Cleveland courier. (Cleveland, White County, Ga.) 1896-1975, October 02, 1964, Image 1
\ > i y 9 THE i * ■CV* S\? COVERS THE MOUNTAINS LIKE MOONSHINE Devoted to tkoXA gricultural, and Industrial In terests of White County VuL LXVI1 50 THE CLEVELAND COURIER. PLATFORM For White County and Cleveland: A Cleaner and More Beautiful City All Highways Graded and Paved To Make White County the Mecca for Tourists Development of Winter Sports in .Mountain Area if ■d'i % ■ : 4;>. i . . ■ fW: ft % I ••i . v'- Dr. Warner Earle Fusselle,new president of Truett*McConnell College, resumed his ;new duties last week. He had been pastor of the v irst Baptist Church, Gaiuesville, un¬ til he resigned to accept this new job. New School Building To Be Ready Nov. 1 6 & 7th Grades to Stay in.PreswtBldg The $42,000 White County will get from the state building fund will go toward paying for the new elementary school building in Cleveland that will be ready for occupancy in three or four weeks. Theu the Shoal Creek School will be moved to Cleve¬ land. The nevv building will be only able to take care of grades one through live. ’The sixth and seventh grades must remain in the present high school building The new (bailding will have a cafeteria I NOTICE A Pancake Breakfast will be held Saturday on the Northside of the public square. This is sponsored by the Boy Scouts of Cleveland. Won’t you help the Scouts Y T can drive your car to ou now Hogpen Gap, d,40U ft., on the Sen. Richard B. Russell Scenic Highway If frost conies soon, theu watch the leaves on the high elevation soon get away fast Please come to our office dur¬ ing coin t week and slip U3 yom renewal to l he Courier The Cleveland FallFestival will be held Oct. 24—25 Pal Allison of No. [Atlanta was here Tuesday. Sheriff Baker advises that Judge Smith will be at tte courthouse Nov. 3 from 10 to 12 to take pleas Turnip greens were never bet¬ ter and most everyone has an abundance Frank Veale in The Atlauta Times ou Sept. 24 carried a list of buildings in Georgia that reflects character. Here are those near us: Lumpkin County courthouse White County courthouse, Grace Church, ClarkesviUe; aud Na coochce Baptist Church k---- Pear nooc of those things which shall suffer: ... be thou faithful death, and 1 will give thee a crown Me.—Rev. 2:10 Nov 3 is the General Election, You will VOTE on the Constitutional ments to the Ga. Laws ae well as fora President of the U S. Also for con¬ gress in the 9 th District, It l)r Hugh Master, could visit Cleve¬ land now what would he tell Cleve|aud to DOf The tourie. business (if properly de_ velnped is tremendous and will make While County bloom. But WE have got a lot to do Harrison Nix declares he’s whole¬ heartedly in tavor of 129 bypassing the Public Square. How do you feel? The Federal government should em ploy T V, Cantrell as a eoneultant and get bis unexcelled advice and opinion on sourwood and chbstnut trees. The Standard Telephone Company baB sent out the finoet it Georgia Mountain Leisureland” that The Courier has seen Mr. Stewart, that suggests a booth t the Cleveland Fall Festival I Now is the RIGHT time to get a sur ey made for a bypass of 129 of the public square,) If ALL Three of the f;ounly Commie siomars will ACT then the State High¬ way Dept, will order that a survey be made Frank Reid will soon be giving The Courier bis pudictions on Snows ioWhitt .'ounty this .winter Do you think {the Voters of White County should‘decide whether White County Jo.es tte ( $20,000 received from Beer Taxes each year or let ii flow down the drain? Beer will be legally sold in Helen in 1965, yet White County shall not receive a penny There’s plenty of “leather britcbee”jand pickled beans in the farm homes this year in White County. Both are served when the temperature te very, | very low Please read the Jarticle ou American inl'he courier tnis week |and tell each member of the Grand Jury to THINK be¬ fore the old court house is allowed to be torn down Now is the HIGH T time to go to Wash iugton to get giants and loans. Well, who is going aud when? We have been .Bleep too long. Let’s A C T Harley Brady telle it would be nice )o have I 964 wages, 1935 prices, 1928 dividends, and I 9 OO .taxes C, D. Y.iung avers the ideal