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IHMMIIIMriI A a
The March of Dimes float attracted considerable
attention during the annual Christinas parade here
CROSSWORD ♦ ♦ ♦ By A. C. Gordon
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ACROSS
1 ■ Clarification
11 ■ Legal bond
12 - Greek letter
14 - Ponder
16 - Krypton (cbe tn.)
17 - Ossetian native
18 - Correspondence
afterthought
19 - Pronoun
20 - An abrasive
21 - Stipend
22 - Wanderers
24 - That is (abb.)
25 - Unit
26 - Little devil
27 - Particulars
28 - Rtblic way I
(abb.)
29 - Hail!
30 • Union of National |
Security (abb.) I
31 - Measure of 1
quantity (abb.) I
32 - Entwine
33 • Girl’s name
34 - Scottish "to"
35 - Public notice
36 - Wandering
38 - Matured
39 - Scottish Gaelic I
lx I SI I sTdTO^B HI M ■ ■ > | Sjn|py
SEEINGIS BEL,EV,NG!
vWy^TRADE
ip । IN
*SALE
Bring in that OLD wig of yours and
receive $5.00 to SIO.OO off on a
new wig of OURS. Minimum pur
/ j chase $15.00. Hair pieces not
/ / included.
>5"" TO ’IO" FOR YOUR OLD
WIG
Many Styles To Choose From Capless *
Casuals, Shags, Flips, Show Girls In
^^^^^Venicelon, Elura, Teuron, Dynel And
■ Human Hair.
* lfiS
SOUTH
W MM
MARCH OF DIMES FLOAT POPULAR
40 - American
Education (abb.)
41 - Pronoun
42 - Italian poet
43 - Day segment
44 - Lose luster
46 - That is (ahb.)
47 - Provider of
heat
49 - This and that
(three words)
DOWN
2 - Receiver of
real estate
3 - Employ
4 - Two centuries
in old Rome
5 - Irritating
6 - Beetle
7- .. shucks!
8 - Perseveres
9 - Eject
10 - Exist
13 - Affirmed
15 - Stood up
17 - Mathematical
magnitude
19 - The cosmos
20 - U.S. southern
state (abb.)
21 - Transmits
23 - British legis
lator (abb.)
24 - Pierced
29 - Turned aside
30 - Not titled
33 - Inter-American
(abb.)
34 - In the direction
of
37 - In reference
39 - Girls' name
43 - Play on words
44 - Bog
45 - Adjective suffix
of comparison
47 - Musical note
48 - Football
position(abb.)
Friday night. The local unit will hold its annual drive
next month.
Chelsea Newsf
By Mrs. Tom Gamer
Phone 862-2427 §
; j|^' '
Recently visiting Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Finster were: Mr.
and Mrs. Mack Blalock and
Mrs. Blalock’s sister and Mrs.
Betty Brown of the Cove Road
Community.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Sumner
visited Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Bagley and Mr. and Mrs. Wood
row Mason Sunday afternoon.
Best wishes to James Houser
who has returned from service
recently. Mr. and Mrs. James
Houser, James and David were
Sunday dinner guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Felton Westbrook.
Other dinner guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Westbrook were Mrs.
Albert Franklin and Susan.
Sunday visitors of Misses
Beulah and Annie Garner were
Mr. and Mrs. Whit Campbell of
Chickamauga, Mrs. Mattie
Eleam, and Mrs. Mamie Wil
liams.
♦ ♦ »
Mr. Bailey Honored
Mrs. S. P. Bailey honored
her husband with a birthday
dinner Sunday, Mr Bailey was
celebrating his 79th birthday
anniversary.
Those enjoying the occasion
were: Mr. and Mrs. Thurston
McNair and Mike of Dry
Valley, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
Bailey and Greg and Mrs. Gail
House of LaFayette, Mrs.
Janice Floyd, Kim and Danny
of Summerville, Mrs. Ruth
Ragland and Debbie of Chatta
nooga, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis
Bailey and Timmy of Ringgold,
Mrs. Bessie Hill, Hiram Camp
bell, Warner Wilson, Nancy and
Sheryl, Mrs. Eunice Bailey, and
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Bailey
and baby.
We wish for Mr. Bailey
many more happy birthday an
niversaries.
