Newspaper Page Text
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Free Press-News & Farmer, Thurs., Apr. 10, 1969
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JACK TROT, Editor GUY BUTLER, Adv. Mgr
MRS FREDERICK LEE, BUS MGR _
Forest Park P O Box 47 Jonesboro P O Box 456 Phone 366-3652 and Jonesboro GReen
leaf 8-6841—Office 819 Mam Street. Forest Park, Georgia 30050
Second Class Postage Paid at Forest Park, Ga.
Associated Georgia Newspapers, Inc.”'
a
I s ® 8 )
MEMBER
New .: >. .num ti :ng matter tor the current week must reach the Jonesboro and Forest
Park off • n ’ . iti ■ than Monday noon to assure publication in the next issue The Pub
u-lu : ot be t •■sponsible for errors in advertising beyond the cost of the ads
Classified advei • i-mg rate: $1 50 minimum, for 20 words or less; extra words 5c each
lam 1 ; In.ink- ~ 'oo Display advertising rates furnished upon request. Communications
invited All arm 0 : r publication must bear the writer's signature. The right to edit oi
return arte 5 -. without pubi.cation is reserved
Subscription Rate SXOO Per Year
Soil Conservation Activities
By I oin Cole
Soil Conservationist
('layton County is .in inter
esling county to drive through,
north to south or east to west
You will see the effects on the
land where interested farmers,
landowners or operators have
applied a planned soil and
water conservation program in
cooperation with the lipper
Ocmulgee River District
On I ayetteville Road (Ga
54) going south tiom Jones
boro, can be seen on both
sides, grass, trees, pasture and i
ponds I ook to the left as you
leave the South I xpressway.
you will see kudzu that has
covered land from which top
soil was removed look tight, a ;
wildlife project Mi \\ I
( amp has done for many years,
martin gourds affixed to cross
arms on a tall pole Small holes
KAWASAKI
CYCLE SALES & SERVICE, Mt.
920 Main St. Forest Park
GLENN BLANTON, Manager
361-5585
ADULTS
ONLY
. Unless you're a teen
* with a big appetite
4 / A man sized portion
j / of USDA inspected pure
M ground (reef on toasted
sesame seed bun with
lettuce, tomato and our
\ ) special ROUND R sea
X^_. soned dressing
Rounder 400
Burger
Open pit barbecued
lea, pork lam or toast V/ r i \ \
ed sesame seed bun / — \ \
with Chef Cox . South /« _ J
ern Recgu R.i R O —J I B*U ■Yj
&S&Kound’r
^W=«^BURGER'N BARBECUE
Jonesboro Road &
Main Street
FOREST PARK
.4 Newspaper
Os Integrity in
Fast-Moving Clayton
OFFICIAL COUNTY
LEGAL ORGAN
I he cut in each gourd tor a nest
i to be made, eggs layed and
i soon young birds will fly out
. to seek food and explore the
■ world.
I raveling on. Mr. Jim and
| Joe Mundy have good grazing
in their pastures In the back
; ground healthy tall loblolly
‘ pine trees are growing. Io the
■ right Mi I red Waddy has a
large, well kept lawn, and in
: the back trees that produce
■ leaves that are eaten by worms.
I hese worms are good fish
bait Now. you guess the name
ol the trees and the worms.’
Next on the right lives Mr
and Mis Joe McKneeley, with
Howeis, shrubs, good fescue
clover pasture with black angus
■ cattle, grazing. With the sun
light in the right direction the
cows reflection can be seen in a
A Prir*-Winning
Newspaper
1961
Better Newspaper
Contests
NATIONAL NEWSPAPER
Driving & Heart Attacks
New York Dr. Samuel
Belle! oi the Philadelphia
General Hospital has reported
that the stress of driving a car
may contribute to fatal heart
attacks among drivers with a
history ol coronary heart
disease Ihe doctor said
electrocardiograms taken in the
act of driving merrited further
study.
nice (not muddy) larm pond
Now, we see Mi J I llis
i Mundy's home on the let!
| with blooming thrift along the
road, a farm pond on the right
with a well protected grass and
clover watershed used for
pasture. We didn’t gel hall way
to I lint River bridge, with
more yet to see!
