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THE CLEVELAND COURIER
COVERS THE MOUNTAINS LIKE MOONSHINE
to the Agricultural , Commercial and Industrial Interests of White County
vpL LXII1I 4(i
Curbs Favored By Ponltrymen
On Production
At a meeting held in Gaines
ville on the night of Sept 7
Georgia Poultry Federation
ed 121—43 to ask the
government ie help the
depressed poultry industry
was a sweeping {change from
a few weeks previous action
when they voted 3 to l
any kind of government
A meeting by the special com
mittee was he'd Tuesday in Ag
riculture Commissioner
Campbell’s office to decide
what control plaus to make
also to invite other states to
ticipate.
Broiler production cuts will
recommended by a certain
centage
The turkey season will shortly
be here and this naturally cuts
the demand for broilers and hens
It is reported that the Georgia
production of turkeys will be 56
per cent over last year.
It is stated that unless broilers
sell for at least 14 cents pel
pound there’s a loss that cannot
be endured very long.
So, too, the dime per pound for
broilers digs deep into the grow¬
ers. A few years ago they gol
three cents per pound; now only
one to I L-2 ceuts per pound. So
many growers make less than $1
per hour.
Warriors Stomp Tallalati Palis 45-0
The White County Warriors
defeated Tullulah Falls last Fri¬
day night 45*0, Hud Black scored
thyee touphduwns, Bill White
scored onp and passed to Black
for another, Carlton Brown and
Jimmy Lockaby scored one each.
Bill Jenkins kicked 3 extra points
The Warriors play Union County
tonight. Go to BlairsviHe and
support them.
PTA Meeting
The first meeting of the Clevel
and PTA will ^ held at the
Sphpol Cafploripip Sept* H at 8
p. m* AH pardnts are urged to
atteud.
Mr- and Mrs. Edgar Everhart
frad as thmr guest for several days
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Van Wormev
pf Sfafeu Islapd, Nr Y. He is a
rc(,irpd R. ft.executive. Both for
pieply lived in Atlanta
Mf. and Mrs. Louts DeSausure,
daughters Margaret and Ellen, of
Atlanta! were Saturday vjsitoysot
Mr. and Mrs, Edgar Everhart
Mr« and Mrs. De.Sausure recently
celebrated their 67th anniversary
and both are healthy and active
and greatly interested in this part
of Georgia.
The public is urged to attend a
meeting at the Legion Home
Tuesday, Sept, I9, at 7:80 p. un
wnere efforts will be made to or¬
ganize a Boys Scout Troup for
White County. Be sure to attend
£dd|e SpUpn was arrested las',
week when pe deliberately rati
bis car off 75 to keep from hitting
a loadep school bus. He is ebarg
ed with possessing a case 0
“moonshine”.
Mr. and Mrs- Edgar Everhart
will leave Monday to attend the
ceremonies at the Antietam But
tlefield Site at Sharpsburg, Md.
Sppt. 30 and at Gettysburg, Pa,
Sppt, 21 of the dedication of the
monuments to Georgia Confedfe
rate Dead °n these Natiopa
Battlefield sites. Gov- Vandiver
will preside at the ceremonies.
Tboy will go fiom there to Ohio,
thence for a few days in Mias.
Truett McConnell Coviege
opens Sept. 18.
iUBBUUBK FOB THE GOU8DSU
Local Nev yo
Send tu the NEWS ao that it will
appear in The Courier. We will ap
precite your cooperation.
Miss lo Ann Winkler h^s re
turned to the Florida Sanitarium
and Hospital in Orlando, Fla. to
continue nurses training.
Mrs. Charlie Dick and daugh¬
ters, Debbie and Pamela, of Los
Angeles, visited Mrs Carl Sutton
recently.
Mrs. Janette Officer, mother of
Mrs Carl Sutton fell one day
last week, but fortueately no
bones were broken. She lives with
Mr, and Mrs Sutton.
Mi s Madge Blalock, (daughter
if Mr and Mrs. B B. Blalock, left
Tuesday for Emanuel College in
Royston
Leave all results with find. You are
no! always digging up the seeds iu your
garden to see how they are growin?
