Newspaper Page Text
PAGE POUR
TUB BITPLBE H8RALP. RUTLBB. GEORGIA, APRIL 13, 1944,
THE BUTLER HERALD
Entered at Postoffice at Butler,
Georgia as Mail Matter of
Second Class.
Chas. Benns Jr., Managing Editor
O. E. Cox, Publisher & Bos. Mgr.
OFFICIAL ORGAN TAYLOR CO.
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY
WHY EDITOR'S HAIR
TURNS GRAY EARLY
MAYBE ITS ME I
TODAY AND TOMORROW
When everything is crossways
In his well-written column, “To-
Evidently Sister Margaret, Jones, and upset, when you feel that all day and Tomorrow,” under the
editor' of the Fort Valley Tribune, those around you are either malin- head, “The Windowsill of Heav-
has had similar experiences to . gering or doing their jobs badly, en,” Dr. Louie D. Newton, of Druid , Many of these, of course, merely
some of our own in roaming j when you are overwhelmed by the Hills Baptist church, gives us such j fi nc j their way to the waste bas-
CRUSADE—1944
Every day there come to an
editor's desk dozens of appeals for
support of one cause or another.
arounding, missing a train here , cross stupidity and inefficiency of pertinent thought pe deemed it
and bus there with endless worry those in authority—then is the wise to carry it in our editorial
and vexation over the confusion of 1 time to stop and say “Maybe it's columns today, as follows:
Average Weekly Circulation
Fifteen Hundred Copies
SUBSCRIPTION, $2.00 A YEAR
Established in 1879
different times.
We endorse whole heartedly her
recent editorial reproduced as fol
lows:
Dear Reader:
ket. But there is one cause we are
always and eager to champion. It
is the annual campaign of the
Women’s Field Army of the Ameri
can Society for the Control of Can
cer. Each year in the month of
The WindowSill of Heaven
Self-searching is one of the car-1 (By Louie D. Newton)
dinal principles, a first factor in! Someone has said, “Lean each
establishing good public relations, morning for a little while on the 1 April—Cancer Control Month this
No competent advisor on this im- windowsill of Heaven.” And well splendid group of volunteer worn-
Blessings upon the head of a portant subject would start his may we couple with that wise ad- I e n seeks to enlist the support of
Congressman! work by attacking the action of monition the words of the Saviour, 1 every citizen in its efforts to
Strange words, say you. Ah, but competitors. He begins his task by , when He said, “Men ought always spread the knowledge that CAN-
this Congressman is a pearl of a survey of his client's business to pray, and not to faint.” i CER CAN BE CURED IF TREAT-
great price; a man gifted with a and attitudes. He makes very sure These are days that try the souls ! ed IN TIME.
«— " " : “ ’""[true understanding of the limits of that there are no flaws, no errors of men. Who is sufficient for! Thi = snpctacular cause It
Put on your old gray bonnet'human endurance, one who, if his to be corrected at home, before he these things? Certainly none of us h oiammir Anri likp nil eriu
with the new ribbon on it—that's colleagues see fit to support his re- starts to win public opinion will claim wisdom and strength cational movements nroeress is
the way the old song is revised
for Easter in wartime Britain. The
old bonnet, obviously, is revised
too, because new ones are not so
plentiful as they used to be.
to win
cently introduced measure, we in- abroad. j sufficient for the task at hand and slow _ nd freauentlv most discour .
