Newspaper Page Text
10-A
& The Summerville News, Thurs., Oct. 11, 1973
Lyerly
Happenings |
By Mrs. Martha Bishop
Phone 895-3381
F ** fl
Dr. and Mrs. Leon Young of
Thomasville visited relatives in
the area a few days last week.
They hosted a luncheon party
in Chattanooga Saturday.
Guests were: Mrs. M. J Hogg,
grandmother. Mr and Mrs.
Tom Hogg and Mark, Mr. and
Mrs. Mike Lanier, and Hugh
Hogg of Rossville.
Mrs. W. T. Adams visited
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Hughes
this week. She also visited Mrs.
Tezzie Ridley.
Mrs. Ana Berry spent the
weekend with her son, Dewey
Battles, and family at Mentone,
Ala.
Mr. and Mrs. Hollis Rut
ledge were guests of their son,
Donald Rutledge, and family
of Atlanta for the weekend.
Young Mr. Rutledge celebrated
his birthday anniversary. On
their return they stopped with
their daughter and family, Mrs.
Don Logan, for an overnight
visit in Acworth.
Best wishes go to Joe Reed
in Trion Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Cook,
Marie. Tommy, and Bill and
Miss Judy Grimes visited Mrs.
Cook's sister, Mrs. George
Nettles, in Macon during the
weekend. Mrs. Nettles enter
tained for Mrs. Alma Lewis,
her stepmother, who was
married to John Pollard in
Barnesville Sunday afternoon.
Miss Beverly Taylor of
Young Harris College spent the
weekend at home with her
parents. Mr. and Mrs. J. S.
iaylor.
Mrs. Johnny Bryant and
Mrs. Gordon Allen were visit
ing and shopping in Rome on
Monday.
Tom Stallings, a patient at
Redmond Park Hospital, is
somewhat improved at this
time.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Kitchings were spend-the-day
guests of her brother and wife,
Mr and Mrs. Bob Jones, of
Broomtown, Ala. on Saturday.
Mrs. Ed Bishop visited Mrs.
W. T. Adams on Saturday.
Wednesday guests of Misses
I aye and Leone Bushin were:
Miss Lunie Whisenant and Mrs.
Ana Berry. Their Thursday vis
itors were Mrs Roy Alexander
of Summerville. Mrs. Doyle
Gaylor, and Mrs. 1 rnest Hurley
of Chattoogaville.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Gaylor of
Clarksville, Tenn., were the
weekend guests of his mother,
Mrs. Sarah Gaylor. The newly
weded couple were honored by
the Lyerly Church of Christ at
the home of Mr. and Mrs.
I rank Yates on Saturday night
Mrs. Yates had a delightful
plan of games. Cake, nuts,
mints, and punch were served
Mr. and Mrs Joe Woods of
Roswell were Saturday dinner
guests of Mrs. A. M Bryant.
Mr and Mrs. J B Cantrell of
near Rome visited Mrs. Bryant
and other friends Sunday after
noon.
Mr and Mrs. Henry A.
Reynolds visited Minister
Walter I Neal of Pennville
Friday Mr Neal serves Menlo
Church of Christ.
The area singing of the
churches of Christ will be held
at Menlo Oct. 21. at 3 p.m.
I veryone is invited to attend
Mrs. L. C. Hooper and
daughter visited Mrs. I mily
I utral Monday
Mis Bill Brooks visited Mrs.
Dan Brooks Sunday afternoon,
together they visited Mrs Clift
Fleming at Chattoogaville.
Mrs. Hobart Stallings visited
Mrs Hugh Blalock and Mrs.
Myrtle Wheeling Sunday eve
ning. She also visited her
daughter. Mrs Ruth Stancil
THE NEW
Many Items
Store
Located Behind Formers Supply Store
IS NOW OPEN
FOR BUSINESS!
WE BUY, SELL AND TRADE
USED FURNITURE ANDANTIQUES
We have many antiques and other items too nu
merous to mention We also have color and
black and white TVs and all kinds of used fur
niture.
Watch for the Big Arrow
at the railroad
Mrs. Jim Hollis recently vis
ited her son, James Martin, and
family in Jonesboro. She also
visited Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Weems and baby, Max, in
Stockbridge. Max is the
: Hollises first great-grandchild.
His mother is the former Sue
j Martin.
The Martins of Jonesboro
and Mrs. Hollis visited Mrs.
Ruby Hollis and Mr. and Mrs.
Billy Gravitt and children of
; Riverdale on Friday night.
Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Thomp
son visited her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Ridley, of Rock
Face on Sunday. Mrs. Ridley is
ill.
Mrs. Frances Fuller is con
fined to her home at this time.
