Newspaper Page Text
r • ■ ■ •- - * • ,
Free Press—News & Farmey. Tues., Feb. 18, 1964
Tara District Boy Scouts
To Hold Meeting Tonight
Arthur Perkins, chairman of
the Tara District of the Atlanta
Area Council, Boy Scouts of
America, announces that the
Tara District committee will
hold their regular monthly
meeting at 7:30 p.m. on Tues
day evening, February 18, at the
Clayton County Federal Savings
and Loan office on Main Street
CLEARANCE SALE
Ladies' & Children’s Dresses
, At Exactly
Yz PRICE
ELKINS DEPT. STORE
HAPEVILLE, GA.
■KAN, BABY, let's ROLL U WELL , YOU CAME TO THE ||
HIS SWEET BUWY FROMH RIGHT PLACE, MISTER// ML
mnniAm /I _— -
MOTORS
PTO THIS DRIVE-IN.WOW-l^». ‘ aC'A
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■■■■■■■
CLAYTON COUNTY’S CLEANEST USEDCARS^^^^J
PUBLIC EDUCATION is Americas
Greatest Asset... Housed within our 432
classrooms is Clayton County’s only hope
for the future.
TOMMY VAUGHAN ' dedicated to
Public Education... and pledges his com
plete cooperation with our school officials.
ELECT
TOMMY VAUGHAN, Commissioner
RE-ELECT W. LOY DICKSON
SHERIFF
• PROVEN
ABILITY
"YOUR FRIEND AT ALL TIMES — NOT JUST AT ELECTION TIME"
NEVER A BIG "I" AND LITTLE "YOU" ATTITUDE
Your Vote and Support Sincerely Appreciated
in Forest Park. This meeting is
made up of representatives from
all the sponsoring institutions
in the Tara District Boy Scout
service area. The committee also
has various sub-committees that
are responsible for all phases of
district operation.
The Tara District has recently
completed participating in the
observance of National Boy
Scout Week. The week was
highlighted by many Cub Scout
Blue and Gold banquets, special
church service recognitions on
Scout Sunday, February 9, and
service projects all over the
county.
Chairman Perkins has this to
ELECT
TOMMY
VAUGHAN
COMMISSIONER
April 4,1964
5
Sensing the News...
LOOKING TO THE FUTURE
Eventful as has been the last
year, 1964 promises to hold even
greater significance for the
American people. The new year
is a year of decision-making for
the nation’s voters.
Each and every responsible
citizen has a high obligation in
say about Scouting in our area,
“We have a tremendous chal
lenge to make Scouting available
to all boys in our area who
would like to become a part of
the scouting program. We feel
that Scouting is doing a wonder
ful job of helping to strengthen
America in a program that is
designed to develop character,
build citizenship and physical
fitness in the lives of the boys
of today.”
1964 to make people start think
; Ing about the American destiny
at home and abroad. We can
move forward in the direction of
national integrity and independ
ence, toward further refinement
of the free enterprise system and
to a restoration of rights that
have been impaired by bureauc
racy and leftwing extremism. Or
the nation can continue to scrap
both the Constitution and the
capitalist system on a piecemeal
basis, surrendering more of its
freedoms and accepting more di
rection by bureaucratic power
elites.
A good way to begin the New
Year is by having faith in the
capacity of the American people
to recognize the choice before
them and the fateful nature of
the decisions which they will
make when thev vote. What
really separates the liberals and
the conservatives is that the
former don’t really trust and be
lieve in the American people,
whereas the latter have confi
dence in the ordinary, qualified
citizen. Though the liberal fre
quently prates of “democratic
processes” and “civil rights”, he
invariably wants to make gov
ernment in America something
that is run by “planners” in
Washington. The hallmark of
the “liberal” is that he wants to
remove power and decision-mak
ing from the average citizen,
whether it be in business mat
ters. foreign affairs or the choice
of associates and customers.
These “planners”, which is the
same as saying “these liberals”,
assume unto themselves the om
niscience to know what is best
for the people rather than leav
ing that decision to the people
themselves.
The conservatives, on the oth
er hand, believe that the average
American community—and the
states—don’t have to seek direc
tion or guidance from Washing
ton. George Washington once
said. “The people of these United
States mean well, and I firmly
believe they will always act well
whenever they can obtain a
right understanding of matters.”
The conservatives believe that
too. It takes a lot of faith and
patience to believe in the demo
cratic process, to believe that the
people themselves should have
the right to choose their own
destiny and guide their own fu
ture. These qualities the “lib
erals” do not have; these quali
ties the conservatives do have—
and it is these qualities that must
be preserved if we are to remain
a free people.
_ In many subtle ways the “lib-'
x®rtds^\«eek to present their non-j
freedom as freedom, their plan
of regimentation as an enlarge
ment of rights. They attempt to
take something away from each
American and at the same time
to convince those who are losing
something precious that they are
obtaining a gift from govern
ment.
Thus in 1964 it is not enough
to be steadfast in one’s belief in
constitutionalism. The good cit
izen must be informed and he
must learn the various dodges by
which leftists aim to strip citi
zens, communities amj states of
their right to regulate their own
affairs. The union bosses will be
ordering programs of “political
education” in the coming year.
Conservatives must launch vital
programs of their own. Not only
must they have the political
facts at their fingertips in a
year of debate, but tljey must
take the offensive against “lib
erals”.
The greatest and costliest
single undertaking in the his
tory of medicine is the broad re
search program against cancer,
according to the American Can
cer Society. Help step up this re
search effort by supporting the
American Cancer Society’s 1964
Crusade.
• MATURE
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