Newspaper Page Text
pfrrv, ELK° boys
Si; DEAN’S LIST
' William Felton White of Perry
J William Leon Ragan Jr. of
£lko were among 85 students at
Guaranteed 3 Per Cent
INTEREST
On Savings Accounts
PERRY LOAN & SAVINGS
BANK
■- ■''■■'■' ' "'
A wishing well isn't enough
when you want new industry
YOU’RE NOT LIKELY to get a new industry simply
by tossing a coin into the cool depths of a wishing
well. That’s why more and more Georgia com
munities are calling on the resources of the Georgia
Power Company’s industrial development staff.
Last year this group helped to locate 158 new
manufacturing and processing plants in 84 towns
throughout Georgia. These plants represent SB3
million in capital investment, 7,000 jobs, and s2l
million in annual payroll.
Our industrial development representatives help
Georgia communities to grow and prosper. They
are working hard to make this year’s record even
better than last year’s.
GEORGIA POWER COMPANY
A CITIZEN WHEREVER WE SERVE
« i
Now—Run Your Cor
Without Spark Plugs-
Get Up to 31 More Horse-Power, 8 More Miles per Gallon
USING ONLY REGULAR GAS!
Yes this revolutionary new FIRE INJECTION SYSTEM ?;? .. CHEC^ HES I ! I )I !™^ ES ?I
installed in 15 minutes, must deliver maximum power and J
economy WITHOUT CHANGING TO HIGH-PRICED PRE- | g&J* f ||g|
MIUM GAS must give you up to 31 more H. P., 8 more ■ J
miles per gallon for the life of your car! See unprecedented spark plug firi injector -
GUARANTEE below! Fire* ■ cros * air gap NO air gap required J.■
* Wire electrode burns NO wire electrode
away .... ►
Carbon ruins firing tip NO tip deterioration
Save up to 6 cents per gallon. Ne se d tting eaning and N 0 tvVr nlng cr * e,tin| * ‘
Needs periodic replacing NO replacing
Needs premium gas NO premium gas needed
_ __ __ __ _ __ ___ __ __ _ _
I range
RISK’S SALES COMPANY ( Sparrows out under NO blowing out p ev.n,.t t
I 756 Carro “ f o 5 m ’ J y e SJwiii «•<»* ••"«> mt
Yes, I want new pep, power and performance from my automooue. & GUARANTEE - INSURANCE - INDEMNITY %
□ On« matched set of 6SA FIRE INJECTORS for $8.94 YEAR f-/ Tak« your of SA FIRE INJECTORS ond jg
Q One matched set of BSA FIRE INJECTORS for? 11.92 AAAKE •»##••••« ■ | 1 (ft install them immediately; then, give your rg
I n Sinale SA FIRE INJECTORS (Number )at $1.49 each # CYS I B w injection system every lest you can |g
I u single SA rIRE INJtciUK3 irtumo. MODEL B think of .. . storting - acceleration - gas 5N
□ - . .... INJECTORS Pi Send •"/ SA EIRB R r.', mileage - motor pep and smoothness for gj
Enclosed Is the full price for the 5A TIKE mjcv-ivno INJECTORS C.O.D. I Rto full days. You must get up to 31 mote W
lam ordering. You will oav the postage. 10-day money* 1 [•'. horsepower -up to 8 more miles p*'
back guarantee. I will G gallon - increased engine RPMs - fatter
I oay for the postag* I K storting, biasing oceelorotion, freedom eg
and C.O.D. charges. > r-< from knocks and pings, easier starting m Hi
1 el -1* all kinds of weather . . . AND DO ALL Os
■ JU I Bi THESE THINGS ON REGULAR GAS, Os Ai
lemlllalfti £ rOU G£T YOUR MG NEY BACK. fl
NAME ..Hi **** enclosed! j | G A » ,on « 05 ,he SA fIRE INJECTORS are in K
I -Ta mili.. □ Check I I R your car you ore covered by a PRODUCT £
ADDRESS W H'O./i S LIABILITY INSURANCE POLICY, endorsed ||
.... ..•*■ I ... n Cash H ■ Rby an inlernotlonolly famous insurance if-:
I CITY. MlMlltttvMMf|Ml#tta ,,„ 9 ti,us ZONE.,,i sTAl>ttssU-tf I g(, company. A detailed description of this
Li — — __ mm “ S coverage is yours on request. yd
“ g |f any SA fIRE INJECTOR does not con-1
B linue to deliver maximum performance
Z, for the life of your cor, we wilt replace yg
m j-/ it fREE, or we will replace your igni'
■ _ ■ 11 gi, system with a set of brand new standard rg
■ _ m f ■ M V American plugs. Simply return your SA C
If ION m. Tllllw I _■ I R f IRE INJECTORS with your guarantee
|||\|| S OdlCd wUI |
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756 CARROLL ST., BOX 325, PERRY, GA.
