Cleveland courier. (Cleveland, White County, Ga.) 1896-1975, February 26, 1965, Image 1
- • JP 1 • f *0- ■ !&■ fey THE 1 COURIER COVERS THE MOUNTAINS LIKE MOONSHINE Depot ed to the Agricultural, Commercial and Industrial Interests of White County Vul LXV111I N»n 20 THE CLEVELAND COURIER PLATFORM For White County and Cleveland: A Cleaner and More Beautiful City All Highways Graded and Paved To Make White County the Mecca for Tourists Development ofWinte Sports in Mountain Arer Russell Scenic Road Contract Goes to Franklin N. G. Firm The Macon Construction Co. of Franklin, N. C., submitted an ap¬ parent low bid of #758,321 Friday for completion of the Senator Richard B. Russell Scenic High wav through the North Georgia mountains The project calls for 6.8 miles of paving from a junction with State 180 near Vogel State Park to Tcs natee Gap. .6 mile irom Hogpen Gap to Tesnatee Gap lack some work before paving will be start¬ ed from Richard Sims’ Senator Russell secured the Federal Lauds fuud^-the first ever to come to Georgia. Thestate is building about 3 miles in Union County, which is outside of the Forest Service. This highway goes through some of the most rugged and beautiful mountains in the world When winter sports are establish ed at Raven Cliffs or Lordamercy Cove then this aaea will bloom There will be a meeting of the mule members of the Loudaville Church on Sat., Feb. 27 at 2 p.rn. for the purpose of organizing a Men’s Club. All meu are urged to attend. Lady Warriors ttiin Area Tournament The W. C. Lady Warriors won tin- 4-A North Basketball Tour naniei it Saturday night bv defeat nig tho Rabun County Girls 50 86 Our girls bad previously de feated No. Habersham and No. Hull. The W C. Lady Warriors are playing now in Mtnroe for the Regional Championship. If they win there, then they will invade Macon for their try in the State finals. Eveiyono go out and sup port this very fine team. The Warriors coach is Wicky Loudermilk. Rabun County Boys defeated No. Habersham Boys 45 to 33 Key Club To Sponsor Muscular Distrophy Dri?e Sunday ihe White Jouoty Key Club wili sponsor a Muscular Distrophy drive Sun¬ day, Feb, 28. Tbe Club members will be stationed at various plac:a iu Cleve¬ land and stop car* and ask for contribu¬ tions. Everyone is urged to contribute generously to this very worthy cause. Ga. Supreme Court Sajs Jurors Host Be Drawn Io Open Court A 29 year old man seotsnoad to the electric chair for tbe murder of a young couple by the Walker County Superior Qonrt has been granted anew trial by tbe Ga. Supreme Court Tues¬ day Justice T, IS. Candler wrote tbe decision. Reversal was based on the fact that the names of the traverse jurors were not drawn iu open court. MARCH WLllM Fotaakejher not, and she shall preserve thee: love her, and she shall keep thee,)— Proverbs 4:6 Beauty contests didn’t begin in Holly* wood, Atlantic Oily or Miami, but when the second woman appeared on earth Man is a creature who btiye football tickets three months in advance, but waits until the day of her birthday to buy hie wife a gift, My girl friend Beesie says, “Ton prob¬ ably wouldn’t worry about what people think of you if you knew how eeldom they did,”/—Mary Singleton in BnapSbota Hard work is nothing more than an ac¬ cumulation of easy things you didn't do when you should have, so declares Tom Underwood. Whan the Cleveland merchants start advertising regularly in The Courier, then that great volume of business wont go to other towns. The people read The Courier avidly and will tf ade wi h the business that ad¬ vertises icgularly, Tellord Hulsey declares an old fash¬ ioned woman is the girl who ttics to make one husband last a lifetime, When J, L. Nix decides that White County should hare a RE&L airport then we will be getting somewhere, Don Henderson should be consulted on the selection of a site. J. H. Telford avers some ta ks have to be put off dozens of tunes before they completely elipyjur mind, Tbe Federal government is planning io establish a dozen new national parks One should be established in our moun tains and then you Can expect winter sporte and all other recreational features to be given prompt attention. The Dr, Masters buge-jS10,0oO,000 Tour¬ ist Experimental Station at Unicoi 8 tate Park should begin to bloom shortly, Cleveland and White County should make application NOW with ARA and Applachia for loans and grants on sever¬ al projects. A big RUSH will be on after House paesee the bill. A bypass of the public square ot I 29 i* being fought by ceriain people. No '.ourist will be ea. ei to stop in Clevelam and Made with all the conglorma ted traf. fic, Look at the square in Gainesville! You’ll lie doing a tina deed if you wil| give ALL of your Job Printing to The Courier. Zoning laws will shortly be put into force in White County if tbe Or, Masters Toutist Experimental Station is located at Unicoi State Park Haven’t seen Oscar ,)’K Hey reel ntlj to learn his .prediction