Newspaper Page Text
Come To A Soup
And Cracker Party i
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* ■
i
m for
February U the month
parties! Whether you celebrate
the birth of famous men . . . Lin¬
coln and Washington ... or pay
tribute to Cupid, it’s fun to have
a party during this month, it
|gtve 3 a lift to that mid-winter
j Let* the affair be very with informal.
Bedeck your table mugs or
bowls of hot hearty soup. Just
open a can or two of your favorite
condensed _ _ neat, .
{canned soup ana
tjry mixing soups, too. It’s fun to
create your own specialities by
jsaixing or matching any twosome
from your pantry shelf.
Soup and crackers are natural
go-togethers. Arrange a selection
of crisp crackers, tasty dips and
spreads for a help yourself tray. with
As easy as mixing soups, and
canned soups, are dips
spreads with pantry shelf items
like canned boned chicken, deviled
ham, and seafood.
What could be easier for party
fare what could taste better?
. . .
», MUSHROOM AND
VEGETABLE CHOWDER
1 can (lOVi ounces) condensed
cream of •mushroom soup
soup cans water
3 can < 10 % ounces) condensed
vegetable beef soup with
Blend mushroom soup
water;' add vegetable beef soup.
Heat, stirring now and then
4 servings.
CHEESE ’N CLAM SPREAD
X can <7'/2 ounces) minced cla ns
2 packages' (3 ounces each)
cream cheese
1 teaspoon lemon Juice onion
t teaspoon grated
Dash salt
’ Dash black pepper
Drain clams; blend Z table'
, clams with
•spoons liquid from
cream cheese and lemon Juice
{until smooth. Stir in grated onion,
salt and pepper. Carefully mix
plains into cUeese, Chill if desired.
iUse as a spread on crackers or
[bread. Makes 1% cups. fNS
| f Tips By on Carol Touring] LanemmammJ
—
. Women’s Travel Authority a
yy Just recently the AAA did a
'costs leurvey on average yearly driving
for a family of four. Re¬
sults of this study bear out one
of my pet theories—that the
farther you travel by car, the
cheaper it becomes. In other
1 .won rds, it’s “cheaper by the mile! It
V-f' Certain costs
f. of car owner
w -■
\ J j- ship do with not
SQe change
! on mileage. Depre¬
ss ciation, license
fees and insur¬
ance r e m a jm
•Si fixed no matter
1, - S 3 how much you
;■ drive. The main
added expense for extra miles is
for gasoline and oil. However,
competition among U. S. oil
companies keeps these costs
down. Results of the survey men
itioned above were as follows:
* rot 5,000 Miles For 15,000 Miles
$481.33 depreciation $ 481.23
\ 104.39 Insurance 104.39
16.86 license fee % 16.86
116.00 gasoline and oil 348.0C
37.00 maintenance 111.00
r 25.50 tires 76.50
*$781.08 TOTAL FAMILY COST $1,138.08
Cost per mile for 5,000 miles- ■3.9<?
Cost per mile lor 15,000 miles—1.9c
p There you have proof that
every mile you drive costs less
th'an the one before. So, whether
it’s for convenience, pleasure, drive or
for economy, it’s smart to
MORE because it gets cheaper
by the mile. And since five can it’s
travel as cheaply as one,
also cheaper by the car’oad!
MRS. r
FORUM
by JANE STEWART
To beat the bugs, soak overnight; cigarette
stubs in a little water
then strain and dilute the resulting
liquid and pour
l>—— ; .,m • ■ — s it around the
:.' plants (but not
on the plants).
You'll tree
***' your plants
from ants.
% To
\? 33 V open a
f , lode that's hard
to turn, oil the
key rather than
trying to lubricate the lock. Same
effect!
If a hot kitchen of is your problem, the
place a pan food cold removed. water in That
oven after is
way the water will absorb the heat
instead oi the kitchen getting hot. ;
By storing i jour peanut-butter
jar upside-doum on the shelf, you’ll
keep the peanut-butter completely
| tended.