Middle Georgia College who were
named to the Dean’s List for the
winter quarter. An average of 85
or better is required for the Dean’s
List.
White is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. W. F. White anti Ragan is the
son of Mr. and Mrs. Leon Ragan
of Henderson.
In 1958, 4,000 children under 15
years of age died of cancer. Leuke
mia accounted for about half of
these deaths. Help research find
ways to prevent and cure cancer
and leukemia. Give to the Ameri
can Cancer Society’s 1959 Crusade.
COOPER ETHERIDGE
Fire ants, they tell us, have in
vaded Houston county and I can’t
help but wonder if that is not
what got hold of me one dark
night in Texas.
It felt like it.
I was a special agent of the
FBI at the time, assigned to the
Houston field division. The San
Antonio office called the Houston
office and wanted two radio equip
ped cars for an extortion case sur
veillance. The boss at Houston
picked two of us guys who had
just arrived in Houston, figuring
that SOMEBODY had to drive the
cars over to Austin, so it might as
well be these two green agents.
Someone had written to the pre
sident of a railroad and threatened
I to blow up the railroad if he didn’t
put $50,000 in “a varmint hole” at
a certain spot near Austin. The
railroad official had called the
FBI and the usual extortion case
procedures were put in motion.
Arrangements were made to put
a package that resembled money
in the “varmint hole” as directed.
Then the place was to be “cover
ed” by agents in hiding in the vi
cinity.
I was one of the “lucky” agents
who drew an assignment to lay out
in the pasture nearby. As I recall,
we took our places about 4 o’clock
in the morning, under cover of
darkness, and plenty of darkness.
I was fortified with a half pint of
water, two chocolate bars and a
greasy ham sandwich I bought
from a local “greasy spoon” before
we left. And, of course, the .38
revolver.
By 3 o’clock that afternoon, I
had no more water, no more cho
colate bars and no more sandwich.
I was hungry and thirsty and tired
of watching the vicinity of the
“varmint hole”. A few cows came
up to the bush I was using for
cover and looked at me as if I was
wacky. And you get to feel that
way sometimes on these surveil
lances.
Nothing happened all day and
since our instructions were to
come out of hiding about 9 o’clock
that night and have some other
agents take our places, I moved
out in the darkness toward the
highway. Evidently, the other guys
had got tired before I did, for I
could not see any of them.
Since you don’t leave anything
around one of these “plants” (so
called because the fake money
package is “planted”), I had in my
shirt the greasy paper sack which
had held my sandwich. I lay on
the ground near the road for about
a minute.
A minute was too much. Before
I could realize what was happening
a million ants swarmed all over
my chest and tummy and started
biting me so fast I couldn’t jump
enough. Off came my shirt and I
started scratching those “hot”
bites as I moved out on the road
—deserting my post. I found a
i radio car about a mile down the
: road and they took me to town,
where I had a chill in a hot shower
at the State Police barracks and
went to bed about midnight.
