Cleveland courier. (Cleveland, White County, Ga.) 1896-1975, September 11, 1964, Image 1
E i ^4 J COURIER COVERS THE MOUNTAINS LIKE MOONSHINE Devote g^ia the Agricultural . Commercial and Industrial Iuteraata of White County VOL LXVU Me. 47 t’HE CLEVELAND COURIER. PLATFORM For White County and Cleveland: A Cleaner and More Beautiful City All Highways Graded and Paved To Make White County the Meeca tor Tourists Development ot Winter Sports in ountain Area Landrum Wins ¥:W : fc I ill m : ; 7: ■ :.x: III :■ Wi £li m 7 , X. m M -: Sl:| mi Uoturreshmani jjj Phil Landrum ■won reelection Wednesday over Zell Miller and Buckeye^dhi in the closest race he has ever run duiin? his 12 years in Congress front the Ninth District Reparls Thursday A, M, said Landrum-Pbad some 5,000 to 6,000 votes ovar his closest rival, Zell Miller. Landrum carried White County with a White County with a vote of 454 to SIL for Miller There were fewer votes in this primary than for a loug, long time. Allen Chappell carried White County 310 to 287 for Fowler Zell Miller Sued Gainesville Times Zell Miller, a candidate for Congress from the Ninth Dis trict, sued the Gainesville Daily Times and Sylvan Meyer, editor, for $1 million, two hundred thousand dollais because of an editorial that appeared in the Times on Sept. 3 The editorial, “He’s Best for The Ninth’s,” endorsed the can¬ didacy of |Cougressfliau Phil Landrum. Meyer’s comment was, “1 would only say what Harry Tru¬ man once said, 4 t If he can’t stand the heat, he’ll just have to stay out of the kitchen. M The Weather Bereau predicts the weathei for Sept. : Temper, will be above normal Precipita. tiou blow normal. The ing an Atlanta firm make a sur vay for a modern water and sew¬ age system for Cleveland that is hoped will be sufficient for |a no. of years, Mr. Story reports that you can now drive to within a very short distance of Hogpen Gap .on the beuator Richard B. RussellScenic Highway, iHogpen is 3,400 ft. and you can get a breath taking view from there. A jury of Madisou Couuty white men late last|Friday .fouud t£o Athens men innocent of kill ing a Washington, |D- C„ Negro educator on a lonely highway. They must yet be tried in Federal Court on civil rights charges Dors, the most destructive hurricxne rsceui >e»rs, h .8 done great damage North F lorida and Georgt’e costal area, Keeping Spices Keep the top of spice tins vsry se¬ cure, as the air tends to “aalcineaa.* make sptoaa Jmc their flavor and Itpis bettei, if the will of God be eo.Jthtu ye Butter for well doing, then for evil do¬ ing, For Christ also hath once suffered for eins, the juet for the unjust, that he night bring ue to God,—I Pet, 3:17.18 Pray to God at the beginning of all thjr works, eo tnoil mayest bring them all to a good euding —Zenopbon Cleveland is getting a lot of FREEpub ■icily that money can't bay, We'll K«t more shortly. W e hope that the people appreciate it. We are sure of at le at one more At lanta Jouraai-i.uuetitutioo Magazine colored picture and an .interesting story before Christmas, Oil) -of-town Job Printers did cot get al| ol this lor Cleveland FREE indications are that the leaves on the big mountains will change their color earlier this year, borne ere predicting frost around Oct. i, fOigord Campbell tells another reason fir unhappy marriage is that men can’t fool toeir wives like they could their mothers. Congressman Phil Landrum predicted Sept. 3 in clnyUm that the Blue Ridge Parkway would be extended 140 ,milee in Georgia and complelrd in eight years) This great tourist route t.blowing the crest cf the mountains will revolutionize oar mountains,! This ie the greatest greatest thing that has occurred in our mountain! in a generation and Congressman Land, rum deserves the praise from ALL of