1965-66 BASKETBALL SCHEDULE
White High School
November 12
November 19
November 23
November 24
November 30
December 3
December 7
Friday, December 10
December 11
December 14
Friday, December 17
Tuesday, January 4
Friday & Saturday, January 7 & 8
Tuesday, January 11
Friday, January 14
Saturday, January 15
Tuesday, January 18
Friday, January 21
Tuesday, January 25
Friday, January 28
Saturday, January 29
Tuesday, February 1
Friday, February 4
Tuesday, February 8
Friday, February 11
|Ti\i' Av^ \Vc v
/■ <
/ V •V«' ""X 2
In Georgia, 41 * -Y
after golf
beer’s the one ■■■
for good tastOi
good fun
I .Mid)
V
vlw vr
■Art
f After settle house a down and hard-played add for on the up a soft drink the 18 score chair holes, that with in it’s scores the good friends. with club to
What better time beer?
almost every golfer—cool, thirst-quenching
Yes, beer’s great to relax with, great for refresh¬
I I So whatever your sport¬
ment, great for taste.
boating or baseball— swimming or tenms-relax
afterwards with t»SR Bestful taste of beer.
UNITED STATES BREWERS ASSOCIATION, INC.
8390 PEACHTREE RD., ATLANTA, GA. 30326
'nj ;•; ■f.'io'A)
18167
SUPPOSE WE HAD TO DEPEND
ON 8G»®G$B SIGNALS!
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jsm yi
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v\v m.
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' In the eerty days of Amerlco, communica¬
tion was by smoke signals. It took a lot of
fire—and a lot of smoke—to talk to your
neorest neighbor.
Today your newspaper brings you news of
your community—as well as the world as
soon as it happens. f
(
READ YOUR WEEKLY NEWSPAPER fgf
e An Ace-High Dinner
Serves Four Persons For One Dollar
R emember how yo«rve tut
when, you held two aces and
Crew two more? That Is some¬
thing the feeling the housewife
has when she discovers an ace
high dinner which she can dad
to four persons for one'ddQar.
Try this one, and yo *'ll see that
this is no Matt.
Cabbage and Tomato
Gratia 234
Boated Smoot Potato Slices TO$
Battered Beets 104
Sliced Cucamben with
k S ea s onings 104
9 Bread and Butter Bf
fruit Salad 324
• with Cream 7»
TUB CLEVELAND (GA.) COURIER
Woody Gap
Toccoa
Union County
North Hall
South Habersham
North Habersham
Lumpkin County
Rabun Gap
Dawsonville
Franklin County
Banks County
North Hall
Stephens County
Rabun County
Union County
Toccoa
Lumpkin County
Franklin County
South Habersham
Rabun Gap
Woody Gap
North Habersham
Dawsonville
Rabun County
Banks County
Cabbage and Tomato au GratUei
Boil three caps of shredded cab¬
bage until just tender, and drain.
Add one-fourth cup of water to
the contents of one can of tomato
soup. Pat alternate layers of
cabbage, soup and grated cheese
(using one cup of grated cheese)
into a baking dish, dusting lightly
with salt and pepper. Cover with
battered crumbs and bake about
twenty minutes in a *75 degree
oven.
Fruit Salad: Drain the fruits
from one cap of canned fruits tat
salad, chill, add one-half cop '
•Deed celery and one-fourth
of chopped nuts. • Mix car
with one-fourth cup at
nalw and
Increase in Debt Dollar
Means Decrease Value
For Wage Dollar
By Henry J. Taylor
If President Johnson is right
(and we are safe) in all the spend¬
ing he’s proposing, wha't’re we
waiting for? Why don’t we just
double the national debt and
everybody get rich?
Mr. Johnson talks of our needs
and desires — about which there
is no argument. His promises to
meet them are heartwarming and
when he refers to his own early
poverty his sincerity is deeply im¬
pressive. But, oh, no, if patriotic
benefits to create happiness and
well-being were as easy to provide
as Mr. Johnson makes them sound
there wouldn’t be an ounce of
poverty any place in the world.
Anyone can promise to speed
up the printing presses and build
up our debt. This brings happiness
and security?
Governments that overspend face
global and epidemical forces from
the outside that no amount of
mystic theory oan avoid or kick
downstairs into the deep freeze.
Creditor nations abroad draw out
their gold. And now in proposing
to change the law and remove the
dollar’s gold backing this resigna¬
tion to events is premonitory; it
helps to intensify the very conse¬
quences it fears.
Inside our country ian increase
in the debt dollar means decreased
value for the wage-and thrift dol
lar. We all grow progressively
poorer in the long run but the
l creeping price level, the erosion of
Jthe people’s savings, Social Se¬
curity, pensions and take-home pay.
The 1939 dollar’s purchasing
power has already declined to
less than 45 cents. Declining cur
rencies follow the law of physical
bodies; they accelerate as they
fall. But even at the present rate
our dollar will be worth less than
25 cents in 10 years.
When Mr. Johnson or anybody
proposes cradel-to-the-grave dis
bursements by the U. S. Treasury
that somehow sounds free, our
misinformation becomes complete.
