Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWO
THE BUTLER HERALD. BUTLER, GEORGIA, MAY 18, 1961.
Reynolds Department
Conducted by
Civic Improvement Club of Reynolds
Next Week Labeled
Vacation Planning
Time in Georgia
Atlanta, Ga. — Residents of Ga.
I Savannah Girl
[Crowned New
Miss Georgia
| COLUMBUS, Ga., May 14—Sav-
^Bwar^Mhliin Brunson, a petite are advised that careful planning
i ssTssyssr* beamy ' u ,h v s «■' ** - ■ ««,.
, She received the crown Saturday, 10 ”' , u „ „ JI
Mrs. D. W. Harp spent Friday in > Dr. and Mrs. Stewart G. Black- night after winding the preliminary ' Noting that Gov. Vandiver has
Atlanta with Miss Ann Harp. [shear of Gainesville, Ga. spent ;awards in the first two nights of proclaimed Sunday as the start of
„ ... „ . . . Thursday and Friday with Mr. and , the pageant. She won her group’s Vacation Planning Week, W. H.
Mrs. Mattie Heirs has been ad- Mrs Thomas Byrd. talent competition after taking the Maddox, chairman of the Patrol-
'swim suit competition. ,men Council of Ga. said:
mitted to the Macon hospital,
Mrs. W. H. Roberson of Macon
visited friends here Sunday P. M-
Mr. Sam Dykes of Farrar spent
Thursday wit-h Mrs. S. H. Bryan Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. G. C. Jinks and
Mr. and Mrs. G. C. Jinks Jr. of
Colquitt, Ga. spent Sunday with
Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Bell and Mrs.
R. M. Jinks.
Miss Brunson, 5 ft. 4% inches tall "In designating May 21-27 as Va-
and 112 pounds, received the crown cation Planning Week, the Gover-
from last year’s winner, Sandra'nor called attention to the import-
Tally of Homerville, and said: “I ant role played by the tourist trade
am completely thrilled and de-,in the state’s economy. Many
lighted. .thousands of state residents de-
Miss Barbara Gases spent Sun- ' Mrs - Ne l* L,ucas ’ Mr - and Mrs - Her ecstatic mother Mrc «_» c 1 ”, ". “ —
dav in Greenville with her n a rents , Paul McDaniel and Mr. and Mrs. R r ecsta ttc mother, Mrs. Hall S. pend on tourism as the source of
y P 1 C. B. Hicks attended the funeral B sa ! d Glenda ’s victory their livelihood, as indicated by
of Mrs. Mamie Van Horn in Leaiy, wa ® nicast Mother’s Day pre- the fact that tourism in Ga. is a
Tuesday P. M. | se3 . any mo, " er could ask for.” $425 million a year business.
First runnerup was Charon Pitts „ .. . , , . .
Paul Pierce is among one of Tay- I of Thomasville. Second runnerup travpip,^ 1 et l fr* f ° U ,°v, s a e
ejlor County men who will receive | was Virginia Holtlendorf, Miss Way D i ea sure and b recrlat^ ^to ^he
- their diploma at Mercer June 5th.'cross. \ * recreation to be
Tho thirH .gained from a vacation in Ga., he
7 h * . h * d _ r , U ”r Up . spot . was a ‘said. “The best way to insure
Mrs. Ola Hicks is home after a
few days in the Sams-Whatley hos
pital.
Mr W O. Brunson and Gene
Brunson shopped in Macon Satur
day.
Mr. Billie Whatley of Atlanta
was in town last Friday on busi
ness.
Mr. and Mrs. James Ricks and
family visited Prattsburg Sunday
P. M.
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Waters at
tended the Reunion in Montezuma
Sunday.
Mrs. Verna Lucas spent the
weekend in Atlanta as guest of her
children.
Mrs. A. S. James visited Mr. and
Mrs. Wm. Horton in Macon last
week.
Mrs. R. L. Bell, Mrs. J H. Neisl-
er and Mrs. Robert Bel lspent Thurs
in Macon.