I’ru t all to find, and he will bless your
work.
—H, idonsell
Wav be if Fate Norton, Joe Telford and
a great number of other White County
people in fiaii.esville wid really become
iuteiesled in a hew highway leading off
from south of Clermont, via Broukton
and thence east of New Holland we can
then begin to see some ray of hope.
These former White County eitiz ne
will be doing a tremendous service to¬
ward development of our mountains by
selling lb's line made into an ultra-mod¬
ern highway,
Won’t you people talk with all former
White County citizens about this proposid
highway?
l'he Courier in of the very strong opin
ion that a constitutional amendioen’
should be submitted to the people list
would put Legislatoie on an annual sala¬
ry.
There’s too much spent on so-eailed
comuiillee i.jpn, which sometimes goes to
an astronomical figure, The Legislators
now receive $"0 ()■ i (lay while in session
which is enounb to en'icu an able person
to run for the office,,
A letter from Senator Richard B Rus¬
sell dated Sept. 5 staled, "1 am stil
hopeful, however, that I will bo able to
accept your kind invitation to make a
helicopter tour <>f the road (Richard B,
Ru«sell Scenic Highway) during the com¬
ing Fail and if 1 am able to woik it out,
will of course be iu touch with you
oromptiy.”
This great scenic highway from Richard
Sims’ to Tesnalee Bap is estimated b
cost $1,70b,000 and Senator Russell
should sec the whole area before cou
truction is slatted so “that he will be
satislied with the final survey, whicn we
maintain must go up Dukes Creek .8
mile fu>m Richard Sims’.
The Editor will continue to urge out
great Senator to see ALL the ar ea be¬
fore a final location iesettleti on.
The Lily officials muei not ltd any'gras!
grow under their feel ic .heir endeavor h
to get an expert to work out the trafht
ptoblem on the public square, as well ae
on 1H9 south and uoith in the city limits
The sooner something is doue the battei,
Cleveland just must have an ultis.
modern motel before May 1962.
Now that out new ultra-modern 129 ie
completed and now beiug used people
will Btait coming to our mountains in
droves Well, where will we keep them?
Somebody had better gel busy NOW and
ste that we do have at least one place to
keep these visitors with' lots of green
folding money.
There'll be a lot of ’’leather breeches’’
and p’ckle beans pul up i.i White County.
Oldlimers told that when the skin o,
onioDs are very thick and tough it meant
that the coming wintry will be cold and
Kees'er /'Fit, Miss-Airman
pd Class Jesse M. Black, sou ol
Mr. and Mrs J- Mu Black, o-l
Cleveland, Ga., recently graduat¬
from the i7 week Aircraft,Con
rol and Warning Operate!Louise
it Keesler |
At Hutchinson AFS, Kansas,
Airman Black will operate the
Seim-Automatic Ground Envtr
Minient System.
Misses Mai'Y and Iva Town*
return to their home in Utica
next week after staying se¬
weeks in Paradise Valleys.
Stamey Cbevrolet|Co willjhave
new | U»(52 Chevy and Corvaii
display Sept 29. Also Nix
will have the 1962 Ford
Charlie Turner tells that his
Miss Calhe, tan really cook
held beans that will make
call for a second helping.
J.G. and Lee Thomas, brothers,
very sick.
John Turner, of Lumpkin Co
in town Saturday (afternoon *
Drought in Manitoba, Canada,
pitiful. It also reaches into
and the Dakotas It is
to be a ayeat deal worse
the 1925 drought that hit
It’s syrup making time Jui the
Chicken prices have lowered in
past week to i0 'cents per
Somebody is going to get
hurt in 1 he squeeze.
Mr. and Mrs. W, B. Smith have
returned to their home iu Gray
sou after spending the summer at
their summer cottage in Blue
Ridge District,
Mr. and Mys. Ernest Weathei
bee have returned to their home
111 Albany after spending several
days iat their summer cottage 111
Paradise Valley.
M. E. Thompson announced
Sept. 8 that he would in alljikeb
hood he a candidate for U,S. Sen
ate against Senator Herman Tal
rnadge.
