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THE CLEVELAND COURIER
“COVERS THE MOUNTAINS LIKE MOONSHINE
Devoted to the Agricultural, Commercial and ludustrial Interests of White County
Vol, LVIHI No. 26
THE CLEVELAND
PLATFORM
For White County and
Cleveland:
A Cleaner and More Beautiful
City Graded and
All Highways
Paved
To Make White County
Mecca for Tourists
Development of Chattahoo¬
chee River
Airport Atlanta
4-Lane Highway from
to S. C. Line
J. H. Campbell Dies At.
Gainesville Hospital Sunday
James Hamilton Campbell, 78,
died early Sunday morning' at
Hall County Hospital, where he
last Saturday. He had been in
ill health for several years.
He-was born in White County
and spent his life hi re, except for
a stay in Bedford. Va., where he
was engaged as a millwright, and
a few years in Banks County and
at Jefferson, where he operated a
wheat and com mill
He had been a member of the
Baptist Church for 59 years and a
member of Yonah Lodge, No 382,
F. & A. M., for 58 years. He
was Tax Collector of WhiteCoun
ty for several years.
During World War II he was a
member of the White County
Selective Service Boaid.
Funeral services were held from
the Cleveland Baptist Church
Monday afternoon at 3 with the
Rev. W. 0. Cruce, Rev. Claude
Hood, Rev. H. H. Humphries
and Rev. John Wofford officiat¬
ing. Interment was in Cleveland
cemetery. The Masons had
charge at the grave.
lie ie sntvived by bis wife, six sons,
William, Fred, Clifford, Hope and Rty
Campbell, City; and Dan Campbell,
Montgomery, Ala ; one daughter, Mrs
Harry Ragan, City i one sister,.Mrs. D. M
Alexander, College Park ; anil six grand¬
children
Ward’s had charge.
John H. White Dies In
Gainesville Hospital April 27
John H. White, 81, died in Hall coun¬
ty Hospital April 27, where he was
carried April 27, following an illness of
several years.
He was born in Blue Ridge district and
spent hiB life in White County, except for
a few years in other states where he wap
engaged in construction work. He w «8 a
member of the Cleveland Baptist Church
He was one of the first citizens to show
his interest in pulling Cleveland out of
long Rip Van Winkle spell by construct¬
ing business) buildings on Use square, and
often expressed that his health pievented
him from doing more,
Funeral services were held from the
Cleveland Baptist Ceurch Sunday after
neon with the Rev W.O. Once and the
Kev. H. H. Humphries officiating. In
torment was in Tesuatee cemetery
Survivors include his wife; two sons.
Charles II. and Jack N. White, both of
City; three daughters, Mrs. P. E. Mc.Le
Roy. Baltimore, Md.; MrB. J. W Rainey,
East Poin; Mrs P .8 Ragland, Cornelia;
two brothers, D F White, City, and W.
A. White, Helen; and eight grandchild¬
ren,
Wark's had charge.
Road Will Be Paved
To Top of Brasstown Bald
Gov. Griffin April 25 allocated $75,000
to the 8tate Highway D.-par ment for
paving the road to Ihe top of Braestown
Bald, the highest peak in Georgia, which
ie 4,784 feet above sea level.
This paving job has long been neglect¬
ed and it will oflVr the motorists an op¬
portunity to view Georgia's mountain
Wonderland.
When you give orders to printers
away from Cleveland for Letter¬
heads, Envelopes, and all Job
Printing, do they boost and work
for Cleveland’s progress and fu¬
ture growth? Don’t you think
that The Courier is entitled to
all the Job Printing in Cleve¬
land? Well, then give us your
order. ——-wm
Ye have sown much, and bring in
tle; ye eat, but ye have not enough . .
Consider your ways Go up to the
tain,—Hag 1:6, 7, 8
Frugality is good, if liberality be
ed with it. The first ia leaving oft'
fluous expenses; then best owing them
tin benefit of others that need. Ihe
without the last begets covetousness;
last without the first begets
—William Penn
White County will grow beyond
dreams of any of ouv most
citizens if John Quillian will build
modern highway fromCleveland
ville.
I. Walter Thompson Co, the
largest advertising agency, presented
last Saturday to the American Aspn,
Advertising Ageuctes meeting in
Sulphur Springs, W. Va.,
—1 9 75 ”
Specifically do we wish to call your
tention to the section from Atlanta
near the Va. and N. C. state line, which
is designated as the Interurbia of
Southeast in 1975.
This projected revolution of our section
in the near future is most amazing. All
of this growth will lie fro a Atlanta,
thence tn Greenville, 8. C , and continu¬
ing in a northeasterly course.
