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'i* COURIER
COVERS THE MOUNTAINS LIKE MOONSHINE
Devoted to the Agricultural . Commercial and Industrial Interests of White County
VOL ' LXV 111 I N*. 15
THE CLEVELAND COURIER.
PLATFORM
For White County and
Cleveland:
A Cleaner and More Beautiful
City and
All Highways Graded
Paved
To Make White County the
Mecca for Tourists
Develoi went of Winter
Sports in Mountain Area
7 Inches 01 Snow Falls
Here Jan. 15 And 16
Snow started falling Friday
evening, lan . 15, around 7:80,
There was a lull for an hour 01
so Saturday morning. then it
starieu snowing again and by 11
we had measured 7 inches of the
beautiful white stuff.
Suow fell as far south' as Ma
con Atlanta had two inches, but
.
the temperature remained well be
ioiv freezing and the youngsters
had a time sledding and some
even had skies.
Witt* hmd whited still ahead we
can expect many more big snows
Helen To Get Federal Aid
For Community Improvement
Senator Russell’s office advises
The Louder that Helen recertifi
cation will makethein eligible for
several types of Federal Assist
ance.
Any enmn.unity MUST have a
ct>i tificutiou of a Workable P10
gram be!ore it is etigibl 1 to re
ceive Fcderal Aid iu the form of
loans unci grants.
What is Cleveland doing?
Manpower Training
Opportunities:
Gerald Frankum, local manager,
the Georgia State Employment Ser¬
vice stated that the formation of
classes for the Manpower Training
Programs recently approved under
the provisions of the Manpower
Development Training Act of 1962
for this area is on schedule.
The Training Programs include:
YOUTH
20-Automobile Mechanic
20-Clerk-Stenographers
20-Clerk-Typist
ADULT
20-Automobile Mechanic
40-Machine Shop
40-Sheet Metal Fabrication
20-Clerk-Stenographers
The Training Programs repre¬
senting the occupations as listed
were selected on the basis of a
study conducted by the local em¬
ployment office reflecting present
and anticipating manpower needs
of existing industries, not only in
this area but other areas as well.
| The instructions will be admin¬
istered by the State Department of
Education through the local edu¬
cation officials. Training facilities
are now being made ready.
The selection and referral of
individuals to the training faeili
l , ties will commence next week. In¬
i' dividuals desiring to avail them¬
selves of the training opportunities
available are urged to contact the
State Employment Office immedi¬
ately. Trainees will receive allow¬
ances during the course of train¬
ing ranging from $20.00 to $39.00
requirements. We are especially
interested in youth applicants as
per week, depending on eligibility
more vacancies exit in these train
ing courses.
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Raccoon
So Daniel was taken up ont oft he
••id no manner of hurl wus found
him, because he believed in his God
Dati, 6:23
Judge Roy 8atterfleld advisee
man needs a wife becanee many
go wrong that he can’t blame on
government
J. L. Nix tells the trouble with
individualists is that they "re getting bard
er and h .rder to tell apart.
Every citizen of this country,
be pounds nails, raises corn,
rocks s or wiles poatry, should be
to know and love his American
to use the language well; to understand
the physical nniverse, and to enjoy
arts, i he dollars be g ins iu the
of enl ghtmml like this will be earned
drudgery and spent in ignorance,—
Calvin Gross
Norman Shavin tells id bis column
l’be b’onatitufion Mjiidry that “me
mand lor Dude models is nil string
Atlanta, *»
He says bis survey shows fewer than
dozen males and females oiler
apecia ized entertainment, and tbat their
pay is extremely poor to what they
the viewer, wbtcb is everything, and
poy is exceadiugty poor—$3 to #5 &u
Au art teacher tells he is able to
au ample supply of nude fern lies.
Governor Sanders said Jan 12 in
State to State speech before tbe Ua.
islature'hat - This administration
become a lane duck administration
high noon ou Jan. 10, I967—and not one
minute before!
So, it is positive he will not run
st Sen. Russell in 1966
l'ed Hall asked The Editor one day last
wsek if we read Bill Shipp’s story on In
tere ale No, 75 J8n, lo iu lira Atlanta
Journal-Constitution. We him that we
read it with .nucb interest.
Attei several years close reading and
studying stout the Interstate System or
through primary highways we defiuately
decid d with PROGRESS,
A bypass must be made NOW of 120
of the public squ”re for ALL through
travel.
Weil, Ted, if you want to go Gaines¬
ville do you take the old 129 route or the
new route?
Progress is bound to affect some busi¬
ness! But that seems to be what we
must pay for in our onward and progres¬
sive coar e,
Oo you ravor progress? or the old J29.