John H. Southard, of West
Palm Beach, Fla., has purchased
the 100 acre Farm of-- Sose
bee on Blqe Creek. He expects to
move there by Jan ist., 1962.
Chevrolet will introduce diesel
power in their 1962 trucks
Stamey Chevrolet can supply you
with any of the 198 different mod
els in medium and heavyduty
trucks.
Mrs. Edna Barron o( Leslie, Ga., wis
guests of Mr, and MrJ, T. y. Cantrell
last week,
E. H. Bumll of Louisville., (is visiting
his sister, ure, A E, Moody,
Mis Jas. P. Davisson. Gharleiu and
Mas. H. H, H’lbebiand and esughteis,
Debbie and Jeanie, of Washington, D. C
visited AR&nt .Tuesday
H. H. Hildebrand, of Washington,
C., atmed in his plane Wednesday
a lew days visit with he Davidsons I
Check Horn* Freezer
Before stocking up the home
freezer, check Its contents and use
food, under particularly storage meat, for thst time. has
been some
C'Ricism is something yon can avoid
by Baytng nothing, doing nothing and be
ingnothing* according toUi, l). G. NealJi
jack Smith avers, conscience is what
makes you tell your wife something you
kuow abe’li fiud out anyway.
The crimes that are uow being com¬
mitted by man againBt man cry aloud
not tor vengeauce, but for a complete
change iu oui relationship one with ari
other—George Lansbtiry,
If you want to write something that
will live forever, sign a mortgage
Some people would like to take a trip
to the moofi but are afraid to git iu the
front row at church so declares Eddie
Adams.
Even a teuibstone will say good thiugs
about a fellow when he is down, muses
Oha lie Thomas.
Will Freeman thinks ths hydrogen
bomb has made one great contribution to
democracy With it, all men are cremated
equal,
Any cowaid can tight ^ battle when'
he’s sure of winning; but give me Ih,
man who has pluck to fight when he’s
sure of losing. That's my way, sit; ami
there are many victories worse than de¬
feat —iscu'ge Eliot,
Herbert Glover muses, that someone
has.ohservcd that it takes the average
student twenty minutes longer to tell
what he thinks than to tell what be
knows,
Charlie Turner avers no one is ever too
old to learn,but many people keet,puttiog
it off', especially when well-stacked and
luscious ypung ladies are about,
Most people in high places in Washing¬
ton believe that the Russians were trying
for a missile killer when tpey made four
nuclear explosions.
Be sure to read the Southern
Railway System Ad ou page 3
The Southern is vitally interested
in the development of oursection
SUBSCRIBE FOR THE COURIER!
CLEVELAND, GA, SEPT. 15 1961
BILLY GRAHAM, TALMADGE
AND LANDRUM TO BE AT
TOCCOA FALLS SEPT. 25
Dr. Billy Graham, famed evan¬
gelist, will be the principal speak¬
er at an open-air rally to be held
on the baseball park of Toccoa Falls
Institute Monday afternoon, Sep¬
tember 25. The rally will be the cli¬
max of a three-day celebration of
the Fiftieth Anniversary of the
Toccoa Falls Institute by Dr. Rich¬
A. Forest in 1911. Alumni and
of the Institute from far and
are expected to attend the cel
Other featured speakers will in¬
Georgia’s Senator Herman
her Ninth District Rep¬
Phil Landrum, and Doc¬
Julian A. Bandy, President of
Institute. All of the guest speak¬
have been long time friends oi
Toccoa Falls Institute. Friendship
Doctor Bandy and Doctor
dates back to the boyhood
of the latter, at which time
>octor Bandy was his pastor.
Seating accomodations for the cel
bration are being provided for 5,000
cople, and the public is cordially
invited. The service will begin at
: :30 p.m.