A government is a spender, not
an earner. Anything the govern¬
ment says it will give to the people
it must first take from the people.
The government is spending more
than the entire income of every¬
body west of the Mississippi River.
On the average, American families
spend about a quarter of their in¬
come on food. But now we pay
more taxes each year than for our
food and clothing combined.
No wonder the Bureau of In¬
ternal Revenue is now equivalent
to an enterprise with 64,000 em¬
ployes and 900 branch offices.
That’s its size, and during your
five-day work week it’s taking, on
the average, your full earnings
for a day and a half.
Are we working for the govern¬
ment or is the government working
for us?
Congressmen in their new $122
million building and their $7,500
a year salary increases to them¬
selves, agency officials on global
junkets, etc., grow more lavish all
the while.
President Johnson’s personal jet
costs more than 300 Rolls-Royce
limousines and costs $2,300 an
hour to fly.
Nor is it true that our govern¬
ment is larger only because we’re
a growing country. This is straight
political malarky.
Since 1900 the gross national
product (Washington’s own fig¬
ures) has increased about 33 times.
Federal expenditures increased
234 times. Employment increased
nine times. During the Kennedy
Johnson Administration the rate
of growth in government employes
has been about five times as rapid
as in our civilian labor force.
If President Johnson spoke
' about the 900 take-take-take of¬
fices the tax bureau operates and
less about what sounds like Wash¬
ington generosity we’d be better
educated another favorite
Washington topic also made to
sound free.
Anyone raising a word of warn¬
ing is supposed to be a penny
pinching scrooge impervious to
human needs. But hey, it’s our
money, yours and mine, and we
have a direct interest in it.
What is folly in the family debt,
debt and more debt cannot be wis¬
dom in the kingdom. The applaud¬
ed rulers merely come and go and
leave us to clean up the mess. So
will President Johnson on his pre¬
sent course. His good intentions
are not pertinent. Next to wars,
nothing has finally caused man
kind more misery than Inflation
with its destruction of working
people’s savings and its artificia
pay.
Baltimore American
NAT! QU A I fOITOIIAl
A Tl
Here
Here B-Boys
There B-Girls
Here B-Boys
Here
Here B-Boys
There B-Girls
There
Here
Here B-Girls
There B-Boys
There B-Boys
Tournament
Here B-Boys
Here B-Boys
There B-Girls
Here B-Boys
There B-Boys
There
Here
There
There B-Girls
There
There B-Girls
Here B-Girls
On Civil Disobedience
By Rev. Dr. Robert B. Watts
(Dr Watts was ordained in the
Episcopal Diocese of Los Angeles
in 1958. He is a Phi Beta Kappa
graduate of the Yale Law School
and former editor of the Yale
Law Review. He is former Chief
United! States Attorney in New
York, a former special assistant to
the United States Attorney Gen¬
eral, a former general counsel for
the NLRB, and a former vice
president and director of General
Dynamics Corporation. He has
argued many cases before the
United States Supreme Court.
The following is excerpted from
a recent sermon by Dr. Watts in
La Jolla, Calif.)
THERE HAS been advanced by
various philosophical followers of
th Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.
one of the most extraordinary sug¬
gestions ever made in Anglo
Saxon or American legal annals.
As a mixture of sophistry and
soft-headedness, brewed by non
legal minds, I assert that this sug¬
gestion has spawned the present
wave of destruction now sweeping
the country.
IN BRIEF, this proposed doc¬
trine is that if any citizen, after
meditation, comes to the conclus¬
ion that any law is unjust — and
further concludes that if appre
hended he is willing to accept the
penalty imposed for violation of
the law — then it becomes morally
justifiable to break the law open¬
ly and notoriously.
Of course, the worst thing about
this doctrine is that again there
are no dividing lines in it. If it
is valid for a small violation, it
applies equally to a more serious
one.
The amazing thing is that many
clergy of this church, incuding
both priests and bishops, have
openly and officially accepted this
doctrine. Episcopal clergymen have
received written expressions of
his doctrine for their guidance.
And large numbers of clergy
of this a'nd other communions
have been sent, or have gone on
their own volition, to Southern
areas for the sole purpose of ex¬
pressing racial concerns by open
law defiance pursuant to this new
assertion of moral right.
FINALLY, as sorely distressed
Christians we see instance after
instance of reluctance on the part
of elected officials to meet law¬
lessness quickly and firmly lest
there be an adverse effect upon
their personal political careers at
the ballot box.
