Cleveland courier. (Cleveland, White County, Ga.) 1896-1975, February 19, 1965, Image 1
/7’i.^Z / THE CLEVELAND COURIER COVERS THE MOUNTAINS LIKE MOONSHINE Dovoted to the Agricultural , Commercial aui Industrial Interests of White County VOL LXV11U IS** |9 THE CLEVELAND COURIER. PLATFORM For Whits County and Cleveland: A Cleaner and More Beautiful City All Highways Graded and Paved To Make White County the Mecca for Tourists Development of Winte Sports in Mountain Arer f 1 Sheriff Salary Fuither Explained We have been running in The Courier for the pastfour weeks has been running a Legal Ad porlainmg to the a Sheriff com pensaion or salary of of White County. You will note that the of the Sheriff hereafter will be set at $7,500. Salary to be fixed Jab 1 of each year and not to re d uced. All expenses to be paid paid for by the (county; autos fully equipped and uniforms fur nised and $l 0 par month for uni form cleaning The Chief Deputy’s salary is set. at $3,600 per year This change becomee effective Jan • 1 , 1966. All costs, fees etc. that hereto fore have been collected by the Sheriff will go into the County Treasury White County Most Pay $5i),i08 to Schools Id 1M Rept. Tom Mauney left with us Saturday the new local support that counties and cities school system must pay in 1965 and 1966 It is most revealing that what is demanded of White County in 1966, which is $55,108, and in. crease of $7,294. IK bite County Seeks Support For Chamber ot Commerce Some 4 O people attended a meeting at the CityHall Monday night and made the first step to¬ ward organizing a Wuite Countv Chamber of Commerce by elect¬ ing a temporary Board of Direc¬ tors until June 30 . They are: H. A. Allison, Harold Ruesch, J. L. Nix, Tel ford Hulsey, Gene Evans, W. R. Jenkus ,mid iRoss Cutting A representatiuo from the State Chamber of Commerce will come here Feb. 23 at 7 :30 p. m. to as¬ sist in furthering the organ 1 za tion. All interested people are invited The Divisional Key Club meet¬ ing will be held at White County High School Suuday, Feb. al, at 2 p. m. Rev. Barfield’s daughter and husband and 2 children of Rome spent the weekend with them She is a sole ist at the First Methodist Church, Rome. Snow fell Suuday afternoon,but the temperature was too high it to lay. However, the high peaks were white Monday. Look for a BiG snow and more cold weather until late March Mr. aud Mr*. Jim Rowan and children of Macon were weekend guest* of their mother, Mra, W, N, Noell Mr. and Mre, Floyd Head and none of Decatur visited bomefolka over weekend Mr, aud Mre, Gordon Telford end child reo of Carneeville Bpent Sunday wi b parents. improved Parke Bell of Marietta ie some. L SMS warn » hat Reports from Washington indicate t S enator Richard B. Russell will re cov r his illness, Senator Russell haslbeen a hard work¬ er, with long boars.—18-20—all his life and has neglected his health. We trust that he shall soon recover Somebody said '.hat through history one of maukink’s most pleasant diver 1 sions has been the close observation end apppreciaton of the LEUS of girls We knew a certain fellow that keeps hie NOSE close to the ground, Frank Wells; Atlanta Constitution able writer, tells the '“future looks brg ht »» for some 1,WH) miles of scenic highways, bonder how many White County will secure? Old Mi.JGroundbog certainly must be embarrassed over last w-ek’s hot weather However, beware spring is not here yet, APPALACHIA S*4 IN GEORGIA The 35 counties of Georgia which are included in the Appa¬ lachia bill have good cause to be happy over the Senate’s approval of this legislation. There can be no doubt that the bill, if the House approves it as expected, will have a major eco¬ nomic impact on this area. The reason for certainty is sim¬ ple: $840 million of the $1.1 bil¬ lion in the bill will be spent for highways and access roads in those areas of 11 states from Georgia to New York which are favored. What has happened in some of the Georgia areas of Appalachia during recent years is, in a way, a regression. In many counties cotton, corn and other crops, few farmers remain and that kind of agriculture on a small scale is no longer profitable on land that is not the state’s richest. Industry has not yet filled the gap. Welfare rolls have grown. In only one of these economic eddies — Dawson, the smallest of Georgia’s 35 Appalachian coun¬ ties — public assistance payments in 1963 totaled more than $150,000. What has kept these counties from recovering economically, in many cases, is poor access to the cities and the main-traveled routes. Industry has not seeped through the mountain passes; It has taken the four-lane roads to more