At 5 o’clock the next morning,
they routed me out of a very
sound sleep and put me in a radio
car to be parked about a mile from
the “varmit hole.”
Nothing happened until about
4 o’clock that lonely Saturday af
ternoon, when a 65-year-old man
showed up at the “varmint hole”
and looked in it, but he didn’t
look long for there were a half
dozen agents around him and he
was quickly taken into custody.
He admitted later that he had
written the letter and “didn’t
i know why I did it.”
FBI agents learn that screwballs
usually pick a weekend or a holi
day to set up their crazy extortion
schemes.
But ants do not usually figure in
the deal.
After 18 years I would sort of
; like to go back to that ant hill and
; pour some very strong ant killer
; right in the middle of it.
FOR THE BIRDS: A fellow calls
his wife a bird—watches him like
a hawk.
! SAD STORY: The State is in a
! financial crisis, we don’t have
! enough money to put good school
busses on the roads, our mental
- hospital lacks adequate funds, our
' roads are tearing up and our
. schools need more money, and you
■ don’t have to wonder why with all
the graft and corruption of the
last state administration. And the
i stealing has been done in the name
of “politics”. A lot of people say
, you’ve got to expect that in poli
: tics. We just don’t see why we’ve
: got to take that kind of thievery
. in the name of politics, or in any
I other name.
i
; STREET SCENES: Trash truck
| flying down Swift Street with
trash flying all over the street.
. Tourist car with bare feet sticking
up in windshield,
i
1 WHAT AN EASTER! Sunday
i probably took the prize as the
! worst day of the winter and spring
’ (?) with rain falling on Easter
! bonnets all day long. Look for
t some nice Easter outfits next Sun
- day. Many didn’t get a chance to
wear them last Sunday.
I
) NOTICE TO DEBTORS
: AND CREDITORS:
f Georgia, Houston County
i All creditors of the Estate of
, Nancy Elizabeth Corder, late of
Houston County, Georgia, deceas
’ ed, are hereby notified to render
1 in their demands to the undersign
ed according to law, and all per
sons indebted to said estate are re
- quired to make immediate pay
r ment to us.
, March 2, 1959.
L Mrs. Clyde Jones Peacock
Calvin Arthur Kirkland
Executors of the Will of
Nancy Elizabeth Corder, de
ceased 6tc. 3-5.
\ .
; Cancer is the leading cause of
: death among American women
I aged 30 to 54. More lives could be
) saved if every woman had a com
[ plete physical checkup at least
’ once a year. Support the American
I I Cancer Society’s 1959 Crusade.
The Houston Home Journal, Perry, Ga., Thurs., April 2, 1959
MISS YATES AND MR. SATTERFIELD
TO BE WED IN NEWNAN ON APRIL 11
The engagement of Miss Betty
Jean Yates, daughter of Mrs. Lu
cille Lewis Yates and the late Har
vey Jerome Yates of Newnan, and
George Harrison Satterfield, son of
Mr. and Mrs. John M. Satterfield
of Perry is announced today.
Miss Yates is a graduate of New
nan High School and is employed
by Southern Bell Telephone Com
pany of Newnan.
Mr. Satterfield is a graduate of
Perry High School and attended
Middle Georgia College. He served
three years in the U. S. Army. Mr.
Satterfield is employed by Gener
al Motors Acceptance Corporation
at Newnan.
The wedding will be solemnized
at the First Baptist Church of
Newnan Saturday, April 11, with
members of the immediate fami
lies attending.
SALE OF LAND
Georgia, Houston County,
Will be sold under the powers
in a deed from Wesley S. Calver
ley to I. L. Nix dated November
29, 1957, later transferred to Nix
& Company, Incorporated, record
ed in the Clerk’s Office, Houston
Superior Court, during legal hours
of sale on April 7, 1959, before the
courthouse door in said county,
at public outcry, to the highest
bidder for cash, the following pro
perty: All that tract or parcel of
land lying and being in Robins
View Subdivision, located in Hous-;
ton County, Georgia, two miles
north from the center of Warner
Robins, Georgia, and being desig
nated as Lot 3, Block “B” of Ro
bins View Subdivision, traced by
Leroy Halbrook, Registered Sur
veyor No. 991 and dated June 28,
1956,, this map was compiled from
maps made by T. L. Ellis dated
April 17, 1952 and revised Oct.
