Cleveland courier. (Cleveland, White County, Ga.) 1896-1975, May 20, 1927, Image 1
THE CLEVELAND COURIER v r OL. XXVIIII, No. 28 . JUST IN PASSINC By James A. Hollomon From the news dispatohes in Sunday papers many cities and towns in north Georgia are com¬ bining to hold a rousing filth an¬ niversary celebration of The Con¬ stitution-government’s famous mountain forest expedition on June 2, It will be held in the confines of the Vogel state park, at Neel’s Gap, on the Appalachian Scenic highway. This great paved thor¬ oughfare across the Blue Ridge, connecting with North Carolina’s splendid system of pavement just south of Murphy, is one of the many direct results of that remark¬ able tour that braved the perils and hazards of slippery mountain sides, swollen streams, valley morasses and unblazed trails for a solid week without missing a schedule. The Constitution is naturally ap¬ preciative of the esteem of the peo¬ ple of the mountains for this pio¬ neer undertaking that seemed at the time almost as menacing as crossing the Atlantic with an air¬ plane today. It brings back memories— In the winter of 1921-1922, while staff correspondent for The Con¬ stitution in Washington, I con¬ ceived the idea of'bringing the northeast Georgia mountains to the definite attention of the people of America, through moving pictures. Also, and particularly, to carry the high federal and state officials, interested in highway, forest and recreational development, into the almost inaccessible regions of north¬ east Georgia so that they might see for themselves that no more beauti¬ ful mountain area existed in Amer¬ ica, or an area more deserving of road and playground and rest-area attention and stimulation. I sought the good offices of Con¬ gressman Gordon Lee of the sev¬ enth, and Thomas M. Bell of the ninth. And between us we soon interested Thomas H. McDonald, chief of the federal bureau of roads, the national forester, Colonel W. U. Greeley, the war department, agricultural department, and even the president, who designated a special executive representative. This done, the next step was to interest Chairman Holder and members of the highway board and Chief Higway Engineer Neel. They cooperated, wholeheartedly. By the time the plan was com¬ pleted, and the weather—as we thought—was propitious, we moved out of Washington in a special Pullman car, and were met in Atlanta by a vertible conclave of state officials, foresters and other representative citizens numbering several hundred. The weather failed us. It began to rain on the Monday, June », that we moved northeast from Brookwood station, but move we did without a falter, several hundred strong, with a motor cara¬ van a mile long. “Let it rain!” Well, it rained. The further we got the harder it rained. But undaunted we pushed ahead. Gainesville by lunch. Helen, Cleveland and the Bell ranchhouse for night. Then to Tallulah viaClarkesville, aucfa swing through Habersham and then on to Clayton for the night. On the way, at times, some cars were limp on their sides, others stuck in the mud, others ditched, others drowned out in swollen streams. But, like the pioneers who turn¬ ed their faces to California’s gold in ’49, we hung together rather than facing the possibility of bang¬ ing seperately, and not a car was missing iu tlw: second night’s Devoted to the Agricultural, Commercial and Industrial Interests of White County checkup. In the meantime, McDonald and District Forester Reed, and army engineers and Georgia highway officials had vied with all of the others in marveling at Georgia’s mountain beauty and visualized opportunities. “O, for accessibility through this wonderful country?” It was every tongue. McDonald, the road chief of America, mud-bedraggled and fa¬ tigued from pushing, pulling and from even carrying underbrush for temporary roadbuilding to permit a cleavage for some distressed car, stood in perfect amazement at every turn in the forked trails. With glasses he peered through tlie mists in the gorges, the drip¬ ping green foliage of the mountain¬ sides, the cataracts, the rippling streams, in the valleys, the oceans ot laurel and rhododendrons, the symmetry, the sublimity. “ Wonder/ul,” he would mutter. “Roads! Roads!! Roads!!!” Reed, the forester, was bending over his charts