Cleveland courier. (Cleveland, White County, Ga.) 1896-1975, June 25, 1965, Image 1

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t i & 11 ^ If V .vry' COURIER ; r*/ COVERS THE MOUNTAINS LIKE MOONSHINE Divoto'd te Ikt Agricultural. Commercial and Indnitrlal Intertill at White County VOl LAV 1111 Nm. 37 * 1‘HE CLEVELAND COURIER. PLATFORM For White County and Cleveland; A Cleaner and More Beautiful City AH Highways Graded and Paved To Make White County the | Mecca for Tourists Development of Winter Sports in Mountain Area Truett-Mc^oDLell Granted $400,000 lo Build 2 Domituroes Congressman Phil M. Landrum wired i'he Courier Tuesday that he had just h, en notified that the Community facilities Adminis tration has approved a $400,000 college housing loan for Truett McConnell College to build two donatories to house I28 students County CouMUiom Name Hospital Authority The County Commissioners named a seven member committee June 17 Lo study the county needs for building a new hospital in White County—on the West¬ moreland Sisters lands at the site of the lute lep Freeman home. The committee will make a survey and report to the Com missione, s. Tha Westmoreland sisters have offered to #ive AppalochtalBillwill the site for ^.hos¬ pital air* the furnish 80 per cent of the funds, So, with the land being given the county should not be asked to put any money. The committee is: L. R Cooper, >V.R. Jenkins, Jimmy VVilki: s. Dr. Don Fahrbach, Jack Holcomb, Mrs, C. C. Blalock aud Tom Mauney. Hear that a BIG food store and a hardware aud furniture store are planning to locate in or near Cleveland before Christmas Old Fanner's Almanac telle from June 25 to 3O: Wet’s debt repaid in full we bet. A cool droll II The Weather Bureau’s weather outlook from Mid-June to Mid July lor our aiea: Temperature, below normal. Precipitation,be low normal. We hear that Labor Union or¬ ganizers plan to move into White County before Christmas. The Courier should go into every home in White County The Punlic Works aud Economic Development bill is now being pushed in the House by Presipent Johnson The Poverty Program needs to be something that will be worth* white and noticed 111 the future. How about flowers planted in the grass strips of out leading high* way ? Walter G. Foster of Atlantt bad.hiffb praise for the flowers 111 the islands on the public square white ire was here .Saturday. Student Accused of Sex Attacks NEW YORK, (UiPI) — A 19 year-old Negro college student faced a hearing Monday in Bronx Criminal Court on charges he staged a string of knife-point sex attacks on young white girls. He was ordered held in $50,000 bail at an arraignment Saturday on charges of felonious assault, rape, sodomy and weapons law violations. knife He was arrested with a similar to that used by tbe at¬ tacker in the earlier cases, ac¬ cording to police. NO MORE? The Cmiier would greatly ALL the Job Printing from every ness in White Count /. Why can’t we get at least a smell amount of money to start Winter Sports before enow fa)|f My girl friend Bessie; says, “It’s be¬ ginning to look like those who believe the world owes them a living are going to win.”—Mary Singleton in 8uap Shots Alarm clock: A small mechanical de¬ vice to wake people who have no cbildt Egotist: An impossible person who thinks almost as tuneb of himself as yon do of yourself They say Methuselah lived 1,000 lye ire, but be didn’t have to ait up al| sight figuring bis income taxes “What would you any to a girl who kissed every man she met? *# •‘Pleased to meet yon. »* Coed: “Doctor, will mv scar show? IJ Doctor: “1 dnnno, I haven’t Been tbe spring styles yet. t» • * I don’t know anything about Darwin* son, your mother made a monkey * out of me. »» • Am 1 the first girl that you ever kissed ?” * ‘Indeed net, it takes hours of diligent practice to be ae good as Kiser as I am. M ltev. Asa Dorsey tnuses wisdom is knowing v»ben to spaas vour mind an wb, n to in nd your spe. cb While County needs llo secure juet a lot of Appalacbi road funds Applications must be made in the Governor's cilice. I’he quicker »hee ,; applications are acted on Ute sooner ws’ll be getting some road work President Johnson’s attendance of Judge 1 Robei I L, Russell’s funeral at Winder June 16 detinatcly proved bis great love for bis dear friend, Senator Richard ii. Russell. We, as Americans, should consider de¬ voting at least a part of our epare time to iu proving our cultuial education, by reading worthwhile books, or worthwhile literature, ia an effort to increase appre¬ ciation of tbe bettei things of life. Tbe strength of our country in the years past mj been the average Christian home of America, and the strong family concepts and ideals which