cn tbe snows be. fore buds start eiuging. The old court Bouse ie still standing anf we b, pe will greet people for anothe' hundred years. Cline Woody,'a retired L', S. Fore t employee, tells that be old American chestnut ie ,oming back* lie bap made lot of experiments at hie home and did have cbestnule last year Children begin by loving tbeir patents as they grow older th-y judge them: s met:m- 8 they rgive them. A man seldom makes the same mistake twice. Generally it’s three times 01 more We are glail Inst While County wil) again have a Chamber of Commerce Though I don’t ike the crew, 1 won’t sink he ship. J *11 do my best to save the ship, Tbe reason is plain, W e are all iu the ship and rnuei sink or ewim to¬ gether —Daniel D foe Communities should he planned with 1 an aye to the effect nade upon the human spirit by being continuously surrounded wi h a maximum of beauty—Thomas Jefferson. Maggie's Valley, V. C., had 7 inches of enow Jau, 15. Well, we had 7 inches but no place fixed ior skiiars Frank l). Miles Pusses Funeral services for F rank Danie'Mii'-g 87, wore conducted Tuesday frorn th Firat Baptist Church, Rev, Jos Ful bright officiated and interment was in th. Cleveland cemetery. He died Monday in a Thomastou lios pitai. He is survived bv one daughter, Mre Paul McCollum, 'Cleveland; four sons Grover m. Miles and Marvin J, Miles' Cleveland; Jonn Fraoklin Mins and Robert Hoge Miles, ThomaMon; one sis¬ ter, Mrs. Alma Mattie Sutton, City; 12 grandcuiidrrn and 8 great grandchildren Paul Westmoreland called Dues day afternoon and told us we could expect a b'g snow by tbe end of the week. He said we are now operating under the Old Moon and that is when the Big Snows come out out of the North¬ east. Local News Send oa tb* NEWS to that # will appear in The Courier. We fB »p piecit® your Telephone or write The Courier the NEWS. _ Weeping willow leaves are now out encugh to show the green. Wonder if they wont be weeping before spring is here? If you want Beer voul can get all you want at two places in Helen. But White County is losing at least #20,000. With tho school taxes greatly increasing— $7,294— next year some taxpay¬ ers will soon be making themsel¬ ves known. Cost of operating the county is greatly increases n» O' so where is the money coming from? Vernal Equiuex will come on March 21. Frank Reid is predicting sleet by today The State Senate passed a Home Rule bill Feb. 18 and the House is expected to rush it through. You won’t have to vote ou so many local amendments hereafter, Tue Weather Buiean predicts the Weather outlook for this area from mid-February to mid-March Temperature, above normal; Pre¬ cipitation, above uormal. Will March come in like a lion or lamb? Born to Mr. and Mrs. L. D. Autry a daughter at Hall County Hospital Feb. 16. Born to Mr. and Mrs. Buddy Brown a daughter at HallCouuty Hospital. Bom to Mr. and Mrs. W.B,^ Smith a daughter Feb. 17 Mr and Mrs. S anley, Ellis Lynda and of Stephen of De¬ catur visited parents. Editor and Mrs. Jas. P. Davidson. Sunday afternoon, Arnold London and Robert Abernathy caught 27 lbs. of crappies in Lake Lanier one day last week. March 6 and 7 is the annual Red Cross Church appeal which will be directed by ministers of each church A much modified inspection car bill passed the House Monday A list of Grand md Traverse Juriors for the April Term of the April Term of the Superior Court will appear in our issue ofMarch5 Mr. and Mrs. Pul Allison ofN O Atlanta were here Tuesday Gary Potts is iu Hall County Hospital Albert Brady leturnod home last week. John Dawson of Delray Beach, Fla., tells that he plans to open a nudist club in the Atlanta area Mr, ad Mrs, Glen Cornell rod Kalb} »( Atlanta ep»nt the weekend with Mr*, Bonnie Dixon Mrs. W L. Bowen visited hei late hat¬ band s sisters in Eastman recently aod Charles Henderson came np .or a visit with hie lather, Mrs, Herb Rommerdale led Wednesday to visit her son Mrs: Eula Brookshire bae been confin¬ ed to bed with arthritis the paai week Mrs. Thelma Aden is at home after spending some lime in Atlanta with her eon, Joe, who has bad an operation on hi* eye for a displaced retina, He ie expect¬ ed home in abou. a week Rev, Fulbright ia quite ill with flu Charles White ie in ihe Veteran* Hos¬ pital in Murfereboro, lenu, Mrs, f.ncy Palmer has been quite ill Tbe annual Future Farmers of Ameri¬ ca and Future Homemakers Banquet will bs held Mirch 5. The menu has been planned and decoration* have started and a big success ie anticipated, Millard Craven ie at home from the hospital SUBSCRIBE VOS TOM CO* Tprm *J CLEVELAND, GA* FEB. 26. 1965 Key Club Meeting By Richard Davidson The Key Club held its regular meeting at the High School Mon¬ day. Larry White presided. 