Newspaper Page Text
THE BUTLER HERALD, BUTLER GEORGIA. SEPTEMBER 10, 1959.
PAGE THREE
"I Love You All"
President Eisenhower
Tells Crowd in Paris
Paris — “Je vous aime, tous,”
President Eisenhower told the
French people o-n his recent visit to
Paris. “I love you all.”
And a vast, cheering crowd of
Parisians roared back with a dra
matic ovation that clearly said in
resopnse: “We love you too, Ike.”
It was another personal triumph
for Eisenhower on his crusade thru
Western Europe to bolster the North
Atlantic Alliance agai*nst Commun
ism.
COAL FOR SALE
Just received a car load of high grade Coal.
Anyone needing Coal will please place your order
NOW for early delivery.
Mrs. H. E. Childres, Butler, Ga.
BARGAIN SALE
O!
HOUSEHOLD
and KITCHEN FURNITURE
The furnishings in the home of the
late Walter J. Butler Estate have been
moved to the Edwards Store Building
next to Smith’s Pharmacy and will be
open for the sale of same every Wed
nesday and Saturday until sold.
This merchandise will be sold at a
bargain, and for cash, only. Stop by
and see what is offered.
MARTIN A. CHAPMAN
West Point Mfg. Co.
Will Honor Thousand
Employes This Week
West Point, Ga. More than 1,000
men and women employes of West
Point Manufacturing Co. will be
honored at four service award
ceremonies this week.
Five new members, each with
50 years of service, will be inducted
into the company’s “50 Year Club”
by J. L. Lanier, company president
at the Club’s 12th annual meet
ing Thursday, 7 p. m. at the Shaw-
mut, Ala. community center.
New members of the club are:
Homer Brewer, Lanett Mill; Clifford
Crawford, Dixie Mill, LaGravige; G.
W. Cromer, Wellington Mill, An
derson, S. C.; Henry Paschal and
Walter Smith, both of Langdale,
Ala., mill.
The induction of these new
members will bring the member
ship of the club to 172, thought to
be the largest of any group of its
kind among the industries of the
nation.
Col. Rudolph Wimberly,
Well Known Lumpkin
Attorney, Succumbs
Grandmother's Day
Will Have to Await
Another Session
Washington, D. C. — The House
Judiciary Committee has decided
Robert Byrd Wright
Appointed by Governor;
Succeeds Bodenhamer
Atlanta, Ga t . — Gov. Ernest Van
diver has picked Moultrie business
man R. B. Wright Jr. to succeed
that 90 weeks are enough for an former political opponent on the
average year and is forthrightly
refusing to add any more.
The committee also has counted
at least 31 months on the 1959
calendar and says we’ll have to
tighten our belts and try to get by
with the same number next year.
As for days, whoever said there
are never enough of these just had
not counted. Neither has the ju
diciary committee. It would take
too long. But the committee adam
antly refused to add to the num
ber.
This means we won’t be able to
celebrate Grandmother’s Day, as
proposed in a bill by Rep. Iris
Blitch. Children’s Day sponsored by
several lawmakers, also seems to
be out. Rep. George Meader figured
we ought to observe Family Day,
but now
committee
these hills.
We can continue to rejoice, of
course on Mother’s, Father’s, Moth
er in law, Old Maid’s, and Old
Lady Days. According to Chases’
Calendar of special days, weeks
avid months, all of these already
are scheduled.
State Board of Education.
Wright, 39, an automobile deal
er was born in Macon but moved
with his family to Moultrie there
after.
The governor will recommend
that Wright replace former guber
natorial candidate W. T. Boden
hamer of Ty Ty on the board.
Bodenhamer resigned from the
board last week to comply with a
state law which forbids a board
member from being active hi school
work. He has been named school
principal in his home community.
$160,000 BLAZE
HITS DALTON STORE
A heavy pall of smoke hung
over Dalton cm Sept. 1 as firemen
Original Tenant Provision
Are Changed for 1960
Conservation Reserve j
The original 1960 Conservation
Reserve provisions relating to ten
ants and sharecroppers have been
changed. This statement was re
leased by J. F. Bradley, Adminis
trative Officer for the State Agri
cultural Stabilization and Conser
vation Committee.
The new provisions will allow
designation for the Conservation
Reserve of land that was farmed by
a tenant or sharecropper in 1958-59
if the tenant or cropper has volun
tarily left the farm. Bradley stated
that the old rule required that a
tenant share cropper be shown on
the contract even tho the previous
tenant or sharecropper had stopped
farming.
As an alternative the tenant’s
land could not he put under con
tract.
The closing date for requesting
rates under 1960 program is Gopt.
10. The 1960 signup nerior' has
I guess we can’t. The volunteers, city workers and con-j boon open since Aug. 24. Farmers
didn’t approve anv of I vicrts cleaned up debris after thei w h° would like to participate and
dictnt approve any or * . in v „ ;irs have had 1958 or 1959 tenant- that
city’s costliest fire in 10 years.
ATLANTA WOMAN LOSES
NECKLACE VALUED AT $14,900
Lumpkin, Ga. — Rudolph S.
Wimberly, 75, veteran attorney and
Methodist lay leaderdied Friday at
Patterson hospital, Cuthbert, after
an operation Monday.
The Stewart County attorney,
admitted to the bar in 1904, grad
uated from Mercer in 1901 and re
ceived the doctor of law degree
from Mercer in 1904.
