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COVERS THE MOUNTAINS LIKE MOONSHINE
Deputed ll the Agricultural , Commercial and Industrial lutaraatc of Wkita Couuty
VO| LX V1111 N* |6
THE CLEVELAND COURIER.
PLATFORM
For White County and
Cleveland t -
k Cleaner and More Beautiful
aty
All Highways Graded and
Paved
To Make White County the
Mecca for Tourists
Development of Winter
Sports in Mountain Area
The Greatest Statesman
Of Tbe Century Passes
Sir Winston Churchill, 9O, suf
fured a stroke Jan. 15 - his third
and died Sunday morning.
He wa9 able to muster all sup¬
port Loin every Brition during
the horrible blitz. By doing so he
may have saved the world from
Hitler conquoring and ruling.
He served in the House of Par
linient 62 years. His mother was
an Anieiican.
Funeral service will be held in
St. Pttul t athedral, London, Sat¬
urday, and burial will be m St*
Martin’s churchyard, neai where
he was born.
Two While County Ken
Serionolj Bart In Anto
Wreck On 129 Jan. 21
Albert Brady is in Hall Couuty
Hospital with a compound frac¬
ture of tl.o bead 1 left band
niuiifflep, but it, can be partly
saved, ana his left eye dislocoted.
Robert 1 ee Autry is in Veterans
Hospital No. 48 with a torn kid¬
ney, lung;- punctured ane there*
movai of 1 be splsen
It is repotted that “Bud” Ramey
was driving Autry’s car
Catholic Chapel To Hold Open House
The Cai holic Chapel in Cleve¬
land will hold Open ||House Sun
day, Jan 81, from 2 to 5 p m.
The Chapel is located two blacks
we. t nl the square on the Dah
loneoa HignWBy next to the
Laundraniat.
There will be no worship ser¬
vice iu connection with the||Opeu
Aouse, out guided tours will be
giver, catholic pvoctices will be
exputiued, unp questioned iwill be
answered. The purpose |of the
C pen House is to promote better
understanding among Christians.
Kveiyone is cordially lindited
'J lie Woman’s Club met with
Mis. Josephiue Head lett Thkrs*
day. Mrs. lay lor had charge of
the program aud showed her ,col.
lection of buttou to tbe club
Rev. Barfield’s brother of At.
lauta was here over the weekend
Barnett Kenimer of Knoxville,
Teun , spent Monday night with
Mi. and Mrs. J. H. Telford. JHe
and Mrs. Telford aud Mrs. Betty
Hiohsmith attended the funeral
of chas Kenimer Tuesday.
Reports are that Kenneth
Chambers told the PTA Jan. »1
that he had carefully examined
the grounds cf the new
house aud that theie was ample
paiking spac . Well, for WHO?
W here does the public k come in?
Miss Mary Lou .button
that we had to Jan. 26
of rainfall
1 he Lity will will shortly in.
still a traffic light |between Sea.
bolt’s bervice Station and
vacant lot
^
Veb. 2 is Groundhog Day
Bat the ayes ot Jbe wicked shall fail
and they shall not escape, and their hope
•hall be as the giving up of the ghost.—
Job 11:30
My girl friend Bessie says, ** An op¬
timist is a man who marries bis secretary
>nd thinks he can go on dictating to her,’
—nary Singleton in Snap Shots.
Richard Davidson telle he’s not a
weather prognoaligstor, bat from what hr
bear* from the “Oldtimers” you . can ex¬
pect February and March to be a REAL
humdinger
Aa good almost kill a man as kill a
good bojk: who kills a man kills »
reasonable creature, God’s image; bat be
who deatroye a good book kills reason
itself, A good book is the piecioue lile
blood of a master-spirit, embalmed and
tre.aured up on purpose to a life beyond
life.—John Milton,
One thing ihe United States Supreme
Court cannot do is declaie the U. S Con¬
stitution unconstitutional. If tbe Court
oouid do eo, it might attack the make-up
of the U. 6 Senate which, with two s.na
tors from each state regardless of size, it
clearing defying the Court’s Bat that
representation in state legislatures must
be on the basis of population Shouldn’t
ydu acu
Jenkin Lyod Jones) editor of the l ulea
I’tibuae, says: “ihe trute liberal, in
my opinion, should boggle at social
theories that degrade the human being.
