Newspaper Page Text
•he
E (r —d COURIER
COVERS THE MOUNTAINS LIKE MOONSHINE
Devote'd to tko Agricultural, Commercial and Industrial l nt crests of White County
VOL LXV11II Ns. 13
THE CLEVELAND COURIER.
PLATFORM
For White County and
Cleveland:
A Cleaner and More Beautiful
I City Graded and
All Highways
Paved
To Make White County the
Mecca for Tourists
Development of VV inter
Sports in Mountain Area
«1
Mo Beer After Jan. 16
The County Comm'.ssioners
have defilin' ely decreed that No
Beer will be sold in White County
in 1965 .
Helen can legally sell beer at
two places within the incorporate
limits of He'en.
The Treasury of White County
has lost $ 20,000 for 1965 by this
foolish action by the Co- Comm.
Establishments that have been
selliugbeer have until Jan, 15 to
dispose of ibeir stock.
It is reported all three members
of the County Commissioners
voted to issue NO Beer license
foi 1965
Inflation?
“There is no immediate cause
for concern, This was the com
ment of the Chamber of Comemrce
of the United States on the sub
ject *of inflation i n the light of
current increases in inventory ac¬
cumulation. after read
We feel the same way
ign this newspaper’s recent sam¬
ple of the opinions of five promi¬
nent American economists. Not
that reasons for concern were not
identified. And they were made
vivid in a survey of businessmen
by Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner
& Smith.
The prevailing tone, however, is
one not of emergency tout of wari¬
ness. It is wise not to assume the
fat years will continue forever
without taking thought for the po
■tential dangers of fatness.
One of the latter wage settle
ments, such as that of the auto
workers, which exceeded the ad¬
ministration’s guidelines. If they
spread to the industries with less
profits to accommodate them, the
pressure on prices could become
acute. of the inter¬
But so far, as one the in¬
viewed businessmen notes,
flation has been less than the in¬
crease in real wages. And, also, as
the economists agreed, the produc
five capacity of industry is not
likely to be strained to the piont
where it would force prices up.
In fact, business itself is plan¬
ning to increase capacity with a
rate of capital spending higher next
year than last. Through automa
tion for example, industry has
___ -prices down
been able to keep some
even though wages have risen.
There may be a paradox here,
however, in that the aim of in¬
creased employment may not he
served toy the increased invest¬
ment supposed to achieve it. It is
not the sheer amount of invest¬
ment, but the kind, which needs to
be considered. complex^
Complexities within
ties. Clearly the price of prosperi¬
ty is eternal vigilance. So far, we
are inclined to agree with a Colo¬
rado businessman who said:
“No question hut what we are in
an inflationary economy, although
basically a controlled one not only
because of many effective govern¬
ment tools but also because of con¬
structive attitudes of the consum
er and the business community.”
Editorial in Christian Science
Monitor.
Primitive Methods
Head Not
'f Advertising Followed Ba is
*
' ) vi Be Modern
advertise hereh
J)on’t break the chain.
A certain prominent columnist
that crime in ‘“rural areas etaows a vae
increase in forcible rapes and robberies.
Indeed small towns and eitiee led in
crime for tue first nine months of I 9 O 4 *»
Afeil. The Courier is proud that this
is positively untrue for Cleveland We
do have a very good police force iuCleve*
land and Sheriff Frank Ba^er has euc.
ceasfully handled ALL lawbreakers in
such a manner that the/ wish to commit
crime io toother county
Lbs Courier believes that he has made
White County almost crime ridden. We
hope that he continues to use that clever
and magic personality during 1965
Froeperty is something you feel, feel,
fold and mail to Washington, opines
Henry Davidson,
The business outlook for the first part
of 1930 now seems to be excellent
The Courier is anxious to C a- ry ALL
the news in 1965. Won’t you phone,
come to our office or mail in any news
items!
It’s The Courier'e sober and honest
opinion that White Couaty NEED8 a
close unity of ALL county officers. Well
how can we move forword without this
cooneratiou I.
Congressman Phil Landrum will have
great power in the 89xb (jongs ess, which
convened
Enlargement of the 5,h Circuit court
form nine to IK members has a good
chance to receive President Johnson’s
recommendation
It’s likely Mississippi will get a judge
to fill the vacauoy ot the late Judge Deh
Cameron.
Clyde Dixont 'dtcIaiSB it is better to sit
in the back row and be discovered than
ait in Ihe front row ..nd,;ibe found out,
J. H. Telford telle you ere only young:
once, but you cun stay immature inde
finitely,
The Courier is anxious to learn the
of Dr. Keeling od the future for
tourist development ot our mountains
It the “Great Society” is to be a sue
then President Johnson must have
ALL the support of the great Senator
Richard P Russell
A number of people have been looking
at The C’outiei’s weather prediction '- for
this wioter with a lot o--. Well, tell
them V!) check with us from NOW until
April.
