Cleveland courier. (Cleveland, White County, Ga.) 1896-1975, June 11, 1965, Image 1
THE CLEVELAND COURIER COVERS THE MOUNTAfNS LIKES!MOONSHINE Devoted to the Agricultural, Commercial and luduetrial Iutereete of White County LXVlill Nw »5 * 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 Tourist* development of Winter Sports in Mountain Area House Expected To Piss $3.3 Bit ion Bill Pot Eionoiic Development did The Semite passed June 1 a $3 3 billion, 5 year public works and economic development bill thiit is urn d to give more jobs and higher income in the nation’s distressed metis The House now has the bill lit committee* ind action is expect ed very soon to bring it to the floor of the House for a vote.Pres ident lohnson is expected to throw hie full weight behind pas sage of the bill When 'he bill gets favorable action tin i* it is expected that the Dr Masters Tourist Experi¬ ment Si..tim will he given the green light find the $i0 iniilio t project wt 1 get started shortly thereafter Depression View Quiets U.S. Officials WASHINGTON — June 2 (AP) —To>p Administration economists officials remained silent today concerning the Federal Reresve Board chairman’s talk of “dis¬ quieting similarities" between the present and the pre-depression 1920’s. That comparison by Chairman William MeChesney Martin was in sharp contrast to repeated opti¬ mistic statements by government economists. He made it in a speech to the Columbia University alum¬ ni group in New York yesterday. Some brokers said the speech by the chief of the Federal Re¬ serve, which controls the nation’s money and credit supply, was a major factor in yesterday’s sharp drop in stock prices. The Federal Reserve Board has been slowing u.p slightly the rate of money expansion for about three months and many investors apparently feared that Martin’s statements indicated that a strict er clamp-down was in prospect. Also there may have been some concern that the Federal Reserve would tighten up cm credit avail¬ able for purchasing stock, al¬ though Martin said this was one sector in which there had been great improvement over the ex cesses of the 1920’s. The Special Election to Fulton Lovell to tbe House Dist. 6 will be held on June Voters will vote ONLY at court house ttt Cleveland. Be sure to read the Big Ad The First National Bank of Delia in this issue, Tbey are to get more White County ing business The Senator Richard B. Rus sell Scenic Highway had of travel on it Sunday The 76th anniversary of Magna Carta is bting held England and the Uuited Juue 13 19 It is reported that Grady ridge plans to start of a very ultra-modern motel restaurant on the site of the W. L. JPardue home Construe tion is expected to start August 1 Th« doctor was discussing health and bygina with his spinster patient. *4 Even though you take a bath every day you can’t stay healthy just by bath, ing alone. >*. “Maybe not, doctor,’’ snapped the lady, **bu< I’m still going to bathe alone it Dr. L. G, Neal declares you can tell when you’re getting aid. Your feet hurt before you get out of bed. Paul Westmoreland muses, Did you sver wonder why womeD seem to prefer the strong silent silent man? Thtv think he’a listening, • I 1 call m> wife Candy, “the huebend expltined, "because ebs’s built like a peanut cluater.” Youug chap to friend: “He jast does* n’t plan (or the future at all. Bo’s getting carried next month and hasn’t even found her a job. il Ed B«ad tells women are unpredictable You never know how they are going to manage to get their owu way. J L. Nix telle that the President’s Beautificarion Program on Highways de mands the greatest consideration of every citizen. J. L. le likely to ask that airs, Johnson co ue to our mountains tbisj summer or fall, Ollie Turner telle we NEED men tn office who can he depended upon, We a^re Ollie, but where will yon find them? The Dr. Ua^teie ncreational plan at Unicoi PaiK would have gone much faster it ciMtain reportere woul i have kept their no e cli-aD. Anybody with auy sense should know the stories that the lis'ues ville leporti ie have carried hurt the progieas of the Dr, M * tore plan The nouey people DO not control The Courier and shall never as long as J m I) a’ Iron '» Edl'nr, If you «re to bjii i a town the ONLY wkv is to get tbe support /-f the people— not just a lew people i itl money. Who ie responsible for Ctoveland being • iroughv