The Butler herald. (Butler, Ga.) 1875-1962, February 15, 1962, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

PAGE TWO THE BUTLER HERALD, BUTLER, GEORGIA, FEBRUARY 15, 1962. i Reynolds Department Patricia Jean Palmer Becomes Bride of Edward Wainwright Conducted by Civic Improvement Club of Reynolds Dr. F. H. Sams spent Friday in Dalton with relatives. Mr. and , Mrs. Jimmy Childres spent Thursday in Columbus. Homestead, Fla. — Miss Patricia Jean Palmer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. F. J. Palmer became the bride of Edward Wainwright, son of Mr. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Parks and and Mr "' Walter Wainwright of children spent Sunday in Covington ^tler Sunday afternj^ at First with Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Harris and baptlst Lhurch, Homestead, Fla. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Capes. Rev. I. G. Zahler, pastor of 1 Goulds Baptist Church officiated Mrs. Willis Saunders, Mrs. Nell at the 4 o'clock ceremony before an Mrs. Frankie Lewis^ is^ the^guest | Qjj ver Mrs Bernice Hill and Mrs. altar adorned with standards of 'Ernest Childres visited in Jones- white glads and Fuji mums. Mrs. of Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Aultman. Mrs. Jim Brewer and Mrs. Jimmy Bradshaw were in Macon Tuesday. i boro and Griffin last week. Mrs. Oscar Thompson of Atlanta was the guest Wednesday and week in Philadelphia on business. I Thursday of Mr - F. A. Ricks, | Charles and Mrs. F. M. Mr. Ferdinaoid Carson spent last Carson. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Byrd were in Atlanta several days last week. William Spear, organist, presented the traditional nuptial music. Escorted by her father, the bride was attired in a ballerina length gown of candlelight satin styled | with mother of pearl appliques at Ber- the round neckline, three-quarter length sleeves i>n the fitted bodice Mrs. Willis Saunders, Mrs [nice Hill, Mrs. Joe Royeton and Mrs. Mrs. L. G. Hooten of of Thomas- I James Gray were luncheon guests an d bouffant skirt. Her only jewel- ton spent Sunday with Mrs. Charlie'of Mrs. Ernest Childres Thursday. r y was a single strand of pearls, a Hoats. Mrs. Lillian Horton is spending a few days with Mr. and Mrs. Willie Suggs. Mr. and Mrs. James Gentry and son spent the week end with Mr. Gentry. Mrs. Nell Lucas and Mrs. Irene Whatley were were in Macon Wed nesday. Mr. and Mrs. Jackie Payne spent Thursday night in Monticello with relatives. Mr. Baxton cook of Athens vis- gift from the groom. She wofe Mrs. Frank Stephens of Columbus pearl and sequin crown with finger and Mrs. W. A. Saunders of Atlan- tip veil of illusion and carried a ta spent Sunday with Miss Eva B. white orchid and feathered carna- Griffith and Mrs. Winnie Breazeale tions. Miss Elder Blackmon underwent . Miss L ™ da . Smith was maid of surgery at the Macon hospital last hono1 : ' aad Mls * Virginia Douberley week and ber many frie'nds join It* in wishing for her a speedy recov ery. length gowns of pastel yellow and pink silk organza styled with lace inserts across the square necklines McEl- and panels of lace on thefull skirts. Macon They wore matching headpieces with, their mother Mrs' McElmurray with circular veils and carried Co- who is a patient at the Middle Ga. lonial bouquets of yellow and pink carnations. Donald Wainwright, Butler, Ga., brother of the groom was best Mr. and Mrs, Swilling [Murray spent Monday in Hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Atkins of Saturday ^ ^ LaWrenCe C °° k l Big Rapids, Mich., spent a few man . Buddy Dunn * also of But ler, Saturday. |days last week wi( , h Mrs . c w . was the usher . Mr. and Mrs. John Mims Jr., of g° at j* and Mr ' and Mrs - clifton Atlanta visited their parents for the week end. Mr. and Mrs. Ben Hinton spent several days last week fishing at Panacea, Fla. Mr. Horace Trapp and daughter of Macon visited Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Hicks Saturday. Mr and Mrs. R. E. Mullins of Macon spent Friday with Miss Winnie Aultman. Mr. and Mrs. Hobart Wardell of Ft. Benning, visited