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LEADER-TRIBUNE. Thursdav. MM! 3. 1956
LEGAL ADS
NOTICE TO CREDITORS !
GEORGIA—Peach County.
A11 creditors of the estate
Lee Anne Bell Cunningham, de
ceased, late of said County, are
hereby notified to render in their
demands to the undersigned ac
cording to taw, and all persons in¬
debted to said estate are required
to make immediate payment to me.
This April 4, 1956.
Donald Allan Cunningham,
apr 5-12-19-26; may 3-10
CITATION
GEORGIA—Peach County.
To Whom it May Concern:
A. fi. Xrrowsmith, Jr., having
resigned as Guardian of Mrs. Lena
Betty Sue, by Peach County Motor Co.
W Htl LAS? rp- » f*Li hoT
PLAV hap % APPUU01N&? 3TWLTCMIN6 *40
AUOUHCl IN ki VAWNtNO a-d
Ateura ll,l>
if.
. I«<u-t, C
Have you been stretching your budget to the limit
trying to include those necessary auto repairs?
You’ll find that the repairs done by the experts at
the PEACH COUNTY MOTOR COMPANY are
priced reasonably. Why don’t you bring your car
around today, we’ll give you an estimated cost of
repair in a matter of minutes.
PEACH COUNTY MOTOR COMPANY
iSU j
mOR5-204! FORTMUFY^^
WALTER WAINRIGHT THOMAS E. BYRD
Dorit let ‘ Shrinking Horsepower
cripple jour pick-up in traffic
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Be money .h««<
clean-burning ^ ^ ^
Clean-burning Gull that caU se “Shrinking .....
against the l g Viigh-compresswn
protects Horsepower’ m tjdW keep fuU, safe
^^^ he i p9 you
engines. The ands of ex tra miles,
engine power ... tor M
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■$ Get the gasoline that burns clean"
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it L..J PROOF; See how the left-hand plate is black¬
i pll ened by the “dirty-burning tail-end”of gaso¬ x jfXXHS
line ... while NO-NOX leaves the plate on the x-:
refines :
1 right clean. That’s because Gulf out .-•X
the “dirty-burning tail-end” of gasoline, in m i
-
making New NO-NOX. II I
X-'.V.-.
DIRTY-BURNING Gb GUU N0-N0X ^ - ; -;x
TAIL-END GASOLINE I Gulf No-Nox ■ •x' ' ; ;-X
y. XvX-tSt .;V'
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Gean-buming... plus: Highest Octane you can biy \ j x
John A. Houser & Son
GULF DISTRIBUTORS
Phone TA 5-5421 Fort Valiev, Georgia
Lexow and Mrs. Ruth A. Bass
having applied for guardianship
of the person and property of Mrs,
Lena Lexow, notice is hereby giv
en that said application will be
heard at the next regular term of
the Court of Ordinary for said
County, the same being held on
the first Monday in May, 1956.
Witness my hand and official
signature, this 9th day of April,
1956. B. A. Young, Ordnary,
apr 12-19-26; may 3
GEORGIA—Peach County.
Personally appeared before the
undersigned, L. Oscar Walker,
who, after being duly sworn, de¬
poses and says that Waiker Mo¬
tor Company is a partnership
composed of L. Oscar Walker,
James F. Smith and Henry B.
O’Neal, each of said parties is a
true and lawful owner.
L. Oscar Walker, Fort Valley,
Georgia, owner of 50% in said
business, James F. Smith, Macon,
Georgia, owner of 25% of said
business, and Henry B. O'Neal,
Macon, Georgia 25% of said bus¬
iness.
The main place of business of
said partnership being located on
N. Macon St., Fort Valley, Ga.
And that business is engaged in
the buying, trading, and selling of
New and Better Used Cars.
This affidavit is made in ac
cordance with the Georgia Code
Annotated section 106-301 as
amended.
Signed this 21st day of April,
191>6. L. Oscar Walker.
Sworn to and subscribed before
me this 21st day cf April, 1956.
J. Leonard Wilson,
Clerk Superior Court,
Peach County, Georgia.
GEORGIA—Peach County.
Clerk’s Office, Superior Court.
Filed in office 21st day of April
1956. J. Leonard Wilson ( Clerk,
apr 26—may 3 chg
NOTICE
Mr. Bass and Mrs. Bream
cordially invite you
to
spend the day
(and $1.00)
at the daily
(except Sunday)
snatching party at
EVANS LAKE
You are requested to do your
best to relieve them of not more
than 10 young Bass and 25 young
Bream.
