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l-'''/ ,'t / It rf CLEVELAND .' 7 / 7 ' COURIER ^
THE
"COVERS THE MOUNTAINS LIKE MOONSHINE
Devoted U. to A tricult ural, I.ter.,1a of Commercial Loan,, and
VOL LX1 No.
THE CLEVELAND COURIER.
PLATFORM
For White County and
Cleveland:
A Cleaner and More Beautiful
City
Swimming Pool
All Highways Graded and
Paved
To Make White County the
Mecca for Tourists
Development of Winter
Sports in Mountain Area
Ultra-Modern Highway from
Cleveland to Gainesville
Former White County Woman
Tharts Atlanta Holdup
A 20-year old Negro man en¬
tered Marvin S. Dorsey Sr’s store
in Atlanta Feb. 27 with a “white,
short sleeve undershirt over his
head, disguising all of his eyes,”
“He had a wooden tree limb
eoverad over to make it look like
a gun,” so stated Mrs. Lounelle
Patrick of Hampton, Va.
The Negro ordered, “Give me
all your money.
Marvin Dorsey got a 38 pistol
and held it on the would-be ban
•dit and told him to drop what he
had.
Mrs. Patrick, who lives in
Hampton, Va., was visiting her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Marvin
Dorsey. She got a blackjack and
went to work on the Negro from
behind. He dropped the limb
and tried to run. Mrs. Patrick
caught him with her left hand as
he tried to leave the store. The
bandit slung her to the sidewalk
and then she really went to work
on him with the blackjack, Mr.
Dorsey took the Negro in the
store and Mrs. Patrick called the
police.
Mr. Dorsey was a native of
White County.
Bathing Beauty Queen: “Do you think
I can become a famous movie star like
Briggitte Bardot?”
Producer: “Perhaps, but it will re¬
quire attireless effort on your part.”
On page 3 you will find a flour
coupon that you will want to cut
and use.
Be sure to read the Stovall
Tractor Co., Cornelia, Ad on
page 2.
Frank Nelms, manager of Ed¬
ward Flor Co., Demorest, visited
Editor and Mrs .Jas. P. Davidson
Monday afternoon. He was ac¬
companied by Creed Taylor.
Funeral services were held in
Demorest Sunday for Samuel
Franklin, 78- He was the father
of Mrs. Crawford Dorsey
Mr, and Mrs. Tom Mauney at¬
tended the funeral of their great
aunt, Mjs§ Mary Glazner, at Fair¬
mont, Ga., last week,
Migs Jane Cooley of Washing¬
ton, D- C., plans to visit parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Cooley,
next week.
Mrs. A. L. Mauney Sr. is at
the home of her daugeter, Mrs.
Clarence Cooley, and is improv¬
ing satisfactorily.
Mrs. Earle R. Payne of Madi¬
son, Fla., informs her pother Mr§
L, G. Neal, thel they ave having
a Iqt of rail!,,
Mf. and Mrs. Lowell Franks
Spent the weekend with parents
This was lold by one of the seniors
that attended the Sweetheart Dance
recently. The young man was fascidated
by the strapless evening gown worn by
hie beantifnl dale,
-What bolds it up!” the boy asked.
-Gravity,” was the immediate rs-
Happy is the n an that lindeth wtsdjm,
and the man that getleth
For the merchandise of it is better that*
the merchandise of silver, and the gain
thereof than fine gold She is more pre¬
cious lhao rubies, and ail things thou
cangt desire are not to be compan d
her. — P, ovei bs
The Courier has reason to
ly believe that we can expect
some ACTION oh the ultra-mod
ern highway from Cleveland
Gainesville within a very
time.
