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JUNIOR BASEBALL
SCORES TO JUNE 10
JUNE 1, 1960
VFW 200 030-5-3-4
Kiwanis 140 001-6-4-5
Mobley and Smith; F. Williams
and Hulbert; Winner, F. Williams;
Loser, Mobley.
Second Game
Lions 100 340-8-7-2
Roughton Bros. 000 070-7-3-3
Adams, Pierce (5) and Lowe; Lay
son and Irby; Winner, Adams; Lo
ser, Layson; H. R. Pierce, Martin.
JUNE 3, 1960
Andrew-McClendon 021 030-6-0-2
Tolleson 000 3104-4-1
Hathaway and Lockerman; Bes
singer and Watson; Winner, Hath
away; Loser, Bessinger.
Second Game
Roughton Bros. 200 111 004-9-13-1
Kiwanis 041 000 000-5- 94
Dismuke, Martin (7) and Irby,
Dennard (7), Mclntyre, Jackson
(7) and Hulbert; Winner, Martin;
Loser, Jackson. H. R.—Martin.
JUNE 6, 1960
Roughton Bros. 003 002-5-9-2
Tolleson 112 0004-5-0
J. Layson and Irby, Bessinger and
Baxley; Winner, Layson; Loser,
Bessinger; H. R. Dismuke.
Second Game
VFW 001 053-9-9-0
Andrew McClendon 000 041-54-1
Mobley and Smith; Cotton and
Lockerman. Winner, Mobley; Lo
ser, Cotton.
JUNE 8, 1960
Lions 300 000-3-2-3
VFW 010 0034-2-1
R. Collier, Adams (6) and Adams,
Lowe (6), Marshall and Smith;
Winner, Marshall; Loser, Adams.
Second Game
Kiwanis 001 1- 2-3-2
Roughton Bros. 314 3-11-5-1
F. Williams, Lee (3) and Hulbert,
Martin and Irby; Winner, Martin;
Loser, F. Williams.
JUNE 10, 1960
Andrew-
McLendon (10)00 402-16- 64
Kiwanis 252 312-15-13-3
W. McCarty and Lockerman, F.
Williams, Lee (1), Armstrong (5)
and Hulbert; Winner, McCarty;
Loser, F. Williams. H. R.: Arm
strong, F. Williams.
JUNE 10, 1960
Tolleson 004 000-4-2-1
Lions 015 12 -9 5-3
Dennard and Allen, Pierce, Adams
(3) and Adams, Lowe (3). Winner,
Adams; Loser, Dennard.
Standings as of June 10, I 960;
Team W L Pet.
Roughton Bros. 3 1 .750
Andrew-McLendon 2 1 .667
Lions 2 1 .667
VFW 2 1 .667
Kiwanis 1 3 .250
Tolleson 0 3 .000 1
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AKIN DRUG COMPANY
PHONE GA 9-2114
PERRY LOAN & SAVINGS BANK
THE FUTURE AND YOU!
DIEBOLD
INCORPORATED
(LVft too of
- »ni, '■■■ r" ——- ■' - ,IJI j
•urw TO MAKE
by this model of a small watershed in miniature which is on display at Camp Benjamin Hawkins this
week.
kale Model of Small Watershed
On Display at Boy Scouts' Camp
Newcomers Club
Conducts Meeting
The Newcomers Club of Perry I
held their June meeting at the I
home of Mrs. E. H. Colwell, Pine-j
ridge Drive.
Eight members were present.
Many members were vacationing
in Florida. Guests included Miss
Joyce Lee, Educational Director]
of the Perry Methodist Church,
Miss Lee’s mother, Mrs. Edith
Harvell of Florida and Mrs. Dottie
Deaton of Perry, formerly of
Spain.
A White Elephant Sale high
lighted the evening.
Delicious refreshments were
then served by hostesses Mrs.
Louise Turner and Mrs. Robbie
Meeks.
The next Newcomers Club meet
ing will be a supper on July 14.
Willis Huston, engineer, Agri-I
cultural Extension Service, says
water supply is the first and most
important factor to consider when
planning to irrigate.
BYRON—lllustrating the latest
step in the nation’s flood preven
tion program to reduce an annual
SSOO million loss, a scale model
lof a Small Watershed in minia
| ture is being displayed for more
I than 1100 Boy Scouts at Camp Ben
| Hawkins here for five days.
The model is provided by Allis-
Chalmers of Milwaukee, Wis.,
I through its Atlanta construction
i machinery branch. It shows what
can be accomplished for soil and
water conservation under the U. S.
Department of Agriculture’s
“Small Watershed” program, es
tablished under the 1954 Water
shed Protection and Flood Preven
tion act of Congress (PL-566).
Measuring approximately 5 feet
wide by 10 feet long, the model
represents in scale an actual area
of about two square miles or 1,280
acres. It shows a fully developed
“Small Watershed,” which is an
i area less than 250,000 acres drain
ed by a main stream and the
creeks and brooks which flow into
it. The watershed includes a drain
age divide, which is the ridge of
land between two regions drained
iby different river systems. Farms
and a small town populate the
area.
Byron in Drainage Basin
Byron, in fact, is right in the
middle of the huge drainage basin
of the Ocmulgee river. Located
near the headwaters of the Juni
: per Creek Watershed on the west
*
| KILN OR AIR DRIED
: Harold O. Baxter, forestry mar
keting specialist, Agricultural Ex
tension Service, describes air-dried
lumber as lumber which has been
dried by exposing it to air and
sunlight. Lumber dried in special
drying chambers under controlled
heat and moisture is referred as
kiln-dried lumber, he adds.
| and Sandy Run Creek Watershed
on the south, the Byron area
drains into the Ocmulgee byway
of these creeks.
Approximately 55 miles south
east of Byron, work is underway
on a real-life counterpart of this
model, the Little Creek Watershed
which drains the southeast comer
of Dodge county, emptying into
the Little Ocmulgee River. The ap
plication of this Watershed Asso
ciation, already approved by the
state, has been approved by the
USDA for planning.
The State of Georgia has ap
proved and sent some 60 Small
Watershed applications to the De
partment of Agriculture in Wash
ington for conservation.
CONGRATULATIONS TO
Perry Loan
& Savings Bank
ON THEIR NEW QUARTERS
*s. x x & >&****
-v. 40i
LONG ROW OF TELLERS WINDOWS IN BANK VIEW TOWARD OFFICES OF EXECUTIVES
We are proud to have been selected to furnish the bank fixtures and office
equipment for this beautiful new building.
AnWticarL
OL
OFFICE EQUIPMENT CO.
552 Mulberry Street MACON Phone SH 2-7548
GRADING-UP
“Grading-up” refers to the prac
tice of using purebred sires on fe-
CONGRATULATIONS TO
PERRY LOAN & SAVINGS BANK
ON ITS NEW AND SPACIOUS HOME
★ ★★★★★
We are proud to have had a part in the new
building by installing
LEE’S CARPETING
in the executive areas of the bank
MASSEE FURNITURE COMPANY
807 Carroll Street PERRY GA 9-2751
The Houston Home Journal, Perry, Ga., Thurs., June 16 iq^
males with the objective of im
. proving the herd and increasing
the uniformity and productivity of
-
■ the offspring, points out R a i nK
; Williams, animal husbandman T
• ricultural Extension Service ’ 8 ‘