Invitation raay be obtained at
A. J. EVANS MARKETING
AGENCY, Inc. (adv.)
The first successfully used sub¬
marine was launched in 1897.
You tell a woman you love her
and she asks how much.
Geographer
Reports On j
“Rainmakers*’
ATHENS, Ga. — The prospects j
for „ 20th .. century ' Rainmakers . , j
in
Georgia are neither good nor bad. j
This is the opinion of a Uni- '
versit - v of Geor S ia ge grapher
who sou * ht to eva!uate last - vear ’ s !
“weather modification” project in
12 outheast Georgia counties.
Dr. James F. Woodruff of the
University’s geography and gepl
■ogy department set up his evalu¬
ation project at the request of the
Southeast Georgia W’eather Modi
duetion has been largely for Gov¬
ernment warehouses and grainer
ies because the market was glut¬
ted. It has become a serious
problem, in which every Ameri
can has a stake. It has greatly
diminished our foreign farm
tra( j e
During World War II, a friend
of mine, a carpenter by trade,
hjred ^ f#w of hjs carpenter
frjends and a sma]1 enter
tQ buitd ammuniticn erates
^ Z cJ^L ol
erge33 shipments, and it paid ai
premium price to expedite and ex-1
pand pro< i uc tion, to get thousands
Qf people bugy bui]ding crates My
fr;end rented an oJ<} waK , ho|lae
ggt U p saw r jg 3 and an as3emb |y
line, and turned out crates by the
thousands. He made a small for
t une _
Demand Halted
At the end of the war, the need
for ammunition crates in huge
volume abruptly stopped, My
friend attempted to convert his
plant to the manufacture of soft
drink crates. He sold a few thou¬
sand crates, but the market soon
became glutted; too many ammu¬
nition crate plants had converted
to the same product. When my
friend’s production began to pile
up in his plant, he finally halted
operations, and told his employees
that for the time being there was
no market for his plant’s produc¬
tion. There was never a thought
of being paid for unneeded crates.
The carpenters got jobs in the
building boom just opening up;
and my friend became a success¬
ful residential building ecntrae
tor.
A wood-working plant and a
farm are different enterprises.
But there are elements in the ex
perience of my friend the crate
manufacturer which apply to the
problem of Government stimulated
surpluses. When, through any ar
tifieial device, we “freeze” people
into productive positions when
there is no real outlet for the
fruits of their labor, we are
throwing a monkey wrench into
the whole process of the Ameri¬
can system.
Farmer’s Own Opinion
The American Farm Bureau
Federation, whose 1,623,222 mem¬
ber famil.es add up to approxi¬
mately 8,000,600 people on the
farms of America, believes that
rigid high supports jeopardize the
future of farmers and the freedom
®f rail citizens. Through its state, j
ennnty and local groups the Farm
Bureau is conducting an educa- ,
hional program, designed to give J
farm families a clear understand¬
ing of the economic facts involved
in the farm problem.
There is sound logic in the Farm.
Bureau’s “Platform for Prosperi- j
ty on the Farm.” “Prosperity can
be enhanced, the platform de¬
clares: (1) By adjusting the size i
of the agricultural plant to mar- i
ket demands; (2) By getting rid |
of price - depressing surpluses; j
(3) By cutting costs on and i
off the farm; (4) By developing
bigger markets at home and
abroad; (5) By applying science
on the farm ard throughout the.
marke system.”
CLIFF S CITY
APARTMENTS
Completely Furnished
3-Room Apartments
Phone TA 5-5763
UPHOLSTERING
TAILOR-MADE SEAT
SEAT COVERS FOR CARS
STUDIO COUCHES, PLAT
FORM ROCKERS, AND
OTHER FURNITURE
JACKSONS
GARAGE
N. Macon St. Ft. Valley
Phone TA 5-5931
LOOKING
AHEAD
w GEORGE S, BENSON
Putident—Hirditf Settcf. CtlUft
Arktuu j
I
THE FARM PROBLEM
President Eisenhower’s handling!
f the farm bill situation could!
prove to be a key factor in re¬ !
turning our American farm fam
ilies to fuller dependence and in
safeguarding the freedom of all
citizens. The action may lead to
indisputable proof again that the
free, competitive market is the
best system to govern production
and distribution. This system has
lifted production, in all areas of
our economy, high above anything
ever before accomplished in the
history of mankind.