and maps to catch the boundary lines of the Cherokee and the Nantahala, planning future campsites and the trails. Once in a while there would be an arrow of sunlight to siioot through the clouds like an unex¬ pected Hash from the surface of *1 blackened sea— And then the photographers, some of them from the government. Price of the Constitution,Buchanan of the Pathe News! How they would click and click, and command for pictures of action and for setting and backgrounds. That was their business— And they were on their jobs either clicking cameras or heaving at stuck automobiles. Again, the rain! And then the plunge ahead! Interesting? Intensely! It kept everybody happy. It gave every¬ body a vision and a will. The mountains had to be de¬ veloped ! Wednesday— Clayton to Highland, a tteady climb over an Indian road that ran through War Woman creek, some¬ times high enough to float a tug¬ boat, and sometimes barely rippling in summer laziness It looked now like our Waterloo. But it wasn’t. With four pairs of trusty mules imported from Beck’s farm on top of the hill every car of the caravan was out long before uightfal). In a veritable downpour with the thermometer dropping like Moun¬ tain Dew into a thirsty stomach we pulled into Higland around 9 o’clock in the evening. Everybody in Highland was up. A great concourse of people from Asheville and other western North Carolina cities and towns had ar¬ rived to meet U6. Then a banquet, and then to bed. How sweet the thought! Thursday evening the sun was out brightly and we turned back to Dillard, and to Clayton, through the forest trail, and by Mud creek falls. Eighteen miles to Dillard by the shorter route! Gordon Lee shifted from a heavy car to a Ford. Tom Bell shifted over from his own car to the Constitution’s path¬ finder, Mrs. Bell caught up the army engineers in her car. All along the line went the order to change riding companions. Two miles, fine! And then trouble began. Eighteen cars were in a moment stuck in one line, with others cutting their own paths along the wooded trail sides. We found a teamster with a pair of mules trying to make Dillard for a load of groceries. He was commandeered at $3 a CLEVELAND, GEORGIA, MAY 20 1927 . haul, with everybody in reach, up to the knees in mud, pushing, tug E'”R Ten hours later the 18 miles had been negotiated. Later, the lucky teamster bought out the grocery store he had been heading for. Clayton was made for late sup¬ per. The photographers had done good work as the day had had oc¬ casional spasms of sunshine. Friday morning, raining and for¬ bidding, with the great East and road through the beautiful IHawassee and Young Harris val¬ leys to Blairsville to be negotiated, “It can’t be done!” The natives shook their heads with doleful notes of warning. “Never quit on a Friday,” I said. “We will try it if we run off the fill into Burton lake.” Every person in the party said “yes.” Charlie Barrett, the head of the National Farmer’s union, laughed optimism into the camp by explain¬ ing that we could at least get to the headquarters of Burton and go fishing. Congressman Larsen buttoned his raincoat tighter and said, “I am ready, boys.” McDonald said he had once swum eight miles up the Colorado river against the current. He was ready for anything. Holder and Neel and the high¬ way bunch were just as game. The army engineers had boots up to their waists. They said they would walk if necessary. The foresters said they were used to rafts. So off we were! . We got through finely. That was tlie second best day’s sun in fact we had, and one of the most picturesque. Standing on the top of the Track mountain late in the afternoon, as the angled sunlight filtered from the West the beautiful Hiawassee valley below, Thoma? II. McDon¬ ald broke into an ectasy of enthusi¬ asm as he shouted : “I was born in the Rocky Moun¬ tains, and spent several months in Switzerland—but, that is the most beautiful scene I have ever wit¬ nessed.” At Blairsville, the home of Bon nell H. Stone, the forester, who had been our intrepid, uncom¬ promising and tireless spirit in the entire expedition, we were told that we were “bottled up.” Our Saturday schedule was to divide into two groups, one tocros^ Tesnatee gap, and the other to cross Blood mountain at Woody gap, tlie two