Newspaper Page Text
THE BUTLER HERALD, BUTLER, GEORGIA, APRIL 15, 1954.
INSTALL IT YOURSELF
You don ♦ have 4o have a carpenter ♦<> inttall Adjuitomatic. You merely puf 4he 2
•nd screws to the position you want tham, then pull out the awning until the inverted
keyhole ilati slip over the screw heads. Now your awning is ready for permanent fasten
ing. Put in other 4 screws on arms and scroll: then screw in the 2 nuts and bolts on oach
fid# ©n th# icroll. Tighten all 4 screws and your awning is fastened permanently.
Butler Lumber Company
Butler, Ga.
Taylor County Motor Co.
Reynolds, Georgia
few €!t£¥f®i©’i' Th&ks
do more work per day... more work per dollar!
MOST TRUSTWORTHY TRUCKS ON ANY JOB! - Chevrolet Advance-Design Trucks
You save hours on the road.
Thanks to new high-compression
power, you can maintain faster
schedules without driving at higher
maximum speeds. Increased accel
eration and hill-climbing ability let
you save time where it counts.
You save time on deliveries.
With new truck Hydra-Matic trans
mission, you save time at every
delivery stop. And you can forget
about clutching and shifting for
good! It’s optional at extra cost on
Vi -, %- and 1-ton Chevrolet trucks.
You save extra trips That’s be
cause of the extra load space you
get in the new Advance-Design
bodies. New pjbk-up bodies are
deeper, new stake and platform
bodies are wider and longer. Also,
they’re set lower for easier loading.
You save with lower upkeep,
too. Extra chassis strength saves
you money on maintenance. There
are heavier axle shafts in two-ton
models . . . bigger clutches in light-
and heavy-duty models . . . stronger
frames in all models.
You save on operating costs.
New power saves you money every
mile! The “Thriftmaster 235” en
gine, the “Loadmaster 235” and
the ‘Jobmaster 261” (optional on
2-ton models at extra cost) deliver
increased operating economy.
And your savings start the day
you buy. In fact, they start with
the Jow price you pay and con
tinue over the miles. Chevrolet is
America’s lowest-priced line of
trucks. Its also the truck that has
a traditionally higher trade-in value.
Come in and see all the
wonderful new things you
get in America’s number
one truck. We’ll be glad
to give you all the money
saving facts.
CMC FACULTY MEMBERS
ARE ANNOUNCED BY
INSTITUTION'S TRUSTEES
|secretary to commandant, Maj. H.
!C. Barnes, commandant of cadets;
I Mrs. J. F. Bell, detitian; Maj. D. L.
, Black, mathematics and alumni di-
Milledgeville, April 11—The Roard rector; Mrs. J. C. Bonner, librarian;
of Trustees of Georgia Military Mrs. R. B. Bonner, maintenance;
college have announced faculty Maj. H. W. Cheek, biology and
elections at* the school for 1954-55. public relations director; Maj. L. E.
Those elected include Col. R, A. Cordell, head coach; Mrs. R. E. Cot-
Thorpe, president; Mrs. J. F. Am All ton, English and science.
Warm Springs Dedication Seven Person Burned
Marks Anniversary of Late As Coumbia, Ala., Home
President F. D. R's Death Goes up in Flames
By W. C TUCKER
Columbus Ledger-Enquirer
This week brings the ninth an-
Dothan, Ala., April 11—Mrs. G. B.
Elmore and her 10-year-old daugh
ter, Johnnie Lee, died within min
utes of each other Sunday, bringing
Television Service
The world’s best training, test
equipment, and parts has been
made available to me to give you
the best in television repairs.
W. J. WALLER
niversary of Ihe death of President to seven the victims claimed by a
Franklin D. Roosevelt, which oc- home fire at Columbia, Ala.
curred at nearby Warm Springs. I Two other Elmore children, Eu-
It was on April 12, 1945, that the P° ne Allen, 7, and Alice Faye, 4,
world was startled by the an- were bsteri , in fair condition but
nouncement htat President Roose- ^ rs - Gilbert of Eufaula was
velt had died of a cerebral hem- in serious condition.
Elmore children who died in the
blaze were Jeanette and Annette,
orrhage. He was 63 years old.
