Newspaper Page Text
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THE BUTLER HERALD, BUTLER, GEORGIA, MARCH 17, 19-49.
SUMMARY OF THE NEWS
THROUGHOUT GEORGIA
Georgia Federation of Music
Clubs held their annual festival at
Macon yesterday.
Judge S. W. Warren, 77, Or
dinary of Candler County, died at
his home at Metter Sunday.
Thomasville s 28th animal rose
*how April 29th promises to he
"bigger and better than ever this
year.
Atlanta is one of five key cities
in the nation in the new medical
supervisory setup of the Veterans
Administration.
The Young People's League for
Better Government at Macon will
sponsor a “Better Citizenship
Week - ’ beginning today.
Gov. Herman Talmadge has ac
cepted an invitation to address the
graduation class of Georgia South
western College on June 9.
Farmers in Georgia took in 290
percent more cash in 1948 than
ihev did in 1938, according to De
partment of Commerce reports.
A 810,000 damage suit against
Walter A. Wheeler and Gray Cabs,
Inc., was filed in Bibb Superior
Court yesterday by W. K. Holt.
Miss Daisy Weathers, East Point,
has been named secretary of the
Wesleyan College Government or
ganization in a run-off election
Oficials of the Georgia State
Employment Service yesterday dis
closed a need for 200 veterinarians
and 200 vocational training teach-
-ers.
“Atlanta: Pride of the South
east" is a leading article in the At
lantic Coast Line News for March.
Two Atlanta scenes illustrate the
siory.
The inaugural trip of the first
highway postal service in the state
will begin at Savannah March 28
instead of in April as originally
planned.
The new, $115,000 building of the
First Baptist church of Swainsboro
was constructed in a series of spe
cial services of worship, praise and
thanksgiving.
More than 800 Georgia druggists
are expected to attend the 74th an
nual meeting of the Georgia
Pharmaceutical Association in Ma
con April 4-G.
The Swift Manufacturing Co. at
Columbus Monday agreed to reim
burse five former employees, al
legedly discharged for union
activities, a total of $4,500.
A hot political fight was shaping !
up Saturday at Columbus as three !
new candidates and possibly a
fourth stepped in alongside four
others for two new Muscogee Com-
-mission seats.
The 66th annual session of the
Georgia Baptist Woman’s Mis
sionary Union is being held in Au
gusta this week . Delegates rep
resenting 63,422 members of the
union are attending the conven
tion.
Wingate Dykes, well-known young ,
Americas attorney, will seek the
vacancy in office of Representative
of Sumter county created by the
resignation of W. G. Pearlman,
who has been appointed assistant .
state purchasing agent.
Rep. Vaughn Terrell, sightless
member of the General Assembly
fTom Floyd County, has been ap
pointed superintendent of a state
factory for the blind to he estab
lished by the State Welfare De
partment within the next 30 days.
Elmon G. Suelzer, Jr., was Tues
day found dead in his parked au
tomobile at home in Columhus. He
apparently committed suicide, it is
said. His brother, Lt. John F.
Suelzer, is said to have committed
suicide with a shotgun last De
cember.
The best ham at the annual Ham
and Eee show, entered by E. D.
Ellis, Ft. Valley, sold for $36.06
although it weighed slightly less
than 22 pounds. Other top winners
soldf or from 90c to $1.65 per
pounw. Some two dozen others
sold for 75c a pound.
Miss Betty Ramspeck, of Deca
tur, has been named a princess
of the Washington Cherry Blossom
Festival. She will represent Geor
gia. She is the daughter of former
Congressman Robert Ramspeck and
Mrs. Ramspeck of Georgia. They
now live in Kensington, Md.
Two diamond rings and a dia
mond brooch, held by a Deputy In
come Tax Collector, will be sold
at public auction in Atlanta toctav.
Proceeds will be applied on the
balance of an unpaid income tax
assessment against an Atlantan.
The jev.elry has a retail value in
'^excess of $10,000. i
Sanitary-Health Plan
At Columbus Studied
3y Chinese Doctor
Columbus, March 14—An Orien
tal doctor studying here who left
Shina while it was still in Nation
alist hands will return there in
May to find the Communists vic
tors in civil war.
But Dr. P. S. Chang, the senior
medical officer in the Chinese Min
istry of Health, insists he prefers
not to be concerned about politics
His concern is over the scarcity ol
doctors—one for every 25,000 in a
iand of 450 million people.
