Newspaper Page Text
PAGE 8
THE BUTLER HERALD, BUTLER, GEORGIA, MARCH 24, 1949.
SUMMARY OF THE NEWS : Redwine Says Cigarets
THROUGHOUT GEORGIA Can Sell at 19c Retail
Federal Aid For
Schools Recommended
Billy Parker, 12-year-old lad
LaFayette, wins Texas music | wine said today
scholarship. cigarets for 19c
Atlanta, March 18—State Reve-
of | nue Commissioner Charles Red-
dealers can sell
i pack if they
want to.
Ordinary Robert T. Hawkins has
under consideration a petition for
a liquor referendum in Sumter
county.
Violence flared in Americus over
the week end as two slayings took
place late Saturday. All involved
were Negroes.
Miss Emma Kate Mansfield has
become the 16th candidate in
County Commission race in Mus
cogee county.
Pay increase totaling $180,000
annually will go into effect for
employes of Milledgeville State
hospital April 1.
In Talbot county court last week
Johnnie E. Smith was tried and
found not guilty of a charge of
assault and intent to murder James
Edwards.
The Wadley News is said to be
the name of a weekly newspaper to 1
be established April 1st at Wadley |
by Steve Martin, former newspa- ;
per man. i
Cyrus J.Byars, 30, died at Macon
hospital Friday of accidental gun- j
shot wounds received at the home
of his father, W. F. Byers on Eng
lish avenue.
A 62-year-old white man was
found dead in a Macon hotel room
Saturday. He was identified by de- j
tectives as H. S. Walker of Jack- j
sonville, Fla.
John L. Kelly, former Savannah |
policeman, has been elected editor
ol the George-Anne weekly publi
cation of the students of Georgia
Teachers College.
Miss Ann Fortson, daughter of !
Secretary of State and Mrs. Ben W. I
Fortson Jr., of Washington, Ga., has ]
been elected May Queen at the i
Georgia State Woman’s College.
Announceent is made of a gift
of $10,000 to the Reinhardt College
Building Fund by Mrs. C. H. Free
man of Newnan, Ga., in memory of
her son the late R. Hill Freeman.
Falls killed three elderly Atlan
tans last week, The Atlanta Red
Cross reported Saturday. Falls were
also responsible for 111 out of 317
home accidents involving injuries.
Simon Moltack, president of the
Big Apple Supermarket Corpora
tion in Atlanta, has announced
plans for the construction of a
huge branch grocery store in Ma
con.
If Georgia picked its outstand
ing woman of the farm, Mrs. Eu
gene Talmadge could win in a
walk and still have several well-
cultivated acres to spare, it is
claimed.
The Georgia Forestry -Commis
sion held its first official meeting
in Atlanta Monday, and mapped
plans for expanding the state’s
forest fire protection program and
other services for landowners.
Their church burned to the
ground Christian week two years I •
ago, Lavonia Methodists will soon I J
move into a pretty new home of j •
worship that is a sparkling testi- $
monial of the small congregation. •
Approximately 40 teachers and $
an unknown number of adtninis- J
Irative employes will be dismissed •
in the University of Georgia sys
tem as the result of economy or
ders, says the Atlanta Constiution.
The old post ofifee building and
lot on Twelfth Street and First
Avenue, Columbus, Friday was
sold to the Bradley Realty and In
vestment company by R. E. Martin
Jr., and E. D. Martin for an esti
mated $131),OoO.
Miss Emily Woodward of Atlan
ta, director of the University of
Georgia’s Division of Forums, will
participate in the press-magazine
discussions at the second National
Conference on UNESCO at Cleve
land March 31 to April 2.
John C. Evans has submitted his
resignation as ordinary of Warren
county, to become effective April
1. Evans’ resignation c omes after
serving only three months of the
four-year term he was re-elected to
in the last county election.
W. C. McLemore, former head of
the Georgia Bureau of Investiga
tion, Tuesday became city man
ager of Manchester, succeeding I.H.
Davis who has been connected
with city adminishration almost
without interruption since 1913.
Inspection trips made by legisla
tors during the recent session of
the General Assembly cost Georgia
taxpayers $10,296. That is not the
final cost, however. The Senate
passed a resolution to permit its
game and fish committee to make
inspections at any time this sum
mer.