our people and we are eure that it will keep the Congress for as long as he wishes to serve us Senator Richard B, Russell expects to go over the Senator Richard B. Russell Sonic Highway before cold weather Mr, Story will have one ol his 4-wheel jeeps available, A belie >pter will be there to taae the Senator over all of ouj moun¬ tains bo he can see everntbing Andy Spa. he, Atlanta Journal-Consli. tvtion .Magazine w iter, and Kenneth Rogers, famed photographer, expressed interest last weeij about returning' soon for a story on pickled beans and leather britches It would make an interesting story, Rev, Joe Fulbtigbt eaye.enme women would make belter wives if they were net so intent on making better husbands. Mow that Blood Mountain Lodge is a lead-sure fact, it ,is expected that the Ponderosa, near Hiawassee, will soon ge) iuto high gear, Cleveland could receive AKA fuuds’to build a fabulous tourist resort |bere Mo. body seems iutere- ted Borne form of winter spoils will be in¬ augurated near the “Little Andy" Adams old bnmeplace lor our young people by winter. At least a small dam will be built for ice skating. The White Couu'y voter must begin to do some very setioue thiuking. He will be requited to put up at least double Ibe local funds he has been paying for Ibe support of our school. Think about (his when you decide not to issue beer license in 1995. Well we’li still bare beei sold legally at Helen A by pass of 129 of the public square is vital and essential for Cleveland’s growth Wbat will Ur, Masler’s Bay it immediate and positive action ie not taken MOW 1 When all is added up Senator Russell will be proudest for bis euergy in the development of Winter Sports in tbe Raveu Cliffs area the innumerable and far-teaching accomplishments uf his long career in the CJ. S, Senate ’ ^ Yon can already see some ^ trend turn¬ ing from Goldwat-r to President Johnson So as Nov. 8 approaches you might set some BIG guns in the South spe.kiug fo, LBJ, They are nut content to.-iloee their Chairmanship in the Congress and R Uoldwater wins then the Republicans will grab the Chairman of-ttbe Committees Goldwater is not seeking votes in the South merely for bimseit, Bo, ien’t It reasonable to expect Democratic office holders of local jobs to get to work fir the Democratic ticket in November, If Ibe election was held today, theu it is (airly certaiu Uoldwater weald carry G«. Well, wbat will be tbe results Nov, 3 ! Bill Allison ielle automation is man’s effort to .uake work so tary that women can do it all. ■ordon Lionard advises fear tbe goa t from tbe Iront, tbe mule fiom tbe rear, auu a woman with an umbrella coming from any direction Ono biond to another: “Wolves like railroad trains, You like to them whis-le even ij you aren't to go anywhere. *» TO SELL ’EM, TELL FS^’EM With An Ad SUBSCRIBE FOB THE CLEVELAND, GA* SEPT. 11 Local News Send u the NEWS ao that it will .ppear is The Courier. Wa wfH «p jrecite font Telephone or writ® The Courier ihe NEWS. When Cleveland businessmen advertise in The.Courier they can deduct that amount from their in¬ come tax. Rou’U find a list of the Grand and Traverse Junes for October Term in this issue. When all {these fine vegetables are gone a number of people |will be lost for something to eat. {Our wife is cooking some of the finest beans we have ever eaten It’ll soon be srup-making time in Choestoe district, Union Coun¬ ty. We rre anxious to get some if Frank Allison’s choice syrup. Senator Goldwater will speak in Atlanta Sept. 15 The Moose fraternal organiza¬ tion is now seeking members for .1 club in Cleveland. JA meeting was held at the Holiday Manor last night. ' 4 reJ» Ot. - Mr and Mrs. J. S. Clevelandlof Tampa, Fla., spent most of last week here. Mr. and Mrs. Paul |Mauney of