Cleveland courier. (Cleveland, White County, Ga.) 1896-1975, January 01, 1965, Image 1
% V*l . 'V s \( ii-Vr COVERS THE MOUNTAINS LIKE MOONSHINE Devoted to # 4 # Agricultural, Commercial and Industrial Internet» ot White County VOL LXVIIII a 12 THE CLEVELAND COURIER. plaivorm For White County and Cleveland: ' 1 A City t All Panftfl To Make White County the Mecca for Tourist* Development of ’M^inter Sports in Mountain Aren ■m Clyde Dixon lias In Hanoi! in the runoff election Tuesday for member of the White County Board of Education for District 1 Clyde Dixon won with 11*1 votes against 666 for H* A. Allison. 40 tickets jv the county were voided, The new members will take over Jan 1 , 1965. Kiwanis Install* 1865 Officers The local Krwams Club install¬ ed the new officers for 1965 Mon¬ day night. Mr. Glen Gasaway of Buford, new Lt Governor of the 10 th district, installed the new of fleers. They are Carey Highsmith president; Edgar Everhart, Vice president; Bobby Thomas, seore-, taiy-treasurer; Board of Directors Jack Smith’ Herbert Glover, H. A Allison, j. H. Warner, Frank Kinuear, Kenneth Chambers and George Howell. North Georgia ios tine Due By January 1 Construction of • natural gas. line from Bogart to Jefferson la well under way, according to John Durden, Athens Manager for Geor¬ gia Natural Gas. The pfajeck which will cost nearly $400,000, will include 65,000 feet (12 miles) of 10-inch line and 11,000 feet of 4-inch. H is ex¬ pected to be completed by Jan. 1. The BogartJeffersoffi line is the first leg of the extension of gas service into the area north of Jackson County. Plans are to serve Cornelia, Pendergrass, Tal mo, Msaysville, Homer, Baldwin, Mt. Airy, Demorest, Clarkesville and Cleveland. The gas is being brought from a tap on the pipeline of Transcontinental Gas Pipeline Cor¬ poration which runs through the Bogart area. The line now under construction will not be extended north of Jef¬ ferson at this time. It is being built now, however, in order to provide adequate supplies of ga* for the Jefferson area customers, Mr. Durden explained. — Atlanta Journal. W. T. Conpar Passes Funerhl Bi-ivicfS tor WilliMB Tillman Coupi-r. S8, Cily, died In Hall County HoppHttl Du:, 23 tttirvwo i by hi* wif% daughter Mies liie C'lV* three zona,, J, -W» Cooper, Bntord; lUryee Doopar, White 1 Garden Fla., and igL Ewell Jooyar »Ci<y • nd six gra fkbildron. NOTICE It Tbe Annual Meeting M emtiers of Physicians Inc- will he held at 6:30 p. Wednesday, January 27 , <1965, the Blue Shield Office, 2375 Borings Hoad, Columbus, Ga., nominato and < lectmem the Bo >rd of Di ectors, and vote upon^a proposed of th e Bylaws of thisGCerporation as pertains^:/ Article II, Section 2 . That portion of this Section which now reads ‘‘fourth nesday iu January »> shall amended to read ti last m January. It BLOWERS £ Lot ool mercy and truth forsake thee: bind them about thy neck; write them upon the table of tbiue heart: So ebalt t&oii find favour and good understanding in ttatfteigbt of God and man,>Prov, 3 H4 You can expect the zoning and plan rrtngrefmrt for White Connty to demand that a bypeee be MADE at once ot 129 in «0fa»etand*nd 75 iu Helen. •If> White County really wants the Dr. Masters Experimental and Recreational Center )o be located at C uicoi State /’ark then must follow tbe recommejd attdoif made iu the report to the letter' It looks like Senator Russell is bring¬ ing pressure ndon the Forest Service to start Winter Sparta along the Senator Richard B, Russell Scenic Highway, Tbe Connty Cotnmiseioners have stated that no beer license will be iseund in lg65 That means (bat we’ll loose $20 000 ih taxes, Where will tUat lost revenue come from? Well, mapbe the taxpayers are willing to ••put-ont” more money. Helen now has two places that sell beer legally, Tbs Pageant magazines recent publi¬ cation tells that Senator Richard B. Russell is the most effective U, S, Sen¬ ator. UarnsooPalmet says if be had anything to do about it that White County would nave a real airport. A bypass of the square is positive if the Ur. Masters Tourist Recreational cen¬ ter at Unicoi is to get the green light from the Federal Government: Thot, F. Under weed declares ’’going to church regularly may not be your debit, bat it would be a mighty good on* (or yon to have. It Th»t story of Willard Neal’s on Ben. Richard B, Russell’s to the famous aceuic highway teat was published-in the At lauta Jcnrnal-Constmuiou Magazine last Sand*) will mean the 8U UR develop¬ ment 01 ALL tbat aiea wtiurher Paul Vin¬ cent or Jim Vessey thinks good of it or not, Wtint DO these fellows have against development oi our mountains? To* Editor hopes to go to Washington toon anil talk to some of those lellowa iu the Foreit