Newspaper Page Text
•-. is - -
Bl|bP
HH|
«di mam, -
M ■.■;*■■•' «<
i
■ :■
iHk
Hk
wfe, 'titifWzsMiit
J«
C. D. LEVERETTE
Leverefle Heads
Ist Baptist Men;
Mr. Luce Speaks
Members of the Brotherhood of
the First Baptist Church Tuesday
night elected C. D. Leverette as
president, Horace Langston vice
president and B. W. Bozeman,
secretary.
Mr. Leverette succeeds Clifton
Athon when the new church year
begins Oct. 1.
George Luce, president of Blue
Bird Manufacturing Company of
Fort Valley, who recently traveled
to Africa and Egypt, was the guest
speaker. He served as a missionary
to Africa for five years.
“The communists, if they take
over America, will make Eich
mann look like a piker,” Mr. Luce
said. “They have said that they
will have to liquidate 60 million
Americans when they take over
this country.”
He said the communists have
done everything so far that they
have promised to do, and have fol
lowed Lenin’s program of encir
cling the U. S.
“Have we already had the re
volution?” Mr. Luce asked. “Lenin
said America will fall by dropping
into our hands like fruit from a
tree, and Russia won’t have to
fire a shot.”
Mr. Luce said America ought
not to keep wasting its resources,
apparently referring to foreign
aid, and said both the New Deal
and the New Frontier are social
istic administrations which help
the cause of the communists.
He said that Ed Beck, former
Fort Valley basketball star who
toured the Orient, was told by a
young Chinese that “the commun
ists will take over America and I
have asked them to give me Fort
Valley.” The Chinese student
claimed the reds will take over
America by 1970, Mr. Luce said.
He was introduced by Avon
Buice.
PUBLIC SALE OF
REAL ESTATE
Georgia, Houston County
Under the powers in a deed
from Grady W. Parker to Jim Wal
ter Corporation dated Jan. 6, 1961
recorded in Deed Book 143, Folio
232-233, Clerk’s Office, Houston
Superior Court, the same having
been duly transferred and assign
ed to the undersigned transferee,
there will be sold during the legal
hours of sale on October 3, 1961,
before the courthouse door in said
County, at public outcry, to the
highest bidder for cash, the fol
lowing property:
All that tract or parcel of land
lying in Houston County, Georgia,
to wit: In Land Lot 178, sth Land
District, and being known as Lots
Nos. 57 and 58 and 59 in a Sub
division known as Norman Park,
according to a survey plat thereof
made by W. Henry Watterson, Re
gistered Surveyor No. 398, on
January 13, 1960, and recorded in
Map Book 6, folio 77, Clerk’s Of
fice, Houston County Superior
Court. The above-described lots
have such metes, bounds, dimen
sions and shapes as shown by the
above-described plat. The above
described lots are conveyed sub
ject to certain restrictive coven
ants this day executed by the
grantors herein and recorded in
the Clerk’s Office, Houston Super
ior Court.
Default having occurred under
the terms of the note secured by
said deed, and the holder having
elected to declare the entire debt
due and payable, the power of
sale contained in said deed has
become operative.
Sale will be held, deed made
and proceeds thereof distributed
in strict compliance with the
terms of said deed.
MID-STATE HOMES, INC.
Transferee
William K. Buffington,
Attorney
Macon, Georgia 4tc. 9-7.
Sales of cottage cheese in the
United States last year were 21
per cent greater than the yearly
average for the five preceding
years, report Extension dairy mar
keting specialists.
Safety Deposit
Boxes for Rent
PERRY LOAN AND
SAVINGS BANK
Perry, Georgia
Tolleson’s Purchase of Fitzgerald
Mill Boosts that City's Economy
From Fitzgerald Herald
\ The local economy, dealt a stag
• gering blow when the Rountree-
Hunter Lumber Co. saw mill ex
j ploded in flames in December, was
] given a substantial boost here this
, week with the announcement of
the purchase and complete reno
i vation of the large mill by Tolle
| son Lumber Co., Inc.
1 J. M. (Buddy) Tolleson Jr. of
Ocilla, vice president and general
manager of the enterprise, anti
cipates one of South Georgia’s lar
| gest and most modern mills here.
Maintaining a second mill in
Perry, Tolleson is moving its Mys
tic and Alapaha operations to
Fitzgerald. A complete moderni
zation of the mill is underway.
“We believe strongly in paint,”
smiled the vice president. As he
spoke, one could see painters at
work all over the sprawling lum
Woodruff’s ar—hit the budoet-bullseye with...