Mrs. Gussie Royeton Sunday. Mrs. W. H. Burchfield of Heflin Ala., was a recent guest of Mr. and Mrs. Dan Payne. Windham. A reception followed the cere mony in the social hall of the Mr. and Mrs. William Horton, Mr. church - Miss Janice Palmer kept the acid Mrs. A. S James and Mr. J. guest book - Aides were Miss Beck y C. Fuller visited Mr. Herbert Ful ler of Columbus Saturday who has been in the hospital. Thorn and Miss Peggy Eaker. After a hbneymoon in the state the young couple will live in Butler. For traveling the bride wore a navy blue suit with white acces- Mrs. Clifton Paulk, Mrs. Sylvia Woods and children of Birmingham series and an orchid corsage, are occupying the Marshall resi dence. Mrs. Wood is employed in the Citizens State Bank. We regret to learn that Mrs. Bet ty Whatley had the misfortune of falling and breaking her shoulder. Her numerous friends wish for Mrs. Whatley an immediate and com plete recovery. Extensive Research Means Big Savings To Forest Owners As a result of extensive research during the past seven years, less than one per cent of the seedlings . Carl Visage, radioman third class * n Georgia forest tree nurseries Mrs. Marie Jensen of Macon is| left Fcb - 7th for a Mediterranean were infested with insect pests dur- cruise on the USS Leary. The Leary ing 1961 ' accordin g to a news re ‘ will visit six countries during the lease . b y the state forest research six months it is out. His parents co ^ aclL spending a few days this week with Miss Winnie Aultman. Mr. and Mrs. William Horton of Macon visited Mr. and Mrs. A. S. James for the week end. Mrs. Verna Lucas attended a meeting in Athens Ga. Friday for Lunch Room Supervisors. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Childres spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Taylor Childres at Tifton. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Pruitt of Thomaston visited Mr. and Mrs. T. Whatley for the week end. Mr. and Mrs. Julian Whatley and daughters visited Mr. and Mrs. Don Avery in Americus Sunday. Mr. Clint Green who is an out patient at the Macon hospital was at home for the week end. Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph Parks of Decatur, spent Saturday with rela tives in Butler and Reynolds. Mrs. Andy Dahl of Warner Rob ins spent Sunday with Miss Win nie and Miss Laurice Aultman. Mrs. Neil Oliver of East Point spent last week end with her par ents, Mr. and Mrs Bernice Hill. Mrs. Bernice Bass and Diane were in Atlanta several days last week while Diane was a page in the Senate. Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Hicks and family of Nashville, Tenn., spent the week end with Mr. and Mrs. C.B.Hicks. Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Powell and Mrs. Josh Newsome attended the funeral of Mr. Edgar Boyd in Ath ens, Friday. Miss Jerri Windham and Miss Sandra Hinton spent the week end at Emory University the guest of Mi,ss Jane Windham. are Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Visage, Sr., of Reynolds. His wife Torbert Visage of Jacksonville, Fla. The state’s forestry leaders said Dianp this important achievement was brought about by the work of the Southeastern Forest Experiment Station, U. S. Forest Service, in co operation with the Ga. Forest Re search Council and the Ga. Fores try Commission. H. E. Ruark, Research Council Director, said “this breakthrough in the control of nursery insects is of particular importance to Georgians Georgia Southern College ad-' 18 0U J s t ate bad led tbe entire n ?' mitted 145 students to the Profes- £<« during the past two years in sional Program of Teacher Educa- j! 10 Production of forest tree seed- tion during the fall quarter, 1961, ling ^ Miss Rebekah Mims Makes Professional Teacher’s Program according to Dr. McKenney, direc tor of admissions counseling for teacher education. Miss Rebekah Mims, a sopho more from Reynolds, was among CLASSIFIED ADS. STRAYED Black male Persian cat with those admited to this professional whbe on j^ rayed fron \ my program. Students planning to become pub lic school teachers at Ga. Southern are required to apply