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I KNCLOSBt
Order-Cash
AMB -
I REST ADDRESS
RFD—
nr.
CATS
vci Cost-Rigid Frame-Metal Building
For information and free e«ti
li,j.te call Carroll ! Daniel Con
*tnictiou Co.,! Gainesville. GA
686-3241
NOTICE
Very strict roinz regulation
hould ba made NOW ri t'n u
t modern 129 south of Cleve
d t> n’t v tit t > ■ I v ■ We
need ACTIO N
FOR SALE
Singer Machine : In like new
cabinet. Zig-Zags, makes button¬
holes, fancy stiches, darns, etc
Local party may finish payments
of $11.14 mouthly or pay complete
balance of $58 60. Full details and
where seen write: National’s Cre¬
dit Manager* Mr. Laughlin, Box
1161, Athens, Ga.
National Sewing Machine Co.
Asheboro N. C.
fiuppont Gild
AcEu/ttUA
Form No. 510-A
a
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GS
buy girl scout
COOKIES_
LIKE THE AIR
THE SPOKEN WORD IS
BUT THE PRINTED WORD
IS ALWAYS THERE
Yes, For Really Effective Advertising
None Even Approach The Printed Word
For Pleasure and Profit, Read The
Advertisements In
THE CLEVELAND COURIER
e
HOMEOWNERS, if yon need
MONEY
YouCan Borrow Up To
$ 5,000
SECOND MORTGAGE
CONSOLIDATE ALL YOUR
DEBTS into One Low Payment!!
60 Months to Repay
arm LOANS ANYWHERE IN GEORGIA
Out-of-Towners Mail for Mortgage Loans
NAME
ADDRESS
CITY. PHONE
FIRST GAINESVILLE MORTGAGE
AND & TITLE COMAANY
301 Flrjt Federal Building Gancsville, Ga
*
<v.
Methodist Church
Church Announcements
Sunday School 10 a. m.
Morning Worship 11 a.m,
M. Y. F. 6:30 p. m.
Evening Worship 7 : 30P ,1U
Prayer Service Wed. 7:30 p, id
Frank Barfield, Pastor
Official Organ of White County, c
Published Weekly at Cleveland, Ga.
j as. p. DAVIDSON, EDITOR
Entered at the Post Office at Cleve
land, Georgia as Second Class Mall
Matter.
Subscription Price Ann u all y
In Advance
White County $3JM
•uaet 93.91
w~
NOTICE
When vc u need ANY Job
Printing please give ALL of it
THE CLEVELAND COtJRIEr
c r \5
M3
A
4; {■$
4%
NEW MONEY FOR
YOUR OLD THINGS
Your Discarded Furniture,
Piano, Radio, Bicycle, Tools
leo Box. can be eold with
K WANT AD IN
THIS NEWSPAPER
THE CLEVELAND (GA.) COURIER
WHITE COUNTY.
Whereas, J. Ralph Pardue, Administrator of
W. L. (Alice) Pardue, represents to the
Court in his petition, duly filed and entered on
record, that he has fully administered Mrs.
W. I,. (Alice) Pardue estate: This is, there¬
fore, to cite all persons concerned, kindred and
creditors, to show cause, if any they can, why
said Administrator should not be discharged of
from his administration, and receive Letters
Dismission, on the first Monday in March,
1966.
Roy Satterfield, Ordinary.
GEORGIA, WHITE COUNTY . L.
Whereas, J, Ralph Pardue and Marvin
Pardue, Executors of the last will of W. L,
Pardue, represents to the Court in their peti¬
tion, duly filed and entered on record, that
they have fully administered W. L. Pardue
estate: This is, therefore, to cite all persons
concerned, kindred and creditors, to show cause,
if any they can, why said Executors should
not be discharged from their administration,
and receive Letters of Dismission, on the first
Monday in March, 1965. Satterfield, Ordinary,
Roy
GEORGIA, WHITE COUNTY
To all Whom it May Concern:
Mrs Lora B. Allison having filed her peti- real
tion seeking leave to sell or encumber
estate set aside to herself and her minor
children out of the estate of Marvin Allison
deceased, as a year’s support, this is to cite
all and singular the persons who may be in¬
terested therein, to be and appear before me
on the 1st day of March, 1965 at 10 A.M.,
and show cause, if any they can, why the
prayers of said petition should not be granted
Witness my official signature, this 1st day
of February, 1965. Ordinary.