Well, the County Commissioners will
make you shout wnun you pa,
your 1905 ccunty taxes. Plesss remem
Oer this,
N. if. Sesbolt proclaims he womier e
jasl bow »uy man Can figure out tfi r
.vealfier by loj&iug at lUc moon
l he preseui County Jommissioners can
ue relied upon to hold struugly to teariug
10WQ tte old court fiouati.
Well, the energetic ladies that have so
iar succeeded to get a six months noldoll
are to be fiigfily commended, We trust
hat tbe ladies will cuotiuue tfieir enei
geiic pursuit to &eep the old c jur, house
Bill Lindsay tells that you’ll perspire
only by a tire from Feb. 8 to 9
J JU, Telford deciaree be sure the
brain is engaged before putting the
aioutfi iu gear,
NOTICE
Parents whose children will be starting
to school tills September please caller
bring their immunization record by the
While County tiealtfi Department as soon
as possible,
Dorothy N, Payne
Septic Tank Service
If your Septic Tank needs cleaning calji
Hammond S ptic I ank Service, ■ainee
ville, Le, 536.22o6. We have trucas with
1000 gallon tanks with pumps, We aee
equipned to give you quick service and a
good job.
Notice 01 Intention To Introduce
Local Legislation
Notice is hereby given that there will
be introduced at tbe January 1965 Regu.
tar Session of tne General Assembly of
Georgia a bill to place the Sheriff'of White
Couoty on a salary io lieu of tbe fee sys¬
tem; To provide compensation for deputy
sheriffs; To provir e ftr the cost of operet
iog Bheriff department; "’o piovide and
define the procedure therefore; To repeal
any conflicting laws; and for other pur¬
poses.
This 16th day of January, 1965,
Tom Mauney
Representative, White Couuty,
Georgia
Local News
Send os the NEWS 11 win
appear in The Confer. We will
precite your
Telephone or write The Courier
the NEWS.
It is reported that the County
officers will be able to enter the
new courthouse by March 1 .
Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Barden of
Atlanta were here Jan. I 4 . Mr,
Barden was an employee of the
Southern Railroad for 47 years.
George Raymond Brown Jr,
was on the Dean’s List for theFall
Quarter of 1964 at Ga. Tech.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Bentley, a sou, David Bryan, at
Hall County Hospital J an. 15
Paul Westmoreland tells he
tried to phone us on the night of
jan. 14 to tell us to expect a big
snow within 94 hours. Paul is a
perfectprognostioator. Lotus hear
from you again.
Kenneth Rogers, chief .photo¬
grapher of the Atlanta Journal
Constitution, was here around
10:80 a. m. Jan 16 . He is always
on thejob to get pictures of great
interest to our mountains. He’ll
be back shortly,
Our daughter, Mrs. Garland
Lovell, surmises that the Old
Farmer’s A lmanac prognosticator
knows his business We agree
with her.
This is the kind of weather for
leather britches and pickle beans
with homemade sauerkraut with a
lot of lean pork.
Father Frank Ruff is serving
Cleveland and White County par¬
ticularly well. He is working to
establish better recreational facil¬
ities for the young people
A military representative was
at Truett McConnell Wednesday
to talk with Junior College stu¬
dents about the ROTC Vitaliza
tiou Act of 1964.
Mrs. Roy Clark and Mrs. Mur
vin Cuudell spent last weekend in
Austell with Mr. and Mrs. Lamar
Allison.
Roy Clark’s sister is building
one of the finest restaurants and
most elite motels in ALL North
Geoigia. She hopes to ha we it
open by April.
Bill Jackson told us in the Post
Office on the morning of Jan. 15
tbat he wanted to see a big suow
aud real low temperatures so he
could sell some coal. Well, Bill,
we predict you had better get
your order blanks ready and the
truck m hue shape.
Mr. and Mrs. H, H, Davidson
and Mrs. Henrietta Harris and
-in spent Sunday iu Jefferson
with Col.and Mrs. Jack Davidson
Paul Westmoreland declares il
9 now remains on the ground for
three days you can look for more
fall .
The thermometer went down to
11 Tuesday morning.
Old Farmer’s Almanac predicts
Jan. 26 to 28 : “Below zero, my
hero. . >
Frauk Reid predicts from Feb
i
4 through Feb 7 , you’ll shovel
out of your hovel.
Judge and Mrs. Roy Satterfield
left Tuesday night by plane for
Washington for the inauguration.
They plan to return Friday or
Saturday.
Ranger Smith of the U. S.
est Service, Clarkesville, was in
town Tuesday.
Mn and Mrs. L. R. Cooper are
spending a few days with Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Cooper in Pa’atka, Fla
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Virgij
Hunt Jr., a daughter, at Hall Co.
Hospital Jan. 21,
CLEVELAND, GA, jaN. 22 1965
By Richard Davidson
The Key Club held its regular
meeting at school Tuesday. Dr.