acces¬ sible communities. Roads obviously will help enor¬ mously in those counties traversed by only one or two two-lane high¬ ways, many of which are in poor condition. The Appalachia bill’s name makes it sound like an omnibus measure addressed to all the needs of that region. But primarily it is one leg of the table. The others, in Georgia’s case, are the anti¬ poverty bill, primarily an educa¬ tional program; the Areas Rede¬ velopment Administration, which did so much in the past, to invite new industry to depressed areas; and this state’s own local develop¬ ment commissions. We cannot with certainty judge all parts of the Appalachia bill and we have some doubts about its fairness to counties that do not share in the program. But there is no doubt that, if it becomes law, a large part of Georgia will bene¬ fit considerably. Editorial Atlanta Journal Long Walks Are His Cure For Pressure MOSCOW, Feb. 11 (UPI) — The Soviet news agency Tass reported that a 65-year-old pensioner cured his high blood pressure by walking 21,000 miles over the past five years and four months. He aver¬ aged 31 miles per day. Alexei Polikarpov told Tass that he has walked about four-fifths of the distance to his goal of 26,000 miles — the distance covered by Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin on his 1961 space flight. Polikarpov, who calls himself the “walking sputnik,” was interview¬ ed fin a town in northern Siberia where he was trudging across the snow in a ski suit in 40-degree below zero temperatures, Tass said. “I started out with high blood pressure, but with every thousand miles I feel myself getting better,” he said. Local News Send ua the NEWS M 11 appear in Ilia Courier. Wa vffl precite poor Telephone or write The the NEWS. Glen McCullough, secretary of the Georgia Press Assn., Atlanta visited The Courier Feb. 11 . He says he expects to return shortly. Last week was unusually mild for February. The thermometer registered in the 70’s for two or more days. State Highway Engineer M. L, Shadburn tells that he is impres¬ sed with Pres Johnson’s suggest ion that “A broader study be made for scenic roads and park¬ ways. » W onder if the Forest Service is likewise^ impressed? Well, how abont that $20,900 in Been Tax White County could have received in 1965? Whether you like it not, there’s tAio places 111 Helen that sell Beer legally Ames has hired two Negro girls Mr. ane Mrs. Billy Ed wards are e nrolled at Piedmont College. He is nv'jonny in Business adminis¬ tration and she is a Liberal Aits Education. Sgt. o Underwood and wife were visiting here Sunday Traffic lights have been install ed on the square between Arnold -ieaboit’s Service Station and Head's vocant lot. I 11 1964, $59,694 in job insur¬ ance were paid to unemployed workers in White County, At present there are 56 unemployed, workers getting job insurance on claims filed in W hite County The*Ga. Mts. Planning and Development Commission will have a meeting at Truett-McCon nell College Feb. 2s at 7 p. m Dr. Wm. Keeling of the Univer¬ sity of Ga will present his first seiiesof discussions concerning rourishis Study. You are invited t 0 ' attend, Gainesville and Cornelia gel most of the grocery business 11 : White County. Certainly most of this business could remain in Cleveland if the local merchants would advertise every week in The Courier Dr. Samuel Poole of Gainesville spoke to the Kiwanis Club Mon¬ day night on the Heart Program and the cause of heart attack. Paul Westmoreand phoned us on Feb 5 that ' we could expect a SN^W in a day or 30 . Well, he seems to interpret the weather better than most people* When is the next snow, Paul Be ready with • genetone donation when one of your neL hbotg, serving ee a HEART Fund volunteer for the Georgia Heart Aeao. call* al your home Feb, 2i. Th?re will oe • meeting of the members* 1 f Louusviile Church on Sat. Feb 27, at 2 p, m. For the pmpoac o' rganizing a /Mc ’» C ub. All men ate urged to attend < , f'umroon a*ff 00 mXffMr/onme? —mre mm AXfootw Qutr/avS 1 *-M/ v-v ACTIVITIES CL1VKLAND, GA* FEB. 19. 