out of tbe long Rip Van Winkle spell? What did tbe money moguls do? A good friend asked us last week to make a prediction on what kind o* *t*a her we can expect next winter, Wei , if obe extreme follows another, the look for a bnmding-r Barbara Jean Kim bred of Na coocbee ha& been named the‘‘out¬ standing woman student” tn the Udt verst ty of Georgia School of Pharmacy. She received the Lambda Kappa Sigma Award, which signifies the selection, at the recent honors program of the School. The anuual Student-Faculty Alumni program is highlighted by recognition of distinguished students in the five-year profes¬ sional course. Mrs. Bernice H. Crrne was awarded the B. S. Degree at the Annual Commencement Exerctae at North Georgia College on Sun day, June 6. She graduated with the B. S. Degree in Elementary Education. Mrs. Crane reegived the Gold Honor Bat for being on the Honor List for three consecu¬ tive quarters Mr. and Mre. Gordon Johnson and Jau.es of Hialeigh, Fla,, epeol a fi w day g this week with parents. Mr, and Mrs, Frank (Reid a li 7 * i f: V'l 7 li 4 ) / YOUR RIGHT TO KNOW IS •lal THI KSY TO ML YOUR LIBIRTIIS FOR FINE PRINTING Local News tbe NEWS li will appear In The CoorUr. We win ap Telephone or write The Courier the NEWS. The Weather Bureau’s weather outlook for this area for June is: Temperature near normal. Preci¬ pitation below normal. Mayor Obe Pruitt of Blairsville and J. W, Smith of Blairsville were visiting here lune 4 J )W. was a former County Agent of White County and Obe is a re¬ tired Deputy U. S. Marshal. Obe has secured more for Blairsville t^an they have had in 100 years E. C Hefner of Augusta is visiting in White County this week Old Farmer’s Almanac predict from June ll to 27 : “Too humid for cupid ; wedding tents you must rent. »> Jack P. Nix spoke at a Confer¬ ence for Local Administration at the N. C. State College, Raleigh, Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs* Jas. P. Davidson, Jr. and Sandra of Doraviile visit¬ ed parents SuudayJafteruoonThey drove up to Tesnatee Gap. That was a fine story Frank Danin! had in the Atlrntn Journal Constitution Sunday. He plans t<> return when paving starts l'he No. G. Annual Conference the Methodist Church begins 2l| Mrs. Porter Glover underwent -urgery for varicose veins in Gainesville last week. Mrs. C. H. Nelms of Cornelia ■spent last Friday with her daugh¬ ter, Mrs. Jas. P. Davidson. Mr. and Mrs. Garland Lovell have purchased the Dr. Lowell Franks home and will move into it June 15. Dr Franks plans to build a home Richard Davidson spent a "day or two in Atlauta this week L S. Larsen, Blue Ridge dis¬ trict, who grows gourds of vari¬ ous sizes and shapes, brought us a small basket of boyseu berries Tuesday. He has red and Rasp¬ berries, 3 varieties of blackberries slrawoerries, as well as boysen berries. Go to see him sometime The very fine rain we had Mon¬ day will make many gardens pro¬ ducing for the table next week Mrs. W . L. Allison has been very sick for the past week. Mrs. W. R. Ledford fell in her home last week and was carried to Hall County Hospital The Bible Study, at Smith’s Chapel has been discontinued, but preaching will continue at 7:30 Mr. and Mrs. Carl Prater of Atlanta and Mr. ;and Mrs, Lester Prater of Lawrenceville were Sunduy guests of Mr. and Mrr. T. V-Cantrell The R.abun County Mouu taiueer Festival will be held in Clayton June 18, 19 and so One of Sears’ big trucks was here Monday. You’ll probably see them ofteu. Miss Mary Lou ,Sutton advises we had 1 ;64 inches of rainfall on Tune 7 Opera! od Uemioi IV )FHTNo( — ;Radio mao Seaman Eiiael li. Tbnmae, USN.Jeon of Mr. and M,e- Jeeae A. Tboinat, R2, Cleveland, lia., ie serving aboard the destroyer U88 Hawkins, an 'olteruate re covery ship for NASA's Project Gemin OT.4 orbital miaaiun, Hia *auip was a unit of Navy Taek Force 140, the primary recovery organization (or ^tbs manned tour day, 1.7 million mile space ,niieeiun Mre Cbloieoa Pbiilipa, Mr« I A. L' jlauuey, Sr., aud Miee Minnie , lrviu spent tbe weekeu in Atlauta Everybody roads this Newspaper. Dm Coorlcb CLAVILAND, GA, JUNE II 1965 ire Your Affairs Id Order? Are your aff Ira in ordertrhe f Changing Times, offers ths check Del, And note that someone know where each document may found. It you hove e will, ethers is it? fety deposit box, where is it and a here’s the key? Check These Will Stocks Birtb