Service about Pant aud Jim on why we think that the Senator Richard B. Russell Scenic Highway should have up Dukes Dreek from Richard Sims’ Those two fellows will pe hounded now nntil a REAL road ia built uy Dukas Creek from Richard Bim’e to near Dukes Creek Falls, ae well ae a bridge ovc^pbe gorge just above the Lib J, L, Nis, Clyde Dixon, (Clyde Turner and Barnett Blalock could get W bile County 1 REAL Airport if they WAN i one N)ie Newspaper: If Just Can't Win CLEVELAND, Ohio — The Plain Dealer yesterday amused readers by detailing the woes attendant to xewspapering. The paper noted: “If the sheet contains too much politcial matter, the people won’t have it. If it contains too little, people won’t have it. If the type is large, it don’t contain enough leading matter. If the type is small it they can’t read it. “H we have a few jokes, we are called a blackguard. If we have no jokes, we are called stupid, a fos¬ sil. If we give them lengthly edi¬ torials, it is said there cannot be much sense in so much writing. If we omit editorials, we are lazy g have no brains. 1 we give a complimentary no¬ te one, all the rest are jealous use they are not treated the «uuc. If we do not, we are selfish, and a greedy hog. If we undertake to please the ladies, men say the paper is of no account. If we do not, the ladies will not have the paper in the bouse. “If we attend church, it is judged to be done to obtain patronage. If we stay aiway, because the commun¬ ity requires our labor on Sunday as well as on other days, we are denounced as desperately wicked and full of deceit. If we compli¬ ment the conduct of a man or a class in the community, no notice is taken of it. If we fail to compli¬ ment them, we are doing them an Injustice. ‘Tf we call the attention of the public to existing abuses, we are exposing and disgracing the town. If we do not do it, we are cowardly and dare not tell the truth . . . “PS. If you have a child, do not, we pray you, allow him to be come an aspirant for position in the* newspaper world. Better set him up in the peanut or boot black business. II ^pVBLA^flj^ZTjiyN. 1 1965 Local News Send ua the NEWS no Hud it will appear in The Courier. We will ap precite your cooperation. Telephone or write The Courier the NEWS. Old Farmers Almanac predicts from Jam 1 through Jau. 14 < 4 Colder and bolder. Sheets of rain, snow and sleet. Now even ski-buffs will want their earmuffs Telford Hulsey attended adm¬ irer at Emory University for the new County School Superinten¬ dents on Tuesday evening. Dr. Purcell was speaker. Paul Westmoreland of Roberts town was in town Dec. 23 . He looks for great tourist develop¬ ment in that area in the next few years. Mr. and Mrs. Dean Head and family spent the holidays here with parents. Mr. and Mrs Glen Cornell and Kathy spent the holidays here. Miss Carolyn Hulsey spent the holidays with parents, Mr. and Mrs, Bill Hulsey, Lat Vandiver tells that you’ll shovel out of your ho /el from Feb. 1 through Feb 7. There was a terrible tragedy Friday afternoon when two families from Flowry Branch plunged into Lake Lanier killing seven persons and injuring four. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Lynch and two sons were Christmas guests Mr. and Mrs. Henry Nix Mr and Mrs. Harold London and family of Atlanta spent the holidays with Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Londod Mr. and Mts. ! Bill’Cooper and Greg returned to falatka, Fla., Monday after spending the holi¬ days with parents. Frank Allison, of Choestoe dis. trict, Union County, was here Monday. He brought us some of his fine syrup. Miss Mary Lou Sutton advises we had 5:73 inches raiufalldunng December, a :49 inches fell last week. Several people have expressed a keeu desire to go to Hogpen Gap and Lordamercy Cove since the Willard Neal story appeared in the Journal-Constitution Maga¬ zine Dee- 27. Cleveland and White County should keep almost daily touch with Congressman Landrum on Poverty Aid and Applachia Aid, Mr. and Mrs. James Murphy and children of Barnesville and Guy Lovell of the Air Force, Fla, spent the holidays with parents. Mr. and Mrs. Fay Lovell. Mrs. Ed Underwood and child¬ ren of Savannah spent the holi¬ days with parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ross Mize, Slack Cleveland Parts Co., Inci have constructed a building next to Turner’s Laundramat and will be open for business soon. Mrs. G, C. Nelms, Gainesville, told The Courier Sunday that was anixous to see Cove. Mr. aud Mrs. Paul Mauney Columbia, S. C., are this week with their mother, Mrs A. L. Mauney. Mrs. Henrietta King of spent the holidays with uer Miss Bonnie Lothridge. Oscar Kenimer of TrussviUe, Ala. died Dec. 26 . Mrs. M.W- O’Kelley and child