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t There's Excitement
v in the Seasons
, and comfort in the home
with electric heating and cooling
A flameless electric heat pump gives you
unmatched comfort around the calendai!
In raw winter weather it keeps your whole
house sunshine-warm. In the hottest hours
of the summer months you get a tingling
hint of a frosty morning. /
Set the thermostat when your heat
pump is installed. Then forget it. After
that, seasonal changeovers are automatic.
Your heat pump simply reverses its cycle
from heating to cooling as needed.
i
Since it uses only electricity, there are
no combustion by-products. Interiors stay
clean. Redecorating costs are cut.
It’s all so economical with our special
low rate for total-electric customers. And
with budget billing, you will find your elec¬
tric bill the same every month.
GEORGIA POWER COMPANY
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Editorial -
POVERTY WAR NEEDS ARA
President • .
. J ohnson’a wap on poverty is in danger of
losing a valuable ally before it even gets off the
ground.
A companion measure, or at least what should he a :
ministration companion measure—the legislation Area Redevelopment Ad¬
guishing around in House (S. 1163)—has of been lan¬
the Representatives all
through the Spring and Summer, and faces the dan
l gear of bemg overlooked or forgotten in the mad rush
ito wind things up so Congressmen can hit the cam¬
paign Praddent trail.
Johnson and his legislative lieutenants
Mould not let this happen. For they have laid great
and worthy plans for helping the young people of our
nation learn trades and skills in the job corps camps
ateMreadyfor ?^ gram whicl1 ' wil1 Srt the* 6 young
.. there has to be jobs for them to torn to once
their training has been completed.
•* tli e Area Redevelopment Administra
eree~o (fRA> to do at comes the start in. That’s of the Kennedy-Johnson what the ARA was ad
nation? 1 *— crea t® ne w jobs in depressed areas of
Aad ** has been doing just tiiati The ARA has ap
Preved . . projects around the
E?I at *vY3? ine8a Private country, banks, teaming up with
unes which generating to finance indus
y»ere jobs are are hardest to some 116,000 This jobs
»e«*r billion Mara create. effort wiU add
perlob'created. » a year to our gross national
* * 08 t ^^ en «*« WOO
tijfen t?® H 8 ? aboutfighting v>lfn this heard of, Against and If
de Sw war
^ P art home and the political
bm P * 8Sed this P iece ofneeded
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THE ttJEVEtANE fGS.) COURIER
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salute the fjL «
4-Hdubs R'M i0<
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Many of our future leaders will be found among the
outstanding young people of our 4-H Clubs s s * almost
150,000 youngsters who make Georgia the largest 4-H
state in the nation e • •
Working to develop Head, Heart, Hands, and Health,
these young people are engaged In purposeful pursuits
which will equip them to face the challenges of the
future • f •
Their determination, dedication, and energy will make
them citizens of distinction In future years . • t We wish
them well! • • •
mA \
m HABERSHAM ELECTRIC
cV Membership Corp.
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THE PRESENT T \\\ £ \
That Lasts A Year it': .■O- 1 V 1
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The a Home suascR^noN Newspaper to J§ I i j
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’65 Chevrolet Impala, Sport Sedan *
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a Yw Chevrolet Impala
It’s ’65’s biggest, most beautiful change. There’s strik¬ ride with a new Full Coil suspension system. Fact is,
ing new styling. New length, width and lowness. A if you overlook just one thing you can easily convince
roomier new Body by Fisher housing an interior yourself you’re onto a big expensive car here.
that’s a knockout. And a more serene Jet-smooth And that thing is its Chevrolet price.
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New Corvair Corea Sport Coupe ■ 1 n
’65 Coreair Corsa
There’s never been anything like it from either side And a higher powered range of engines-with up to
of the Atlantic. There’s new thin-line hardtop styling 180 hp available in the top-of-the-line Corsas. How
for all closed models. More length and width, sporty can a car get? Your dealer’s got the
more entrance and shoulder room in all models. Corvair that'll show you. *
*
See 5 beautiful shapes for *65—Chevrolet, Cherelfe, Cheen If, Corvair A Corvette—at your deater*a
Stamey Cheveroiet to.
Cleveland, Ga.
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PRE-SCHOOL READING}
( A-m I tion Thousands consisted: of years of parents ago educa¬ teach
A |) .uC V vgUl ing skills their and, children arts to the maintain necessary life
seeking clothing, ■
\\ - food and
~W shelter. Youngsters learned by
is i „\ f \ imitating ents did. the things their par-
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up® Although many states had compulsoryoJe? I
'/■ mentary education, when Abraham Lincoln '
|schooling. was a boy he only his had one year of formal
In family's log cabin he
</! ^taught ^few difficult himself books the like hard Aesops way — fab/et, reading a f
tory of the U.S., and, His¬
ill the.- Bible over and
‘
over.
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child Today better you can help your x-r I
for school, prepare himself .A
not by imitation m w s
mo.' o
rote, but with reading 7/ %
chines. For instance, the Na¬ C
tional Institute of Education's
pre-school reading machine
takes your 3-to-6 year old
sics step-by-step of reading through and, the at the ba- (SXtKSS \ _____ t I
same time, lets him set his K
own pace and check his re¬
sponses. Z
: !
A Wildfire Every 3 Minutes 36 Seconds ?|
DIXIE'S OteOftACE. •*
i 400
| 1 FOREST PER BAY! FIRES j
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N.C i
Venn.
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ARK- e.c
‘MISS. ALA. GA.
TEXAS
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Ip IS South States there** a new wildfire starting in the.
forests 400 times a day, compared with 84 times a day for the
rest ef the nation. Problem is ona to be tackled by Southern
Forest Fire Prevention Conference in New Orleans in Aprils