tend to nominate for the Hall of Maybe its me! We must apply 1 ahead. The news broadcast re- ag ^ e NeveS
Fame. [this same routine in considering reminds us that hourly we may these workers there comes sooner
It is his wish and intention to our own relations with those with expect tremendous announcements , t th realisation that thru
undo a great wrong inflicted up- whom we come in contact. Are on the fighting fronts. Here at Z.„ efforts knowledge has been
on the citizenry of these United, people always fighting us? What home we face difficult days. brought to someone that has sav
The Fifth War Loan Drive for i States in general and upon your W e must ask instead is-are WE I like some lines, written years ed ^ p ° erson>s Vife If thfs ham
sixteen billion dollars will start editor m particular. He Is going combative. Have WE a prepetua] ago. by Clinton Scollard: pened only once in a lifetime H
on June 12th and end July 8th. It “ “VCTnV'am °h“ P „ ZfZ S H h0Uld , CTS? Have WE "Let us put by some hours every P „ uld be y wor , C h yeai . a tfSlort
is planned to sell six billion dol- le - ge ot slee P in S. eating, and arls- been interested only in our own 1 day 1
lars worth to individuals. The oth-, in g-. at the proper time once fai
er will be raised from investors ™ lbar toallasCentralStandard Are we misunderstood by our, when dawn j Tremendous strides have been
other than commercial banks. T ‘ me - and wbich ln ? Ur ° plni ° n fellow men?—Wtll, what has been Peers through the window pane, or | d in th diagnosjs treatment
should have been set forth firmly our attitude toward others? Have when the noon I and rule of thif riUea/e whieh
, a . , as Article Eleven in the Bill of WE been ODen and friendlv renriv Flames like a hurnisheri tnna7 in ! uisease, wmtn
Taylor county may not have any p . . f ° p dna , I ” en i ai y> ready lames, iikc a Dumisnea topaz, in each year des t r0 y S 0V er 160,000
great wealth, or great number of N ’ d we stand alnne in nnr c? er ® and and to b j u ,? der ’ 1tl ? e vaalt ’ .. , . ! people in the Unit d States—many
population, and we may not have ind N °' na t„ a, havino to ,° r e ve P ° UrS ” * he , ot them at a time oi life when
„ e “\ “ , , . ' they are most useful to society.
Its plaintive melody, some little Research on the causes and cure
of cancer is steadily going for-
individuals. The oth- j in S> at ^_ the , 1 pro P^°” ce , fa j ri S hts and in our own problems? For Holy things—whether it be j ^n^ove^agai^ 1 ^ happenS
mem to‘peopled but 6 we are'sme about like moles to see if it is day- the past works both ways.
less porperty is advertised for time by the clock instead of sleep-| We cannot create good feeling I hour , U1 „ aiCttUliy
taxes each year than any other ing llke honest people until the by force. We cannot legislate Wherein to hold rapt converse ; vvard Y et despite these advances
. * sun romps iin All ovpt the* pnnntrv Fk * r..n __ ^ i ctc-opnc uicac auvantca
industries to give employ. « Sf!*? “ *“«* “ ve Galling up I . ear of eve
county in the state.
sun comes up All over the country friendship. We cannot get full co- with the soul, i of science a nd medicine the aver-
^missaTTevi! FoTtiL r ra '!° n ° n d , eman ?; f “t-we can From Sordidness and self a sanc L ge i„dividual-no matter how ?n
Mrs. J. S. Matthews Sr., mother [ nto volume of nrotest l ° °“[® el a es a11 these things tuary telligent—is still obsessed with an
of Capt. J. S. Matthews Jr., pub- that has Denetrated the ha lls of y W o°Vux- a attltUd i eS ‘ ,u rL , Swept by the winnowing or unseen j awful fear of the disease and with
lisher of the Hawkinsville Dispatch p onerGSS Thousands of Cnsne? Q e ^ ke P eo P le who like us. We wings I the certainty that once incurred,
and News, passed away at her Milauetoasts have risen as nnp P tn net l dl y towardl those who And touched by the White Light death is inevitable. Actually, au-
home tn Denmark S C on March Milquetoasts have nsen as ° nG to give us friendship. We are con-I ineffable.” I thorities tell us that in some
30 after a lingering' illness The dano “" c ® the extra hour with ^derate of those who are fair to 1 But, someone will be saying, I! forms of cancer the ratio of cuTr-
tt U ’ a ” er a un 6 erin s U1 / iesa - iae which they were presented in 1942 us. Don’t forget however that this can't take the time to nause atlw-i^ 15 . caacer * ne ratI ° 01 cura
Herald adds ns sympathy to oth- _ h „ incr mo . nc „ f . iurgei, nowtver, mat mis can i raxe ine ume to pause at bility is higher than in some eth
ers beine so freelv extended I ^ Deing tae means of getting works in reverse as well. dawn or in the evening time for er diseases and nearlv all forms