1965 Bloodmobile Here Next Monday The Red CroBs Bloodmobile will be in Cleveland Monday, Feb, 22 , at the Health Center front 1130 to 4:30 to collect blood to be used by White County patients who need transfusion of whole blood. The quota is 70 pints. If this amount is received It will cover oveiy resident of White County during the next 4 months, regard edlees of the amount of blood needed, If this amount is not collected only the families of the donors will be covered Every donor is examined to determine if he is able to give a pint of blood. If for some reason the donors are rejected, their families shall become eligible to receive blood as a a Fed Cross Card is issued to them just as il they had given. Several White Countiaus have been seriously ill and have re¬ quired large amounts of blood. Lets meet our quota every time and make all our people eligible from the Red Cross. Key Club Reports Various Activities The Key Club held its regular meeting Monday at the high school. Larry White presided, and Terry Hardman was guest from the Ki wanis Club. The club has finished a pam¬ phlet on White County. Mr. Mc¬ Daniel will have it published and in circulation shortly. A Key Club car wash will be held Saturday, Februray 27, on the National Util¬ ities lot. The price is $1.50 per person. Rudy Autry and Hank Huston will become members of the Key Club, and the dub will tour North Georgia Trade School next Mon¬ day, beginning at 1:30 p. m. A dance is planned for the near future, with the club band furnish¬ ing music. Twelve club members attended Mt. Yonah Baptist Church last Sunday. Gary Potts and Richard Davidson attended the Kiwanis meeting Monday night. NOTICE — The Key Club will have a car wash lasting all day Saturday, February 27, at National Utilities. Price $1.50, and tickets will be sold in advance for this car wash. What's Going On In Your White County Schools By Telford Hulsey, Superintendent STUDENTS, did you know that every day of High School is worth one hundred dollars to you? Sta¬ tistics show that a high school graduate earns at least $72,000 more in his lifetime than an 8th grade dropout. So it means money in your pocket to stay in school and get your diploma. * * * * WHAT DO YOU THINK OF VALENTINE’S DAY — I was visi¬ ting the White Creek School last week. Miss Jackson and her class of first and second graders had a wonderful display of Valentines. All their school work was centered around Valentilne’s Day and I got a new spirit for Valentine’s Day. FREEDOM LIVES ON — Mr. Collins and his class at White Creek study how and why this great nation was burn and de¬ veloped. A study such as this could make us all better citizens. TEACHERS AT THE WHITE CREEK SCHOOL are among nearly 16,000 Georgia teachers who are taking the Department of Educa¬ tion’s television course on How to Teach Reading. I congratulate them. BOOK TO READ — “The Rector of Justin” by Louis Auchincloss, is about a New England school¬ master. It may remind you of some Georgia schoolmasters you have known. WSCaUBI BOB IBB <x> T ~ , ’ r " r ” Established 18M Per Jmi « Several from Areo Attend Highway Division Lab School ATLANTA, Feb. 2—The Gaines¬ ville highway field division office conducted its twelfth annual labor¬ atory school at the division office headquarters on U.S. 129 east of Gainesville the week of Feb. 1st. The purpose of the school is ito increase proficiency,in the samp¬ ling and testing of iToad materials, and the correct procedures for re¬ cording test data. The schools are scheduled during the winter to take advantage of the lull in road building activity brought about by the cold, wet winter weather. Study topics cover virtually the entire road building cycle, from pre-construction soil testing along a proposed highway route through U. S. Bureau of Public Roads in¬ spection ol test records. One full day each is given to concrete and asphalt paving, using training ma¬ terials and instruction made avail¬ able by the Portland Cement As¬ sociation and the Asphalt Insti¬ tute. Similar schools are conducted in each of the Highway Department’s six field divisions during winter. The Gainesville divison’s school, however, is the oldest, and the only one that runs a full week. Assis¬ tant Field Division Engineer T. S. Moss is chiefly responsible for its conduct and planning. On the final day, Friday repre¬ sentatives of the main Highway Department laboratory and general office in Atlanta and the U.S. Bu¬ reau of Public roads took part in the program. A meeting of the Gainesville chapter of the Georgia Highway De¬ partment Engineers’ Association was held following the close of the lab school on Friday afternoon. Lab schools were conducted in the Cartersville, Tennille, and Thomaston field division in Janu¬ ary and schools for the Tifton and Jesup divisions were scheduled for the week of February 8. A. D. Story, resident highway engineer of Cleveland announces that the following men from Cleve¬ land attended in Gainesville: Luther M. Adkins, Engineering Aide IV; Buddy E. Allison, Engi¬ neering Aide II; Donald H. Bentley; Engineering Aide II; Ben R. Brady, Materials Test Technician I; Charles B. Bryson, Engineering Aide I; Edward P. Cantrell, Ma¬ terials Test Technician III; William