When a mao succeeds, he doe° so by
climbing a ladder field by a woman who
encourages aud believes in him
Taxes, Taxes! And still taxes mount
end mount. There ate all kiuds—city,
county, elate and state income, federal iu.
come and a host of hidden federal nicks
A nd every Mamed one of the taxing uuits
is crying because they don't have enough
to do with, It’s a heck of a thing to
think or express, hut the major cause of
the Revoludonary War was unjust taxes
on the part of the British
Modern civilization frequently attempts
to compel people to I e moral. In these
times we are all too prone to attempt to
force others to do that which we think, in
our own fallible judgment, is moral. Wit¬
ness the prohibition amendment, various
blue laws passed at various limes, cen¬
sorship laws, remember the-Sabbath
laws, etc. Each of these laws is aimed at
making people better and more moral by
means of force. Each such law is an
immoral means employed to obtain a
moral result.
Preachers should preach only one eer.
mon or eo a year. People are against
sin anyway, so why harp on it?......
Traffic lights should be turned off at dan¬
gerous intersections to save electricity.
Eaerybody knows it's a dangerous spot
and that is sufficient,, ... Teachers
needu't review lessons, Tell the kids just
once and they won't forget.....Big
city stores that advertise constantly in the
big dailies are wasting their money
Everybody knows what they sell......
BUT if you re ooe of the foolish kind
like the Notre Dame cathedral in Paiis
that stood for six centuries and tinge the
bell every day to people know it is
still there then you’ll want’t to
advertise regularly and continniusly in
The Cleveland Courier.
“I'm not as young as I once was,”
kidded Red 8 kelton, “but I still love t
chase girls, Only difference now is that I
can’t remember why I’m chasing ’em.”
One of t le surest of all truths is that
life will give you no more than you give
it.—Norman Vincent Peali,
We don’t seem to be making much
headway with the Forest 8 crvice on in¬
ducing them to construct winter sports
in our majestic mountains, Don’t it seem
that our mountains could receive a modi¬
cum of attention for such a great develop*
msnt if our government continues to give
billions tc foreign governments for any
sort of project f We thought charity be¬
gan at home.
Will it be necessary for some of our
progressive men and women to go to
Washington and hang around like Grant
did at Richmond to wrangle nut sufficient
money to start this great development tor
our mountains?
Well, we are a persistent cuss and in¬
tend to keep up the fight,
The immense prestige of the U, S. dol¬
lar is being serioi sly weakened by infla¬
tion, and the principal offender is deficit
spending by the federal covernment. Wil¬
liam McCbesney Martin, chairman of the
Federal Reeeive Board, stated in Atlanta
last weik.
Wonder if the Forest Service will con¬
struct a road from Richard 8 im»’ to
Dukes (.reek Falls this year in time for
vacationists to enjoy this unsurpassed
scenty this summer?
Maybe business is getting better for
some lucky people. Anyway, if bneine.s
is better wonder wby Dun & Bradelreet
continue to report business failures
around these of a year ago every week?
The man of letters must make up his
miud that in the United States the fate of
a book is in the bands of a woman,—
William pean Powells,
Even if I knew certainly the worl i
would end tomoirow, I would plant ao
epple tree today.—Martin Luther
Miracles sometime occur, but one has
to work teiribly hard for them —Chaim
Wei» uann.
“Television is another means of wast¬
ing time and potentially oce of the
world’s greatest dangers,” | Archbishop
of Canterbury.
A conceited cubs is a man who thinks if
he hadn't been born there would have
been an unfillablc vacancy,
It is reported that former Gov. Griffin
is telling everyone that he comes in con¬
tact with that he is positively a candidate
for governor in 1962.
MARCH. 6 1959
Local Ne
Send us the NEWS so that it
appear in The Courier. We will
precite your cooperation.
How much TAX do
town printers pay Cleveland
White County?
“Any woman can be attractive to
if she has the energy,”—Bette Davis
Many » man who never went to
can subtract from a fifth.
