Newspaper Page Text
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Johnny Tidmore entered
Children’s Hospital in Chatta
nooga on Monday for plastic
surgery on Tuesday. A speedy
recovery is wished for him.
Mrs. Vernon Tidmore
visited Mrs. Melba Meredith in
Chattooga County Hospital
Wednesday.
Mrs. Lenora Gayler and Mrs.
Vernon Tidmore visited Mrs.
Charles Norton in Floyd Hos
pital and Mrs. Lillie Mae
Dooley in Chattooga County
Hospital on Monday.
Mrs. Mattie Slappe of
Attalla, Ala., was guest over
the weekend of her brother,
Wesley Abernathy, who
remains on the critical list at
his home in Lyerly.
Rev. Allen Lawrence,
Robert Wood, Arthur Powell,
Mrs. Emily Futral, Mrs. Harold
Bishop, Mrs. Maude Tallent,
and Mrs. Anna Cochran were
among the guests of Wesley
Abernathy over the weekend.
Mrs. Doyal Gayler of Chat
toogaville was guest of Misses
Fay and Leone Busbin Tues
day.
Miss Leone Busbin visited
Mr. and Mrs. Tommy Adams
Thursday afternoon.
Mrs. Bob Kimbell visited
Mrs. Tezzie Lou Ridley and
Mrs. Lena Bishop Monday
afternoon.
Roy Bishop visited his
mother, Mrs. Lena Bishop,
Sunday night.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe D. Hender
son and son, Glenn, of Rome,
Mrs. Edith Ray, and Mrs.
Harold Bishop visited Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Cook Saturday after
noon.
Mrs. Hugh Bohannan was
Tuesday afternoon guest of Mr.
and Mrs. Earl Jones and W. N.
Kimbell.
Those visiting Bill Cook,
Mrs. Cook and Marie over the
weekend were: Mr. and Mrs.
James Lewis, Wally and Lynn,
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Cook, Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Reece, Mr. and
Mrs. G. C. Pickle, Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Bishop, Minister Frank
Yates, Mr. and Mrs. Joel Cook,
Margaret and Tony, James
Murphy, Susan Clark, Mrs.
Janette Shore, Mrs. Mary Hay
good, Mrs. Shirley McLeod,
Mrs. Gussie Cook, Marvin
Pickle, Rev. Allen Lawrence,
Robert Wood, Arthur Powell,
Mr. and Mrs. Alonzo Anderson,
Avery Bryan, Mrs. Edith Ray,
Mrs. Martha Bishop, and Mr.
and Mrs. Joe D. Henderson and
son. Glenn.
Mr. and Mrs. Danny Wyatt
were Sunday night guests of
Mrs. Velma Wyatt.
Barry and Tracy Jackson are
recovering from a recent illness
at their home. A speedy re
covery is wished for them.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Tucker
See the 1973
Snapper
Mowers
AT
Crawford
Hardware
LYERLY
Give him a lightweight
homelite
CHAIN SAW
For the man who *nioy» imping, cutting hi. own
firewood. no P more useful gift than
ting’out of-doors, there s no mure « •
a lightweight Homebte Chain Sa *_ M *
his Xmas the best yet. Buy him o
today. Priced a. low ••
Mestern outo
BAB Summerville
Ph 857-2«>
Lyerly
Happenings |
By Mrs. Martha Bishop I
Phone 895-3381 $
had as guests Sunday, Mr. and
Mrs. Andrew Montgomery of
Dry Valley, William L. Short
and Mr. and Mrs. Tommy
Tucker of Summerville.
The Byerly Homemakers
will sponsor a Christmas Bazaar
Friday, Dec. 15, from 10 a.m.
to 2 p.m. Homemade cakes,
cookies, candies, sewing, handi
craft, canned goods, pies,
knitted items, Christmas deco
rations, and Christmas toys will
be for sale. Come by and buy
your Christmas gifts, etc. The
Bazaar will be held at Lyerlv
City Hall.
Several ladies from the
Lyerly Church of Christ met at
the church building Monday
afternoon to make sick room
pads for patients in the com
munity.
Mrs. Henry Reynolds and
Mrs. Emily Futral were in
Atlanta on business Thursday.
Mrs. LaFaughn Bishop of
Summerville and Mrs. Harold
Bishop were in Rome shopping
Tuesday afternoon.
