Newspaper Page Text
Che Summerville News
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CALHOUN HIGH SCHOOL BAND MEMBER
Blows Trumpet During Festival
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Staff Photos By Jason Espy
TRION MAYOR HOYT WILLIAMS AWARDS BAND COMPETITION TROPHY
To Ridgeland High School, Walker County, Band Member
Sublignans Turn Out Big For Historic Festival
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Top, from left, Janie Wilson and Agnes Fowler
demonstrate hand quilting at Subli%-na festival. Below,
several residents make ugv[a sinlfijng a&; They are from
left, Mar%: Rece, Melissa McWilliams, Winona Hughes,
Martha Teems, Frances Cargle, Louise Johnson, Bar
Visiting Bands
March To Beat
Trion High School was host
to 19 high school bands durin
the first Mount Vemon-Riege%
Band Festival this past Satur
day at Sam R. McCain
Stadium, Trion.
The bands hailed from three
states, with about 3,000 to
4,000 spectators claiming the
stands for the afternoon
com}getition.
.S. Alexander Hiih
School, Douglasville, was the
overall Sweepstakes winner of
the band competition, also
garnerinslfirst in Class AAAA
contest division.
Class A winners were, first,
Pleasant Valley High School,
Jacksonville, Ala.; second,
Mount Zion High School,
Mount Zion; third, Dacula
High School, Dacula.
In Class AA, Model High
School came in first, followed
bv Rockmart High School.
Back In Time
bara Price, Marie Plunkett, Brittini Scoggins and Pat
Scoggins. Trumpeter Christopher Atking,gigd the flag
on its march through the festival grounds. (Staff Photos
By Julie Griffis).
October 17, 1991
with second place. Murray
High School, Chatsworth,
received third Xlace.
In Class AAA, first, Villa
Rica High School; East Ridge,
Tenn. Hllfih School, second; and
Adairsville High School, third.
Additional Photos
on Page 10-B
In the festival classifica
tion. Superior ratings were
received by: Dacula High
School, Mount Zion Hiih
School, Villa Rica High,
Ridgeland, Hifih, Walker Coun
ty, Sequoyah, Canton and
Calhoun.
Excellent ratings were
nabbed by Geraldine, Ala.
High School, Section, Ala.
High School; and Pickens
County High School.
' ‘ Features/News |
1-B
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Tropical Plants Flourish With
Some Care, Extra Special Touches
Bernice Campbell doesn’t
claim to have a green thumb.
In fact, she'll tell you ]iust
the opposite. But try telling
that to her two fruit-bearing
ineapple plants and 10-feet
_Eanana trees.
" The Crest Street resident in
Summerville said she started
growing the %ineapples and
anana trees about four years
ago “‘just for fun.”
And just a few months ago,
her healthy, robust pinea%ple
glants decided to give birth to
aby pineapples. One plant has
two pineapples, which accor
ding to Mrs. Campbell is very
rare the first time a non-farm
pineapple plant bears fruit.
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By JULIE GRIFFIS
Feature Writer
Staff Photos By Julie Griffis
SYBLE BROWN, DAVID GRIGSBY POSE
In Historic Costumes For Festival
HANDMADE DOLLS, TEDDY BEAR CRAFTS
Other Crafts Lined Walls Of Gym
(o - ;’hom By Julie Gri;
BERNICE CAMPBELL, SUMMERVILLE, SITS AT HER PATIO TABLE
With Her Two Fruit-Bearing, 4 Year Old Pineapple Plants
UNKNOWNS
She knew verg{( little about
the tropical plant known for its
{)uici' fragrant fruit, which pro
ably got its name because it
looks l.iie a pine cone. That lack
of knowleSge spurred Mrs.
Campbell on to a trip to the
local library. But, sfle said,
there was nothing on tropical
plants except in encyclopedias.
Eventually she met someone
who knew a little about pineap-
Eles. The rest she discovered
y trial and error.
For instance, from her
brother diving into her swim
ming pool ang splashing large
amounts of pool water onto her
banana trees, she discovered it
made them grow faster and
bigger. Now Mrs. Campbell
waters her plants with water
from the swimming pool dur
ing the summer. :
~“When I first saw the water
drench the banana trees, I
thought, ‘Oh no, it will kill
them,’ but they actually grew
better,” she said.
BANANAS
She said she’s given several
baby banana plants to her
friends. She keeps the banana
trees planted next to the swim
ming pool during the summer,
but come winter, they're dug
up and put into the basement
to lie dormant for the winter.
The pineapple plants are kept
in pots next to the pool during
the spring and summer months
but are brought inside to sit in
front of a sunny window when
its cold out. Though large, her
banana trees have never borne
fruit and she’s not sure why.
“I wish I could find out
what to do. I want bananas,”
she said.
The majority of the world’s
g{ineapple does not hail from
awaii, like most people think,
but from Thailand, and it takes
about 20 months for a pineap
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MARGARET MANNING, LENORA BURTON SELL
Sweet Potatoes, Vegetables, Preserves
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FRANCES TUDOR AND BARBARA CROWE
Ready Mrs. Tudor's Craft Booth
ple at a pineapple farm to
mature. But, Mrs. Campbell
thinks it may take a while
longer in Georgia.
Mrs. Campbell started her
plant from the crown of a
pineapple she bought at the
grocery store. She said she cut
off the crown, the small group
of leaves at the top of the fruit,
and rooted it in water. She then
put the roots in potting soil.
Then she just fertilizeg and
watered.
PINEAPPLES
Though the aver: ineaj
ple plang takes abom?gelg to 1%-
months to bloom, the Campbell
plants have taken almost four
years.
“I think it took so long
because, in the beginning, I
had two plants in one pot.
When I separated them, tgley
started to %loom." she said.
First a pinkish red flower
see TROPICAL, page 4-B
Additional Photos
on Page 11-B