Newspaper Page Text
Long after John
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about carving the [maw I
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heart tree — to on the life—over the story oak iS i 0
comes
the desk of the
Society editor!
That's what makes *K Ik. il\
the editing of a
weekly paper a thing
which holds the com¬
munity together—the weddings, the births,
the accomplishments of the citizens —
that's one more reason why you enjoy
YOUR WEEKLY NEWSPAPER
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READ YOUR WEEKLY NEWSPAPER
For Your Special Recipe File
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NOW IS THE' TIME :for all good homemakers to come to the
aid of their families with new and different fish dishes. This
arecipe for quick-frozen fish fillets served with an easy dill pickl*
sauce is a good one to add to your file of family favorites.
BAKED FISH WITH DILL PICKLE SAUCE
I package (12 ounces) Birds Eye Salt, pepper, and paprika
. Cod or Haddock Fillets % cup butter or margarine
Melted butter or margarine % cup chopped dill pickle
14 teaspoon sugar
Put frozen block of fish in greased shallow baking dish.
Brush with melted butter and sprinkle with salt, pepper, and
paprika. Bake in hot oven (400° F.) until easily flaked with fl
fork—about 40 minutes. Add dill
Meanwhile, melt % cup butter in a small saucepan.
pickle and sugar and heat gently about 5 minutes to blend
flavors. Pour over the baked fish or serve separately, as desired.
Makes 3 servings.
o ■V' <5 V Jet-smooth Luxury Chevrolet ' ' :V ■
makes roads feel as smooth as the maps they’re printed on
Run finger over a map and find yourself a place to go. Wide seats with foam-cushioning front and rear. Luxurious
your in Chevrolet. wall-to-wall deep-twist carpeting (this year it comes with
That’s a preview of how it feels to get there a A choice of
\V e ’ ve put what we think is the best suspension even the lowest priced Biscaynes).
system in its class under this great highway per- S ?? seven great engines, all precision-balanced for
former. A big husky coil spring at each wheel }) (j smoother running, with^ four^ smooth-sluftmg ,
and double-action shock absorbers to throughout soak up Ir^nF’N’TRflVFlA TRADE ,J™ VEL transmissions Chevrolet the to great match highway Everything performer that it make* is.
bumps. Over 700 sound deadeners t
tr ch T* an irrss byrbher ‘°
There’saTot t 'N* Travel Time at your Chevrolet dealer’s.
of otherJet-smooth luxury, too. for the great highway performers
Chevrolet Impala Convertible
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N-T DEALS ON CHEVROLET ■ CHEVELLE ■ CHEVY H ■ C0RVAIR AND CORVETTE NOW AT YOUR CHEVROLET DEALER’S
> CHECK THE T
Stamey Chevrolet Company
Phone 3—5-H Cleveland, Go.
THE CLEVELAND (QA.) COURIER
parents and all law enforcement
agencies is needed. We recommend
that the parents and all citizens of
this county aid out law enforcement
officers in combating the operation
of motor vehicles on our roads in
a manner in which to endanger the
lives of our children and people
generally using our roads and high¬
ways. We request the Department
of Public Safety to assign sufficient
personnel to our county, especially
on week-ends, to immediately stop
the drag racing and spinning of
automobiles on our roads and high¬
ways for the safety of all people.
We recommend that Mrs. Mildred
Nix be paid $10.00 for typing these
presentments and commend her for
the efficient job that she is doing
for our county. We recommend that
these presentments be published,
but not the attached reports, in the
Cleveland Courier and that the
publisher be paid the legal rate
therefor.
We wish to express our thanks
to Judge Sidney O. Smith, Jr., The
Solicitor General’s Office, the var¬
ious Peace Officers and our Bailiff
for their assistance and cooperation
in the court of our deliberations.
Respectfully submitted,
James A. Haynes, Edward Bla¬
lock, L. R. Merritt, T. H. Blackburn,
W. L. Edwards, Rev. James W. Wat¬
kins, Rev. Jimmy Palmer, John Ed¬
wards, E. B. Hunt, Guy Black,
George Leonard, Glenn Hogan, Ed¬
ward Allen, Wilbur H. Burke, John
G. Helton, Grady Pardue, Winston
C. Lusk, Thos. E. Mauney, Henrietta
Harris, Joseph E. Glaze, Horace i.
Hulsey.
*NOW AND shiver SLEET this ftiay win¬
cause you to
ter, but this winsome llttto
Miss won’t freeze up. She’i
Nancy Woodruff, Anti-.Freeze” otherwise
known as “Miss
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Grind Jorj Presentments
April Term
Georgia, White County
To The Superior Court of said
County:
We, the Grand Jurors, empaneled
and sworn for this the April Term
1964 herewith make the following
presentments to the Court:
We appoint Mr. Curtis Dorsey to
fill the term of Mr. Fred Moore
which has expired.
