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Jonesboro Defeats
, Walker, 14 to 3
Last Saturday night the
Jonesboro “Cardinals” picked
up their second victory of the
season when they beat the
* Walker “War Hawks" by a
score of 14-3,
Walker won the tossup and
elected to receive at the l ast
Coal. Jonesboro kicked off and
no. 22 Jimmy Moon returned
the kick to the 30 yd. line.
Although there was no score in
the first quarter, there was
plenty of action.
In the second quarter Jones
boro scored once and Walker
picked up its 3 pointer. Bill
Bush, no. 87, one of Jones
boro’s ends put the Cardinals
on the board when he inter
cepted quarterback M. L.
Prince s pass and ran it 45
yards for the first scoring play
ol the game. Then Spooky
Craddock, no. 10, made the
conversion to lead the “War
Hawks” 7-0. After the “War
Hawks" had pushed it all the
way to the 13 yd. line, with 9
yds. to go in the 4th down,
their kicker Bob Reissiger, no.
22, kicked a beautiful 13 yd.
' field goal. Going into the
second half the score was 7-3.
In the 3rd quarter the Cardi
nals scored the second and
final touchdown of the game.
Willie James Albertie, no. 33,
‘ made the touchdown on a49
yd. run through the middle of
the line.
There was no score in the
4th but there was tension
throughout the rest of the
game for both teams. The
clock stopped with Jonesboro
victorious over the Walker
“War Hawks.”
Atlanta Showing More
Interest in Clayton
Various Atlanta com
missions are realizing anew the
importance of having more
active participation by the lo
cal governmental agencies in its
planning for the future. Since
Clayton county is one of the
fastest growing sectors in the
five-county metro area, with an
increase in population of
32,000 in the past eight years,
it is now considered a main
area for future expansion.
To show the new wave of
concern with the outlying sec
tions, two large organizations
, recently invited the candidates
for county commission chair
man of the five counties to
attend briefings on upcoming
events and plans. Elbert Stiff,
candidate for Clayton county
< commission chairmanship, at
tended both and was the lone
representative of the commis
sion at each
The Community Council of
the Atlanta Area, Inc., which
has received a grant for com
prehensive health planning
from the U. S. Public Health
Service, and has been desig
nated the area-wide agency to
plan all public health services,
briefed the candidates on what
to expect in their respective
area in the form of help from
federal, state or community
agencies, and informed them
on the amount of responsi
bility to which the cities and
counties are obligated. This
will be a valuable aid to Clay
ton County.
A second briefing was held
by the Atlanta Area Metro
politan Planning Commission,
also to inform the candidates
of the latest plans for traffic
control, neighborhood resto
ration and upkeep, utility ex
tensions, schools, economic
activities, commercial and in
dustrial growth, and popu
lation expansion. These sub
jects are of the utmost im
portance to the county and
. having current ideas and ma
terial to study is necessary if
Clayton is to keep abreast of
things.
Os the five counties, (’lay
ton is smallest in land area,
> with only 149 square miles,
but since 1960 has averaged
4,042 people moving in per
year, with a total population
this vear of 78,700, so it has
C. H. Kniesiey, Sr.
G. H. Kniesley was known
far anil wide.
His ready smile ami friendly
face seemed always to abide.
His busi-
n esses were
successful for
he worked
from morning
light
The place
still found him
slaving long
into the night.
Many
people spent
their lives
, dreaming every day
Pops started out to do it
and somehow found away.
His counsel for his children
helped to shape their lives
He was concerned about
* them if they had a cold or just
the hives.
The restaurant business in
Galveston started his career,
Coney Islands and ham
burgers were popular every
year.
Seafoods in San Antonio
were specialties of the place
At Christie’s they gave up
their lease so they missed his
smiling face.
School Lunchroom
Amendment
Is Backed
Members of the Education-
Health Committee of the Clay
ton County Chamber of Com
merce met recently with Mrs.
Joy Huie, Coordinator of Food
Service for Clayton County
Schools, to study the lunch
room amendment to be voted
on in the general election,
November sth. This amend
ment, if approved, will allow
state funds to be used in the
school lunchroom program.