Don Fahrbach was guest from
Kiwanis. He talked to the club on
winter sports; and how skiing
and ice skating are fastly growiu P> tr
The Blaiisville Club will come
to Cleveland forypn iuter-club
»’meeting.
Mr. McDaniel suggested the
dub start a project of making a
pamphlet with information of our
county in it. The clab will spoil
sor this and have copies printed
tojdis'ibute.
STATE OF GEORGIA
COUNT? OF WHITE
Resolution ol the White County
Board of Education
Notics To The Public:
tot the mutual benefit of all tbe duly
elected Hoard of Education Membeis o'
Whit* County, Georgia, we hereby adopt
tM motion and resolution to change tiu
regular monthly meetings of the Uounty
Board of Education from the first Tues¬
day in each month to tbe second Tubs
day in each month The effective date o l
thin Change ia to be the second Tuesday
of February, 19(15.
Presented,read and unanimously ap.
proved at tbe first official meeting of saiu
board.
This the 5lb day of January, 1905
Lt. R, Cooper, Chairman
Telford Hulsey
School Supt, aud Board Secretary
Frank W. Allen Passes
Frank W. Allen, 87, died at his
home in Helen Jan. 13
H» was a native of White Coun
ty aud spent his life here.
Funeral services were conduct¬
ed from the Helen Presbyterian
Church Sunday. Inte*meut was iu
the church cemetery.
He is survived by one son, Hu¬
bert, Gainesville; one daughter,
Mrs. Virginia Nord, LaCrosse,
Wis.
Mr, und Mrs. Guy Remoter o A
Jacksonville spent several days
this week with Mr aud Mrs, Jim
my Wilkins at Helen.
Mrs. Byrd of Reynolds spent
several days last week with her
mether, Mrs. T. J, MacDonald.
If J. L. Nix and Clyde Dixon
want a REAL airport in Cleve¬
land, then we’ll get it.
Hayward -Keenan, the capable
driver for Northern Freight Lines
for Cleveland, strongly agrees
with the Editor about a very BIG
snow.
Miss Carolyn Huhey under¬
went surgery at Piedmont Hos¬
pital, Atlanta, last week. She is
now at the home of her parents
Victoa Bristol Passes
Fuuatal services (or Victor Uosdmah
Bristol, 82, Santee, were held Tuesday
from the Nacoochee Meibodiet Church
2 p. o, Iuterment was in tbe ebureb
cemetery.
He wee a great student of the history
of White County and was a member
Nacoochee Methodist c,burch most of
life
oooua ■ cooooooooopo
U88 Kearaage (tVS-33) |FHTJS:r
Dec, 23— Airman WayneL Crane, U8N.
son of Mr. and Mrs, Barnett Crane o
Cleveland Ga., returned to Long Beach
Calif., aboard the anti-suWartne war
far* aircraft carrier USS Kearearge, after
completing a aix months deployment
tbe Far East with the Seventh Fleet.
Infant London Passes
The infant daughter born
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold London
Hail County Jant 18 died.
Funeral services were held
Bine Crpek Church cemetery Jan
20 .
Don’t brisk tbs chain.
Established 1891 $ 3 Per Jea*
.
Extend Blue Ridge
Parkway Across
Georgia's Mountains
Georgia’s mountains may soon
be developed into a mecca for
tourists. Already several projects
are in the works within the moun¬
tains, including the Richard B.
Russell Scenic Highway, an In¬
formation Center atop Brasstown
Bald, the Welcome Center at Ring
gold, and the Georgia Chamber of
Commerce Stay and See Georgia
campaign among the communities.
The state parks also are being
improved under a $2.3 million bond
program. Under State Parks Direc¬
tor Horace Caldwell, these parks
at last are being whipped into
shape.
Now there’s a new development
which could be a boon to the whole
mountain area — and all of Geor¬
gia tourism for that matter. That
is the extension of the Blue Ridge
Parkway from North Carolina
through North Georgia, treminat
ing somewhere above Marietta.
This is the type “anti-poverty”
project which will do some lasting
good. It also would fit in nicely
with the ambitions of many Geor¬
gians who wish to see the moun¬
tains developed, and who wish for
tourists to see more of the beauty
of Georgia.
Rep. Phil Landrum and Rep.
Roy Taylor (D.-N.C.) have intro¬
duced a bill which would author¬
ize the extension of the Blue Ridge
Parkway. And the chairman of the
House of Interior and Insular Af¬
fairs Committee has assured Rep.
Landrum that the bill would have
clear sailing.
The cost of the projeet is esti¬
mated at $72.7 million. It would
be an extension of the highway
for 190 miles, from Beech Gap, N.
C. It would be built solely with
federal funds and it also has the
approval of the National Park Ser¬
vice.
We hope that this Blue Ridge
Parkway is approved by Congress.