Thank God, no? all our officials
are of this character, but too
many are.
All these things we see and
hear as we are assailed with bits
and pieces of Scripture, which
seek to justify a Christian “do
nothing” attitude.
And the result is all too often
complete confusion and deep con¬
cern over what is right for us to
do as loyal Americans and good
Churchmen.
WE ARE morally disarmed and
brainwashed. We are afraid to
speak out and let our voices
be heard in demanding a return
to law observance by all citizens —
white, yellow, black, red, priest,
bishop, or missionary.
What shall we do? What may
we do as Christians?
The answer is, I submit, that
which not too long ago propelled
a somewhat obscure New England¬
er into the Vice-Presidency — from
which he succeeded to the Presi¬
dency. Paraphrased, only as to
one word, his answer was, "There
Is no right to demonstrate against
public safety! //
And with that, Calvin Coolidge
crushed a strike by the police in
the city of Boston.
The ringing declaration electri¬
fied the country. It stopped short
a vicious new idea. It was correct
under our form of government.
NOW WE ARE face to face with
a whirlwind largely fostered and
encouraged by our vacilliation, our
attempts at appeasement and the
participation of some of us in this
new theory of morally justifiable
lawlessness.
As our own Governor says, we
now face insurrection — an at¬
tack upon the very existence of
our government.
When that point is reached, we
must first use overwhelming force
to crush and destroy every ves¬
tige of danger; and then destroy
this sickness of mrnd which has
led so many to defy law and order.
But what about the theological
problem? Can we, dare we, pro¬
tect our way of government and
our individual rights and still call
ourselves Christians? Here I part
with many of my ecclesiastical col¬
leagues and give you a ringing
“Yes!’’
Read verses 13 through 17 of
Chapter 12 of the Gospel of St.
Mark. You all know the story.
YOU REMEMBER how Jesus
then called for a Roman coin and
NOTICE
When \< u need ANY Job
'’rintinar please give ALL of it
®H£ CLEVELAND COURIER
> t>*«k -Money Order__Caeh
• » K
_
EOT ADDRESS.
■RFD_
i „
a ric__
•fflciai Organ ui White County *
uhlished Weekly at Cleveland,' G*.
-AS p. wAVTDSON, EDITOR
"intered at the Post Office at Cleva
and Georgia as Second Class M.li
latter
B it ascription Price AtumaUy
In Advance
VbUe Countv $3.09
'«hh» 13.01
COURT OF ORDINARY.
White County, Ga.
IV any Creditors and All Partias at In¬
terest :
Regarding Estate of O. Major Dorsey
<>i aierty of Whith County, Georgia.'notice
s hereby giveo that Mrs, C, Major Dor
ey the heirs, have filed apdlicatiou wilh
me to declare noAdmieistr&tion necessary
Said.application will be heard at my
office Monday, November let, 1965, an 1
'f no objection is made an order will ba
passed saying uo ,A ministration necea
say
October 4 h. 1965
ROY SATTERFIELD, Ordinary.
j ! reward,
Briefsase lost near PeoplesBank
Rearing trnt initials E,F. H. Impsr.
papers inside, balongrng to
General Edward F. Henry, Jack¬
sonville, Fla. Good reward of
fered. Notify Blalock Realty Co
Cleveland, Ga. Ph. 865-3519
LOSE WEIGHT safely with
Dex-A-Dset Tablets Only 93 c
at Griffin Drug
f
, TAXIDERMIST
Deer Heads Mounted
Animals Mounted
Tommy Coleman
JClayton, Ga.
Phone 782-SO42
Help Wanted
Make $30 or more per day on loci]
Food Route,; • Man or woman, pait or
, full time, Experience not required
Write Mr. Heath, P. O, Box 2768, DeS do
Sta,, Memphis, Tenn, 38J02
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Cleveland Methodist Ctinrcli
Church Announcements
Sunday School 10a. m.
Morning Worship 11 a.m,
M. Y. F. G:30 p. m
Evening Worship 7:30 p. m
Frayer Service Phuie. 7 :80 p m
Frank Barfield ,, Pastor
asked whose face appeared on the
coin. The answer was “Caesar’s.”
Jesus didn't tell them to de¬
cide whether they liked the Ro
man taxes, or whether the tax
collectors were brutal and un
just — and, if so, to start a tur¬
moil and demonstration by break¬
ing the Roman law.
He told them to obey the laws,
and not to forget to carry out
God's laws as well.
I say that as Christians we can
and should use that same resolu¬
tion of our confusions.
St. Louis Globe—Democrat,