Mrs. Myrtle Carroll of Byrom-
ville spent the weekend with Mrs.
Wm. King.
Mr. and Mrs. George Goodard Jr.
are spending this week in Rome
and Atlanta.
Congratulations to all Taylor Coun
ty girls and boys.
Mrs. D. W. Payne, Sr., Mrs. D. W.
Payne Jr., Mrs. Gann Nelson, Mrs.
R. E. Aultman, Mrs. Frankie Le-
tio Koliuoon uriii™. * , T~ saiu. me Desi way iu insure
Brunswick, Miss Golden^Isles and tbeSe benefitS is thrU synthetic
Lynn Shirley, Miss Athens.
preparations,” Maddox said. The
“wS* ““f' ’ t S “£ ur& vacation
Wls and Mrs. L. M. Doyle spent Jo Johnson. Miss C^dar VaTley Ca!-’ ers . toa '; oid hectic - last minute va-
Monday P. M. in Macon. yl Alien, Miss Macon; Kaye Bryant " planning '
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Byrd a nd Miss North Geor e la and p hylbs Ann G * soline , s * rvi « Rations in all
milv Mr. and Mrs r.arta'nH Hairston, Miss Rome. sect,ons of the sta e are prepared
family, Mr. and Mrs. Garland Byrd
and family, Mrs. W. T. Whatley 1 —
and Dr. and Mrs. Troy Whatley Dr. James E. Bovd
spent Sunday at Woodruff Dam »-.* , , ,
near Columbus. |L,lectea r resident
Mrs. Lamar Griffin of Americus j West Ga. College
visited Mr. and Mrs. Joe Royton j
last week. Mr. and Mrs. Royton re- t Carrollton. Ga. — Dr. James E. 1
turned home with her. Mr. Royton Boyd, director of the Engineering
was admitted to the Plains Nur- Experiment Station of Ga. Tech P.Mi'n Prncrrnm
sing home in Plains. [and a nationally known scientist. r eea Ura,n rrogram
Mrs. Ruby St. Johns of Atlanta ’ bas been 5 le 5 ted ^ the *° aTd of Non - Cooperators
rs R,i ” h ‘” h gems of the University System Will Miss Benefits
to supply free road maps, and to
ready autos for summer driving, he
notes. “The numerous points of in
terest in the state should attract
many out of state travelers who
can be expected to aid our economy
while rewarding themselves with
an enjoyable vacation.” he said.
Mrs. Elizabeth Johnson and dau- , „ . . ,
ghter, Teresa, Mr. and Mrs .Leo- ° f ., Ga ’ as presldent of West Ga
nard Monk Sr., and Hugh Monk > „ lege '.„ J ^ ... I
and Mr. Wallace Monk of Atlanta w He '' nI ! sacceed Ur. Wm. H. Row What happens to the corn and
spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs J wh0 dIed March 10 after succeed grain sorghum producer who does
H. Windham. * Dr P Ir, g ra m as president last not sign up for the 1961 Feed
j July. Grain Program?
Dr Boyd is the fifth member of ‘The non-cooperatir will miss out
j his faculty at West Ga. College to on a few benefits,” says W. H.
become a college President. Booth Chairman of the ASC State
| Dr. Boyd, from 1933 to 1935. was Committee.
— a member of the West Ga. faculty He pointed out that non-coopera-
Mrs. C. J. Harp Jr. and children ' Reynolds High School publishes serving as the first head of the tors will not be eligible for price
spent Sunday in Doerun with Mrs. herewith a calendar of events for math and science department He support on com, grain sorghums,
Harp's mother. ! hat institution during the remain- is married to a la-dy of Carrollton, oats, barley or rye of the 1961
ing weeks of the 1960-61 school Elizabeth Cobb, daughter of Mrs. crop. “This could be pretty impor-
Beeland of term as follows: Betty Cobb. tant factor considering the present
Mrs. Irene Pierce is spending a
few days with her son, E. A. Pierce Calendar
in Powersville.