Donald George Thomas, 18,
who shot at Ft. Beiining soldier
m Atlanta Sept 4 in the ankle
with 45 pistol had-left {the place
where he works and was walking
to hin rooming house when four
soldiers robbed him of $70 He
ran in his {room and tired one
time at then feet after they re¬
fused to stop They thed halted
and he marched them to the
police
Thomas was charged with
currying a pistol without license
and tiring it.. 1 he case against
Thomas was nolprossed Sept.I3
A new national park has been
created f-f has been named Prai¬
rie National Park; m a county in
northeast Kansas, where buffalo
wi.l roam.
Wonder why somebody can’t
interest Sce’y Udall to create a
uational park iu White County?
You businessmen who give
your Job Printing to out-of-town
pviuters should ask their salesman
how much their firm contributes
to Cleveland and White County’s
progress and growth.
The Courier pays taxes iu
Cleveland and White County and
we feel that we are entitled to all
the Job Printing in WhileCounty
Harvey Adams Passes
Funeral services ware held Sept, |2 lor
Haivey Burton Adams, 65, of Helen, who
died Sunday at his residence.
Services were at Chattahoochee |Me!ho
dist Church with Revs, Asa Dorsey and
Ronald Hooper officiating. Interment
was in the church cemetery.
He was a lifetime regieint of while
County and a veteran of Woild War 1.
He was a member of Cliallahoi chee
Methodist Church.
Survivors include one son, Henry
Adams, Helen; seven daqghtt»'s, Mrs
Billy Mathergou, Xante# K 1; Mrs. Archie
Pelsieglou, Norfolk Nj ; Mrs. L. M
Campbell Cleveland ; Mrs. Willard Yoik,
Sautee R 1; Mrs. Laveils MaBerry, Hape
ville, Mr Bobby Flatherson, Dawsonville
Mrs Calvin Garret Helen; two sisters,
Mrs Liza Jackson, Maysdlle; 28 grand
children; one great-grandchildr
Ward’s bad chrrge
Jay N • G, Mile# Sr. Passes
Graveside services were held Sept, i2
at 2:30 p m, for Jay N. G. Miles 8r,,
of Atlanta, formerly of Cleveland, who
diea after a long illness Sept. 9 in Qrady
Hospital, Atlanta.
The Rev. Emory Brackmau conducted
the service from Cleveland Cemetery.
A native of White County, Mr. Miles
had lived in Atlanta for the past 50 years,
A retired life iusurance agent, be was
member of the Methodist denomination
since childoood 1
He ie survived by one son, Jay N.
Miles Jr,, Atlanta; two daugbleie, Mrs
Mary L. Btcknell. Gaum; Mias
Maty Milee, Atlanta; one brother,
I). Miles; & sister, Mr a, Mattie A
Cleveland; and two grandchildren.
Wards had charge.
Established 1891 $9.61 Per Year )» Alto*
—- O’* HOMETOWN AMERICA
THE FIRST fifty HE WENT ALONE —
:
SHOCKING —That’s the word for
the news from Washington that a
proposed Federal law would compel
lady tourists to take off their shorts
if they want to visit the Capitol.
Hasty- inquiry, however, reveals
that the news is a little distorted.
bill introduced by Rep. Walter
McVey (R., Kan.) merely requires
that the ladies must not put on
shorts in the first place.
Thus the crisis at the seat of gov¬
ernment expands—as Rep. McVey
complains that the ladies do. In the
Senate a few days ago, Stephen M. !
Young (D., Ohio) complained about
'hefty- ladies in very short shorts”
the gallery. Now the freshman
Republican from Kansas informs the
House that shorts—unlike Congres¬
sional debates—do not cover the
subject.
TOO GOOD TO KEEP
Writing of the troubles of an ed¬
itor, Mr. Bankston told of the re¬
cent loss of two of his subscribers.
One had written, asking how t o
raise twins successfully, while the
other wanted to know how to rid
his orchard of grasshoppers. The
answers were forwarded by mail,
but the editor put them in the wrong
envelopes. So the subscriber with
the twins received this answer:
‘Cover them carefully with straw
and set fire to it, and then the little
pests after jumping into the flames
for a few minutes will be speedily
settled.” And the man with the
grasshoppers was told to “give them
castor oil and rub their gums with
a bond.” (Courtesy of the Friendly
Half Hour)
WHITE COUNTY HIGH SCHOOL
FOOTBALL SCHEDULE
1961—62
Sept. 15, Union County (There!
