Newspaper Page Text
FRIDAY, AUGUST 21, 1959
GLENWOOD
SOCIALS AND PERSONALS
Eloise Avery of Swainsboro
visited friends here Sunday.
* ♦ * »
Mr. and Mrs. Joe McCranie and
daughter of Rhine spent Saturday
with Mr. and Mrs. Bill Jones.
* * * *
Mrs. K. J. Jones and children
of Albany visited Mrs. Bill Jones
Monday.
* * * *
Mrs. J. P. Morrison Jr. and Mrs.
Thelma LaFortune were visitors
in Dublin last Thursday.
• • • *
Mrs. George LaFavor and Mrs.
Jack Andrews are visiting Mrs.
Orii Horn this w r eek.
♦ * * *
Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Wilkinson
and sons visited Mr. and Mrs.
R. E. August in Savannah recent
ly.
• * • •
Steve Jones celebrated his 10th
birthday with a few friends at a
party given by his mother, Mrs.
Bill Jones.
» « » «
Mrs. Calvin Lang and children
and Mr. and Mrs. Roger Mitchell
were week end guests of Mrs.
A. A. Purvis.
BROWNING'S
FLOWER SHOP
Flowers Os Distinction
For Every Occasion
Telephone Numbers
Jackson 3-3254. Residence 3-2301 i
P. O. Box 296 Glenwood, Ga.
' s
Mrs. Don Gross and children
spent Tuesday with relatives in
Valdosta. They, with Mrs. Walter
Ryals visited relatives in Sparta
and Augusta, during the week
end.
* * « *
Mrs. Walter Ryals was given a
going away party Tuesday by the
Fellowship Sunday School Class
of the Methodist Church. Mrs.
Ryals will be a house-mother at I
the University of Georgia, Athens.
» » * »
Ray Willis of North Carolina
and Stanley Sumner of Cordele
have returned to their homes
after a weeks visit with their
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. M. F.
Whitehead.
* * * *
Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Bradley
and Stewart Bradley spent Sun
day with Mrs. D. J. Blackburn,
who is a patient in Glynn Me
morial Hospital in Brunswick.
They had supper Sunday night
with Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Eason
in Jesup.
* * * *
Visiting Mr. and Mrs. L. Cooper
Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. O.
Cooper, Elizabeth and Jerdme
Cooper, and Mr. and Mrs. Gal
braith, of Sharpesburg. Last Tues
day night Mr. and Mrs. S. L.
Galbraith and children were sup
per guests of Mrs. Cooper.
Decorator’s Digest James P. Erdman f A.LD. I
' v •
■ j
Trees Tell a Timeless Story
A tree is one of Nature’s
most perfect gifts to Mankind,
and has, from the beginning of
time, played a very important
part in Man’s well-being. It
shelters him from the sun and
protects him from the rain—
provides material to warm him,
and food for him to eat. It gives
its life’s fibre so that he may
build houses and ships, and in
troduces life giving elements to
the air that man breathes. It
is the focal point of beautiful
landscape design—an inspira
tion for painters, poets, and
musicians. Perhaps no other
gi^t of Nature is so faithful
a servant.
Trees, even after they are
cut, continue to live. Fine hard
woods used generations ago to
enhance both interior and ex
terior beauty are only more
beautiful today due to the age
less vitality of Nature’s own
product. Fine cabinetwoods used
by artisans of another era have
inspired the present-day gener
ation of designers to create our
Mrs. Bill Furney and sons of
; Warner Robins spent Sunday with :
Mrs. Bob Simpson.
i’- * *
! Mr. and Mrs. Fred Freeman
of Savannah visited relatives here ।
during the week end.
* » ♦ •
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Ed Clark and
I Mr. and Mrs. Loisette Anderson
j spent Sunday in Glennville.
’*’ ’ i
I Mrs. Lamar Conner was ill last j
i week and was a patient in a Vi-I
i dalia hospital a few days.
# * * »
—Whalley's grapes near Helena
are now ripe. Come and get them.