made us a gieat people, emphasis t hese arty^thrralenea cheap by today's cheap over on sex, novels, pictures and television programs, aud the wash.oat moral fiber which is con¬ tinually stieseed to tbe children of tbi* country, Tbe Wai! Street Journal of June 18 tells that the Communists plan to take over thi¬ ll 8 . by 1975 , Also that they plan a Negro Republic will be established in tbe Southeastern U £ Tbe annual 5th of July cele¬ bration at Demorest will be held this year on July 5th. A great political figure will speak at 4 p, m. Street dance at 7 p’m. You are invited. Miss Mary Lou Sutton advises we have had 4 81 inches of rain¬ fall from June l to June 24 Mrs. J. F. Ivie, Mike and Pam of Atlanta visited parents, Editor and Mrs, Jas. P. Davidson, last week. Draperies were installed in the court house last week. Why Newspaper Advertising? One of the countless reasons why the response to newspaper advertising is so outstanding is that women expect to see adver¬ tising in their hometown news¬ paper — The Cleveland Courier. This special advantage of The Courier, which we have pointed out so often, is now buttressed by a research project which has concluded: “getting a woman to see an advertisement is not enough —A woman pays attention to ad¬ vertisements when they’re where she expects to see them —(in The Cleveland Courier—) otherwise she is likely to ignore them.” V LETTERHEADS ENVELOPES Local News Send ua the NEWS ao that it will appear in The Courier. We will np piecite pour Telephone or write The Courier the NEWS. Why hasn’t White County ap¬ plied for the food stamp program? Hall, Rabun and Stephens has it functioning Japanese beetles are swarming like liata and are eating up the leaves ju a number of trees. Father FranK Ruff spoke to the Winder Kiwanis June 17- He was accompanied by Carey High smith, Bobby Thomas, Harold Burnett and Bill Hodson Heavy crushed stone mixed ted c’ay started to be put down Monday on the Senator Riohard B, Russell Scenic Highway. Mr. Lewis Reaves, president of The Fast National Bank of Cor¬ nelia tells he appreciates the bauking business from White County and is out to get more. Mr. and Mrs. Waiter G. Foster and daughters of Atlanta are at their cottage in the Paradise Val¬ ley area. Crage McDonald, son of Mr. ana Mrs. Clove McDonald under¬ went an appectomp at Hall Coun¬ ty Hospital on the night June 18. Hailey Brady tells we had 48 degrees on June 19 A. M, Business that normally would normally go to the Cleveland merchants is now going to other cities will continue to go if the merchants don’t advertise m The Courier. Sears in Gainesville is getting the furniture and appli¬ ance business and the grocery Dusiuess is going soother towns The Courier’s advertising is advertising picking up veiy fast. Most ab of it is out of town busi¬ nesses. The Courier has made no solicitations but these tirms reali¬ ze the great pulling power of 1 he Courier. If it don’t pay to ad¬ vertise in The Courier, then why do tbeydo it? The First Natioual Bank of Cornelia has another^ Ad in The Courier this week Mr. Reeves wants you to know know that h e appreciates your business and from what we hear he is getting more and more each week. Be sure and read theHabersham Savings ani Loan Assn. ad|in this issue, Some people believe that i) pays to advertise in The Courier. Mrs. Nina Brown andMrs. Jean B. Skelton, public welfare work¬ er of White County, will attend the workship for Social Workers in Athens June ,28-30 Miss Susan Byrd of Renolds is visiting her grandmothei, Mrs ,T. J; McDonald, Sr. The Crurier is happy that John Pennington has been named City Editor of Tbe Atlanta Journal. John’s got it. We hepe bis wife makes the best one since Harllee Branch, Sr. We hear that Father Frances Ruff is tbe “brums” for planting the flowers in the islands on the svuore. Well, the other preach¬ ers must come up with a good one to beat that NEWSPAPER ADVERTISING AT YOUR SERVICE TO-HELP YOU SI n,uer Usage Insulating glass now is being used by many builders iu all windows of homes, Instead ot only in large pio> tore windows where it was first ha troduced la house construction. CLEVELAND, GA* JUNE 2S 1965 a S3 V W " i l Burton J. Bell bnebeen appointed Ex, Sec’y. for the Chp ishoochee River Basin Development Commission and is uow on tbe job, Mr. Bell has been to Cleveland on a onmber of occasions. If you want to see the Cbattaboocl e River .ully devi loped then write or res Mr. Bell at Room 5 O 2 I Carnegie Way. N W,, Atlanta' With the consent of the officials of Mossy Creek Campground the families ot Marvin S. I) >reey„ Sr. of Atlauta and Va 1 had planned to celebrate the 50tb wedding anniversary of Mr, andMrs.MarvinSpence Dorsey on June 20th