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—~THE PEMBROKE JOURNAL, Thursday, October 16, 1969
The Pemetieok o= ourr ey
) UIBED T MARY - CUUSED BY BONE - READ BV THOW Al
Published In The City of Pembroke Every Thursdev
FRANE O MELLER . . oiioil clivinniecivasiane s Editor
MRS, FRANK O. MILLER.. ___.....__........ .Local Editor
Subscription Rates $4.00 a year, sent anywhere in the world.
Advertising Rates Upon Application.
.I‘;.
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Gov. Léster Maddox
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Reports To/ The People
PS¢ et e A
ATLANTA (PRN) — What
we are seeing today, in many
instances, is our own
government using taxpayers’
money to wage war against
constitutional government,
against rights to private
property, against the private
free enterprise system and
against law-abiding citizens
who work for aliving.
A large percentage of the
money
poured into
OEO and
the various
so-called
ANk
poverty'
programs
finds its
way into
the pockets
of street
gang members, anarchists,
blackmailers, communist front
organizations and other
enemies of this country. Very
little of it ever really helps a
poor person to pull himself out
of poverty.
Under the pretense of
helping poor people to leam
how to raise sweel potatoes, to
fish or to “communicate”,
OEO bureaucrats and their
VISTA proteges have spent
hundreds of millions of dollars
of money belonging to you and
other taxpayers in an attempt
to destroy our republican form
of government. Success in the
United States is being penalized
in order to finance the
deadbeats, the paraiites, the
anarchists and the criminals.
~ Just recently, OEO mailed
poout thousands -of | “training
;. manuals for community
action” which teach people
how to destroy their
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My electric apartments in
.
Florida were so successful, I
.
thought of trying the same
.
thing here. But what really
. " ,
sold me was Georgia Power’s
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10-year service plan.
Sam Hemphill
Hemphtll and Rosenberg
Upkeep and repairs can really cut profits. And
ruin a tenant’s comfort and peace-of-mind.
So, developer Sam Hemphill decided to install
electric heating and cooling in 104 new units
now going up in Tucker.
“Today, people want greater comfort, convenience
and reliability thdn ever before,” says Hemphill.
“And electricity can give it to them. Naturally,
I’'m pleased to be building something I'm sure will
rent quickly. And 1 feel secure knowing that
the heating and cooling equipment is in the expert
hands of a Certified Electric Heating and
Cooling Dealer.”
The service plan Hemphill has assures that trained
men will inspect his heating and cooling
equipment annually, and keep it in gundé\\pcr;ning
condition. “That keeps my profits level, the
tenants happy. And that’s what apartment real
estate is all about, wouldn’t you say?”
.
Georgia Power Company
government, how to get in on
the welfare gravy train and how
to sue any person and any level
of government or business that
gets in their way of getting
something from nothing.
The so-called war on
poverty is really not that at all.
It has turned into war against
private property rights, against
private free enterprise, against
constitutional government,
against the United States of
America and against law and
order and the decent and
law-abiding achievers of this
country just like you.
I submit to you that the
greatest poverty in this country
is not one of material values
and dollars.
The real poverty is a poverty
of spirit of church members ---
A poverty of patriotism by
those citizens who work to
destory America and those
citizens who do nothing or
little to defend and protect it---
And, a poverty of honesty,
integrity and courage of too
many public officials in high
office.
The 24-hour-per-day war
being waged against the honest,
hardworking and law-abiding
citizens in this country must be
turned back, and soon, if
America is to survive as a free
republic.
It can be done by the voters
of this country if you are
determined to do so and elect
only those candidates who have
the ability, courage and
patriotism to do the job.
Further, 1 submit to you
that you should not wait until
the next election to get actively
involved. "~ § t
Generally, 'speaking,
governors, congressmen,
Close Look
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Georgia Power Company President Edwin 1. Hatch
examines a model of the company’s nuclear-fueled generat
ing plant on display for the public in the lobby of the
utility’s 270 Peachtree Building in Atlanta. The plant, now
under construction near Baxley in Southeast Georgia, is
named for the power company chief executive. Georgia
Power has received from the Atomic Energy Commission a
permit to complete the project. The plant is scheduled to
begin producing electricity in 1973,
presidents and other electea
officials are followers -- not
leaders, and respond to
whatever and from wherever
the pressure comes.