You are waiting to do some great thing
,, perform the small things that are uu
.
9H0D and they will bring other aDfi
,
greater things for you to perform,— John
Bright
Pro!. McDaniel’s Mother Passes
The mother of Prof- Marion C,
McDaniel died Dec. 80 . Funeral
S ervices were held Jan 1 from the
Tucker First Baptist Church.
Bank Shows Great Gaia
Yon will tiud a page Ad on
page ‘2 for the Peoples Bank
statement as of Dec. Hi, 1964
Be sure to read it.
This bank has made enormous
strides since its establishment in
1946
Mrs. Ed Turner Passes
Mrs. Ed Turner, 77, died l’ueeday after
an extended illness,
Funeral servict e were field from Shoal
C.eek B»|iti«l Church Wednesday
Rev, Claud Hood officiating.
She is survived by her husband
one brother Pete Roberts, Cleveland,
A 1963 Chevrolet was stolen Fom
Mexander'e home Tuesday night,
Robbers were thwarted Sunday
as they attempted to rob the B, T.
son store near oloasy Creek
The parents of Father Frank Ruff
visiting him,
MR. MERCHANT
The EYES of THE
’if** COMMUNITY WOULD i
BE ON YOUR AD
IF IT HAD BEEN
fUMHAoM 1 IN THIS ISSUE
Key Club Meeting
By Richard Davidson
The Key Club held its regular
meeting Monday at the High
School, Dr. Warren Griffin was
the guest from the Kiwams
8 members of the Club attend¬
ed the Cleveland Methodist
Church Sunday. The District
Convention will be held in Macon
April 8-12 All members who
plan to attend must pay $15 for
rcgisteration fee.
Sam Dixou and Gary Stamey
attended the Kiwanis meeting
Monday night.
(J88 FrUDklia D, Uoossvelt (CVA 42)
(FfctrN 1 ,) —Dec, 8 —Avistion Ordnance
man Second Claes Bill R, Stov r, U8N
sou of Mrs. M A. Stover, RI, Cleveland,
hi , is serv.ng abjard th watli.ck aircraft
carrier USS Frahslin D. Roosevelt,
operatin as a nnit of the Sixth Fleet io
h , Mediteirauebti,
Fort Ruuker, Ala,, (AHTVC)— C a pL
|{< ggicial R. Barden, sou of Mr, andMrs,
Jewell P. 6a rden, H2. Clevelaad. Ga.,
completed a 16 week fixed wing qualifi.
cation i uurse at the Army Aviation
School, Fort Rucker, Ala., Dec. IS
During Hoe course Captain Barden re
ceived instruction in flying Army fixed
wing aircraft and neing them in various
Hciicai maneuvers.
Local News
Send oa the NEWS eo that it will
appear in The Courier. We will ap
precite your cooperation.
Telephone or write The Courier
the NEWS.
Watch the weather until Janu¬
ary is over so proclaims Heury
Davidson.
Mr. and Mrs. Parks Bell of
Marietta spent Dec. 3 I with Mr
and Mrs, J. A. Cook,
Farmers who receive part of
their income from another job
should contact the Farmers Home
Administration, 212 So Sycamore
St., Gainesville.
The Georgia General Assembly
convenes Jan. 11 . Tom Mauuey is
serving in one of the most tumult
ous sessions m its long history.
Art Austin, 74 , of Atlanta, for¬
merly general manager of the
Chestutee Mines, was buried 111
Arlington Cemetery Jan. 1 . He
had several good friends in White
The Courier’s postal rate auto¬
matically increased Jan. 1 .
Now, it is said the Administra
tion may ask Congress to raise
the second class rate in ]9e5 on
top of the exorbitant rate uews
papers now pay.
The weather in Western Europe
fox the past 10 days has been
most severe and claimed 223 lives
The Weather ..Bureau’s outlook
for January forourarea: Temper
ature much above normal. .Pre¬
cipitation near ncrmal.
.If we get several days cf tern
peratures like we had Monday
our young people could ice skate
if they had a small dam
The Saturday Evening Post
will shortly do a big story, with
pictures of Senator Richard B,
Russell.
Mr. and Mrs. J as, P. Davidson
Jr. and Sandra of Doravtlle spent
the weekend with parents.
Barry Blalock, who attends a
military academy tu Asheville,
spent the holidays with parents,
Mr. and Mrs C, C B.alock.