for admis sion to the Teacher Education Program. Selective admission residence Feb. 8th. Finder please notify Mrs. Lucy Edmondson Butler, Georgia (2151p) Phone UN. 2-2562 FOR SALE: Five-room brick to teacher [ house, screened porch, central heat, education has been conducted as an 1125’xl75’ lot, on paved street across experimental program at Georgia‘from high school building. If in- Southern during the past year. terested, call UN. 2-2552. (28b) Rehearsal Dinner For Wedding Party Mr. and Mrs. Walter Wainwright entertained the Palmer-Wainwright wedding party on the evening of Jan. 25th at the N.C.O. Club, Home stead AFB, Fla. Those attending were the bride to-be, Patsy Palmer, Mr. and Mrs Frank Palmer, Linda Smith, Vir ginia Douberley, Becky Thorn, Ed ward Wainwright, Donald Wain wright, Mr. and Mre Charles Ayers Ann Reece, Buddy Dunn and Mr. and Mrs. Walter Wainwright. Well fertilized quality hay for sale. Coastal Bermuda, $28.00 per ton; mixed grass, $25.00; Bahia $25.00 per ton. FRANK RILEY Butler, Ga. (2,8) UN. 2-4975 FOR SALE MORTGAGE LOANS TO PAY FOR CONSTRUCTION AND TO REFINANCE • HOMES • COMMERCIAL PROPERTY • FARM HOMES Current Rate of Dividends on Savings 4% PERRY FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION PERRY, GEORGIA PHONE GA 9-1522 MALCOLM REESE, Sec.-Treos. Large Red Hens at my farm: 90c Each. Get yours while the supply lasts. 12 or more delivered at $1.00 each. Joseph J. Harmon (281b) Phone UN. 2-4900 REPAIR SERVICE We repair all makes of Appli ances, Electrical and Plumbing Work. For prompt service, call: 1 DOYLE’S—Butler, Ga. ■ (213p) UN, 2-4415 j AVAILABLE AT ONCE Rawleigh business in Crawford county. Good opportunity. Experience helpful but not necessary. See Mrs. John John son. 127 Oak St., Ft. Valley, Ga,. or write at once. Rewleigh Dept. , GAB-810-102, Memphis, Tennessee. (2T3p) , SEPTIC TANK CLEANING i Cleaning Septic Tanks and lines serviced and repaired. Prompt, ef ficient service. Phone TA. 5-8244. P. O. Box 154, Fort Valley, Georgia. (r25’4pt v j An electron probe microanalyzer can analyze a speck of steel 40 millionths of an inch across. Health Department Booklet Predicts Needs Thru Next Few Years The nationwide population ex plosion is increasing the problems of public health and creating new opportunities and demands for pro fessional health workers in guard ing the health of the people. In a recent brochure, “A Look to the Future,” prepared by the Ga. Department of Public Health, Geor gia’s health needs for the next five years were listed as increasing serv ices in the areas of water and ra diation pollution, housing, rehabili tation, mental illness, rehabilitation of alcoholics, nursing homes and expansion of local health services. Examples of the increasing needs for services and personnel, as ex plained in the brochure, are high lighted by the fact that while vir tually no immunizations for civil defense purjposes were made in 1960 the predicted number required by 1967 will be 3,351.000. The expected number of home visits by public health nurses is 862,000 by 1967 as compared to 462,000 visits made in 1960. Other local health services will require comparable expan- pansions. Preservation of water resources from pollution is increasing in im portance as industry moves into the state and community needs ex pand. Additional chemists, aquatic biologists and other specialists will be needed to insure the best use of the state water supply for all citi zens. Radiation pollution from nuclear testing as well as commercial and medical use is aci area requiring increased surveillance. Trained emergency dadiological assistance teams will be needed to protect the public from these man made dan gers. Continuing community health programs are required in housing rehabilitation. The booklet points out that slum areas make up only 20 per cent of the average city’s resdential area but these bad housing neighborhoods represent a heavy drain on community re sources thru high disease and crime rates. The St^te Health Department must offer increasing services to the local communities in combating these problem.s