place for a picnic is usually a little furtb-r on Miss Mary Lou Suttou avers breakings cnirrow is good luck in a way—it means you’ll last at leest seven more .years Dr. L. G. Neal Jr, tells any book is a good book which feeds the mind some¬ thing wbieti may enlarge it, or .move it to action. Our dear and good fiieud, ,Claude G, Hood see ns to watch The Editor closely to see about our nutritulion if falling short. Well, bis observation prodded him to briug ua some old time,crease back cornfield beaus on Sept, ,24. We feel better already, Claude. (Thanks Next week is court, Won't (you give the Grand Jury your serious;and deliber¬ ate opinion on what disposition the County Commissioners should make ol the old court house? Think, How can it be replaced alter it is torn dow? Lester Maddox opened his Cafeteria last Saturday. We a,e glad he is back serving the peo¬ ple good food Cheap. Mauypeo ple from White County will go there when they are in Atlanta. Lester drove away three Negroes Monday BLOODMOBILE The AruericanRed CrossBlood uiobde will be at the Health Cen¬ ter Monday, Oct. 12, from 1 to 4 Don’t Wait Donate Everybody reads this Newspaper. Charlie Maloof was in town Thursday He looks fine Fix-Up and Paint 7 Your Rural Mail Box % Today mra Local News Send os the NEWS ao Oat It appear in The Courier. We will oiecite your cooperation. Telephone or write The Courier the NEWS. When Cleveland businessmen advertise in The Courier they can deduct that amount from theirin come tax. A number of people are pre dicring a frost*soon. No ice, bad heat, rain or sleet: a fine week. Oct, 6 — 12 . pre diets Old Farmer’s Almanac Sept, 26 at 6 a. m. the ther (nometer went to 40 , according to Eddie Adame. The Federal Aviation Agency has recommended construction of 37 uew air landing facilities in Georgia and the improvement Georgia/ of many existing ones in White Coudtv was not listed James (Sonny) Helton and Miss rqelma Jones of Gainesville were married Sept. lS, The Lady Bird Special, a train that will carry the wife of Presi¬ dent Johnson, through 17 Ga. communities on Oct" 8 Reloads can be made on.gasolins lax paid to the Fecteml government if -.clnim is postmarked uot later than Sept, 30. “Tap” Bennett spent the weekend,with Ernest .Loyd Born to Mr. and Mrs, Lin Davidson: 4ert- 20 a daughter, Susan Beth, weighing 7 lbs. 9 ozsj Mrs. Alaywne White brought a wed* formed tomato to i'he Courier office Mon lay that W 6 igtiee„l 3 4lb, Jack I’rlnca ^Republican candidate for Congress, was here recently, He is a very capable and brilliant young man and will make a good impression on any¬ one he meets Col. and Mrs. Joe K. Teliord of Gaines¬ ville are proud grandparents, Mr, and Mrj. Allen Broxloo of Atlanta have uam wd their new born son Joseph Telford Broxton. Mr. and^Mrs. J, H, Telford md Mr. and^Mrs, T. V, Uantrelj are great grand Kenneth iRogers, photogr pher and Jharlotie Smith, writer, of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution Magazine were here Tuesday, Kenneth will return veay soon The Cleveland Fall Festival .will open Oct, 24 25. Also on Oct. 31 and Nav, 1 Mrs. Virginia E, Rommerdals ;has com¬ pleted a 12 months course in Practical Nursing at theNo, Ga. Tech, & Vocation¬ al School, darkesville P te Wheeler is state chairman cf the Veterans Day obseraance Nov. 11 White County should have a BIG Day The Kiwanis will have Ladies Night at the Holiday Manor Oct. 5 at 7 :15 p. m, Dr, Fusselle will be the guest speaker Young O’Kelley can’t keep still uutil he reads Andy Sparks’ story and Kenneth Rogers pic lures ou what the Olcltimers ;of White County predict the kind of winter we can expect Donald Thurmond and John Sosebee say they are highly plecsed with the ads in The Courier, Miss Mary Lou Sutton Advises Cleveland has had 14148 inches of rainfall to Oct. 1 since Sunday The Ninth District Farm Bureau Chap, tars will meet in Gainesville el the Avi n Restaurant Jet, 13 at £ p, m. A .large crowd is i specie 1 Mre, Lola Edwards Aden, 87 Clarkes viils, was buried at Blue Creek ^Sepl'30 Sha was a native of White,County Mrs, Carolyd Gold Water Erekine, .sister of Senator loldwaler j will attend the Goldwater Gala in u .Jon Oct ;i5 at the city auditorium f *v hTTib £lliJ !