The pressure has been
coming from the welfare
staters, the parasites, the
socialists and special interest
groups rather than from the
good and productive citizens
who must make your wishes
and demands known to elected
public officials, if you and
others are to remain free to
practice your profession and
serve in business and in other
capacities you would like,
rather than be directed by a
socialist government.
The motion was made by
Governor Rockefeller at the
Governor’s Conference in
Colorado Springs, and the
other governors voted 47-1 for
a take over of all welfare
programs, removing any
authority from city, county or
state levels, any responsibility
at those levels, any degree of
judgment at those levels as to
ho would be qualified to
%fivg %lfflt payments and
o could not.
‘A program now being
offered before the Congress
would increase the number of
persons on welfare from 10.2
million to 22 million, an
increase of approximately 12
million, most of whom never
have and never would ask to be
placed on welfare because, even
though they might not produce
as much as some others, they
are still proud and productive
workers and they know that
they have eamed what they
have.
If this proposal is
implemented, and these 12
million additional persons are
put on welfare at a cost of some
four to six billion dollars, it is
likely that, by 1975, we will
have some 30 million persons
on welfare and this number
could increase to 35 to 40
million by the year 1980.
And, all of these millions of
people, instead of having an
incentive to work, would have
an incentive not to work
beyond a certain point. Their
initiative would be killed and
they would be forced to be
dependent instead of
independent.
Ours would be strictly a
socialist welfare state with a
guaranteed income, and when
this happens, you and the other
freethinkers and productive
people in this country who are
already carrying a heavy load
for people who could provide
for themselves would be
saddled with even heavier taxes
to pay the bill.
N
German Measles
Vaccine
Available
The Bryan County Health
Department will be offering
Rubella (German Measles) vac
cine to all children in the first
grade and to the female chil
dren, under 12 yrs. of age in the
6th, and Tth grades in Bryan
County schools on Wed., Oct. 15.
Supply of this vaccine is not
great enough that it may be
given to all children at this
time. However, within the next
twelve months, perhaps this
vaccine will be made available
to all children between one year
of age and puberty.
Rubella is well recognized to
be a common, although rela
tively unimportant illness of
childhood. Even at this, chil
dren who have the disease miss
several days of school, in addi
tion to the discomfort associat
ed with Rubella. The real im
portance of Rubella lies in the
hazard it poses to the fetus
(unborn child) if the disease
is acquired by a woman in her
early months of pregnancy. A
nomalies to the fetus caused by
the disease range from minor
ones to those which threaten
life. Some of the most common
ly recognized defects of the
congenital rubella syndrome
are cataracts, heart defects,
deafness, and mental retarda
tion. Preventing infection of
the fetus is the princpial ob
jective of rubella control. This
can best be achieved by elim
inating the transmission of the
rubella virus among children,
who are the major source of in
fection for susceptible pregnant
women., Furthermore, the live,
attenuated rubelia virus vac
cine is safe and protective for
children, but not for pregnant
women because of an undermin
ed risk of the vaccine virus for
the fetus. Children who haye
been given dtv;le;‘ gfibql,lg; \?:tibc;te
have had ’ess'entip:ily no' compli
‘citations whenever, '
For purposes of immuniza
tion, a history of rubella illness
is usually not reliable enough
to exclude children from being
immunized. Therefore, it is
recommended that all parents
get their children the immuni
zation ' whether or not they
think the child has had the
disease; for the shot will not
hurt. In doing so, you will
know that your child is pro
tected and canont transmit the
disease to susceptible pregnant
women,
The health department has
given each school a supply of
the parental consent forms.
These forms will be sent home
by the children who are elig
ible for the vaccine and it will
be necessary for the parent to
sign these forms and return
them to the school (by the
child) if they want their child
to get this immunization, If
the slip is not signed, the child
will not receive the vaccine.
This program is being con
ducted by the Bryan County
Health Department with assist
ance from the Georgia Rubella
Control Project, and has been
endorsed by the Bryan County
Boards of Health and Educa
tion. The American Academy
of Pediatries and the Georgia
Medical Association also have
given endorsement to this pro
gram. The success of a Ru
bella Control Program will be
a tremendous step toward re
ducing birth defects.
