Cleveland courier. (Cleveland, White County, Ga.) 1896-1975, August 18, 1967, Image 1

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CLEVELAND COURIER " ' MOUNTAINS COVERS THE LIKE MOONSHINE Devoted 1 ! to!*** Agricultural, C ommer del cud I uduetriul lot ere He of White County voi I \XM NO. Dedication of Scenic High ay Saturday Plans were about completed Aug. 11 at a luncheon meeting n Helen for the dedication of the Senator Richard B, Russell Highway at Tesnatee Gap on Aug. 19 at 1,30 p, m: .Senator Russell is the most outstanding: statesman in the nation and the world A large crowd is expected to fie here Saturday to hear him Speakers in addition to Sena¬ tor Russell will he Senator Un¬ man I’aln.iidge, Lt>v. Maddox, Congressman Landrum and Jus. I*. Davidson Justice I'hoB, S. Candler,Blaus ville is Master of Ccremniien Kang<-r Lewis J. Smith, Claikos. ville, will lie recognized as well as several local citizens. Wade Murrah, the director of public re. latinos, will he recognized for his untiring eil'orts in getting the Kind extended from Tesnatee Lap to ISO Waller Woody will not ha not he forgotten Walte.i is a retired man in the Forost Service Vou would NO 1' have hid the Sen. Kiehard B. Russell Scenic Highway if the Forest Service had their way. This r ad shou-d have gone from Rudiaid Sims’ up Dukes Oeok to Davis Creek Falls across a bridge at the Dukes Cieek C rge then up Dodd Creek and above Raven Cliffs to Hog pen Lap. Autos drivers will be stopped by the patrol and permitted to school buses and carried to the speaking area. Sheriff Baker will escort Sen, Russell from Cleveland to Helen, and to Te'-enatee Lap Richard Davidson will drive Lie S n.ttor The road will be closed to tra¬ ffic during the program. Programs will be distributed as the cars enter the highway, Clarence Palmer will lead the 3 rd Army Band from the Holi day Manor Restaurant-to I esna tee Lap where they will begin playing at 1 : 3 O p.m Gordon Leonard will substitute for Paul Westmoreland in pre~ seating honey to Sen Russell. Leek Cash is at home after stay in Hall Co. Hospital. SUBSCRIBE FOR THB COURIER ,, If the , _ boreal Service „ , , had , , had , then way time would not have been a Senator Richatd B. Rus sjll ScenicHsgiliv.y Nor do they feel good about the Blue Ridge Parkway We want them to do something other than grow pine trees They must remember that they do not own the land but are ONLY cus todians tor us Tin. nests of hornets are most 011 the ground this yeai. Frank Reid tells lie expects a very hard winter with plenty of snow J’he Co. Com nil hr ion pm have had ample tiuib press a tiuam-iai ataleiuen* io be publish • i'ii♦* law specifically statue (bat a cleai an (i umleretamiabe Hlaleiiienl bn published by (he C»>, OH), twice » ye*. Each m«.iil„r U subject 'll criuonal proBMOUHuu. Why (1„ i|i«j . efiiee o giva ilit* pcoplj Hu I, cih anJ lUs truth? Mrs. J >s Millm an.1 Mrs. Orsdy Jairaid <>l Memphis visiisil fri.-nils in (’Isvelnm. vlondny on Itieii way o Mi ml FI. Ai. Hud Mia. James Lunsford of l horn 'UI u aavi^iJVD, Haights, UiiVU Mich , , arc ttlC visaing V1C11JII£ Iheii tliCII father, rf, 'J. ..endereon, and sister. «rs. W. L Bowen Di Hei ry S. Jennings of Naihesville ■la advises u i that he will attend hr Dedication He made Siveial trips I. Washington when Sen ItusBsll Was j;verj sick sevtlal years ago, Tl.e Depty Sec. ol Transporlalion Judgt Siltou will attend lire Scenic Highway Dedication, NOTICE If there has been any local tie. kets for the luncheon disti ihute'l they have not been authorized by us. Judge T,S Candler las. P. Davidson NOTICE The Courier will appreciate VLL the Commercial 1‘riulg l for White County. Why give it to out-of-town printers who pay io taxes to Cleveland or C runty? the out of town prin ors don’t spend any money the local merchants. — Local News — Send us the NEWS $0 that it will appear in The Courier. We will appreciate your cooperation. Telephone or write The Courier the NEWS. Phene 865-2310. If you attorneys have any legal ads to run in Sept, please do your very best to get them to us on Sept 1 or 2, as Labor ,I)ay opine on Monday and that most always gives ns a pain. The smuv predicatin'* say that we will have at least, two big