■ iTh [i CLEVELAND, GA, oCT. 2 1964 ’ t •- : ■ i ►V ;---v Senator Robert K, Bailew oi *41 ue Ridge was in tovvnjast Sat uiday afternoouj He told that hejis going to work hard lor every county in the District. Madison Co. Tops Warriors By Richard Davidson' Reporter I he WCHS Warriors in their secoud some game of the season fell to the hamis jf Madison County by a score of I 4 -O The Wairi r iverer t rippled by injuries barite Browu end Doug; Drowu were >ut and both a>e key men on the Warrior team. The Wartiois play North Hall bsrs Oci, 9, i his will ae the Homecoming ior ibe Warriors] Dwight Edwards Passes Funeral services for Dwight Waltir Edwards, 29. Atlanta, ware heid from tbs Cleveland Frst Courch Sep 1 , 25. Rev, /oe Fulbright officiated, Interment was iu Memorial Gaidens, City, He died in Atlanta He is survived by parents, Mr, andMrs, John Edwards, City; two brothers, Edsel Atlanta; and Bill Wayne, City; two sis¬ ters Mrs. Benny Caudell, City; and Mrs Carl Smith, Atlanta Mrs. Carrie Garner Passes Funeral services for Mrs, Carrie Bat ibi field, 71 , Rl, wsb held Bepl. 28 from New Blidge Baptist Jhurcb, luterment wus in Ibe church jeemeters, bbe bad been a member of New bridge Church for 49 years. She is survived by five daughters, Mrs, Byrd Morris, R4; Mrs. Jerry ;Lee Alex¬ ander, RljMiss Ruth Garner, ^larkssville four eons, Guy Lee, R2; “J. O. Garnet, LoganvilJe; Randal aud |Linsey, Gaines ville; bro'ber, Paul Satterfield, Rl Lula; IS grandubildreu ; 7 gresl grandchildren Albert Wayne Harper Passes Funeral services were held Sunday, Sepl. 27, at Ml; Yunah Baptist Cburab for Albert Wayne Harper. He was retired from the Air Force, luterment wag in the church cemetery Infant Edge Passes Funeral services for Little Tenny Sue Edge, 3 mos. old, daughter of Mr and Mrs, John Ed Edge was jhtld Sept 29 from Tesnatee Baptist church. She is survived by her p rents one one eieter Robt. Amour Passes Funeral services wore held from|Union Jrovei Hoiiuess Church TnesDay for Robt Armour of Skits Mt, Burial was Skits Mt j OPEN, deadly PAN FIRES, 6 ER 0 DS/ are J 11 bj m 3 9 3 r = = i Vse YocmsTBK eCKEBHSOK ANO OPEN Am OMSKGMRDS-KCEP fiEATEES/ PKM EXPOSE? £ PANE <s> Keeping Spices Keep the top of spice tins very se¬ cure, as the air tends te make spices lose their flavor and “spiciness." Established 18H American Landmarks Week The entire nation is American Landmarks Week September 27 to October 4th. sored by hundreds of historical, municipal, and other agencies, its aim is to draw national attention to the increasing need for safe¬ guarding the richness and divers¬ ity of the architectural, historical and natural heritage of America as living history for the benefit of future generations. As landmarks disappear, one by one in the name of progress, the need for their preservation brings increasing concern. The goal of the week is to emphasize this need hat all citizens, school children, civic groups, political and local leaders, must work to insure that the affluent society does not erase the national memory. On September 14, Governor Carl E. Sanders officially proclaimed “Georgia adherence to the goals of this celebration and our full cooperation in awakening in Geor¬ gia a renewed interest and pride in the greatness of our historic inheritance and the necessity 1 of its preservation in this changing world.” Governor Sanders has appointed Joseph B. Cumming, Chairman of the Georgia Historical Commission and leading Augusta lawyer, to serve as chairman of the Action Committee of the American Land¬ marks Celebration. Mr. Cumming, who believes that Georgia’s his¬ tory is her most important asset, hopes that this week will begin concerted movement toward pres¬ ervation and exploitation of Geor¬ gia’s fast disappearing landmarks. Senate Approves Aid for Appalachia By TED LIPPMAN , (Constitution Washington Bureau) WASHINGTON The Senate passed the President’s Appalachia bill Friday, The vote on the $1.07 billion bill was 45 to 13. Senators Richard Russell and Herman Talmadge vot¬ ed for the measure. The bill now goes to the House of Representatives. Congress hopes to complete action on it and one or two other bills and adjourn next week. The Appalachia bill provides special help over the next five years to the