We can now exp ct spring to dash
ward with blooms in profusion.
is almost here as wild cherry buds
almost ready to burst,
Alaska has the highest brt th rate
the lowest death rate of any state,
cording to the 1959 Annua! Supplement
of the World Book Encyclopedia
The trout streams will open April I
Mr. and Mrs Bill t’ampbell and child,
ren of Atlanta visited their mother,
J. H Campbell, over the weekend.
Mrs. F. J. Nix of Tampa, Fla , spent
a day or so here laet week.
March came in like a lion—if you
in Sunday night.
Grady ca'penter of Augusta spent >h
weeken l at Cleveland DeLuxe Cottages.
Grady stated that bueineas was rotter: in
Augusta.
March is the month for kite flying and
the little boye will bs trying their skill at
every strong wind,
The National Democratic Convention
will beheld in Los Angies July 11, I960
to nominate a president.
Sheriff Allison took his pister, Mrs
Ollie McGee, to Decatur Feb" 27 to take a
look at two women and two men, but
they were not the ones who held up hit
store Feb. 25.
March never kills its fruit, eo they say
Flirt Yukon, In northeastern Alaska,
reports the stale's highest—and lowes'—
temperatures. According to The World
Book Encycloyedia, weatherman reported
100 degree F ia Jnnc, 1915, and -78 F. in
January, 1886,
Raymond Brewster was r eleased
Hall County Hospital yesterday firm
cuts and bruises sustained in a two car
accident in fUineevdle last Friday night
A Gainesville man wae killed. Brewster
was driving one of the car a,
A Baptist Training Union Conference
will be held March I 9 at the Cleveland
Baptist Church.
“Unless action is taken promptly to
correct the present trend (of unemploy
men!) we may drift into a serious de¬
pression,”—George Meaney.
28 boys from White County Higb 8 cbool
will attend the annual awards luncheon
of the Ga. Vocational Agriculture 100
Bushel Corn Club in the Atlanta Biltmnre
Hotel March 18, These boye a'e; Mel
vin Anderson, Donald Bentley, Edward
Bentley, Gwendtdl Bolgin, Arnold Early,
Britt Harkins, Richard Harkins, Marvin
McCollum, Garnet McCollum, Joniue
Miles, Dean Nix, Gene Nix, Earl Palmer
Grady Pardue, Kenneth Pardue, Vinson
Pardue, Welton Pardue, Charlie Thomas,
Donald Thomas, Grady Thomas, James
Thomas,Jearl D, Turner, George War¬
wick.
“Advei Using not only creates sales, hut
it contributes to tbs capital value as
much as any other business purchaser"—
Marion Harper Jr,, chairman of the board
of McCann-Erickson Inc.
According to a house HouseCommiltee,
Americans ate being hiked of sometning
like gl 00 million a year for preparations
advcitised as weight reducers. They in
elude wafers, machines, appetite satients
and other devices Their advertising, the
report says; “Is an area fraught withde.
ception and outright fraud,”
Congressman Phil Landrum
writes that he does have a pi'om
tse front the Forest Setvice that
they will do some surveying or
the road to Dukes Creek Fulls
this yean
TJje thermometer was 22 Wed
uesday morning.
The Red Cross Fund Drive for
I959 is now on.
The Army sent np a rocket
Tuesday that is believed missed
the moon by 35,000 miles and is
now orbiting around the sun.
Hon. Howard T. Overby,
prominent Gainesville attorney,
has been named Chairman of the
Ninth District 1959 Easier Seal
Campaign.
In The Courier next week we
will carry a Legal Ad for the
letting on March 20 of the road
from Unicoi Park Dam into Hab¬
ersham County.
Supreme Court
The Worst In Century
Says Gen. Wood
Gen. Robert E. Wood, midwestern
Republican and retired board chair¬
man of Sears, Roebuck & Co., Mon¬
day attacked the Supreme Court
as the "worst we have had in 100
years.” the unveiling of
Wood, here for
a plaque in his honor at a new
Sears store, said "hundreds of thou¬
sands" of Northerners feel the
court’s desegregation decree problem was
a mistake. "This racial
could have been settled—given time
and patience—by the South itself,
the 79-year-old Chicagoan declared.