28, 1955, the other dated June 13,
1953. The aforementioned plat is
hereby incorporated into and made
; a part of this description. Said lot
has such shapes, courses, metes,
bounds and distances as are shown
on the aforementioned plat.
Default occured in the monthly
installment due March 1, 1958, Ap- 1
,v: f
Wssk ........ jJtbs.:: sS&Sfc %WtiML
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I “Buyers prefer my I
| ORTHOCIDE treated peaches” 1
“I was the first to use ORTHOCIDE in this area and find in my road
side stand that the buyers prefer my ORTHOCIDE treated peaches
over others,” reports Horace E. Settle of Inman, S. C. “Color always
sells better and ORTHOCIDE gives them the color. This increases
my profits.”
Don't delay—start an ORTHO program todayl This report is
just one of hundreds received from leading fruit growers who have found
I that ORTHOCIDE (captan) in an ORTHO program has improved color,
B finish and keeping qualities of their fruit. This outstanding fungicide
ORTHOCIDE (captan) provides exceptionally fine particle sizes, better
■ Sticking and wetting agents. Ask your nearest ORTHO Fieldman how
| ORTHOCIDE in an ORTHO program can increase your crop profits, tool
I (ortho) S
I Helping the World Grow Better I
California Spray-Chemical Corp. . A subsidiary of California Chemical Cq, I
P. O. Box 876, Columbia, 8. 0,
1.». Ml. «. «. MT. HM imho, nnMuL mtu wniwt, uu waMnoiu m wornm umi Ulfei
There Is an ORTHO Fieldman In this area to help you... B
KERSEY BROS., CENTERVILLE RD., GA 9-2074 OR
t Phone right now;.. i
NEIL YOUNGBLOOD I
1 Call 5709 (thomaston) J
■>: • :
- ,^j^l
MISS BETTY JEAN YATES
ril 1, 1958, May 1, 1958, June 1,
1958, July 1, 1958, August 1, 1958,
September 1, 1958, October 1, 1958,
November 1, 1958, December 1,
1958, January 1, 1959, February 1,
1959 and March 1, 1959, thereupon
the entire debt was declared due
and payable and the power of sale
contained in said deed became op
erative.
Sale will be held, deed made and i
proceeds thereof distributed in
strict compliance with the terms
of said deed.
NIX AND COMPANY, Inc.
| Mrs. Mary Mann Smith,
Attorney at Law
4tc 3-12.
FARM FIRE LOSSES
Agricultural engineers at the
Agricultural Extension Service re
port estimated losses of farm pro
perty in the U. S. by fire in 1958
increased $4 million over 1957.
Total loss livestock, machinery,
and crops, as well as buildings,
included—was $156 million in 1958
as compared with $152 million in
1957.
COMPLETE LINE OF OFFICE
SUPPLIES AT HOME JOURNAL
1 STEER FEEDING
Many authorities recognize steer
feeding as perhaps the most risky
phase of beef cattle production, de
clares Ralph Williams, animal hus
bandman, Agricultural Extension
Service. When skill is applied in
steer feeding it usually is profita
ble—often very profitable, Wil
liams adds.
J "4 / ■
M 4 a H
Save TIME I
and LABOR! I
With CALORIZED ALL- I
MASH LAYER you S
feed 20 per cent less m
feedl That's 20 per 1
cent less feed to 1
handle! And that's why ■
you'll make important f
savings in time and
labor with CALORIZED S
ALL-MASH LAYERI |
BIG INDIAN FEED
MILL, INC.
- PERRY, GEORGIA