Mr. and Mrs. M. F. Whitehead
j spent the week end in Warner
Robins with Mr. and Mrs. Dewey
Raburn.
• » * •
Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Cason and
’ children visited Mr. Cason’s moth
। er in Monticello recently, who is
p ....
Mrs. W. H. Sightier and chil
। dren spent the week end in Vi
] dalia as guests of Mrs. L. A.
: Dixon.
* » * »
Mrs. C. C. White and Mr. and
Mrs. G. L. Thigpen and son Glenn
of Warner Robins spent Sunday
with Mr. C. L. Galbraith.
♦ * * *
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Newsome
j and children of Milford, Ohio
! spent the week and with Mrs.
W. C. Rice.
» « * «
Mr. and Mrs. D. S. Stevens and
son Dan of Millen and Mr. and
Mrs. J. C. Fowler spent the week
end as guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Walter Edge in Culman, Ala.
* » * *
Patients in the various hospitals
are Mrs. Daniel Butler in Gross-
Mercer; Mrs. W. E. Coleman in
! Augusta and Mrs. Kent Currie in
। Dublin.
* # * *
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Eubanks cel
| ebrated their 25th. wedding an
! niversary with friends and rela-
I tives at their home Sunday. They
! received many nice gifts. Miss
j Nole Windham is spending this
i week with Mr. and Mrs. Eubanks.
» * * *
j The Rev. and Mrs’. Walter Mc-
Cleskey and children were recent
■ supper guests of the Rev. and Mrs.
George Fields. This past Thurs
day they attended a birthday din
ner honoring Dr. McCleskey of
i Atlanta, who was 75 years old.
* # $ *
i Mr. and Mrs. Charles Dixon
1 and Mr. and Mrs. J. B. McDaniel
‘ carried Mrs. G. C. Rice to Atlanta
; from where she went by plane to
i St. Louis where they will live.
; Beth and Scott Rice are staying
{ with Mrs. Rosalie Galbraith a few
i days.
heritage for the future, as fine
structural woods have ";-
enced current architectural
trends.
Man-made products have
opened new avenues of con
struction, but wood remains the
living symbol of strength and
beauty. Home builders today
are recognizing the necessity of
incorporating fine hardwood
lumber and veneers in archi
tectural and interior design. In
contrast to manufactured struc
tural material, wood provides a
natural warmth —an aura of liv
ability that cannot be achieved
in any other way. Adaptable io
both traditional and contempo
rary styling, fine hardwood ,s
the perfect transitional mate
rial, and has influenced the cur
rent design trends established
by our leading architects and
decorators.
Good design is ageless, and
the materials used to produce
good design should incorporate
the timeless quality of mis
greatest of natural products.
WHEELER COUNTY EAGLE, ALAMO, WHEELER COUNTY, GEORGIA
Mrs. Wyman Kennedy and |
! children of Dexter were recent j
guests of Mrs. Guy Rivers.
* * * »
Mrs. C. A. Stewart is spending
this week with her daughter Mrs.
A. A. Eason in Jesup.
* * * «
Dr. Edgar O’Quinn visited his
■ mother, Mrs. Jewell O’Quinn, this
j week.
♦ * ♦ *
Sincere sympathy is extended
I to the family of Mr. George La
! Favor who died last week.
* » » »
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Jones and Mr.
: and Mrs. John B. McCranie and
children of Rhine spent Sunday
। at Tybee Beach, Savannah.
SCOTLAND
1 The Scotland Home Demonstra
■ tion Club met at the home of Mrs.
(James Dobbs on August 11 with
■ nine members present.
The Vice-President, Mrs. W. C.
Cook, presided and opened the
meeting by reading the thought
for the month. Mrs. Dobbs con
ducted the devotional.
Since the July picnic was post
poned, another was planned for
August 25 at 7:30 p.m. at the
city park.