which was perform¬ ed by tne late Rev. R, fOwer June 20> 1215, and to alao attend the Dorsey ’..Re union July 11 at Mossy Creek camp ground, but due to critical illness it will not be possible. Mrs, J, tf. Brackins of Buckiot Beach, Va., daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Dorsey, Sr.. Atlanta, recedly undeiwen' eorgory for the removal of a very large hernia of the lower stomach, but is now recovering nicely, Jraudall Autry is Working in Allan a with his brother Ray Neal Virgil Autry spent ine w ekend with parents* Mr. and Mrs Loy Autry Mr and Mig.ltlto Mauney visits 1 heis is cently. l'h y are moving fo 11 f Km x ville Stack to Florence, Ala. , Mr. and Mrs Bill Underwood o Jacksonville, Fla ; Mr, and Mrs, Abner Underwood and mi. aud Mrs. Rtchaid Blacb of Atlanta visited pareateff»(rol, and Mrs. Thos. F, Underwood Mr, and Mrs, church of Atlsnta vi-itrd Mr. and Mrs, RaymonJ Barrett Sunday Miss Mary Sanders, Athens, ami Miss Mary Comber, Pentwld, Ga,, visited ibe Teltorda Sunday. Miss Nell and Chariie Skelton, Come lia visited relatives and friends hers'jat Mr and Mrs, . hariie Buff of Madison the Telford Monday C, E Barrett, Jr. olFloidia was hire Keenetn Keen is on a two weeW^vac.. • Tbs County has been given a conirac place base oo the -Bean Cieek road. the road from the Jot! Evans home tbe new li.9 has bun placed on Ibe system anti a contract foi trading Clyde Dixon, Savings Bonde Cba'rman Wuite Gonnty, asks all holders of K H Bonds to talk with him befare re tbe proceeds Mr, and Mre./i'hos I’urrer announce the a so , Mies Nahcy Edwards visited here Sun Mr.. T, V Cantrell is ill at tbebonie of daughter, Mrs. Joe Telfortl iu Gainer mi. ud Mrs, Allen Mauney Mauney Jr, children aio visiting mi. and Mr/, Hail) Mauucy in Columuiu, 8. C, South Africa Boom Due for Slowdown JOHANNESBURG, June 10 (UPD —The greatest economic boom in South Africa’s history may have outrun itself. The nation’s econo¬ mists are warning South Africans to prepare for hard times ahead. But there are warning signs that the economy may not continue at the same rate. The boom that has transformed South Africa from an economic invalid to the most pros¬ perous African country in the past five year is creating some of the trouble by its sheer momentum. South Africa’s greatest asset is her gold mines. Thus bad inflation could put South Africa’s golden goose out of business. Everybody reads this Newspaper. The Cleveland Courier Established 1891 Denton Receives State Jaycee Award Reginald Denton, member of the Downtown Atlanta Junior Cham¬ ber of Commerce, has received the State Jaycee “Key Man Award” in recognition of outstanding service rendered as Chairman of the 1965 Georgia Governmental Affairs Con¬ ference. Effective June 14, Mr. Denton becomes chairman of the International Relations Committee Georgia Junior Chamber of Com¬ merce for 1965-66. Mr. Denton is a graduate of Cleveland High School and Georgia State College and is the son of Mr. and Mrs. John Denton of Cleve¬ land. What's Going On In Your White County Schools By Telford Hulsey, Superintendent 4,000 HOURS OF $5,000 EARNED BY YOUTH CORPS The boys and girls are doing a fine job for the county. We still need about six more boys to work. WANTED — TEACHER AIDES FOR PROJECT HEADSTART July 4 — August 13, 1965 Five teacher aides needed for Cleveland Center. One teacher aide needed for Na coochee Center. One teacher aide needed for White Creek Center. Only adults considered — Pay $1.25 per hour. Application forms at School Superintendent's Office. On Patman And Economy The Editors: In his statement of June 10, Rep. Wright Patman insinuated that W. M. Martin, Jr., Federal Reserve chairman, has yel¬ led fire in a crowded theater. If any one man has the power to rattle this nation’s economy by voicing his convictions it’s about time something down to earth be done about it. What Rep. Patman and many others are trying to conceal is that our economy is like an old tottering pier that needs shoring up where an occasional sag ap¬ pears. Trouble is, though, when it starts sagging in several places we must build a new pier and the only timber we have is what we can salvage from the falling one. J. R. EUBANKS. Decatur. — Atlanta Journal. Tourists In Florida TALLAHASSEE, June 19 (AP)— A total of 14.4 million tourists spent $2.5 billion dollars in Flori¬ da last year, an increase of $73.9 milion left behind by 14.2 million visitors to the state in 1963. Highways: Safe, Clean, Attractive Every American has a vital stake in highway safety. This newspaper has in the past called upon De¬ troit industrialists to equip their new cars with specified safety and antismog devices. Now Washington may impel De¬ troit to do what it