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MEMBERS of Brownie Troop 758 with display of UN
flags and dolls.
Brownies Celebrate 11. N. Day
United Nations Day was
celebrated in a very special way
by the members of Brownie
Troop No. 758 in Jonesboro.
The International Affairs De
partment of the Jonesboro Jr.
Woman’s Club gave them a
U. N. Day Tea with all the
trimmings.
Decorated with beautiful
dolls from around the world
and colorful U. N. flags, the
refreshment table featured a
special punch recipe, cheese
snacks and Chinese Fortune
Cookies. Each Brownie was
given an “Around The World”
paper doll book. Mrs. Bill
Wood was in charge of deco
rations and Mrs. David Parker
and Mrs. Charles Banks furnish
ed the refreshments.
Mrs. Bobby Anderson,
troop leader, gave a brief
history of the U. N., something
about it’s purpose and it’s
member countries.
Then each girl, in coopera
tion with the Red Cross, wrote
a personal letter to a seriously
wounded soldier in a hospital
in Vietnam.
T reatment
Plant
Operator
No Experience Required
Salary: 5420 to S5lB/mo.
Gain valuable training
and experience that
could lead to a career in
Water Pollution Control.
Vacancies now exist at
the Flint Creek Treat
ment Plant (off Clark-
Howell Hwy.) and at the
Camp Creek Treatment
Plant on Cochran Rd.
(off Cascade - Palmetto
Road.)
Work involves operation
and servicing of a varie
ty of equipment, check
ing meter readings, rout
ine care and cleaning of
machinery and premises.
APPLY at Personnel De
partment, City of Atlan
ta, 260 Central Ave., S.W.
Ph. 522-4463, Ext. 267.
USED CAR SPECIALS
TO MAKE BUYING AT HOME
A REAL SAVING TREAT!
’67 CHRYSLER Newport 2-Dr. HT. OWC I
Loaded. Extra Clean
’66 CHRYSLER New Yorker 4-Door
Town Sedan (Loaded) ^LL7J I
'6B FIREBIRD 2-Dr. HT. Vinyl Roof. V-8 (7430 I
Auto. P.S., P.B. Fact. Air, 10,000 Miles IQO I
’66 PLYMOUTH FURY 405. I
Loaded. 12,000 Actual Miles ¥ 1000
'67 SATELUTE 2-Dr. HT. V-8. Auto. tIOOC
Power Steering. Like New y 177 D I
66 PLYMOUTH FURY Wagon. f I
F\ill Power and Air J|f7o
808 MADDOX
CHRYSLER
PLYMOUTH, INC.
0 Ph. 361-6550 - 175 Georgia Ave. I
Near Old Hwy. 41 - Forest Park
I
Five new girls were invested
into the troop. They were Terri
1 ruelove, Lisa Crumbley,
Susan Epps, Jan Clark and Tina
Williams.
Lake Citv
To Hold
Election
The annual election of the
City of Lake City will be held
on Saturday, December 7,
1968, at the Lake City Town
Hall, 5347 Jonesboro Road,
from 7:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m.
Offices to be filled are Mayor
and two councilmen. Those in
terested in qualifying for these
offices should do so before the
deadline date of November 17,
1968.
Lake City Town Hall will be
open from 8:00 a.m. to 12:00
on Saturday, November 2nd
and November 9th in order for
the people who have not regis
tered to vote to do so before
the deadline of November 17,
1968.
Liddie Sheffield
City Clerk
’Rollin' Wrecks'
Seek New Players
The Atlanta “Rollin’
Wrecks”, a wheelchair basket
ball team in the National
Wheelchair Basketball Associa
tion, is seeking new players. To
be eligible you must have a
permanent disability which
would prevent you from play
ing basketball efficiently with
persons who are not handi
capped. You do not have to be
confined to a wheelchair to be
eligible. Most of our team
members are amputees, para
plegics, or victims of polio.
Wheelchairs are furnished
by the “Rollin’ Wrecks.” The
only expense to the players is
gas to get to and from practice.
Our Conference is made up
of teams from Atlanta, Nash
ville, Chattanooga, Miami, and
St. Louis. We will play 12 con
ference games in the coming
season.
Play for the coming season
begins in December 1968. Any
one interested in trying out for
the team can contact: Terry
McCormac, 667 Roxbury
Drive, Riverdale, Georgia,
Phone 478-1623, or Bob
Graham, 366-6509.
The hard work of other
people often explain the suc
cess of other men.
Babb Tri-Hi-Y News
October is World Service
Month. The purpose of YMCA
World Service is to help the
people in home and foreign
lands to help themselves
through the development of
local leadership train-in the
fundamentals of Christian
democracy. Financial as
sistance for the Home Office of
the State YMCA is needed to
strengthen the “Y” program of
Christian character building
here at home.
Tonight from 7 to 9 p.m.
the Y-Clubs of G. P. Babb
Junior High will be going door
to door in their neighborhood
asking for your support
through a contribution to the
World Service Campaign. The
collectors will be wearing
Y-Club identification arm
bands and carrying cans with
identification. This is to pre
vent imposters from collecting
this badly needed money.
This month has contained
many projects for the club in
cluding and outstanding dis
play in the Lunch Room pro
moting National Lunchroom
Week. It was a cartoon of
“Super Chicken,” that famous
Saturday morning celebrity,
. .
FOLLOW ME . . . First Lt Alex C. Green holds an M-60
machine gun high as he leads a reconnaissance platoon
across a stream. The platoon was on patrol in the Saigon
area. Green is from St. David, Arizona.
—. JLF
ALL TOGETHER PUSH — 9th Infantry Division engi
neers move a section of a bridge toward a new crossing site
in the Mekong Delta region of Vietnam.
