Newspaper Page Text
PAGE 4
THE BUTLER HERALD, BUTLER, GEORGIA, MAY 10, 1962._
The Butler Herald
Ktttered at Post Office in Butler
Georgia as mail matter of
Second Class
Man Has Obligation Must Learn to Save On Retirement
Someone has said we can't con- ! Most American delay paying ffnding’ 0 employment
because of their age, insist that
affairs of State, but we can do or get their drivers’ licenses until i business and industry are making
wonderful things in that place the last possible time — and they
trol the universe. We can’t always taxes until the the last day.
make our voices heard in the great Most of them don’t buy a car tag
Chas. Ben ns, Jr., Business Mgr ___ „ .
Chas. Benns, Jr., Managing Editor where all ideas and hopes begin — don t pay their bills until the dead-
O. E. Cox, Publisher & Bus. Mgr. our homes.
The home is the foundation stone It has been said time and time
on which stable government is again that such things are “just a
founded and exists. Destroy the good old American trait.”
home and you destroy peaceful and Apparently there is another corn-
orderly government and create cha- m °n American trait which needs
os and anarchy.
I God himself ordained both home
and civil government, and recog -
OFFICIAL ORGAN TAYLOR CO.
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY
Average Weekly Circulation
Fifteen Hundred Copies
Phone: UN. 2-4485
changing:
Records in the Social
Board offices show that
there by pull, niced the necessity for each to out of every 100 Americans reaching
work in harmony with the other, the age of 65 do not possess as much
The Ten Commandments were giv- as $250 in actual cash savings.
It’s a real friend who likes you en as a guide to mankind for daily We are > thus, a spending nation,
in spite of all he kows about you. living. The “do” and “don’t” com- Whatever we may make in the way
serious mistake in stressing age
in connection with employment.
These “unwanted” workers de
nounce the "prejudice against age”
and assert that most older em
ployees, through the benefit of past
It’s Still True
You cannot strengthen the weak
by weakening the strong;
You cannot help the wage earner
by pulling down the wage
payer;
You cannot further the Brotherhood
of man by encouraging class
hatred;
You cannot help the poor by dis
couraging the rich;
experience, can be both productive y Q u cannot build character and
Some people get
■others by push.
mandments and the Sermon on the of earnings we spend. It applies
One doesn't need a garage for Mount, leave little to be desired, if usually to those who make mini-
those little foreign cars — just the mankind will follow the patterns mum and more substantial sal-
box they came in. laid down. ar ^
Tn«tf>art of trvine to control the *he Social Security Board has , , , ,
to blow out universe and conquer outer space, other figure^ which will open the ^h*! upon reding 66 year oldje-
and profitable to their employers.
They intimate that age, experience
Security and dependability are assets which I
about 85 often more than offset the pep, en-
thusiasm, exuberance and inex
perience of younger workers.
Now, with old age security and a
steadily extending program of in
dustrial pensions, the sociologists
are not quite sure that the desires j
of all people can be taken care of
by an old age pension.
There are many reports of work
ers, in all sections of the nation.
ourage by taking away man’s
initiative and independence.
—Abraham Lincol.n
DEFEND
FREEDOM
BUYU.S.
SAVINGS
mD lf
It isn’t necessary — — x
the other person’s candle in order man will find it more profitable to ol a “- They note that:
to let your own shine.—Lexington learn to control his own temper and Fw° cent of all Americans
■Christian.
tirement age, complain bitterly
about the assumption that they are
unfit to continue working. It seems
conquer the evil forces around him. a r« self-sustaining at age 65. | unfit continue worKln jj- u seem
He has an obligation to try and do Forty-five per cent of Americans j tha t t her f are P*°P* e
An exchange says: “A man owes both.—Exchange,
it to himself to become successful;
■■“"’'““'““ Be Lazy and Love It
Here’s your comforting thought
for today: The world changes so
fast that you couldn’t stay wrong
:all the time if you tried.
The world would be worked out of
Its troubles in no time if all of us
worked the way we think every
body else ought to work.
Our food budget now runs out
about the 20th of every month.
Seems like it’s about time they
changed the calendar.—The Elber-
ton Star.
How times have changed! Now
adays when the doctor finds a pa
tient in a run-down condition, he
presbribes, less golf and more time f or
at the office.
