Newspaper Page Text
Henrietta,s
Beauty Shop
Complete
Beauty
Service
Your patronage will be appre
mated. 5-3151
For appointment call
Henrietta’s BeantY Shop
Mrs.Henrietta Davidson Harris, Operatoi
ik
Male HLilp Wanted
A&A—Qualified man or jronan for es*
tabliebed loute work, W ill train. Car
earn $30 or more per day. yVrjte Mr.
Heath, Box 2766, DvSota Station Mem
phis 2,Tenn.
k I
r SALESMEN WANTED
Man wanted to supply Riwleigh Pro
ducts to consumers in White County
Good time to start, Wiite R.wlcigb
GAL-160-815. Memphis, Tenn.l
1
SHERIFF’S SALE
GEORGIA, White County.
There will be sold at
outcry to the highest and best
der for cash between the
hours of sale before the
door in White County, Georgia,
the first Tuesday in January,
the following described
to-wit:
One 21” Stromberg Carlson
Set, Serial No. r r 25946 and
Said property found in the
session of Grady Sears, levied on
satisfy a Fi Fa in favor of National
Finance Company of
against Grady Sears issued from
the Superior Court of White County,
levied on as the property of the de¬
fendant in Fi Fa, notify of levy and
sale having been given the defend¬
ant in Fi Fa.
This 15th day of November, 1962.
FRANK BAKER
Sheriff WTiite County
5
t>ATRC>NI2ING US **+ ~ rr//'/.
IS UKE MAKING c w
LOVE TO A fi iM
WIDOW
m //%
J'/'y m4 ou
CAN'T OVERDO IT
ChristiMsTiano*tncl Electric Organ
Are you thinking ot giving your
family a new piano or organ for
Christmas? If so, visit Chick
Piano Co. We are not undersold
ou new or used pianos. Small
deposit holds for Christmas Open
evenings by appointment,
Chick Piano Co.
279 N. Lumpkin.St.
Athens, Ga.
It
. I
BBS
.
tm
•v'; :
BBS
: v.
m
s
BABY DOLL BIKINI—Here’s
the 1960 swim suit story In two - :
parts, both brief. Cotton gteg- -
ham checks star in this founced
two-piece bikini by California
£ea Fashions.
-e.
•"The will of the people ia the onIJ (
Without s college course is more val*
liable than a college course without a
gible. —William Lyon Pkelpa.
*
for rent
Five Ro7>m (-ottegs. Fnii,-eh«>l •h'ri'Ujrh
out l.irgs yar<1 Nonl
Ml-8 L O.
SAI.E SPINET PI ... AM) . n.
FOU takeov«i
w.n.ed, VA 7 „i„u- R pnonsible party p to
p .
nioutbly pavnn nts on RQo
Of Mana¬
On b« seen locally. Wipe Omlil
ge p. Or Box 34(5, Krnge Mountain.N.O
NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
FEDERAL AID PROJECT
NO. FLH-15-1 (1) COUNTIES
OF WHITE AND UNION
Sealed proposals will be received
b v the State Highway Department
of Georgia at the General Office at
No. 2 Capitol Square, Atlanta, Ga.
until 11 A. M., Eastern Standard
time, Dec. 21, 1962, and labor, publicly
opened for furnishing all ma¬
terial equipment and other things
necessary for the construction of
7.112 miles of grading and paving
located in White & Union Counties
on what is locally known & s th e
Richard Sims-Dukes Creek Falls
Road. Beginning at FAS Route
2334 approximately 2 miles south¬
west of Robertstown and extending
northwesterly to Hogpen Gap.
The Approximate Quantities
Are As Follows: and , Grub¬ _ ,
135.300 Acres Clearing
bing—Roadway—Lump Sum.
6.000 Acres Clearing and Grubbing
__p er Actg. Unclassified Ex¬
1,201,200 Cu. Yds.
cavation and Borrow, Including Ma¬
terial. Overhaul _ Ex¬
11000 Sta. Yds. on
cavation—2000’ Free Haul.