Roy Satterfield,
CITATION
GEORGIA, WHITE COUNTY
To Whom It May Concern:
Mary Abernathy, as Guardian of Saran
Abernathy and James Abernathy, has filed
her petition for an Order allowing her to sell
each of the one-half undivided interests 01
her wards (subject only to the life estate in
their mother) in certain property, for the
purpose of care, maintenance, education and
support of her said wards. All interested per
sons are hereby cited to show cause before the
Court of Ordinary on the First Monday in
March, 1965, why said Order should not be
granted as prayed. Satterfield,
Roy White County, Georgia
Ordinary,
HENRIETTA’S
BEAUTY SHOP
Complete
Beautv
Service
Four Patronage Will be
-For Appointment Call — 5-3151
Mrs. Henrietta Davidson Harris,
Operator
Cup and Paint
Your
Rural Mail Box
Today
rmi/ma
d MMMM
M :-x: A w
M
■ v M
1
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m ■ m
m
HINGTO,
iSm
increasing con¬
cern over the outflow of Amer¬
ican dollars and our shrinking
gold reserve, and justifiably so,
because it is vitally important
to the security of the United
States that we maintain a stable
currency.
Stop-gap
measures to &
alleviate the
gold dollar m?.
•
problem may
provide tem¬ m i -ifi
porary relief,
but they fall
short of a real
and lasting so¬
lution. The heart of the prob¬
lem is the fact that we are
placing too much of a burden
upon the dollar.
The dollar is strained almost
beyond limit by the load it must
carry for foreign aid and mili¬
tary defense throughout the en¬
tire Free World. Year after
year, we end up spending more
abroad than we take in. The re¬
sulting balance of payments defi¬
cit leads to a drain upon our gold
supply, which has decreased
about $9 billion in just the past
14 years and reached its lowest
point in 25 years, O
* * *
! THE UNITED STATES now
has approximately $15.1 billion
in gold stocks, of which more
; than $13 billion must by law
j be held in reserve to back our
| dollars. This leaves less than
$2 billion in so-called “free
gold” to meet foreign claims
now totaling more than $26 bil
lkn.
: A loss of confidence in the
dollar abroad could cause a run
t. (Net prepared or
Sol¥e Crossword Puzzles; Win CasIPrlw
Match vtuir wits against ibe expert,
Try solving the Jackpot < rosswoid Pus
tle each HundKy in the Baltimore Amei i
:an. The prize is never lose than 9200,
,nd it it goes unclaimed, (100 is added
;ach week until someone *rjns.
Look for does, word list, rales an J
tis week's prize in the
BALTIMORE
SUNDAY AMERICAN
Order from Vo i Loa Cte wedeal et
NOTICE!
Need a man In attaint manager in the
largest Horn* Shopping .Service in tb< -
Southeast. L miled travel required in
N E. lift, Dial net« Mi <imom salary Zof
*80 week, , plus . when . of -
per expenses out
own Must be bomlaple an I have go <1
work leference with no drinking problem
Phone 865 3091 |for interview appoint*
mt-nt. C, M, Baker
Piano and Electric ’Organ Sale
At (ihick Piano Co. you will finrt|Amer_
i« .......... s gneetvnlue i" mirrepntnoi $23175;
ptodiee pmnuf $154 SO; new pianos $495.i
Or have your piano rebuilt an<l remodelr,:
at monej-arving prices. Oblck Piano Do,
* ■">"* VOlir ,lolUr «>■> 8
(.Me Piano Co
27 1 N, Lumpkin St Athens tia
PINEY WOODS
PETE Says:
DEAR MISTER EDITOR:
Water pollution appears to be
getting some needed attention. A
report by the NAM shows business
is really doing something aibout
it. It says $100,000,000 is being
spent yearly by plants to curb
pollution; that 69 per cent of man¬
ufacturers have installed water
treatment facilities, and that vir¬
tually all plants being erected to¬
day have built-in treatment equip¬
ment.
Cities seem to be making less
effort to stop dumping raw sewage
into streams. Gov. Rockefeller
cites one New York state town’s
plight During last season’s drouth
it faced a crisis because it couldn’t
use the water in the stream flow¬
ing nearby. The wa'er was so bad
it would “foul the pumps of the
fire engine,” the governor said.
That town learned its lesson.
Yours truly,
PINEY WOODS PETE.
— Atlanta Journal.
upon our gold would pre¬
sent an impossible situation. It
is a condition we should not
allow to continue.
Last year, the Congress took 1
action to curb the outflow of
American funds invested abroad :
in an effort to improve our bal. |
ance of payments, and earlier
our monetary authorities took .
other credit-tightening steps to
ease the problem.
And now there axe proposals
to modify the requirement that
our gold reserve be at least
large enough to constitute 25
per cent backing for the U. 3,
money supply.
It is true that if the pres. ■
ent situation continues, we will
not long be able to dip into our :
“free gold” to meet foreign
claims. Some action will prob¬
ably be taken by the Congress to
buy time. We cannot afford to
.
repudiate foreign demands for
gold and destroy confidence in
the dollar.
