Newspaper Page Text
PAGE FOUR
THE BUTLER HERALD, BUTLER,
GEORGIA, SEPTEMBER 28, 1961.
The Butler Herald
Entered at Post Office in Butler
Georgia as mail matter of
Second Class
Chas. Benns, Jr., Business Mgr
Chas. Benns, Jr., Managing Editor
O. E. Cox, Publisher & Bus. Mgr.
OFFICIAL ORGAN TAYLOR CO.
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY
Average Weekly Circulation
Fifteen Hundred Copies
Phone: UN. 2-4485
Newly Weds Start
With 18 Children
CARMEL, Calif.-Flanked by their
18 children - including a cooing
baby cut-up who almost stole the
show - Navy Chief Warrant Officer
Francis Beardsley and Mrs. Helen
North were married Saturday in
historic Carmel Mission.
The children marched into the
mission in a double-rank military-
more children - perhaps many
more children.
To take care of the present fam
ily, Beardsley has enlarged his
home from five to eight bedrooms
and from three to five bathrooms.
Kitchen facilities are set up along
restaurant lines.
“I would love to have another
child”, the blue-eyed, brunette, mo
ther of eight said before the cere
mony.
“This marriage isn’t just an ar
rangement, a merger of two fam
ilies. The way Frank and I feel
Two Girls Die
In Dublin Blast
style formation, tallest in the rear
A baby and a toddler were carried about each other, it would be piti-
they divided ful if we didn’t have any children I
'in. At the front pew they
Georgians Observe
50th Anniversary
Of Weeks Law
Dublin, Ga. — A kerosene explos- i
ion last week resulted in death for :
two girls who lived near Dublin, j
Sheriff Bussell reported.
According to investigators, Annie ,
Mae Jackson, 14, was cooking j
breakfast and poured kerosene fin- j
to the stove, which exploded. She ;
died from the flame and her sister, j
2 year of age, was found dead in
adjoining room apparently from
suffocation.
The mother, Hannie Jackson, and I
!£““ r\,rr* an older sister were unable to
Poman Catholic ceremony, father j ‘ Maybe one, maybe 10. That’s up reach the younger girls when the
Peary, Catholic chaplain at he to the good Lord. We’ll see what he explosion occurred, investigators
Navy's Postgraduate School at i has in store for us.” sa £j
Monterey, where Beardsley is sta
tioned, officiated,
“ j Most of the children beamed ap-
Georgians this week are observ- provingly as the wedding proceed
ing the 50th anniversary of the ed. But Teresa North, 1, played,
Weeks Law of 1911. This year the chattered and cried while older
National observance was conduct- children tried to quiet her.
ed in Asheville, N. C., announces j Finally a bottle was produced
Austing Guinn, Taylor County For- and dignity was restored.
estr> Ranger. I Beardsley was left with 10 child-
w °, U . ask .' Wl>at is the ren w h en his wife died last year
Weeks Law? It is one of the few t ... .. .. , I
laws that has changed, and marked I after a short lllness - Mrs - North s I
a turning point in our history as a i husband was killed in a Navy jet'
nation. Around the turn of the J bomber crash. They exchanged con-j
dolence prayers after learning of j
each other’s tragedies, began cor
responding, dated and then decided
the
ATHENS, Ga., Sept. 13 — Condi
tions for fall harvest and other
farm activities improved in most
areas of the state as weather be
came more favorable, the Georgia
Crop Reporting Service reports.
County agents reported that cot
ton and peanut harvest is increas
ing in volume after being delayed
by excessive rains. Farmers also
are making better progress in the
preparation of land and the seed
ing of winter pastures, small grains
and cover crops.
However, scattered showers par
ticularly in south Georgia, continue
to limit harvesting operations and
to increase damage previously done
to cotton and peanuts in those wet
areas.
The condition of cotton shows
no appreciable change from the
preceding week with most reports
about equally divided between fair
and good. Boll rot is reported in
several areas. Harvest has advanc
ed considerably.
Notice
Beginning on October 1st,
KEEN’S BARBER SHOP
will be open for business
on Monady, Friday and
Saturday only, each week
until further notice.
0. C. KEEN, Sr.
R. F. D. 1
BUTLER, GEORGIA
century the philosophies of
thinking people of America was
to protect and preserve our natur
al resources. Before which for
many years an all-out exploita
tion and outright waste of our tim
ber had been taking place.