ASH STREET BAPTIST CHURCH
5354 Ash Street
CHARLIE W. THOMPSON, Pastor
JOE MOORE, Minister of Music and Youth
AIR CONDITIONED FOR VOUR COMFORT
Early Worshin ------- 8:15 a.m.
Sunday School ------- 9:30 a.m.
Morning Worship - - - - - - 11:00 a.m.
Training Union - ------ 6:15 p.m.
Evening Worship - - - - - - 7:30 p.m.
T ci V' /A \ i / i
ft Yvi li I. bfi ■' , 4 Xh
x j. Lft iIW L Jwi ~ t
II rip
Make the
Great Escape.
Switch to a
flameless electric heat pump
You know what's worse than cold, wet winters and
hot. sweaty summers? h's coming home from the
vacations you take to avoid such things. And
finding out that the weather hasn't changed very
much while you were gone.
I hat's what's nice about the flameless electric heat
pump It changes the weather for you. It cools your
home in summer. Warms your home in winter.
I liters out spring pollen. And keeps you from
wilting under humidity throughout the entire year.
You could buy a heater, air conditioner, air
cleaner and dehumidifier — and still not have a heat
pump. You see. a heat pump can be all these things
automatically. All you do is select the precise
temperature you want. Anil from that point on. the
heat pump keeps your home perfectly comfortable.
Season to season. Hour to hour.
We even have an economical service plan which
guarantees that the heat pump will perform
flawlessly for It) years. Be sure anil ask us about it.
When you are ready to make the great escape.
Georgia Power Company
Al I 111-. PRESENT TIME about 7 out of 10 Americans
live and work on only about 2 per cent of the land area. With
their number growing each day. they reside in over-crowded
urban areas plagued by problems that have become extremely
costly and even dangerous.
I ederal. state, and local governments are spending billions
ol dollars in an attempt to solve some of these social and eco
nomic problems. Some progress no doubt is being made, hut
not enough. We keep hearing demands that more and more
money be pumped into urban areas to ease poverty, provide more
housing, promote belter health, and expand job opportunities.
through public and private effort and individual enterprise,
more will have to he done to resolve the urban crisis. It will
take more money , and it will also require a lot of hard work
and sound planning on the part of everyone concerned—those
living to help ami those being helped.
IN DEAI ING WITH the multitude of social and economic
problems confronting our nation today, it is important to realize
that the crisis of our space-starved cities is very closely related
to the plight of job-starved rural areas.
People go to live where they think they can get a good job
ami make a living. They come off the farm and out of the
countryside and create the massive rural-to-urhan migration that
we have been witnessing in the past two decades. Some of them
make it. but mans do not. Thus, yesterday’s rural poor be
come today's urban poor. Thev become welfare cases, frustrated
by chronic unemployment and life in the ghetto. Unless this
trend is reversed, the rural poor of today will inevitably become
the city poor of tomorrow. This is the cycle that must be broken.
♦ ♦ ♦
RI RAI DEVELOPMENT IS PARI of the answer. The
key lies in making rural areas more profitable and attractive
places in which to live and work by promoting industrial de
velopment and more jobs. In short, if we can we need to start
a new migration, from the city back to the country.
I am cosponsoring legislation to provide tax incentives to
attract more job-creating business and industry to rural areas.
Such a measure as this would improve the quantity and quality
of economic opportunities in rural America. It would be a major
step toward revitalizing small towns and farm communities that
presently contain only 30 per cent of the population but half
the nation’s poverty.
(not prepared or printed at government expense)
late would be much simpler
if we didn’t try to make people
think we re what we're not.
Herman Talmadge
REPORTS FROM THE UNITED STATES SENATE
On Alligator Poachers
Washington Secretary of
the Interior Walter J. Hickel
has declared war on poachers
who are illegally killing Florida
alligators. Ten additional
National Park Rangers are
being assigned to Fverglades
National Park in an effort to
stop the slaughtering and sell
ing of the illicit hides at a high
price.
Thank You...