He should question the political prac¬
tices that penalize ibe doers to fatten the
don’te**. He should recognize that the
forced reproduction and encourage.neo 01
Incompetence and irresponsibility
through pnblic subsidies will eventually
produce a society in whicu there will be
leaa for all. Bach a liberal will, at the
same lime, reject the law of the jungle,
Neither competence nor strength nor in¬
telligence will be allowed to impose raw
ower upon the mass He will cherish
those checks and balances which halt the
depreciations of, aa old Joe 'Pulizer pul
it, ‘predatory capito) and predatory labor’
And I might add, ‘predatory govern.
insntY’l
Telford Hulsey declares a man who has
money to burn willacoo find the person
who has a match lot it,
Mrs Nellie Robinson muses a whisper
is one way to make people believe what
they olhetwlae wouldn’t*
Fmnk Kinnear opiues women tare like
pin wheel, j you don’t) have to undere a nd
them to enjoy watching tnem.
Will Freem-n declar s maybe it’s
nothing to worry alionc if the kids hava
trouble with the study of history. The
peoyle who make it seem to have a lot oi
trouble’
When yon go to pay your taxes thin
tall you will be reminded tbai the $30 000
iu Beer tax for 10tt5 went up iu smoke,
That $30,000 must be made up some way
from each taxpaj er
Vet, tv hits County has beer, as there
two places in Helen that legally sell beer.
me, Jas. P. Davidson surmises that il
might not be a bau idea to study the
•tare, moon, fogs and other Old Timers’
predictions on White Couuty’s weather,
<Vnat do yon think Paul Westmoreland!
The quesliou is now being frequently
••keil: “Who wilt be the NEW Post
maeter of Cleveland! We couldu’i
hazard a guess Do you want to talk
Congressmen Landrmn
Times have chaugsd. Tiday a man
pays a quarter to park bie car so he
won’t be hued two dollars while spend
mg a dime (or a nickjel cup of cotiee, so
proclaims i. barite Maio.if
Decision la a sharp knife that cuts clean
and straight; indecision, a dull one thal
Osaka and tears and leaves ragged edges
behind it. — Gordou Graham,
if you go through life with a clenched
hat, nobody can ever put' anything ' into
it, so declares Frau a Nelius, Di merest
The business population of White
County .ncr asaii 7% .luring ac¬
cording to Bt&Uatica released by George
F, Huroyt, district manager of the A t
Irnta office of Dunn & Bradsireet, loe, A
physical count Of tbe Dun & Bradsireet
Reference Book for January, I9K0 re
veals >}76 bnaineanea, manufacturers,
•holeaalere anil retailers, iu this area
U, S, Naval Reserve * 1 raining Cenlei.
Ban a Anno, C tt bf.— William G, Wood
(BUI) waa elevated to BU-IA, US Navy
Jau 16, IB65, He ia an instructor al the
irkining Center, He .a (ne ecu or Mr
eud Mra. Joe Wood
The road frOmftTeanatee Gap to 180 in
County, from J *cae Gap 10 139, will be
let Feb. 19 aud completed ia 550 Calen¬
der daye,|
The Cleveland girls and baekutball
t same and lha B teem won the games
TueadaV nigblat at 1 tcoa
Local News
Send os the NEWS II
appear in The Coaster. Va a 01
precite your
Telephone or write The
the NEWS.
Mrs. J, F. Ivie, Mike and Pam,
of Atlanta, visited parents,
tor and Mrs. Jas. P. Davidson,
Jan. 21 and 22.
Jack Prince, Inc., a new com*
pauy to further process poultry lh
this area, is now in production tun
Gainesville. He is the first to
make this new process’ possible^
A. C. Ross, District Director of
Internal Revenue, warns ALL
taxpayers to be sure that they
file the right form.
H. S. Nix and Frank'Hemphill,
of Habersham REA ; left Satur¬
day for a Regional REA meeting
in Miami.
Linda and Sonny Davidson of
Jeffersou spent the weekend with
grandpareuts, Mr. and. Mrs. H.H.