So, the only thing that can hold back
White County from forging ahead now
is a modern highway from Cleveland to
Gainesville.
We wont have a modem highway un¬
less an entirely new survey is made,
Mr. Quillian will make known that ne will
have a new survey made and shall con¬
struct a very modern highway, then he
will detinately he the source that will
start a spark for unsurpassed industrial
and tourist development in White L’ounly.
The Editor’s very good friend, Robert
W. Holder, Atlanta, has for many years
predicted the marvelous growth of White
County if we can only secure a modem
highway to Gainesville.
The c 0UI > er trusts that Mr. Quillian
will soon announce that a new modern
highway will be constructed from Cleve
land to Gainesville, and if he will do it to
give it the name of the “John Qnillian
Highway ”.
GuS York’s great work in pasture
development in White County ie now
coming to the fore after all the rain we
have had this spring.
GuS would Ire happy to see the results
of his wonderful work for the people of
White County. The pastures in While
County are a living monument to Gus
York and will perpetuate his name and
generous deeds as having done more foi
the farmers of White L’ounly than any
one.
Gus wanted to see the hillsides green
and stop the raindrops from washing
away the precious soil, Well, Gus’
valuable work is now coming into fruition
The prophet Nos’radamus predicted a
battle between the “Bear and the Eagle,”
This is interpreted by the follows of Nos¬
tradamus to mean war between
and the United States, lie said Hie Eagle
would win.
Up to now the 1952 dollar has lost 4
cents.
Creeping inflation is causing the ad¬
ministration considerable headaches.
is causing acute hardship to people with
fixed income
Some people contend that the ‘‘tight
money” policy of the administration
hitched solely on high interest rates.
Senate is now making an investigation ol
tight money, which, it is argued, is
ing away between 8 anti 4 billion
a year trom those who need it most and
then giving it to those who need
increased the least.
Money is what you need mote of
less you have of it.
It is stated that American gil ls
the most beautiful legs in the world,
Next to God. we are indebted to
first for life itself, and then for making
worth living —Bovee
Most of ns don’t put our first foot
ward until we get the other one in hot
water.
Some people are easily entertained.
you have to do ie sil down and listen
them.
It was woman who put man out
Paradise, it is still woman, and
only, who can lead him back.—Elbert
HnbbarA.
‘‘I like to see a man proud of the
in which he lives; I like to see a man
live in it so his place will be proud ot
him.”—Abraham Lincoln.
The land, whither ye go to poesess it,
a land of hills and valleys, and
water of the rain of heaven: a land
the Lord tby God careth for : the eyes
the Lord thy God are always upon it,
from the beginning ot the year even
the end of the year,..Deut. 11 'll.12
Rumors unquestionably are bad
cine but after all tbeie must be
thing to keep the conversation going in
the barber shops and beauty palors.
— The Daily Sikc aton (Mo.) Standard
CLEVELAND, GA* MAY 3 1957
Local Nexrs
The couriei failed to give c edit to the
poem, '‘Spring At Cleveland”, in our
last issue to Earle J. Grant, Doraville.Ga.
Mrs J. F. I vie and Mike and Mr and
Mrs jas, P. Davidson Jr. of Atlanta
spent the weekend with liomefolks,
Ted Hall has purchased the back half
of the lot- Watkins is building a
home The lot fronts on W, Underwood
St. He plans to builil a home in the
I'uUir-.
Miss Mariann Kidd has been vety busy
for the past week getting (riearlake Lodge
in t eadiness for a big summer business.
She opened the Lodge Wednesday,
The public is invited to a Boy Scout
pageant depicting the history of North¬
east Georgia al Chicopee Forest 8atur
day at 8 p m.
It isn’t ton early for the people who
will have tt iats for the White County
Centennial to start to consult a designer
The Gainesville Chamuer of Commerce
can give the necessary information
Mrs. Nellie Davidson is visiting in
(Cleveland and Brooklon
Mrs. Jas. P. Davtdsou and Richard re¬
turned Monday evening from a few days
visit with daughters, Mri, H. H. Hilde¬
brand and Mrs. NeldaJo Davidson, in
Washington, D. C
Thu Touchdown Club of Lawrencevdle
is sponsoring its annual horse show May
15. The show will he staged in two parte
at 1 p. m, and at 7 p. m. Both shows are
very floe and Ihe people are asked to at
tend. The proceeds to go to the High
8< hoof recreation facilities.
