Cleveland courier. (Cleveland, White County, Ga.) 1896-1975, October 12, 1962, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

c i /f THE COURIER COVERS THE MOUNTAINS LIKE MOONSHINE Devoted t o VOI. LXV 50 THG CLEVELAND PLATFORM For White County and Cleveland: A Cleaner and More City All Highways Graded and Paved To Make White County Mecca for Tourists Development of Winter Sports in Mountain Area Five To Ron For Senate In New 50th District The Atlanta newspapers report that Zeii Miller of YounglHarris; Lee Irvin of Cornelia: Clifford Blalock, City; Bonnell Akins, Blairsville: and Robert K. Bal to tv, Blue Ridge, have paid their $5n0 fee to George Stewart and will run for State Senator from the new 50th District, which now composes of 8 counties. Tuesday was the deadline for qualifying. In all I kilihood there will be a runoff.oH Oct. 23 between the two highest candidates You will find Ads in this issue for 4 of the five candidates for State Senate from the 50th Dist. 4 Ninth !> strict Republican Conven¬ tion was helil in Blaireville Wednesday nigli). Dr. Roper of Jasper was selected to tuu for State Senate Nov, 6 and p> ti linns will be preseuted |to the Sec’y cl State by Or . 25, Fted Black resigned hr Chairman for White |<’ounty. City-Wide Cleanup Wednesday, Oct 17 The Mayor and Council have askod that a city-wide cleanup be held Wednesday, Oct. 17 You are asked to make your premises have a happy greeting appearance and do all you can to make tins a real clean-up, t i ■ —- Ross Palmer’s Home Destroyed By Fife Sunday Fire staited in the wall of the stairway of Ross Palmer’s home Sunday around noon. All of the interior of the house was burned. The Weather Bureau’s long range weather outlook for Oct. for our Aioa is that the tempera fliyp W'H bfl much be low norma l and the precipitation above npr mal i* Bill Allietn reports that White Courty has a good chance of getting a lot done on the Ait port through the ARA benefits. He telle thai he intehde to keep it hot so our good fri. ud Robert Hogan of Dudley can visit us often La man Anderson mode as feel good Tuesday over securing Winter Sports in Ibe Raven idiffs ere* by snowfall of 1 '63, He plane to visit oar mountains tbie fall. Liotun Ciawfofd, affable manager Ihe Cornelia Cppa-Cola Bottling Co , ju town Tuesday. He gave us a 4. umo Cooa-t Ola Ad ts ruu in our issue October lg. He has always ed keen interest in Cleveland.e County's progress You will find 5 Constitutional Ameod msuts ptiuted in The c.ouiier next week Niue slit .ents from' Cleveland and vicini>v ate enrolled at North Georgia College. D hlonega* for the 1062-63 academic y> ar. They are: Mrs. Jane W Cole; Cadet James H. Glen, Sautee; Hiss M lauie Head; Miss Lynda lone Hood Sautee, Miss Bat bara Jean Kim* brell, Sautee; Mi«* Betty Hartis Mcjo tosh; Mies Marviene Ann Miles; liiee Mary Jo Mize j and Cauet Harolo Roger Btfit f % 9 \ No town ever grows and pushes for ward without a five, wide-awake newB K per. What would happen to devo¬ id if The Courier decided to stop Local News Send us the NEWS so that it appear in Hie Courier. We will precite your cooperation. Telephone or write The the NEWS. Born to Mr. and Mis. Bently , a £irl , Oct. 3, at Hal Co. Hospital. Mrs. J. F. Ivie; Mike and of Atlanta spent Sunday parents. Editor and Mrs, Jas. P. Davidson. Bill Lindsay, Bill Jackson, Arnold London, Bill Abernathy, Jack Winkler and Corky Stover went to Panama City last Friday on a fishing trip, returning. Sun¬ day. W. B. Lumsden of Nacoochee Valley was visiting in Cleveland Oct. 4. He’s enjoyidg good health. W. G. Murrah of Choestoe dis¬ trict, Union County, was in town Oct 5, Mr. Murrah is a retired Director of Public Relations of the First National Bank of At¬ lanta. Ranger Freeman, Clarkesvtlle, of the U. S.jForest Service, was m town last Friday. He is a native Mississippian. Little Sherrill O’Keiley, 3 year old daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Demorest O’Keliey of Fredtcks burg, Va , was buried Oct ll. She was the granddaughter of Mr and Mrs Joe O’Kelley of Shoal Cx’eek. She had been ill a long timejwith Leukemia. Project Mercury (FHTNC)—Ernest M, Lee, postal clerk third class, USN, soi i>( Mi. and Mis’ Millord Lee oi Cltvelano la,, is serving aboard tb< radar picket destroyer USS Veeoie, a unit of the re¬ covery forces which the U 8 Navy and U. 8 Marine Corps have aieigoed to the Atlantic Ocean area for the third manned orbital flight into space, The Editor appreciates the fine mess of fish given us Sunday by Bill Lindsay, Frank Allison of Cfioostoe dis¬ trict, Union County, was in town Monday. Mr. and Mis. George Davidson of Detroit are expected to arrive in Cleveland Saturday and will visit with Mr. and Mrs. Frank DeLong Sr- at Brookton for a few The.boys 'dormitory at the Vocational School burned Satur¬ day night. Arson was the cause Grady Henley of Marietta spent the weekend at Helen, Mr. and