■urjji HIX’ n 0...,
mi rwpii j
MIIKj U rjmg
The Directors and Staff of Clayton County Federal warmly ap
preciate the fine reception given our Grand Opening observance
last week.
IF YOU WERE UNABLE TO ATTEND
WE WELCOME YOUR VISIT AT ANY TIME!
And While You're Here . . .
REGISTER FOR FREE GRAND OPENING PRIZES!
We're giving away two RCA Portable Color TVs, thousands of Gold Bond Stamps . . . and you may win
just by registering when you visit. You need not be present to win. Also, get bonus Gold Bond Stamps
with each new account opened!
CLAYTON COUNTY
FEDERAL
Savings and Loan Association
OFFICES: 101 North Main Street •P. O. Box 935 • Jonesboro, Georgia 30236
822 Main Street • P. O. Box 25 • Forest Park, Georgia 30060
The New Folk to
Appear April 11
I rom the famous steps of
Sproul Hall at the University of
California at Berkeley to the
warm and sandy shores of
Daytona Beach at spring break,
the smooth and vibrating
sounds of the exciting, popular
group known as The New Folk
have “turned on” hundreds of
thousands on the campus
scene.
The most versatile group in
America nine performers,
representing nine different
campuses The New Folk have
a sound all their own Words
cannot adequately describe
their sound, which, by
comparison, emulates smooth
ness of “The Association”, the
intensity of “Simon and
Garfunkel”, the impact and
excitement of Sergio Mendez’s
“Brazil 66”, and the natural
ness of a Glen Campbell
They’re a new kind of
people with a new kind of
purpose, and a new kind of
“in-ness”. Maybe that’s why
they’re call “The New folk.”
In addition to their production
of fine tones and unique
blends, they are also dedicated
to being a part of the solution
instead of part of the problem
they’re a big plus factor in a
sometime negative world. So
what are they saying.’ It’s not
so much what they are saying
as what they are living and
communicating very simply, a
dynamic relationship with
Jesus Christ. As Colorado uni
versity’s (Music Review
Michael Grass) put it:
“Wednesday night an over
flow crowd was audience to
perhaps one of the most
polished and harmonic pop
groups touring the college
circuit today Ihe New Folk.
It doesn’t seem natural (at least
at the "Harvard of the Rockies
C. U.”) to attend a concert in
the University Memorial Center
and hear not only perfectly
coordinated music, but at the
same time witness a very
unique presentation of God!
Yes. God God in the person
of Jesus Christ. Now who
would think that the Inter
fraternity Council, one of the
co-sponsors of The New f olk,
would present such a group
and risk the destruction of
their I picurean philosophy
with Jesus Christ?”
According to the M. C. of
the group, "Men are coming to
the conclusion, through the
process of elimination, that
Jesus Christ is the answer to
the world's problems simply ■
because nothing else works." ■
The New Folk carry the action i
with them that’s their bag
hear them and judge for your
self. The New Folk will appear
in concert April 11. 1969 at
8:00 pm. in the Alexander
Memorial Coliseum. Tickets
arc: Advance 51.50 At door
$2.00. Tickets can be pur-
chased at Jim Salle’s Record
Shop in Buckhead or at all
Davison's Stores or call
237-0743 for information on
special groups.
Advance tickets purchased
in groups of 25 or more are
51.25 each.
The New Folk sing under
the sponsorship of one of the
most dynamic and penetrating
movements of this generation
Campus Crusade for Christ
International. Active on
hundreds of American
campuses and in approximately
40 countries of the world, this
movement is acclaimed by
leaders in all areas of life for its
effectiveness in presenting
Christ as a lasting solution to
the needs of the world.
r v/1
I -I*® 'r I
U V M
L TAI
I <A- *1
WITH STAR . . . F r an
Garten, 17. Great Neck,
N. Y., winner of the Miss
American Teen-Ager Con
test at Palisades Amusement
Park, New Jersey, visits with
James Franciscus, star of
Columbia pictures’ "Ma
rooned" in Hollywood. Fran
won her title over 250,000
girls between the ages of 13
through 17, with Hollywood
trip one of her prizes.