
ited relatives in Chelsea Mon
day.
Jean Willingham was spend
the-night guest of Reba Garner
Thursday night.
Ann. Sandy and Jimmy Wil
son, of Summerville, spent sev
eral days last week with Shbryl
and Nelson Wilson. They at
tended singing at Chelsea Bap
tist Sunday night.
Miss Myra Warren, of Balti
more, Md., spent most of last
week with Misses Beulah and
Annie Garner.
Visiting the Warner E Wilsons
over the Fourth were Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Burt. Miss Annette
Burt and Mrs. Daniel H. Burt, of
Cleveland, Tenn. Nancy Joyce
also visited her parents.
Mr. and Mrs. Holford Wilson
and daughter, Diane, of War
wick. Rhode Island, were visiting
their grandmother, Mrs. C. N
Wilson, and the Warner E. Wil
sons.
Cadet Edwin Wilson, of North
Georgia College, returned to
school after visiting his parents
over the Fourth.
Rev. Howard Finster and fam
ilv pninved a vacation to various
Rev. Howard Finster and fam
ily enjoyed a vacation to various
places in Florida.
SECOND HAND
TV SETS
12 to Sell — As Is
10.00
I SEWING MACHINES
Regular $139.95 Sewing SAO Q R
Machine and Cabinet 07.73
Regular $199.95 Sewing SIOO OR
Machine and Case 1X7.7w
Regular $169.95 Sewing SQQ OR
Machine and Cabinet 07.73
Regular $179.95 Sewing SQO O R
Machine and Case
Regular $269.95 Sewing SIAO OR
Machine and Cabinet 1“7.73
AIR CONDITIONERS
10,100 BTU *169.95
210 Volts (4 to Sell) $l7O AE
11,000 BTU 1/7.73
TID BIT TRAYS
REG. $1.98 97c
Clement
c
THE SUMMERVILLE NEWS, SUMMERVILLE, GEORGIA
.. z— ~ —r — ~
A *■ JfeM t
Ml. *8 Si
■” A"' f'l
.•’ . xA sr 7 ---
READYING HIGH SCHOOL— This
scene, photographed last week at the
front of the Summerville High School
building, is typical on that campus this
summer as various improvements are
underway. A great deal of painting is
being done, rest rooms are being im
proved, two classrooms in the basement
of the band building are being readied
for possible use and various other im
provements are planned. The project is
financed with $4,300 made available to
the Summerville school when a bond
FAMILY FOOD BUYING
Freeze Packaged Luncheon
Meats to Preserve Flavor
Q. Why does packaged cooked
sliced ham and other luncheon
meats sometimes have a “butter
milk” or slightly “soured” fla
vor? I keep them in the coldest
part of the refrigerator.
A. The “buttermilk” or
“soured” flavor may be caused
by the growth of bacteria. In
a special study of this bacteria
known to attach and thrive on
pre-cooked meats. Dr. William
A. Miller of Kansas Experiment
Station found that these bac
teria thrive at refrigerator tem
peratures rather than at warm
temperatures. At freezer tem
peratures, such bacteria do not
multiply. While this bacteria
does not make the foods harm
ful to health, they do affect
flavor and odor For best flavor.
Dr. Miller advises that packaged
cooked ham slices be stored in
FANS
Regular. $39.95 SO7 OR
20" Window Fan A/.7J
Regular $54.95 SQOOR
20" Deluxe Fan 37.73
Regular $22.95 s*l E A E
10" Oscillating Fan
Regular $18.95 $1 A A E
10" Oscillating Fan _ IX.7W
SPECIAL!
23" ZENITH TV
(Base Free)
M 99’ 5 .
11l
| MATTRESS & SPRINGS
Regular $29.95 Innerspring SIQ .95
Acme Mattress 17.7 W
Regular $29.95 „ *19.95
Acme Box Spring 17,7^
Regular $54.95 510-Coil 95
Button Top Mattress 30.73
Regular $54.95 SQQ OR
510-Coil Box Spring 30.73
Regular $64.95 510-Coil s^7 AE
Smooth Top Mottrcss 4Z,7J
Regular $69.95 510-Coil $/|4 OR
Quilted Mattress *1*1.73
series was paid off ahead of time re
cently. If the money holds out, School
Supt. James Spence said this week, some
new blackboards and shades may be
added and some shades may be repaired.
Plans call for the campus to be used for
the newly - consolidated county high
school until a new structure can be
erected. Shown painting are Rex Cass
idy and Paul Quinn, high school coaches
who had requested extra work during
the summer.
the freezer rather than the re
frigerator. This is true even if
you keep meats only a few days.
Q. I’m a “weight watcher” or
“calorie counter.” Every time I
eat pork my husband tells me
pork has many more calories
than beef. Please compare the
calorie content of the two meats.