A very speedy recovery is
wished for her.
Mrs. T. A. Wallace is much
improved and appreciates so
much the many visits of her
friends during her illness.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry A.
Reynolds visited their son and
family, Wesley Reynolds, in
Athens, Ala. Sunday. They
went to see their grandson,
David, play ball and to attend a
singing in the community after
worship hour. They also visited
the Jenning Burgess family in
Nashville, Tenn., on Saturday.
Mrs. Burgess is the former
Linda Reynolds. They also vis
ited the other daughter, Alice
Reynolds, who lives in Nash
ville.
Mrs. Ella McFadden spent
several days with relatives at
Coosa last week.
Willie Broome was able to
be carried to the home of his
son. Minister T. S. Broome, on
Sunday for a short visit. He
and Mrs. Broome reside at Oak
View at the present. Mrs.
Broome has been ill but is
slightly improved.
Mrs. Charles Kitchings vis
ited Mrs. Henry Reynolds and
Mrs. Jim Hollis on Monday.
Mrs. Robert Kimbell at
tended Kappa Kappa lota
meeting at the home of Mrs.
D. Henley in Summerville. Mrs.
Kimbell is the new secretary of
Rho, the local branch.
Allen Bryant spent Friday
night with Mr. and Mrs. Lewis
Hanle. The Hanies Saturday
night guest was Mrs. A. M
Bryant.
Minister Allen Lawrence of
the Baptist Church and Mr.
Lewis Hanle spent Thursday in
Atlanta.
The Lyerly Senior Citizens
Club will meet Tuesday morn
ing, Oct. 16, at 10 00 at the
Lyerly Baptist Church. All
senior citizens of the area are
urged to attend.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Tucker of
St. Petersburg, Fla., Mr. and
! Mrs. C. R. Chandler and Mrs.
Robert Nation Jr. of Chatta
nooga, and Mrs. Frank Cran
more, Angie and Kenny visited
Mrs. Vernon Tidinore Tuesday
afternoon.
Get-well wishes go to Ray
burn Mitchell who underwent
major surgery at Memorial
Hospital the past week.
Mrs. Lena Bishop had as
i guests Thursday night, Mr. and
j Mrs Bill Bishop and children,
Brian and Karen.
Mrs. Vernon Tidmore vis
ited Mrs. Harold Bishop
Monday afternoon.
Mrs. Lula Mae Talley and
; Mrs. Martha Moore of La
i layette visited William N.
I Kimbell Monday afternoon,
i Walt Vernon of Summerville
| also visited Mr. Kimbell
| Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. James Gilliland
■ and son. James 11, of Summer
ville were luncheon guests
Saturday of Mrs. Mozell Gilli-
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Mrs. Mabel Ballenger points to the
name of her husband, the late Thomas
D. Ballenger. The nameplate was added
this week to the Cancer Memorial
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CHATTOOGA HIGH SCHOOL FBLA OFFICERS
The Chattooga High School Chapter of
the Future Business Leaders of America
was host to the district meeting Satur
day at CHS. Local FBLA officers are,
left to right: Mary Camp, secretary;
land.
Mrs. Mozell Gilliland visited
recently with her brother, i
W. C. Yancey, of Altoona, Ala.
Mr. Yancey has been very ill
recently.
Expressions of sympathy |
are extended to the family and I
friends of William Newton
Kimbell who passed away ।
Monday at 5 p.m. following a
lengthy illness at Chattooga i
County Hospital.
Mrs. Lena Bishop and Mrs.
W. T. Adams and Martha, Mr.
and Mrs. Joe D. Henderson of
Rome, Mrs. H. S. Bishop, and
Edith Ray and son, Bud Ray of
Martinville, Va., Mrs. Buddy
Williams, Mrs. Hamp Brewer,
and Mrs. Jude Ray of Summer
ville were among those visiting
Mrs. Nona Laura Snow, a
patient at Chattooga County
Hospital, Sunday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Ragland
and Mrs. Lettie Crawford have
returned home from a three
week vacation where they
enjoyed points of interest in
the Western States. They also
visited their sons and families,
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Ragland j
and family of Spokane, Wash., 1
Mr. and Mrs. Wilburn Ragland
and daughters of Los Angeles, [
Calif. They also visited Mr. and ■
Mrs. Harvy Crawford of
Albuquerque, N M.
Mrs. Nelda Eloyd was guest
over the weekend of her sister, [
Mrs. Inez Cameron, of I
Gadsden, Ala.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Wyatt ot
Summerville, Mrs. Louie John
ston, Mr. and Mrs. Danny ;
Wyatt, and Mr. and Mrs. Gene .