mountain region stretching from Pennsylvania to Georgia and Alabama. That sec¬ tion is one of the poorest in the nation. According to Sen. Jennings Randolph of West Virginia, 12 per cent of all federal welfare money is spent in this region. About 8 per cent of the nation’s population lives in the 11-state, 355-county area. Under the terms of the bill, about 80 per cent of the billion dollars would be used for building new highways and improving old ones. Other programs call for struction of multi-county centers and hospitals, of land for pasturage and ing and soil, water and conservation. Opponents of the bill call it second installment of the war poverty.” They contended legislation should not grant erential treatment” to a geographic area. Also, they said the Appalachian Regional Com¬ mission set up by the bill would make state anid local governments subservient to the federal govern¬ ment.” Thirty-five north Georgia coun¬ ties are designated as part of Ap¬ palachia. mmm m i W * u FIRE PREVENTION WEEK’ OCTOBER *-)S $3.61 Per Teat at PHYLLIS BATTELLE . Women Fall for Heels, But Take Nice Guys As Soul Mates I was a mere wisp of a collegian when I first observed a great truth —- that women fall in love with heels. Most nice girls finally recover from their infatuations for “heel ish types (heels never marry nice girls; they marry older girls who wear black stockings and make their lives miserable) and find what is known in the romance racket as a “good guy.” From that point on they live happily ever after . . . until there’s a slip-up. A most common slip-up in this idyllic marriage of nice girl-good guy, according to a prominent psychiatrist, occurs when the hus¬ band becomes preoccupied or dis¬ tracted with other orders of busi¬ ness besides his wife. At this point, she tends to get mixed up in her thinking, and looks upon the good guy as a heel while remembering the heel as a good guy. (“I should have married Jim,” she laments, conveniently forget¬ ting that Jim was a louse, and be¬ sides he wouldn’t marry her any¬ way.) The husband’s distraction, in other words, brings on the wife’s distraction. And with her distrac¬ tion comes a slacking off of her chores around the house. It may come to the point where in her suffering and resentment, both husband and bouse suffer equally. “It is at this stage that many, many husbands think their wives are lazy around the house, said psychiatrist Dr. Richard H. Hoff¬ a while ago. But these women not so much lazy as they are “They are not trying so mulch relax — as to escape. They are a flight from unhappi¬ And the unloving husband is solely responsible. “The man who remembers his mother’s cooking with fondness, but fails to compliment his wife’s, deserves his food served out of cans. “And the man who never tells his wife he loves her deserves to come home to a mess. >> Dr. Hoffman toad a strong feel¬ ing that if a man loves his wife and tells her so, he will find him¬ self possessed of the most docile, efficient and hard-working of mates. Women, he said, “will scrub the paint off .the floors if they feel appreciated.” On the other hand, a woman scorned can be the most lethargic — and mean critters this side of an irritated water buffalo. She may charge, but not into the house¬ work. Women still wring their hearts (and his socks) out for heels. But only before marriage! Baltimore American. Police Hunt Young Negro As Rapist *r A negro man with a woman’s stocking covering his face and a butcher knife in his hand raped a 27-year-old Southeast Atlanta wo man Sunday afternoon, police said. Officer R. M. Rambler said an investigation showed that the wo¬ man lives with another woman who a small The two women were in the baby’s room when the assailant entered through ithe kitchen where he picked up a butcher knife. He went to where the women were and told the younger woman to come into another room with him. If she refused, he said, he would cut the baby’s throat. He also made the other woman stand at the doorway and witness the as¬ sault. After the attack, the man ran out the baick door and took the knife with him. The attacker was described as about five feet, seven inches tall, and in his 20’s. — Atlanta Journal. UTTERS f== \B TO THE_ HS EDITOR