Stewartcounty for many years,
He was chosen chairman of the
Stewart County Rationing Board,
charter member of the Lumpkin | jg
Lions Club, member of Stewart
County Board of Education and a
leader in forming the Stewart
County Housing Authority.
Born in Wesley Chapel communi
ty Oct. 14, 1883, son of the late Dr.
J. S. and Sally Wimberly of Stew
art county, he attended elementary
school in Stewart county.
His first marriage was to Miss
Beyne, Macon. After her death in
1941, he married Mrs. Annie A.
Rose, Macon.
s For Sale
128 Acres Timberland
Lots of Growing Timber
Already on Land
l Plus 50-Acre Lake
Well Stocked with
Bass & Bream
I have left the farm, should be sure
j and contact their local ASC offices
by Thursday (today).
I The Conservation R«s*»rv» p ro-
Richmond, Va. - The loss or'|f* m ha * h * e " v fV Popuiar with
theft of a $14,900 diamond necklace | ’ n Georgiri. In fact, nar-
at a Richmond dance hall was re - |ticipation in Georgia ranks among
ported to police Saturday by an
Atlanta woman.
Mrs. Janice Edwards said she left
the dance hall at 11:30 p. m.. Fri
day and noticed that the necklace
was missing when she entered the
car.
CAMILLA PRISONER STEALS
JAIL KEYS AND ESCAPES
G
This is an ideal location for 9,
a Sportsman Lodge or Com
mercial Fish Camp.
Located 2 Miles N. of Butler
Priced Very Reasonable
Camilla, Ga. — Amos Wade, de
scribed as dangerous, finally broke
out of Mitchell county jail with
out the help of his girl friend.
] Sheriff John Maple said the 32-
lyear old Wade, who was being de
tained on a ssafe-cracking charge
for Crawford county, escaped with
Steve Luckey, 17, of Camilla, and
James Jones of Orlando, Fla.
the top ten in the nation. Mr. Brad
ley said that there are 12,500 con
tracts in effect under the program
which began in 1956. These con
tracts cover 793,000 acres, of which
565,513 acres are being devoted to
tree cover. 192,000 of the contract
ed acres will be devoted to cover of
grass or legumes. The State acre
age goal for the 1960 program is
134.000. This compares with a goal
of over 400,000 acres that were put
under contract under the 1959
program. Mr. Bradley says that,
unless extended by Congress, the
program for 1960 will be the last
one to be offered.
LITTLE VICTIM OF BURNS
CELEBRATES 5th BIRTHDAY
With an orchid pinned to her
| shoulder and eyes as serious as the
They tell us that middle age is occasion, Dale Mathews celebrated
when your experience is longer, her fifth birthday last week.
your stamina lower, and your fore
head higher.
TERMITES
KILL THEM Yourself with ARAB
U-DO-IT TERMITE CONTROL
Sava $100 or move. Easy to uae. No
harm to plants. Professionally proven
B years protection. Get FREE folder at
your Lumber Yard. Thousands use It.
J. E. Bone Building Supply
BUTLER GA.
She played hookey, with the doc
tor's permission, from the Macon
j hospital room where she has been,
a patient six months, to be guest
of honor at a party attended by
what seemed like half of Crawford
county.
It was a celebration of two
events: Dale’s fifth birthday and
the fact that she is still alive and
rapidly getting well.
Last February the little girl
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Felts
Mathews of Roberta arrived at the
Macon Hospital with nearly two-
thirds of her body seared by
burns.
With her came her mother, a
patient too badly burned trying to
save her daughter.
LOOK
• TO CATCH FISH •
GET LARGE SWAMP WIGGLERS!
-FROM
J. HUGH Y’.ifDHAM
Reynolds, Georg!:
THE NEW-SIZE FORD
STARTS ON ITS WAY TO YOU!
MODERN
BANKING
SERVICES!
The Falcon, the New-Size Ford, already is the most thoroughly tested
and proven new car in history. Today this new Ford Falcon starts
EXPERIENCE RUN, U.S.A., over every mile of numbered U.S. highway
tested, paint-tested, stability-tested,
service-tested . . . every thing-tested on
Ford’s own proving grounds. The Fal
con has already proved to engineers
that it takes anything they can dish out.
Now, Experience Run, U.S.A. will
show you what the Falcon can do over
your kind of roads.
How many miles to the gallon? Rec
ords will be kept of every drop of gag
used. Better gas mileage? The Falcon
will average up to 30 miles per gallon 1
This is not a test run in the ordinary
sense of the word. For in its 3 years of
development and over 3 million miles
of proving, the Falcon has already
passed and repassed every kind of test
that could be devised.
It’s been dust-testeu, heat-tested, and
endurance-tested on the test track at
Kingman, Arizona. Wind-tested and
rain-tested in the 300 mph wind tunnel
at the University of Maryland. Shock-
tested, curve-tested, brake-tested, noise-
On October 8, the New-size Ford will
be at your Ford Dealer’s . . . for you to
experience. See your Ford Dealer today
for more information on the Ford Falcon.
FORD DIVISION,
Coming your way soon
tJijtlcJOrrL.
EASIEST CAt IN THE UttlBin TO Aunt
Payne Motor Company
Butler, Georgia
Are in operation in this bank
today. Our reputation for faithful serv
ice through the years, is a source of
satisfaction and a responsibility, it
keeps us alert always to do our best
to live up to the service expectations^
of our customers. # *
THE CITIZENS STATE BANKS
(Members Federal Deposft Insurance Corpooration)
BUTLER, GEORGIA REYNOLDS, GEORGIA