Newspaper Page Text
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The Summerville News. Thiirs,, Derember !»■ 1062
j* 1 * ..„ •• " MBT-
: Holland News
By Mrs. Mark Strawn
Mr. and Mrs. Maxwell White
and Mr and Mrs. Donald Howell,
of Rome, had Sunday dinner at
the Lighthouse. They were cele
rating the White's wedding an
niversary.
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Bur
nette, of Marietta, were Thanks
giving dinner guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Gladstone Burnette Mr
and Mrs. Marshall Boss, of La-
Fayette, visited the Burnettes
Saturday night.
Lester White was Sunday din
ner guest of Mr. and Mrs. Earl;
White in LaFayette.
Mrs. Bob Brison and Mrs. Bob
Strawn took their children to the
Summerville Christmas parade
Saturday. Mrs. Lois Barker and
Misses Sara and Mary were also
in Summerville Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Worsham
entertained with a Thanksgiving
dinner for the Worsham family.
John and Miss Brenda Cochran, i
of Trion, were guests also.
Prepaid giving is 1 r
Keaily giving!
J 01N 0U R 1964
CHRISTMAS CLUB
You'll find this the easiest way 1 *' ।
to save ahead for Christmas Jf' £f. \ ' (')
gifts and other year-end ex- "j L ’. kJ . । ■ 1 v
penses. Choose one of the i
classes below, and start your (J U J ja,.
Club saving today! J| aMm
Depoiit Receive in J *■ ;/\ • ,
V/eeklyi 50 weeks: f. »*♦ V i)
$ .25 $12.50 \* * ®’ /A
.50 25.00 < ’j \
1.00 50.00 V ; AUlfXl
2.00 100.00 \ .>^'l
3.00 150.00 \ j
5.00 250.00 \ . * J
Farmers & Merchants Bank
MEMBER F D I. C.
3% INTEREST PAID ON SAVINGS
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V? V li*' , I give her the prettiest, and most practical, surprise of r^^Srt fl ' ' 1 r 4
Hz all when you give lingerie. We've slips, pettis, panties, /in fir
V* f^r 4^ •|, pajamas and gowns ... beautifully detailed in breezy- V IMt
'ft T Tz .| ; ' • ^S»\ W-* # T care fabrics. ’ .t l| ft
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V't L »TV f '\ f • ’ /i' \ • X Sleep shift or waltz gowns of nylon '* V i' s ^ x / \^yv ' ? fts Fili B V?
SV 11 \l\ 1 *' ' *• > '- \ Z -Mis /I ' I V- • \ tricot Tailored or lace trimmed. ^^sSj^yWTlHl P'ft^ \\(
<' I '>A' i ' zi i ; I/ A Lovel y colors $5 98 to $9 RiJ'X 1 - vx/ r ^*>l i
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Zl^ 1 \i’l» 11 •• s a ** n ‘rw / us f/ \ f It ‘.^ smocked yokes for extra fullness. Long Ms ? ?• ft L-z - ""' ’ ” sWr ,' ' a 1 r^
ft \ftMV / / 7/’ / w x $5 98 \ i '-t iM ft f/\ \ ft
, 7 X } ‘ Tift. r / '>' : \ / * II: jo Beautiful robes in cottons and nylon. f / \ j •• .<# \ \ ~
J/> ' 4 y»? Jr // ‘ ‘ : ' ' / fI . ; 1 Quilted for your comfort. Light as a 14 X’* ' > ’lr \ \
I^7 U- Z> ft/ A / I ft- A h"""' 5598 tosl4 98 /Jp"7 VV\ I \\ W
«v^ .^WAttk 1/ i lr / / *’ ’ ’ \ / f. ' . ‘ 1 Slips Pretty subtle embroidery on ny- ./ j;■ /-' M * 's< 1 \ W) V?
V*X ^Blw^sr t fl I* /i r \ J ' f : V 10,1 trlcot Lace salore White, pastel il —'' llkJ*. J~. . r J \ >
✓l7 SI F \i |(. /; it Jr I • I pink. blue, champagne, red and black. /kXx Y ' W \ 1 JIV
vr/ ?J Zs/ H / i $4,059 \ \
V^t r s * g ^^r'. I \ T ~ » i' Panties in favorite styles—briefs, K '' s ft •• >z
<A( i/HH X ■ / . I \ I \ banded or flare legs. Nylon, rayon or i Ji iX B
ij? K . / ’ V V I \ blended nylon and cotton. Colors to C -JCM'. -7 f. *” Zi SIV
» ■/■ h- ft 1 ' \\ 59ctoS2 7\; J\ «
S Z I ■z- II I \ \\ I lw pure combed cotton pettipants. >o'^. ft ftft yZn
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X( . X •-s ■-ft I I Classic, slim line pajamas Nvlon tri- Half shps in all colors. Lavishly trim- Z “'<7 "Zftftft’ ‘ ■ X ft?