The only man to serve more than 9 month old twins . and DoriS( 3 .
m terms, President Roosevelt was Two of Mrs Gilbert ‘ s children, Mar
|tw
.elected four times. He had begun
upon service of his fourth term a
[little less than three months before
his death.
cus, 2. and Martha Helen, 2 months
old also perished.
Police Chief D. E. Nolen said the
tragedly resulted when Mrs. Ei-
Taking office on March 4, 1933, more threw kerosene on smolder-
on
:| [Mr. Roosevelt found the country in j ng ashes in a stove.
||i its most disastrous depression. He
i| inaugurated measures designed to
fl j relieve the people of the critical
§g I economic situationand his adminis-
pjtration was known as the new
f|! Deal. He was President when the
Columbus Lady Succeeds
Mrs. T. J. Smith Heads
Pearl Harbor attack was made by State Garden Club Group
Macon, April 11—Mrs. T.J. Smith
DOYEL'S STORE
Butler, Ga.
Phone 89
pi Japan, plunging the United States
| jinto World War II.
| I President Roosevelt could see vie-
P tory approaching in the greatest of McRae heads the new oficers of
• 'all wars but he died before the the Garden Club ot Georgia, elect -
| United States actually achieved tri- ed shortly before annual eonven-
|| | umph. However, the var in Europe tion adjourned Saturday. She suc-
I came to an end the next month ceeds Mrs. A. N. Dykes of Colum-
after his death and hostilities bus.
: [ceased in the Pacific soon after the Other officers are- Mrs. E. D
| dropping of bombs on Hiroshima Fulcher of Atlaqta, first vice presi-
and Nagasaki in August, 1945.
TUMULTY. LONG ADVISOR
TO PRESIDENT WILSON
IS CLAIMED BY DEATH
^p»> o£?
| Pre-Easter Specials
Dresses and Suits
REDUCED
For Your Easter
Wardrobe
MITCHAM'S
Ladies' and Children's Apparel
MONTEZUMA/ GEORGIA
", 15
» ffti!wCUiirS iV
Washington, April 8—J. P. Tu
multy, private secretary and con
fidential advisor to President
Woodrow Wilson, died in his sleep
at his home in OIney, Md. He would
have been 75 on May 5. '
A witty Irishman and astute poli
tician who got his start
dent; Mrs. Charles Hardy. Gaines
ville, second vice p r esident; Mrs.
Edgar Bullock, Columbus, third
vice president; Mrs. J. D. Carter,
Tifton, recording secretary; Mrs. H.
C. Cox, corresponding secretary, and
Mrs. Shelby Myrick, Savannah,
treasurer.
ARTHRITIS?
I have been wonderfully blessed
in the in being restored to active life
rough and tumble of Jersey City’s after being crippled in nearly every
"Gibraltar of demovracy or 5th joint in my body and with muscu-
Ward, Tumulty had been in ill lar soreness from head to foot. I
health for several vears. He had re- had Rheumatoid Arthritis and
tired from a law partnership with other forms of Rheumatism, hands
his son, J. P. Tumulty, Jr.
DR. WILLIS L. WEBB
OPTOMETRIST
Fort Valley, Ga.—Phone 611
Hours: 9 a. m. to 5 p. m.
Except Wednesday
deformed and my ankles were set.
Limited space prohibits telling
you more here but if you will write
me I will reply at once and tell
you how I received this wonderful
relief.
Mrs. Lela S. Wier
2805 Arbor Hills Drive
P. O. Box 2695
Jackson 7, Mississippi
EVERYONE in the country is using more elec
tricity, and Georgians are helping to set the pace.
In fact, you’re five years ahead of the nation
in your use of electricity. Our average residential
customer was using more electricity back in 1949
than the average American home uses today.
Over the years the price of electricity everywhere
has been generally downward. But you’re 14 years
ahead of the nation in the low price you pay for
your electric service. Yes, back in 1940 you were
paying less for a kilowatt-hour than the nation’s
average residential customer pays today.
Right now you’re using 27 per cent more elec
tricity than the national average, and you’re paying
22 per cent less for each kilowatt-hour. Don’t you
agree that, in Georgia especially, electricity is your
biggest bargain?
GEORGIA POWER
A CITIZEN WHEREVER WE SERVE
light for freedom • power for progress
Commemorating Thomas A. Ellison’s
invention of the first practical in
candescent lamp, October 21, 1879
New strength and stamina
Lower upkeep costs I
i