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'Spare Time Income
Refilling and collie iujj money (torn New
Type high qmlity crin Na selling. operaleij To qunlifj diepxr
ears in thi* area
YOU mjat hive car, referencee, $600
$1900 cash, Seven to twelve ho-ifs week -
y can net exiej ent monthly ine.Otne. More
fni| time, For pjreonal Interview write
P.O.Box 4185, •ittsburgb 2, P*. Include
phone number
Spring Clearance' Sale ol
Mew and Used Pianos
Sixty-three unite ot new and ti ed piano«
are on eala at Chick Pi-too Co. where yon
buy better inetrnmeute fur leer money.
Or, have your piano rebuilt inside and
outside at Chick Piano Co, Fur a good
deal, You check with Chick, Attune
Very strict zomar regulation
•hould be made NOW jn the ull
ra modem 129 south of Cleve
land. Don’t wait too long Wo
need ACTION M)W
Solve Crossword Puzzles; Win Cash Prize
Match yonr wits against the expert
Try solving the Jackpoi ( roaewoid Poz
tie each Sunday in the Baltimore Ameri¬
can. The prize is nn er ln»H than $200,
and it it goes unclaimed, $100 is addeil
each week until someone wins.
Look for does, wind l.Jt. rulwa ao»'
bis week's prize in the
BALTIMORE
SUNDAY AMERICAN
Order from Yonr Loa iSeWBurulv
SALESMAN WANTED —< \n n t.>
succeed Hawteigh Dealer in W bit».C°- or
Lumpkin County. Over 25 pi eft i rt-p a hit
car nr cess ary,?, Can earn $!25 and ui
per week from start or wr.ts AK 160 115
Rawliegh, Memphis, Tennessee.
Bi Bj
* > r
B
LOOKING AHEAD
By Dr. George E. Borson
President, National Education
Program, Searey, Ark.
CIVIL RIGHTS OR WRONGS
Two very thoughtful expressions
in the difficult area of “civil rights”
recently have been called to our
attention, in view of public in¬
terest in the legislation being de¬
bated in the Congress. One was a
speech by Associate Justice Charles
S. Whittaker of the U. S. Supreme
Court. The other was an article
by a member of the New York
Bar, Edward F. Cummerford, which
appeared in the “American Bar
Association Journal.” Both have
been reprinted recently in U. S.
News & World Report and they
make very excellent reading for
any thoughtful American.
What these two discourses seem
to have in common is an implied
warning that it is time for all of
us to engage in some reflective
thinking for ourselves about the
so-called “struggle” for rights
that rages throughout the land.
Our judgment will have to be
tempered with concern for Ameri¬
ca and for the standards of decency
and fair play that are American
traditions. These judgments ought
also to be leavened with emotion
derived from our basic respect
for human dignity, but they must
be reached with dispassionate
reason. It is a very big challenge.
A Time For Caution
Such thoughtful observers as
these are disturbed not simply be¬
cause they see the disunity, blood¬
shed and unrest. They are serious¬
ly concerned about what effect
the turmoil, the divisive propa¬
ganda, the loose thinking, the ar
rogance of power politics will have
on the soul of America.
They are concerned, too, about
the net losses to the individual
that are experienced in the total
struggle. They think in terms of
the future as well as the present.
And they are convinced that it is
time for some serious soul-search¬
ing and some questions about where
we are going. appointed
Justice Whittaker was
to the Supreme Court in 1957 and
therefore did not participate in
the school integration decision of
1954. Without passing personal
judgment upon that ruling or
even upon present arguments in
Congress, Justice Whittaker has
warned the nation against holding
out false expectations for a panacea
of law, or even the hope that a
democratic government can be, or
even should be, a “leveler” of its
THE CLEVELAND COURIER
Fleas* Mtd my «ub«criptioa to
ig COURIER as I have indicated
low:
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'ance else we shall be forced to
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’EM, TELL
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NOTICi
•Vno does your printii pot Letterllea'
iVH.'opee, Various For ns, -1C? W I ■
c n't you give AIL >'< or Ju I rnti*-*
The Courier? Job Printers in -othei
•vnspty nr> tsxee in Clevelsnd or While
County and have no interest in our sec
■ m, except take yrr- money What «rt
hey doing for the (rogreea o( Whit.
(;onnty ?
WHY MONEKY AROUND? • 90
. . . When experience supports
the fact that Newspaper adver¬
tising is the most effective buying
and selling medium in the world
Everybody reads this Newspaper.
/ S i
* ft
s» ‘Hi
people. His remarks particularly
caution the nation to use prudent
care in employing catchwords and
cliches that appeal more to passion
and prejudice than to reason.
Equality or Freedom
In exploring some democratic
fundamentals, Justice Whittaker
finds that many persons misunder¬
stand “equality of opportunity”
and argue that everyone is entitled
to permanent economic equality.