erS being so frecl> extended. )thera no v vh ere faster and feeling, <‘ M aybe its me!” Maybe the prayer. There are so many things ‘ Tre curable’ if treated ! In the eariv
worse when they get there. I trouble is with us Let's be snrp to be done so manv ursFent calls * cu a °. “ ireatea in tne earl y
President Roosevelt signed into It will of course be an imnos ’Inr L I Lets be sure to be done so many urgent calls, stages. This fear has such a para-
A .„ ., „ „ I ; J ’ , course > De an impos- our own attitude is right before No. No thoughtful person can lvzine effect on neonlp that more
the nL- tn cnenri more than a slb ® feat for all the suffering vve start criticizing the other fel- say that. For the moment one be- , often than not when thev do de-
Kir *. ,, ^ . n ,. (< , resulting from and attendant upon low. Let's do some self-searching gins to utter such words, the In- tect some svmntoms
^ 1 1°" d0l S?P d “« d ‘," g ,Kf dV , a ? h “ ‘S 8 ’, tinkering with the and some self.straightening first ner Voice will speak: ‘ C * S ° mC symp,oms
war clnaor to lanan The'hill alao c ! oc , b !° be erased even if that bit, Let’s not be so quick on the 1 “Be still and know that I am
war closer to Japan. The bill also G f legislature is unlegislatured. It, trigger to defend ourselves If our God ”
provides $600,000,0000 for shore win reouire more than an -ct nf aeiena ourseives. il our uoa
* , , U1 ret l uire more man an act ot actions were right, we don t have 1 We dare not take a step without
< " on ^ ress to ^ ron ou L (he tangled to put up a defense—we just have His tracks well before us. We dare
affairs in kitchens all
facilities in the United States.
. , , .. , over (h e . to tell the facts. Let's be readier not reach out to grasp the tasks of
We have spoken several times land, to replace the hours of sleep | to understand the opinion and the unfolding day until first we’ve
of evidences of Spring, but we lost, and the wear and tear on the
have reserved the best for last, nerves during the era of Central
That string of fish Bob Carson War Time, Central Standard Time
yanked out of Persons’ lake served or Eastern War Time. Only a mir-
two purposes by satisfying the ap- acle can restore the dark locks of
wishes of others and deal with clasped his hand,
them as we wish them to deal j God waits at the gate of every
with us. I day, ready and able to help all ■ pieces of literature giving informa-
“Maybe it's Me!” That’s the who will take His hand. He knows tion about cancer. It stresses the
that might
indicate the disease, they do abso
lutely nothing about it for fear of
the diagnosis. Unfortunately, can
cer cannot be ignored—the delay
merely lessens the chances ot
cure.
To help dispel this fear, the
Women's Field Army distributes
all year round thousands of
place to start to improve the con-
petites of a host of friends and pre-time changing vintage, fast; ditions around us and our public
flllmnr fWo hoorto mnntr urif U nrtvMrri n n ..m 4-1 T~« i. m* “
filling the hearts
envy.
many with growing gray under the Fast Time
i regime.
, Strength is fast ebbing. Another
Certainly the spirit of Spring, two years of getting up at night
OPA has released an extra 4,500 and going to bed in the arternoon
bicycles this month. With our and we will be totally unable to
application before the ration board g e t U P at all. But we stand ready
we were promptly advised that our and willing to forgive, If not for-
greatest need was a wheelbarrow g e L all these tortues which
and a
thanked them and walked away time and still do, when the gen-
relations. And, after all,—MAYBE
IT IS ME!
FARMING BY POINTS
to pout it out.
The news from Washington is
that after trying to revive the 16-
eed was a wheelbarrow 1 get, an inese tortues which we !; ,rdt * ood production as a basis j., simnnspri tn hp
few garden tools. We! took as a personal affront at the t° r .deferring farmers, Selective j J ^od Southern mUn‘ ‘
- ■ n— —i. x. Service has decided to leave it all i ’ g oa . bou t ne rn negro.
to the draft boards. The 16-point, ara 1 en]oymg a f u ree land now ’ but
system seemed to offer the farmer j wh ' te people , W J° are putting up
ah opportunity to figure out b ltb your , foollsb
whether he was doing his bit as a I SOon for £ et > and
tleman from Missouri persuades
his associates to throw out the
life-line and we car. once more
come and go according to the laws
“Men not yet in training may
deliver the final blow of this war” ,
according to The Christian Science j of H eaven and Nature.
Monitor, which is not very encour
aging for those hoping for an ear
ly end of this war. Too, if The
Monitor is right, the final blow
Your Editor.