We appoint Thomas E. Mauney,
Rev. James W. Watkins, Glenn
Hogan as a Committee to investi¬
gate the welfare needs of the fami¬
lies in our county and those that
are presently receiving welfare aid
and request that this committee re¬
port their findings to the next Grand
Jury.
We recommend that the mechani¬
cal condition of all school buses be
improved immediately and that
buses over 10 year models or older
be removed from any bus route in
our county and be replaced by bus¬
es in good mecanical condition.
We recommend that the officers
of the Game and Fish Department
and other law enforcement agencies
rigidly enforce the law prohibiting
hunting within the boundaries of
our county on Sunday.
We recommend that the proper
county authorities promptly obtain
and construct garbage disposal areas
throughout all sections of our coun
ty.
Through Committee we ljaye in¬
vestigated county property and find
the same with the exception f)t the
jail and courthouse in satisfactory
condition. We recommend hat the
windows in the jail and courthouse
be repaired and that the chimney
on the courthouse be removed an
the same is a hazard.
We have received and examined
the reports from the Ordinary’s
Office, Health Department, County
Agent’s Office, and County School
Supt. Office and find the same in
order. These reports are attached
and made a part of these present¬
ments.
By Committee we have investigat¬
ed the ballot boxes used in the re¬
cent election of county officers and
find them in order except that one
box was not locked.
This Body is alarmed at the acti¬
vities of Juveniles and young peop¬
le of our county and adjoining
counties on the streets, roads, and
highway at night, and especially on
the week-ends. We feel that to
combat this growing and serious
problem that the cooperation of
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THE ILLINOIS FEPC nas
given employers of this country
a foretaste of what they can
expect if hiring and firing poli¬
cies are taken over by the fed¬
eral government.
And they will be taken over if
Title VII of the so-called Civil
Rights Bill
now pending
before the Sen¬
ate is enacted
into law. Here
is what Arthur
Krock, the dis¬
tinguished col¬
umnist for the
New York
Times, had to say about this
proposed legislation:
u A federal bureaucracy would
be legislated into senior partner¬
ship with private business, with
the power to dictate the stand¬
ards by which employers reach
their judgments of the capabili¬
ties of applicants for jobs, and
the quality of performance after
employment, whenever the issue
of ‘discrimination’ is raised. 1 1
This is the message we have
been endeavoring to get across
to the people in the present de¬
bate in the Senate. It is a warn¬
ing which must not be ignored
if we are to preserve the free
.enterprise system as it now ex¬
ists.
* * *
A RECENT RULING by an
examiner of the FEPC in Illinois
in a case involving Motorola,
Inc. shows the preposterous
lengths to which a law, such as
this, can be carried.
In this case, a job applicant
claimed he was not hired be¬
cause race, even 7*
he had failed the employment
examination. An examiner from
(not prepared or printed at t/ovemment expense)
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Id Georgia • ••
at a picnic, beer is a natural
When friends you’re family, relaxing and at your thirst’s favorite whetted outdoor by fresh beauty spot and with
or your air exer
fact, ose—that’s the ideal time recreation—swimming, for a cool, refreshing glass hiking, of beer. just Ia
you can name your or
matching well TV- and chances arc nothing in ths world fits it quite
•S as beer.
'Soar live in familiar land of glass personal of beer freedom—and is also a pleasurable that reminder right enjoy that
We a our to
beer and ale, if we so desire, is just one, but an important one, of
those personal freedoms. <
In Georgia... beer goes with fun, with relaxation
UNTIED STATES BREWERS ASSOCIATION, INC.
am HtACBIME XD, KJ, AIUNU. CA.
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the FEPC charged Motorola
with racial discrimination and
ordered the company to hire tha
man, give him back pay and
seniority from the time he was
first rejected, and to stop using
the employment test.
The general ability test was
held to be unfair “to culturally
deprived and disadvantaged ;
groups.’’ Thus, it appears that j
the Illinois commission want* j
easier tests given to certain job
applicants than to others, with j
all considerations of merit and !
ability pushed out of the way.
* * *
AS ABSURD as this sounds,
this is what happened to Moto¬
rola, and it shows what can
happen on a much wider scale
if Title VII of the Civil Rights
Bill is passed.
The federal government would
be given the same measure of
dictatorial power over hiringi
firing, promotions and all con¬
ditions of employment at private
businesses.
The securing of a job, holding
it and working for advancement
are matters that heretofore hav*
rightfully been determined by
the free will of Individual em¬
ployees, employers and any la¬
bor unions that may be involvedL
These are the groups whose
rights would be destroyed by the
proposed federal takeover in
Title VII,
It is inconceivable to me that
the Congress would enact a law
telling private employers that
they can no longer use their
own judgment in deciding whp
is best qualified for jobs they
have to offer.