High rigid support prices were
established during Warld War II !
as a purely emergency measure to!
assure needed bumper crops to j
help feed our allies. These sup
ports should . ,. . have , been discon- ..
tinued at the close of the war
For political reasons the high
rigid support prices were con
tinued long after the need for
lumper crops munis e . an
tastie, wasteful surpluses of tarm
prm uc 3 ave pi e up. e cos
to the government now for stor
age alone on the surplus farm
prr.i ut s is over one rm ion i o
8 a (lay '
Schemes Tried
Various schemes have been
devised for controlling production
by economic planning and rigid
control of the farmer himself.
But the high rigid support prices
like a dynamo on produc¬
tion — surpluses piled higher and
The farmer became, in
a captive of the Govern
“program,” rather than an
operator. In many of
basic food commodities, pro-
THE LEADER-TRIBliyE
Published Weekly on Thursday Established 1333
DANIEL K. GRAHL, Editor
Entered as Second Class Matter at the Post Office in Fort Valley, Georgia, under
the Act of March s, 1 ST 9 .
MEMBER GEORGIA PRESS ASSOCIATION
ADVERTISING RATES
DISPLAY ADVERTISEMENT RATES _____ Furnished Upon Request
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS _____3c Pur Word
(Minimum Charge 50c)
CARDS OF THANKS 50c
legal advertising c» 4 h in A<n>» „«•. classified advertisements «na
CARDS OF THANKS. Cash in Advanced t«*»i*rnir uirrthaius accounts.)
Publishers net responsible for errors in advertisements other than the cost of
advertising.
SUBSCRIPTION BATES
IN GEORGIA . One Year—53.00
OUT OF STATE .. One Year—53.50
IN GEORGIA Six Months—5LT5
OUT OF STATE S x Months—52.00
fication Association. This group
asked fur the evaluation as a
basis for future negotiations with
commercial firms whose business
it is to attempt to increase rain¬
fall through cloud seeding.
The stud 7 shows tKat while
weather mcdification “may pos
si My ameliorate droughts in Geor
g.a, it cannot eliminate them.”
There also is no evidence that
c i ou d seeding has reduced total
rai "*>» Southeast Georgia,
Actually, Dr. Woodruff’s study
shows that for a 9-month period
e ^ au d seeding may have increased
rainfall in the target area by al
most 2 inches, but the very nature
or clcud seeding and the meas
urement of results makes this fig
urL uu -onclusive.
“Seeding,” he says, “is only ef¬
fective if atmospheric conditions
are conducive to normal rainfall.”
A clever meteorologist, he points
out, could produce apparent good
results by seeding at a time when
atmcspheric conditions are such as
Charge It
ci vt»- S'?
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Makes shopping so much easier when you
pay your bills by check. Economical, too,
because you know where every cent goes.
As a suggestion, Dad, open a checking ac¬
count for Mother before another day goes by.
BANK OF FORT VALLEY
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporatiosi
Capital, Surplus and Profits Over 375,000.00
Now^
GLEANER-BALDWIN combine service
at your
Allis-Chalnters Dealer
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e
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m y
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t
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PVs \ T£. %
m _xvxwi5o
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Factory-Trained Mechanics
Now you can get the same complete serv ice for your
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owners have been receiving for years.
We have True Original Parts from the same factory
that made the originals for your Gleaner-Baldwin
combine.
Our mechanics are factory-trained to service these
machines completely and with cost-saving efficiency.
Take time now to put your combine in shape before
harvest. Let us check it for you now.
JlLL-CROP and GLiLANER-BALDWIN are AUla-Chalmers trademarks
ALL3S-CHALMERSOC
.sales and servics
J. F. DUKE & SONS
NORTH MACON STREET FORT VALLEY, GEORGIA
to produce rainfall without seed¬
ing.
And it is the “unknown" posed
by this possibility which made the
study a difficult one. Dr. Wood¬
ruff had to find out how much it
would have rained anyway.
To establish his project on a
sound scientific footing, he select¬
ed for purposes of comparison
similar counties in other par.s of
the state which were not to be
seeded. He then collected all
available data on these “control”
counties and was thereby a »e to
measure statistically the positive
or negative results of rainmaicing
attempts in counties where seed¬
ing was conducted.
Counties in which the project is
located are Appling, Bac n, Ber¬
rien, Bulloch, Candler, Coffee,
Evans, Jeff Davis, Tattnall, Tel¬
fair, Toombs , and Wayne
The Liberty Bell was cracked in
1835 while being tolled for the
' death of Justice John Marshall.