Columbia, S. C., spent the holi¬ days with.Mrs. A. L. .Mauncy Robert Havper.has moved his trailer behind the Cleveland Jewelers Mr. and Mrs. Jus. P. ,Davidson Jr. and Sandra ofJDoraville spent the weekend with parents, Editor and Mrs. Jas. P. Davidson There’s two cas.s ofdtecarlet f v r in tue community. Mr. end Mis, W.D. O’Keltey and Madison and Jim yd Birmingham, AlaJ, spent the weekend with parents, Mr. and Mrs, J. H, Telford | Mr. and Mrs, George Mauuey ofKnox villo, Tenn., spent tbe weedend with re* lativee, Mri and Mrs. Jo A)[en Miller and son of Atlanta and Fiasier Millei visited their mother over tbe weekend. Mrs. Hobt. Bruce and children of Forest Perk visited Mrs. J. B/.R. Barrett over the weekend.| Mr. and M,e, Root. Kenlmer- etu'n d to their home in Hampton, Va., after visit¬ ing (heir mother. Dr. Masters will fiele an appli¬ cation for a complete planning program for White County. This, of course, must included bypass of Cleveland. Of course this will require a bypass of {Helen The PTA will hold its first meeting Sept. 10 at 8 o’clock at the school bouse Mr. and Mrs. Zell Miller were on the public square Wednesday A. M. They bid nor ,visit The Courier office^ Mrs. Stanley Ellis,fcLynda and Stephens of Decatur lspent a few days last week with parents, Editor and Mrs. Jas. P. Davidson Mrs, Stella Aleobrouk was honored ot) her 92nd birthday Tuesday, Sept 8 ,by a parly given her by her two daughters, sire, Hoy S, Power and ere Joe David son, Relatives and frieude attended) The Alien reunion will bs heln at LoudevlUe Campground Saturday night and Sunday Sept. 26 and 21 Claude Sima* ilneinsay cow has twine, a male and a female. Miss Linda Black, daughter of ,Mr, and Mrs, Lhae, Black, and Miss gharlene Palmer, daughter ot Mr and Mrs. Clifford Palmer, were graduated from the Hill Cyuoly School of Nursing Saturday after¬ noon at Breuau auditorium. Linda wan awarded the Nightingale trophy, The staff' uorsee and faculty pick the reetpeut of this trophy which ie based ou her cation of service in the nursing held Mrs, Ben Allison and are. B, A, son entertained at a luucueon at the.Holi day Manor honoring Mies .Sussianne lock anti Mies Anu Jollier, brides to be Mrs. Joe Telford drove her parents, and Mrs. Y. V. Cantrell, to Asheville a (ev days visit last week Olive Turner ie tack at home and ploring. g ymrciBB ffOB THE CO» T ” r "^ Warriors Crush ^Lumpkin County The W, C, H. S.f Warriors feat Lumpkin Co. in their second gamefof the season by a score of 44-0. Lets everyone go out ai d sup port the Warriors tonight in their fiist home game aganist Tocca'. J. F. London Passes Fun rsl eeivioe for James F, London S3, m ;Douah. was he'd Saturday from tine Creek Baptict Church, Interment 'as in the church ci meteiy. He died 8 ept, ? at his r esidence follow n* h') illness of six uiinthe, He was a native ot White C°nnty, but »kd liuetl in McDonough for the past 10 /ears Survivors include hie father, Fs&ok Louden, Clevetaud; wife, two eons,Joseph md Harvey London, |MoDouough; three lauglittere, Carolyn, Linda and Jenel I Loudon, McDsuougb; three brothers. Robert Lo dou, Cleveland; •'Marvin Lon lou. College Para; Harold London Uemoreet; one eister, Mrs, J. W. Wiuvet Cornelia|| , John Abernathy Passes Fun ra serviejs f. r John Abernathy 69 , Koberletowo, wag held Sdnday from Chattahoochee Methodist Church, Inter¬ ment was in tbe church cemetery. He died Sept 3 followiug a Jong illness He was a member of Chat.shoochee dethodist Church, He is survived by two biothm, Fiank iberualhy, Robertstown; Charlie Aber¬ nathy, City; two sisters, Mr-, Cliff' Sims and Mrs. June Brock, ''Robertstown Revival Announcement Reviual services will begin at the Zion Methodist Church Mou day night, Sept. 14th, on each evening ‘ at 8 o’clock. Rev. Frank