expeditions to con¬ verge at Dahlonega Saturday night for dinner. Saturday morning it v* as raining, and natives of Blairsville said it would be foolhardy to attempt either route, and especially the the Blood mountain gap. The lattar had no road, only a trail, and tfiat full of ruts, holes, streams, and even young trees iu places. No one had attempted to travel it by motor, or other than by horse¬ back. “We will make them both,” I said. And we did. McDonald, Reed, several others and myself—McDonald personally choosing it—started out across Blood mountain at 8 o’clock in light cars. I sent our Packard pathfinder over the other route. After an all-day fight, sometimes literally cutting a mile of road ahead of us, building pontoon bridges, and filling ruts that would drop a car almost out of sight, we reached the top of the mountain at 9 o’clock that night. Then supper with Mr. and Mrs. Woody, the former the ranger, a fine type of hardy woodsman who, Illue liidge Dots Rev. S. S. Crumley filled his ap¬ pointment at Mt. Pleasant Sunday Prof. W. L. Ashe, of Drhlonega, Was in thit section last Sunday. The singing at Mt. Peasant last Sunday by the Hefner Brothers and others was fine. Prof. F. A. Jarrard, of Roberfs town, has been elected teacher at Robinsville, N. C. Mrs. C. A. Allen, of near CleveJ land, and Mrs. J. C. Allen gave us a pleasant call Sunday. The for¬ mer Mrs. Allen stated that her hus¬ band was at Vanderbilt. Day Your Subscription Now Mr. Dave Westmoreland, ol Nacoochee Valley died at his nome Friday night after an ilness of several months. He was interred in Nacoochee cemetery Saturday. Tom Watson Ashe, the little son of Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Ashe, died Saturday night after an illness os a few days. He was interred in Cleveland cemetery Monday. Mrs, Torn Fisher died at her home in Cleveland Saturday night after an illness of several months. Mis. Fisher leaves a husband, several children and a host of re¬ latives to mourn her departure. Her remains were interred in the Mt. Pleasant cemetery Monday on horseback, had met us and join in tire fight to carry our cars over the mountain. We descended the mountain by .Woody guiding us down the trail by the light of burning fires. We rolled into Dahlonega shortly before midnight. The other wing of the expedition was there. Sunday the trip back from Dah¬ lonega by the Cuinmings-Alplia retta route was more easily made— And thus tlie expedition ended without a mishap, without friction, without a discordant note, without one unhappy memory for anyone. It cost the Constitution a great deal of money. It had nothing to exploit except its faith in Georgia, and its earnest desire to be of constructive service in the development of as great and beautiful a mountain area us there is itr this county—to help tire national welfare of as good a peo¬ ple as there are in the world. And then the aftermath— Work began at once. The for¬ estry department got busy. One year later the same road that it took us ten hours to negotiate in 1922 I drove over in high gear in a little more than an hour. The great scenic highway across the Blue Ridge, costing a million dollars, is one of the great highway engineering feats of the nation. Well was the gap named after Warren Neel. Tire East und West road for Blue Ridge to Blairsville is all paved or graded and surfaced. The highway along tlie Tallulah route, from Clayton to Clarkesville, is under paving contract. And so on along every road and trail wp traveled. The federal bu¬ reau of roads, the state highway department, the federal forestry service, have all done finely coor¬ dinated service. After five years! Now the citizens of the northeast mountains, joined in by those of Rome and other northeastern sec¬ tions, desire to pause and take stock, and on June 2 declare again and show formally their appreci¬ ation to the Constitution for that memorial pioneering expedition. We are personally proud that results have followed. [PRICK $ 1.50 A YEAR IN ADVAN< E Commencement Time Commencement is commencing and we are nearly ready for the fun. We think it is going to be bigger and better and more marvelous than ever. If you like anything being ready and happen to need a pair of silk hose, a hat, a silk dress or a pair of shoes. We have them