Davidson, while their parents,
Coi aud Mrs. Jack Davidson,
went to Naw Orleans.
The Weather Bureau predicts
the outlook for Mid-January to
Mid - February: Temperature,
much below normal and precipi¬
tation, above normal.
Millard Holcomb timidly tells,
all to get ready for a “heap” of
snow in February.
The way the workmen are
working on the new courthouse,
it now loaks like it will be ready
for 6 l trance in February.
The Courier has really been
busy with Job Print'ng since Jan.
1, for which we are-moat grateful.
W h • give out-of-town printers
your job Printing when The
Courier can do it and the money
will remain at home?
There are just a few business
people who give their Job Punt¬
ing to out-of town printers.
Journal-Constitution Washing
toil correspondent told Sunday
that Sen. Russell does not expect
Gov. Sanders to ruu against <1101
next year I
'I he Courier told you this last
week in more explicite words.
Work has stopped until spring
on the Senator Richard B. Rus
seil Sceni# Highway. However,
Mr. Story tells ail tbe rock has
been blasted from Hogpen Gap to
Tesnatee Gap and a jeep can uoyr
make it to Tesnatee Gap. A let
ting is expected soon from Teana*
tee Gap North.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Header
son of Griffin spent the weekend
with parents.
Mr. and Mrs. Jas. P, Davidson
Jr, and Sandra of Doraville spent
Sunday here,
Did.* you know that a wild
cherry limb is the best fire poker
you can find? We have one that
we have tried for two years.
Paul Westmoreland advises he
will shortly consult with Young
O’Kelley and Harley Brady on
what kind of weather to expect iu
February and March.
Paul advises that Tray moun
tain and the upper Chattahoochee
River point to a very rough Feb¬
ruary and not a pleasant March
Fanners who wish to secure a
loan from the Farmers Home Ad¬
ministration should go to their
office in Gainesville at 212 Syca¬
more Street.
The Whits Couuty Board of Education
Uus signed the assurance or compliance '
‘ with the Depsninect of Health, Educa¬
tion sod Welfare regulation under title
VI of the Civil Rights Act 964
Sub District MYF wee held at Cbatta
boochte Cborjh, KoberUtowo, Thursday
W O, jieadeis is now at home
Dr. Jimmy Crane is spending thin
CLEVELAND, GA, JAN. 29 1965
By Richard Davidson
The Key Club held its
School. meeting Monday at the
Larry # .Wbite presidec
Kenneth Chambers,
and Jack Smith were
guests
A car was decided ,to have
oar wash iu February. Also
proved a plan for preparing a
phamphlet ou#tho history and in¬
teresting facts |of White Couuty
jimmy Waldnp took the oath
ond became a Key Clubei,
The Club has ithe program at
the Kiwams Club Feb. 1 Col
G. C. Nelms, District Supervisor
of State Schools, Gainesville,will
be the speaker. Joe Glover and
Sam Dixon are scheduled to go, to
the Kiwanis Monday night
NOTICE
Parents whose children will be starting
to school this September please call 01
bring their immunization record by the
White Connty Health Department as soon
a* possible,
Dorothy N, Payne
Chas. M. Kenimer Passes
Dbarles M. Kenimer, Sr., Atlanta, died
J»t. *4.
He was a native of While County, bu
hat spent hit mature life in (Atlanta.
Funeral services were held Tuesday,
Jen, 36, at Spring Hill, Dr. Cecil Myers
officiated, Interment, Decatur,
He It survived by bis daughters, Mrs,
Annie Rosa Wirick, Liainl; Mrs. Mar)
Wheeler, Mrer Eugene Gatlin, Mrs Lester
England, nr*. E, M. jKinney; sons, T. T.