We also hope that funds are ap¬
propriated and the highway is built
as rapidly as posible. It should be
a magnificent asset to Georgia.
Editorial in the Atlanta Times.
Note of Thanks
City of Cleveland
c/o Mayor’s Office
Cleveland, Georgia
Dear Friends:
On behalf of the patients and
staff at Milledgeville State Hos¬
pital, we would like to express
our deep gratitude and sincere
appreciation of your Christmas
gifts. Each year as this program
enlarges, we realize more and
more how small our aspirations
would seem if it were not for
your help.
Thousands of gifts were received
from people all over Georgia and
because of this unselfish act no
patient was forgotten this Christ¬
mas.
We hope that a rich measure of
the happiness you have brought to
our patients will be yours during
the new year.
Sincerely,
Ray D. Brown
Public Relations Representa
tive
Cold Weather Due
Through Month
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The U. S.
Weather Bureau says the Eastern
part of the nation will have be¬
low normal temperatures and above
average precipitation through mid
February.
In its 30 day outlook, the bu¬
reau said Friday the larger than
normal amounts of precipitation
would affect the Gulf Coast re¬
gion northward through the At¬
lantic Coast states, the southern
Rockies and the southern Pacific
Coast area.
The outlook is for below nor¬
mal temperatures in the East and
Southeast and above normal tem¬
peratures in the Northern Plains
states and norther portions of the
plateau region.
•rfryiARCH
IN cun
When Will The
Cold Spell Hit?
By Robert McKee
It’s interesting to look back on
the capricious winters of 1960 and
1961, for the cold season is with
us again and there’s no limit on
what may happen weather-wise.
In spite of being in the balmy
South, there have been numerous
occasions here when temperatures
went below the zero mark. Coldest
on record in Atlanta, says the
Weather Bureau, was 8.5 on Feb.
13, 1899.
It isn’t comforting to read the
results of a study made by
Bureau’s Office of Climatology. It
says:
u Winters throughout the world
have been getting generally colder
since 1940, breaking a long-range
warming trend that began in 1881.”
For a long time Georgians talked
about the stinging winter of 1899,
which was regarded as the grand
daddy of them all in spreading
desolation and destruction. All
across the nation were reports of
people freezing to death in the
1899 blizzard.
Old accounts say flowers and
other vegetation were ail but wiped
out in that intense cold. Georgia
isn’t attuned to living in tempera¬
tures 8 degrees below zero.
THE CULPRIT
In recent years, March has been
the culprit for spreading intoler¬
able weather across the state. The
state hasn’t yet recoverd from
th losses it sustained in the great
ice storms of 1960 and 1961.
In I960, a 10-inch March snow¬
storm, mingled with sleet, shut
down schools and other activities
in 12 North Georgia counties. Iso¬
lated back country families were
on the verge of starvation when
military vehicles and helicopters
came to their rescue with baskets of
food.
In one of these storms (they
were spread out over a period of
five days), North Georgia’s poultry
industry suffered losses that
amounted to $5 million. Says a
news story that appeared at the
time:
“Piles of snow have collapsed
hundreds of chicken houses in
Lumpkin, Hall and White counties.
Several poultrymen lost as many
as 100,000 birds. Some chicken
houses burned when smudge pots
were used as auxiliary to the heat¬
ing systems. There were reports
of cattle freezing in Habersham
County.”
FOOD SUPPLY
One family had plently of fire¬
wood, but only a day’s supply of
food when the storm struck. Food
was brought to them by a helieop
tor from Ft. Benning.
The helicoptor had stopped at
the Ranger Corps station at Dah
lonega. Its commander, hearing of
the family cut off from the rest of
the world, gave orders for picking
up food at an Ellijay grocery store.
A firm indication that winter has
arrived is seen in the experience
of an ocean liner in the North
Atlantic. Aboard were several hun
hundred people returning from
European cruise.
The liner was delayed for days
by an ice storm it encountered
just off Newfoundland. Most of
the passengers became seasick and
touched land.
I’ve seen two almanacs with pre¬
dictions on what lies ahead for
Georgia. Both say this will be a
comparatively mild weather win¬
ter. Maybe so, but chances are
we’ll feel the raw cold that usual¬
ly | starts heading this way from
Canada just after the first of the
year.
It will be terribly cold in the
country west of the Great Lakes
and some of that chill is bound
to leak and stream in this
direction. When that happens we’ll
know we’re in for it.
Atlanta Journal.
There's Cash
In Outdoors
Outdoor recreation, is big busi¬
ness with Americans spending $20
billion a year now and by 1980
will spend an estimated $46.4 bil¬
lion.
In Missouri’s 31 Ozark coun¬
ties, for example, recreation and
tourism adds nearly $70 million
annually to the economy in
eluding more than $2.5 million in
wages to 5.000 local people and a
$2.5 million market for locally pro¬