The Fifth Annual Georgia Poultry Fes¬
tival will be held in Gainesville May 17
and May 18 The banquet will be May
17 at 7 qO P, M at $6 per person and at
8:45 the final judgiug of Miss Georgia
Chick Beauty will be made. Saturday,
May 18, 60 floats will start at II. At 1:15
P. M. General Thomas D. White, next
Chief of Staff of the Air Force, will speak
The Standard Telephone -Company is
installing dial telephones in Cleveland
You will continue to use the present sys¬
tem until the dial system is cut.in, which
won’t be very long.
Mr. and Mrs. George Dean Telford and
children of Cornelia spent Sunday after¬
noon with parents, Mr. and Mrs J. H.
Telford,
Mr and Mis. Barney Head of Gaines¬
ville were vi-itors here Sunday afternoon
The Internal Revenue Service are using
their held men to go after people who
failed to file their Federal tax returns.
Mrs. Bill Bailey and son, Bill, and
daughter, Miss Maty, of Toccoa visited
the Telford’s Saturday afternoon. Mrs.
Bailey was the former Miss Minnie Kim
sey,
Airs. J. B c l)D y« r B Captain Madge
Conyers will leave Monday. Mrs. Con.
yers will be located for the preBcnt at
95 26th St , NW., Atlanta 9, Ga. L ap
tain Madge Cony ere will return to Frank
fort, Germany next week.
Mother’s Day is May 12.
Dr. Hurd C. Willett, of the
Massachusetts Institute of Tech¬
nology, one of the country’s top
meteorologists, thinks we’re in
for a fairly cool and wet summer.
We have received the name of
only one person born in White
County in 1857 or early 1808 . J
M. Glover was born March 27,
1857.
Mackey Boyd, Margaret Ann
Campbell, Miss Jones and Miss
Carter attended the FIIAconven
tion m Atlanta April 25, 26, 27
Bill Cooper, Rogers Little,
Harrison Huff, Tommy Vaughn,
Cliff' Blalock. Rodney Nix,Frank¬
lin Presley and Clyde Dixon at
tended the Key Club convention
in Atlanta April 26, 27, 28
Mr. and Mrs. L. R. Cooper at
tended the State Rotary Conven
tion in Savannah over the week¬
end.
Hubert Head caught an 8 lb. small
muuth base iu Twin Lakes Wednesday
morning. Hubert was so jubilant over
his wonderful catch that he wanted some¬
one to share in bis joy so he gave it to
Tire Editor. Many thanks! Hubert said
that tliis big fellow really put up a fight
Many people will soon be trying thuir
luck at Twin Lakes, Hubcit used a Jive
minnow,
Blackberries are tdoolning. Does this
mean that the cool weather is over?
W R, Ledford is very ill.
Uev. - Morrison is building a
home just west of Charlie Abernathy's
home.
SUBSCRIBE FOB THE COURIER)
To A Young Friend
By Earle J. Grant
Doraville, Georgia
Sweet as pink arbutus
Blooming in May
Is my young friend
Whose name is Fay.
Ethereal in loveliness
t'o the eyes she's a H eat;
Oft with her head above the clouds
And a rainbow at her feet.
She lives for the Lord
Each and every day
And scatters sunshine
Along life’s highway.
Lucky is the one
Who wins her hand ;
She would make a Auadise
For any man!
Mrs. VV hitter Passes
Funeral services for Mrs. Maria Whilbr
73, of Paradise Valley, died at Habersham
County Hospital April 25 after a brief ill¬
ness was hr Id Sunday with gmveeide
service at the family cemetery on R3 with
Elder Asa French ‘officiating.
She was horn in Fair Haven, Mich..tm
had lived in White''ounty for many : yeare
She is survived by two sisters, Mies
Maltha Vesthardt, R4; Mrs Henry Ford
cist, Canton, Ohio; and three brothers,
Sam Teethardt, Ft, Lauderale. Fla ; r;ail
Testhardt, New York City; Edgar Test
hardt, Toledo, Ohio.
Ward's were iu charge.
Misa Mamie Glen Passes
Mi-s Mary (Mamie) Glen, 94, of Na
cooehee Valley, former librarian of car.
negie Library, Atlanta, died April 25 at
the Habersham County (Hospital.
She was a native of White Jcotintv and
a member ,of the Presbyterian Church
most of her life, She was librarian in the
periadicals room at Carnegie Library for
40 years before she relired£20 years ago
Funeral services were held Sunday at
3 p. mi from the Naeoochee Presbyterian
Church winh the Rev. Robert Alexander
and Rev- Rov Ethridge 1 fficiating. Inter¬
ment was in the church cemetery.