Mr. and Mrs. Claybmn Allen
of Marietta spent the weekend
with their sister, Mrs. Ella Belle
Jackson.
The 89th Congress opened
Monday.
Congressman Phil Landrum
ci
won as a member on tne Ways &
Means Committee of the House
President Johnson made a very
strong message on the State of
the Union Monday night, He’ll
get all the logislationes passed
that he will ask for.
Young O’Kelley and Harley
Brady -visited The Courier’s of¬
fice Monday afternoon- They
told we would have a SNOW be
fore Jan. 15.
Will Freeman visited Cleveland
Tuesday. VV ill told that he’s
coming down and beforo too long
and play with us.
Geo W Davidson celebrated
his 90th birthday Jan 5 at his
home Those present were: Mrs 1
W innie Fred Barrett, Mrs- Myrtle
Craue, Vlrs. Joice Barrett, Mrs.
Joe Da 'idson, Buford Davsdsou
Detroit; and Mrs Not a Huckbee'
Mr. and Mrs Hoyt Crane Jr.
and children, and A'lr. and Mrs,
Herman Crane spent New Year’s
Day with their mother, Mrs.
Myrtle Craue andsistey, Mrs- Joe
Barrett.
Judge and Mrs. Roy Satterfield
will fly to Washington Dec. 17
attend the inauguration,
Miss Jane Cooley is
a visit. She is with the St
partment and her last
waB >n Paris. She will be
'u Tangerina, Africa.
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TetfordHulsey, White Counny’s
new School Superintendent, took
office Jan 1 , 1965. He has a very
ambitious program that we’li
carry next week,
Mrs. Carolyn Boggs is clerk.
Hope for Millions
In Cancer Drug
By RUTH WINTER
NEW YORK, Dec. 26 — An anti
biotoic which cures certain forms
of .cancer and curbs others has
been licensed by the federal gov¬
ernment and will be available to
hospitals only on an around-the
clock basis Jan. 4.
The drug, dactinomycin (to be
marketed under the trade name
Cosegen, manufactured by Merck,
Sharp and Dohme of Rahway, N.J.,
is effective against Wilm’s tumor,
a kidney tumor usually found in
children, Rhabdomyosarcoma, a
muscle tissue cancer resistant to
radiation treatment, and carcinoma
of the testes and the uterus.
The average patient usually re¬
ceives a five-day course of dac¬
tinomycin. A second five-day course
of therapy is given to some pa¬
tients after a two-week rest period.
Almost all patients experience one
or more toxic effects, most of
which are usually reversable when
ihe drug is discontinued.
These effects include nausea,
vomiting, abdominal pain, diar¬
rhea, ulceration, anemia* skin erup¬
tions and tissue damage.
Sources at Merck, Sharpe and
Dohme stated that dactinomycin
is presently being tested for its
effectiveness against other forms
of cancer. They added, however,
that it is too early ‘to come to any
conclusions concerning the results.
CLEVELAND, GA* JAN. 8 1965
young egg-head, decided teaching
rather than the ministry was his
vocation, he requested the Los
Angeles Board of Education to as¬
sign him to a negro school. He
got his wish, as they say, in spades.
From the moment he put his foot
in the door these ninth graders
began working on white “Teacher”
and did not let up until they had
achieved their end, his ouster.
During Kendall’s tenure he was
embroiled in every depraved act
that hate-filled, beastly hellions
could devise. He was spat upon,
had a knife spun past his head, was
nearly blinded, had the tires of
his car slashed, and was profaned
daily whenever one of his “stu¬
dents,” male or female, felt the
urge .to curse him.
On one occasion a 17-year-old
leaned into his face
and blandly offered a variety of
exchanges for so simple a thing
as a passing grade. Again, in seek¬
ing out the reason for a student’s
protracted absence from class, Ken¬
dall went to the student’s home
and found himself in the midst of
a teen orgy. On another occasion
the school’s principal played host
at a soiree for male teachers at
which “French” films were ex¬
hibited.
in the
Kendall was assigned the role of
reciting the Pledge of Allegiance,
the “laugh-provoking” lines of
which degraded the flag. He had
his prejudice-in-reverse experience
with the NAACP and the Black
Muslims and went from one to
the other, month after month, as
some sort of melon head, bound
and determined to overcome.
They showed him.
Whenever he laid his trials be¬
fore the principal he was assured
his problem lay not with the stu¬
dents but in his own failure to
“communicate”. When, in desper¬
ation, he carried his complaints
o the Board of Education he was
made to wish he had not done so.
