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Open house was held last Friday after
noon at the new Chattooga-Floyd Coun
tFY Farmers Home Administration
(FmHA) office, 113 Economy St., Sum
merville. Shown are Milford Morgan,
Rainwater Academy
Earle Rainwater, coroner of
Chattooga County, has suc
cessfully completed a 16-hour
Coroner's Regesher Training
Course at the Georgia Police
Academy.
The course, mandated by
the 1985 General Assembly,
provides refresher training to
all coroners and detputy cor
oners in the state of Georgia.
Required for continued cer
o CLOTHING
T TR R L ~
S PP RSR AR A A O S S P I TR MS DR sPO Tl
A N RA R L AR A
A OR YOUR MONEY BACK
ST AT
and Shirts
Kids' Sizes
o WE HAVE PLUS SIZES —
§g USE OUR CHRISTMAS LAY-AWAY
=(T Famity cinh
s = Family Clothin
/N DOWNTOWN SUMMERVILLYE (oL N emT Buildgg)
o MAKES SENSE
il
N, Tl sLOW BACK PAIN
RWS a- eNECK PAIN
"’fif" }‘\" «SHOULDER PAIN
BN, *HEADACHE
Pl | A /&3 «PAINFUL JOINTS
N@ 5 °NUMBNESS IN
i\ o 1 HANDS OR FEET
offl W@ *LOSS OF SLEEP
W" S, Sk eFATIGUE |
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‘\)‘\?Re L Gall 734-3433 or 734-3443
Hill's linic
CHIROPRACTIC AND PREVENTIVE MEDICINE
HIGHWAY 27 — TRION, GA.
Open House At FmHA Office
tification as a coroner, the
course updates students on the
latest trends and techniques in
coroners procedures.
The 1988 course concen
trated on such topics as burn
death investigations, iden
tification of skeletal remains,
AIDS and coroners pro
cedures, child abuse deaths and
vehicle homicides. Ugon com
pletion, coroners and deputy
Ladies’
Blouses
RSPt
owner of the office building; Helen
Carpenter and Joyce Green, FmHA staf
fers, and in back, %like Payne, head of the
FmHA office. (Staff Photo).
Graduate
coroners are better prepared to
assist law enforcement officers
in the investigation and pro
secution of criminal cases, said
Ben Jordan, Academy
superintendent.
Use NEWS Classifieds!
Adult
N LY I 8 16
and Shirts
No Nonsense
LR [T
1 2
Or $lO Dozen
Mosby’s Rangers
Created Locally
By KAREN COOK
Contributing Writer
Chattoo% County has a
new Civil War reenactment
unit. Now in addition to Com
pany B, Chattooga will be
represented by a cavalry unit,
the 43rd Virginia Battalion,
Mosby's Partisan Rangers.
The unit, perhaps the most
famous cavalry unit of the Civil
War, was raised in the northern
Shenandoah Valley of Scot-
Irish immigrants, many of
whom migrated to Northwest
Georgia.
APPROVAL
Final approval of the new
reenactment unit was given
this past weekend by the ex
ecutive board, Georgia Divi
sion Civil War Reenactment
Association Inc. (GDCWRA),
in Macon.
The 43rd was commanded
%y Lt. Col. John S. Mosby, a
niversity .of Virginia
Fraduate and a self-taught
an'er. :
nterestingly enough,
Mosby read law while in jail
awaiting trial for the murder of
a fellow student. He was
acquitted.
MOSb}E{ later recruited the
Partisan an%ers to engage in
guerrilla warfare in extreme
Northern Virginia.
EXPLOIT
In his most famous exploit,
he captured a Federal general
in his bed, uncovering the
sleeping general and slafiping
him on his behind with his
saber. This occurred in March,
1863.
Rather tharlbl sull;render alit
Appomattox, Mos sim
dl{;ganded his rangers aglfi
returned to his law practice.
During Reconstruction,
Mosby became a Republican
and a friend and supporter of
President U. S. Grant.
Grant said in his memoirs:
“Since the close of the war I
have come to know Col. Mosby
personally and somewhat in
timately. He is a different man
entirely from what I had sup
posed ... He is able and
thoroughly honest and
truthfuf"
PROLONGED WAR
Mosby'’s biographer, Virgil
C. Jones, described him as
weighing 125 pounds, of
medium height with sang
blond hair and a clean-shav
face. He wore a grey cape lin
ed with scarlet that was
thrown back over his shoulder
and a hat with a curling ostrich
plume. Jones also advances the
theory that the actions of the
Partisan Rangers prolonged
the war in Virginia by at least
16 Injured
Last Month
Sixteen people were injured
in 27 traffic accidents in Chat
tooga County durin% October,
according to Sgt. J. E. Gossett
of Post 38, Georgia State
Patrol, Rome. ’
No fatalities were reported
in any of the accidents.