has thus far resisted. The Senate Finance Com¬ mittee has adopted a proposal by Sen. Abraham A. Ribicoff (D) of Connecticut that would require manufacturers to install safety and exhaust control devices or pay a 4 per cent excise tax on new cars. If pressure can be brought to guar¬ antee that such a tax would come out of profits and not out of car buyers’ pockets, the measure should be effective. Auto lobbyists are said to have been strenuously opposed, and are expected to try to torpedo the Ribicoff amendment. Strong citi¬ zen backing for the Ribicoff pro¬ posal should do much to help Con¬ gress stand firmly behind it. The Senate Finance Committee acted a second time in the public interest by adopting an amend ment by Sen. Paul H. Douglas (D) of Illinois which would retain a 1 per cent federal excise tax on passenger cars. Revenue from this tax would be used to clean up automobile junk yards along the nation’s highways. Again, the man ufacturers were reportedly op pqsed. iLL. for You » The Court's // Penumbra ii The Supreme Court has ende, its term with a flurry of decisions on behalf of individual rights. Jus¬ tices differed on constitutional points, even sometimes within the majorities. But the decisions clear¬ ly confirmed this court’s tendency to interpret the Constitution in a way to properly give the individ¬ ual the benefit of any doubt. Thus the justices agreed that the Constitution does not specific¬ ally deal with the right of privacy in marriage. But the majority in¬ voked this right in ruling against a 19th century Connecticut law pro¬ hibiting the use of birth control de¬ vices. In the court’s opinion the First Amendment has a M penumbra tt where “privacy is protected from governmental intrusion.” And it found a new application of the Nin¬ th Amendment providing that “the enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be con¬ strued to deny or disparage others retained by the people. » This is one point where the two dissenting justices, Mr. Black and Mr. Stewart, parted company with the majority, though they equally deplored the Connecticut law. They felt this interpretation of the Nin¬ th Amendment was ‘'to turn somer¬ saults with history.” They assert¬ ed the amendment was passed not to broaden the powers of the court but to limit the powers of the fed¬ eral government in relatiod to the people and the states. By the mi¬ nority’s reasoning, the repeal of the law should have been left to the people’s elected representatives in Connecticut. Surely the court must not begirt to use the Ninth Amendment a* an excuse to cut down any state law it considers misguided. The people of the states must retain their right to be wrong. But the majority opinion seemed sensitive to the limitations and responsibili¬ ties of the court in this regard. It wisely drew distinction between the general run of laws and those dealing with the personal right of privacy in marriage: u We do not sit as a superlegis¬ lature to determine the wisdom, need, and propriety of laws that touch economic problems, business affairs, or social conditions. This (Connecticut) law, however, oper¬ ates directly on an intimate rela¬ tion of husband and wife and their physician’s role in one aspect of that relation.” The complexity of interpreting the Constitution in regard to to¬ day’s problems of individual rights was suggested by the five-to-four decisions in two other cases. Should the individual be pun¬ ished for his political beliefs? The court seemed to think not. It struck down as a “bill of attain¬ der” a federal law making it a crime for a Communist to be a labor-union official. Should the individual be protec¬ ted from the possible unfairness resulting from television coverage of criminal trials? Yes, again. The court reversed Billie Sol Estes’s state swindling conviction on the grounds that it was televised de¬ spite his objection. This is a case where a broad interpretation of freedom of the press might come in conflict with a broad interpretation of the rights of the individual. At this stage in the development of television, however, its impact on a criminal trial seems more likely to hamper justice than to foster it So the Supreme Court goes off for the summer, with its "penum¬ bra” glowing. —'Editorial in Christian Science Monitor. 'L'lMTOBIAl It would be sad If private In¬ dustry had to be goaded by gov erament into adopting measures designed to promote the safety of the public, Considering tbe vast sums spent by industry to create a favorable public image, we feel certain that manufacturers would not wish to jeopardize public confidence by J I disregarding public health, safety and good taste, -Editorial in Christian Science Monitor. _t_J -* k __b