Following discussion, the
Committee, headed by Mrs.
Billy Pruitt, voted to submit a
recommendation to the Board
of Directors that the Chamber
endorse and support this
amendment. At the following
meeting of the Directors, Mrs.
John Dean. Chairman of the
Women’s Division Executive
Committee, submitted this
recommendation which was
unanimously approved.
The School Lunchroom
Amendment is listed as
Amendment No. 4 on the
ballot and the Chamber urges
all citizens to vote in support
of this amendment.
Edmund S. Muskie, Demo
cratic nominee for Vice Presi
dent:
“We are going to work for
peace, and we are going to
achieve peace.”
most properly taken a promi
nent place in Atlanta’s future
plans.
\ BY HELEN HALE
Chopped frozen spinach is
simple to prepare. Add salt,
pepper, onion juice, and 3-
ounces of cream cheese. Blend
together and cook until tender.
The flavor fillip of the tiny
brown celery seed is available
whole or as celery salt, which
is a mixture of ground celery
seed and table salt. Celery seed
is one of the important pickling
spices. It is excellent, too, in
chowders and fish soups; in
egg dishes; with sea food and
salads of different kinds.
Ground leftover meats or
ready-to-serve meats can be
made more appealing with
one-half cup chopped celery
and one teaspoon prepared
horseradish to one cup of the
ground meat. Moisten with two
or more tablespoons of mayon
naise.
On buttered pumpernickel
strips arrange whole Norway
sardines. Garnish with a curled
strip of smoked salmon and
sprig of fresh dill. Refrigerate
until ready to serve.
Small pieces of ham left
over? Chip finely, mix with
finely minced chives and cook
with beaten eggs.
Three-Egg Pie
3 eggs, beaten
1 1/2 cups milk
1 1/2 cups cheddar cheese,
grated
1 cup cooked ham,
diced
1/2 tsp. onion powder
1/2 tsp. salt
1/4 tsp. pepper
1 tsp. dry mustard
Spread grated cheese in
bottom on unbaked pie
shell. Mix all other ingredi
ents together and pour over
cheese. Bake at 375 degrees
for about 45 minutes, or
until firm in the middle.
Sprinkle crushed potato
chips on top. Serve- hot.
The one thing that has the
greatest effect on the kind of
tobacco produced is fertiliza
tion, according to Robert L.
Miles, agronomist with the Uni
versity of Georgia Cooperative
Extensive Service.
He came to Ft. Stockton
with Ethel and the boys,
Owning a motel had its
varying tears and joys.
He liked the west with its
horses and its land
If a friend needed some
thing he offered a helping
hand.
His friends called him
“Pops” as they met him on the
street He seldom saw a
stranger! New friends he liked
to meet.
He stayed with home and
family and gave them his best
He worked so hard that he
didn’t have time to rest.
Illness had plagued him in
the last few years
His optimistic look at life
helped him through the tears.
We loved him for what he
was in deed and word
Our hope for the future is
to commit him to the Lord.
Poem by:
Mr. Charles Goe.
G. H. Kneisley was my
wife’s father. We laid him to
rest Wednesday in San
Antonio, lex. Two other
ministers and I shared in the
services in Ft. Stockton and
San Antonio.
bJbb^
B
Hi-Y Program at
Forest Park Kiwanis
Presenting the program lor
the October 24 meeting of the
Forest Park Kiwanis Club was
Buddy Bowles, President of the
Hi-Y Club at the Forest Park
Senior High School. He spoke
on the Christian influences of
the Hi-Y Club and the club’s
activities.
Shown in the photograph,
left to right, are: George M
Kilpatrick, district Hi-Y board
supporter; Dick Sale, District
Hi-Y advisor; Buddy Bowles;
and Herman R. Walker, Vice
President of the Forest Park
—'l J
KJ
William G. (Bill) Johnson
'Bill 7 Johnson
Appointed by
Speir Agency
Lee Speir, President, Speir
Insurance Agency, Inc., Forest
Park, announced the appoint
ment of William G. (“Bill")
Johnson, age 41, account exe
cutive. Mr. Johnson will head a
team to evaluate the insurance
needs of large companies and
|||||||^^ \ \ I My uJMr JH
TOP LAW ENFORCEMENT
I ■ i
wS* 1
is 1 -J
■■Wl IM
BETTER EDUCATION and RECREATION
THIS IS THE MAN WHO’LL INSURE THE FUTURE OF CLAYTON COUNTY
You can count on it. With Sharon Abercrombie on the job, you've
got a man who keeps things moving and gets things done. He
knows how.