Barfield will do the preaching. The public is cor dially invited to attend % Ballev Wins Senate Race - -- ; Robert D. Ballew, Blue Rikge attorney, was elected Senator of the 5Qth District over Mrs Amilee C. Graves and Hoke Wi'lis Mrs. Graves and Ballew tied in White County—5(l5 It is reported Ballew carried Habersham Couuty and all othei counties except White. Singing The White—Lumpkin Counties Singing Convention will meet Saturday’ Sept. 12, at p p. m. at the County Line Church An ou Sept. 18 ,at Friendship Baptist Church an all day singing will be held. Dinner ou the ground. All good singers invited Mr, end Mrs, W, L. At ieno and Welburn West lett Friday for a visit in l’txae 0 ❖ €g 4 ipHSftJ W Established 18M $ 3.61 p« y«« « fRioters Should Be Punished With Swift Prison Sentences j ated Civil into disobedience rioting, has deterior¬ mob violence, looting, and outright destruction of private property and business es¬ tablishments in Philadelphia. Scores of policemen doing their duty 'have been injured by Negro mobs who apparently had orders to attack, retreat, attack, and at¬ tack again, with bricks, rocks and anything else they could lay their hands upon. The Philadelphia rioting, like the Harlem riots, was systematic. The pattern was repeated and intensi¬ fied. There comes a time when re¬ sponsible Americans must take a responsible stand. This goes for congressmen, mayors, business of¬ ficials, police officials and all citi¬ zens of a community. These rioters must be brought to justice. Punishment should be stem and swift. The laws for inciting to riot should be fully enforced; that means prison sentences for those judged guilty. Those who are financing these riots, and those who are paying for the publishing of inflammatory leaflets (thousands have been cir¬ culated in Harlem accusing Police Lt. Thomas Gilligan of being a “murderer” and telling how to make Molotov cocktails and fire bombs), should be apprehended. Here is a case Where the FBI could do the American Republic a real service. Those public officials, such as New York’s Mayor Wagner, who keep kowtowing to the intimidation of minority group pressure, should be voted out of office by the re¬ sponsible coalition of conservative and independent voters. Groups which have been infiltrated by known Communists, such as the so-called Youth for Mobilization in New York City, should be ex¬ posed and their leaders brought to justice. There is nothing more despicable than mob violence and gangs of hoodlums who attack law-abiding citizens without provocation. As long as rioting is rewarded by a party in power, whether on the national, state or local level, it will continue. Will the American people let It continue? There is a noticeable time lag before the NAACP’s Roy Wilkins took to television with a state¬ ment that the FBI should investi¬ gate the rioting because it looked “organized” and “planned”. The American people also heard a charge that a group known as “Blood Brothers” had traveled to Philadelphia from New York to do what damage they could. The folly of those who have sought to have their civil rights cake and eat it too is now apparent for all to see. How will the liberals rationalize away these riots? How will they explain to the law abiding shop¬ keepers in Philadelphia, New York, Rochester, Kansas City and other cities ithat the rioters somehow are not responsible for their violence? Here laid before the American people is the supreme folly of the liberals and the bloc-vote politic¬ ians who have by their softness and their silence sanctioned the rioting, ithe looting and the abdi¬ cation of responsibility of these mobs which threaten the security of the American Republic. Where will the riots spread from here? Will it be Chicago