Reynolds High School
of Events
Mr. and Mrs. Dan
Columbus spent Sunday with Mrs
Homer Beelnad.
Mr. A. M. Carter spent the week
end in Macon with Mr. and Mrs.
Louie Laurence.
Mrs. Herman Hill and daughters
spent Sunday in Butler guests of
Miss Louise Hill.
Mr. Jerry James and Mark of
Albany spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. A. S. Jones.
Mr. J a ckie Payne of Atlanta
spent the weekend with his mother
Mrs. D. W. Payne Sr.
Mrs. Julian Whatley and children
and Mr. Van Livingston visited in
Ellaville Sunday P. M.
Mr. Charles Nelson of Warner
Robins spent Saturday with Mr.
and Mrs. Gann Nelson.
Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Griffith spent
the weekend in Columbus with Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Stevens.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Cosey and
Miss Susan and Karen Cosey
shopped in Macon Saturday.
Mr. a ad Mrs. Garni Nelson and
May 21: Baccalaureate Sermon.
May 22: Graduation.
May 23: Dismiss for Summer Va
cation.
Worship at Trinity
2nd and 4th Sundays
There will be worship at Trinity
Free-Will Baptist Church at 11 a.
m. on the 2nd and 4th Sundays in
each month.
We urge all who will to come
and hear the good old-time Gos
pel messages of Rev. R. B. Mc-
Fadden of Macon.
Trinity Church.
Upson County Man
Just Out of Army,
Shot in Accident
Thomaston, Ga. — An 18 year
old Yatesville man out of the serv
ice little more than 24 hours, sus
tained a serious gunshot wound in
an accidcint recently.
Chappell Hill, graduate of Yates
ville High School last year and
Mr. Rob Aultman attended the ball basketball player, was reported in
game in Macon Sunday P. M.
Mr
the weekend in Atlanta. M
er remained for a week’s visit.
and held a Loomis fellowship.
$174,000 Fund Will
Supplement Tech Pay
Formerly of Wilkes County. Dr. huge surplus of feed grain,” Mr.
Boyd received the B.A. Degree in Booth said.
math from the University of Ga. The state chairman warned that
i in 1927. He received his master of it will be risky for farmers to count
H. W. Sasser, principal, arts in math from DukeUniversity on any increase in market prices
in 1928, and the doctor of philoso- of feed grains. As cooperating
phy from Yale in 1933. While at growers receive payments which
Yale he was a graduate assistant represent grain from Commodity
Credit Corporation stocks, this
grain becomes available for mar
ket and farm use and will compete
with other feed grain on the mar
ket.
Here’s how it works, according to
... Booth.
Atl ^”i 3, G3 u R ® cord grants of Cooperators who want to receive
over $147,000 have been approved the cash equivalent of grain at
J j 6 ,rus,e ® s of the Ga Tech the support price may ask CCC to
ounda ion Inc., to supplement act as their agent in marketing
iQm r no S professors during their grain . As agent f 0 r the pro-
, . .. . ducer, CCC will advance the pay-
11 0 ^ ,/ he °M7 < [- a !l 0 w haS JI 1 T ment to the producer in cash thru
al ocated over $67o,000 for Tech the count A SC office and subse-
salary supplements since the pro- quent ly market the grain.
w 3 In ln 1957, according to Non-cooperators receive only the
W C. Ward ow Jr„ of Atlanta, foun market price , whatever it may be.
dation president. He ig only not ineligib , e for f ee d
tv ° grants ^ re roade possible gra j n p r j ce support and payments,
thru funds raised from alumni but he for egoes the usual benefits
and friends and through money of a production adjustment pro-
derived as Tech’s share of the „ stocks of
T . _ , ^ „ gram as Government
Joint Tech-Ga. Development Fund. jn are marketed .
To ypur knowledge, this is the
largest confining faculty supple-
mentattion program among the
South’s public institutions of high
satisfactory condition after under-
r. and Mrs. J. H. Neislgr spent going sur K er y at Monroe hospital,
weekend in Atlanta. Mrs. Neisl-1 *' u , 1 I syth f ’., iU .