ren of Birmingham spent the holi days with homefolks, We are glad to read of a court with a nice ear for humanity. It is not only the financially bankrupt who can find a saving grace note to the old 88. By Richard Davidson The Key Club held their regu¬ lar tacering at school Monday with Larry White presiding Carey Highsmith was guest from Kiwanis. The committee of Lov Timer. Larry White, Joe felover. and Sam Dixon raised < 44 . that bought food for 3 white families and 2 colored families for Christ¬ mas. We would like to thank the merchants for their donations. Members of the club will attend Cleveland Methodist Church Sun¬ day. The club will have the pro¬ gram ;»t KiwauiSfthe first IVfonday m February. Richard Davidson, Larry White and Adrian Howard attended Kiwanis Monday night. Mrs, Lewis Crespo of Atlanta is in Ga. Baptist Hospital With a broken hip. Mr. and Mrs. George Mauneyof Knoxville spent the holidays with hotnefolks. Judy Gooch underwent an ap¬ pendectomy at Hall County Hos¬ pital Dec. 2 O .1 Rev, C. A. Johnson was carried to Hull County Hospital Dec. 39. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Edwards spent the holidays in Atlanta with^ their children. Ray Robinson and son of vVayiiesville, N, C. visited his mother, Mrs Bell Robinson Tues, Herbert Glover loft Thursday to atieud the Orange Bowl game m Miami, Florida. Comments on Here & Hereafter By Dr. Bob Jonas “I have set the Lord always be¬ fore me.” That is what the Psalm¬ ist said. Very few people do this. Some people set the Lord before them when the baby is sick or when some other trouble comes. God should always be before His people. No man can fall into sin until he takes his eyes off Jesus Christ. You can hold a dollar in front of the faces of some men, and they cannot see God. A11 they can see is a dollar. There are peo¬ ple who could see God above a mountain of gold. God is everything to them. In everything, He should have pre-eminence. He should be above business, above pleasure, above ail social relations. Since He is God, He should be supreme over our lives. The way from earth to heaven is spoken of as the path of life. I do not know what life means. No man knows. I know what the scientists say about life. A doctor come to the bedside of a dead man. He holds the mirror over the dead man’s face, and there is no breath stain on the mirror. He ex¬ amines the dead man’s heart with an apparatus, and there • is no re¬ sponse of the dead man’s heart. “He is dead,” the doctor says. There are certain tests to which he would respond if he were alive. A Christian responds to Jesus Christ. In the Christian’s heart there is a divine life. Jesus came that men might have life and have it more abundantly. A Christian’s heart answers to the heart of his Lord. I have heard the great ora¬ tors, and my soul has been stirred by their eloquence. My emotions have been moved by great dramatic events. But nothing ever sent such a tingle up and down my back as a simple gospel story. Since I have found Jesus, my heart responds to' the divine mesage. The artist’s heart responds to art. The soul of the musician responds to music. The heart of the great actor re¬ sponds to drama. The heart of the Christian responds to God. HUN a Mora BUSINESS Try Our Ads 11 n 1 •f 10 01 O W(t\ r i 4 2 w,\ & 9 i '■ ~m 3 ye A TO ttLEBMJORS r d With the advent of another year we might well be skeptical and say, “Why Celebrate with such fervor and excitement? A good year had to die so 1956 could be born.” We might say this, but no one does. If 1955 was a good year, it will be well remembered, but few will dwell upon its passing. It must give way to a bright new year bringing with it the profound impres¬ sion that we are again blessed with an invaluable supply of new days, hours and minutes. We have found a new reservoir of time; time in which to make plans, to do things, to live and think, and to make our dreams come true. Time is hadeed the true coin of our mortal realm, a deeply personal possession that each is free to spend, squander, sell, give away, devote to the glory of God and to the causes of humanity. And though 1956 marks yet another milestone along the journey of life that is all too short and quickly travelled, it is joyfully welcomed as the giver of a new and magical handful of time. With this magical . handful it is possible to defeat the worries of age; to conquer fear; to see through the shadows of disillusionment. With unified determination and with the help of God, this handful of living, this New Year 1956, can be recorded In the book of life upon earth as a year of achievement in man’s hopeful quest for a better world — where all nations and all people live together in joy, peac q nd harmony. 