♦ » »
Mrs. Marie Wright and David
visited Mrs. John Cross Sunday
afternoon. They also visited
] Mrs. Grace Sentell and James.
Visiting Mr. and Mrs. L. A.
Finster last Thursday and Fri
day evenings were their son,
Sam, from Troy, Ala.
We send expressions of
sympathy to the family of
Frank Smith who died last
week. He was the son of Mrs.
Charlie Smith and the late Mr.
Smith.
Sorry to hear Dewey Brown
is sick. To him we send get-well
wishes.
Gordon Kinsey spent Fri
day and Friday night with
Rusty Gill.
Sunday dinner guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Howard Bailey and
Nell were: Mr. and Mrs. Bud
Sumner and girls, Mr. and Mrs.
George Payne and family, and
Mrs. Sue Gilley and boys.
Mrs. Annie Lee Rosson of
Rome was weekend guest of
Rev. and Mrs. G. W. Rosson.
We send get-well wishes to
Robert Tidmore who entered
Floyd Hospital Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Luther Bryson
visited Mr. and Mrs. William
Bryson and son of Dalton
Sunday afternoon.
» ♦ »
Mr. Finster Honored
On December 9 a birthday
dinner was given by Mrs. Bessie
Brown of Valley Head, Ala., in
honor of Jack Finster.
The dinner was held at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Finster.
Those attending were: Mr.
and Mrs. C. A. Schlichee of
Valley Head; Mr. and Mrs. Mack
Blalock of Mentone, Ala.; Mrs.
Sarah Leavitt of Cloudland;
Mr. and Mrs. J. R. McKenny
and sons, James and Edward of
Ft. Payne, Ala.; V. A. Baugh of
Ft. Payne; Mrs. Catherine
Chamlee, Danny Chamlee, Mrs.
Elsie Cooper and daughter
Gina, and grandsons, Mike and
Joe Simmons, Mrs. Jane Bishop
and son, Randy, Mr. and Mrs.
Billy Wright and son Mike,
Hiram Campbell, Haywood
Hester of Valley Head, Ala.
Everyone reported a good
time.
• * *
We send congratulations
down to Broomtown to Mr.
and Mrs. Fred Wilson who cele
brated their 46th wedding an
niversary recently.
Visiting Mr. and Mrs. Tom
I Garner during the week were:
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Gill, Rusty
and Thomas, Misses Beulah and
Annie Garner, Mrs. Mary
Phillips of Summerville, Miss
Sheryl Wilson, and Bobby
McDaniel.
Mrs. Warner Wilson and
Sheryl were in Chattanooga
Thursday evening.
Mrs. Larry Hurley and boys
and Mrs. Woodrow Allison and
son visited Mrs. Marie Wright
and David during the weekend.
Mrs. Carl Sumner spent
Thursday afternoon with Mrs.
j Mary Pledger.
Wood row Eleam and Joe
Eleam, Jr. visited their mother,
Mrs. Mattie Eleam, on Satur-
I day
Miss Joy Wright and Philip
spent Saturday night with their
sister, Mrs Ronnie Pilcher, and
Mr. Pilcher in Summerville.
Saturday visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Tom Garner were Mr.
and Mrs. Jim Gill. Rusty and
little Tom, Gordon Kinsey, and
Mr. and Mrs. Boyd Garner,
Tina and Sharon
Mr. and Mrs. Frankie Crowe
and children visited Mr. and
Mrs. Jim Gill Saturday night.
Rusty Gill was weekend
i (uest of Mr. and Mrs. Boyd
Recall Old-Time Christmas?
In the frenetic pace ot
modern life, the simple
Christmas traditions of the
past seem all but for
gotten, but at Greenfield
Village and Henry Ford
Museum in Dearborn,
Michigan, the unique joys
of earlier Christmases are
well remembered and
faithfully recreated. This
year beginning December
9, the real spirit of the
season comes to life there
so that visiting families can
experience today the kind
of Christmas their an
cestors knew.
The warmth and nos
talgia of earlier Yuletides
abounds in the Greenfield
Village houses decorated
as they might have been
by their original famous
owners-men like Edison,
Ford, the Wright Brothers,
Noah Webster and Stephen
Foster. These and other
authentic early American
buildings, aglow with
candles, freshly-cut green
ery, festive tables, poin
settias and Yule logs, trace
300 years of Christmas tra
dition.