* * *
DESPITE measures that may
be taken to temporarily relieve
our balance of payments deficit
and the gold drain, it seems to
me that the United States will
continue to be faced with this
problem so long as it spends
more abroad than is collected.
Certainly our Europ ean
friends whom we have pushed
along the road to prosperity'
should begin to share more of \
the cost of the defense of the ;
Free World and of aiding un- ■
derdeveloped Countries. 4
fr *4t4 *■* *» ■
at govermeat eeepeme)
peptic Tank Service
If your Septic’ Tenk cleaning cell
Hammond S ptic I nnk H»ivio«. »uin«o
ville, L**, 530.22.",8 w « have irucRs with
1000 Kalian lank* «itb ptlin.ix w*
equipped to (rive you qnick service end *
good job.
Notice Ot Intention To Introduce
Local Legislation
'oiice ic> lo-rebv given that there wi I
be introduced «l the January 1965 Regu
lar Seeeimi ,f tne General Aseeuihiy o*
Georgia a bill to plaCi' the Shi riff of White
Lonmy cn a ialaiy in ien of llie fee eye
tem ; To provide notnpe'igatloo for deputy
sheriffs; To provi e f r ib* eo9t of operat¬
ing sheriff department; 1 o provide and
define tlie procedure therefore; To repia
any conflicting laws; and for . otheu
poses.
This 16th day of January, 1965,
Tom Mauuey
present alive, White County,
Georgia
13 WHITE COUNTY
GEORGIA, of WALTER G. FOSTER,
The petition
E.', Atlanta!
Georgia, respectfully shows:
Petitioners desire for themBelves, their suc
STSw “apTtal MANAGEMENT COM
PANY”. 2
— —
The object of said corporation shall be
pecuniary gain for its shareholders.
The general nature of the business to be
transacted by the corporation shall be as fol
*°'(a) generally To lend money, conduct with business or without transactions security,
and to
commonly carried on by loan companies.
(b) To buy, sell, assign, discount and re¬
discount notes, drafts, bills of exchange, con¬
ditional sales contracts, bills of sale to secure
debt, deeds to secure debt, mortgages, securi¬
ties, accounts receivable, and choses in action
of all kinds, both as principal ami agent.
(c) To deal in all lines of insurance and
contracts of indemnity as principal, agent or
broker. otherwise . hold, ,
(d) To purchase or assign, acquire, exchange,
own, mortgage, sell, convey,
option, leaBe, subdivide, develop, improve, or :
otherwise dispose of real and personal property
of every class and description; to construct,
erect, repair and remodel buildings and struc¬
tures of all types for itself and others, as
principal or broker. commercial,
(e) To engage in any other
enterprise principal, .
financial or investment as
agent or factor, provided that the same be not
inconsistent with the laws of the State of Geor¬
gia. —4—
Petitioners further desire that said corpora¬
tion be vested with all the rights and powers
now or hereafter given to do any and all
things which may be needful or proper in the
operation of the above described business, and
that said corporation have all of the powers
enumerated in Sections 22-1827 and 22-1828,
Georgia Code Annotated, and such powers as
may hereafter be given by law.
—5—
The corporation shall be authorized to or¬
ganize or participate in the organization or
subsidiaries engaged in any business similar to
the business of the corporation as set forth
herein.
.«— 6 —
The maximum number of shares of stock
shall be 250,000 of the par value of One Dol
lar ($1.00) per share, all of which shall be
common stock.
However, the amount of capital stock with
which the corporation shall begin busines
shall be not less than One Thousand Dollars
($ 1 , 000 . 00 ).
7
The time for which the corporation is to
have existence is 35 years, with the privilege
of renewal of the charter, from time to time,
upon the expiration of said periods of thirty
five (35) years. —8—
The principal office will be located in White
County. Georgia, but privilege is desired to
establish branch offices in other counties both
within and without the State of Georgia.
Petitioners further desire that by-laws of the
corporation shall be adopted by the common
stock holders, and such by-laws shall provide
for the officers of the corporation, the man
ner of their selection, and such other rules
appropriate to by-laws which have as their
purpose the control and management of the
corporation, including provisions whereby the
by-laws may be amended.
— 10 —
Your petitioners herewith exhibit a certificate
of the Secretary of the State of Georgia as
required by Section 22-1803, Georgia Code An¬
notated. petitioners be
WHEREFORE, and pray style to afore¬ in¬
corporated under the name
said, with all of the rights, powers, privileges
and immunities Bet forth above and as aro
now or may hereafter be allowed similar corpo¬
rations under the laws of Georgia.