We must make sure we get forceful and vigorous action. Time
waits for no one, and the opportunities that open today may be
closed tomorrow. With Sharon Abercrombie working for us, we
have an alert, experienced and aggressive public servant who'll
get the most of the best for all of us in Clayton County.
Vote for the man who has YOUR family and YOUR future at heart.
Elect Sharon Abercrombie. He's nobody's man but yours.
This Ad Has Been Paid for by Clayton County Citizens and Supporters of Sharon
Abercrombie
Kiwanis Club.
Dick Sale in addition to his
Hi-Y advisor leadership, is also
the Key Club chairman of his
local Kiwanis Club of Newnan.
Sale presented part of the pro
gram, commenting on the im
portance of adult support of
the Hi-Y Programs in the
schools. He also commented on
the quite active Hi-Y Club of
the G. P. Babb Junior High
School, which he described as
the largest, most active, and
most outstanding Hi-Y Club in
Georgia, and probably the
nation.
to develop specially tailored
plans to fit those requirements.
For the past nine years Mr.
Johnson has been resident
secretary in Atlanta for Gulf
American Fire and Casualty
Insurance Co.
A graduate of Oglethorpe
College, (8.5., 1948) and
Atlanta Law School (L.L.8.,
1952), Mr Johnson has also
completed the American Insti
tute of Insurance course and
Mutual Insurance Institute’s
advanced casualty school. He
has taken several Dun and
Bradstreet financial analysis
courses.
Mr. Johnson and his wife,
the former Jane Speerman, are
both from Atlanta. They have
two sons: Bill, 17 and Jeff, 16,
and two daughters: Laurie, 10,
and Kerrie, 8. Mr. Johnson is
an avid football fan and has
worked for several years as a
football official.
LOYAL CLASSMATES
I nglewood, N.J Friends
ot Cheryl Pennington, a 17-
year-old senior who lost her
left arm to cancer, have started
a fund to pay $4,000 in medi
cal expenses and for an artifi
cial limb. Ihe fund's co-chair
man said any money raised
over the necessary amount
would be donated to cancer
research.
Georgia
Leads All
States
Georgia leads all states in
the percentage of women over
20 who had a Pap lest for
uterine cancer in 1966, accord
ing to a report this month in
CA, a Journal for Clinicians,
published by the American
Cancer Society.
Only the District of
Columbia topped the 43 per
cent for Georgia in a survey of
pathologists contacted by the
College of America n
Pathologists. Washington, D C
reported examining 65 per cent
of its female population over
age 20.
The annual Pap test, accord
ing to the American Cancer
Society, for all adult women
would insure the early de
tection of cancer of the cervix
at a time when it is practically
always curable.
Hie increasing use of the
test over the past 25 years has
been a major factor in reducing
the death rate from cancer of
the uterus by almost 50 per
cent.
In 1966, the year of the
current survey, Georgia
pathologists reported “read
ing" 572,273 cases submitted
to them by doctors throughout
the state. This compares to
187,372 done in 1963 ... an
increase of 205 per cent.
The American Cancer
Society has conducted an ex
tensive public education pro
gram to advise women of the
importance of the Pap test as a
control to uterine cancer
deaths. Since 1963, more than
67,660 Georgia women have
viewed American Cancer
Society film programs on the
Pap test; and the examination,
available in almost every
physician’s office, has been de
scribed and promoted in practi
cally every piece of the more
than 20 million pieces of litera
ture distributed in the five-year
period.
The Georgia Department of
Health launched a statewide
“screening program” in 1967
to make the Pap test available
to adult women who receive
services at the health depart
ment clinics in 1940 of the I 59
counties.