1
I
It’s wonderful to be lazy—if you
know how. It spares your heart,
saves your energy, relaxes your
mind—and you needn’t feel at all
guilty about it if you confine your
laziness to those approved ways,
recommended by a pschologist:
Be too lazy to frown, fidget, and
, worry.
| Don’t wear yourself out carrying
the needless weights of grudges,
prejudices and envy.
Listen more than you talk, and
see how much better you feel after
almost any meeting or gathering,
j Don’t run to catch a bus or trol
ley. The next one is better for your
heart.
Don’t rush for a bargain that
takes more out of you than it saves
your pocket book.
are dependent on relatives at that
time.
| Thirty per cent are dependent on
charity.
I Twenty-three percent (less than
one-fourth) continue to work after
65.
Which brings us right back to the
fact that 85 out of 100 Americans
have little or no cash reserve at 65,
and they are not ready for retire
ment financially, despite the possi
bility of having Social Security’
payments or some other small pen
sion due to start.
We Americans need to start some
systematic savings plan early —
regardless of the amount. We know
how to play but not to save.—
Moultrie Observer.
want to be forced to retire.
7 Ages of Woman
the
(and
Most girls don’t care whether
men have blue eyes or brown eyes
as long as they have “greenbacks”.
Someone has enumerated
seven ages of women thusly:
In her infancy she needs love
and care.
Inchildhood she wants fun
cash).
In her teen age she wants excite
ment (and cash).
In her twenties she wants ro
mance (and cash).
In her thirties she wants admira
tion (and cash).
In her forties she wants sympa
thy (and cash).
In her fifties she wants cash
(and more cash).
See by the papers where a wom
an filed suit for divorce because
her husband was careless about his
appeafctHfcd! He ’hadn’t shown up in
nearly two years.
Don’t criticize the work of oth
ers unless you want to do the work
—St. Albans Naval Hospital News, of others.
•THE SPRINGFIELD, ILLINOIS, BANK
WHERE LINCOLN DID HIS BANKING ■
DISPLAYS OLD LEDGER BOOKS
SHOWING THAT THE PRESIDENT'S
SAVINGS GREW FROM A FIRST
DEPOSIT OF *310 MADE MARCH 1,1853
TO A HIGH POINT OF *9,048.64 AT
THE TIME OF HIS ASSASSINATION.
: Don’t knock yourself out trying
to park your car in a space too
small for a scooter. Better to pay
a parking fee at a lot than a bill
at a hospital.
Don’t bother to quarrel over
small things—like a card game.
; Let the other fellow think he’s
The language of tones belongs right when it really doesn’t mat-
equally to all mankind, and melo- ter.
dy is the absolute language in Conserve your mental muscles for
which the musician speaks to every things that count, and never both-
heart.—Richard Wagner. er to wrestle with the inevitable,
the imponderable, or the insignifi-
When you hear a fellow recom- i can t- Journal of Lifetime Living,
mending his honesty highly, you
better take a firmer grip on your State and district 4-H Club events
own pu.se and have no business are staged each year to give 4-H
dealings with him. Truer words Club members a chance to demon-
never spoken, Bro. Moore.
According to the Chamber of
Commerce of the United States, our
government spending has grown so
fast that in a 15-month period it
would be sufficient to buy up ev
erything that Soviet Russia pro
duced in one year, including fi
nancing the Russian armed
and all of their missile work.—
Screven County News.
strate their accomplishments and
receive recognition for jobs well
! done.
i
Did you know that the hidden
taxes, known as the painless kind,
are being paid by all citizens and
the “pinch” is said to be increasing
all the time as politicians think of
forces more jobs for friends to fill.
| Travel Highlights j
■Romantic, semi-tropical islands
' have stirred men’s imaginations
j since the days of the Roman Emper-
: ors. Many became personal play,
j grounds tor men of wealth and
i power or served as secret lairs for
sea-going pirates who ranged the
seas in search of plunder. But here
in the United States, once exclusive }
islands, richly steeped in historic
lore, have unlocked their doors to
•■■welcome vacationers of every eco-
Tsmmic level. Most scenic of these
mtreats is Jekyll Island off the
Georgia coast where the infamous
pirate Edward Teach, better known
as Blackbeard, is reputed to have
buried a golden treasure—and pos
sibly a few of his crew.
lekyll Island, once owned exclu*
sively by the Rockefeller, Vander
bilt and Morgan
irpMgJ families, now
Wrjafcfr* ft welcomes visi-
«- tors from every
r. state. Thousands
of motorists en
joy the island’s
scenic splendors
,'Jix each year —
seeking buried pieces of eight while
■vacationing at winter motels whose
rates range as low as $4 per day!