450 Cu. Yds. Channel Excavation.
56950 Cu. Yds. Subgrade Treatment
Material, Including Material.
8110 Cu. Yds. Stabilizer for Sub¬
grade Treatment. Sub-
441000 Unit Yds. Overhaul on
grade Treatment Material.
7.106 Miles Special Subgrade Com¬
paction and Test Rolling.
2770 Cu. Yds. Structure Excavation.
1400 Cu. Yds. Foundation Back¬
fill Material, T-ype I.
2900 Cu. Yds. Foundation Back¬
fill Material, Type II.
336.01 Cu. Yds. Class “A Con
crete. “B” Concrete.
3 Cu. Yds. Class
38413 Lbs. Bar Rainforcing Steel.
200 Lin. Ft. 15” 16 Gauge BCCM
Pipe SD.
830 Lin. Ft. 18” 16 Gauge BCCM
Pipe CD.
1330 Lin. Ft. 24” 14 Gauge BCCM
Pipe CD.
1100 Lin. Ft, 30” 14 Gauge BCCM
Pipe CD.
270 Lin. Ft. 36” 12 Gauge BCCM
Pipe CD.
330 Lin. Ft. 36” 10 Gauge BCCM
Pipe CD.
180 Lin. Ft. 42” 12 Gauge BCCM
Pipe CD.
130 Lin. Ft. 42” 10 Gauge BCCM
Pipe CD. 60” Gauge BCCM
100 Lin. Ft. 10
Pipe CD, Ends Beveled 1.5:1.
150 Lin. Ft. 60” 10 Gauge BCCM
Pipe CD, Ends Beveled 1.5:1- Strut
ted.
70 Lin: Ft. 66” 10 Gauge BCCM
Pipe CD, Ends Bevelad 1.5:1.
210 Lin. Ft. 66” 10 Gauge GCCM
Pipe CD, Ends Beveled 1.5:l-Strut
ted.
170 Lin. Ft. 72” 8 Gauge BCCM
Pipe CD, Ends Beveled 1.5:1- Strut
ted.
12000 Lin. Ft. 6” Perforated Pipe
Underdrain.
40 Lin. Ft. Culvert Pipe Removed,
SD or CD.
200 Tons Stone Plain Rip Rap.
480 Sq. Yds. Sand Cement Bag
Rin Rap.
7 Each Concrete Right of Way
Markers.
2 Each Project Marker Posts.
2 Each Project Marker Arrows.
2 Each Project Marker Plates.
554100 Sq. Yds. Seeding.
230 Tons Agricultural Lime.
104 Tons First Application Fertili
zer.
16030 Lbs. Second Application Fer¬
tilizer.
556 M. Gals. Water for Grassing.
529000 Sq. Yds. Bituminous Treat¬
ed Mulch.
2 Each Restore Existing Property
Comer Markers.
728 Cu. Yds. Mortar Rubble Ma¬
sonry 3950 Retaining Cu. Walls.
Yds. Local Stone Ditch
Checks.
5 Each Concrete Spring Boxes.
Bojms ^ or Spri n S
69000 Tons Graded Aggregate
Base and Shoulders.
23200 Gals. Cutback Asphalt
Prime.
92700 Sq. Yds. Asphalt Cement
Surface Treatment, Stone Size M-5
Type I.
92700 Sq. Yds. Asphalt Cement Bi¬
tuminous Seal.
I t Material. Highway Signs, Type
48 So Ft. Highway Signs, Tyne II
Material.
180 Lin. Ft. Galvanized Steel Posts
type I.
500 Lin. Ft. Galvanized Steel
Posts, Type II.
3 Each Timber Barricade Panels
Type I.
Said work shall begin within ten
(10) days after formal execution of
contract and shall be completed
within 340 working days. When
contract has been executed, written
notice shall be given the Contrac¬
tor, at which time, and not before
work may be started.
