Newspaper Page Text
* Beauty Under Glass
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I In this scene from the magic show td he World’s presented Fair, at the the Gen- girl,
- ml Cigar Hall of Magic at the New York in to the
I i . in the glass box makes of Marl? a startling Wilson, reappearance creator of the live response magic show
magical presiding gestures wizard television’s “Magic Land of Aliakazam.”
i ama on in under silken
‘cloth. : Moments Magician before, Wilson the girl whisked was floating the the cloth. air The girl a
away was
[ gone. And now, again aa the magical Cloth is whisked away—she
T The live magic show at the Hall of Magic for 10-12 min*
runs
; (ltes ana will be presented th?6£ times ‘Mtf an hour wllLMle every day each of shew# the
e LI two
Tmef cog by Judy Graham
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In 1783 the first ah travelers
went aloft in a balloon built * (L
by the French Montgolfier
lamb, Brothers-passengers were a
a rooster and a duck!
1 The flight was so successful,
S men fried and accom*
pllshed a trip in the balloon '
on November 21st. _ n-. It l
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t Right after World War II, International travel by land, air
and sea began to Increase. Travel figures reached 435,000.
In the 1960’s, with the hustle and bustle of people “going
places,” figures grew to 1,634,000.
o
For today’s traveler, the
- first International Travel vt
I Holiday held Show will be
at New York’s Coli¬
seum, November 21st
through 29th. It will of¬
fer nine days of continu¬
ous, exotic entertain¬
ment, dancers, featuring folk
from singers, troupes r. *2
all over the world- pH
( end a replica of the orig¬
inal Montgolfier balloon.
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Trout Season Open
S Tv? f ?v e ^r eia anglers like this one will
Ha to + ^ th Geor ^ ia ’ Picturesque
trout streams this s mountain
«^138 month with the opening of the
U t SO n Apri! 1 st until Sept 15th#More
f trout rnnt streams t stocked ; by the - State Game
50^^ oOjWO 1 fW°™ Georgia miSS anglers. i° 11 Some be of open the for best more fishimr th au is
Popuiar W f™ oman streams Creek, like Hiawassee Tallulah Rifer!
northeast Ge River
n£ 8 trout or^a. Last year’s
to effect. This year J for )er the l >ers first ? n per time, day anglers will remain
bepmmtted fish at night S'tmut will
f^ hlng h on the
weas from May Ti/r 0n State game management
runs 2nd, o j closing Sept, 7th, 1964. i
* " ’ tl " lW * 111 >lf ------—--'•"»■/ A
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T THE CLEVELAND (GA.) COimiER
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•IT HAS BEEN interesting in¬
deed to see certain senators and
congressmen deplore racial agi¬
tation and violence in their own
states and cities. Not too long
ago they thought it was all right
—and even encouraged such con¬
duct—so long as it took place
somewhere || 8
else, particu- jf' %
larly in the I M
South. . ''
It seems demon- that | | "•v:
when
strators take f
to the streets jj 1
and trample '
underfoot the
rights of private individuals and
property owners, it is mere civil
disobedience or the exercise of
peaceable assembly—if it hap¬
pens in places* like Albany or
Savannah.
But when the same thing oc¬
curs in New York City, Cleve¬
land or Philadelphia, it is
branded as wild and unruly vio¬
lations of the law and an in¬
fringement upon the rights of
other citizens.
* *
OF COURSE, that is exactly
what it is and what it has been.
The wonder of it all is that it
has taken some people this long
to recognize it. It would be un¬
charitable, I suppose, to suggest
that it hasn’t been the politically
expedient thing to do.
however, they seem will-
(not prepared or printed at government expense)
WHERE U S. WILL GROW FASTEST
IN NEXT 20 YEARS
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Slates expected to population 8°' n ii
more tVian 50>t In
:ft. States expected population to gain
25 to 50% In
□ States expected to gain
5 to 25% in population
Over 220 Million Americans by 1975
THE SPOKEN WORD IS
LIKE THE AIR
BUT THE PRINTED WORD
IS ALWAYS THERE
YeSj For Really Effective Advertising
None Even Approach The Printed Word
For Pleasure and Profit, Read The
Advertisements In
THE CLEVELAND COURIER
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FAMED BERMUDIAN DIVER Tucker 0 helps
visitor adjust a pretty
swimming , equipment few underwater
A years back Tucker dived up from Ber¬
muda waters a valuable gold and silver treasure trove from submerged
wreck of 16th century Spanish galleon. Experts have valued Tucker
treasinre at $75,000. There are at least 40 known wrecks around mid
Attanhc resort which skin divers can safely explore. Bermuda’s pro¬
tective reefs encircling the Colony make for some of the safest under
swimming in the world. Hit
n The rose is red, the violet, blue,
This little bill is overdue.