next? And why have so few arrests been made of Comunists who are direatly involved in the rioting? Why, too, has there been almost conspiracy of silence on the part of television to ’’play down" this riot¬ ing in Northern cities, when they devoted hours upon hours of so called documentaries to the Missis¬ sippi invasion, to tbe St. Augustine integration .attempts, to Albany, Ga., and to Montgomery, Ala. — Editorial, Atlanta Times. * MARSH RABBIT * •I9M NHwt WiWMs -JURY LIST — — GRAND JURY — List of Grand Jurors drawn serve at the October Term, 1964, White Superior Court. J. D. Kanady, W. L. Robinson, J. M. Holcomb, E. H. Duvall, W. B. Robinson, Nelson Miller, James Howard, John Sosebee, Rev. Homer Morris, Ollie Dorsey, Homer Bar¬ rett, Guy E. Palmer, Rev. Harry Ragan, Mrs. Ella Bell Jackson, Bu¬ ford Nelms, J. Eston Sutton, Gar¬ nett Gilleland, Bobby M i n i s h, Charles Sosebee, Jr., Robert Pil¬ grim, J. C. Kimsey, Clyde Cham¬ bers, Sandy Hulsey, Fred Moore, Hayne Simmons, Roy Wade, Cole¬ man Reed, Horace T. Hulsey, Wil¬ liam R. Hambrick, Wayne Cannon, Odell Helton, Robent Hefner, Cecil Crumley, Jesse G. Thomas, Alex Cantrell, Jack Smith, Wilfred Dean, Steve Lewis, Calvin Garrett, C. H. Adams. — TRAVERSE JURY — List of Traverse Jurors drawn to serve .at the October Term, 1964 of White Superior Court. H. J. Rommerdale, Neal Black, Brookton Hulsey, James E. Turner, Loy MdCollum, Garrison Palmer, Clarence Pitehford, Jimmy Helton, Jerry Smith, Eugene Crane, and Vernon Farmer, Wallace Griz¬ zle, Hoyt Sosebee, Virgil Hunt, Jr., Wayne Westmoreland, Mrs. Esther Witt, Wallace Lewis, Ray Sutton, Floyd Nelms, Allen Pardue, and Carl Lamar Black, Bill Arren dale, Roy Gerrell, Marvin Miles, Willard Tallent, Mrs. Bonnie Dixon, Denver Loggins, B. B. Blalock, Homer Wade, Homer Trotjer, Mit¬ chell Stancil, Dwayne 0. Taylor, Hoyt Allison, Charlie Thomas, Opal Minish, J. S. Chastain, Tommy Turner, Garland Bristol, James Westmoreland, Lester Jackson, Walter Hicks, Scott W. Craven, Rev. John Fuller, Frank Lawson, Comer Abernathy, Lawrence Boyd, Earl Shelnut, George R. Brown, Jr., Arnold Wheeler, James L. Austin, and Mrs. Grace Russell, George Bul gin, Ray Lovell, Mts. L. R. Cooper, Milford Lee, Ernest Crane, J. V. Pardue, Jr., Clyde Kinsey, William J. Smith, Rev. C. H. Thurmond, and J. C. Kimsey, Burman Stovall, Tom W. Reed, Clifford Stovall, Lawrence Cleveland, Horace Ander¬ son, Ewell Head, Henry Knight, A. M. Smith, W. T. Allen, and Ralph Barnes, Thomas Haskel Chambers, J. K. Westmoreland, Vincon Pardue, W. R. Smith, Rob¬ ert Lester Baker, Coleman Cant)®, Haskel Dalton, William H. Postell, Miss Ruth Curtis. Politics On Parade By Sid Williams LeRoy Johnson, Atlanta Negro Senator who was a delegate from Georgia, just about removed him¬ self from ever being appointed del¬ egate to another convention when he walked over to the Mississippi Freedom group Wednesday night and stated before the television cameras .thait he was there in sym¬ pathy with their position. Georgia, leaders were furious with him. On the other hand, Negro delegate A. T. Walden, long-time Atlanta con¬ servative, was the soul of circum¬ spection. NATIONAL JMTOIIM A iTI It's Topless For Stopping This Show GREAT YARMOUTH, England (UPI) — Amber Bandella, a shapely 20-year-old redhead, stopped the ^how at a performance of a musical Saturday night — and dhe wasn’t even in the cast. Miss Bandella walked into the theater just as the curtain went up and took off her mink stole, reveal¬ ing a topless evening dress. Actors on the stage forgot their lines and the muicians in the chestra pit stopped playing Overture to Ogle. The stage manager, in the tradition of “the show must go prevailed on Miss Bandella to up. 4< Certainly, darling,” she donning her mink. The show tinued.