His father, Acey Hill, said that
his son was discharged from serv-
Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Pierce spent ice after serving his six months
Sunday with their sect, Paul and active duty with the National N©gTO Colleges Given
Mrs. Pierce and Alan in Decatur. Guard at Ft. Bliss, Tex, last week
and arrived home Friday. The ac-
Miss Dathine Brunson of Atlanta eident took place a little more
spent the weekend with her par- than 24 hours later,
rents Mr. and Mrs. J. N. Brunscci. | Hill said that, “He (the son) had
How about the possibility of a
non-cooperator building an acreage
base for future program? This is
also risky, Booth said. The depart-
er learning, and one of the larg- ment of A griculture> he sqid, will
est o its type in the nation,” Mr. strongly reC ommend to Congress
Wardlow said. -
Million by Rockefeller
A grant of $1 million to Spel-
man, Morehouse, Clark and Mor-
come in a short time before the ac- iris Brown Colleges has been made
that any future legislation involv
|ing establishment of base acreage
for production adjustment should
1 give no advantage to producers
who did not cooperate in the 1961
feed grain program.
Cancer Drive
Mrs. J. B. Hicks and Miss Bobbie [ eident and stopped in the room by the Rockefeller Bros. Fund.
M ° ntez “ ma spent Sunday | where 1 was watching TV. He I Of the total grant, Spelman is We have recently learned of the
with Mrs. Geo. Brady and Caroline said he was going to bed. In a’receiving $750,000 for the construe- death of Gary Cooper, world-re-
rat y ’ ' few minutes I heard the shot and tion of a new ficie arts building.The nowned movie actor, a victim of
Mr -»na Thnm» s Pi ™,i he yellcd ' 1 rushed into the room facilities will be used for courses that great killer CANCER, but we
soil of ('ontorviiin and * ound '“ rn 0,1 tRo fl°° r and in art, drrama and music. Dr. A. W. never learn of the deaths each day,
PiiPsts of i-heir n ironis i-.si Thu tbo gl !” 0,1 lbc bed ' Tbe gun had Manley, president of Spelman, was caused by this insidious disease,
t i l, P ‘ ‘ ( been in a gun rack over the bed,in New York. Thursday to accept of the staggering number of less
J and he said he had it down and the grant. weel-known people.
dropped or bumped it and it went j The remaining $250,000 is desig- I REMEMBER: Cancer strikes 2 out
off.’ The gun was described as a nated for the joint land acquisition of 3 homes. Cancer strikes 1 in 4
| program of the four colleges that of all ages and both sexes. Cancer
[comprise the Atlanta University strikes more children from 3 to 15
Mr. and Mrs. J. H. McRea and
. .. , . „ , . _ on. i ne gun was i
vvi h m SI M R “ ay IT Da ^° n bolt action 22 ritle.
with Mr. McRea s mother, Mrs.
Pearl McRea.
Mr. a nd Mrs. C. L. Ayers, Mr
and Mrs. Ducher Whatley attended
Governor’s Panel
Studies Foreign Sales
the Miss Ga. Pageant in Columbus Of Georgia Products
Friday night. &
Mr. and Mrs. Dick Windham and
Center. This sum will be made years of age than any other dis-
available to the center after the ease.
four colleges have raised a total of REMEBER: Money is needed for
$500,000 from other donors for the education and research. The fund
same purpose. raising campaign for Crawford
j Announcement of the grant was County begins May 22nd and runs
Atlanta, Ga. — A problem of pro- made on the first anniversary of through May 31st. An authorized
Mr. Jimmie Windham spent Sun- in °t>ng sales of Georgia’s goods in the death of the late John Rocke- worker will call on you during that
day in Talbotton with Mrs. Wind- foreign markets is expected to re- feller Jr., and was made in his period for a donation. Please give
ceive special consideration at a 3- honor. generously for unless progress in
day Governors’ Convention on ( Since the founding of Spelman, Cancer Control continues 45,000,-
Trade and Commerce opening May the total contributions (including 000 Americans now alive will dev-
31 in Atlanta. [family sources to the several in- elop the disease, hut
Representatives of industry and stitutions in the Atlanta Universi- REMEBER: Cancer can be cured
business establishments from ty Canter now amount to more if detected in the early stages.
throughout the state will discuss than $19 million. |
methods of attracting new indus- J — | Human progress is often impeded
try to Georgia and improving the It takes a tough physique to with by the anxiety of human beings to
ham’s mother.