“Cancer of the cervix is
three to five times as frequent
in the lower socio-economic
group of women,” Dr. Morris
E. Brackett, Director of the
Department’s Health Conser
vation Branch, said recently in
GEORGIA’S HEALTH, a
monthly bulletin by the De
i partment of Health
Through these local health
department clinics. Pap tests
are available free to 92 per cent
of the Georgia women in the
low income brackets.
“With the availability of the
Pap test in virtually every
doctor’s office and through the
health department for those
qualifying for public service.
IMPORTANT?
VITAL!
.
I Free Press-News & Farmer, Thurs., Oct. 31, 1968 £
YOUR UNITED APPEAL '
A L M
\ Ji » in / *
OSIM 1 Bl' ' / J
1 Bf pUJ W / {
Bi W I r : ib.J
I I
100% UNITED APPEAL PARTICIPATION
AT UNION CAMP—Forest Park residents
are shown as they joined other Union
Camp Corp, employees at the company's
Forest Park corrugated container plant at
a coffee and doughnut party last week.
FUN IN 4-H
Georgia’s 153,103 Four-
H'ers are part of America’s
head -hear t-h an ds-and-health
young people. They choose
from dozens of learning exper- 1
iences callee! “projects”. If you '
are between the ages of 9 and 1
19, you too can have fun in J
4-H, says Dr. T L Walton, .
state 4-H leader at the Univer- ‘
sity of Georgia.
no woman should die of cancer 1
of cervix in our state," Dr *
John P Wilson, Professional 1
Education Chairman of the ■
Georgia Division, American
Cancer Society, said.
One thousand new eases of
uterine cancer are expected in
Georgia during 1968, and in
1966, uterine cancer did cause
the death ol 342 women in our
state.
ALL THE CATFISH AND CHICKEN YOU CAN EAT
A the original
Specializing in Channel Catfish and Hushpuppies
SEAFOODS - STEAKS - CHOPS
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK Rpjfuuintih I
Famous Rio Vista Salad Dressing 4
4 ... . 1 LOCATIONS
Sold at All Locations [ , Atlanta area-
FOR RESERVATIONS AND CARRY-OUT SERVICE, PHONE
1. 5000 Memorial Drive 443-9888
(Highway 78 near Stone Mountain)
2. 2375 Stewart Ave., S.W. 766-4611
3. 3425 Moreland Ave., S.E. 622-0757
At Top of Hill Highway 23 and 42)
4. 914 S. Four-Lane Hwy. (Marietta) 428-8020
ELECT
SHARON ABERCROMBIE
CHAIRMAN
BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS
Nobody’s Man But Yours
The party marked the company's 100%
participation in the United Appeal fund
drive. Left to right are Charles A. May
field Jr., Miss Jud Deynney, Eric C. Hyde,
Mrs. Doris Eisinger, James F. Mood and
W. George Butler.
'Christmas Idea Fair'
Ihe Women's Division of
the Clayton County ( hamber
of Commerce invites everyone
interested in learning how to
make Christmas decorations
and gift articles to its
“Christmas Idea Fair” Monday
November 11, 1968, at G. P
Babb Jr. High School from
7:30 to 9:30 p m There is no
admission charge to this fair
and it is presented as a special
Christinas event to add to the
fun and festivity of the holiday
season.
Demonstrations and instruc
lions from six different com-
lake care of the minutes,
for the hours will take care of
themselves.
Lord Chesterfield
ft
•T * ■
I £
wCI
... —Mr jM
A GREATER CLAYTON COUNTY
panics will be given in the mak
ing ot tree decorations table
size Christmas trees, arrange
ments. door wreaths, bow-mak
ing and lighting displays In the
line of food ideas, the Atlanta
Gas 1 ight Company will
present "Bake a Merry
Christmas Other companies
who will assist are Georgia
Power Company, Shepard’s
Decorating Service, the Home
Economist Extension and 4-11
Department
Further details will be an
nounced next week Make your
plans now to attend the
“Christmas Idea I an".
Ihe trust that we put in
ourselves makes us feel trust in
others.
I a Rochefoucauld
15