E. Cash, Materials Test Techni¬ cian I; Tommy L. Cowart, Engi¬ neering Aide II; Mack Gregory, Ma¬ terials Test Technician II; Joseph A. Johnson, Jr., Civil Technologist; Clifton L. Kilpatrick, Engineering Aide II; Jackie S. Kilpatrick, Rod man; James H. McCay; Engr. Aide III; George W. McCollum, Engr. Aide IV; Whelchel L. Meaders, Engr. Aide II; James L. Nix, Engr. Aide II; William L. Robinson, Engr. Aide IV; Freddie B. Seabolt, Engr. Aide III; Roy A. Terrell, Hwy. Proj. Engr.; William D. Welborn, M.T.T.I.; Joseph W. Westmoreland, Civil Technologist; Gary H. York, Engr. Aide I. \ ‘ Theology Student Portrayed on T-V An outstanding Emory theology student and four Georgia moun¬ tain churches will co-star on Two Bells-TV Edition over WSB-TV Saturday February 27, at 6 p. m. John Mann, Jr. will portray the life of a theology student, as he is photographed in class, teach¬ ing a kindergarten, refereeing ath¬ letic events and preaching at his four churches on the Nacoochee Valley circuit. Camermen have filmed John on the campus at Emory in the normal class routine of the theology stud¬ ent and have followed him to the beautiful Nacoocheee Valley Meth¬ odist Church. Also on his circuit is “Chatta¬ hoochee Methodist, the little frame church that was used in filming the movie “I’d climb the Highest Mountain." A dinner on the grounds was held in February at Loudsville Camp Ground in White County for the camermen, despite the weath¬ er. The fourth church on the circuit is Mt. Pleasant where Eas¬ ter sunrise services are held in what the young minister describes as “the most beautiful spot in narth Georgia. Miss Satterfield Wins Homemaker Title At WCHS This Year Jerily Satterfield is this year's Betty Crocker Homemaker of To¬ morrow for White County High School. She scored highest here in a written homemaking examina¬ tion taken Dec. 1 by 552,704 senior girls in 14,236 of the nation’s high schools. She is now eligible for state and national scholarship awards ranging from $500 to $5,000. Test papers of all school win¬ ners in the state are being judged competitively. From this, the State Homemaker of Tomorrow will be named, and will receive a $1,500 scholarship from General Mills, Inc. sponsor of the annual Betty Crock¬ er Search. In addition, her school will be awarded a set of the Encyclopedia Britannica by Encyclopedia Britan nica, line. The second-ranking girl will receive a $500 educational grant. 4-A Regional Tourney/ North, to be held at Truett McConnell The 4-A North Section Regional Tournament will be held at Truett McConnell College, Cleveland, on February 18, 19 and 20. Schedule for February 18 will be: —South Habersham and Rabun County girls at 6:00 p. m. _North Habersham and South Habersham boys at 7:30 p. m. _White County and North Haber¬ sham girls at 9:00 p. m. On Fehruary 19th the schedule will be as follows: County and North Hall boys at 6:00 p. m. Habersham girls and the White County-North Habersham winner at 7:30 p. m. County boys and the North Habersham - South Habersham winner at 9:00 p. m. Winners of the boys and girls tournament will be determined on Saturday, February 20 at 7:30 and 9:00 p. m. Winner and runner-up from this tournament will compete in regional finals at Monroe High School on February 24, 25, 26 and 27. In The Interest of Public Order, Liberty Con Be Maintained I quote one of our Justices of the Supreme Court of the United States who said recently: Justice cannot be administered, nor are the lives and safety of prisoners secure, where throngs of people clamor against the pro¬ cesses of justice right outside the courthouse or jailhouse doors. The streets are not now and never have been the proper place to ad¬ minister justice. Use of the streets for such purposes has always proved disastrous to individual liberty in the long run, whatever fleeting benefits may have ap¬ peared to have been achieved. Those who encourage minority groups to believe that the U. S. Constitution and Federal laws give them the right to patrol and picket in the streets whenever they choose, in order to advance what they think to be a just and noble end, do no service to those minor¬ ity groups, their cause, or their country. Or as another distinguished Supreme Court Justice phrased it so eloquently: The rights of free speech and assembly, while fundamental in our society, still do not mean that everyone with opinions and be¬ liefs to express may address a group at any public place and at any time. The Constitution’s guar¬ antee of liberty implies the exis¬ of an organized society main¬ public order, without which itself would be lost in excesses of anarchy. .... Congressional Record. 'IM* l