Cleveland courier. (Cleveland, White County, Ga.) 1896-1975, July 30, 1965, Image 1

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{ * / /? IvUdA-'i x \ - - ,< i i r-'f i COURIER COVERS THE MOUNTAINS LIKE MOONSHINE Devoted Jt§ tkt Agricultural , Commercial and Industrial Interests of White County V()l LXV1UI 41 A ---- THE CLEVELAND COURIER. PLATFORM For White County and Cleveland: 1*" rfltt ■■ "or . A Cleaner and More Beautiful City All Highways Graded Paved To Make White County the Mecca for Tourists Development ;of Winter Sports in Mountain Area Medicare Passes The Senate-House congrees agreed on ihe Medicare bill July 21 and the filial vote Wed, of this week makes it into law Every person 05 or over is eli¬ gible to receive hospitalization and a pin to pay doctors’ bills. , The baste plan pays foi 90 days of hospitalization daring each each spell of illness and up to 100 home health visits after hospita lizatiou. The supplemental plan in ad¬ dition hospitalization doctors’ bills in the home, not included in the basic plan, including diagnos* t c, N-iuy and laboratory services outside the hospital, radium thcrap) , ambulance services,reu tal of noil lungs, and oxygen tents, easts, braces , etc. How ever, )uu would pay 13 P er month m premiums. it would be $6 for a couple, la addition,you you would pay a $50 utinuai de dnetabk- on the total of hills covered by the plan and you would pay 20 per cent of the total charges above the $50 Both the basic and supplemen¬ tal plans will begin 1, I9 o 6 After the filial passage of the bill mote concrete information will be obtainable. However, you are advised to conduit your Social becuiity representative who will be at the court house Repoits are that farmers will be greatly beuefitted Mayor S. W. Reynold To Head Small Busieess Loans Mayor W. Reynolds has accepted to head Small Business Loans for White Conty uuder the Economic Act of I 964 A screening committe shall be named, comprising two county representatives and a board ‘t directors of six persous Deserving businesses and in dividnals can get up 1 $ 25,000 lol exponsiju or starting new busi ness up to $25,oOo for expansion or starting new bugiuess. Commander Nash _ Awarded Certificate i Of Commendation \ Commander Certificate Ernest H. of Nash Commen¬ was 1 awarded a Adminis dation by the Veterans tration in appreeiatiom for out¬ standing service to Georgia veter¬ ans and their families, and for whole-hearted cooperation with the l, United States Veterans Adminis ’ tration. k The Certificate of Commendation I was presented by W. A. Tate, [manager of Veterans Administra- 1 tion, Regional Office, Atlanta. I Commander Nash has served as ■ local manager with the local Veter lans ivisor, Service Office and Area of Super- Vet¬ erans Georgia Department Service for several years. iHe supervises 13 Veterans Service loffices serving 26 North iGeorgia counties. Wider Usage yroml atin g glass now is being by many builders in all windows homes, instead of only in large Lture windows where it was first 1 taoduced in house coostaru oti p a. My girl friend Bessie, eaye, •‘The average girl would rather have beauty Iban brains,|b cause Ibe average mna see better than be can mink. »» —Mery Singleton in Soap Shots He that diligently seekelh good pro cueeth favors! but be that eeeketn mis. chisf, it ahall come unto him.— Proverbs il:27 Charlie Malooe mules why don’t tba Department of Internal Revenue offer as oai money back it we’ve got satisfied? Well, the Old Farmer’s Almanac has no good news for the firt four days of August. In fact, their prediction for August loams everything but ideal Wonder if our August Fellows are pre¬ pared to tell, us abrut snows this winthr? Frank Reid Is already advising to iooh tor a lot of snow and several big oues Can the ocean qe desalted so New York cau have ample water at all times? Dastardly crimes are committed in Waehiugiou Daily. 4 Negroes got a wife G a Stale Dept official July 21 in day¬ time and All raped he This oadeal was for over two hours. Congress ank tbs President should see that a lady C .n be FREE in Washington aud Atlanta We were tola July 22 that the Hears Haicesville Store has had more Horn White County than from Gainesville and Hall JouutA Then you people should both the Manager and the Advertising Manager tie should advei .ise in The Conner Ellis small mid a IV audience July •H that it was his lull intention io n,n toa Governor in Sept. 1966 If Elite is able to make a vigorous campaign aud eoojgh money flows his way then vne’ii make it HUT for someouu If your federal •rovernmeDt is to exist tuen it must inOT