Mrs. Jas. P, Davidson Jr. and Sandra of Doraville spent the weekend with parents, Editor and Mrs- Jas P, Davidson Recent elected members of the County Democratic Executive Committee will not take office until tho day following the State Convention Mr. and Mrs. Oscar White, Greeley, Colo,, are spending a week with their mothei, Mrs, W, Mrs. J. Fresley, Ed Underwood Sr, of Green¬ I ville, S. C., visited Mr. and Mrs. VV, J. Presley Jr., Sunday Spec- -4c aud Mrs. Jimmy Brookshire ol Ft, Eustis, Va,, are spending several days with home folks. Miss Doris Hood, student at Wills Memorial Hospital, Wash¬ ington, spent the weekend with parents, Mr. and Mrs. Claude Hood. Mr. and Mrs. John Hadaway of Chamblee spent the weektnd with Mrs. Ella Bell Jackson. Mrs. Anu Wells of Miami and Mrs. Madge McClain of Savan nab spent Saturday night with Mrs. Ella Bell Jackson SUBSCRIBE FOB THF rjHJBIHU ocr. 12 1962 Is not the whole land before separate thyself, I pray ibee, from ittbou wilt t? ke the left hand, then will go to tha right; or if thou depart Ibe right hand, then I will go to the —Gen. 13 ;9 Early next week we should have positive information about an modern motel and restausant for Clove land, The Courier haa been working very nard to get this great enterprise for Cleveland since early August Yesterday is already a dream. To¬ morrow is only a vision. Today well lived makes every yesterday a dream, of happiness, every tomorrow a vision of hope, Look well, therefore, to this day —From tbs Sanskrit • Salutation to Ibe Dawn." The extraordinary eeseion of the Geor. gia General Assembly adjourned Monday after agreeing to a reapportionment of tht Senate, aid to municipalities and a few other measures. The White County Harvest Festival begins Oct. 20-21 and will continue each weekend thereafter until Nov, 3-4 The leaves are brightening very fast. Thousands of people are expected to vieil our mountains during tbie lime. You should see the sour wood leaves so prominenlly displaying I heir deep red color alongside the gold, russet aod green and so proudly beckoning the vieitors to our mountains. The varied colored leaves will bring thousands of people to our mountains, but where will they stay and sat f Maybe you’ll want to do something shout this vital matter? We are anxiously awaiting to see what die etalward San lers supporters wfll do about getting ACTION ou extending ul. ra-modern 129 froiu south of Cleimont. via Brookton and east of New Holland and then connect with a 4-Iaoe to Atlanta Word comes that rhe Highway Board elans to build a 4-lane wed of the South -rn Railroad from Gainesville to connec with the Industrial Boulevard at Dora ville may be rushed a little in 1863 Senator Byrd of Va. made a statement in the Senate Chamber Oct. 3, 1962 that he said that an officer of the Pentagon in¬ formed him that there were 20,000 troops in Oxford, Miss., the early part of Iasi week to guard ONE Negro. The town has a population of 5,000 Claude G. Hood proclaims even in these days of Social Secnrity acd unem ploymeut insurance, you’re not too bright f you think a neet egg is strictly for the birds. There’s nothing wrong with lee >agers that trying to reason with them won’t a - aravate, avers H S. Nix A woman’s idea of keeping a secret ir refusing to tell who told it to hei,eotbinki< Lai Vaudiver liarold Burnett muses, that hard work is an accumulation of easy things that you didn’t do when you should Dr. Don Fabrbach tells a smile Is a curve that can set a lot of IhiDge straight Housework is something you do that nobody notices unless yon don’t do it, proclaims Mrs, Polly Stamey Tawning Is usually the act of a person who inadvertently opens bis month when he wishes others would shut theirs, muses Clyde Dixon. A legend is a lie that baa attained the dignity of age, opines Dr, L- G, Neal A snob is a pe> aon who is ashamed to have his acquaincea catch him with bis friends, declares Mark Black. Happiness is often overlooked because it doesn’t cost anything, opines J. H, Tel fold A headline told us that the national passed the $!j00 billion mark for the time in history. Uncle Sam had bet¬ make some other arrangements for debts. Most of ns are up to our neck our personal debts, too. W e weie shocked the other day when a remarked that he didn’t "bother” to bis services in tbie newspaper everybody in the area knows what hie business is and whole to find if they want him! The person who uttered tbie heresey obviously never heard the old refrain: "The mao who whispers down a well about the goods be has to sell, doesn’t rake in lots of dollars like Um one who stands and boilers.