Contract executed pursuant to this
Notice is binding on the State High-'
contract way Deoartment, will as such. Said
not create liability, ex¬
pressed or implied, against the'Uirt
dersigned -Chairman) of the State’
Highway,.Boajd, against—any as' an -individual’
State Highway, Department, employee, of the
her -individual capacity. in his
*
z The wage to be paid
this- extract shall be *the
set-out in the Labor Pro-
included in the Proposal.
attention <5f bid lers is directed
the Special Prov isions covering
of labqjr, methods of
subletting or assign-
. CiLBVteL'kND XGJLJ CUU RI gi g 4
ing the centre nation, subletting or
assigning the contract and to the
ise of domes'ite materials.
Plans and specifications are on;
file at the e if ice of the undersign¬
ed at Atlanta, and at Gainesville,
Georgia, anti at the office of the
Board of County Commissioners of
White & Union Counties at Cleve¬
land & Rlairsville, Georgia, where
they may he inspected free of
charge. ^Copies of the plans may be
obtained upon payment in advance
of the sum of $15.00. Copies of the
General SDecifications may be ob¬
tained upon payment in advance of
the sum of $3.00, which sums will
Pronosals must be submitted on
forms, which will be sup¬
b v the undersigned, and may
obtained by a payment, in ad¬
of $5.00 for each proposal sub-1 j
When the proposal is
mitted, it must be accomodated by
a certified check, eashier’s cheek,
negotiable United States Bonds, or
other acceptable security anri in the
amount of $20,000.00? must be
plainly marked ’‘Proposal for Road
Construction,” County &nd Number,
and show the time of opening as ad¬
vertised. Check of the low bidder
will be cashed and all other checks
will be returned as soon as the con¬
tract is awarded, unless it is deem¬
ed advisable by the State Highway
Department reserves the right to
cash all checks. Bidders Bond will
not be accepted. Bond will be re¬
quired of the successful bidder as
required by law.
Contracts Will not be awarded to
contractors who have not been
placed on the list of qualified Con¬
tractors prior to the date of award.
No proposal will be Issued to any
bidder later than 9 A. M. Eastern
Standerd Time of the date of open¬
ing bids.
All bids must show totals for
each item and total amount of
bid. Rivht is reserved in the under¬
signed to delay the award of the
contract for the period not the to date ex¬
ceed thirty (30) days from
of opening bids, during which pe¬
riod bids shall remain open and
not subject to withdrawal. Right
is also reserved in the undersigned
to reject an-’ and all bids and to
waive all formalities.
Upon compliance with the re¬
quirements of the Standard Specifi¬
cations. Ninety (90) percent of the
amount of work done in any calen¬
dar month, provided that payrolls
have been submitted as required
and the remainder within thirty
(30) days after the Final Statement
is approved by the Engineer.
This the 3 day of December, 1962.
State Highway Deportment
Of Georgia,
Jim L. Gillis, Sr„ Chairman
Willis N. Harden, Member
Clarke W, Duncan. Member.
Keeping Spices
Keep the top of spice tins very se
ure, as the air tends to make spices
'heir flav 'r and “spiciness D
A few words on
■< :>< £4
Wmm s FOOD
m .
FARMERS . .
I - and die
■■■■■
By the year 2,000, our
population will be near
300 million ... The world
will have doubled its
population! Our country
may well become the
(( bread basket” for a
world of hungry people!
i
American farmers, each now feeding more than 25
people, have to meet increased demands . . . Did
you knQi^iiat right now over 10 million people have
jobs haji31i n S the products the farmers provide?
And, jas American farmers provide food in adequate
amounts, it costa less of your salary than it did a few
years • e •
hll
Low*4Jbst electricity from electric co-ops helps keep
our standard of living high . . . Continued low-cost
electric service—on the co-op’s “area coverage” prin¬
ciple—ii vital td"our Nation’s future? . . y .
-.7 i 1 TTAbersham ~
* CORPORATION Electric Membership
ta
’’COMMUNITY OWNED • COmUNHV.BUW
£ %
Sure, She's Ggmgjto
Get a Id
sa
m
I
\
M
:
P
Sips V
■ ft:
VX. ‘
V; V-'
3 ; -"’ 1
>
Wm&m n
{; US 1
■■> i
■ :
m
m S’, ■
m 'SO m
.