Explaining how and why Geor gia’s future lies in the health of its citizens, copies of "A Look to the Future” are available from the Ga. Dept, of Public Health, 47, Trini ty Avenue, S. W., Atlanta, 3, Ga Fitzgerald Boy Shot After Grabbing Cash Fitzgerald, Ga. — A Negro teen ager was shot in the back Satur day night when he attempted to rob a filling station, police said. Albert Swanson was downed by a shotgun blast as lie ran across the street in front of the station with $900. According to police, the youM entered Tucker Service Station at 7:45 p. m. with a stocking over his face and brandished a 22-rifle. He ordered everybody to lie down on the floor and then made the own er, W. A. Tucker, open the cash register and give him the cash. Tucker gave him the money and then shot Swanson in the back with a shot gun as he ran across the street. Swanson was listed in poor condition at Ben Hill county memorial hospital. m m mm MU| jkJ “^^|epor#s From ISHIN CTO" THE LATEST civil rights bill introduced in Congress will, if passed, ride roughshod over two provisions of the Constitution and a Supreme Court decision and destroy the right of the states to determine the qualifi cations of their voters. Section 2 of Article I of the Constitution of the United States reads; “The House of Represents- atives shall be composed of members cho sen every sec ond year by the people of the several states, and the electors in each state shall have the qualifica tions requisite for electors of the most numerous branch of the Legislature.” Nothing is clearer in the Constitution than the above quotation—that the qualifications of electors shall be determined by each state. * * * IN 1913 THE 17th Amendment of the Constitution was adopted. It changed the method of elect ing Senators from the Legisla tures to a vote of the people within the states. The language in this Amendment is identical to that contained in Section 2 of Article I. This is the only clause in the Constitution that is repeated in two different sec tions. Even Earl Warren’s Supreme Court has upheld this right. As sociate Justic Douglas was the author of a unanimous decision of the U. S. Supreme Court in 1959 that affirms the right of each state to determine voter qualifications. Unfortunately, in our country many in high office have forgot ten constitutional principles. This is particularly true during election years. Many members in the Congress have made po litical careers by misleading the so-called minority voters in the name of civil rights. Since this is an election year, we must again face the civil rights issue. * * * THE MAJORITY Leader has now introduced a bill in the Congress that would completely disregard and violate the Con stitution. This potential legis lation would make a sixth grade education sufficient for voting qualifications throughout the country. The Constitution can be amended only by a vote of two-thirds of the Congress and ratified by three-fourths of the states. The Executive, Legisla tive and Judicial Branches all combined cannot amend the Constitution. Yet this bill would attempt to do so by legislation alone. It is inconceivable to me how anyone could attempt to surpass Earl Warren’s Supreme Court in striking down the few re maining rights of the states. The members of the Senate who feel as I do will exercise every weapon and resource at our com mand in fighting this unconstitu tional and vicious piece of pro posed legislation. ,2f T (not prepared or printed at government expense) t Taylor County Tax Books Are Now Open TO RECEIVE STATE AND COUNTY TAX RETURNS FOR THE YEAR 19(2 All persons owning property January 1, 1962, must report it for taxation purposes. In order to get the benefit of HOMESTEAD and PERSONAL EXEMPTION it will be neces sary for you to file your application on or be fore April 1, 1962. I will appreciate you calling by the Tax Commissioner’s Office the first time you are in the Court House and making your return. All Persons Selling Cartridges $ 5.00 All Persons Selling Fire Arms & Cartridges $15.00 Yours to serve, C. H. ADAMS Tax Commissioner, Taylor County, Georgia