Newspaper Page Text
THE BUTLER HERALD, BUTLER, GEORGIA, APRIL 29, 1954.
Flavor of the Month
Strawberry
Sundae
Peach Growing in
Taylor County Revived
By Reynolds Farmers
Interesting Facts About
Mail Handling Changes
Told at Postmasters Meet
PAGE THREIT
Several Newspapers
Among Noted Business
Firms in This State
Mrs. Whatley Succeeded
By Mrs. Mallory of Vienna
As District Club President
Ice Gream
A top taste treat . . . every
delicious bite captures the
tangy ripe goodness of
rich juicy, ripe
strawberries,
temptingly blended §
in smooth pure
Kinnett's vanilla
ice cream.
This interesting report relative Brunswick, April 23—Reasons be-1 Atlanta April 2^—J J McDon- Mrs ’ M. L. Malloy of Vienna was
rees In tTe Tevnolds^ea^ is^told ^^ S ° me ot the recent P° stal ac-jough of Atfanta, executive vice P^sident of the Third Dis-
by Paul .Hawick 'featureUteJ rf countin « and handling P^sident of the Georgia Power Co. F «*™} ion ? f Wome "’s
the Columbus Enquirer: j changes were explained to port- j J" clmmerS^t' ence rccentl >’ in Vienna" Sh^'su^
Lawrence Cook of Reynolds is masters of Georgia’s smaller post' the loud's annual meet ceeds Mrs - c - E - Whatley of Rey-
one of at least seven Taylor county offices Friday. I w v Rarr n _ ... . bolds.
ST5S "KT SOZSZ | c The , a 7 al h convcmlon of thc " 7" c °“i £ SK?_
ing center Georgia branch of the National named chairman of the board ton , fjrst vice Dresident . Mr _ T *
r . . iLeague of District Postmasters of directors, McDonough succeedsE. Douclas of Ft Waii^ Ln-j •
trees"of two v£te on’Ts fem f° Und one recem chan e e - the clos-, S - Gambrell for a one-year term. I pres fdent^ Mrs W. F, Black ‘of
nMr £ * ° h l fa ,n £ of man Y fourth class post of-l In other elections J. W. Dent of Montezuma third vice Dresident -
l^'n 6 planted the trees in flees, cutting into the ranks of its Tate and E. D. Smith Jr. of Allan- Mrs. Lambert Jones of CofumhoV
within^three vearT ™ bear |members. The league has been ta were named to the board of di- 'recording secretary; Mrs! Geo Par-
He said L nlanted 1500 Hi*h |sP° keSman . ° r th ’ rd and f ° urth rectors - E ^ other-board members ris of Cordele treasurer, and Mrs.
planted 1,500 High- class post offices in particular, al-,were re-elected. |R. L. Buxton of Columbus auditor.
land trees and 3,500 Redcaps. There
is about a week’s difference in
their ripening period in harvesting.
They are the same general type of
peach.
“I won’t plant anything between
the rows
said. “I
trees to Diant watermelons nr'enme' Ke . pi in eacn ° rilce ln the P ast - re ', tne Augusia Chronicle, accepted a man’s Club was first, Wynnton
other cron betwepn the trees hut T cei P ts now g° into a single fund scroll on behalf of the state’s old- Study club of Columbus second,arfcl
just don’t have the labor to’ do it and payroli bookkeeping has been est business firm. The Chronicle Cordele Woman’s Club third. First.
Then, too l rin a het,^ teh ' similarl V simplified, he observed
tho it has some members from the] Five newspapers headed a list of Another highlight of the day were
larger omces. j 23 Georgia business firms cited by awards made by Mrs. Maxwell Mur
A. C. Lawrence of the Atlanta re- the chamber for centennarian fay of Ft. Valley, chairman,
gional accounting office told the awards at a luncheon meeting. All in the flower arrangement sec-
postmasters the changes are de- of the 23 firms have been doing tion, each arrangement depicting
dgned to streamline operation..business for more than 100 years, one the 10 divisions of the work of
in the orchard” Cook ° u mi carmine operation. - — „ — —
don’t think it hurts the where four separate accounts werej L. C. Harris, managing editor of The federation. The Ft. Valley Wo-
kept in each office in the past, re- the Augusia Chronicle, accepted a man’s Club was first, Wynnton
Then, too, I can do a better job of
harrowing the trees and getting*
rid of the grass without
crop.”