Surgiving are two nieces, Mies Snfaan
hfleu, Richmond, Va ; and Mrs W. L
Dolive, Spri igdale, Ala.! |and four neph¬
ews. Jim Glen, Sautee; John Glen, At¬
lanta; Guy Kemmer, Jacksonville, Fla ;
and John Kenimer, New York City
Ward’s had charge,
Save Dad, Asks Group
Bewailing ’He-Women’
NEW YORK—(AP)—The time has
come, a group of social scientists
agreed today, to pay more attention
to Pop. much emphasis,
There’s been too
the Child Study Assn, of America was
told, on the emancipation and growing
importance of women.
“So much self-consciousness has
arisen,” reported Dr. Janet Rioch to
the annual convention, “that both
men and women are blocked in spon¬
taneous behavior.”
Dr. Rioch, faculty member of the
William A. White Institute of Psy¬
chiatry, Psychoanalysis and Psycho¬
logy, said the long-established pattern the
of family life in which father was
boss has largely disappeared. Kline
Another speaker, Dr. Otto
berg, Columbia University professor
of Psychology, said:
“t ils time to reassess the role of
the man in the American family. We
are getting a little tired of ‘momism’
—not that we want to exchange it for
a ‘neo-popism.’ Josselyn, ” the Chicago
Dr. Irene of
Institute of Psychoanalysis, added:
“In spite of the biological and in¬
herent psychological differences ... we
are drifting toward a social structure
made up of he-women and she-men.”
Dr. Ray Lee Birdwhistell, anthro
polgist, from the University of Buffalo,
noted much study is needed of chang¬
ing family behavior, but he found “one
conclusion, however, seems pretty rea¬
sonable.
“Excessive authoritarianism has un¬
healthy consequences, whether it
wears skirts or pants, and the ideal
of equal rights and equal responsi¬
bilities is not only pertinent to a good
democracy but also to a healthy fam¬
ily.”
Auxiliary To Meet
The American Legion Auxiliary will
meet at the Legion Home May 7 at 3;30
p, m. Important businese to be discuss¬
ed. All members please be present
Mrs Eugene Wright, Pres.
The more the merchants advertise
in The Courier the better town Cleve¬
land will be. A live and wide awake
town is where the local merchants
advertise regularly in their Home
Newspaper. If you want more busi¬
ness Mr. Merchant, have an ad in
The Courier regularly. It will pay
you big dividends.
Send us the NEWS so that it will
appear in The Courier. We will ap
precite your cooperation.
— - ■ r 7 ~
—
Established 1899 3.00 Per Year ii» Adroit >.
• HELP FIGHT AGAINST LITTER
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•"THESE LEADERS in the fight against litter on America’s highways,
* parks and beaches were guests of Keep America Beautiful, Inc.,
this month in New York City. They are Giles H. Miller Jr. (left), pres¬
ident of the First National Bank in Culpeper, Virginia; Mrs. William
J. Walters of New Brunswick, New Jersey, president of the National
Council of State Garden Clubs; and George T. Sargisson, executive
director of Recreation, Promotion & Service, Inc., Wilmington. Dela¬
ware. They reported on state and national anti-litter activities at the
annua] directors meeting of KAB, a new public service organization
for the elimination of litter. Twenty-four leading industries and more
than thirty civic groups and agencies are represented on KAB. x
WILL RUSSIA MAKE MISTAKE
LIKE AESOP’S FABLED DOG?
Did By Walter Locke
we think wisdom was born with
us and the 20th Century? Nothing
is so good for us, when this vanity
inflates us, as to turn back to a slave
named Aesop, who lived 2,500 years j
ago.
If any nonsense possible to men
has not ben exposed by some fable I
of Aesop, I cannot imagine what it !
is. Children, little and big, young and j
old, like animal stories. Here in old
Aesop and his fables is an easy avenue
to a wisdom forever needed, never
old. |
Aesop’s story, for instance, of the
dog and his shadow. So much better. ;
more peaceful this world had been had 1
that understood! story been oftener told and better j !
GREED |
The dog with his dinner, a piece of
meat, in his mouth was crossing a |
stream. Looking down into the water
he saw another dog with a piece of
meat in his mouth. Letting go his
own he attacked the other dog to take
his meat from him. But this other
dog and his meat was but the shadow
of the first dog and his meat. In his
greed to get more, the dog gained
nothing and lost what he had.
If Adolf Hitler had only known and
heeded Aesop and the dog that lost
one dinner by tryingto have two.
iHtler in his brief six years had
rallied a beaten, dispirited Germany
into the greatest single power in the
world. He had seized everything to
which Germany had a shadow of a
claim.