“White Teacher In A Black
’.ohool” is a damning indictment
f “progressive” education and
lie terribly corrosive effect of
.deology currently prevalent in our
ociety, the social insistence that
‘all men are created equal.”
It is not likely this book will be
well received by the critics for it
is not what the left Wing wants to
be read. But for the person who
.vould learn what goes on in such
schools as these, “White Teacher
n A Black Sohool” will tell him
bluntly.
JOHN J. SYON
The News & Courier
Chareston, S. C.
Editor’s Note: This book may
mrchased by sending $4.95 to:
Brentano’s
586 Fifth Avenue
New York, New oYrk,
4ATIOMA I IMTOKIAV
A iTi
WRITE A
WANT AD
CASH IN ON N
STUFF
IN
THE ATTIC =JU
Established $3.61 P« Tear -
That Icy Stare
SCIENTISTS predict a drop of a
few degrees in average temper¬
ature in various areas of the earth
might bring on another great Ice
Age.
It’s not so awesome, considering
that many a husband can tempo¬
rarily create the Ice Age by telling
his wife that she hasn’t the knees
for those short dresses.
Editorial in Atlanta Journal.
// White Teacher In A
Black School" by
Robert Kendall,
Devin-Adair, $4.50
If “White Teacher In A Black
School” were not an autobiographi¬
cal recounting of events it is like¬
ly some Watch & Ward society
would seek to have it banned. The
attempt may be made in any event,
the book’s bent and dialogue be¬
ing what they are.
But White Teaoher’s nature
and its raw language are not the
author’s fault, if fault they be.
Robert Kendall has done no more
than faithfully report the submis¬
sive years he spent as ringmaster
in two predominantly-negro public
schools and since his experiences
were revolting, they come out
that way. What goes on in these
undisciplined integrated jungles is
unbelieveable.
ever our new auto inspection law
which becomes effective Jan. 1.
They’re afraid too many voters,
who don’t like the idea of paying
$1.25 to have their car’s safety
checked by competent mechanics,
will take their displeasure out on
them when re-election time rolls
around.
This is a selfish, short-sighted
way to look at this legislation,
which was designed to remove a
lot of hazard and death from our
highways.
If a person can’t afford to have
the defects of the car he drives
corrected, he can’t afford to drive
it at all, because when he does so
he’s gambling with his life, with
increased chances that he might
lose.
Yours truly,
PINEY WOODS PETE.
— Atlanta Journal.
Negro Prefers
Missippi to ra
<•
New York Slum
NEW YORK (AP) — A young
negro from MoComb, Miss., said
Wednesday he would prefer to live
in Mississippi rather than New
York City if he were forced to re
side in a slum area,
The negro, Tracy Lewis, along
with several other members of the
Student Non-Violent Coordinating
Committee, appeared on the NBC
TV “Today” show, with Hugh
Downs as interviewer.
Downs asked Lewis, if he had
to live in a slum area, where he’d
rather live, and the youth replied:
“I’d prefer to live in Mississippi
Asked what he has learned from
his visit thus far, Lewis said:
Some parts of New York are
similar to McComb, as far as inte*
gration and segregation is concern¬
ed.”
Habersham EMC i
Pays $21,048.50
In Taxes
Habersham Electric Membership
Corp. paid a total of $21,048.50
in Ad Valorem taxes for the year
1964. White County received
$5,107.20 of this amount.
Habersham Electric Membership
Corporation pays all taxes that
any other business is required to
pay; but is exempted from Feredal
and State Income Tax since the
Cooperative does not make a profit.
Like any other business, the Co¬
operative is not required to pay
income taxes unless a profit is
made. The Cooperative does not
make a profit; the margin above
actual cost is invested in lines and
other facilities which are the
property of the consumers who fur¬
nished the money.
The Habersham Electric Mem¬
bership Corporation is proud to pay
its fair share of City and County
property taxes, so that the Co¬
operative may have a part in the
growth and development of this
area. The Cooperative is happy to
support the local schools, bonds,
etc., by paying taxes.
STREET SCENES
(The Atlanta Journal)
Attractive bow-legged blonde in
black stretch pants attracting more
attention on Ponce de Leon than
other young women similarly clad.
HIGH FASHION Feminine
bathing suits are getting so skim¬
py that even some of the design¬
ers are feeling a little nervous.
Says one of them, out on the
West coast . . .
The suits are getting pretty bare
so bare, in fact, that the girls
will simply have to wear something
them. The designer’s sugges¬
...HATS!
PINEY WOODS
PETE Says:
MISTER EDITOR;
Some legislators from rural coun¬
to be cold feet
WINTERTIME
ACTIVITIES
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