Mrs. N. L. Flanders, Project
Chairman for Safety, gave an in
teresting folk and led the group
in a general discussion by giving
I a safety check-up test.
j Plans for the fair were dis-
I cussed at length.
After a game, led by Mrs. Sam
i Crapps, was enjoyed the hostess
j served delicious refreshments,
i '
I
*■ t .j
“But there are hundreds of thou
sands of mentally sick people who
have not been so lucky-who can
not recover because their mental
hospitals cannot give them the
treatment they need. 1
You can help them return to
their loved ones, by supporting
your mental health association.
God bless you all and thanks
ZZ?
'■■ * :
7
MJ
ye cues
Children do not “outgrow”
crossed eyes. To prevent possible
loss of sight, crossed eyes should
be treated before the child is
i four years old.
* * *
Frequent blinking, rubbing of
eyes, attempts to brush away
blur . . . over
sensitivity to
light . . . exces
sive squinting
. . . stumbling
over small ob
jects, may mean
your child has
an eye problem.
(One child in
; four needs some kind of eye
( care.)
♦ ♦ *
Glaucoma, a leading cause of
i blindness, attacks one person in
i 50 over age 40. These symptoms
( may mean glaucoma: Frequent
I change of glasses - none of which
I is satisfactory . . . inability to
adjust the eyes to darkened
rooms . . , loss of side vision;
blurred or foggy vision ~. vague
eye discomfort.
* * *
Approximate
| ly 300,000 in
; dustrial eye ac
' cidents occur
( every year.
Proper use of
j safety glasses
j at work or in
! the home would
( reduce eye in-
juries by as much as 90%.
» * *
Sunglasses should not be worn
for night driving. (They do re
duce glare but they also reduce
your ability to see.)
• • *
A thorough eye examination
every two years is your best
safeguard for protecting your
precious gift of sight.
* * •
For a free folder on eye health
write to Eye Health, National
Society for the Prevention of
Blindness, 1790 Broadway, New
York 19, N. Y.
’HOPE NEWS
I
Mrs. Mose Lee and daughter j
Shirley, of South Carolina, visited
her parents Mr. and Mrs. V. W.
Montford last weeh.
Mr. and Mrs. Billy Carter, Mrs.
I. A. Carter and Judy Carter en
, joyed homemade ice cream and
cake with Mr. and Mrs. N. G.
Clark Friday night.
Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Cooper of
Jacksonville, Fla. visited Mr. and
Mrs. Pat Clark Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. N. G. Clark were ;
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Harvey Sears Sunday. Dela Ann
and Leary Sears accompanied
their aunt, Mrs. Clark, home and
visited with her through Monday.
Little Cathy Hensley of Atlanta
is visiting her grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. C. R. Dixon for two
weeks.
' Mrs. Tom Browning has re
turned after several weeks visit
with her son, Clayton Browning
’ and Mrs. Browning in Jackson
ville, Fla.
Mrs. Eldridge Pickle visited
Mrs. A. L. Pickle Saturday.
Visiting Mrs. I. A. Carter during
. the week end were Mr. and Mrs.
, James Adams and children Ann
and Marty and Mrs. D. E. Carter
and children Judy, Gary, and
" Ricky, of Savannah.
’ Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Billy
, Carter Saturday were Mr. and
Mrs. Thurmond Jones and chil
dren Gail and Henry, of Savan
nah.
BRIDAL SHOWER
A miscellaneous shower was
given at the Hope Baptist Church
Saturday evening for Mrs. Cap
Couey, the former Miss Johnnie
Mae Pickle.
The new bride received many
nice and useful gifts. A large
crowd attended, and everyone en
joyed the refreshments. Mrs.
Eldredge Pickle, the bride’s aunt,
gave the shower.
Birth Announcements
Denise Coleman
Mr. and Mrs. William Henry
Coleman of Helena R-l announce
the birth of a daughter in the
Telfair County Hos-pital on Au
gust 14 who has been given the
name Denise. Mrs. Coleman is
the former Miss Hazle Brown of
Wheeler County.