In Hitler, Aesop’s dog awoke. Look¬
ing about him, his world in his hand,
he saw a shadow in his hand, he saw
a shadow and leaped to possess it.
Poland he would make his. The result
is history. The man who, in 1939, was
a towering success, was six years later
the most tragic failure, perhaps, in all
history.
The war lords of Japan, in 1941,
had won everything to which Japan
had the ghost of a claim. They had
been allowed to seize and hold Man¬
churia. They were getting away with
murder in China.
NOW RUSSIA
Insanely, as greed will lead men
and dogs to do, Japan thrust at the
throat of America. Four years later it
met its Hiroshima, a nation not only
beaten, but disgraced.
Russia, with our help, fought off
Hitler, gained full freedom for itself.
Had Russia been content to take what
belonged to it, it could prosperously
have worked out its destiny under
whatever system it embraced. The
dog had its dinner in its mouth.
Like iHtler, like the warlords of
Japan, the Russian masters saw the
shadows and sprang to seize it. Now
they stand where Hitler stood in his
day of pride and power. Now their
torubles multiply. Is theirs to be the
familiar story of Aesop and his shad¬
ow-snatching dog?
We wait to see. All history of
greedy men and greedy dogs predicts
teh answer—Atlanta Journal.
Ideal Feminine Figure
What, sir, is your idea of the
ideal feminine figure? The Brit¬
ish consider the ideal figure to be
bust, 84; waist, 23, and hips, 34 .
Height, five feet, ten inches. The
British go for long-stemmed,
slightly flat-chested beauties. The
French, and keep in mind I am
speaking from the male viewpoint
prefer women who have the fol¬
lowing measurements: Bust, 38 ;
waist, 25, and hips, 3?. Height,
live feet, seven inches. Fifty mil¬
lion Frenchmen can't be wrong.
Or cau they?
E. V. Durling in Baltimore American
What Does the Future Hold
For the Small Community!
By Weller Locke
“THE COMMUNITY of the Fu¬
ture” is Arthur Morgan’s latest book
and the title raises a question before
the book can answer it. Is this the
community the future is to bring ? Or
is it the community the future needs
to have but may not get?
By reading the last chapter first,
I have a way of doing with books
you get the answer plain. Mr. Mor
gan confesses to a “deep foreboding”
that his “community of the future” is
already the community of a past
which cannot be restored,
The tide has been running against
the. small community—the community
small enough to give the free, full
play which men, to their best, must
have.
Should that prive true, what be¬
comes of us ? The obvious answer
in Russia of the Soviets, in the
lands where Fascists rule.
This allows but one “community,”
the state. The mass swallows up the
man. Men are turned to robots, auto¬
matons, their minds and will sup¬
pressed.
This is the way of the states that
are professedly and proudly totali¬
tarian. But the current runs in this
direction even in America, where wa
still fight to be free.
We have been noting the totalita¬
rian way of Teamster Beck (my illus¬
tration, not Arthur Morgan’s). The
billion-dollar industry; the clique-run
national association of this or that
profession; all these marks of the
modern trend to the mammoth tend
to hold men in tight-lipped jackets,
not in free-tongued liberty.
So Arthur Morgan does not see his
“community of the future” as a happy
day as sure to come to us as Sunday
itself. To establish and preserve that
community is a struggle against odds.
He enlists in that war.
Chapter after chapter of the book
is given to showing, from different
angles, the need of the smaller com¬
munity if the man is to be himself.
How else, in this age of the hinge, is
the man to be bigger than the ma¬
chine towering over him ?
PATIENT
Arthur Morgan is patient. He re¬
minds us that the recent years of
binding men into impersonal masses
was preceded by 20 million years
the learning in the saving strength of
small community. A law of life
expressed through 20 million years
is hardly to be thwarted by a diver¬
sion of a few thousand years. Even¬
tually, if not now, men will live in
comunities as men.
So goes “The Community of the
Future,” a book bringing understand¬
ing to the world of the present—and
the future, too.
FOR SALE
IRIS, $5 per doz; nil different, OrS
(loz. for $5, my selection,
Mis. J, F. Miller
An interesting program will be given
by school children of White C'ouutvTuee
day, May 7, at 7:30 p. m. at the Methodist
ghurch in Cleveland, The program ie
sponsored bs the Cleveland W. C. T. U,
and will consist of a speech contest and
musical numbers by the children Parents,
friends and all others are cotdially invit¬
ed to attend.
I NO PRINTERS OUT LET TAXES HUNTMO US OF DO TOWN YOUR HERE PAY