The patrol made 183 arrests
and issued 253 warnings dur
ing last month, Gossett said.
Courts in Chattooga dispos
ed of 169 pendinfil;ra%fic cases
in October, including 41 guilty
Fleas, 107 bond forfeitures, and
our no contest pleas. Seven
teen cases were dismissed.
Fines and forfeitures last
month amounted to
$12,640.30.
Closings .
Summerville and Trion city
offices will be closed on Thurs
day and Friday, Nov. 24-25 in
observance of the Thanksgiv
ing holiday.
Preaching
the Living Word
to a Dying World
CENTRAL
AVENUE
BAPTIST
CHURCH
Central Avenue
. 4 \ ;’ f:«,vf
v %R
Owen * " Davis
Church Phone — 734-3140
Sunday School .10:00 a.m.
Morning Worshipl9:4s a.m.
Evening Worship .7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Night 7:00 p.m.
six months. They so dominated
the area behindy Federal lines
that all of Northern Vir%’n.ia
was called, “Mosby's Con
federacy.”
MEMBERS
Members of the new unit
from Chattooga County are
Billy Bryant, Summerville;
BobbzlLee Cook Jr., Summer
ville; Mike Martin, Menlo; Cary
Meadows, Gore; Stan Nix,
Trion; and Larry Parker, Sum
merville. Members of the unit
from outside the county are
Mike Brown, Suwanee; and
Doug Moss, Acworth.
’l%:e unit will be armed with
reproduction Confederate
cavalry carbines, cap and ball
gist,ols. and sabers. All saddles,
ridles, and other tack will also
be replicas of that used in the
1860 s.
¢ ;i‘
N : j
COL. MOSBY
FREE Every Bth Roll of Color Print
Film Processed and Printed
(Accompanied by a Photo Club Card)
o<
<A PHOTO
Bl =
=£X7 WORLD
——— n = S i 7 2
2;“ T o -
‘2_ \\\&S’Q‘ Where our lab operators
— \Li care as much about the
=>~ : quality of your prints as you
el ;‘a t do!
31 N. Commerce - Summerville 857-3221
MONDAY-FRIDAY 9-6 SATURDAY 10-2
DR R R R
w
A.*" g §
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4 '
P AR
e W~
'
| HIGHWAY 27 AT PENNVILLE
(Next to Pets-R-Us)
SRR R S S AS T SR RO -
Phone 857-6431
e E ]
(Limited Delivery Areaq) .
HOURS — 4:00 p.m.-10:00 p.m. Sunday-Thursday ' :
4:00 p.m.-11:30 p.m. Friday & Saturday
* OUR DOUGH IS MADE FRESH FOR YOUR TASTE *
WE USE 100% REAL CHEESE!
I o A
' } Seil S y - ‘ Tgy ,fig
A w"' ';‘"I; !-P" i' W ifi‘ FNJ 3 g ';: 1 i
b J~§§;g§7;-. & .
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Members of the Ladies Auxiliary VFW
Post 6688, donated several food items to
the Chattooga County Community Ac
tion Council food pantry last week. Pic
Gore Craft
Festival Sat.
Gore Community
Center will host its annual
arts and crafts festival
Saturday, beginning at 8
a.m.
A booth may be rented
for $5 by craftsmen and in
case of rain, booth space
will be available inside the
center. 4
~ Plenty of food will be
available, in addition to
the crafts.
The Summerville News, Thursday, November 10, 1988
Auxiliary Donates Food
@ SPECIAL
(’{ 14 KT. GOLD BANDS
oMM. .. $39.95 %s{(@’s s
4+MM. ... %69.95 sl
6-MM....%129.95 JEWELERS
Fellone
2 BTG
S MCcGINNIS DRUGS
bk South Commerce Street
" Summerville, Georgia
Tuesday, November 15, 1988
Charles M. Scoggins '9:30 a.m. to 11 am.
FREE Cleaning and Check-up of Any
Hearing Aid.
FREE Electronic Hearing Test in
Your Home. .
If you can’t come in, we’ll come to you
Just call us at 857-4151.
BELTONE HEARING
AID SERVICE %&Q
404-B McCall Bivd. er Hearing Through Professional Care
Rt ol Better Hearing Through Professional Care
tured from left are Auxiliary members
Shirleg Willingham and Jene Adams, and
Sue Elliott, Council president. (Staff
Photo By Buddy Roberts).
3-B