The trees are planted in a com
pletely terraced orchard. The tree
Revising one money report form
was established in 17S5. 1 honorable mention went toHlamil-
Gambrell cited the Chronicle as ton Woman’s Club, second to Vi-
another i to move entries to the left side en-! a . 1 firm “ which has £ reatl Y eon- enna Woman’s Club and third to
Jabled higher officers to convert thei buted to Georgia development Junior Womans” Club of Columbus,
forms into punch cards for me-| and P r °g ress -” I. In ,he scrapbook judging, first
chanical accounting Lawrence ex-* Gambrell presented the seconl place went to Hamilton Woman’s,
, xt x» Club and second place to the-
to J. N. Moore,
> t, .. , t T, nlDined .Centenarian award „. ... ...
lor Cook°by the“oi]°”onse7atCl G~. W. Adolphus, Sandy Springs, I "C'Tohn"^ °T f ° , M ^ , , MmbU8 -
Service to prevent washing H e is president of the branch. The l ”J”'? eev ’. ll , < \ P? weekly newspa- Mrs John Avenl] of Mimtezuma
said he hopes , 0 get aid from the postmasters will hear A. B. Strop,' P "' “. e la " Hs , led m ,S19 U . f ! ohajrman of line arts dis-
Production and Marketing Admin-1 administrative assislant to the'T Tetoml T? 'Ta “.Tj f'ff-' s,Jver ™P "ih.ch she will
“ ,he ~ ” r ,ha
an^inveshnen^of °about a $3 'per7ee I closing TfnqM Iatu7ay'night. 1 Th< ' Col »™ b “ award j -Mrs. J. W^Davidson Tcriumbus
. . . P ei trte | y K was accepted by Edge Itcid, man- retiring second vice* president, wasi
by the time the trees begin to bear. I : aging editor. The Enquirer was program chairman.
to get by cheaper than
Your Favorite Kinnett Retailer Has It!
/
'S
Ice Cream
I hope
that.”
Cook said he is using about .six
pounds of fertilizer per tree per year
but that thp amount will increase
as the trees grow.
The Taylor farmer said his new
orchard will be a supplement to his
regular farm income, and not a
separate and complete operation.
FORT VALLEY STUDENT
IS DISTRICT WINNER
IN SPELLING CONTEST
Atlanta, April 25—Wearing his
“lucky” tie and shoes, 13-year-old
David A. Krant of Atlanta Saturday
correctly spelled“insipid”to win the
annual state spelling bee here.
Ann Warren 11, of Monticello, the
only sixth grader in the contest,
was the runnerup, and Stephen
Johnson, 14, of West Point, was
third.
Georgia Writers Honor
Peggie Mitchell in
Memorial Services
founded in 1828. ’ j The all day session, wifli recess.
J. H. Baird of Decatur accepted For luncheon took place iri the Vi-
the fifth awadr on behalf of the CI1 na Methodist church''with Mrs..
New Era Publishing Co., founded Whatley, Mrs. E. C. Taylor, presi-
in 1830. | dent and the host club, the Vienna
More than 200 business and in-'Woman’s Club and Mrs. W..
jdustrial leaders from throughout E. Griffin of Vienna, presiding.
Ation+o • i.r ,l the state attende the luncheon. Pre-1 'Participants on the program were
.a a. The Georgia Writers | S entation of the centenarian awards Mrs. Edward White of Vienna, or-
Assn. has paid tribute to Margaret*was sandwiched between progress gan- music, Rev. W. A. Pilgram, in-
Mitchell author of "Gone with the reports by directors of the cham- vocation, Mrs. Davidson collect
Wind.” with graveside memorial 1
services.
Some 50 members df the writers’
group were present in Oakland
cemetery for a wreath presentation.
The ceremonies were in conjunc
tion with Georgia Authors’ Day.
Mrs. Raymond Massey, president
of the club laid a wreath of lillies
and rod roses on the grave. “I am
proud to be of the city and the I
section which Margaret Mitchell
saw so clearly and captured .-,o viv
idly,” she said.
Confederacy Pageant
Written by Mrs. Bankston
Presented at Ft. Valley
TRY THIS NEW CHEVROLET AND YOU’LL TELL US IT
out-peiforms!
out-saves!
ber’s various divisions and an, Mrs. Hubert Hoover of Ashburn,
illustrated talk by Walt Kelly, ere- salute to flag, Mrs. J. L. Woodard
ator of the comic strip "Pogo.” j of Fitzgerald, welcome, Mrs. G. N.
Guest and Mrs. Paiks Ham of
Montezuma, response.
Mrs. Fannie Mae Griner was in
troduced by Mrs. J. I. Mobley of
Hamilton, garden chairman.
Mrs. A. E. Bush of Vienna an
nounced credentials, four state
chairmen, 16, club presidents and
176 club members present.
The pageant of “The Flags of the. Among distinguished guests pres-
Confederacy, written by Mrs. W. ent were Mrs. Maxwell Murray of
r. Bankston, Roberta, and present- Ft. Valley, state recording secretary
ed at the state meeting of the UDC Mrs. R. C. Collier of Montezuma
| was enacted at Ft. Valley Monday state chairman of moral and spirit-
(evening at the high school auditori- U al values; Mrs. George Burrus Jr.
I uni by a group of young matrons of state chairman press publicity and
the city and high school students Mrs. Palmer of Cordele, past pres-
' and tea S!j?J S ' _ , . Went of the Florida Federation.
Mrs. Clifford Prator, president of A volunteer contribution taken
Ft. Valley UDC and Mrs. F. W. during the session will be used for
Bowman Sr. pageant chairman the Independence Hall Restoration
wore in charge.
AND IT’S THE
owes!
GET THE BEST OF ALL 3—
PERFORMANCE, ECONOMY, PRICE
Only Chevrolet gives you all these "Best Buy ” values
We're so sure of what you'll find that we welcome any test or
ony comparison you care to make! Come in for the facts and
figures. Take a demonstration drive. That’s the easy way to
prove for yourself that Chevrolet gives you the best of all 3
— performance, economy, price!
Highest Compression Power—You get finer performance and
important gas savings with the highest compression poWer of any
leading low-priced car!
Fisher Body Quality—You get smarter styling—greater comfort,
safety, quality—with this only low-priced car with Fisher Body.
Safety Plate Glass—No other low-priced car gives you the finer
visibility of safety plate glass all around in sedans and coupes!
Biggest Brakes—Smoother, safer stops with less pedal pressure!
That’s what Chevrolet gives you with the largest brakes in its field.
Famed Knee-Action Ride—Chevrolet gives you the only Unitized
The new 1954
"Two-Ten" 4 Door Sedan
Knee-Action on any low-priced car—one big reason for that finer
big-car ride!
Full-Length Box-Girder Frame—Only Chevrolet in the low-price
field gives you the extra strength and greater protection of a
full-length box-girder framel
Come in now, and prove it for yourself!
CHEVROLET
CLASSIFIED ADS
SALE ON NEW AND
REBUILT PIANOS
projecl of the General Federation,
and for Tallulah Falls Schcoi,
(owned and operated by the Georgia
Federaiion.
Mr. Whatley read a letter an
nouncing that the “Behind the
'Scenes Club” of Jordan High
I school was the first school in the
Take advantage of this closing state to make a donation, $100 to
out sale, new Pianos thirty percent the restoration of the Independence
discount for cash; practice Pianos, Hall. Bennie Pore is the club’s
$100.00; factory rebuilt Pianos, president and Mrs. Aggie D. Scott
$200.00 plus sales tax. CHICK the advisor.
PIANO CO., 128 N. Hill Street, Reports from the club revealed
Griffin Ga. (4’29’2b) outstanding work done in Ameri-
— | can ism, American Home, Communi-
STRAYED (cations, Conservation, Education,
Strayed from my place Thursday' [ r /'p Sr ^ r,S ’ J nte " lat . ional f f ‘ au ' s
night, April 8, a white and light | ar ^ SC °’ b C Affairs and WeI '
red spotted heifer cow about two
years old; short horns: may have
calf now'. Finder jjlease notify me
and receive reward. (4222p) B
H. E. Jones, Rt.'2, Butler, Ga. Chosen in Miss Georgia'
Four More Beauties
PIANO BARGAIN
Will sell 1954 Spinet like new to
responsible party who can make
small down payment and assume
small monthly payments on bal
ance. Also fine upright Piano very
cheap. Just the piano for the be
ginner or musician. Write: Credit
Dept., 83 Alabama Street, S.-W.
Atlanta, Ga. 4’22’4b)
Taylor County Motor Co.
Reynolds, Georgia
POTATO PLANTS—Certified
Bunch Porto F.ico, grown from vine
cutings. Now ready lor delivery.
Harris & Heidt Plant Co.
Cordele, Georgia I
(4'15'2b) P.O. Box 49; Phone 942.
Symptom* of Distress Arising from
STOMACH ULCERS !
due to excess acid
QUICK RELIEF OR NO COST (
Ask About 15-Day Trial Offerl
Over five million packages of the Whaaro
Tkkatmhmt have been sold for relief of
symptoms of distress arising from Stomach
and Duodenal Ulcers due to Excess Add—
Poor Digestion, Sour or Upset Stomach,
Gassiness, Heartburn, Sleeplessness,
etc., due to Excess Acid. Ask for “Willard’s
Message” which fully explains this remark
able home treatment—free—at
Smith's Pharmacy
BUTLER, GEORGIA
Contest May 6th and 7th
Columbus, Ga.—Four more beau
ties, winners of local contests ii
Georgia cities, will join other con
testants competing for the title o:
Miss Georgia of 1954, in the Misj
Georgia Pageant at Columbus Mai
6-7.
Tlie four latest entries in the
pageant are Carolyn J. Fisher, Mis. 1
Atlanta; Mary Jane Doar, Miss
Macon; Yvonne McCormick, Miss
Cochran; and Peggy Smith, Miss
LaGrange.
The selection of Miss Georgia is
based on talent and personality as
well as beauty. The winner is w
receive a valuable scholarship anc
other prizes, plus a chance to corn
pete for the Miss America title ir
Atlantic City later this year.
The Columbus Junior Chamber o:
Commerce which annually spon
sors the Miss Georgia Pageant, lias
planned two days of festivities ir
connection with the event this
year .
A Texan passed away and upor
arriving at the gates of his eterna
home, remarked, “Gee. I neve:
thought heaven would be so muef
like Texas.”
“Son” said the man at the gati
sadiy. “this ain’t heaven.”