The Weeks Law of 1911 has en
abled us to ecijoy the benefits of
the forests thru the years; the law
authorized the Federal Govern
ment to acquire lands along the
headwaters of many navigable
streams and encourages the State
to control damaging forest fires.
The National forests of Georgia
consists of the Chattahoochee Na
tional Forest, the Oconee National
Forests; these forests consist of
more than 770,000 acres of land
which are managed under a mul
tiple use principle of land man
agement. This means that these
Forests provide outdoor recreation,
timber, water, and wild life for the
people of Georgia and the Nation.
For instance over 50 million board
feet of timber is harvested from
these forests annually. Also provid
ing recreation and hunting and
fishing for millions of people an
nually.
Thru this law Georgians are as
sured of fresh, clear, pure water
flowing from the mountain for
ests for home use and to meet the
water needs of the State’s growing
industries.
We can certainly see why the
National Celebration of the Weeks
Law effects every citizens of this
county as well as the entire state
and nation. It emphasizes the
founding of a great American heri
tage which produces outdoor recre
ation, timber, wildlife and graz
ing.
Cotton and Peanut
Harvest in State
At Peak This Week
to get married.
Mrs. North was calmly confident
about coming hurculean task of
homemaking. In fact she said she
hopes she and Beardsley can have
FOR FREE INSPECTION
EXPERT
RADIATOR
SERVICE
GUARANTEED QUALITY PRODUCTS
Cleaning
repairing
recoring
rebuilding
211
AUTO RADIATOR SERVICE
JACK T. BENTLEY
N. Green Stree Thcmaston, Georgia
YOUR KIND
OF A BANKI
Where service to the community
and you comes first.
Here the small depositor receives
the same service as the larger
depositor, and his account is Just
as welcome.
If you like this kind of a bank,
come in. You'll enjoy your asset* \
ciation with us.
THE CITIZENS STATE BANKS
BUTLER, GEORGIA REYNOLDS, GEORGIA
(Members Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation)
The Ford
in yourgbe^future
* will be here tomorrow!
Starting' tomorrow at vour Ford Dealer’s,
>ou will discover a line of Fords so long,
so new, so varied that everyone will find
his personal Ford — the car that fits his
pleasure and needs as precisely as though
it had been made to measure. ■ For
those who want a true luxury car, there
are two distinguished new series of
Galaxies—both swift as a rumor, silent as
a secret. With Thunderbird styling,
Thunderbird power, and quality that
sets a new industry standard, the 1962
Galaxies give you every essential feature
of far costlier fine cars. ■ If you are
looking for economy without compro
mise, look to America’s favorite compact:
this year there are more Falcons than
ever to choose from—13 in all. ■ Wagon
fanciers will find unprecedented variety
—lrom a new wagon that seats eight to a
Falcon Squire Wagon with the rich
wood like finish of the famous Country
Squire. ■ Pick the Ford in your future
with this confidence: every 1962 Ford is
built to a standard of quality so high that
it will change all your ideas of how fine,
how quiet, how enduring a car can be.
Galaxie / 500 Club Victoria (foreground)... Galaxie
Town Sedan (background) . . .The Galaxie / 500-new
in name, new in luxury-is for those who want all of the
elegant extias. The Galaxie makes it easier than ever
to move up to fine-car luxury—at the low Ford price. All
Galaxies are beautifully built to be more service-free.
T hey go 30,000 miles between major lubrications, f>,000
miles between oil changes and minor lubrications.
Brakes adjust themselves automatically. Special zinc coat
ing protects vital body parts against rust and corrosion.
FALCON SQUIRE WAGON . . . Brand new for ’62, it’s sleek,
sophisticated ... and the only compact wagon of its kind. Inside,
it is available with Futura bucket seats and a handy console!
Jutside, it lias steel side paneling with elegant woodlike finish.
’62
Fords
Features of the future—now
J
FAI.GON FORDOR SEDAN...Just
one of 13 Falcons for 1962, this 4-
door sedan has an improved version
of the Falcon Six engine that last
spring recorded (lie best gas mileage
lor a Six or Fight in the 25-ycar
history of the Mobilgas Economy
Kun. Falcon's low price for 'G2 makes
** America’s best compact valucl
Payne Motor Company
Butler, Georgia