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Smith-Morrison Vows
Slated For June 25
Mr. and Mrs. Billy C.
Smith, Summerville, announce
the engagement and forthcom
ing marriage of their daughter,
Mimi Reshelle, to Kelvin Ray
Morrison, Rome.
The future bride graduated
from Chattooga High School
and received her Associate
Degree in Criminal Justice
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Bride-Elect of Lawrence Dollar, Jr.
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== OUR EVERYDAY PRICES ON
¢é\ &/ 14 kt GOLD WEDDING BANDS
“ ‘;‘/ ) LADIES: MENS:
A W 2mm...534.95 3mm...549.50
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COUNTRY CURTAINS
AND SPREADS
COUNTRY COUNTRY CAROLINA
DOTS * CALICO * RUFFLES
Buy Country Ruffles ‘|/ OFF
and Get Wood Pole /2 Reg. Price
Ll bttt
Gigi Pouf, Chair Pads, Place Mats,
Valances, Swags, Wreaths . . . Most
Anything You Want in the
COUNTRY LOOK!
ALL OUR 'l OFF
ARE :
BLIN Ds 2 Reg. Price
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North Commerce St. Phone 857 JoddeSummerville
from Floyd College. She is cur
rently employed by the
Cartersville K-Mart.
The prospective bride
groom graduated from East
Rome High School and receiv
ed his Bachelor's degree in
Marketing and Management
from Morehouse College,
Atlanta. He is currently
employed by J.B. Robinson
Jeweler's as a manager-trainee,
Kennesaw.
The wedding is planned for
2 p.m. Saturday, j,une 25, at
Metropolitan United
Methogist Church, Rome.
Some formal invitations
were sent, but all friends and
relatives are invited.
Retired Teachers
Schedule Meeting
The Chattooga Countf'
Retired Teachers Assn. will
meet at 2:30 p.m. next Tuesday
at the Summerville First
United Methodist Church.
A special music program
will be presented.
Dairy Farmers Bouncing
Back From Challenges
Always at the top of your
shopfing list, milk remains an
excellent food buy. The
averaege consumer has to work
only 6.9 minutes to purchase a
half-gallon of milk, says an
economist with the Georiia
Extension Service who
reminds shogpers that June is
DairKllMont X
“Milk and milk products
have shown the smallest in
crease of any major food group
reported in the Consumer Price
Index since 1970, says
William Thomas.
But the milk on your
Erocer's shelf doesn’t get there
y magic. It's the result of
Georgia's multi-million dollar
dairy industry that is doing
well despite recent challenges.
179 GONE
“Under the recent dairy ter
mination program, 179 Georgia
dairy farmers went out of
business. Many pe(()lple wrote
off the whole industry in
Georgia as out of business,”
Thomas says. ‘“However, the
industry has bounced back well
and is still an important part of
Georgia agriculture.”
He says that although the
number of dairy farmers and
dairy cows bottomed out late
last year, 1988 figures show a
gain of nearly 3,000 more cows
and several more farms.
“There are now 653 dairy
farmers with sales during 1987
of more than $l6O million.
When you add in the activity
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of the 15 processing plants, the
retail value to milk sales
amounted to more than $320
million,” Thomas explains.
He adds that dairy cows are
also producing more. ‘‘overall
production was l:r 15 percent
in Agril compared to last year
at the same time,” Thomas
says.
COSTS
_How much does it cost the
dairy operator to produce this
milk? “A dairy farm is an ex
pensive farming operation to
own,” he says. “Georgia dairy
farmers have invest,egl almost
$5,060 per cow. The average in
vestment on one dairy farm is
$721,000 or a total of
$4.7-billion in the state.”
Two negative factors that
operators continue to cope with
are lower farm milk prices and
higher feed costs.
“Farm milk prices are
below those of last year due to
the 50-cent reduction in the
level of the support price.
However stronger commercial
demand could push milk prices
higher later in the year,"”
Thomas says.
DEMAND
He explains that during the
hot days of late Audgust and
September, milk production is
decreasing while demand is in
creasing. ‘‘Kids are back in
school and drinking more milk.
Then come the holidays,”
Thomas says. “You'd be sur
prised what all those fruitcakes
and other holiday bakini will
do to the demand of milk.”
He adds that usually the
shopger doesn'’t see an increase
in the price of fluid milk
because it is sold at cost (or
below) to get customers into
the store. “The homemaker
may see this higher price
reflected in cultured milk pro
ducts like yogurt or sour
cream,”’ Thomas says.
But for now, the declining
milk prices plus the increasing
feed prices mean a drop in the
milk-feed ratio for farming,
And that means less profit.
DROP
““In spite of the drop in the
ratio (pounds of feed e%\:als in
value to a pound of milk), it is
still profitable to feed dairy
cows this year,” Thomas says.
He hopes the dairy industry
doesn't have to face a ‘‘double
whammy”’ of feed price in
creases ¥rom another drought
in Georgia as well as the cur
rent one in the Midwest. *“Soy
bean meal just went up SSO a
ton this week,”” he says.
But, because Georgia's
dairy farmers are efficient and
becoming even more so,
Thomas expects the future of
the industry to be secure. ““As
long as the people of Georgia
want milk to drink and ice
cream to eat, Georgia dairy
farmers are willing to produce
it,”” he says.
The Summerville News, June 16, 1988 . . ..
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Lyerly Twins
Marty (left) and Michael Womack, 5, are the twin sons
of Mr. and Mrs. Roger Womack, Lyerly. They recently
graduated from Lyerl]z[Elementarszinder ten. They
are the grandsons of Mrs. Mollie ( omackFfireason and
the late E. H. Womack; and Mrs. Ethel Long and the
late Curtis Long.
The Teloga Volunteer Fire Department will sponsor a
fund-raising barbecue Saturday at the fire hall, Highway
337. Plates may be purchased at 11 a.m. and continuing
until late afternoon at $4.50 each, including drink.
From 4 until 8 p.m., there will be a gospefsingin with
“*New Grace” from Central Avenue Baptist Church,fi'rion.
and ‘‘Rejoice’” from Summerville Church of God.
[:figinning at 5 p.m., candidates for political office will
speak.
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Mary Hannah
. .
Orientation
Counselor
Mary E. Hannah, Trion, a
graduate student mag’onng’ in
elementarly education at
Jacksonville State University,
has been chosen as a &eer
counselor for Orientation "88 at
JSU this summer.
Peer counselors will work
with incoming freshmen on a
one-on-one basis to ease the
transition from high school to
coll’file.
ey will counsel their
assi%ned freshmen throughout
the first year of college. Peer
counselors were chosen based
on academic standing and
other traits.
11-B
Pvt. Adams
Completes
Army Course
Pvt. Annie L. Adams,
daughter of Lurlene F. and
John D. Adams of 211 E. Sixth
St., Summerville, has com
pleted tan Army motor
transport operator course at
Fort B(;x. Np‘.el :
During the course, students
were trained in the operation
and maintenance of military
vehicles of less than four and
one-half tons rated capacity.
Instruction was also given 1n
the transportation of person
nel, equipment and supplies.
She is a 1987 graduate of
Chattooga County High
School.