Wood’s comments, which fell on a
somewhat surprised Dixie audience
were greeted by spirited applause
from 200 local businessment who
gathered at a luncheon in his be¬
half.
The general, who said he voted
"straight Republican," described
Georgia’s Senators Talmadge and
Russell "two of the best in the
U. S. Senate today.” both are
Democrats.
"I resent very much the interfere
ence of the states’ rights by this
Supreme Court, which, to my mind
is the worst Supreme Court we have
had in 100 years,” he said.
William Andrew Cantrell Passes
William Andrew (.untiell, 58 , died sud¬
denly at his h'ltne at Rnbertetown M&rcb
J Funeral services will be conducted
fiom the Chattahoochee Methodist Church
this afternoon at 2pm
He was a farmer, a member of Chatta¬
hoochee Methodist Church and a member
of Yonah Lodre 382, F&Am.
He is survived by hie wife, live sons,
Russell C’autreil, Robertetown; Thomas
Cantrell, Clayton; William A. Cantrell,
Jr„ Nacoocbee Valley; Edward and Ail,
lard Cantrell, Kobcrtslown ; two daugh¬
ters, Mrs. J. V, York and Miss Lois Can
trell, Rnueitstowu; bis mother, mis Lula
HcCay, Bobertstown; two sifters, Mrs,
George Abernathy, Robertstowri; and Mrs
Joel Abernathy, Sautee; two half brothers
Unseen Pslmer and Marvin Hit ks
War t’s bail charge
Heart Attack Takes Roy Howard
Roy Lee Howard, 53 , of Mossy Creek
Campground died March 2 of a heart at
■auk while sitting in hie pickup at ( lev*
!an 1 DeLuxe Restaurant.
He bad been a resident of WhiteCounty
for the past 14 years. He was a plumber
and was a Baptist.
Fnncual services were held yesterday
from County Line Church with RevClaud
Hood officiating. Interment was in the
cemetery.
He is survived by his wife, four daugh¬
ters. Mrs. Junior Kidwell, Slayusville, N.
Va.; Mrs. Curtis Dorsey, R2; Mrs Riley
Urutnley, Aeroa, Col.; Miss Kay Howard,
R2; hie parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charlie
Howard, Ducktown, Tcnn.; one brother,
Bill Howard, Davton, Tenn.; tour sisters,
Mrs, Guy Mealer and Mrs Itrle Dale,
and Mrs c lftuh « Caylor. Duektown
Tenn.; and Mrs, Norman Iti binson,Chat¬
tanooga, Teon.
Ward’s bad chnrge
B. M. Hogan Passes
Funeral services for Ba'ue McKinney
Hogan, 00, Rt. 4, were held March 4 from
Union Grove Holiness Church with the
Revs. Asa Dorsey and L, G. Howard offi
dating,
Interment was in the church cemetery.
Mr, Hogan, a lifetime resident ol White
Ccunly, died in Hall C<>. H ispital March
2. He was a member of Union Grove Holi
ness Church.
He is survived by his wife, six sons,
William, Gainesvilh ) Clinton, Doraville;
Bradford and Bobby, Gainesville;Eugene
Walhalla, 8 . C. and Telford, Cleveland
’('hree daughters, Mrs, Elmer Smith,
Gainesville; Mrs. c ® 1 Dalton, c^rawfor I;
Mrs. Eugene Dyer, Mt. Airy, six brothere
Audy, MiUstead; Arthur; Doiris, Calif,;
Robert, New Holland; (riande, Gaiuesville
Joe, at. Airy; Watson, Rl 4; three sisters
Mia, Robert Leonard, Decatur, Mrs Claud
Skeleton and Miss Maude Hogan, Rl.l;
and 24 grandchildren.