But our system, he patiently ex¬
plains, was intended to permit the
energetic, the creative, the thrifty,
to rise as high as they will, so
that each may “find his own level
on the stairway to the top.” Men
may find permanent equality only
in Communism, but not without
surrender of their freedoms and
liberties. Current tendencies for
people to obey only laws they like,
to act with haste, to avoid the
delays of “due process,” to believe
the end justifies the means — all
are among the cliche arguments
that he explodes.
WHAT DIRECTION?
Mr. Cummerford describes the
relentless zeal with wihich some
Americans and certain public
agencies strive to wipe out all the
“bias” and "discrimination” they
can find. The real danger, he in¬
sists, is that civil rights backers
also may wipe out individual free¬
doms in their zeal for reform.
He cites our experience since
World War H with State enforcing
agencies, which started unobtru¬
sively but in time become aggres¬
sive, power hungry, and expansive.
Litigation patterns (he cites ex¬
amples) are developing the idea
that racial balances of sdhools and
neighborhoods must be altered into
a different ratio from which has
normally developed.
We are allowing liberty, Mr.
Cummerford shows, to be subordi¬
nated lo “equality”. Leaders of
government, of the press, of
churches, and of education are to¬
day giving more supoprt and en¬
couragement to mob action, he re¬
marks, than to the maintenance
of maximum freedom of thought
and deed for individuals. We may
be now on the threshold of the
era predicted by Orwell, when Big
Brother watches to maintain the
“terrible equality that is slavery,”
Mr. Cummerford suggests. How can
we disagree with his view that it
is high time to ask ourselves where
we are headed? ____
THE CLEVELAND (GA.) COURIER ~ WfVSBf
GEORGIA. SUPERIOR WHITE COUNTY. WHITE ___
TO THE COURT OF
COUNTY: MRS. ANNIE KATE DOR¬
ASA DORSEY. DORSEY, applicant*.
SEY and BYRON S. as
Sh< desire for themtelve*. their
FIRST: They be incorporated
successors and associates to
under the name of FONDA MILLING COM¬
PANY. The principal office of said cor¬
SECOND: located in White County,
poration shall be
Georgia. THIRD: Byron S. Dorsey Is , a president ,. of ,
v
Fulton County, Georgia, and hia post office
address Is 1491 Kenmore, Atlanta, Georgia.
The other applicants are resident* of White
County, Georgia and their post office address
is Cleveland, Georgia. of ... Bald corporation .. is .
FOURTH: The object The general nature
\ profit to its shareholders. be transacted and the cor¬
I of the business desired to
porate powers are: , ___,
(a) To manage, provide services for and
operate feed mills and other businesses
and undertakings and buy, lease, remir,
service and sell merchandise and real
and personal property. aim privileges
(b) To have ail of the powers of Georgia _ and
enumerated in the Code
such powers as may hereafter be given
by law. partnerships joint ven¬
(c) To enter into or firm
tures with any other person or
in any business or undertaking whicn
this corporation has direct or incidental
authority to do. .
(d) To enter into contracts of guaranty or M
suretyship and to become guarantor or
surety on obligations whether or not tb®
corporation has a direct interest in the
subject matter of the contract oblige
tion guaranteed, corporation shall „ . have exint- . .
FIFTH: Said with privilege to
ence for thirty-five years charter provided by
renew or • extend its as
la 'sixTH: maximum number of shares of
The Thousand shares of common
stock shall be One Dollars share.
stock of a par value of Ten per
However, the amount of capital with which
the corporation shall begin business shall not
be less than One Thousand Dollars. The cor¬
poration shall be authorized to issue additional
shares up to the maximum above stated and to
reduce the amount of capital above outstand.ng, stated, but
not below the minimum upon a
majority vote of the Board of Directors.
to the # incor
WHEREFORE, applicants pray
porated as aforesaid.^ -\y AYN E * GREER
By: Joe K. Telford
Attorneys for Applicants Secretary
Tt annearing by Certificate of the
of State that FONDA MILLING COMPANY
is not the name of any other Georgia corpora
tion; of the foregoing petition are
The prayers ami ... their successors,
granted and applicants hereby incorporated
associates and assigns are MILLING COM*
under the name of FONDA
PANY for the period of thirty-five years, with
the privilege of renewal or extension of
charter at the expiration of that time accord¬
ing to the laws of Georgia, and that said
corporation is vested with all the rights and
privileges mentioned in said petition. Ordered
further that the first publication of said peti¬
tion and this order may be any time within
two weeks hereof.
This 20 day of April. 1964.
S. O. Smith, Jr. COURT,
JUDGE, SUPERIOR
WHITE COUNTY. GEORGIA
Filed in office, this 21 day
of Am-il 1961.