0 Why Does Dr. King .Oppose Rescue Mission !n Congo? The Atlanta (Ga.) Times, De¬ cember 14> 1964 Dr. Marten Luther King’s pom¬ pous pronouncements on The Con¬ go should be a warning to all Americans. Here is the recipient of a Nobel Peace Prize criticizing his own country overseas for carrying out a misson of mency to rescue white missionaries, both American and European, from the blood¬ thirsty savages trained by the Chinese Communists, This is how the wire service quoted Kng: “It is imperative that all foreign troops and all mercenaries be re¬ moved from The Congo immedi¬ ately.” How would this newly discovered expert on Congolese affairs res¬ cue the white hostages who are be¬ ing raped, tortured, mutilated, hu¬ miliated, and murdered in The Congo by the rebels? Would he rescue them nonvio lently? Would he race into the jangles crying peace, brother, peace? Would he ask Peking’s puppets to peacefully abandon their designs for conquest of the very heart of black Africa? What words of consolation does peacemaker King have for the family of Dr. Paul Carlson, who was tortured and murdered by the rebels? “We must recognize The Congo crisis for what it is a civil war where there can be no military solution,” peacemaker King, apos¬ tle of nonviolence, declared in Nor¬ way. “A solution can only come about through nonviolent means, and the only meaningful way must be through the agency of the Organiz¬ ation for African Unity under the auspices of the United Nations,” King said as he sought to under¬ mine the foreign policy of the Jnited States in regard to The Con go. Dr. King condemns Americans md the Belgians and the mer enaries” for their rescue mission n The Congo, while the rebels link in and out of villages, killing thousands of Congolese themselves. The demand that the United States “get out of The Congo” came first from the Kremlin. Now the demand is being echoed by the pacifists and the “peacemakers” vhd would appease the Communists it every bend in the road. Now does Secretary of State Dean Rusk still wish to send Dr. King on a goodwill” mission to Africa? I e WfflfERTIMK WvLJfflL ACTIVITIES JLJ Established 18W Don't Wait to Choose Your Doctor Americans are the “movingest” people in the world. It is no longer a common thing to hear someone say, Oh, he’s been our family doctor for more than 20 years.” After you arc settled in your new home, entered the children in located the most convenient and garage, joined the of your faith, is there any¬ you have overlooked? Have chosen a family doctor? Choosing a family doctor is most especially if you have Don’t, wait until illness suddenly and you find your¬ late at night, frantic for help, no one to call. It is true that most communities emergency call systems which locate a doctor when a crisis However, the emergency have been averted if the had been under the regu¬ watchful care of your personal HOW TO CHOOSE? You might start by caUing the medical society and asking the names of several physicians your vicinity. Membership in local medical society indicates that the doctor is a qualified phys cian meeting the high standards of his fellow practitioners. If there is no medical society in your town, consult a nearby hos¬ pital, the pharmacist or perhaps consult the American Medical Di¬ rectory, published by the Ameri¬ can Medical Association, at your local library. In the latter you wiU find specific information as to the professional qualificatons and spec alization of physicians in your community. Then you will probably want to question others about the doc¬ tors you have in mind. A doctor’s patients or your new neighbors can help you decide on the one M.D. best suited to your family. Then visit his office. See if you feel comfortable with him and if he inspires in you trust and con¬ fidence in his ability. The relation¬ ship between doctor and patient is very important. When you have selected your family doctor, be completely frank with him. The more a doctor knows about his patients, the better care he can give them. For your own good — and the health of your family — don’t make necessity force you to make a hasty choice. Select Mm now. When illness strikes, you can turn to him in confidence, knowing that he knows the health record of you and the members of your family and is your friend and ad¬ visor as well as your protector when you need him. BUT NOT THE PIANO It was only a filler to a news¬ paper, but it left a song in our heart. A California court decided that a resident who declares him¬ self bankrupt need not give up possession of a musical instrument such as a piano. Such instruments are "essential to the life and well being of the individual,” said the judicial opinion. SJ* $3.61 P« Yeas