— Town & Country, Pennsburg, Pa. In Naples, Fla., police say evidence indicated that a person who broke into a home aud stole a TV set took a bath be¬ fore leaving the premises. The Soviet Onion’s meet potent wea¬ pon may wall he her quietest education "—William Benton, Eucyclopedia Brltannica NOTICE —Under new regulations we have to pay a for each newspaper that cannot delivered. We as* any who changes address to please By us in advance. U. S. PUSHES PUBLIC! WORKS SPEED-UP WASHINGTON (UPI) — and government officials were vised today to plan public works projects to get most from a new federal program intended to pep up the economies of depressed areas. However, they were cautioned against trying to get government money for projects which do not meet a public need or will not pro¬ vide jobs for the unemployed. Administrator William L. Batt Jr. of the Area Redevelopment Admin¬ istration said the emphasis will be on projects that can be started be¬ fore June 30 of next year, and finished in about 12 months. “We are looking for speed, speed and more speed,” he said. Batt was among the speakers who briefed about 400 government offi¬ cials attending a conference on the recently enacted $900 million acce¬ lerated public works program. Speakers stressed one criteria for eligibility over which state and lo¬ cal governments would have no con¬ trol—the presence of a serious un¬ employment problem. Christmas Overseas Parcels Christmas parcels for the arm¬ ed forces overseas should l>e mail ed between Nov . and Nov 20 Greeting cards should also be mailed withip those dates if they are to be delivered before Christ mas. Get instructions from the Post Office on how to pack parcels. Dan Campbell Dies Heart AttacOundsy Thomas Daniel (Dan) Camp¬ bell died of a heart attack at his home in Montgomery, Ala-, Sun* day morning- filling He operated a large in Montgomery for the 22 years Funeral services were held in Montgomery Monday afternoon, was also there. He is survived by his wife, “ii's. Martha Campbell, Montgomery, Ala,} son, Thomaa Harold Campbell, Ala. i mother, Mrs. J. H City ; fivs brothers. Bill, East Fred, Ray, Clifford and Hope of ; one sister, Mrs. Harold Ragan, City, two grandchildren, The Ninth District GEA Fall ConveD iou wifi be held in Qaioaevills Oci. 8 Ruben L. |Hogao, pr sident of tne Bank of Dudley, is one of, the 117 piorni oenl Georgians recently appointed to the via. Small Business Advisory Council, He meet with the group in Atlanta Thursday Mr. Hogan owns ecveral'hundred acres oi land in White County and ie responsible for the ultra modern 129 south of Cleve. land.; Grand jjourt is still in session. The Jury adjourned Wednesday. Mrs. Robert New has been; named on an advisory Qo,mt»' u $ e by Dr Claude Pur oull to study educational .research in Ga. Dr. Purcell stated that business and in Uuslrv have found that research pays tremendous dlviuends, abd feels that research will do the same for .education, Kj liightori V & n I "K* Uttk toy, I m hiding fmt brack btUt" DIE IN BLIZZARD MELBOURNE, Australia A young Malayan student and Australian geologist were dead of exposure Sunday after were trapped by blizzard on snow covered slopes of Woods l2Q miles ea8t of Melbourne, •CB8CBIBS TOR IBB Established 189* $3.61 Year la NEGRO VOTE DECIDES A GEORGIA ELECTION ATLANTA — A veteran "conser¬ vative” Congressman went down to defeat before a tide of Negro votes under Georgia’s new election rules. Representative James C. Davis (Dem.) lost out in a runoff primary in his bid for a ninth congressional term. Mr. Davis, who is 67, was de¬ feated by Charles L. Weltner, an attorney reguarded as "liberal” who was making his first political race at 34. The vote: 75,000 for Weltner, to 62.000 for Davis. In two small coun ties, it was Davis, 25,000 to 22,000.' But in Fulton County, which includes most of Atlanta, it was Weltner. 53.000 to 37,000. In 12 Negro pre cints of Atlanta, it was Weltner, 16,068 to 535. This lopsided Negro vote clearly defeated Mr. Davis, an all-out segregationist. Under the county-unit system which prevailed in Georgia until a federal court threw it out last spring, Mr. Davis would have won the pri¬ mary. The two small counties he carried had eight unit votes. Atlan¬ ta’s county had only six. WANT TO MAKE A MILLION? All you have to do is to find a substitute for advertising. John V. Doyle, vice-president of Campbell Ewald Company (ad agency) said in a speech recently. All that’s ne¬ cessary is to find a substitute way that will inform millions about a new product to make life easier; find a way for men willing to risk time and money in developing ideas to reach the public with those ideas; find a way for the local supermarket to let every housewife in his neigh¬ borhood know what the price of hamburger is today; find a way to tell all the college graduates the opportunities available to them in all our different kinds of industries. That’s ALL you have to do. It was obvious that Mr. Doyle was vexed with the critics of advertising. STRIDES FORWARD IN MENTAL HEALTH The principal mental disease is schizophrenia, which involves a dis¬ integration of the human persona¬ lity. Until recently, victims were foredoomed to spend their