Clifford Campbell COURT,
CLERK, SUPERIOR
WHITE COUNTY, GEORGIA
Ik V^itchezi%; -wise Vs
bf LYDIA PERRINS
»A Favorite Crab Recipe
W This delicious crab dish can be
mad* with fresh or tanned crab
meat. For the white sauce, you
i may substitute • tan of con
: denied mushroom .soup,
D8VHSDOUUI
9 Tbsp. butte* «r margarine
• Tbtp, float
!9 cap* rich mflk
il pjatonta, choppedfla*
9 Tbcp, grata pepper, chopped flat
I Tbcp. chopped ponder
1 Tbcp. Sherry (optional)
1 tap. tier C Perrins WonssisnUi*
% top. dry Bustard
Befit and pepper le taste
1 9 caps flaked fresh or Canned
| 'crabrneat
t hard-cooked egge, chopped
1 Farmtum tr
I •:%
Mate a whit# tense* ef fht, batten
yit^l m id
fagtadUats except che ese, tom Into
taking shells er individual
•aeeeroles, end sprinkle with cliccccii
Bake In a moderately hot oven (379
YOUR
HOME Yjf.
with
Instead of shaking a dry mop
out the window, use this effective
cleaning method. Run the nozzle
of your vacuum cleaner carefully
over the mop, and all the dust will
be cleaned off in no time.
* • *
To prevent cake icing from
it sticking is to the wax paper in which
butter wrapped the for the lunch box,
which the icing part o/ touches. the wax paper
• • •
A hand towel fastened around
the neck with
a clothespin
may be u as
a bib for young
m i3s£ towels your dren. guests own or The chil- for
are easy
to wash, you’re
sure to have
around, and they enough to go
cover the whole
front.
• * •
stick After round you wash clothespins woolen gloves
in ea«A
finger and thumb. This will fceep
them from shrinking and will alse
help ary the fingers more rapidly.
• * •
Don’t worry when the party
winds up in the kitchen—every
hostess can be proud of the appear¬
ance of her gleaming porcelain
enamel appliances. And no fear
of cigarette bums, glass rings,
food stains. Cleaning porcelain
enamel requires just a soap and
water once-over-lightly.
• * •
// light you’re switch tired of the fumbling for *
the in dark, paint
jil with lyminout paint.
THE CISVEUND COURIER
Official Organ of White County, i
Published Weekly at Cleveland, Gn.
JAS. P. DAVIDSON, EDITOR
Entered at the Post Office at Cleve
land, Georgia as Second Class M all
Matter.
Subscription Price Annually
In Advance
White County 93.09
Other 93.61
HENRIETTA’S
BEAUTY SHOP
Complete
Beauty
Service
Four Patronage Will be Appreciated
For Appointment Call — 5-3151
Mrs. Henrietta Davidson Harris,
Operator
Childhood
Prior to World War II, the Arm
consisted of eight regular divisions
and the Philippine Divi 0 . teSS
than half of its present stre- i.
NOTICE
When you need ANY ) I,
please <>ivo A l-l- of il
1 he Courier
BY ADVERTISING: The
man who used to run a small
town business groaned as he de¬
clared: “Advertising ruined my
business,” be said, “1 let my com
petitor do all of it”
DTICE— Under new posts' r*-gu
ittons we have to pev a dim*- for
ach newspaper that canno. -t Se¬
vered We ask any subscribe! who
hanges baddres* to niease nouiy
in advanot*
Buy Your Ford
From TURNER
and get way out Yonder!
Clyde Turner, John Sosebee and Ray Turner
say that they will give you tha best buy in
any type Ford to be found in Georgia
So come and see the best selection of all
type FORDS in all North Georgia
FULL 2 YEAR WARRANTY
F ‘This Is No BULL
We have prices as Hot as ihe Weather
TDRNER FORD, Inc.
John Sosebee, Manager
GRIFFIN &
sn
DRUG CO
PRESCRIPTION HEADQUARTERS
Msn Stwflt) U«S*A^i "V* sV WV.S - -
*\ ___iBEiV—. i
« €\
A now look l« coming to the
. Main Streets of Aperient small
towns* natloals 1 smallsr towns
t The biir-cdty sre
te^brtgftenlngup a »8r iPDssranri
main
lares
fit The Nation*
k. ipresentatives of
Street and Traffle traveling Safety the
ting highways, Bureau, report 2®
country* cent increase In night activi¬ a
per ties in towns with newly-lighted
'main streets. More people are
meetings, theaters and sport*,
events Is at a new high. their store*,
Man; towns evening report and
open every advantage many
out-of-towners recreational taking and;
of evening facilities. More tourists
other art
reported stopping these,“new overnight.* look", j
Officials of relighted their)
towns say they curb night aeel»:
main streets to and have been )
dents and crime the to*]
creased greatly evening surprised business, at dyie
pride which end have community followed the aetfrilta, relight
ta»