cunimaally try to lit ‘eat evjrj States ttigUls measure, His. ‘oria iB tells tells us that a Democratic loriu of Government, Ouly exists around 200 yenre. Tos way we are rnovieg re quires a lot of taougbt % Richard Davidson muses anybony who thiuks the sky is the limit has uo imagi nation. J, L. -IIX telle 1 be best way to enjoy a ueaulitul garden is to live uext door to one, aud cultivate your ueighbor Millard Holcomb eaiue Uy p reclaims Democratic goveruiueui is uot advanced by yielding to political expediencies, Tba 1 fellow has a dead lull of seuse Approximately 8,000 people iu the U.b were murderea iu 1004, Why can't OUt government cjuUoI crime? Crime in Washington is appahag! Rape ot de cent women iu Washington is aiarmiugi A woman cao't walk the streets aiuc in iu daylight without Ueiag at lacked and urutally raped by Negroes. 11 Fiesident JohDaou wauls crime to be reduced tktu let Uim leil Congress How much do out-of-Iowa printers pay Clev«l*ud and Wbile County iu tuxes? Well, The Courier must pay Business as well as teal estate lax. The Courier’s advertising rate is published. We do not deviate Some uewspapers give several rates, The Courier has ONLY one rate * We hear that sourwood honey is the finest Tom Cantrell has e ret seen. You’ll save a lot of money if you will make every effort to cau everything you possibly cau. Also uext year may not be so favorable gardens and money could be hard to secure So work hard They tell that 1-85 wiil be opened---as far north as Braselton. That will mean much tt the people coming to themoun tains. Not Sexy; They Lose Job SEATTLE, July 16 (AP) — M When we were dismissed we were told that we were too old, that we were not exciting, and that we were not sexy enough, that we didn’t have it distributed in the right places,” That, Jean Strzelecki, 35, told the State Board Against Discrimi¬ nation Thursday, is why she and Darlene Smith, 32, were dismissed from their jobs as cocktail wait¬ resses. The board postponed its decis ion. an* tlm Ski . Don’t break the chain. ADVERTISEl Local News Send os the NEWS ao that it will appear in The Courier. Wa will ap precite your co o peration. Telephone or write The Courier the NEWS. Watch the busmens people start to Advertise more in The Courier if they want business, then they cau get more by regular advertis¬ ing in The Courier, Trade with the merchants that advertise in The Courier regularly The eggplant Mrs- H.HDavid son just can’t be surpassed We know Gov. Sanders and all his crew at the capital are spending this week in Miunineasota at the Nat’l Governor’s Conference Hon. Carlton Colwell of Blairs ville, the new Representative for Umon aud Lumkpiu counties, cer¬ tainly showed his iufl uence in getting the Appalachia High¬ way placed fully and directly through his district. He may be a mau to watch? Certainly a man of ACTION and that is what the people seek Frank Wells, gifted Atlanta Constitution writer aud Owen Davis, photographer, were here Tuesday. A large crowd attended the birthday dinner Sundday for Mrs. Allen, 9z, Santee of Alonzo Allen Mr. and Mrs. Carey Highsmith bis mother of Clermont ana Mrs. J. H. Telford went to Stone Mt. Tuesday The Ga. Mountain Fair, Hia wassee, will be held from August 9 to 14 Try to go to some of the many events The butterflies aruf makingtheir appearance mighty early this yeai August 1 will be homecoming day at the First Baptist Churchof Cleveland, Summer revival will begin on that day, Rev. Charles Droke of Guinesville will do the preaching. Eveiyoue is invited to attend Dog Days started Wednesday July 28. Well it rained, so we can expect the next 40 days to be rather damp I he Dyer Reunion will be held at Old Liberty Church, Union County, August 1. Friends and relatives are limited Antioch Church will hold a re vival from Aug. 1-7 You are invited Col. and Mrs. Jack Davidson and childreu of Jefferson spent the weekend with parents, Mr. and Mrs, H. H. Davidson Barry Blalock Is improving and hopes to return home iu a fewday Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Russell at tended the Shuler reuniou iu At lanta recently Mrs. W. N. Noell and Lynn visieed Mr. and Mrs. Lester Pur¬ cell in Atlauta last week. Mr. ahd Mis. Bobby Russell of Augusta visited E. L. Russell last week Miss Mary Luu Button advisee we had 5 : 24 iucD «3 of rain io July tol’linieday H. e Marvin Aliieou of Lawreucevillr and Mies Shell Kootell jf Atlauta visited Mi-a, Grace Rusaell laet week Mr, and Mrs. Lamar Jobneon aud child* r< n vac tinned in St Augustine, Fla., 'set week Mr end Mre. H, A. Ailieon aud child, ren epent several d»y» at Myrtle Beach, S C .. recently Mr, and Mrs. Jus. P. Davidson tod Sandra of Doiavilie are vacationing along the Bine Ridge Parkway. Joe Glass, mi s Ola Catby and D N, Glass oj Atlanta were here Wednesday 1 he infant sod of ur. and Mis. Dovid J. Dockery, City wee buried Thursday £AI XOliR SUBSCRIPTION CLEVELAND, GA* .. . f*" 1 ■ si i Mrs.JFloyd} J. McDougald of Cleveland, Ga., announces the en gagemeut of her daughter,Shirley to John Gordon McKeuney, Jr., sou of Mr. aud Mis. John Gordon McKeuney, Sr , of Austell, Ga The bride elect is the ^daughter of the late Mr. McDougald of Cleve¬ land, Ga. She graduated from White County High School and is presently employed by the South era Regional Educational Board in Attauta The bridegroom is a graduate of South Cobb High School and Abraham Baldwin Agriculture College, ana attend¬ ed the University of Georgia. He is presutly employed by Southern Bell. The wedding will be in the early fall at the First Baptist Church iu Austell NOTICE The Key Club will sponsor a Dance at the High School Cafe tonun. tonight July 3 U from 8:00 to 11 : 00 . Abner Underwood Fusses Abner Underwoid, ion of C.il, and Mis Thos. F, Underwood,*.iiy, died in Atlan¬ ta July 21 from cancer of trie brain. He held a very responsible position with the Trust Uo. of Ga, He had lived in AUauia for a bomber of yenre, Funei al net-vices were held July 18 Irom East Lake M-Hhodist Church, Atlan¬ ta, aud inter uent was hr Kcethaveii Dtcalm. He was a steward iu his church He ie survived by his wife, two sons Abner, Jr., aud Tommy, Dec# ur; patents Ool and Mrs. 1’lioe, F Underwood, Jity; sister,,adra, Richard Black, Allant,ijaud a brother, liill Underwood, Jacksonville Fla Mrs. Ella Bell Jacl-son, ttharou and Myra Jet»a FpeuVbeveml day* laet week with Di. and Tdna. Jo« H, Miller in MctmphiM They returned via Marietta Cleveland hud oue of its worst electrical storms Sunday after¬ noon. Lightning killed threeeows of H. T. Crumley’s. A number of appliances were damaged, The storm lasted for about 2 hours aud w.is aim st county wide FOR SALE PAY REPAIR COST ONLY ATLAS Rebuilt Vacuum Claenei $l8 79. Write Credit Manager, c-o Cleveland Courier, or phone Credit Manager, Collect 874-5458 / si J wm r J11 fit> FOR FINE PRINTING he Courier. SUBSCRIBE FOB TBPS nmnaimi JULY 30 1965 What's Going On In Your White County Schools By Telford Hulsey, Superintendent PEOPLE TO HELP YOU PLAN — Governor Sanders and Budget Officer Wilson Wilkes have ap¬ proved an amendment to our bud¬ get to make it possible for us to employ eight additional people to work with you in planning pro¬ grams to use the new federal funds. We expect three of these to work at the state level, and five in the field. This is one person for each two Congression¬ al districts. The appropriation bill for the new money (to finance the Johnson Bill) is scheduled to pass Congress in July. Guidelines should come to ms in August. If we wait until federal are available to employ for planning purposes, it be November or December before we could get these new programs started. I want us to work plans together for the use of new funds, well in advance so can start in September. This the reason for employing these eight new people. These people will be paid with the federal money when it becomes available. PROUD OF GEORGIA EDUCATION — In a letter to the editor of the Atlanta Constitution, 5th District Board Member David F, Rice write: “Members of the State Board of Education who recently attended the meeting of the Na¬ tional Association of State Boards of Education in Baltimore, and National School Boards Associa¬ tion in Boston, came home very proud of what out state is doing in education and convinced of several facts. “Georgia has become recognized as one of the top leaders in Edu¬ cational progress. Whereas most states are still in the planning stage for improved educational progress, Georgia is now well a long toward its goal in the actual execution of plans that were made a number of years ago. It the building of technical and vocation¬ al schools no other state can match Georgia. The same is true of Edu¬ cational T-V. In numbers of other fields Georgia is being looked at as a leader, such as the Gover¬ nor’s Honors Program, financing the new Minimum Foundation Plan, the Exceptional Children Program, the Reading Program to Help Prevent Dropouts, Opera ation Bootstrap, and, yes — even consolidation. For ‘ instance, Pennsylvania has over 2500 school districts whereas Georgia has only 196, with a cor¬ responding proposition of schools.” He also cited some of the na¬ tional offices that Georgia edu¬ cators hold. PINEY WOODS PETE