Kenimer, cileries M Kenimer, Jr„Joseph
a> Kenimer, ail ot Atlanta; W. H. K.»ni
mar, St, Petersburg, Flar; sisters, Mrs, J,
H, CMft&d,Cleveland; Mis m B. ; Wing
held, Daytoka Beach; brothers, Gordon
Kenimer, Atlanta; Barnett K.uimer,
Knoxville, C'X'eun,; 19 granu. hi'dreu
•eve, algrea' grandchildren
Frank Nichols Passes
Funeral services lor Franklin Albert
Nichole were held) from the Cleveland
Baptist Church jau, 28 with the KevjFul
brtgbt and Dr. Fuaelle officiating and in
tenant wae 10 ‘Cleveland ceme.eiy,
Ha wa* a member ot tbe B«ptiet|Chuicb
a Maaoo, Sbrioer and a veterrulof World
War U and retiree state highway engi¬
neer for tbe state highway (nr 40 yearal
He died ot |<ukema,
Ho is survive.) by bis iwife, Mrs Anna
Oakes Nichole, eiaier, Mrs* Emma Mc¬
Clure, Andenoo, S, C.; and three brntb
ers, Uzady, Baldwin; KaA.and Leonard,
Auderaon, 8, |J*j
Born to Mr, and Mrs. Garland Lovell
Jeu 26 iu Hall County Hoapi.sl a son,
Edward Davidson Lovell
Tom Mannty is already getiin,, resujls
for Whito County, He’ll |be to say NO
Ha knowa hi. way mound and While
County should ba able to bloom
Delay Check, Conner ^
Tells Car Owners I
BY JOHN PENNINGTON
Public Safety Director Lowell
Conner has suggested that car
owners put off having their ve¬
hicles inspected until the Legis¬
lature has completed action on the
controversial motor vehicle inspec¬
tion law.
The inspection law has come
under considerable criticism in the
legialaturs; some lawmakers want
to repeal it and others seek to
modify it
A legislative committee is to
hold public hearings on the law
next week end come up with some
recommendations.
Col. Conner pointed out that
motorists have until July 1 this
year to accomplish the inspections.
The legislature adjourns on March
12, and likely will have done what¬
ever it’s going to do long before
then.
Next year, as the law now stands,
motorists will have until March 31
to get their vehicles inspected to
comply with the safety law.
— Aitlanto Jownal.
__
Judge and.Mrre, R at Satteifield ie
tamed Friday iron Weiblngtau;
Established l$f»
A Flying Start?
An Economist, said
Newcomb,” is a financier
money. He’s a fellow with a
Beta Kappa key on one end of his
watch chain and no watch on the
other; and, if all the economists
in the country were laid end-to
end they would not reach a con¬
clusion!”
Today our State Government
becoming far more efficient
effective as the demands of an
panding population continue to
upon our increased energies.
An unfortunate result,
of the accelerated tempo of
day governmental affairs is that
boundaries between the three
branches of government often be¬
come blurred.
The framers of the Constitution
of the United States, and of
ing state constitutions, firmly be
lieved that the preservation of lib
erty required a careful separation
and delineation of powers among
the great branches of government,
and they made provisions accord¬
ingly.
Conditions have shown that these
three branches—each of which
checks and counter - balances the
ers are rarely , content to
tam a static position in government;
and , the relative balance
so of
er between those branches either
nses or diminishes, depending
on the determination of the legis
lator or the judge or the executive
to exercise his proper function.
But no matter what may be the
internal condition of government,
the local people continue to live
their own lives and continue to
mand certain obligations of their
government—be it local, state or
national. And if one branch of
ernment seems reluctant or unable
to exercise its proper role, then one |
or both of the other branches usual¬
ly fills this void.
This year the Georgia
Assembly is faced with a
bility to its State, an obligation to
those whom it represents, to distri
bute fairly and justly the voice and
vote of the House of
fives.
Such reapportionment demands
upon our State did not develop
cently. For years Georgia
atives have attempted to reach a
unanimous and acceptable decision.
Yet today the problem remains
solved. *
Last summer the
of our newly-revised State
tution was pronounced upon us by!
the Federal Court because our
elective body did not proportion¬
ately represent all the people. And,
unless this problem is alleviated
this year, the Federal Government
will undertake the job of ^appor¬
tionment for us.
The executive and legislative
branches of Georgia’s State Gov¬
ernment are both privileged and
obligated to create and maintain a
State Government which is efficient,
comprehensive and compassionate
in its relation to Georgia’s citizens.
Georgia's state leaders must pro¬
vide state level solutions to meet
the needs of our people. The en¬
croachment of any other level of
government—or of any particular
branch of the national government
—comes not when the needs of our
State’s citizens are met at the State
level, but when its needs are not
met.