Card Os Thanks
I would like to take this
opportunity to thank my
friends and relatives for the
cards, visits, prayers, and all
other kindnesses shown dur
ing my recent stay in the
Candler' General Hospital in
Savannah.
I would also like to express
my appreciation to those who
have been so thoughtful and
concerned since my return
home from the hospital. May
God bless each of you.
Sincerely,
Mrs. D. C. McGahee
Pants are just as strong for
day as they are for evening.
The tuxedo or smoking jacket
pantsuit — in velvet or satin
and usually black — is an al
ternate for the evening dress.
There are short pants for
fall, too.
Jones Urges
State Growth
CARROLLTON, Ga. (PRN)
— A state legislative leader has
called for a massive state-wide
effort to boost Georgia's
economic and industrial
growth during the coming 10
years.
Noting that 40 Georgia
counties failed to gain a single
new or expanded industry last
year, State Rep. Charles M.
Jones of Hinesville proposed
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" REP. JONES
formation
of a “blue
ribbon
comimittee
of Georgia's
best minds
to chart a
program of
economic
progress for
the seven
ties.”
Jones, 39-year-old majority
whip of the Georgia House and
a potential candidate for
lieutenant governor next year,
said the state has made some
progress in expanding
industrialization since World
War 11. But he said, “we must
move faster in the future if
Georgia is to share fairly in our
national growth and
prosperity.
“We need a bold new
program to chart Georgia's
economic and industrial
growth in the seventies,” he
said. “Such a program must be
state-wide in scope. It must
plan the best use of our human
and physical resources and
promote the interest of each
section as well as the state as a
whole.”
To draft such a program, he
called for creation of the
committee of 100 leading
Georgians representing every
section of the state and every
segment of the economy.
Jones said Georgia must
expand its industrial base as
one means of closing the
“income gap”’ with the rest of
the nation.
Larkspur
Larkspur . . . I need only to
hear the word to be transport
ed back to my childhood. When
I was a child we lived for a
few years on a dusty road a
quarter of a mile or so from the,
edge of town. Between our
house and the next was a large
field. - Like -magic in the late
spring a large area at the edge
of our yard would become a sea
of pink and blue larkspur. The
larkspur spikes combined with
the neighbor's sweetpeas and
Queen Anne's lace were made
into lovely corsages and worn
by the seventh grade girls
every year on their white grad
uation dresses.
Larkspur is in the delphin
ium branch of the buttercup
family. The family is a large
one, but the one we grow as
an annual is generally consider
ed to be the variety ajucis. The
spurred flowers are borne on
spikes from 15 inches to 3 feet
high and come in shades of
blue, rose, pink, lavender, and
white.
While larkspur grows best
where summers are cool they
can be grown in this area if
planted soon.
Best results are had if the
soil is enriched with compost
or leafmold to which dry cow
manure has been added. Super-
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Introducing the
Cutlass Sf Oid g
utlass S from Oldsmobile.
The 1970 Escape Machine that’s
the freshest M) fastback on the road.
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Olds protects ypu with energy-absorbing padded instrument panel, sideguard beams. side marker light 2 :
column and stronger, longer-lasting bias-ply glass belted tires. Pampers you with luxurious lmerax;retrr;r;i, rsotaanrcyj ;?élf:?gi'l:{‘c:r; tzz: ?ttgire'gg
instruments. Pleases you with Oldsmobile’s famous quiet ride, responsive power, and contemporary styling. See it soon. . easy
phosphate should be incorpor
ated into the soil with these
materials at the rate of one
pound to each 100 square feet.
Because seed are sown shal
low, the seedbed should be kept
well watered. These plants
should by the time of the first
hard freeze, be of good size.
They will withstand sudden
freezes and start to grow in
February or March and will
bloom by May.
Mrs. D. N. Beckworth
Celebrates Birthday
The children of Mrs. D, N.
Beckworth surprised her on
her birthday, October 13th
with a cade and all the trim
mings,
Those present for the ocas-
Beckworth, Mr. and Mrs.
Louis Beckworth, William and
Richey, Mr. and Mrs. Danny
Beckworth and Martin, Miss
Elizabeth Beckworth, Mr.