Says: DEAR MISTER EDITOR: Headlines disturb me. Strikes, more strikes, U. S. merchant fleet tied up, foreign ships called on to get supplies to our troops fight¬ ing overseas. Higher wages, more costly fringe benefits demanded. All-time high earnings for big cor¬ porations. Prices of food and clo¬ thing rising. Deficit of $5 billion expected in new US budget, debt climbing. If this makes sense, what con¬ stitutes nonsense? The groundwork is fast being laid for eventual socialistic takeover to put a stop to this almost universial I-want mine-regardless attitude. Unless labor stops demanding more for less, and management starts distributing huge earnings in the form of lower prices and better goods, we’re headed for the roeks. I’ve been watching for reaction to the recently published state¬ ment that Ellis Arnall would run for governor next year on a plat¬ form calling for state income tax payers to be allowed deduction of U. S. income taxes paid by them. I’d expected chorus -.liEim of a ap¬ proval. Income tax paid to the federal government is not real in¬ come. The person who pays it would be just as well off if he’d never received it. Taxing money paid out as a is mot only unjust, but t«ry, It is a penalty on Established 18M Pennsylvania Teacher Pays Russell Tribute The Editors: During the serious illness and lenghty convalescence of Senator Richard Brevard Rus¬ sell, Jr., he was remembered in my daily prayers. I consider him the greatest living American. In 1952 he was the man I wanted to see sent to the White House. With him as President of the United States our country’s honor would have been respected at home and abroad. As a teacher, I have followed his career from the time he was Governor of his native state . . . He has the patriotic zeal that as¬ sures me he will not be shifted from the right course . . . May God spare Sen. Richard B. Russell Jr. for many years to come as our country needs him. MRS. N. H. PAPPAS Erie, Pa. — Atlanta Journal. Ga. High Bench Assails Supreme Court Decision ATLANTA, July 14 CAP — The Georgia Supreme Court said today that the U. S. Supreme Court “by striking down established rules of procedure in trials is shaking the foundation of orderly judicial trials which cam only be followed by chaos in the courts of Ameri ca. »» The Georgia justices, in a 5-to-l opinion, took sharp issue with a recent 5-4 decision by the highest court that a judge should give his opinion on whether a confession was voluntary and then submit the same question to a jury. The Georgia court made its biting comments in upholding a death sentence given Isaac Sims Jr., 29-year-old Negro, convicted of the 1963 rape of a white woman in Charlton County. The Court last year ordered a new trial for Sims on the grounds he had not been provided counsel for an ap¬ peal. Then, Sims was tried and convicted again. A confession officers said they obtained from Sims at the time of his arrest was introduced by the state at both trials. The presiding judge followed Georgia law and left it up to the juries in both cases to determine whether it was voluntary. “The decision of the U, S. Supreme Court is so shocking in condemning procedures that have been practiced for centuries with the approval of both state and federal courts,” that “we think every judge has a duty to speak out loudly against it,” Chief Jus¬ tice W. H. Duckworth said for the court. He added that the UJS. Supreme Court had rendered several con¬ flicting opinions in recent years on the question of confessions. “The admirable cocern of the U. S. Supreme Court for the pro¬ tection of all individual rights we fervently hope will not extend to destruction of the superior rights of the public to be protected again¬ st rapists, robbers, kidnappers and st rapists, robbers, kidnapers and murderers,” the opinion said. Members of the state courts, speaking informally, predicted that an appeal of the Sims case would be taken out of the U. S. Supreme Court. Good Gravy jL. - - Who Cares Fi About Ham LOUISVILLE, Ky„ July 15 (AP) —One store which sells country ham offers this recipe. Place ham in large pot, soak for one day in good Kentucky burbon and cook for two hours. The sec¬ ond day add a bottle of port wine and cook two hours. The third day add another bottle of burbon and cook for two hours. “The ham may not be to your taste but the gravy is wonderful. »> And incentive to earn should never be penalized. So, at this early stage, and subject to revision as times and circumstances change. I’m whooping it up for Ellis, who once did a good job as governor. Yours truly, PINEY WOODS PETE. —1 Atlanta Journal. L 9: