Newspaper Page Text
PAGE FOUR
THE BUTLER HERALD, BUTLER, GEORGIA, MAY 6, 1954.
THE BUTLER HERALD
Entered at Post Office at Butler,
Georgia as Mail Matter of
Second Class
Chronicling items in the Colum
bus Enquirer of a century ago this
appeared in that publication yes
terday: “If it was iiot for hope the
heart would break!” as the old
MOTHER’S DAY
Chas. Benns Jr., Managing
O. E. Cox, Publisher & Bus. Mgr.
|CO,
County Forest Ranger
Issues Information About
Rust Fungus in Pines
OFFICIAL (ORGAN TAYLOR
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY
Average Weekly Circulation
Fifteen Hundred Copies
The U. S. Supreme Court again
failed Monday to rule on segrega
tion
Come hot summer and the gar
den hose will be the fountain of
youth.
| It was only a few years ago that
:Miss Jarvis, a Philadelphia girl,
remembering her own mother with
Editor woman said when she buried ber' a tribute of flowers when Spring
seventh husband and looked anx- came down the green alleys of the! Advice on combatting
iously in the crowd for naother. year, had the inspiration of urging I portant enemy of pine
! all men and women to adopt
I TWO MEN KILLEED
I AS TRUCK HITS
’MOVING TRAIN
LELAND HARVEY, 47.
BANK ROBBER, NOTED
' ESCAPEE, GETS PAROLE
fusiform rust fungus,
Douglas, April 29—Two
an ini were billed instantly when a truck land Harvey, 4», who
trees the first imprisonment in 19
Playing the piano has one big
advantage, says Ernest Rogers, in
that you don’t have to carry it
around.
Can you remember the good old
days when the fellow who owned a
horse and a cow was considered
well off?
Postmaster General Summerfield
asked Congress Tuesday to raise
the salaries of postal employes by
BO million dollars a year.
Jim Chism in the Pelham Jour
nal states: “I see fer every man 35
years of age, there are seven wom
en, but by that time its too late.”
If you like anyone, if you are
grateful to anyone for anything
why not warm that person’s heart
by telling him or her today? Why
Wait?
A gentleman farmer is one who
can waste his curse words on a
golf ball instead of a mule, well j
says Tom Spencer in the Dallas!
New Era. '
I Atlanta, May 3—The State Par-
: don and Parole Board today pa-
men roled convicted bank robber Le-
since his
came this collided With .he engine of a mo,..’ShoX’r
Brig Gen Charles A. Lindbergh, similar custom and thus Mother’s week from the Taylor County Fores- iug about a mile from Douglas. times,
the first man to flv the Atlantic Day was be S un - ’try Ranger. J Killed were Hubert McCranie 54; Harvey, once known as the “bad
. c But in the few years that have. Ranger Austin Guinn said the of Eastmari) an( j h. F. Scott, 31, boy of Tattnall county eight ball
alone and a pioneer in attempts to j ntervened the day has become so fungus, also called Cronartium H omerville, both of whom were rid- squad” was paroled by unanimous
develope a mechanical heart, Mon- well established that no memorial Fusiform, often can be recognized | jng j n the truckcab. Trainmen es- vote and Mis. Rebecca Garrett,
day won literary recognition by be- date, no anniversary is more uni- by large spindle shaped swellings, caoe d injury. parole board member,
ing named the winner of the'versally observed than the second or cankers, on stems and trunk.
Pulitzer Prize award for biography Sunday in May, when honor is paid During certain periods of the
for his “The Spirit of St. Louis.” to all mothers, living and dead, j spring months, bright orange
— | It requires no studied phrases to spores are produced on these
Iri his "Top O’ the Morn” column P a y tribute to mother, “Look into cankers.
.. ,, Q„n w th Y heart and write” is the only; “How to combat this disease,” de-
’ admonition. The great poets have pends on whether the infection is
C. Tucker tells his readers that SWC p t the gamut in tender strains of a forest stand of pines or in a
“Manhattan looks back 328 years of love and affection speak no few ornamental trees in yards and
to the time that island was pur- more feelingly or more meaningful j near homes. Those who note the in-
chased from the Indians by Peter perhaps, than the simple syllables' fection in their forest stands are
Minut for cloth, beads and other of the humblest child who mur- advised to call on services of their
trinkets of the value of about $24. murs his grief, mingled with a tear j Georgia Forestry Commission farm
and a sigh. | forester for aid in working out an
The annual increase of children ^ would be difficult to call the; effective method of attack. Ihose
crca. , ron Qf aH the greaf men who ha ve whodiscover the disease in their
age, notably
expected to
People’s Encyclopedia Yearbook for
1953.
given credit to their respective; y ard and ornamental pines, how-
of elementary school
continue unabated tor a" number of “J 1 th n ° y achievod , in lever, can combat the disease them-
... , , . . life. We might mention a few, viz: selves 0
years, a direct consequence of high Michae]a ] R Gibbon,! Ranker Guinn advised that all
birth rates since the end of World T , ’ ,, i ndlJU1 , auviacu
War II according to the American f lt ’ ^ and a host of others,, in f ec ted limbs be cut off and
~ . .... . . - ; but they can say no more than burned so that the spores will be
every man finds in his own experi- unable to reproduce. (The disease
ence, namely, that his character does not pass from one pine to an-
'■ j bas been formed and nisfeet set up other, but must first pass through
Did you know that the first gaso- on a solid ioundation by the train- a stn^p on leaves on nearbv oak
line driven automobile in the ing he received at his mother’s trees)
United States was operated Apiil «mee. The world would need no fusiform rust is ^ound on the
119, 1892? Just think! That w'as oniy evangelist or reformer, if no man Hunk of the tree, Mr Guinn added,
'62 short years ago. In an average or woman ever departed from that tr ee will died withing 3 to 5
lifetime, this crude machine has'early training of a true mother. .years. Many persons have^found it
been improved until now it can be So, it is with an overflowing ‘ more beneficial to remove the tree
driven at speeds of over 100 miles heart, whether for the living or the as soon as f US if 0 rm rust cankers
an hour. ^dead, that the American people are discovered on the trunk, rather
— j vv ' b Pause Sunday to pay tribute than wait for the tree to die. They
The Atlanta Journal tells us that erbood ‘ n ab tbe changes f ee j the 3 to 5 years are better
Would tjou fradea
Penny for a
. Dollar?
when Annie Garrett, 17 year oid
Walton county girl, enters a bank
over in Monroe she gets the atten
tion usually reserved for a busi
ness tycoon. They all but get out
m ! the red carpet. She used to come
Don’t overlook the fact that it is a-borrowing, butnovv with her herd
more expensive and difficult for'of 50 Aberdeen Angus cows and
the Joneses to keep ahead of peo- calves are usually put in.
pie than for people to try to keep j
[.The most recent .ssue of Esquire
! magazine features an article
called “Sex in Hollywood” in which
The author relates that he attended
a dinner party of 12, knowing
; place.
up with them.
of life, and to say: ‘The best thai utilized by removing the trees and
is in me, I owe to my mother. | planting an unaffected tree in its
Roberta High School
Senior Wins in State
Driving Roadeo
JOHN WESLEY FILM
PLANNED FOR ATLANTA
NEXT TUESDAY P. M.
The State Bridge Building Au
thority expects to receive bids May
26th for the sale of $10,250,000 of
bonds. Money from the sale will be
used to replace some 50 old
bridges.
Mrs. Love M. Tolbert, librarian in
the public school system of Musco
gee county, recently chosen as
Georgia’s “Mother of the Year”, left
Columbus this week for Washing
ton and New York where she is to
receive honors.
Milledgeville, April 29—Bobby
Joyner, 19 year old senior at Craw-
, . . ford County high school, took the
tha his host in the last two years l954 Geo ia high school safe driv .
had been real famn.ar with all six j roadeo championship back to
of his feminine guests, but “There Roberta
hip S " I1 Tt 1 hl |' t ° f * en f. 10n f al the | a 'j Bobby, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. C.
bit. Thais civilization for you! Joynert immc diately began setting \ - 1 ue ““ ay ' 1 nese , W1 ‘ l De ar J P- m -
■ !his sichts on the $1,990 national or e Romans Society of Chris-
Methodists of Atlantawill go to
see the new feature-length color
film, “John Wesley” less than two
weeks after its premier showing in
New York City’s Museum of Mod
ern Art.
Three showings of the film,
which depicts highlights in the 88
year lifeof of Methodism’s founder,
is planned for the Tower Theater,
Tuesday. These will be at 3 p. m.
0 You can if you use Natural Chilean Nitrate of Soda
for your top-dressing and side-dressing needs. It costs a little
more because it’s worth more. But the difference in cost
usually can be measured in pennies per acre, while the differ
ence in value often amounts to dollars per acre.
Chilean “Bulldog” Soda gives you generous extra value.
The nitrogen is 100 per cent nitrate. It’s 100 per cent available
(quick-acting) ; 100 per cent dependable. The minor elements
make crops stronger, healthier. The sodium —26 pounds in
every -100-pound sack—is a key to maximum returns on your
entire fertilizer investment. It offsets the bad effects .of acid
forming fertilizers...increases the efficiency of mixed ferti
lizers containing them. It releases “locked-up” potash in the
soil... increases the availability and efficiency of soil phos
phate... reduces potash, calcium and magnesium losses by
leaching...develops larger, deeper root systems. <
® Sodium builds up the productivity of your land— more
each year. It’s an essential element for some crops... bene
ficial to most and necessary,
for maximum yields of many.
Pennies-per-acre differ-
ence in cost may mean
dollars-per-acre difference
in value to you. Chilean
“Bulldog” Soda is the best
fertilizer your money can
buy. Use it for all of
your top-dressing and
side-dressing needs.
‘Make sure
you gel: de
NATCHEl
kind!'
From Washington comes an
nouncement that a three year bat-
tleto provide an ocean-going freight
i his sights on the $1,000 national
Among new inventions is said,crown for which today’s triumph
to be a combination truck or auto entitles him to compete,
mirror features a special internal .The Middle Georgia youth wheeled
tension spring which permits the his way smoothly through the
elimination of lock nuts or set tough obstacle course, set up by*
screws while still causing the mir- state patrolmen from three states'
tian Service, 7 p. m. for general
church membership and 9 p. m. for
the MYF.
CHILEAN
NITRATE
^SODA
for the top 25 high school drivers
in the state. He amassed a total of
ror to remain in a set position. The
mirror is equipped with two
mounting brackets, one for attach- 291 points.
service between New York and Sa-j merit on the top edge of the door! Bobby topped the Class B group
vannah, one of the nation’s oldest j frame and the other for mounting followed by Marion Culpepper,
active ports, has been won by Sea-Jon the channel drain above the Thomson, second; and Adron Ben-
train Lines, Inc. j door. j nett, Wacona, third. |
Gwynn Albritton of Plains, in (
Sumter county, was first in Class,
C. Ronnie Dye, Wrens, was second;!
and Charles Hise, Chattanooga j
Valley, third.
Other winners included; C>ass (
AA — Jack Herndon, Richmond'
Academy, Augusta, first; Jerry;
Dickson, Fulton High, Atlanta, sec-'
"The Lightweight
All-Purpose Saw"
McCUUOCH * *
Famous Model 33 Chain Saw
Farmers, Pulpwood Cutters,
Loggers ...
The greatest chain saw builders in the
world, McCulloch Motors Corporation, have
scored again!
Imagine a chain saw for under $200.00—
especially a McCulloch Model 33, the chain
saw sensation of the year.
This outstanding cutting tool weighs only
20 pounds, yet it can saw through a 15-inch
tree in less than a minute. . . . Saws full
power in any position, and cuts fast and
close to the ground.... The 33 is amazingly
easy to use for felling, bucking, pruning and
limbing. Save your time, save your energy,
save your MONEY with a McCulloch Model
33. It’s the greatest value in chain saw
history! Only $ 198 75 Delivered
Three other larger McCulloch Models available—
Sales, parts and service on McCulloch Chain Saws,
Earth Drills and Fire Pumps.
ED KNAPP CHAIN SAW CO.
1410 Broadway Phone 21714 Macon, Ga.
lend; Hiram Reynolds, Cedartown,
j third.
j Class A: Dewey Hunter, Douglas-
jville, first; Eugene Collins, Carters-
ville, second; Kenny Cooper, Tifton,
third.
First place winners received tro
phies from Carl Vann, Valdosta,
state president of the Georgia Ju
nior Chamber of Commerce, which
co-sponsorcd the roadeo.
Thomasville Rites for
Ralph Smith, Rural
Electric Administrator
Thomasville, April 28—Ralph W. i|
Smith, field engineer for the REA j
in Georgia and Florida, died at the:
Veterans Administration Hospital 1
at Lake City, Fla., at 63. Funeral !
was conducted at Thomasville.
Hie was a native of Towanda, N. |
Y., and a graduate of the Universi
ty of Montana but had lived here'I
for 15 years. He was a deacon of |
the First Presbyterian church.
CHICAGO BOOSTS INCREASED
REAL ESTATE VALUES
DURING RECENT YEARS
Chicago April 29—A bit of land
about the size of the ordinary rosi-
[dential lot was sold for $1,200,000.
Its location: in the heart of Chi-'
oago’s Loop at State and Madison'
Sts.
The lot, 53 by 150 feet, was sold
by the trustees for the estate of
Mrs. J. O. Armour, of packing house
fame to the Connecticut General
Life Ins. Co. Mrs. Armour had pur
chased it in 1933 for a million dol
lars.
PAY YOUR
WATER BILL
AT
WALKER’S GROCERY
Ellective May 1 all water bills lor City
ol Butler will be payable at Walker Grocery
in Butler.
City officials. urge your cooperation in
paying your water bills at this store.
E. L. HARRIS
Mayor City of Butler