!: K *7
Shirley Cain, shapely movie star¬
let, is getting her cold the easy way
-—but no matter how you catch the
sniffles and sneezes, science has dis¬
covered a new, thorough way to
relieve the miseries of the common
cold. Kj
CUR READERS
ARE NOT—
&
& y/j
%
TRAINED SEALS
BUT THEy RESPOND
TO AD SUGGESTIONS
sud»st>e
THE CLEVELAND COURIL/
Official Organ of White County, v
Published Weekly at Cleveland, Ga.
JAS. P. DAVIDSON, EDITOR
Entered at the Post Office at Cleve
land, Georgia as Second Class Mail
Matter.
Subscription Price Annually
In Advance
White County $3.09
Other $3.61
NOllCt
Who does your priotingoi L.-ller Hem
li volopas. Various Forme, elcf Whj
lon’t you give ALL your Job Priming to
Tbe Courier? Job Primers in othei
r«vn* pay no taxes in Cleveland or While
County and have no interest in our see*
tion, except take yof lr money, What aie
they doing for the ; -ogress rf Wliii,
Qonnty ?
Solve Crosswird Puzzles; Win Cash Prize
Ma'cli vnur wits against the npuri
l’ry solving the Jackpot (;rosewo-(i Puz¬
zle eaeli Sunday in the BaPimore A men
nan. I'hn prigs is nsvi’i'Inss Ilian #200
and il ii guts nticlaifiisd, $100 is adds
n»ch week until s imeone nuns.
Look for clu< s. wind Lit, roles an
Ilia week’s prise in the
BALTIMORE
SUNDAY AMERICAN
Order from Yn?ir Lots a N ewnd^H le
THE CLEVELAND COURIER
Please enter my subscription to
THE COURIER as 1 have indicated
below;
1 ENCLOSE:
_Check__Money Order Cash
NAME___
STREET ADDRESS.
2 JIFD_
CITY__
STATE, ,
Advertisement
For Bids
WHITE COUNTY, HEALTH
CENTER, CLEVELAND, GEORGIA
NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS:
Sealed bids will be received from
General Contractors by the White
County Board of Health, Cleveland,
Georgia, in the City Hall, Cleveland,
Georgia, until 11 a. m., December
21, 1962., for the furnishing of all
labor and materials necessary for
the construction of the above nam¬
ed building according to plans and
specifications. Bids will be publi
cally opened and read aloud at the
time amd place stated.
Drawings, Specifications and Bid
Forms may be obtained from Jacobs
and Matthews, Architects, 311 North
Green Street, Gainesville, Georgia,
on request as follows:
A Deposit of $50.00 per set shall
be payable to the Architects
and is refundable in full if
items are returned in good con¬
dition within fourteen (14) days
after bids are opened; other¬
wise the cost of reproduction of
bidding documents will be de¬
ducted from the deposit.
Bidders attention is especially
called to the “Supplementary Gen¬
eral Conditions” which have been
made a part of the General Condi,
(ions of the A. I. A. Contract. Plans
and Specifications will be available
after November 28, 1962.
Contract, if awarded, will be on
a lump sum basis. No bid may be
withdrawn for a period of thirty
five (35) days after date of open¬
ing. Bids must be accompanied by
a bid bond payable to the White
County Board of Health, in an
amount equal to five (5) percent
of the base bid. Performance Bond
and Material Bond in amounts
equal respectively to 100 percent
and 50 percent of the Contract Sum
will be required of the successful
bidder. These Bonds are to be exe¬
cuted by a Surety Company licensed
to do business in the Stale of Geor
gia.
The Owner will make payments
to the successful Contractor upon
receipt of requests for payments,
having been certified by the Archi¬
tect, as fully covered and shown in
the plans and specifications.
A copy of the plans and specifi¬
cations are posted in the office of
Mr. Lee Palmer, County Commis¬
sioner, Cleveland, Georgia.