Martha Smith
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Smith
of Helena R-1 atmhunce the birth
of a daughter in the Telfair Coun
ty Hospital on August 18. She has
been named Martha. Mrs. Smith
was formerly Miss Eloise John
son of Wheeler County.
Johnnie Paul Wood
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Wood of
Glenwood announce the birth of a
son, Johnnie Paul, in the Telfair
County Hospital on August 19.
Mrs. Wood is the former Miss
Jessee Salisbury of Beatrice, Ne
braska. ________
SEna
r mm
hi a
By John B. McDaniel
•
The honking of the alto sax,
closely identified with the
rhythm and blues field and,
more recently, with rock ’n roll
music, is indirectly the doings
of Adolphe Sax. Sax, who cre
ated the saxophone family of
instruments first turned them
out in 1840. Outside of some
small success in France, the
saxophone made little impres
sion on the music world until
the twentieth century when it
was caught up in the sudden
rise of jazz.
The sax, in case you can’t
think back to Rudy Vallee, has
a parabolically widening metal
rube, with the bell up. It fol
lows the oboe in its key ar
rangement, but the beak
shaped mouthpiece with a
single reed, is akin to that of
the clarinet. A fine example of
the sax’s versatile sound can
be heard in the late Jimmy
Dorsey’s recording of So Rare.
If you think that there’s
nothing in the world so rare as ।
an honest, old-fashioned buy,
drop in at DUBLIN PIANO
CO. and change your tune. On ;
new pianos and used or re- (
built 88’s as well, you can still
buy a lot of instrument for the
money at DUBLIN PIANO
CO., 117 S. Jefferson St. Phone
| BRoad 2-0252.
GEORGIA FARM VALUE
In the Coastal Plain area of
Georgia the average value of
farm assets of nearly 40 per cent
of the families on low-producing
farms is less than $5,000, point
out economists, Agricultural Ex
tension service. In contrast, most
of the commercial farms had farm
assets ranging in value from
$25,000 to $50,000. Net worth of
families on commercial farms
averaged $19,500 compared with
$4,600 on low-producing farms.
Eggs clean much easier if wash
ed immediately after they are
picked up, states Dewey McNiece,
poultryman. Agricultural Exten
sion Service Use a detergent
sanitizer and keep the water
temperature between 115 and 120
degrees F.
GOTA^>
SUMMER COLD
TAKE '
/J symptomatic
OOP RELIEF
Smokey Says:
[you've hit the
NAI L RIGHT ON
I THE HEAD! Z &
8 4
I
H FOMSUWI
g RWSWI
HR HACKS'
IM WJ
Remember—only you can!
MOTOR MASKS
Night Driving
Made Easy
By Martha Johnson
Dodge Safely Consultant
Whether driving in the city or
traveling the vacation highway,
night driving can be tiresome and
dangerous.
Glaring headlights, flashing
neon signs, changing traffic lights
and glistening reflections often
are called “the deceiving eyes of
the night.”
Your sundown-to-sunrise trav
el doesn’t have to be dangerous,
though, if you take a few precau
tions.
• Reduce your speed at night.
• Turn on your driving lights
immediately at sunset—ear
lier when visibility is poor.
• tower your beams for ap
proaching vehicles. Use up
per beams only when the
road is elear.
• Keep your windows clean
for good vision.
• Keep a close watch for pe
destrians.
• Stop to rest when you be
come sleepy.
* Keep the lights inside your
car turned off while driving.
• Never wear sunglasses at
night.
-AND NO FURTHER!
: • Ml
OT YOUR SAVINGS BONP W vr?
purchases
SAFEST INVESTMENT
i
ALAMO
SOCIALS AND PERSONALS
Mrs. Dalton Wright. Editor
Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Dorsey spent
Tuesday in Dublin.
» « » »
Mr. and Mrs. James Harris Os
Mobile, Ala. visited relatives here
during the week end.
* * * ♦
—Whatley's grapes near Helena
are now ripe. Come and get them.