In the Gay ’Nineties, an exclusive
millionaires’ club selected Jekyll
Island as their ideal winter resort,
according to Fred Zapico, manager
of Jekyll Island’s famed 280 room
Wanderer Resort Motel.
Today, however, Jekyll Island is
-a Georgia state park and wild life
preserve. It abounds in serene, un
spoiled white-sand beaches, wild
life, secluded camping sites and hik
ing paths. Added to this backdrop
are such modern tourist touches as
a championship golf course, res
taurants, heated indoor swimming
pools and the like—all available to
motel guests.
The Wanderer Resort Motel is
typical of the modern hostelries that
cater to the thousands of tourists
uhat visit the island each year. Com
plete with 4 swimming pools, ter-
Ta'cCd rooms and stately palms, it
faces, a spotless Atlantic beach.
The Wanderer’s very name typifies
Jcljyll Island’s fascinating history.
Fk>r Jekyll was the site of the land
ing of The Wanderer, the last ship
to carry slaves to the U.S. in 1858
and, according to many historians,
one of the igniting sparks of the
War Between the States. ’
| Some of the more than 1,100 Ga.
veterans waiting for direct VA
. loans to buy or build homes may
I get their applications approved
j soon after July 2, Ga. Veterans
‘Service Director Wheeler says.
j More than 300 Boy Scouts and
I Adult leaders from Georgia and
j South Carolina will gather for an
! Order of the Arrow meeting near
j;Clayton May 4-6 as guests of Mow-
ogo Lodge and the Northeast Ga.
Council.
| The lumber industry ranks fourth
I among all manufacturing industries
] in the number of persons employ
ed. In the South alone, several mil
lion pepole owe their livelihoods,
'directly or indirectly, to the man-
'ufacture, distribution and use of
lumber according to Extension For
estry Marketing Specialist.
Congressman E. L. Forrester, vet
eran Third District Representative
i in Washington, has qualified with
the State Democratic Executive
Committee to seek re-nomination
in the Sept. 12th Democratic Pri
mary. Mr. Forrester is seeking his
seventh consecutive term in the
House of Representatives.
The Sparta Ishmaelits recently
celebrated its 84th birthday. It is
now the oldest business in Sparta
and Hancock County in uninter
rupted operation. For many years
we have esteemed the Ishmaelite
as one of the most outstanding
newspapers in Georgia and join
countless other friends in wishing
for the Sparta weekly many more
years of splendid service to the
citizens of Hancock and adjoining
counties.
CARL. SANDERS
TO THE VOTERS OF GEORGIA:
T o give Georgian. -hole.
announced my in the September !^ ^ ^ positive
the people » * program o£ honeaty,
^amoctattc^ * u^aucce^.^. to the people.
morality and effective
'iong^crippled Georgiele^Pteltee-^^-^VQp^of^Georgia^e action
''*^L*^ved”«dSdh‘et«tion t on i ?he part o£ State. County
and
diB ': T T5 t progress beio^ ST«-JK*
Which have for so
How
real
and improved
City government:a.
tnrpUi=“"”«£^
stoSSSS — sw** the £e ”’ 8t
?he n txpense of the many. __ ^ fec dccid ed v
There is one * ^CoverSc•s^ce this year:
by the voter, in the G peop ie of
Which candidate wil g onestt morally
Georgia a competent^ ^ worthw hile
responsible, ei
well ^* 0 ?£rt’
administration?
o£ Georgia
’
Alieving that the voters o backing .
or CARL SANDERS, I " oC S«ry Georgran^ women voter..
rfhile^here^areeeveral^candidate^^’^^’^^^ra^and^major? 1 -? *
ami deaerve.
o£ government P ^ ^ victory a reality
With your h ®J p ’ "pie of Georgia a lasting rec-
ognition
Sincerely, )
Carl Sanders
Willis Red & White
Super Market
Butler, Georgia
New Building
New Equipment
New Merchandise
TO OPEN SOON!
Wm
SANDERS for GOVERNOR
STATE CAMPAIGN HEADQUARTERS
■
DINKLER-PLAZA HOTEL • ATLANTA, GEORGIA