Ward's uad charge
Broughton Broom Passes
Funeral services for Broughton Broom,
19, who bad resided in White County for
'he past year, who tiled Feb. 27 were
held in the Damascus Baptist Church,
Banks County. Burial was in the church
cemetery.
He is survived by his parents, Mr. and
Mis. Car! Broom, DanieUville; three
brothers, three sisters, all of Dameisville,
except Mrs. Ruby Reed, Rl
TeU your neighbor to eu scribe for
Dm Gottritb __---- -
Established 1899 $3.00 Per Y>*ar h» Advt,
Newspapers Remain
No. 1 Medium
With Supermarkets
Supermarkets continued to invest
the vast majority of their adver¬
tising dollars in newspapers last
year, according to a Supermarket
News survey of the advertising
practices of supers located in Los
Angeles, Philadelphia, New York,
Miami and Oakland, Cal. For the
most part, supermarkets invested
anywhere from 85 to 99 percent of
their ad budgets in this medium.
Reports from three of the cities:
Los Angeles: Ad Managers state
that from 90 to 99 percent of their
ad budgets were invested in news¬
papers last year. They indicate lit¬
tle or no change in their advertis¬
ing plans for 1959.
New Sork: Supermarket opera¬
tors continued to place most of their
advertising dollars in newspapers.
When faced with the loss of this
medium recently due to a news¬
paper strike, they were content—
for the most part—to coast and save
their ad dollars rather than put
emergency emphasis on special
radio and TV spot announcements
or circulars.
Oakland, Cal.: Supermarket
chains remained very strong for
newspaper advertising. Of four
chains surveyed—operating 145
supers—two invested juSlt under
100 percent of their budgets in
newspapers. The other two chains
spent more than 90 percent of their
ad dollars for newspaper space.
Racing Cars
Both Guilty
In Accident
By the Atlanta Bar Association
and Lawyers Club of Atlanta.
Charlie and Bill, who were mem¬
bers of the Black Dragon Hotrod
Society, were racing down Apple
tree Avenue in their respective Hot¬
rods at speeds in excess of 60 miles
per hour. Just as Charlie’s car pull¬
ed to the left and passed Bill’s car,
Bill’s right front fender struck a
small child who had stepped into
the street and seriously injured
him. The child’s parents sued both
Charlie and Bill.
Charlie contended that the case
against him should be dismissed
because the child had been hit by
Bill’s car, but the court held them
both liable. All those who engage in
racing automobiles do so at their
peril, the court stated, and are
liable for any injury sustained by
a third person as a result thereof,
regardless of which of the racing
cars actually inflicted the injury.
The Atlanta Journal
Lesson In Love
All Young men wishing to ad¬
vance their interests with fascina¬
ting females should study the monu¬
mental work by Ovid titled The
Art of Love. Ovid divided his im
mortal book of sound advice into
three parts: 1. How to find a
women. 2. How to win her. 3. How
to hold her. Among other things
Ovid advised: “Apply kisses boldly.
Women like vigorous action. Do
not wait for them to begin.” It is
also extremely interesting to note,
in the section headed "How to Hold
Her" Ovid touched upon the subject
of hair-dos. His observation made
cenuries ago holds true today: "Al¬
ways carefully note and comment
upon the changes a woman makes
in the art of arranging her hair.”
—E. V. Deerling in Baltimore
American.
State Senator Clarence Barrett
asked The Courier to briefly ad
vise the public on his activities in
the past Legislature: He sup¬
ported the REA bill; vigorously
fought a Union and NAACP hill;
got a resolution passed for a road
from Unicoi Park to Annie Ruby
Falls; was on Senate Highway
Com- that reccommended the
early construction of a new high¬
way to Gainesville, which stated
it was one of the four most es
sential needed in Georgia. Asked
that No. 17 he made a Federal
Route. He feels that the high
way to Gainesville will be let as
soon as more funds are made
available.