» » * •
Mrs. Clyde Weitmon of Syl
vania is spending some time at
her heme in Alamo. Her many
friends are glad to see her back.
* * * «
Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Mallory and
daughter Jane of Sylvania were
guests of Mrs. Clyde Weitmon
during the week end.
* * * *
Mrs. Florence Robertson and
daughter Mrs. Frank Powell and
son of Macon visited Mrs. J. F.
Hattaway last Thursday.
♦ ♦ * *
Mrs. Nettie Mouney and Mrs.
Hester Pierce of Leesburg, Fla.
are spending some time here with
relatives and friends.
— FLOWERS
FOR ALL OCCASIONS
LOIS PULLEN FLORIST
Dial 6272 Mcßae, Ga.
Located one block east of the
highway—halfway between
, Mcßae and Helena
Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Brantley had
as guests Sunday Mr. and Mrs.
Jerome Couey of Brunswick and
Mr. and Mrs. Pete Peebles and
children of Mcßae.
* * * *
Mr. apd Mrs. Lige Jones of
Macon Were week end guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Buford Hartley.
Virginia Hartley accompanied
them home for a visit.
* * * *
The Rev. and Mrs. M. R. Jowers
and family of Waycross and Mrs.
P. L. Jowers of Wray spent the
week end as guests of the Rev.
and Mrs. R. Y. Chauncey.
* * * »
Mr. and Mrs. Carlson Brown
and daughters Vicki and Sue, of
Reidsville spent Thursday night
| with Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Hattaway.
। Vicki and Sue remained for
। several days visit.
■ « * •
I Mr. and Mrs. Boyd Moon and
sons Boyd Jr. and Comer of
Lumpkin were week end guests of
their parents Mr. and Mrs. R. G.
Jenkins. Boyd Jr. remained for a
longer visit.
* * * *
Members of the Cora E. Hartley
Bible Class of the Alamo Baptist
Church met at the church Monday
night at 6:30 o’clock and went to
Little Ocmulgee State Park for a
picnic supper. About twenty en
joyed the occasion.
• « • •
Mrs. H. R. Hill and grand
daughter Louise Hill returned
Friday after an extended visit
with relatives in Anderson, S. C.
While there Miss Hill was invited
to a church camp where she spent
a week.
PAGE THREE
Mrs. C. C. Hartley conducted
enjoyable recreation after supper.
» 3 * *
Mrs. Mildred Hillis and Mrs.
Agnes Hillis of Sardis were busi
ness visitors in Alamo Tuesday.
» * * •
Mrs. Agnes Gilder and brother
Buddy have returned from an ex
tended visit in Florida.
» * * *
Mrs. A. P. Hopkins had as
guests during the week end Mrs.
John Barr, of Newport News, and
Paul Keene, of Hampton, Va.
* » * •
Mr. and Mrs. Bubbie Wicker of
Avon Park, Fla. are visiting Mr.
and Mrs. W. M. Purvis and Mr.
and Mrs. G. Z. Hartley.
» » » •
Mr. and Mrs. G. Z. Hartley, Mr.
and Mrs. Bubbie Wicker and Mrs.
W. M. Purvis spent Tuesday in
Macon.
a
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Pope and
children have returned after
several days vacation in Key
West, Fla.
« * a a
—Whatley's grapes near Helena
are now ripe. Come and get them.
* ♦ * *
Mrs. L. M. Pope and Misses Lois
and Anne Pope spent the week:
end at Indian Springs where they
attended camp meeting.
a a a a
Mrs. Millye Mallory and daugh
ter Jane of Sylvania spent the
week end with Mrs. Weitman,
who accompanied them home
after a visit there.
Smokey Says:
—— ■—
BOYS AND GIRLS- XVX
MAKE YOUR OWN / \
SMOKEY BEAR /vHu
BADGE. wA W 1 J
■
• I SMOKEY I 4
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Wai? c? /
.07/
St Vs i
-59-55^
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See Your Lawyer
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Mcßae, Georgia