A. Research at Oklahoma Ag
ricultural Experiment Station
found that lean pork has no
more calories than lean beef.
Three and one-fourth ounces of
cooken lean pork supplies 194
calories, while the same amount
of beef supplies 209 calories.
When the marbling (fat dis
tributed through the lean) is
left in the lean meat the total
number of calories in the pork
is 240 while there are 266 in the
beef.
Q. How do fresh and cured
pork compare in food value?
A. The food value of fresh and
cured pork is similar. Pork like
other meats is a good source of
protein, iron and the B-vita
mins. However, some of the
thiamine may be destroyed by
heat. An average serving (3
ounces) of cooked boneless fresh
loin supplies 44 percent and a
serving of cured ham supplies 29
percent of the recommended
daily allowance of thiamine for
the normally active man. A
serving of the pork loin fur
nishes about 30 percent of the
protein and 25 percent of the
iron recommended daily.
(Selected questions from read
ers will be answered by Miss
Gibbs in this column. Address
questions to Miss Mary Gibbs,
329 State Agricultural Building,
19 Hunter Street, S. W., Atlanta,
Ga.)
He that does good for good’s
sake, seeks neither praise nor
reward, but he is sure of both in
the end.
—William Penn
SECOND HAND
Electric Range
8 to Sell — As Is
S IO.OO
DINETTE SUITES
Regular $139.95 SAOQR
9-Pc. Dinette Suite 07.7 J
Regular $139.95 Oval $Q A Q E
7-Pc. Dinette Suite 74.73
Regular $89.95 Chrome SJF A O R
7-Pc. Dinette Suite 07.73
Regular $89.95 Bronze SXkO O R
7-Pc. Dinette Suite 07.73
Regular $59.95 Chrome s^.7 Q E
5-Pc. Dinette Suite “r/.73
Regular $59.95 Bronze s^.7 O R
5-Pc. Dinette Suite “■/ .73
MISCELLANEOUS
Regular 22c 17
9x9 Rubber Tile
Regular $1.89 sq. yd. A g
Armstrong Vinyl I .“3
Sq. Yd.
CRUSHED
Foam Pillows
“e".. ’i.oo
7 .... >
y ■ ! V ‘ z z
/
WI i T
■ jjkJ
If it rains... let it
TIME WAS when a little rain on washday
threw many a homemaker into a tizzy. Now,
it’s so easy to get the laundry “bone dry”
— rain or shine — with a flameless electria
clothes dryer.
Clothes dried electrically look so much
better and last longer. Gentle tumbling in
radiant, even heat pampers your washables,
makes them fluffy-soft and sweet-smelling.
I An automatic electric clothes dryer is a
real wifesaver, too. It banishes forever the
stooping, stretching and straining that would
tire a weight-lifter.
F And the electricity that runs your clothes
dryer is such a bargain. Through the years
the trend in the average price per kilowatt
hour has been downward.
i No woman wants to be tied down by a
clothesline. So, for a worry-free washday, go
modern with an electric clothes dryer. y
TAX.PAYING •^INVESTOR - OWNER
GEORGIA POWER COMPANY
A CITIZEN W H E R I V E 8 W I SERVE
PHONE
857-6801
Reupholstered Living Room
Regular $149.95 SO4 OR
2-Pc. Sofo & Chair 0*7.73
Regular $129.95 S"7A O R
2-Pc. Sofa & Chair • 4.73
Regular $129.95 $ R O O R
2-Pc. Sofa & Chair 37.73
Regular $69.95 s4^ OC
Odd Sofa 44,73
Regular $149.95 2-Pc. S7O A E
Sofa Bed & Chair /7.73
MISCELLANEOUS
Regular $24.95 $1 A O R
Play Pen 14,73
Regular $12.95 AA
Baby Bed Mattress 7.UU
Regular 69c ft. ya Q
Armstrong Wall Covering “#7C
Regular $12.95 p
9x12 Armstrong Rug 0.70
Regular $39.95 SQ/J OR
Swimming Pools X 4.73
Regular $49.95 3 0 Rollaway SOQ AE.
Bed and Mattress 30.73
Regular $1.95 A7
Plastic Utility Bags 7/ C
Regular $29.95 $1 O O R
Unfinished Chest 17.73
Regular $8.95 p fy p
Unfinished Stool 3.73
Regular $14.95 $Q OR
Unfinished Bookcase __ 7.73
Regular $24.93 <t. aw ■■
Baby Bed $17.95
Regular $9.95 tjr Q £
Table Lamps O.#J
Reg. $59.95 3 0 Rollaway si| ar Q
Bed and Mattress _ 40.
THURSDAY, JULY 13, 1961