<(C /T Aft Z ' \\ , ’ O, P t ' rfwt opacity Requires no £A e ^ rOider ^ -ft A'- 171
/ / "Z ***^»«BC M \ \ \ ironing Beautiful colors. $ 6 95 lon and cotton blend. $4 to $8.95 'A ’ • I'
v7 IZ Z-< t \ ft \ Cotton knit pajamas Blue. pink, aqua, P^ttipants in nylon tricot with Nylon •*. -f^
iVk Ik . sty-" \ C» \\ rP(i c e7 * _ lace trim and dainty rose appliques. ^ft- • ■ftZ
<// "- > y h . $4 to $/.95 $ 598 m
Iv /J Other Gift Selections to HER...
f ', * B Qgs * Suits >*■ Coats ★ Jackets ★ Hosiery Skirts
|Z " ★ Gloves ★ Dresses * Sportswear * Blouses ★ Millinery * Sweaters 1 nV
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Mr and Mrs. Jerry Worsham
and Mr. and Mrs. Alan Green
were Saturday night, visitors of
the Roy Worshams
Mrs. Dorothy Adderhold and
Frank. Mrs. Willard Jackson and
Cynthia Hublcr were Sunday
guests of the Mark Strawns.
Mrs. Theo Kendrick and W. 8.
Crumpton enjoyed Thanksgiving
dinner with Mr and Mrs John
D. Kendrick at Subligna. Mr.
i and Mrs James Henry Kendrick
i and children, of Rome, visited
Mrs. Theo Kendrick Saturday
i and Miss Kathryn Manning was
her Sunday visitor.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Earl Reece,
of Lyerly, were Thanksgiving
luncheon guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Brookshire.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Landrum
j and children, of Griffin, spent
Wednesday night with Mr. and
Mrs. T. H. Holland. They, their
Griffin visitors, and Misses Ber
tha and Mary Holland spent
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I।W ’ ’
I .
ELROD CHILDREN Here are the charming children
of Mr. and Mrs. Millon Elrod of Lyerly. They are Renae,
who celebrated her fifth birthday on Nov. 16, and Mich
ael, who is two. Their mother is the former Miss Ama
lene Mullen. The grandparents are Mrs. William Mul
len and Mrs. Willie Wood. Mrs. Leona Mullen is the
great-grandmother.
Thanksgiving in Fyffe, Ala., with!
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bowers.
Mrs Betty Astin and Mrs. Roy .
Duncan, of Chattanooga, were
here Monday and Mrs. Clyde:
! Stephenson went home with \
j them for a visit.
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Strawn, |
! and R D. Davison, of Summer- j
I viile, enjoyed a 6:00 o'clock tur-!
I key dinner with Mrs. Lois Barker
and family last Thursday.
Mrs. Bob Strawn and Mrs.
Mark Strawn visaed Miss Pearl
| Wright and Mrs. Alla Willis in !
Rome Friday. Mrs. Paul Brook
shire was also in Rome Friday. ।
Mrs. Bob Brison and children
।spent Wednesday night and
Thursday in Felton, Ga., with
their Lee relatives. Misses Sheila
and Sharon Priest remained:
until Sunday with their grand- j
I mother.
Mrs. Jimmy Watson, of At-'
lanta, spent last week with her
i parents, Mr and Mrs. Bill Kei- I
let Mrs. Watson and Mrs. Kellett
visited the Hoke Chambers fam- I
I ily in Trion Wednesday.
Miss Sheila Priest spent Mon-,
day night with Mrs. Bob Strawn.
Mr and Mrs. John Kellett and
’children enjoyed Thanksgiving I
i dinner with Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Kellett.
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Mont-}
gomery were supper guests j
! Thursday of Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Montgomery and Faith. Charles
Williams, of Armuchee, was their!
week-end visitor.
i Elaine Ratliff was Edna Hen
derson's Sunday visitor.
Mr and Mrs Clyde Bennett 1
were in Rome Saturday Mr. and
Mrs. Enoch High had dinner,
: Thursday with the Bennetts.
Mrs. Roy Worshsam and Miss
I Brenda Cochran went to Battey
I Hospital Monday to visit Turner:
Worsham
Collections
Up 6%, Says
Undercofler
State Revenue Commissioner
Hiram K Undercofler reported
collections for the month of No
vember were $34,013,493, an in
crease of $2,112,991 or 6.6'. over
the amount collected during the
same period last year.
This brings total collections
for the first five months of the
fiscal year to $170,416,936.00, an
increase of $12,127,244.00 or 7.0271
over the same five months last
year.