Certificate Marriage Certificate banal Instructions Insurance Bonds Real Fstats Deeds Bank Books Income Tax Returns Social Security Card List of Relatival Mrs. Pearl Warwick Passes Funetai aervics* 'or Mrs. Pearl Hood Warwick, 77, Demotes!, M„ was held Tuesday from tbe Cleveland Metbodia Church. Revs. Frank Barfield and Cbas Masters will officiate with interment v tbe Idsvelaod cemetery, Sbe died Sunday at ihe .home of her daughter of a heart attack. She ie survived by ,oue daughter, Mrs Anuiu Kose^Smilb, Deuioreet, Rls one son, dartuce Warwick, oue foaler sou W illiain B. tiutton,('levetaud; oue broth¬ er, Cleveland; 12 grandchildren end 21 pvat grandchildren John Allison Passes Funeral services for John Wiley Alli¬ son, 60, Atlanta, were conducted Satur¬ day front the Chatlsboocbea Baptist ■ Iburch, Interment was in the cbuicb cemet ry. He died in an Atlanta hospital of a beart attack. He was a native of White <,nunty Peuexcolz, Fie., (FHINC) May 14— Aviation Macbioet'e Male Airmen Wayn* L. Crane, U8N, eon of Mr, and lire Bar. nett Crane of .ilevelenii, Ha,, reported (or duty. May 10 at the U S.Navai Ait Station’ Pensacola Fla. «:re, Robert Bruce of Allan a sjieoi several d iye recently with bar mother, Mrs J. B. R, Barrett, and sister, Mrs, Eula Brookehiic, Mr. aud Mta. Joe Turk of Calhoun, Mia' William Turx, Asheville, aud Mre, Wal¬ ler Luma ie i. Nao.iochse^ visit d Mr and Mia, J H. Tf-ltord Tuesday Eke iiomecoa iug at Blue Creek Sunday was well attended Mr, and Mrs. Dean Head and son, Wee Icy, visited Mrs. B. G Allison over tbe weeaeud. She returned with them (or a vieit, Mr, sud Mre. H, A. Allison attended the Moore reunion Bumiay Mrs. Mona Strickland aud her have takan ao dpartmjot iu Gainesville. Mr. and die. Jerry Dixon the birth of a daughter at Hall County Hospital Juue 5 She is the former Pardue! 4 >ut of tbe 16 Cum Lauda graduates of Piedmont College were from White County, They are; Richard Alien Anderson, Charles Edward Black, Diane T. Black and Mrs, Eunice Hulsey end Glenda’Brooke BA da ree Gemini Pair Will Get $2.25/Hour In Orbit CAPE KENNEDY, June 3 (UPI) —U.S. Astronauts James A. Mc Divitt and Edward H. White each will earn $2.25 an hour — or $3.38 an orbit — if their Gemini 4 flight runs its scheduled four days in space. When they return home, the U. S. Government will write them a check for $220 apiece — their flight pay for one month. To collect flight money, each must fly at least four hours a month and IQQ hours per year. The Gemini 4 voyage will run nearly 98 hours, if all goes as scheduled, Actually, the pay scale for as¬ tronauts is hardly as bad as this might indicate. As Air Force Ma¬ jors, McDivitt and White make $1,120.33 per month—or $13,443. 96 each per year. In addition, they make $16,500 each every year for selling the rights to their life stories to an encyclopedia company. This adds up to an annual in¬ come of $29,943.96 — or enough to make the bouse payments and buy the other necessities of life around Houston, their home, 1891 He Jmt r What's Going On In Your White County Schools By Telford Hulsey, Superintendent WHITE COUNTY'EMPLOYS 54 YOUTH CORPS Thirty-two boys and 22 girls are now working to make White County a better place to live. These job opportunities are made possible by the Federal Govern¬ ment and we think they will be an alsset to the County. GEORGIA'S GROWING AVA Journal, May issue, quotes Business Week (March 27) as re porting that Georgia had the big¬ gest precentage increase in per¬ sonal income of workers of any state in the union. This was an increase of 15.2% from January, 1864 to January, 1965. Much of this is due our expanded voea tional education program. THIS SCHOOL YEAR ends on an optimistic note: more high school graduates than ever before in our history: 51,145. They rep¬ resent an investment of $136,549,- 478.25 in public tax funds, or $2,- 669.85 per graduate. When they started to school 12 years ago, our per pupil expenditure was $157. The year they graduate, it is over $300. The fact that so many are graduating is, in large measure, a tribute to the improvement of our schools and better holding power. New Discrimination Comes Under Fire The Editors: A new form of dis¬ crimination has crept into our so¬ ciety; appallingly enough it is un¬ challenged, largely unnoticed. I speak not of a minority race, faith, etc., but for a seemingly minority