lives in mental hospitals, at a huge cost, only in money but in human and values. But, now, due new drugs and improved therapy, strides are being made combating it. issue of the Wall Street Journal. He cites, as one example, a man who threw his daughter from a balcony and was confined to an asylum for many years. But after treatment with tranquilizers he was released, is back at work, and liv¬ ing a seemingly normal life. In late years the long upward trend of schizophrenics in new York hospitals has been reversed. The decline, according to the deputy commissioner of New York’s de¬ partment of Mental Hygiene, “be¬ gan abruptly with the introduction of large-scale drug therapy in 1955 and has continued ever since.” A very recent development, Mr. Law son says, lies in the use of psyshic energizers, which are sometimes used in combination with the tran¬ quilizers to both calm anxiety and elevate a depressed patient at the same time. He adds, While more and more schizophrenics are being helped by drugs, a determined band of researchers is trying to work an even more basic revolution in con trol of the disease.” This is just one of the many complicated research projects carried on by this country’s pharmaceutical industry in conjunc tion with the medical profession and just one of the arrows pointing to healthier, happier, more productive lives for millions of people. fiWE LETTERHEADS .^ENVELOPES -A frynan la any man who gives (or a seat”—Joseph Gaucher, JFK SIGNS OLD FOLKS’ HOUSING WASHINGTON, Sept. 29 (API)— President Kennedy signed into law Saturday a bill increasing funds for low-cost housing for the elderly and extending the program into rural areas. The bill boosts the present autho¬ rity of the Housing and Home Fin¬ ance Agency from $125 million to $225 million and provides $100 mil¬ lion for rural housing for the elderly. The urban program was begun in 1959. Under it loans for specially de¬ housing units for the elderly be made to private non-profit cooperative sponsors. A similar will now be available to areas. BRICE VAN HORN of the Fill¬ more (Calif.) Herald recalls what the beloved Will Rogers thought of the weekly newspaper: “Take away my ham, take away my eggs, even my chili, but leave me my newspaper. Even if it has such purely local news as ‘Jim Jones came home last night unexpectedly and bloodshed ensued,’ or, 'Jess Bushyhead, our local M. D., 13 hav¬ ing one of the best years in his career, practically speaking — but they just won’t pay him when they get well,” and ‘election ain’t far off and everybody is up for office that can sign an application blank’. Now all that doesn’t seem much news to you. But it is news, especially when you know the people and they your own folks. So, no matter punk you think your local is, let them take it away you a while and see how you The old newspaper, I think, about our biggest blessing. So read and be merry, for tomor¬ the paper may not have enough to come out. BIBLE BUILDS BRIDGES— WALLS Every, day we read of tire import¬ of commerce and industry in our system prise produces more than enough to taka care of our needs in all res¬ pects, and to help supply deficien¬ cies in other countries. By way of contrast, the “planning” in the com¬ munist sphere is not good enough to even furnish its people with suffi¬ cient food. The blessings of a government of, by, and for the people are many. Not the least is freedom of worship, guaranteed in our Constitution. Bible Week takes place 15-21, sponsored by the Lay¬ National Committee, Inc., an organization. This year’s for the Week is as timely as is significant: The Bible Builds Walls.” The eternal of the people of this nation be to keep building the brid and to see that the walls that freedoms—religious, econ¬ political—can never be erect ed. A ‘WE THROW AWAY OUR FINANCIAL RESOURCES’ The Editors: I, along with many others, am deeply concerned about the fiscal irresponsibility of the pre¬ sent administration. I feel that the time has come when the United States must give serious considera¬ tion to its own financial situation. We cannot remain the world’s first power if we throw away our financial resources, as we at present are doing. Our people are burdened with taxes, the rights of the states have disappeared, and the nations whom we have rescued from econ mic chaos do not appreciate our efforts and will not assume their share of the cost of fighting the spread of communism. Every nation to which we have sent countless billions becomes our enemy the mo¬ ment we stop. friends , who Instead of making will help us, we have become the world’s biggest “sucker.” We must remember that this nation belongs to its children, and not to every nation that reaches out its hand for a donation. Thomas Wheelis, Rome—Atlan¬ ta Journal M "The will of the people is the only without a college course is more vaD naMa than a college Lyon course “ ‘ without • BiM*—William