The~Owner reserves the right to
.accept or, reject any or all bids and
f o waive tech nicalities.
White County Board of Health
Dr. D. C. Fahrback, Chairman
Lee Palmer
. Herbert Glover.
'”n8( PIHE FOB THE CtWlCUSSL'
It’s Beit to Be Old
Fashioned In Matter
Of Sex Morality
Rabbi Samuel Rosenblatt
One of the most stinging insults
that could be dealt a man or a wo¬
man of our age is to be called “old
fashicned. To be regarded as be
hind the times may not exactly be
a crime. Yet the position of the
is rarely a comfort¬
one.
If the individual who does not
Into the common mold does
'jt to arouse the anger of those
whom he differs, he does often be¬
the butt of their ridicule, and
is not pleasant either.
Nobody relishes being looked up¬
as a back-number. Nevertheless
are certain matters in which
is preferred to be labeled a mid
a medievalist or even an
archaic fossil than accept what has
ome to be recognized as standard
practice by co-called modern society.
The subject I have reference to is
hat of sex morality. More specific- [
ally do I have in mind the rules laid 1
down in a book like the Bible for
he regulation of the relationship
toward each other of men and wo¬
men, the disapproval of certain
■arnal acts as incestuous or adul¬
terous, the restriction of the gratifi¬
cation of the impulses of the flesh
to persons bound by the ties of wed
‘ock and the prohibition of intima
•ies under other conditions.
In the sophisticated circles of our
lay all these inhibitions imposed
by Scripture are frowned upoei as
illy tabus, the produce of supersti
ion pure and simple. The only ob
actions against incest and promis
■uity that the emancipated man
and woman of our generation would
-ntertain are those stemming from
onsidartions of eugenics or phys
cal health.
If (he harmful results of inbreed
hg and the contraction of venereal
iiseases could be eliminated by
vhatever the means may be, they’
;ee no reason for anybody’s refrain¬
ing from indulging in the satisfac
i.on of his or her natural desires.
The consequence of this attitude
,s an almost complete disregard by
members of both sexes of the con¬
ventions once quite scrupulously ob¬
served. As the Kinsey reports re¬
veal premarital sex experience have
become the rule rather than the
exception among college students.
Chastity is virtually non-existent
among most young people who have
passed the age of puberty, and the
marriage troth is honored more in
■he breach than the performance.
Conformity with this pattern is
considered as being up-to-date,
modern, smart, following the trend
of the times. It no longer calls
down upon him who demeans him¬
self in this fashion the wrath of the
gods. Still less does it incur the
eensure of associates and friends
An act ceases to be sinful when
nearly everybody—including some
of the nicest people—commits it.
Without entering into the ques¬
tion of right and wrong in this in¬
stance, let it be remembered thal
ihere is noting modern about sex¬
ual irregularities. They are as old
almost as the human race itself.
The Bible tells of a deluge that
ciearly destroyed the earth in hoary
antiquity on account of men’s per¬
versities. The degeneracy of the
anscient Egyptians and Canaanites
was held up to the Israelties as an
abomination to be shunned. The
Greeks were, for all their culture,
repraved. The orgies of the Ro¬
mans during (he period of the em¬
pire were notorious.
There is, therefore, nothing new
in lack of self-restraint.
If our society suffers so much
from broken homes, if one mar¬
riage out of three in America ends
in divorce, it is due to the fact that,
when they enter the bonds of mat¬
rimony, many of our people are
sexually already so blase that there
is nothing in married life to attract
or tempt them any more. Why mar
ry and assume the responsibilities
involved in raising a family, when
ill one can expect to get out of mar¬
riage has already been savored be¬
fore?—Baltimore American.
WAIT OUT THE WIND!
-=L_ J
__ _ / _ - —
ft
i&i i 9m
•1 *3=
£4* 1 u
- wwr . m
I* cvTPooR
ON A WINPSrm- m -.
miT
PLAY IT (APE/ A
A /V