Wyatt were Sunday afternoon 5
guests of Mrs. Velma Wyatt.
Those visiting Mrs. L.,8.
Whisenant the past week, who
has recently undergone surgery
on her foot, were Mrs. Harry i
Earrow, Mrs. Beatrice Gardner,;
Miss Lunnie Whisenant, Mr.
and Mrs. L. B. Cook, Mrs.
Willard Jackson, Jimmy Gilli
land, and Mrs. Brunett Jack
son.
Mr. and Mrs. Louie Woodall
were guests ot Mr. and Mrs.
Don Friedland and family in
Chicago. 111., the past weekend
Mrs. Friedland is the former
Miss Patty Mobbs, who i
ATTENTION CATTLE FARMERS
While cattle prices are down some from their
summer peak, they are still high and now is a good
time to sell. But don’t be misled into selling your
cattle direct. You deserve the highest puces you can
get for them, and selling at auction is the surest way.
Our Rome. Georgia sale begins early—at 11:00 a.m.
every Wednesday. This means less shrinkage of your
cattle due to less time in the barn. It means an early
start home. And at McClure-Burnett you always find
the most buyers, the most services, the highest prices
and the best protection.
Our free transit insurance covers your cattle against
injury or death from the time they are loaded until
they ate sold. This is a guarantee you can’t afford to
be without.
We need your cattle You need McClure-Burnett.
Let's get together.
McClure-Burnett Livestock
Market, Inc.
Old Furnace Road Rome, Ga.
IN MEMORY OF THOMAS D. BALLENGER SR
Area Data Sought
On Enrollment
A sample of households in
this area will take part in the
federal government’s annual
survey of school enrollment to
be taken the week of Oct.
15-19 by the Bureau of the
Census, part of the U.S. De
partment of Commerce’s Social
and Economic Statistics
Administration.
Thomas W. McWhirter,
director of the bureau’s Data
Collection Center in Atlanta,
said that interviewers will visit
homes to obtain information
about household members at
tending school, from nursery
school through college, includ
ing those taking vocational,
technical, or business courses.
Results of the October,
1972, survey showed that 60.1
million persons three to 34
years old were in school.
Elementary school enrollment
(kindergarten through eighth
grade) had declined by about
1.4 million since the fall of
1971 because of a decline in
the number of births during
the 1960’5. Although college
recently underwent major sur
gery. Her friends and realtives
of the area wish for her a
speedy recovery.
Miss Margaret Weesner was
Thursday night dinner guest of
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Bishop.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Jones and
son Billy of Yorkville were
called home over the weekend
due to the illness of Mr. Jones’
grandfather, William N.
Kimbell. They also visited in
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Jones and Margaret and Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Bishop.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Henderson
of Rome were Sunday morning
breakfast guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Bishop.
A speedy recovery is wished
for Mrs. Mary Echols who suf
fered a second stroke the past
week. She is a patient in the
Oak View Nursing Home.
Plaque at Chattooga County Hospital.
Mrs. Sue Spivey, memorial chairman,
looks on at left.
Janice Aired, historian; Richard
Hudson, reporter for Indian Lore;
Kathy McGraw, president; Jocelyn
Cordle, vice president; and Kathy
Mitchell, treasurer.
enrollment had increased con
siderably in the years since
1962, a lower proportion of
college-age men were in college
than during the late 1960’5,
while the college enrollment
rate for women has remained
about the same since the late
1960’5.
School enrollment questions
will be in addition to the ones
asked regularly in the monthly
survey on employment and
unemployment conducted
nationwide by the Bureau for
the U.S. Department of Labor.
The survey provides a con
tinuing measure of conditions
in the labor force. The August
survey found the Nation’s
employment situation little i
changed from July. The unem- I
ployment rate, at 4.8 percent,
was essentially the same as in
June and July but was substan-
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M M 3* <
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Almost everyone looks for bargains . . . especially in these days of spiraling costs
and prices However, if you own property and would like to build, you’ll have no
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has built nearly 200.000 "bargain" homes for American families. It takes more
than just price to make your new home a bargain ... it takes quality design and
materials and good workmanship combined with price Jim Walter will custom
build almost anywhere that you own property using the time-honored tech
nique of board by board, nail by nail construction. Moreover, many of the mate
rials, such as "wood made better" hardboard siding, will be superior, long-lasting
products of today's modern technology.
• OVER 20 "BETTER BUY" MODELS • BUILT ON YOUR PROPERTY
M O RTGAGE FINA IM CIN G
to qualified property owner*
...H
--fry?
ROME, GEORGIA 30162
P. 0. Box 368 Route 4 - Chulio Road
Phone: 232-9868
jA OPEN 8 til 8 OPEN tiI6PM
H Weekdays Sot. & Sun.