16 members attended. The Division¬ al meeting of the 10th Dist. Key Clubs met with the WhiteCounty Club at the High School Feb. 21 Father Frank Ruff whs the guest from the Kiwanis. The club will tour the No. Ga. Trade School next Monday- At the divisional meeting of the Key Clubs Chris Bagby was elected Lt Gov, for the 10th Dist for 1965. The dub will go to No. Gwinnett along with the Blairsvile Club March 8 for an interclub meeting. The Club will elect officers for 1965 66 tMarch 8 The club decided not to have a car wash Saturday, but have one the middle of March Father Ruff suggested that the club have a flag selling campaign to sell to the merchants in White County. He also suggested the club make plans someHighSchoo student recreation for spring and summer. Joe Glover and Larry Adams attended Kiwanis Monday night. Mrs, J»ck Forrester, 23 year old /m lb er her infant son were killed when the anto collided with a Boutbbou if’ freight train a; a grade crossing neat Lula Feb, 15. Mies Rebecca Fine Seabolt, Os, died her home in Cbeetatee district, Lumpkin County, last week Funeral services were conducted from Mt, Pisgah Ct.urcb Mif»s Burton Passes Funeral services .or Miss kzie Nil) Lois Bjrion, 18 of R4, was held Sunday from Cool Springe Methodist Church jShe died at her home Saturday She was a native of WhiteCounty. She ts survived by her father, Lewie Burton; three sisters, Mrs, Louie Furry, Mre, Lola Belle Taylor and airs, Glord Jean Burton What's Going On In Your White County Schools By Twlford Hulsey, Superintendent DOLLAR FROM WASHINGTON In 1964 Georgia received in Federal money, food and property $55 million. The breakdown was as follows: Cash — $25,464,375.03. Food $13,932,029.08. Surplus properties — $15,105,806.17. White County received $19,850.05 of this money. This is the money that would be forfeited in the event of non-compliance with the Civil Rights Law. LOW CRIME RATE I was at Nacoochee last week and visited Mrs. West’s Social Studies Class where we learned that Sweden had a very low crime rate. Maybe we could learn some¬ thing from the Swedish. , THERE IS AN ART TO LEARNING Mrs. Davis at Nacoochee was teaching her boys and girls how to spell as I visited her class¬ room last week. GEORGIANS AT THE TOP It’s amazing how many Geor¬ gians this one year alone are heading national organizations and will be presidng at natonal con¬ ventions this year: Thelma Davis, president of NEA’s Classroom Tea¬ chers; Leonard Robinson, president of the National School Boards As¬ sociation; A. P. Jarrell, president of the National Rehabilitation As¬ sociation; Margaret Bynum, presi¬ dent of the Association for the Gifted, a division of the NEA De¬ partment, council for Exceptional Children; and Virginia McJenkin, president of the national organiz¬ ation of School Librarians. , MORE GIRLS WILL GO TO COLLEGE Statisticians say that by 1970 there will be as many women as men going to college. Present ratio — 30 women to 70 men students. •IT OK IA l |Tl Established 181* $3.6t *•» LETTERS TO THE EDITOR - Dear Mr. Editor One of the fine pockets of his¬ tory in our State is Valley and surroundings. Any Georgian who has traveled to New England, Pennsylvania or Vir¬ ginia, cannot help but wonder why Georgia, one of the orginal 13 States, compares poorly to these other Slates in terms of properly kept landmarks. Only your area and a few others have remnants of our heritage remaining. Certainly we must not destroy any more of the sparse crop of fine old build¬ ings. Of course, I am speaking here of the Courthouse in Cleveland. You can never replace it. If it must be abandoned, so be it, but do not remove it. Your neighbor, Clarksville, made a mistake in removing the Park from the City Square. Is Cleve¬ land going to make an even more horrible mistake? Sincerely, Preston Stevens, Jr. Architect, A.I.A., Member Society of Architectural Histori¬ ans. A Delicate Balance In recent years the United States Supreme Court has moved zealously to protect «ie rights of the criminally accused. But in the opinion of many charged with combating crime, the court has gone too far. They are convinced that court decisions have unrea¬ sonably restricted efforts to bring criminals to heel. Officials are troubled by increas¬ ing legal difficulties encountered or anticipated in preliminary de tenton of suspects, the making of arrests, procuring evidence by search and seizure, getting con¬ fessions from suspects through interrogation, and obtaining using information by employing wire tap. Prosecutors and investigators point to a pressing need for new and better tools with which to combat a mounting crime rate, and increase in violence, and the growth of vast empires of profes¬ sional crime. Rather than getting the new tools which they regard as essential, they argue that court decisions have increasingly de¬ prived them of some of the more effective tools they once had. Those, on the other hand, whose primary concern is civil liberties, have been greatly heartened by recent Supreme Court decisions buttressing the right and remedies of the accused. They applaud them as reinforcing the common law maxim that a man is innocent