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808 DEYTON AT WORK IN OFFICE
CLAYTON COUNTY NEEDS:
* A 24-Hour Sheriffs Department
★ A dollar's worth of protection for each dollar spent
★ Full-Time Use of Sheriff's Equipment
★ Adequate facilities for disturbed persons - Not criminal jail cells
★Leadership - not just complacency.
★ A Sheriff - not just a nice fellow
★ 29 enforcement officers, not just 29 bodies who operate on a 16-
hour day
CLAYTON COUNTY NEEDS ROBERT A. (BOB) DEYTON FOR SHERIFF
HE CAN PROVIDE THE LEADERSHIP WE NEED!
VOTE & SUPPORT 808 DEYTON SHERIFF
Paid Political Advertisement
Most Wanted
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BABB Y CLUBS will be collecting for World Service on
Halloween, October 31.
Babb Y-Clubs Collect
1 he G. P. Babb Y-clubs will
be collecting for World Service
on Halloween night Oct. 31.
The people who are collecting
are members of the Y-clubs at
Babb and will be wearing
badges and carrying decorated
collection cans. We urge all
citizens of Forest Park to give
to World Service.
“Give a man a fish and
He eats for a day.
leach a man to fish and
He eats for life” is the
theme for the 1968 collection.
The Y.M.C.A. Program has as
one of its goals to improve
GEORGIA STATE COLLEGE
33 Gilber Street, S.E. - Atlanta, Georgia 30303
October 18, 1968
Mr. Jack Troy
P. O. Box 47
Forest Park, Georgia
Dear Mr. Troy:
Please accept my heratiest congratulations on the award
presented to The Forest Park Free Press by the Forest Park
Kiwanis Club in conjunction with National Newspaper Week.
Your contributions to the Forest Park area are to be
commended. The Free Press is truly exemplary of the finest
traditions of journalistic endeavor. The citizens of your area
are indeed fortunate to have such an outstanding local
newspaper.
If Georgia State College can be of service to you, please
give us the opportunity.
Sincerely,
Noah Langdale, Jr.
President
Charlotte, N. C.—The sign
over the department store
counter says, “Lingerie”, but
Miss Alice Schroff still calls it
the underwear department. No
one seems to mind. Miss
Schroff, a saleswoman, works
five days a week and has no
plans to retire. She is 85.
808 DEYTON
fu.
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FOR SHERIFF
I Clayton Coun^^^B
leadership qualities and help
others to help themselves.
There are over 84 countries
needing Y.M.C.A. World Serv
ice funds. A part of the money
is also used for training of
young people here in Georgia
This training session takes
place at Rock Eagle 4-H Camp
during the summer. We hope
that Babb will be able to con
tribute a sizeable amount to
the Y.M.C.A. World Service
project and to have enough to
send the Y-club officers to the
summer training conference.
ON SPENDING CUT
The Senate defeated an
effort to exempt farm price
supports and medicaid from
the $6 billion federal spending
cut ordered by Congress when
the 10 per cent income tax
surcharge became effective.
Clayton County citizens pay more than one - half million dollars, approx. 17% of the en
tire county's budget, for law enforcement. In return, you receive 16 hours of taw en
forcement participation outside the jail for your Sheriff's Department. In most in
stances, three County Police cars must patrol 150 square miles and provide protection
for Clayton County citizens. (We deserve more.) Your Sheriff, who is the Chief Low En
forcement Officer for your county, should be qualified and trained for his profession . .
Someone who understands that Law Enforcement is a 24 hours a day job. He must un
derstand and realize that Crime, Property Damage and Personal Injury demands 24
hour attention!
Our Sheriff must be trained and skilled in his profession, someone qualified to project
our county's image on local and national levels ... Not only in the field of law enforce
ment, but in Civic and Community affairs. People are the backbone and the very pulse
of our society. Our County has the finest citizens anywhere, but they must be made
aware: That crime cannot survive in the midst of an informed public.