of young adults common¬ ly bound together as the non¬ college graduate . . . I do not criticize the importan¬ ce nor do I deny the encourage¬ ment for all young people to en¬ deavor to obtain a college educa¬ tion. However, there are many who see it beyond their power to spend four years of their time in college . . . Why must they necessarily be victims of discrimi¬ nation? ... Of course, the employer is not wholly at fault by demanding a college graduate; not necessari¬ ly as a prerequisite for employ¬ ment, but as a qualification just as age, sex, etc. His demands re¬ sult from the knowledge that he can, in fact, obtain a college grad¬ uate as a prospective employe. Then, why should he take less? Can an employer honestly con¬ clude that any and all college graduates are of higher caliber than non-college graduates; that they are more qualified? Of course not. But the non-college graduate is seldom given a chance to qualify . . . Perhaps I should advocate the formation of a NAANCG (National Association for the Advancement of the Non-College Graduate). Surely we can no longer continue to devalue the nature of such discriminating practice. ELDMDGE HOLLAND. Atlanta. — Atlanta Journal. BARN BURNING!' Not so long ago, this was a serious cry. It meant that you and yours would starve. Buq not here in White County. Friends and neighbors, even those of you who were at odds with, would work 1 togeth er and soon a new barn, animals and all, would appear like magic. Today, the cry of BARN BURNING1 is heard o again. This time if belongs to the 'small - busines man. Too much of your trade Is leaving th c County. Your father and grandfather cared. ■ Why don ou y brought public service by th fc This uotice to you as a OLD. I SAUTEE STORE^ Loyalty and Oaths Ever since the National Defense Education Act was instituted we have been concerned about its requirements that students receiv¬ ing governmental loans under the! act We must believe take a loyalty oath. | that a citizen should be considered loyal unless proven' otherwise, even as, under Ameri-I can criminal law, he is considered innocent until proven guilty. We did not like the implication of the education act that one pagticular group — students _^ u are prone to disloyalty and must ; swear that they are not. »» In ad dition we felt such oaths were “deceptively futile” in that the real subversive would have no compunction In 1959 in expressed signing them. \ we the hope that Congress follow the lead of President Eisenhower and a num- , her of respected colleges and uni-1 1 versities in favoring repeal of what was then an oath compris¬ ing two points. It was not until 1962 that the first point, the non Communist disclaimer, was re¬ pealed. Thirty-two institutions of learning had stayed out of the loan program on account of this particular requirement. Now the House Education and Labor Committee has approved elimination of the second point, a requirement for an affirmative oath of allegiance to the United States. One might wonder why a loyal citizen could possibly object to affirming his loyalty when apply¬ ing for a loan from his govern¬ ment. Yet the requirement still implies a doubt about the loyalty of students as a group. Many edu¬ cators deplore it. Because of it, a few colleges still refuse to join the loan program. Not to diminish loyalty, but to enhance it, we hope that Con¬ gress as a whole will go along with the committee and eliminate the remaining loyalty oath. By assuming rather than doubting the loyalty of its young ,people the United States can only affirm its worthiness of that loyalty. This is a time when many of the most intellectually vigorous young Americans are questioning what they see as American gov¬ ernmental attitudes in the light of American ideals. The intangible benefits of a repeal of the loyalty oath would surely outweigh any .possibility of thus giving tangible aid to the disloyal. —Editorial in Chrisitan Science Monitor. Politics On Parade By Sid Williams The distinguished Mr. Roy V. Harris, of Augusta, has written a blistering letter to Dean Lindsey Cowen, of the University of Geor¬ gia, who had the gall to state on Law Day in Athens that a man has a right to violate any law he considers unjust (Martin Lucifer King’s opinion). Dean Cowen will be the subject pf much discussion at the next meeting of the Board of Regents. [M UNTO CIA l