Bruce Wilder in his Echoes from
i the Valley in the Columbus En-
may be delivered by an American quirer, quotes the Herald as fol-
married man with children; most [lows: “We know winter has
of the single men already are in passed when we see hare-foot boys
service. [racing along the street. Only if we
I could be a barefoot boy again and
The 23rd senatorial district is give our poor old tired feet the
composed of the counties of Hous- i rest they so much need. Tco, we’ve
ton, Peach, Crawford and Taylor | often thought what a fine thing
and has had as its representative \ it would be if the judgment and
the past term Hon. J. W. Blood- I wisdom of mature years could
worth of Houston. According to have as its ally the energy and
the rotation system, Peach county - enthusiasm of youth. About the
will furnish the next senator and time wisdom comes to the average
a most acceptable one in Hon. A. man he begins to slow down a lit-
C. Riley. It will be of interest to | tie.” Commenting on the above,
the friends of Mr. Bloodworth to I Bruce says: “It's a pity a fellow
know that he will go to the House
from ‘Houston county unopposed.
Jim Chism is not alone in his
conviction that some men are as
“funny” as the colored section of
the Sunday papers. Says he: “One ; tomb. So we, at a certain age, get
can't be both brilliant and a ball
of fire. Possibly wisdom derives
from a slowing pace, which gives
us time to ponder.” The only
trouble is that the time is entirely
too short between wisdom and the
good man I know won't permit
his children to read the funny pa
pers because he thinks they're
printed on Sunday. Sunday papers
are printed on Saturday: Mon
day's papers are the product of
in too big a hurry and hasten the
end by collapse in the form of
heart trouble and wrecked nerves.
the way. He holds the key.
“Lean a little while upon the
windowsill of Heaven.”
The Eastman Times-Journal
says it believes it speaks for a
mighty large group of white busi
ness men and citizens when it ad
vises the negroes to come back to
earth and be the good negroes
the
negro. You
civilian. But there was the nice
little problem of saying how much
and what kind of production
should count as a unit.
Even non-farmers may know
enough to wonder at some of the
decisions. If a man raised eight
acres of tobacco—that excellent
body and energy builder, rich in
proteins, vitamins, fats and pos
sibly riboflavin—he might be de
ferred. If he happened to raise c °mmg president was a lawyer,
wheat, he must cultivate 520 acres wr iter and orator. He died on July
with your foolishness now will not
as has always
been the case in the SOUTH
EVERY GOOD NEGRO* SHOULD
HAVE WHITE FRIENDS.
Today—April 13th—marks the
201st anniversary of Thomas Jef
ferson, third president of the Unit
ed States, and author of the
Declaration of Independence. He
was born April 13, 1745 in Alber-
marle County, Va., and before be-
Editor J. Roy McGinty, of the
Calhoun Times, who is spending
Sunday workers. Not that it makes . much of his valuable time in At-
any difference, but some daddies ! lanta in most useful service to the
are hard headed and their kids state makes the following expla-
know it also.” nation of the absence of some
material for his personally con
ducted column: “The conductor
of this column is going to have to
look to his laurels, or he will be
supplanted as a columnist by a
new member of The Times staff. It
is another “Mack's Column," so to
speak, by Mack Taylor (Annie
Mack Haney), under the caption,
Chips. Already “Chips” has been
quoted in the “Cider from the
Georgia Press” column of the At
lanta Journal, a distinction which
this column has not achieved in
A rnan after our own heart is
the Congressman who has intro
duced in Congress a bill to do
away with War Time and restore
Standard Time all over the na
tion. The war cry on every hand is
to “Conserve- Conserve!” and
electricity is one product among
the most vital for conservation—
still, we move the time forward an
hour by War Time in such a way
that almost everyone is forced co
burn lights an extra hour in the
mornings for at least four months some time. Mrs. Taylor^ is "provine
during thp winter, in i ^ F e
a valuable member of the staff in
and
to gain useful status. This, by
hasty computation, made one ci
garette roughly equal to 75 loaves
of bread.
An acre of green peas equalled
one point. So did a cow. So did
an acre of rutabagas. Selective
Service said so, anyway. But far
mers have had varying ideas
about the expense, labor and ex
pectable profit of each. Picking an
acre of green peas probably
strikes all farmers as a hard way
to get along—and few would care
to pick 16 acres in order to re
main a civilian. Hardly any far
mer, however, would object to
raising 16 acres of rutabagas—if
someone would tell him what he
could ever do with them. No
wonder Washington gave it up!