until proved guilty, as supporting the constitutional provision of proce¬ dural due process, and as combat¬ ing secret interrogation, police burtality, and forced confessions. They hail them as offering a bul¬ wark to the right of privacy, a pro¬ tection to the poor, and a means of relief for the unjustly convic ted. The need, surely, is to strike a reasonable balance—to give police enough authority to do the job and yet to limit authority sufficiently to curb police excesses. We believe that no specific deci sion of the Supreme Court on he half of the rights of the accused has seriously impaired legitimate efforts at law enforcement. We wonder, however, if greater enforce-1 em- 1 phasis by the court on law ment needs would not help to maintain the delicate balance be tween liberty and authority and between the rights of the accused and those of society. We need to remember that the obligation to maintain a balance does not belong alone to the courts. Congress and state legisla¬ tures bear heavy responsibility. While certainly no easy task, we are convinced that legislation can be framed whereby to permit effec¬ tive law enforcement without seri¬ ously impairing the rights of the accused. We hope that legislators, availing themselves of the best thought of the bar association, will move deliberately but resolutely to find appropriate solutions to this problem which affects so directly both the strength and freedom of American society. —Editorial in Christian Science Monitor England Warned Of Money Peril EDINBURG, Ofcotland — The governor of the Bank of England has warned the government to trim its financial sails and curb expendi¬ tures before “every family in the land” is faced with severe hard¬ ship. i The Earl of Cromer told a ban puet of Scottish bankers that Bri- * tain had been given temporary respite through short-term credits from a consortium of 11 central banks. But he emphasized that this 1 was temporary. Lord Cromer acknowledged that the government was faced with many long-term problems but he warned, “Our present situation does not allow us to await on the results of these much needed evo¬ lutionary developments.” He add* ed: “We have to act early to restore balance in our affairs to avoid the need for continual resort to our friends abroad for succor out of their reserves of good husbandry.” Britain’s problem, he said, is that she is living beyond her means. The government must “show moderation in those activi¬ ties at home which could be de¬ ferred without hardship to make room for the more essential and we must, too, relate financially un rremunerative expenditure overseas no what we can afford.” Lord Cromer did not define these home activities or the over¬ seas expenses but he was believed to be referring to the Labor gov¬ ernment’s social welfare program and foreign defense commitments. He said that an enescapable re¬ sponsibility on receiving aid from members of the western financial consortium is for the borrower “to put his house in order at the earliest reasonable moment . . . This is a situation that now faces us at the present time . . . » Britain, he said, must “earn yet more abroad now to redeem at maturity the additional financial obligations we have incurred.” “If at home,” Lord Cromar said, “government, central and lo¬ cal, subordinates the cost in terms of money to other considerations i* an attempt to meet the desires as well as the needs of the citizen in a very demanding world, and if government, too, maintains or en¬ gages in overseas commitments which impose year by year ever increasing cost in terms of money with insufficient regard to the na¬ tion’s earning performance, then one day there has to be a reckoning with the rest of the world in terms of money.” Britain, he said, came II uncom fortably close to that day of reck¬ oning when, last November, the international consortium came to her rescue. But “tbe respite of last November in itself no more guarantees our future than Dun¬ kirk presaged swift victory in 1940.” He called for “decisions now ap¬ propriate to our position at the present time. We still have time to adapt our policies to avoid the menace of hardship which could face every family in the land. I only hope we face up to this need whilst there is still time. >» Blood Quota Reached In White County Almost 100 volunteer blood donors from White County went to the Health Center Monday when the Red Cross BEoodmo bile made its regular visit. From this group * total of 70 p nte of blood was given which met our quota, This mean* that for 'be next 4 months every resi dent of White county is eligible to re oeive blood from the Red Cross regardless of what hospital in the state they msy enter, Seve> al individuals gave blood for tbe first time Monday which was very en couragieg since it has nsually been some who give blond each time. Also Talon aid Appalachian Trail had good repre¬ sentation, >1 7) fe. o as■?<& 1= y«! S>i Pi cS M «w