Bob Kimbell is enjoying a
hunting trip in South Georgia
this week.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Jones and
family had as dinner guests Sat
urday, Mrs. Lena Bishop, Mrs.
Harold Bishop, Mr. and Mrs.
George Bishop of Macon, and
Mr. and Mrs. Joe D. Henderson
of Rome.
Get-well wishes are ex
tended to Miss Tezzie Lou
Ridley who has been on the
sick list the past week at her
home.
Members of the Lyerly
Homemakers Club, Mrs. Ruth
Cook, and Mrs. Bus Wyatt,
helped serve at the 4-H
Banquet in Summerville Friday
night. Others of the club who
helped prepare food for the
occasion were: Mrs. Bill Cook,
Mrs. J. S. Taylor, Mrs. Vernon
Tidmore, Mrs. Ralph Bishop,
Mrs. Roy Bishop, Mrs. Harold
Bishop, and Mrs. Velma Wyatt.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Jones,
W. N. Kimbell, and Mrs. Harold
Bishop had as guest Sunday
afternoon, Mrs. LaFaughn
Bishop of Summerville.
Mrs. Bill Cook and Billy
were in Nashville Friday and
were accompanied home by
Mr. Cook who has been under
going treatment the past
several weeks at the VA Hos
pital. Open heart surgery is
planned after the Christmas
holidays.
Mr. and Mrs. George£ishop
of Macon were guests over the
weekend of Mrs. Lena Bishop,
W. N. Kimbell, and Mr. and
Mrs. Earl Jones and Margaret.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Bishop
had as supper guests Friday
night Mrs. Lena Bishop and Mr.
and Mrs. George Bishop.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Jones and
W. N. Kimbell had as dinner
guests Friday, Mr. and Mrs.
George Bishop of Macon.
Some sixteen County
Homemakers visited the
George Thomas Hunt Gallery
of Art in Chattanooga, Tenn.,
Monday where they were
privileged to see “Christmas
Trees International,” which are
being shown until Dec. 17
from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.,
sponsored by various clubs in
Tennessee.
A speedy recovery is wished
for Tommy Adams, Wesley
Abernathy, W. N. Kimbell, and
Miss Shirley Stallings who has
recently returned home from
Chattooga Hospital. Also, Bill
Cook who is home for a few
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Last week, we published the above picture and asked
if any of our readers recognized these pupils at the
old Hanson School in Dry Valley, to come by our
office to identify them. Well, one of our readers saw
the picture and recognized most of the pupils, in
cluding herself. Mrs. Ella Perkins Graham, Route 3,
Summerville, gave the following identifications:
Seated: Tom Edwards, Henry Bankey, two Williams
boys, Carl Woods; first row: Dora Bankey, Louise
Edwards, Inez Tate, Elizabeth Tate, Robert Tate, Earl
Woods, Williams boy, Daisy Allman, John and Abb
_ _ &
ml WLi w ■ ■ - m
K 4®
DAVID RANDAL Reynolds is
the six-month-old son of Sgt.
and Mrs. Richard Arlen
Reynolds of Fort Hood, Texas.
He has one brother, Ricky,
who is eight years old. Grand
parents are Mrs. Nathan Brown
of Summerville and the late
Mr. Brown and Mr. and Mrs.
Will Reynolds, 352 Walnut St.,
Trion.
khowS'” JF
Is there much difference
in the length of daylight in
various parts of the United
States?
Yes. At various times of
the year there is quite a dif
ference. For example, at the
Winter Solstice, which this
year comes on December
21st, there will be more than
an hour’s difference in the
length of daylight in Maine
and Florida. Florida will
see the sun more than an
hour longer on that day.
Yet at the autumnal equi
nox, and the spring equinox,
the hours of day 1 i gh t are
practically the same in
northern and southern states.
As in the case in December
at the Winter Solstice, the
hours of sunshine are quite
different in the northern and
southern areas. In June--at
the Summer Solstice —the
days in the north are longer.
days from the V.A. Hospital in
Nashville.
Mrs. Robert Wood and Mrs.
Vernon Tidmore and Lynda
visited Mrs. Anna Lee Pollard
and Mrs. Lawrence Burge Tues
day night.
Mrs. Vernon Tidmore
visited Mr. and Mrs. Hollis
Morrison Wednesday.
Mrs. Robert Wood and Mrs.
Vernon Tidmore visited Mrs.