at lower prices than you find elsewhere. Boys if you need a straw hat we have them at reduced prices. Come in and look ’em over. Whitmire 8 Head Always at Your Service Cleveland, Ga. I i Ninth District Kuril Carriers To Meet in Cleveland May 30 Everything is most ready for the Ninth District Rural Carriers con¬ vention to meet in Cleveland Ma\ 30, the. except the dinner and that will he ready on that day fur the ladies are waiting and fattening 1 heir chickens so that the mail men will have a big feed. They will assemble in the Cleve¬ land High School auditorium at to A, M., Monday, 30, and render their program and transact their usual business. Dinner will he spread at Ilird man Park at 12 o’clock by the ladies of Cleveland and this vicin ity. The program is as follows : Song, America. Invocation. Hon. l’lios. M. Bell will introduce the speakers. Welcome address beliall of city, Col. C. II. Edwards. In behalf of post cilice, Mr. Alex Davidson. Music by Messrs. Cooper and Richardson. Response to welcome address, Mr. E. J. Hamrick, Orange, Ga. Music by Mr. A. W. Ivy String Band of Gainesville, Route 6. Address, Mr. J. W. Pickens, Gainesville, Music by Cooper and Richardson. Address Hon. A. S. Hardy, post¬ master, Gainesville. Music, by A. W. Ivy String Bind. Address, Hon. Sam Tate, Tate, Ga. Music by Cooffer and Richardson. 11 145, pictures to he taken by Mr. Carroll Burell, Winder, special representa¬ tive for Atlanta Constitution. 12 :oo, dinner. 1 :oo, 1 ‘. M., busi¬ ness session. Music by A. W. Iv\ String Band. Unfinished business. Reading of minutes. Report of resolution committee. New busi¬ ness. Place for 1928 convention. Election of officers. Song, God Be With You. Benediction. The officers are : W. R. Green, president. Canton, Ga.; O. W. Hudgins, secretary, Flowery Branch, Ga. ; J. E. Pratt, vice-president, Lawrenceville, Ga. CARD OF THANKS. We want to thank the dear peo ple of Blue Creek and Cleveland for their kind help and sweet sym¬ pathy in the loss of onr precious Tom Watson. And last but not least the loving little children who came to shed innocent heartfelt tears for our darling. May Heav¬ en’s choicest blessings attend you every one. Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Ashe and Sllliscrihp For The Courier CIRCUIT NOTES The second quarterly confeience d Cleveland Charge will he held it Loudsville church Saturday tin; 21st, Don t tail to hear Rev. !, G. Logan, presiding elder, preach it 11 o’clock and of course you wi:l want to take dinner with us. Then you will want to stay for the busi¬ ness session just after dinner. Preaching again at Loudsville again Sunday at 2 :30 P. M. Mt. Pleasant 4 P. M., and Cleveland n A. M. and 8 P. M. Plans are being made fer a great day at old Mossy Cieek the 51I1 Sunday. Everybody, whether you attend Sunday Sfcliook any where or not, is invited to attend this etti Sunday meeting. It is being pi, dieted by some t/iat this will he the largest gathering that has ever gathered at this old historic church. We are arranging for one of the best programs possible. Col. G. W. Westmoreland, of Jefferson, an old White County boy, will lie one of the speakers. Also C ,i. Ben Gaill ird, of Gainesville, is on tlie program and several otlieis of this same raek and file. We are expecting Rev. J. II.' Allison, another While County boy, now one ol the leading preachers of the Methodist Church. There is a treat iu store for all who attend. Fry a few chickens, hake a tew cakes and bring them dong and let’s all enjoy the day together. Every Sunday School in the Charge is expected to he present and lake part in the pr< - gram. We have had nearly 400% ii - crease throughout the whole Charge in the Sunday School enrollment during the three montits campaign. Wonderful! Wonderful! The program will begin at 10 o’clock. 'I’iie foil iwing is added to the above program by request of Mr. Henry Allison: Misses Fannie Hamilton and Maude Henson will sing a duet. NACOOCHEE NEWS Commencement begins at Na¬ coochee Inslit ute Thursday night, May 19th at 8 P. M. Thursday night, primary depart¬ ment, Friday night, musical recital, Saturday night, home coining night, Sunday morning 11 o’clock commencement sermon, Sunday night, Bible night, Monday night, senior play, Tuesday night gradu» ation exercises. i