The nostalgia is punc
tuated by activity. Bread
bakes in the hearth of a
pioneer cabin, taffy
bubbles on the stove of a
19th-century farm kitchen
and hammers shape red
hot iron on the ancient
anvil of America’s oldest
operating forge. In a cozy
old parlor, a costumed
hostess crochets Christmas
gifts to the accompani
ment of traditional Christ
mas music of the period.
Outside, groups of
Garner and girls m Rome.
We send congratulations to
Miss Beverly Finster and
Tommy Cox who were married
Sunday afternoon at Berryton
Baptist Church.
Monday supper guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Garner were
Boyd, Jean, Tina and Sharon
of Rome, Reba, Rusty and
Thomas Gill.
We send birthday wishes to
Mrs. Virginia Cooper, Mrs.
Mozeile Willingham and Mrs.
Elsie Cooper.
(SPRING)
.. ~ MR/
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»
m A kA
.. W
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Downtown Discount Furniture Co.
DOWNTOWN SHOPPING CENTER SUMMERVILLE
THE WARMTH AND NOSTALGIA OF EARLIER DAYS
singers roam the streets
singing traditional Christ
mas carols. The sound of
their music drifts through
the bare trees to mingle
with the tinkle of harness
bells on the horses pulling
old-fashioned sleighs
across the crusted snow.
At the Town Hall on
the picturesque Village
green, visitors are greeted
by the friendly aroma of
the hot, spiced cider and
Christ mas cookies served
there. In the nearby
Clinton Inn, families dine
amid festive decorations
which re-create Christmas
as it was in a roadside
hostelry a century and
more ago.
Nostalgia also reigns in
the adjacent Henry Ford
Museum. Intriguing and
often quaint Christmas
decorations from out of
Employment For Women Shows Gain
W A SHI NGTON- Regardless
of the prevailing economic con
ditions or the level of unem
ployment, the number of
women on the payrolls con
tinues to rise.
In the last 20 years, the
number of women in the labor
force increased from less than
20 million to over 30 million,
according to a study by The
Conference Board and reported
in the December issue of
The Summerville News,, Thurs., Dec. 14, 1972
K-
the past line the aislesand
the sound of Yuletidc
music of other eras fills
the air. From time to time,
visitors hear concerts of
traditional music played
on antique instruments
from the Museum’s collec
tion.
Along the Street of
Early American Shops,
more than a dozen crafts
men are busy recreating
that time when not only
the luxuries, but also the
necessities of life were
made by hand. These
skilled artisans mold
candles, blow glass Christ
mas ornaments, cast
metals, form pottery and
make dolls, hooked rugs,
quilts and many other ob
jects in the time-honored
tradition of their arts.
Rounding out this
Christmas from the past,
Finance Facts, a monthly
newsletter on consumer be
havior published by the
National Consumer Finance
Association. Today, nearly 45
per cent of all adult women are
earning paychecks, compared
to less than 35 per cent during
the early 19505.
Mothers are working for
wages in increased numbers
also. Os women with children
under six years old, 30 per cent
THE ELITE BACK SUPPORTER SOO.OO per piece.
Mattress or box spring, Twin Size Also available
in Full, Queen and King sizes
the Greenfield Village
Players present “Puss in
Boots,” a charming holi
day entertainment for the
entire family. This warm
and humorous adaptation
of the classic fairy tale is
enlivened by songs and
dances specially created
for this production. With
both evening and matinee
performances in the
Museum Theater, this love
ly production perpetuates
the tradition of the Christ
mas offerings of an earlier
era.
Truly, at Greenfield
Village and Henry l ord
Museum, the kind of
Christmas everyone would
like to remember still lives,
transporting visitors to a
quieter lime, a more mean
ingful time.
are in the labor force a sharp
increase from 20 years ago
when the proportion was only
12 per cent.
Apparently all sectors of the
American female population
are eager to get a foothold in
the working world. Their
reasons? If not economic, per
haps they ^ant to put their
college training to work or
maybe they are seeking libera
tion from their duties.
15-B