Christian Science Monitor.
4, 1826. He wrote his own epitaph
now on his tomb: “Here was
buried Thomas Jefferson, author
importance of annual or semi-an
nual physical check-ups. It never
ceases its attempts to get people
to discuss the subject as freely as
they would any other public men
ace. When they tell us that prob
ably more than one-half of these
annual deaths from cancer would
not occur were the disease recog
nized and treated in time.it makes
us realize the enormity of the task
of these volunteers, and we cannot
urge too strongly that you too,
give it your wholehearted sup
port.
Here is a crusade in which we
should all take part!
LEGEND OF THE DOGWOOD
COURT'S PRIMARY DECISION
Mr. Editor:
A reader wants to know what I
think of hte Supreme Court's con
stitutional decoction of the con* ti
tutional right of the negro to vote
in state democrats elections The
court, in boiling the negro rights
* down to a political stew, reallv
holds that to exclude the negro
from voting in primaries is the act
of barring the progress of the ne
gro.
A political primary election has
, no legal and binding powers on
human behavior. To pick a party
candidate in a primary is by no
means a fixed election to public
office or authority. A primary i s
just a reflection of a preferred
party man to lead as a satisfac
! tory public officer in a regular
fixed election which alone meets
the demands of the constitution
, Folks are howling about man's
advanced education and learning
in this age. Well, education and
i learning is nothing but the swaep-
ping of one ignorance for another
Man stops running arounci with a
horse and buggy, but he runs
right on in a gas car. The speed
is the difference. Just like the old
savage, he sticks to raw meat.Wc
smart learned fellows cook our
first, then hop in with an ax
pitch-fork, mumble some words
while we wait.
Here is what President Cleve
land had to say about the consti
tution: “How solemn should be the
thought that to us is delivered
I this ark of the people's covenant
and is given to us the duty to
shield it from impious hands. An-
other centennial day will come,and
millions yet unborn will inquire
concerning our stewardship and
the safety of this Constitution.
God grant they will find it un
impaired.”
i Thomas Jefferson, the very dad
dy of the Constitution, did his
talking in 1816. Here is his chat:
Some men look at the Constitution
( with sanctimonous reverence, and
deem it an ark of the covenant,
loo sacred to be touched. They
think we who wrote up the docu
ment, they were full of wisdom
above human limitations, and
what we fixed up is just too wise
to be fooled with by otherg. Then
Thomas, being a ram and Mars
native says this: “Well, I lived in
the age it was written up, and I
knew folks close up; yes, I even
worked with them.” Then he says
“Shucks, they were nothing to
brag about.” He goes on saying:
“Forty years in government serv
ice gives me a hundred yeers of
book reading on man.” He says he
is opposed to too much law-mak
ing and changing. I think he said
imperfections should be home as
men will learn to fit themselves
to practical means of accommoda
tion.”
If any negro has the right to
take part in primaries or any par
ty, he also has a right to visit
secret orders, to join in religious
bigotries without being a member.
A primary is a class and social
order, not a public masquerader.
At the time of the Crucifixion
the do'gwood attained the size of
the oak and other forest trees. So
strong and firm was the wood of
it that it was chosen for the tim
ber of the cross. To be thus used
for such a cruel purpose distressed
(he tree, and Jesus smiled upon it,
sensed this, and, in His gentle
pity for sorrow, said to it:
“Because of. your regrer and pity
for my suffering, I make you this
of the Declaration of Independence \ promise: Never again shall the
cf the Statute of Virginia for Re- j dogwood tree grow enough to be
ligious Freedom and Father of the | u . SGd for a cross. Henceforth, it
University of Virginia.”
This story is making the rounds
in Australia. General MacArthur
was being subjected to a barrage
of questions from his little boy.
When the latter asked his famed
dad to explain the difference be
tween an ordinary rifle and an
M-l repeating rifle, the general is
quoted as saying: “There's quite a
difference, son. It's just as if I
spoke and then your mother
spoke.”
The Tifton Gazette thinks that
w'hen this war is over, the world
—or that part of it where Ameri
can service men have roamed—is
likely to be under a thin coating
of tobacco ashes. During 1944, the
Navy alone expects to use 8,000,-
000 packages of cigarettes month
ly, but that figure is miserly when
compared with the Army's needs.