Therefore, it is one of the fore
most duties of our State Govern
ment to make certain that the af
fairs of Georgia are left in the
hands of Georgians.
We must govern ourselves pro¬
perly, or face the deadly certain
fact that someone else may
us improperly.
I am confident that the
General Assembly can
meet this challenge.
Mr.and Mrs,'JiminY' , ^Rowan
Macon spent tbe weekeud
Mrs Jeannette Noell and
Lynn Noeil,
Mrs. Arthur of Avondale
ed bet brother, W. C. a
Mrs. Mona Strickland has
turned from California where
visited her sister
.Ji
$3. Per X«u «
Highway Landscaping
Ordered by President
WASHINGTON President
Lyndon B. Johnson ordered Thurs¬
day that landscaping be made a
required part of major highway
projects built wholly or in part
with federal money.
Pursuing the “America the Beau¬
tiful” theme he set out in his
.State of the Union Message, the
I [President Commerce John directed T. Connor Secretary of
to re¬
quire the landscaping on projects
I for federal-aid interstate, primary
and urban highways.
44 I want to make sure that the
I I America we see from these major
highways is a beautiful America, »»
said in a letter to Connor.
In the letter, released by the
White House, the President said
I White t ^ at House intends conference to call soon nat- a
on
K* 00 ™ . 1 1116 . beauty * 00 . ' department and . wlU and the its
Bureau of Public Roads to take an
active part.
He asked Connor to undertake a
program aimed ait these goals:
«< '—Encourage the states to acquire
[land or easements adjacent to
highway rights-of-way where neces¬
sary to preserve and enhance the
.beauty of our countryside in both
j-m-ai and urban areas,
r. I —Request the statps to provide
more rest areas adjacent to the
highways for convenience, safety,
relaxation and recreation,
—Broaden the study now under
way on the needs for scenic roads
and parkways to include the goal
of maintaining and enhancing (the
beauty of America,
—Encourage the states in their
maintenance operations on public
highways to aid land abet the
growth of native wild flowers,
Sanders Selects
Six Georgians For , A A
Poverty Program 9 4
*
ATLANTA Governor Carl E.
_
Sanders has appointed six new
staff members for Georgia’s anti¬
poverty program. As regional con¬
sultants to 16 area planning and
development commissions, as well
as unaffihaited counties in the
state, they will work under the
Georgia Office of Economic 0&
portunity.
The new consultants will serve
five geographic areas of the state,
with one serving the state-at-large.
appointees are:
Frary Elrod, of Jefferson, who
will serve the Coosa Valley, Geor¬
gia Mountains and Northeast Geor¬
gia Area Planning and Develop¬
ment Commissions.
Alex S. Boyer Jr., of Sylvania,
who will work with the Central
Savannah River, Oconee and South
Central Georgia Area Planning and
Development Commissions, as well
as Savannah and nearby unaffil¬
iated counties.
Jere N. Moore, of Milledgeville,
who will work with the counties
around Macon and immediately
south of Atlanta, as well as the
Chattahoochee Area Planning and
Development Commission.
Charles R. Short, of Jekyll
Island, who will be consultant for
the Altamaha, Coasted, Slash Pine
and Coastal Plains Area Planning
and Development Commissions.
Walter Hewett, who will move
to Albany, will work with the
Lower Chattahoochee, West Geor
S’ 8 an( f Southwest Georgia Area
Panning and Development Com¬
missions.
Joseph B. Mahan Jr., of Colum¬
bus, will be the state-at-large con¬
sultant. He will work with all the
consultants as well as with the
areas of heaviest population.
Mrs. Bruce Schaefer, director of
the State Department of Family
and Children Services, is the Gov¬
ernor’s designee for implementa¬
tion ef the Economic Opportunity
Act of 1964, and Lucius E. Teasley
is state coordinator.
Governor Sanders said the act pro¬
vides Georgia a major too! in the
development of its human re¬
sources. The act provides funds
and programs by which the indi
vidual community can work with
low-income people to increase their
employability and better the con¬
ditions under which they live.
,TI RIAL