OUT OF TOWN m
PRINTERS PAY M
i NO TAXES HERE
LET US DO YOUR
fWHTMQ
Cleveland merchants can make our
little city a trading center ; f they will
advertises in The Courier
No Man Hath
Seen God-’
A Soviet natural scientist, Y. T,
Fadeyev, has argued on the Mos¬
cow radio this since flights of roc¬
kets and earth satellites have not
found angels or other supernatural
beings in outer space, the develop¬
ment of such devices “casts doubt
on the existence of God.”
Part of this inference is based on
a quarrel with old legends that the
effort of men to soar in the air was
contrary to the will of God. An¬
other part takes issue not so much
with the existence of a Supreme
Being as with medieval imagery
which visualized a heaven of eter¬
nal rest in the skies and peopled
it with winged creatures of other¬
wise human form.
For all his atheism, the Com¬
munist speaker does not contend
that all valid reasoning must be
based on evidence of the physical
senses, sight, touch, and so forth.
Part of the value of space re¬
search. he notes, has to do with
“phenomena, the greater part of
which we cannot perceive with
our sensory organs, such as cos¬
mic rays, X rays emitted by the
sun, or magnetic fields.”
He does not reason that because
such phenomena are invisible and
intangible they do not exist, are of
no consequence, or have no physi¬
cal source. The enmity of Marx¬
ism toward religion is, in this in¬
stance, not so much a denial of
Deity as it is a quibble with cer¬
tain widespread and long-held con¬
cepts or mental pictures of Deity.
Centuries ago the Apostle John
wrote:
No man hath seen God at any
time. If we love one another, God
dwellath in us, and his love is per¬
fected in us.
It may be granted that space ex¬
ploration his not confirmed the tra¬
dition of a patriarchal God on a
white throne and that Russians
may not want to be reminded of
the kind of Deity Czar Alexander
III thought he served in being the
“defender of autocracy.”
But designers of the Soviet moon
rocket, relying on algebraic sym¬
bols and formulas, would hardly
repudiate the existence of a princi¬
ple of mathematics. Myriads of
men and women, striving to ex¬
press love in their lives, do not
consider it irrational to take that
virtue as a working rule and to
find themselves supported in the
endeavor by a power they call
God.—
Editorial in Christian Science
Monitor
Comments On
Here And Hereafter
By Dr. Bob Jones
“These things write I unto you
that ye sin not." These words are
in the First Epistle of John and
are, therefore, addressed to
Christian people. The key words
in the Epistle are "little children,"
which mean "born ones”. So the
writer is talking to those who have
been bom a second time. The
night Jesus talk to those who have
been born a second time. The
night Jesus talked to Nicodemus
He said, "Except a man be born
again he cannot see the kingdom
of God.” God does not tell a sin¬
ner not to sin. He tells the sinner
that he will reap what he sows,
that he cannot do wrong and get
away with it, and that the wages
of sin is death; but sinners keep
on sinning because they are sin¬
ners. When men become children
of God by faith in Jesus Christ,
the God tells them to sin not. That
is God's high and holy standard
for His children. Yet God, Who
knowth our frame and remembers
that even though we are Chris¬
tians we are still dust, says, ”If
any man sin (that is, if any
Christian man sin), we have an
advocate with the Father, Jesus
Christ the righteous.” God asks
His children for the best, but His
wonderful grace provides for the
worst. "Don’t sin," says God; but
if you do, remember you have an
Advocate or a Lawyer to plead
your case. Christians should live
moment by moment in fellowship
the Lord Jesus Christ; but
they get out of fellowship, they
have their fellowship restor¬
by confessing their sins and
things right with the Lord
Christ, who died on the
to save them and the One
they trust for salvation.
“A geutleman is any man who gives
I believe a knowledge of the Bible
than a college course is more val¬
a college course without w
Lyon Phelps.