It's monthly quota is estimated at
234 million packages of cigarettes,
50 million cigars, 2,500,000 plugs
of chewing tobacco, 3,300,000 pack
ages of chewing tobacco, and 11,-
000,0000 packages of smoking to
bacco. Cigarettes from a part of
the emergency rations issued to
soldiers, but there is no other reg
ular issue of cigarettes to them.
Modern invention has no end.
The Elberton Star gives this ex
ample: “The average person can
hardly conceive of an engine func
tioning without generating its own
oower, whether electricity, steam,
during the winter, in addition to
much extra fuel, otherwise. We
greatly hope there will be a con
certed plea to Congress to support
.he bii, lo return .he na.i-T litre me£. |
ni- in?, anrl is hoinrr t... _ 1 . *: ^
"i a a y ways ' and adds a much- gas or what not. But in our Navy
t "f? ed °f feminine charm [yards engines used fot yard trans
... ^ be Tlmes entourage. Chips” |portation function withr...*
shall be slender and bent, and
twisted, and its blossoms shall be
in the form of a cross—two long
petals and two short petals, and
in the center of the outer edge of
each petal there shall be nail
prints, brown with rust and stain
ed with blood. Anri in the center
of the flower there will be an im
age of the crowm of thorns and
all who see it w r ill remember that
it was upon a dogwood tree I was
crucified, and this tree shall not
be mutilated or destroyed, but
cherished as a reminder of my
death upon the cross.”
That fellow who took unto him
self three wives, with Easter star
ing him in hte face, certainly was
a glutton for punishment.
A correspondence course may of
fer an open road to a profession
but it can not supply the sinew
Jackson, Ga.
J. Arden Watkins.
WHAT IS A BOY?
“He is a person who is going to
carry on what we have started.
“He is going to sit where we
are now situated, and when we
are gone, attend to those things
which we think so very important.
“We may adopt all the policies
we please, but how they will be
carried out depends on him.
“Even if we make leagues and
treaties, he will have to manage
them.
“He will assdme control of our
cities, provinces and nations.
“He is going to move in and
take over our prisons, churches,
schools and corporations.
“All our work is going to be
judged and praised, or condemned
by him.
“All our work is for him, and
the fate of the nation and of hu
manity is in his hands.”—Taber
nacle Tidings.
dowed intellect and determination.
Its attention being called to the
mammoth tomato plant production
in South Georgia, the Atlanta and sense to forge‘ahead of
Journal says: “Accustomed as we
have become to figures which are
popularly called “astronomical,”
probably because that is a mouth-
filling word that connotes erudi
tion and culture, we are thrilled
Recent additions to the collec
tion of pets about our house in
clude a pair of real live Easter
, , . . bunnies and a pair of bantam«
by the statistics on the tomato 1 Papa bantam as he struts about
plantof South Georgia. We learn j the poultry yard reminds us of
from the Moultrie Observer that 1 by-gone days when boys began to
the Railway Express Company has shave, part their hair in the mid
made plans to move 1,500 car- j die, wore standing linen coHars
loads of tomato plan s this season - that punched their ears and court
trom our coastal plain. Last year,! ed every new eal that 117,
1,300 carloads were handled. Now, town. But, poor little frlehTenJri
are drawn | let's see. It takes a half million bunnies with P large agate^ d
Standard Time.Then, in communi- ing, and is beine n<?eri hv »i,„ - , — — 1 — — - — ‘“““un wmi laree apatp
Hes that want it, Daylight Saving Times’ new columnist for a Lise erate°d Vnri^ ? gen ‘ pl ^ tS tc \. make Garload - Half a how they denote innocence and
Time can be provided during the worthy purpose. We have P been steanf’ Whin fh- flU - ed Wlth u he m ! lh ° n t ‘ I ! ies 1 ’ 5 U °° 1S ~wait a harmlessness. Turn ’em aloose and
months.—Cairo Messen- reading her contributes with glV - S ° Ut they Whlle We sharpen P^- they'd be as hard to catch as some
—— contributions with return to be filled again and they cil. The answer seems to be 750,- skirt-chasers of the ~ a
work satisfactorily.” 000,000. So wc vote for the bantams *’
summer
ger.
much interest.
DINK HOOTEN
UNDERTAKER
Butler, Ga.
Prompt i Efficient
Service
DAY OR NIGHT
Including Embalming