Mr. and Mrs. John Wood and
children of Charleston, S. C. spent
several days with Mr. and Mrs.
J. W. Waters.
Rev. William Smith was supper
guest of Mr. and Mrs. L. Pierce
last Friday night. Mrs. William status of existing business and in- stand the rigors of the picnic season get credit for themselves.
Smith and baby daughter, Claire ( dustry. [ —— |
returned home with him after I Gov. Vandiver will deliver an ad- It is surprising how much work Money spent for education Is an
spending several days with her pa- dress to the group at a morning ses our friends think we can, and investment in better people and
rents, Mr. and Mrs. L. K. Pierce. sion Monday. should do. higher standards of living.
Reynolds High School
GRADUATION EXERCISES
May 22, 1961
REYNOLDS HIGH SCHOOL AUDITORIUM
BOARD OF TRUSTEES
B. W. Hinton, Jr., Chairman
Dr. F. H. Sams
L. W. Cook
W. F. Brunson
C. F. Barfield
E. J. Parker
W. H. SASSER
Principal of th eHigh School
W. H. ELLISTON
County School Superintendent
CLASS OFFICERS
Gerald Dalton Mclnvale, President
Brenda Faye McDaniel, Vice President
Tommie Diane Powell, Secretary
Harry Ellison Hicks, Treasurer
CLASS FLOWER: Carnation
CLASS COLOR: Blue and White
SENIOR CLASS ROLL
Nancy Virginia Archdeacon
Blanche Annis Brunson
Leila Belle Byrd
Lawrence Wyche Cook, Jr.
Sandra Maebelle Gentry
Harry Elliston Hicks
Lewis Clark Hortman
Betty Jane Johnson
Dorothy Lee Manning
Brenda Faye McDaniel
Gerald Dalton Mclnvale
Clopers Montgomery, Jr.
Trena Ann Nelson
Margaret Agnes Parr
Tommie Diane Powell
Evalyn Alice Reynolds
Henry Clinton Sams
Audrey Elizabeth Willis
James Dorsey Brown
Earnest Daniel Guined
Rhodney Stephen Montgomery
GRADUATION EXERCISES
1 MONDAY,, May 22, 1961
8:00 o’Clock P. M.
Processional . . “The U. S. Cantonment” . . Astin
(The Audience will remain seated for Processional
and Invocation)
Invocation . . “The Lord’s Prayer” . . Class of 1961
Salutatory „ « * Gerald Dalton Mclnvale
Literary Address Lt. Gov. Garland Byrd
Class Song
Awards Mr. H. W. Sasser, Principal
Valedictory Clopers Montgomery, Jr.
Presentation of Diplomas . . . Hon. B. W. Hinton, Jr.
Chairman, Reynolds Board of School Trustees
Benediction . “I’ll Walk with God” . Class of 1961
Alma Mater Class of 1961
(The Audience will please stand)
Recessional
(The Audience will please remain standing during Recessional)
On the Telephone, too,V
YOU GET THERE
FASTER IF YOU
KNOW THE
RIGHT
NUMBER
When you’re not exactly sure of
the number, street addresses
can be confusing . . . especially
if many of the houses look alike.
And the same is true with telephone numbers . . .
when they sound alike.
That’s why it pays to check the directory before
calling. You can really speed up service. There's no
“wrong numbers" and no delay caused by going
through "information” switchboards.
Keep a list handy of I he local and longdistance num
bers you call most frequently. It will save you time.
'll,
I
J
jluiiliir
Public Service
Telephone Company