Sept. 22, Royston (Here)
Sept. 29, East Hall (There)
Oct. 1, East Fannin (Here)
Oct. 13, Rahun County (Here)
Oct. 20, Lavonia (There)
Oct. 27, South Habersham (Here)
Nov. 3, North Hall (There)
NOTICE
The Wcaiey«o Set vice Guild of the
Cleveland Methodist Churob invitee you
to attend a Fall Fashion 8h°v Sept 21
at 8 p,m. at thg While County High
School cafelotiutn Williams Dree* Shop
will furnish the ladies and rniesea
Reede Dept Store will outfit the
and Head’s Store will furnish the clothes
for the boys. Admi«si n will be $.25 and
$.50. The proceed* aae to be usad to help
forniab the new Parsonage,
Everybody come',
NOTICE
There will be a Rummage Sale end
Bake Bale this Saturday Bept,; 16
9 a.m, till dark sponsored by ibe
of the (,'levelaiid Methodist Church,
It will be on the lot uext to
Chevrolet across from the Post Offiee,
The proceeds will be used to help
nish the new Parsonage.
“There is ao much Rood In
worst of us and so mi such bad In
best of us it doesn’t behoove any
09 to sneak ill of the seat of os."
RURAL RAM BUNGS
By Ross Cutting
White County is more extra-ord¬
inary than we thought; With the
oven thermometer set according to
cook book instructions, things burn.
We check the oven and it is heat¬
ing perfectly. We get out the centi¬
grade thermometer and boil some
water. It boils at 97 C. instead of
100 C. In Fahrenheit it should boil
212 degrees but in White County
water boils at 207 F. Turn the oven
50 degrees, lady.
While looking up the temperature
factor in the encycloped¬
ia we couldn’t stop turning pages
and looking at pictures and there
right next to Centigrade was centi¬
pede. We learn that they have from
15 to 170 pairs of legs. Boy, what a
shoe bill!
Then comes centrifugal force
which goes round and round but
doesn’t life© it so finally it goes off
on a tangent like my- sister-in-law’s
sister.
It says that Paul Cezanne was
born in 1839. Anybody know him?
It’s on page 1316. Anyhow he’s de¬
ceased.
Page 1321: There’s the picture of.
the great building housing the Nat¬
ional Headquarters of the Chamber
of Commerce. The book says it’s lo¬
cated almost next to the White
House. We’ve long suspected this.
And there’s Charlie Chaplin’s pic¬
ture - large shoes, small mustache,
cane and derby hat. We’ve often
laughed hard at his comical antics.
Poor Charlie: had to go back ta
England, with all those American
dollars he made here.
Charcoal: It’s made from hard¬
wood. Now there’s something we
should Start making in White Coun¬
ty. You can use it as a smokeless
fuel or make black gunpowder from
it if you run out of atoms.
Charles VI: Skip him - We al¬
ways liked science better than hist¬
ory anyhow.
Madame (Kai-shek) Chiang. She’s
cute: Wonder what the fare to For¬
mosa is?
Chilblane - page 1377 - caused by
exposure to cold and wet. It gives
treatment instructions and doesn’*
say “consult your doctor”. A. M. A.
sick 'em.
The last page is 9410; we have a
long way yet to go. That will help
pass the time while we’re waiting
for homecoming week to start Sep¬
tember
FFA News
The officers of Ine White County Chapt¬
er Future Farmers of America joined local
officers of other Northeast Georgia chapt¬
ers in Aioens Saiuiday tor their annual
dtetriet Leadership Training .Meeting.
Attending the meeting wilh the FFA
advisors, Mr Fitzpatrick and Mr Vaughn
were; Richaid Harkins, Pres ; Edsel
Thomas, V.Pree.; Melvin Anderson, Ben*
thiol; Ervin McAfee, Reporter,
Cleveland merchants can make ou
tittle city a trading center '1 hey will
advertises - ----- Is The flnnrlu
[ ~