Talmadge Urges Lower
Mortgage Interest Rates
ATLANTA (GPS)-High
interest rates and the mortgage
money shortage are threatening
“to drive average families out
of the home buying market,”
declared U.S. Sen. Herman
Talmadge in a Georgia speech.
Addressing the Georgia
Home Builders convention at
Callaway Gardens, the Georgia
senior senator said he has asked
President Richard M. Nixon to
act to lower interest rates on
home mortgages and make
more mortgage money avail
able.
“I can understand the
tially below the 5.6 percent of
a year earlier. After elimination
of seasonal fluctuations, total
employment in August re
mained at 84.4 million, about
the same as in the preceding
two months.
About 50,000 households
across the country, scientif
ically selected to represent a
cross section of American
households, take part in this
monthly survey. All informa
tion provided the Bureau is
confidential by law and can be
published only as statistical
totals in which no individual or
household can be identified.
The Interviewer who will
visit households here is Mrs.
Lettie Esserman.
The Wig Wagon
Is Back
With a Wonderful World of Wigs
OUR LOCATION IS IN THE
GOODYEAR PARKING LOT
10:00 A.M. 'TIL 6:00 P.M.
SATURDAY ONLY!
Super Deluxe sE9sMini $095
Cascades w hair pieces v
One of the largest and most complete selections of Venicelon
WIGS and 100 Per Cent Human Hair CASCADES and HAIR
PIECES.
We Also Have for You the New Also - New for Fall!
JUMBO SQ9S The Gorgeous $1 9 5
AFRO J |Gypsy Wig ■**
ALL WIGS ARE CAPLESS AND SKIN TOPS FOR
EASY STYLING
1 We offer
g a complete line of
j SECOND HOME COTTAGES
action of the Federal Reserve
Board in tightening our money
supply to combat inflation,”
Talmadge said. “But, by rely
ing too heavily on high interest
rates and tight money, we run
the risk of destroying the home
building industry and depriving
the great majority of the Amer
ican people of home owner
ship.”
Because of inflation in the
home market, Sen. Talmadge
said low and middle income
families are virtually prohibited
from buying a home under
present costs and high interest
rates. He added:
“If the present trend con
tinues, home ownership will
become a privilege reserved for
only the wealthy few. It would
be unfortunate indeed if this
country were to be reduced to
a nation of renters.
“But interest rates that keep
going higher and higher will
drive us in that direction unless
corrective action is taken
soon ... it would be an injus
tice to permit an economic
policy to limit the possession
of property to only the af
fluent.”
Sen. Talmadge was harshly
critical of what he called “ill
advised federal fiscal policies
which put the U. S. economy
on skids while other nations
Jim Walter completely finishes the outside of your home including
FOUNDATION ROOFING. SIDING. WINDOWS. DOORS. PAINTING
Then you have options to purchase inside materials and installation of
ELECTRICAL WIRING AND FIXTURFS PLUMBING. FLOORING. WALLS.
DOORS & TRIM. KITCHEN AND BATH FIXTURES
When Jim Walter installs all of these interior options, you'll need only to paint or
paper walls, paint trim, connect to outside utilities and move in. Or you may
purchase individual materials packages, install them yourself and save even more.
Either way. the cost can be included in your mortgage.
We want you to know the full cost and precisely what your monthly mortgage
payment will be. We also want you to know more about the superior materials
and the quality construction methods we'll use. Then . after you have the facts
..A,, it lifts tU.lfa, — — ■
... you decide if Jim Walter
should build your new home
Call, visit or send the coupon
to the nearest Jim Walter
Homes disolav nark for com
plete. no obligation informa
tion.
grow stronger and more
prosperous.”He continued:
“Naturally our own people
get up in arms about inflation
and the credit crunch, and I
don’t blame them one bit.
What it boils down to is the
need for the United States to
stop trying to play policemen,
banker and Santa Claus for the
whole world and put its own
interests first just as other
nations do.”
ONE-YEAR APPRENTICE
Labor Secretary Peter J.
Brennan reports that the La
bor Department has approved
its first one-year apprentice
ship program.
WILL DO ANY TYPE
Dozer Work
Satisfaction Guaranteed
T.R.T.
Construction
Company
Lyerly, Ga.
Phone 895-2’83 or
895-2267
Day or Night
JIM WAITER HOMES
Moil to
I would like to hove more
information and the cost of 'W
budding on my property I HW
understand there would be
no obligation to buy and f
that you would gi*e me these
<oct» free of charge. ^^***««a
NAME
ADDRESS
CITY _ STATE
Telephone (or wighber*)
If rural route please give direction*
I own property nty