He came here on a travel fellow
ship of the World Health Organi
sation of the United Nations, and
he is in Columbus to study one of
this nation's model public health set
ups—the City-Muscogee County
health department. He came on
recommendation of the U. S. Pub
lic Health Service.
A graduate of the Shanghai Na
tional Medical School, Dr. Chang,
43, is burning midnight oil pour
mg over figures and records, sit
ting in on interviews with com
municable disease investigators
talking to young doctors and nurses
and “cramming” on important
data.
He thinks China’s best hope “is
America's rapid strides in research
and cure of many diseases,” which
the Chinese hope to duplicate.
Dr. Chang is especially interested
in veneral disease and tuberculos
is investigation here, a method ot
control which Muscogee county
helped pioneer. The incidence ot
these diseases in China is alarm
ingly high, he said.
Cordele Man Slashes
Wife, Sheriff Says
\«
1 X
Cordele, March 13—Zack Judge,
21. Cordele World War II veteran,
is in the Crisp county jail on a
charge of assault with intent to
murder, Sheriff J. R. Meeks re
vealed Sunday.
Meeks said Judge is accused of
cutting his estranged wife, Mrs.
Hendry Judge, while she was work
ing in a restaurant Friday.
The warrant on which Judge was
arrested was sworn out by Mrs. C.
E. Turner, mother of the wounded
woman.
The woman was listed in serious
condition at a local hospital. Site
is suffering from wounds in the
stomach and chest.
•> -i- •> »> -x- •> •> •> •> »;• •> •> ^ s
NOTICE
—DEALERS ONLY—
DRAIN TILE
FOR SEPTIC TANKS AND ALL DRAINAGE
MADE FROM
PURE GRANITE
NO SAND
*•’
f
I
|
I*
85c
TESTED, TREATED
AND
APPROVEE
Per Joint ❖
LONGER LASTING $
WE CAN DELIVER WITHIN 50 MILES t
See or Write—C. M. WILLIAMS |
HOWARD, GEORGIA }
DOYEL'S *
MEATS
Skinless Weiners lb 37c
Red Links lb 31c
Pig Bones 2 lbs 25c
Smoked Sausage lb 33c
Pig Liver lb 23c
Stew Beef lb 34c
Pork Sausage lb 43c
9x12 Linoleum Rugs
$5.98
3 CXIIS 39c
Oleomargarine lb 29c
Irish Potatoes 10 lbs 59c
Toilet Tissue 3 Rolls 25c
Octagon Soap 4 Bars 29c
English Peas 2 Cans 35c
Fat Back 2 lbs 29c
Marshmallows 3 pkgs 25c
Easter Egg Candy lb 39c
Country Eggs doz 45c
Colored
Oleomargarine lb 39c
Octagon
Powder 4 Boxes 29c
Flat Sardines
o
O
f=3
S3
Pure Georgia Cane
SYRUP
Gal 89c
Blue Horse Note Book Paper,410c
45-lb Can Lard
$7.49
LARD , 4 Lbs 69c
Black Eye Peas
3 Lbs 29c
Dressed Fryers
Lb 57c
See the new Recordio record making machine and radio.
Let us demonstrate them. We can make a record of yonr
child playing a piano or a record of their voice.
DOYEL’S FURNITURE
Your General Electric Dealer
Brock Candy Bars
Milky Way - Forever
Yours
3 Bars 10c
Fresh Vegetables
Kentucky Wonder Beans
Squash
Egg Plant - Bell Pepper
PRICES REDUCED
G.E. Ranges
Was
New Price
19c
mm i
43c
$199.95 $179.95
$239.00 $229.00
Big Reduction in Prices
On General Electric
REFRIGERATORS
HOME FREEZERS
ELECTRIC RANGES
Over 2,000,000 G. E. refrigerators
10 years or older in operation in the
United States.
I WASHES with
1 Activator* action i
.........
\ RIMSES to
| sweet-smelling |
| cleanliness
f 1 usm.
DAMP DRIES
ready for ironing
Sfosgf:
Here — in the G-E All-
Automatic— is every
thing you’ve always
wanted in an automatic washer.
You set the controls—the washer
does all the work. Clothes are
washed amazingly clean . . . and so
thoroughly damp-dried that many
pieces are ready for ironing.
G-E Activator Washing!
All the clothes are washed gently,
but thoroughly, with this correctly
designed G-E Activator. It has three
zones of washing action—gets out
all the dirt from heavy work clothes
or delicate lingerie.
Come in and see the G-E All-
Automatic Washer in action. A dem -
onstration will show you that it’s
“automatic washing at its finest.”
•fraUa-mark Rag. 1). S. Off.
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