Tidmore’s sister, Mrs. Lillie
Mae Dooley, in Chattooga
County Hospital Wednesday
night Mrs. Dooley had the mis
fortune of falling and breaking
her pelvic bone at her home
Wednesday.
Mrs. Vernon Tidmore and
Mrs. Robert Wood visited Mr.
and Mrs. Lewis Hanle Wednes
day night.
Mrs. Edward Smith and Jes
visited Mrs. Vernon Tidmore
Wednesday.
The Lyerly Senior Citizens
Club will meet Tuesday morn
ing, Dec. 19, at 10 a m Rev.
A. A. Tanner will be the devo
tional speaker. All men and
women of the area 60 and
older are urged to attend This
is held each third Tuesday at
the Lyerly Baptist Church.
Mrs. Vernon Tidmore
visited Mrs. Donald Mitchell in
Summerville Thursday.
Mrs. Edward Smith and Jes
of Summerville and Mrs.
Vernon Tidmore visited Mrs.
Lawrence Burge Wednesday.
READER RECOGNIZES HERSELF, OTHER PUPILS
Christmas Gifts
that speak
for themselves.
An extension phone is a unique gift when you give it. And a practical one from then on.
You can choose from a variety of colors and models including mod phones,
delicate phones, plain phones and even elegant decorator phones.
There's a style just right for your loved one.
And, to make your shopping easier call our gift specialist.
She'll reserve the phone you want.
Then, just pick it up at our business office and
put it under your tree.
We'll install your gift right after the holiday is over.
11 wi 11 keep Ch ristmas bel Is
ringing throughout the year.
I di i 4
GEDERAL YELEPHODE
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The people you can talk to One-to-One. | <!__!><LJ>j
Comer, May Bankey, Williams boy; second row: Nelle
Comer, Evangeline Tate, Ella Perkins, Beatrice
Allman, Bill Edwards, Wenslow Godwin, Willie
Comer, Bessie Comer, Grace Woods, Grady Perkins;
back row: Clara Bankey, Ethel Stokes, Bessie Willing
ham, J.C. Langston, Oscar Bankey, Mary Bankey,
Cecil Edwards, Vivian Housch, Annie Mae Godwin,
Essie Perkins, Mamie Williams, Herman Bankey, and
Lindon Allman. Teachers at extreme left and right are
Misses Fannie Van Pelt and Willie Ratliff.
The Summervlle News, Thurs., Dec. 14, 1972 -ft
i FROM GEORGIA POWER CO.
i Yule Tree Safety Tips
: Accidental igniting of a Christmas tree can turn a happy
■ holiday season into an unforgettable time of tragedy.
; So declared Tony E. Branan, manager of Georgia Power
: Co.’s safety department, as he advised Georgia families to
• take the following precautions:
1. Use only a freshly cut tree, one not dried out by
;• prolonged storage. A tree is fresh if the needles do not fall
i off when the tree is bounced down hard. Another sign of
: freshness is a tree butt sticky with resin.
2. Stand the tree in water until ready for use. Saw off
i the tree trunk at an angle at least one inch above the
;• original cut.
3. Provide a strong support for the tree by using a sturdy
: stand that has anchor clamps and a container which holds
• water. Check the water supply daily.
4. Keep the tree away from lighted fireplaces and
j heaters.
• 5. Do not use candles on the tree.
; 6. Use only lighting sets that bear the Underwriters’
: Laboratories, Inc. (UL) label.
; 7. Never string electric lights on a metal tree.
: 8. Check lighting sets for frayed wires, loose connections
i and broken sockets before using. Dispose of defective sets;
; don’t try to patch them.
9. Be sure the fuse of the electric circuit serving the tree
:• is not more than 20 amperes. Do not overload the circuit,
i 10. Turn off Christmas tree lights before the family goes
: out for the evening or retires for the night. Collect and
> remove as soon as possible all combustible Christmas
t wrannines as thev accumulate in the home.
Check Your Tires
Check tire inflation regular
ly, experts advise.
Changing temperature
affects a tire’s air pressure. For
every 10-degree drop in tem
perature, a tire’s pressure goes
down about one pound.
LOTHIAN, Md.-Michael
David Hensen, 19, made ap
proximately seven trips into a
burning trailer to save Sandra
Long and her four children.
When he entered for the last
time, the door slammed shut,
enveloping him in flames.
11-B