LISTEN TO COACH HERB ST. JOHN'S FOOTBALL ROUNDUP ON "HERB'S CORNER" AT 5:15 EACH FRIDAY, WPG A
HOUSTON LAKE DRIVE, PERRY, GA. "WHERE YOUR FOOD DOLLAR BUYS MORE" SPECIALS FOR THURS., FRI., SAT., SEPT 14-15-16
Market Manager’s Select BEEF SALE
GOOD TENDER GOOD JUICY LEAN
ROUND OR T-BONE SIRLOIN STEAK RIB AND BRISKET
STEAK lb. 69c lb. 59t | STEW lb. 29c 1
LEAN MEATY FRESH PURE GOOD LEAN LEAN TENDER
CHUCK ROAST GROUND BEEF RIB STEAK CUBED STEAK
lb. 39c lb. 39c lb. 49c lb. 79c
Good Tender Pound jjffi ■■■ j
Rump or Shoulder Roast 59c I OITIOtOGS
Lean First Cut % j|pF-Li'-.Ma 31)3 4k &
PORK CHOPS lb. 39c Sjl «. lIK
H. & G. A v : ' Louisanna Red
WHITING FISH 10 111 b “ $r y HOT SAUCE 6-oi.bot.loc
Fresh Produce!
GREEN LIMAS 3 cans 39c
CAGLE'S GRADE A Vine Ripe
: Regular 25c Package TOMATOES lb. 15c
POTATO CHIPS ptlß, l9c FRYERS
J Mi'X 3 IL. 9Qf
MEAL zenith 2 i 10c
— CORN 5 ears 29c
PIMFAPPI F hartex No - 2 9Qf
rillLHllLC tllfFD can U. S. No. I White
POTATOES 10 M 37c
SYRUP SIGNET £ 45C
— —rrr- LEMONS
Coca-Colas - 19* dozen 19C
ber yard. “It’s really quite a small
- part of our overall plan,” he ad
- ded, “but we intend to have an
- attractive industry here, too.”
s Fresh paint seems to be a symbol
s of the Tolleson attitude.
As the painters slung their
brushes over the business office,
the boiler plant and the dry kiln,
widespread progress was in the
f making.
Under construction was a new
green chain and Canadian trim
mer, which sorts and separates
lumber at the unloading point ac
-1 cording to length, width and
■ grade. This machine will be per
> forming its production miracles
■ within three weeks, Mr. Tolleson
anticipates. And nearby will be
’ the new dipping vats.
> Within 60 days a completely
t new electric saw mill will be
■ constructed. Already the ground
has been leveled for the improved
facility, which will replace the
steam operated mill which burn
ed in December.
Plans also call for replacing a
large lumber of storage shed and
for the construction of an addition
al shed. The entire area around
the mill has been cleared and lev
eled. A new lumber loader is not
the least of the new equpiment
already in operation under the
new owners.
Also incuded in immediate plans
is the complete remodeling of the
planing mill.
The mill was purchased from
the E. T. Dunn estate in 1946 by
the Campbell Coal Company. It la
ter burned and was replaced with
a $250,000 plant. In 1951 H. R.
Redwine purchased the mill from
the Campbell Coal Co., and when
the saw mill burned in one of the
most spectacular fires December
9, it was owned by Mrs. Redwine,
Felton Davis and Wilbur Roun
tree.
Mr. Tolleson expects to get new
operations underway with 50-60
i men at the outset. The production
goal has been set at approximately
two million feet of fully manufac
tured lumber a month.
Tolleson Lumber Co., Inc., is
one of Georgia’s oldest lumber
manufacturers. It has maintained
its operation in Houston County
since 1919, which today features
a Wolmanized treating plant. “We
have every reason to expect a sim
ilar record of longevity in Fitz
gerald,” Mr. Tolleson said.
The Tolleson mills in South
Georgia have produced 120-130
million feet of lumber in the past
ten years, at a rate of a million
feet per month. They are current
ly under contract with Union-Bag
Camp Paper Co. for chips, used
in the production of paper.
J. Meade Tolleson of Perry is
president of the company.
NYLON WIIITENERS
Specialty products known as ny
lon whiteners or brighteners are
The Houston Home Journal, Perry, Ga., Thurs., Sept. 14, 1961
available. They are effective aids
in maintaining the whiteness level
of nylon garments when used re
peatedly, and can also be used to 1
L F. BELLFLOWER
MACHINE SHOP AND GARAGE
TRUCK BODIES BUILT
Complete line of hardware and auto parts
LOCAL AND LONG DISTANCE
MOVING AND HAULING
PHONE 429-1202 PERRY, GEORGIA
i
improve the appearance of use
discolored nylon, according to Miss
Leonora Anderson, head of the
'Extension clothing department.