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NO FEAR OF FOE ... A fearless youngster ventures
close to a South Vietnamese soldier as the tot’s village on
the outskirts of Saigon is searched for Viet Cong suspects,
Aug. 31. The South Vietnamese government released figures,
Sept. 10, showing Viet Cong terrorists last week killed 121
civilians, wounded 265 and kidnaped 3 in raids throughout
the country.
GENIE’S MAGIC . . . U.S. ADC VOODOO fighter-intercep
tor fires a Genie air-to-air rocket during training mission over
a U.S. Air Force gunnery range.
ITS AN IDEA
^HOME DECORATIONS ”
and all of his food friends ex
plaining the importance of this
week.
Another project is the mak
ing of a school directory. This
is a joint 111 Y and TRI Hi
Y project in which the names,
addresses, telephone numbers,
and homeroom sections of all
the students at Babb are put
together into a book every 2
years. These books will go on
sale in about 1 or 2 months.
Parlier this month, the an
nouncement was made of who
the Hl Y boy and TRI 111 Y
girl of September were.
Debroah Phillips and Sammy
Cruce were the chosen two.
Deborah is Scrapbook Chair
man and has been a member
for 3 years. Sammy is President
of the 111 Y and has been a
member for 2 years. We salute
these two and feel that no one
was more deserving of this
honor.
If you would like to help us,
help us achieve our World Serv
ice goal by giving a generous
donation when we call on you
tonight.
Carol Mitas
Wanda Tison
Publicity Chairmen
Simulated wood panels in
dark-stained Missi on Oak fin
ish combine with wrought iron
in this six light chandelier. The
authentic adaption of Andalu
sian design has six heavy
wrought iron arms and
bobeches. The antique finish
ed simulated candles hold
flame tipped candelabra base
lamps of less than sixty watts
each. Center of the fixture is
formed of six Mission Oak fin
ished panels, each accented
with light amber cathedral
glass. In the center of these
panels, a7swattlamp pro
vides downlight while creating
a warm glow through the glass
inserts.
AT LONG LAST
DOWN TO THE NITTY GRITTY
We have tried to tell the people of Clayton County what happened.
We've tried to tell them how it happened. We've tried to tell them
what they could do to keep this HAPPENING from happening
again.
We have told the people of Clayton County who it was who made it
happen. We have tried to inform the people as to why it must not
happen again.
When you go to the polls on November 5, if you don't want it to hap
pen again, if you want to be sure who you are keeping in office for So
licitor General, if you want to prevent an imposter from stealing the
most solemn of all law enforcement offices, then mark your ballot as
shown below.
Sure, it is a lot to remember, but if you let your vote get stolen for
keeps, and if you don't go to the trouble of writing in a candidate for
Solicitor General, you will never forget this election, not for four
long years.
A lot of people are working very hard to keep this mistake from be
ing made a permanent error. So many people would not work that
hard, that long, for free, if it were not deadly serious. To single out
Elsie and Bobby Jones, Tom Embrey, Ronnie Terrell, Sissy and Em
mett Arnold, Pete Kacoonis, Frank Orr, and Eric Sauerbrey and leave
out the Westmorelands, the Nielsens, the Standfields, the Derick
sons, the Adamsons, and countless, countless others.
Every day, hundreds of aroused voters of Clayton County are urging
other voters to write in the name of Albert B. Wallace for Solicitor
General on election day. They have contributed the money to pay for
this ad, and they want to cut it out, if necessary, and take it with you
to the polls so you can remember exactly how to vote for Albert B.
Wallace. They ask you to re-elect a man for whom you can be proud
to serve as your Solicitor General.
Your write-in candidate might not be the best of all possible choices,
but the fraudulent winner of the Democratic Primary, A. Ed Wal
lace, Jr., has to be the worst. We have told it like it is, now it is up to
you to vote it like it should be, like it shows below.
To vole ■ atrai M hl party lirkel. with thr exception of randidatre for offkee at presidential 11 Elnlfl IA I ft AI 1 fllT
electura. mark a < roa. (X) orrhcck (►*) in the aquare in ihr party column, oppoalle the name of If HV » FBW B M ■
Ihr party of vour rhoice To vote for presidential rlrrlora, mark a rroaa (X) or cheek (>X) in the
square opposite the names of ihe randidatn of the party or body for the offices of President Mate OI UCOrgla
and V ice President vou choose Io sate (or. If you do not desire to vole a party liehet. then place £ | avton County
across (X) or check (*■*) mark in the square opposite the name of each candidate you choose to •
vole for Io vole for a |M -raon whose nsme is not on the ballot, manually write hu name, arcom- General E leCtiOO - NO VombOr 5. I 968
pained by the title of thr office involved, in the write-In column. If you spoil your ballot, do not
erase, but ask for a new ballot. Use only pen or pencil.
REPUBLKAN PARTY DEMOCRATIC PARTY WMFTMN CANDIDATKS PRESIDENTIAL ELECTORS
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FOR ASSOCIATE JURTK E. SUPREME COURT P >
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FOR JUDGE. COURT OF APPEAIS OF GEORGIA .
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FOR JUDGE. COURT OF APPEAIS OF GBORGIA < 1 ’[l S
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IOR JUDGE. COURT OF AI'PEAIA OF GEORGIA
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FOR JUDGE RUPERIOR COURT—CLAYTON CIRCUIT if’.
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FOR NOl.lcrrtHt GENF.RAU-4TAYTON CIRCUfT ijjl
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FROM THE MR DISTRICT OF GEORGIA m^ [W J MM .a a* I A I
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(Paid Political Advertisement)
"Free Press-News & Farmer. Thurs., Oct, 31. 1968 /
17