Leadership and active participation on the part of your Sheriff is a must, if our County
is to take its place as the leader in Law Enforcement among Georgia's finest. The entire
burden of law enforcement should not rest upon the shoulders of our Clayton County po
lice due to the fact they are under staffed already. The Sheriff's Office must meet its re
sponsibility to our citizens.
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JAMES B. EAVES
U. S. AIR FORCE ACAD
EMY, Colo. Cadet James B.
Eaves, son of Mr. and Mrs.
James M. Eaves of 1677
Hebron Lane, Riverdale, is one
of more than 700 cadets who
have entered their senior year
at the U. S. Air Force
Academy.
Cadet Eaves will serve dur
ing the fall term as a squatlron
project officer with the rank of
cadet second lieutenant. He
was selected for the position
because of his demonstrated
leadership abilities and effec
tiveness ratings.
During the past summer,
Cadet Eaves was a senior
supervisor for survival training
of sophomore cadets con
ducted in the rugged Rampart
Range area surrounding the
academy. He was chosen for
the special duty for this
knowledge in survival, evasion,
resistance and escape tech
niques.
He also participated in the
three-week academy “Third
Lieutenant” program. He went
to Keesler AFB, Miss., where
he observed applied Air Force
operations and gained practical
experience while performing
Air Force junior officer duty.
WHO KNOWS?
1. What months are most
popular for weddings?
2. What is a monsoon?
3. What is the distance
from Japan to Australia?
4. What is considered the
“weather factory” of the
world?
5. Who ran for President in
1900?
6. Which President said:
“Public officials are trustees of
the people”?
7. Where may one find the
statement, ‘‘Blessed is the
nation whose God is the
Lord”?
8. How much seed cotton
is required for a 500-pound
bale?
9. Who became President
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808 DEYTON AT WORK IN THE FIELD
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SCENE AT PARTY honoring Judge J. Ellis Mundy upon
the occasion of his retirement from 34 years of service
in the Federal Courts. Shown with him in the picture are
Mrs. Mundy and his daughter and son-in-law, Delores
and Tom Shanks. Judge Monday has resumed the limited
practice of law at Jonesboro.
Judge J. Ellis Mundy
Resumes Law Practice
Judge J. Ellis Mundy has
resumed the practice of law at
Jonesboro to a limited degree
he announced recently. Having
lately retired after completing
34 years of service in the Fed
eral Courts he will divide his
time between the management
of his cattle farm and law
work.
During his tenure he served
as United States Attorney for
the Northern District of Geor
gia and more recently as Re
feree in Bankruptcy. Prior to
the appointments he had en
gaged in the general practice of
law in Clayton County.
after the assassination of Presi
dent William McKinley?
10. In what year was Ger
many admitted to the League
of Nations?
Answers To Who Knows
l.June, August, May and
September, in order named.
2. A seasonal wind blowing
from one direction.
3. About 3,300 miles.
4. The Aleutian Islands.
5. William McKinley and
William Jennings Bryan.
6. Grover Cleveland.
7. Psalms 33:12.
8. About 1400 pounds.
9. The Vice President,
Theodore Roosevelt.
10. September, 1926.
IFree Press-News & Farmer, Thurs., Oct. 31, 1968
"M
RIFFLE SIFTER . . . This amphibious machine is a riffle
sifter on the Mokelumna River, in California. Silt from the
river bottom is ejected through a high pressure nozzle over
the far stream bank. Moving down stream, the machine uti
lizes high pressure underwater jets and a suction pump to
remove sediment and make stream bed spawning gravels
clean and porous. This permits water to seep through and
provide more oxygen for embryonic fish during salmon
"run."
VOTE FOR WILLIE H. HUDDLESTON
Listen to WBAD, 1570 on the Dial
(Paid Political Advertisement)
“All this talk about back
seat drivers is bunk I’ve driven
a car for ten years and I've
never had a word from
behind."
"What sort of a car?”
“A hearse."
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