"This increase is once again
i over two million dollars better
: than that collected for the same
: month last year, and it repre
s sents an increase of approxi
. mately seven per cent. This is
| in line with increases we have
। had for the previous months of
’ this year,” he pointed out.
CHRISTOL (JOES
TO I I . LEWIS
Army Pvt. Thomas E. Christo],
! son of Alfred H. Christol, 41
i First Street, Trion, was assigned
! for duty with the 41st Signal
Battalion at Fort Lewis, Wash.,
j late in October.
Christol is a communications
’ center specialist in the unit.
The 23-year-old soldier en-
I tered the Army last January and
! completed basic training at Fort
■ Gordon.
Christel’s mother. Mrs. Madc
j lyn J. Wallace, lives at 2736
I Third Avenue, S. W.. Atlanta.
Don’t Be Fooled By Latest
USSR Deals, Says Talmadge
Back in his native Georgia for
a brief visit, U. S. Sen. Herman
E Talmadge warned that the
American people must guard
against being “lulled into com
placency” by the recent ratified
Nuclear Test Ban Treaty and
the proposed sale of U. S. wheat
to the Soviet Union.
Addressing a Veterans’ Day
celebration sponsored by the
American Legion’s Atlanta Post
No. 1 (after which he partici
pated in the annual Veterans’
Day parade in Atlanta) the
Georgia junior senator declared:
"The test ban is no panacea
for peace, and the wheat sale,
if consummated, will be a cash
and-carry business deal only.
Neither signify any great break
through in our relations with
the Soviets.
"Make no mistake about it. We
are still engaged in a bitter
ideological struggle with Com
munism. and Mr. Khrushchev is
just as intent on burying us to
day as he was before the treaty.”
Sen. Talmadge, who voted
against ratification of the treaty
because he said it was a threat
to U. S. security, told the gather
ing that “if the Soviet Union
complies with the treaty, it could
be a meaningful step toward
ending the nuclear arms race.”
But, with emphasis, he added:
"However, the risk is too great,
for the Soviet Union has a
shoddy record for keeping prom
ises. Whenever it suits their na
tional interest, the Communists
will violate this treaty, just as
they have broken other agree
ments in the past.
"Witness the treachery of a
year ago when the Soviets in
vaded this hemisphere with their
men and arms, and lied about
the missiles in Cuba. And to this
day we cannot be certain that
all Russian nuclear weapons
have been removed from Castro’s
island
"Witness the 1958 moratorium
on nuclear tests which the Rus
sians violated after secretly pre
tparing for a series of atmos
pheric tests in 1961. Witness a
long string of solemn pledges
broken from the 1917 Bolshevik
Revolution to the present time.”
Talmadge warned that it
would be “a great mistake for
the U. S. to think that the Soviet
Union went into this treaty in
good faith. Anyone entertaining
any such illusions has either
lost touch with the realities of
history and Communism or is
soft in the head.’’
Turning to “another great
threat to the security of this
country, “the Senator and for-
mer Georgia governor said the
U. S. is now “laboring under not
ont but two great deficits, a
domestic budget far out of bal
ance with a mounting national
debt and a deficit in our balance
of payments with foreign na
tions.” On that point he de
clared:
“These critical fiscal problems
could be greatly alleviated by a
sizeable reduction in non-essen
tial government spending, a de
crease in our wasteful and in
efficient foreign aid program,
and a withdrawal of some of our
troops from Europe.”
"It is high time for the na
tions of Western Europe to start
meeting NATO commitments
pl illft H w
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LOW DOWN PAYMENT—PAY WEEKLY OR MONTHLY
ROYAL TV AND APPLIANCES
Commerce St., Summerville Phone Will Stephenson 857-6701
Poppy Sale
Nearly S3OO
•
Nearly S3OO was raised in the
annual Poppy Day sale held on
the Saturday before Veterans
Day by the American Legion
Auxiliary.
The exact figure was $287.88.
Here is a breakdown of the sales
by communities: Menlo and
Cloudland, $154; Lyerly, $16.62;
and Summerville-Trion, $117.26.
and sharing the cost of their
own defense.” Talmadge added.
MRS. McGTNNTS
TO ADDRESS
ELEMENTARY P.T.A.
Mrs. Harry Lee McGinnis will
be the guest speaker at the Sum
merville Elementary Parent-
Teacher Assn, next week.
Her topic will be: “Character
and Spiritual Education”.
The meeaing will be held at 3:-
15 p.m. Tuesday at the school.
A nursery will be provided.
Lyerly 4-H Has
Thanksgiving Theme
The Lyerly 4-H Club met at
the gymnasium.
Sixteen members of the sev
enth grade had a play about
Thanksgiving.
M. H. Purcell’s demonstration
was on rat control. Miss Omie
Wiley gave a demonstration on
importance of fruit in the diet
and how to make salads out of
different kinds of fruit.