Terall Beckworth, Miss Nancy
Beckworth, Ronald Beckworth,
and Brenda Beckworth. A
good time was had by all
In Memoriam
My Beloved Husband
ERWIN W. BELL
Who died 3 years ago
September 30, 1966
Should yo go first and I
remain
To finish with the scroll
No length’ning shadows shall
creep in
To make this life seem droll.
We've known so much
happiness,
We’ve had our cup of joy
And memory is one gift of
God
That death cannot destroy.
Should you go first and I
remain,
One thing I'd have you do,
Walk slowly down the path of
death,
For soon I'll follow you.
I'll want to know each step
you take
That I may walk the same,
For someday down that
lonely road
You’ll hear me call your
name,
* You're meeting new friends.
New neighbors.
New business contacts.
* You're helping to keep your
Country strong.
Keeping it free.
In your spare time.
* You're bringing home
extra money.
Using it to pay your bills.
Putting it aside for
a rainy day.
» You're one of over a
million other Americans
doing the same thing.
You're a member of
the U.S. Army Reserve.
. S Y. BPt NSO U T
PEMBROKE
SHOW TIME:
—Theatre Open Friday & Sai
urday each week. Friday Night
at 8:00 P. M.
Saturday continuous Showing
from 2:30 P. M.
e it s
Oct. 17-18 Frl., Sat.
FIVE CARD STUD
(In Technicolor)
Dean Martin, Robert Mitchum
Inger Stevens
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Living room in the home of Dr. and Mrs. Paul T. Scoggins in
Commerce. (PRN)
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S'ate of Adventure,
ATLANTA (PRN) — Two
Georgia cities will open some of
their most beautiful homes for
tours this fall--Sandy Springs,
October 23 and Commerce,
November 30.
The Sandy Springs tour
features four of Northside
Atlanta’s most outstanding and
unusual homes. The
contemporary home of Mr. and
Mrs. Charles C. Crumley
commands a beautiful view of
the Chattahoochee River from
three levels within the home.
The hanging dining room is of
particular interest.
The country French home
of Dr. and Mrs. Joseph M.
Gibson is decorated and
coordinated throughout with
the shell motif. This impressive
home is featured in the October
issue of GOOD HOUSEKEEP
ING Magazine.
A collection of Boehm Birds
and Ironstone add to the
enchantment of the early
American home of Mr. and Mrs.
James F. Lyman. The New
Orleans style hiome 6f Mr. andiv
Mrs. James E. Casey is
fumished with European
antiques especiaily selected for
this home.
The tour is sponsored by the
Sandy Springs Garden Club.
The homes will be open from
11 am. until 3 pm For
additional information and
advance tickets for the Sandy
Springs tour write: Mrs. K.L.
Coogle - 175 Burdette Road,
N.W. - Atlanta, Georgia 30327.
The Commerce Tour of
Homes and Gardens features an
afternoon and a candelight tour
on November 30. The theme of
the tour is “‘Christmas in
Commerce”. Nine homes and
THE PEMBROKE JOURNAL
e Liked By Many
® Cussed By Some
e Read By Them All
two public buildings make up
the tour.
“Boxwood”, the Georgian
style home of Mr. and Mrs. R.L.
Pittman Carter, is built on the
site of the 150-year-old Carter
homestead. The English
boxwood in the gardens was
planted more than 160 years
ago. The wide pine paneling
and the 9-foot hand-carved
mantel in the living room were
moved from the original home.
Os special interest in the
French provincial style home
of Dr. and Mrs. Ben Minish, are
the Waterford crystal
chandelier in the entry where a
stairway winds upward to a
balcony. The bedroom opens
from the balcony area.
The home of Miss Comelia
Montgomery is best described
as a “friendly guest house.”
The walnut chest in the living
room was made by her great
grandfather and given as a
wedding present to her
grandparents in 1875. Miss
Montgomery will also display a
‘collection +of old American
glass encrusted with gold.
The Commerce Tour of
Homes and Gardens is
sponsored by the Harmony
Grave, Pine Tree and
Commerce Garden Clubs. For
additional information, write:
Mrs. Paul T. Scoggins, 222
Washington Avenue,
Commerce, Georgia 30529.
The Tourist Division of the
Georgia Department of
Industry and Trade
recommends the Tours of
Homes and Gardens in Sandy
Springs and Commerce for an
intriguing visit to two of
Georgia’'s most interesting
residential areas.