So pay it now—don’t wait ’till when
The rose and violet bloom again;
For if you do delay it thus,
No violet will bloom for us.
Unless you pay, the rose will rest
So come across, we need the dough,
Not in the spring, but now, you know.
We will not hear where we are at—
The rose is red, the violet, blue—
Upon a fair and manly chest;
The birds will sing but what of that?
ing at last to call a a
spade, up to a point at least.
They have issued cease and de¬
sist orders, declaring that this
isn’t the American way to
achieve any desired objective,
This is doing more harm than
good by anybody’s standards,
they are now saying. which
Many of us from states
have had to contend with law¬
less agitation for several years
now have been saying this all
along, and we’re glad to see that
we have enlisted some allies.
* * *
MOB ACTION and the taking
of the law into one’s own hands
is of course deplorable whenever
and wherever it occurs. We sym
'pathize with our friends from
other states, and hope that they
will be able to resolve their
problems just as we are now
and have been trying to do in
our states.
It will be remembered that
one New York congressman went
to Albany, Ga., on an “inspec¬
tion” trip during the height of
Couple racial disorder in that city a
or so years ago.
Perhaps a Southern delega¬
tion from Congress could take a
trip to New York or Pennsyl¬
vania to see if we could be of
any assistance in settling their
troubles.
EUGENE PATTERSON
Not a Hand-Out,
But a Hand-Up
Alphabet agencies of the federal
government have been bad jokes
since the days of FDR. But they
have been good news to hard-up
Georgians who are conservative
enough to want to stand on their
own feet but need a little help
to get in that position.
A couple of new ones were born
under Presrident Kennedy in 1962
— ARA, which stood for Area Re¬
development Administration, and
A P W, for Accelerated Public
Works projects. All those syllables
have stood for little but accelerated
public waste in the minds of most
people who have not been affected
by them.
And waste has indeed occurred.
We wrote a piece in this space a
wlhile back questioning the value
of financing new courthouses in ad¬
joining counties with federal APW
funds at a time when the state
needs 10 consolidate, not perpetu-,
ate, some of the counties.
But on the other side of all this
coin, some good has shown UP
In the last two and a half years,
ARA and APW have injected $23
million into Georgia in federal
loans and grants. These dollars,
teamed with $18 million put up
by local governments, private banks
and private development groups,
have put $41 million to work on
224 different projects in 70 of
Georgia’s counties.
Thirty-two projects under the
ARA program are helping generate
some 4,200 permanent new jobs,
which is the purpose ARA seeks
to serve in areas of high unem¬
ployment.
The 192 APW projects, designed
to provide temporary employment
on useful public works, are gener¬
ating more than 25,000 man-months
of on-site employment in Georgia,
according to the U. S. Department
of Commerce.
Main aim is to develop Georgia’s
natural resources. ARA is financ¬
ing searches for new tetehinques in
fields ranging from peach market¬
ing to granite and mineral uses.
APW projects are helping to ex¬
pand recreation, wildlife and health
facilities — in addition to building
those questionable courthouses.
A large number of Georgia towns
have managed to improve their
water and sewer systems — and
thus their industrial potential —
with the help of these programs.
(Sen. Richard B. Russell at one
time criticized foot-dragging by
ARA in Georgia; his hometown of
Winder has now received an $800,
000 public facility loan plus a
$772,000 grant to improve water
and sewer systems for industry.)
The help is being felt widely in
Georgia. How does ARA team
federal and local money? Take
Manchester, Ga. A $225,000 ARA
project has been approved there to
put a company in the business of
silk screen printing on textiles
ARA is lonaing the comnay $146,-
250 for 20 years at 4 per cent. Two
local banks are loaning the com
pany $45,000 jointly; a local de
velopment group is investing $22,-
500, and the company will put in
$11,250.
The funds will buy land, build
plant, purchase machinery and put
•the company in business, creating
50 new jobs.
Nearly three-fourths of the $210
million that the ARA has in¬
vested in projects like this across
America is repayable to the federal
treasury, with interest.
It’s a mighty good program for a
state like Georgia, Which needs
help only to get on its feet.
— Atlanta Constitution
this point.
u I say that if the act of sex is
wrong, then let the censors of the
nation start cleaning up every bed¬
room . . Let the censors of the
church begin with the Bible . . .
The prophets didn’t beat around
tbe bush in describing sex, so what
are we afraid of. >»
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tona WOW! Beach, are the Fla.! fish Litfle ev^ bitin’ Phyllis in Dap Ann
Cansler (left) caught these all by
herself — well, with just a little help
from a couple of anglers with poles.