1st Lt. Eugene T. Blanton, 27,
son of Mrs. Sarah Blanton, of Tal-
botton recently graduated from
the Weather Officer course at Tech
nical School, Chanute Air Force
Base, 111. His training consisted of
a 32-week course of comprehensive
instructions which qualifies him
to organize and direct an Air Force House where a similar plan wound
Washington, March 18—A Senate
committee recommended today that
the government grant $300,000,000
a year to help the states run
schools and another $35,000,000 to
..heck up on school children’s
health.
The two bills were approved
unanimously by the Senate labor
and public welfare committee.
Early Senate action on both
measures was in prospect, although
the school aid bill is expected to
run into some opposition in thG
"Temperance Day"
In All Public Schools
Set For Tomorrow
stomach ache from overeating,”
says Mrs. Mary Dan Coleman, of
the State Department of Educa
tion. State School Supt. M. D. Col
lins believes the best results can
come only from approaching the
problem of intemperance from a
scientific standpoint, just as one
would approach any other phase of
the curriculum. It should be con.
sidered as a part of the Health
Education program of the schoo
as such, become a vital part of the
total school program.
weather station.
Roy G. Williams, prominent Ma
con druggist and former owner of
the Macon Baseball Company, died
Monday in a Macon hospital.
Wiliams was owner of Roy Wil
liams Inc., u'ell known Macon drug
firm, and had been associated with
the Macon Baseball Co. since 1923
when he and 11 other Maconites
purchased the club.
up in a committee pigeonhole last
year.
The education measure is de
signed to equalize school oppor
tunities in the states.
Britain couldn’t solve her eco
nomic problems by becoming the
49th state of the U. S. A. inas
much as the real 48 states haven’t
been able to solve their ovtfn woes.
Tomorrow (Friday) school chil-
den over the state will discuss how
much candy they should eat be
tween meals, how much fattening
foods they should eat, how many
cigarettes they should smoke, and
how much liquor they should
,drink. Why the discussion? It is
Temperance Day—by State law—in
the schools
Students who have begun the
study of sex problems and courses
in driving automobiles will take a
scientific look at liquor and de
termine what effect it has upon
the physical, mental, and spiritu
al life. While preachers, doctors,
judges, athletic coaches, and State
Troopers provide statistics and dis
cussions, the students will look at
the whole temperance picture, in
cluding overeating.
“Temperance education should
begin when the child first gets a
■ •> •> •> <..>^
NOTICE
—DEALERS ONLY—
DRAIN TILE
FOR SEPTIC TANKS AND ALL DRAINAGE
MADE FROM
PURE GRANITE
NO SAND
8!c
Per Joint
'TESTED, TREATED
AND
APPROVEE
LONGER LASTING
WE CAN DELIVER WITHIN 50 MILES
See or Write—C. M. WILLIAMS
HOWARD, GEORGIA
&•>*<
•••••*•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••«
D0VEL
Butler, Ga.
3 Cans
39c
MEATS
Skinless Weiners lb 37c
Red Links lb 31c
Pig Bones 2 lbs 25c
Smoked Sausage lb 33c
Pig Liver lb 29c
Stew Beef lb 34c
Pork Sausage lb 43c
DOYEL’S FURNITURE
Your General Electric Dealer
| Oleomargarine lb 29c
] Irish Potatoes 10 lbs 59c
: Toilet Tissue 3 Roils 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
Fresh Vegetables
Kentucky Wonder Beans
Squash
Egg Plant - Bell Pepper
PRICES
G.E.
Was
$199.95
$239.00
REDUCED
Ranges
New Price
$179.95
$229.00
THE GENERAL ELECTRIC
ALL-AUTOMATIC
WASHER
WASHES win
Activator* action
RINSES to
sweet-smelting
cleanliness
m
ENTER COLGATE'S 49
(Dili) MM Contest
DAMP
ready ft
DRIES
r ironing
19c
43c
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.”
R*f. u. s. T(*. oa.
’ a ,,h ■*
m
9x12 Linoleum Rugs
$5.98
Flat Sardines
Can IOC
Pure Georgia Cane
SYRUP
Gal 89c
Blue Horse Note Book Papernj 10c j
45-lb Can Lard $7.49 j
LARD 4 Lbs 69c
Black Eyi
t Peas
3 Lbs 29c
Dressed Fryers
Lb
57c