Newspaper Page Text
Camp Says Ike’s
Speech Points To
Permanent Peace
President Eisenhower’s speech to
the American Cociety of Newspaper
Editors outlines the broad basis for
permanent peace, Congressman Sid
ney Camp says in a letter to constit
uents. Writing from Washington
#
April 18, Mr. Camp said:
The address delivered by President
Eisenhower Thursday at the assembl
ed American Society of Newspaper
Editors was his first public utterance
on our foreign policy since his inaug
uration three months ago, but it may
easily become known as his greatest
speech.
In this momentous declaration of
American aims for peace all the free
world will take heart and derive
great hope for a correct and perman
ent solution of the many problems
barring the road to real peace. I be
lieve that if this message of the Pres
ident could reach the mases of the
Russian people, such pressure would
be brought upon the powers of that
country that prompt, movement tow
ard peace would begin. After point
ing out the awful cost of military
armament and showing what the
money now being spent for armament
could do toward health and happiness
of the world, he makes this state
ment, “Every gun that is made, every
warship launched, every rocket fired
signifies—in the final sense— a theft
from those who hunger and are not
fed, those who are cold and are not
clothed.’’
Speaking of meaning of armistice i
and stating that aggression and strife
in Korea, liulo-China and on the
Malayan Peninsula should end si
multaneously, he stated, it should
mean—no less important—an end to
direct and indirect attacks upon the
security of Indo-China and Malaya.
For any armistice in Korea that
merely releases aggressive armies to
attack elsewhere would be a fraud.”
where would be a fraud.”
Calling for free elections to estab
ish governament in a “reunited
iorea” and a reunited Germany, he
is expressing the views of a great
majority of thinking men in the free
world.
Truly this speech of the President
could and should be the pattern for
I
long and lasting peace.
MOTHER OF MRS. L. W. HARDY
DIED IN WEST PALM BEACH
Friends of Mr. and Mrs. L. W.
Hardy and family sympathize with
them in the death of Mrs. Hardy’s
mother, Mrs. R. E. McClaren, which
occurred Thursday, April 16. In West
Palm Beach, Fla. Funeral services,
attended by Mrs. Hardy and son,
Billy, were held Saturday.
LET PROGRESS-ARGUS WANT
ADS SELL FOR YOy
ST. JOHNS LODGE NO. 45
F. A A. M., Jackson, Ga.
• Regular meetings first
and third Mondays at 7
30 p. m. in Masonic hall.
Visiting brothers cordial
ly invited.
Master Secretary
Walter Harris R. A. O’Quinn
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W. A. Faulkner
Taken By Death
William Arnold Faulkner, 71, re
siding on the Jackson-Barnesville
road, died Friday at the home of
his granddaughter, Mrs. Sara Mc-
Bride.
Funeral services were held Sunday
at 3 p. m. at Towaliga Baptist
Church. Rev. Bill Coleman and Rev.
J. C. Rowan officiated and burial
was in the churchyard under the
direction of Haisten Funeral Home.
Mr. Faulkner was born in Butts
county and was a retired farmer. He
was a member of Liberty Baptist
Church.
Survivors are two daughters, Mrs.
Littie Howard of Barnesville; Mrs.
Maggie Thornton of Griffin; one
son, John W. Faulkner of Goggins;
a step-daughter, Mrs. H. W. Hobbs;
a step-son, A. G, Wilder of Locust
Grove; one sister, Mrs. Artie Willis
of Warner Robins; four brothers,
J. E. Faulkner of Barnesville; Robert
Faulkner, Smith Faulkner, Grover,
all of Jackson; eleven grandchildren
and four great-grandchildren.
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THE JACKSON PR OGRESS- ARGUS, JACKSON, GEORGIA
Jackson Couple
Has Close Call
During Storm
Butts county relatives and friends
are congratulating Mr. and Mrs.
George Wiley Stratford in their close
AUCTION
JACKSON LAKE
HIGHWAY 3t JACKSON TO COVINGTON
Saturday, May 2,1953 - 2:00 P. M. on the Premises
42 Beautiful Lots on South River. Paved Highway to Property. Best Fishing on Jackson Lake
Where the Willow Bugs Are Thickest.
LOTS WILL BE SOLD TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER
PIEDMONT REALTY & INSURANCE AGENCY
JACKSON, GA. PHONE 7108
call from the destructive storm that
hit the Columbus area Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Stratford reside at
Waverly Hall, and Mrs. Stratford, the
former Miss Jane Collins who teaches
in Atlanta and spends the weekends
at Waverly Hall, were visiting Mr.
Stratford’s sister in Columbus when
the storm struck with destructive
fury. They were enroute home when
trees begin to fall all around them
and power lines were blown down by
the strong wind. Fortunately they
escaped injury and the only damage
was a slight dent in the car’s fenders.
Saturday afternoon’s storm in the
southwest Georgia area was one of
the worst in years. Loss of life was
small but property damage enormous.
It. is estimated that 3,000 people
THURSDAY, APRIL 23. 1953
were left homeless and the R ed Cr
rushed aid to the stricken areas'*
Georgia and Alabama.
The marriage of Mr. and
Stratford was an event of April i
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