BRIGHT FLORIDA SUN doesn’t
bother pretty Nancie Pollard (above)'
as she shades herself with a fringed
panama hat.
WHITE COUNTY.
THE SUPERIOR COURT OP SAID
CLEVELAND FEED & POULTRY COM¬
INC. respectfully shows:
FIRST: Petitioner is a corporation chartered
this court on February 9, 1966.
SECOND: Petitioner desires to be dissolved
a corporation. Such dissolution
THIRD: may be allowed
injustice to any stockholder or to any
having a claim of any character against
corporation.
FOURTH: Petitioner has paid all debts owed
it.
FIFTH: At a meeting of the stockholders of
held on March 28, 1964, a resolu¬
proposed by petitioner’s board of directors
unanimously adopted resolving that peti¬
be dissolved as a corporation. A certi¬
copy of said resolution is attached hereto.
WHEREFORE, petitioner prays that it be
as a corporation.
TELFORD, WAYNE & GREER
By: Joe K. Telford
Attorneys for Petitioner
WHITE COUNTY.
I, A. L. MAUNEY, JR., Secretary of
FEED & POULTRY COM¬
INC., do hereby certify that at a meet¬
of the stockholders of said corporation
on March 28, 1964, of which all stock¬
of said corporation waived notice, the
resolution was adopted by affirma¬
vote of holders of more than two-thirda
the capital stock of the corporation:
“RESOLVED that the corporation, Cleveland-!
& Poultry Company, Inc. be dissolved.**
This 18 day of April, 1964.
A. L. Mauney, Jr.
Secretary of Cleveland Feed & Poultry
Company, Inc.
™?J ORDER
or ?h roin Z P^^ion is hereby granted and
FEED & POULTRY COM¬
INC. is hereby dissolved as a corpora-^
This 18 day of April, 1964.
S. O. Smith. Jr.
JUDGE, SUPERIOR COURT*
WHITE COUNTY, GEORGIA.
in office ^ this 20
of April, 1964.
Campbell
SUPERIOR COURT.
COUNTY, GEORGIA
NOTICE OF PUBLICATION
Notice is hereby given that the business
at Cleveland, Georgia, in the trade
of BLALOCK REALTY COMPANY, is
and carried on by Talmadge Blalock,
address is Box 267, Cleveland, Georgia,
the statement relating thereto required by
Code Section 106-301, has been filed
the Clerk of the Superior Court of White
Georgia.
Clifford Campbell
Clerk of Superior Court
White County, Georgia
CITATION.
STATE OF GEORGIA
COUNTY OF WHITE.
To Whom It May Concern;
The Citizens and Southern
National Bank as guardian of the
property of Charles E. Black, hav¬
ing filed its request for letters of
dismission, 'this ils to cite all
perons interested to show cause
before this Court of Ordinary of
said County, at the next term
thereof, why said letters should
not be issued as prayed.
This April 6, 1964.
ROY SATTERFIELD, Judge,
Court of Ordinary.
CITATION.
IN THE COURT OF ORDINARY
OF WHITE COUNTY.
In RE: Application of Laverne
E. Westmoreland to probate in
solemn form the will of Mollies
Logan deceased, which order for
service by publication was granted
by said court on April 6, 1964.
TO: Ann W. Leddy and all and
singular the heirs at law of said
decedent. 1
You and each of you are hereby
commanded to be and appear on
the first Monday in May, 1964,
before the Court of Ordinary of
said County to show cause, if
any there be, why the probate in
solemn form of the will of said
decedent should not be had.
WITNESS the Honorable Judge
of the Court of Ordinary of said
state and county.
ROY SATTERFIELD, Ordinary.
CITATION.
GEORGIA, WHITE COUNTY.
To Whom It May Concern:
E. B. Hunt of White County,
Georgia, having applied for letters
of administration with will an¬
nexed on the estate of Edward R.
Hooper, deceased, late of said
County;
This is to cite all the creditors,
heirs, legatees and devisees to be
and appear at the next May Term,
1964, of said Court of Ordinary of
said County, to show cause why
such letters of administration
should not be granted as prayed.
Witness the hand and seal of the
Ordinary of White County, this
6th day of April, 1964.
ROY SATTERFIELD, Ordinary,
White County, Georgia.
How Afeovt That!
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.Many in the coqnac old timers distilleries who work in
Trance Soy the aroma of
coqnoc w««t« imm t>ro«dy fumts pr*- c#J£i
loom «eH*,
NATION A ITORIA!
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