Kenneth R. Keene
Attorney for Petitioners
Kenneth R. Keene
Attorney at Law
P. O. Box 246
Cleveland, Georgia
ORDER AND JUDGMENT
RE: CHARTER APPLICATION NO--------------
GEORGIA, WHITE COUNTY
The petition of Walter G. Foster. John T.
McGaha and Paul W. Young, to be incorpo¬
rated under the name and style of CAPITAL
MANAG19MRNT COMPANY for a period of
thirty-five years, presented, read and con¬
sidered. It appearing that said petition is
legitimately within the purview and intention
of Georgia Laws, and that there is no exist¬
ing corporation registered in the office of the
Secretary of State of Georgia by the name of
Capital considered, Management ordered Company. adjudged that
It ia and
the prayers of the petitioners be and the same
are hereby granted; and that petitioners be
and they are hereby vested with a corporate
charter under the name set forth In the peti¬
tion, and said corporation shall have and be
vested with all the rights, powers and privi¬
leges prayed for and enumerated, together
with all rights, powers and privileges that
can be legally possessed by a corporation
created by a Superior Court under the laws of
the State of Georgia.
Granted this . lOth day of February, 19(|§,
Sidney O. Smith
Judge, Superior Court
White County, Georgia
Filed in office this . 12 th. day of Feb., 1965.
Clifford Campbell
Clerk, Superior Court
White County, Georgia
Wanted
For Service Station
Compleleley Renovated
Located in City of Dahlone^a
Conk) o|)|)oi tunity
We will furnish stock of Merchandise
See or cail
CURTIS HUDGINS
Nolan Gee
AMERICAN OIL Co
Phone Lexox 4 4916 Gaine-*vil|p Ga.
t
Got. Senders Speaks to Georgians
Recently I went to Washington
to testify before the Senate Com¬
mittee on Public Works to urge the
immediate approval of one of the
most important issues confronting
our Nation today—one which vit¬
ally and personally concerns our
own state of Georgia.
I am happy to report to you to¬
day that this bill, the President’s
Appalachian Regional Development
Program, was passed by on over¬
whelming majority of United Sta¬
tes Senators last week. And we
have all indications of a speedy ap¬
proval by the House of Representa¬
tives within the coming days.
This Appalachian Bill, if passed,
will mean a new way of life, one
of progress and prosperity, for mil¬
lions of people in the 11-state Ap¬
palachian Region of our Nation.
This includes one-fourth of our en¬
tire state.
Appalachia, the Nation’s largest
depressed area, extends from the
northern tip of Pennsylvania to
mid-Alabama, enveloping and
spreading its contagion through
north Georgia’s mountain region.
Thirty-five of our counties and
675,000 of our people, constituting
13 percent of the population of our
State, are residing in this poverty
blighted, under-developed and
long-neglected portion of Georgia.
The per-capita income in Appal¬
achian Georgia is little more than
$1,000, far below the average in¬
come for the rest of the State. This
mountain region, in fact, ranks
fourth from the bottom in per
capita income of all 11 states in
Appalachia.
More than 35 per cent of the fam¬
ilies in Georgia’s Appalachian re¬
gion have annual incomes of less
than $3,000. This income, by Geor¬
gia standards and by national stan¬
dards, spell poverty.
This poverty links itself directly
to unemployment, in that 14 of our
Appalachian counties are listed by
the U. S. Department of Labor as
areas of substantial and persistent
unemployment.
As a result, the direct cost of
Georgia taxpayers in annual pub¬
lic assistance payments in this
region is $1,500,000. The problem is
compounded by the fact that 18
;er cent of those Georgians in Ap¬
palachia who are 25 years old and
older have less than five years of
formal education.
We in Georgia have a vested
interest in Appalachia and a per¬
sonal concern for the problems of
the entire region. And it is our res¬
ponsibility to see these fellow
citizens put on the road to full
economic recovery and develop¬
ment.
This goal can be attained only
through the establishment of the
Appalachian Regional Development
Act. It can be done only through a
Federal-State partnership that will
assist the region in the promotion
of its economic development by pro¬
viding the basic facilities essential
to growth.
Through our newly-organized,
State-supported Office of Economic
Opportunity, Georgia has made a
certain amount of progress in her
Appalachian counties, but we must
have the proper assistance of all
the Nation in order to relieve our
people of the unnecessary burden
they bear. The natural resources,
the human resources and the po¬
tential are already there. They
need only the proper stimulation
and support.
When this mission is accomplish¬
ed, it will not only bring the 11
state Appalachian Region into the
mainstream of American economic
prosperity, but it will greatly en¬
hance the economy of the entire
Nation as well. It will not only
benefit Georgia’s own Appalachia,
but it will also contribute to the
progress and prosperity of all Geor¬
gia and all Georgians.