snows and several small ones. The law requires that the Co Commissioners publish the tax rate for 80 days 111 the county or gan The Cleveland Cornier. Better get readv to sow those tu nr i ps. Neal Ash has been elected a di rector of The Peoples Bank. Lebur Adams of Roborstown has been given a contract to build the -tone steps hauling into the old trim road overlooking Davis Creek Falls. Several trees have been cut to make more visible the falls The trail hit* heeu buiitfrom atop a knoll at Windy Lap to the old 11 am road Mr. and Mrs. Young ‘stover of Ashburn were here over the weekend. Young is a native of While County and is a very tine man H was 54 Monday A.M. Drive to Tesnatee Gap early Sat- to hear the 3 rd Armv ‘Band which begins to play by 1 : 3 d p.m Moody Menders of Los Angles and, C.J. Meaders of Doiaville visited here over the weekend. 1'- M. Mender Passe* Francis M. Uesdnis, Hr. *u nmplojn e it Philipps Pslioleuui Co;. Dovilln, disd iu ■ 8jin Pisiluiont Hospital in Atlanta Kunsisl ssivices wemlisld Thursday a. 1 p m. ol Doiaville Pint Baptiah Church the Revs. I'Mffmd Weps and Marahall Clans officiated with Mr Claude Turnei soloist and l>nri»| in Laurel ceuiatery .tforcroge A nalive of Cleveland and a eon of the lale Mr. and Mis. Cleatei J ms. usadeis, Sr Ho lived Doravill. and was a deacon if the Dmaville Baptist t huroh He wae i meinb.ie ot the shambles Masonic Lodye No. 414 end lhe tihriiie He is survived by hie widow, dauyhtri Diane, son.Frauces M ueadcis. Jr.jeisisiv are Hoyl llayues, olfi nionMrs Kreo Lee and Mrs. Mark B|. t.C iv; brotheil. Umben s.nytu*; Moody, bo. Angles; Kraus and A! fit l)oravil|U, an 1 C' J if W ai net Rohiu DI ti Blalock, Jr, , is 8 nator Hannan I'alm.dge’a aids at the dedication. Mr snd Mrs Carey Hifliamilh went to < ^ ’< Mr and Mrs Jimmy Payne are vacation ing in Uatlinliurg Term, Gary Potts US Navy San Diago is visiting his friends and mother Mrs JW Lancaster. Trends . . . Racial violence in the United States points up the hardness of the color line that encircle* the globe. Relations between white* *nd nonwhites have assumed an ur¬ gency without parallel in history. A UN seminar on apartheid, racial discrimination, and colonial¬ ism just held at Kitwe, Zambia, pours no oil on these roiled waters. The United States and other Western nations were attacked at the conference by the Soviet Union and other Communist countries. An effort was made to include Israel also in the criticism. Observers at the UN were not surprised at the emotion engender¬ ed at the meeting. People who taste the bitterness of discrimina¬ tion are in no mood today for compromise. SUBSCRtBI FOR fHB COUtlli 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 of Winter The Lord redeemeth the soul of his servants: and none of them that trust in hum shall be desolate. —Ps. 34:22 * A ,-*V M\M I'll" Vacation Reading Club member. -nutt turn in their lisle In the Wl.il- 1 l.ibisr, by Kept. I. Cerlitiu, tee will be awarded during Children's B. ok Week A dlabelict elinie will be conducted si Public llealili Center on'August -J. fr.nn i»i30 lo 12 »ml from 1 io 4 p. m «U(I nil the fourlL Friday every ..Ihe in. nlh Eat a large meal mill plenty of *U(fsr snd slai-ehes 2 hours before ilie lest The s..|jiii.|e ,.f While County will open Aug. t!4 Tie nieichents ofj-leve land should have hie Ads in I heCniuiei Mr. and Mrs, Claisure Niamey will Hy •o New York will fly to New York . n Hept. 2 a d hoard Ilia S 8 Constitution for a 7 seven da,, cruise and visit to Bermuda This Is an all paid expense given hy Chevrolet .dolor Co a» »n award for their sales during May end une Heotgo True has hrelt added to llrs Northeast (Ja, Service 8har ng Project as a music consultant. The Center has oftice* in the nhl Nogm school building Prank Fabian and his etelf of the NK Da Ssrvihe Center attended a stale wide meeting in llrdUn Au(f. 15 Mr, and Mrs. He.r>((e Panlue ulClark. ssville were viewiri(f the Sce.iic High way Sunday afternoon Ueotjfe ea rl Paul Weelmoreland knew every point More pteple were on the Soenic Hi({h, way Sunday Ilian we have cvei si en before K. H. Dyn jays ;he thinks he hse found a wo utn on Shoal (-reek thirl he’ll take unto his fold. He’s a last worker, ao it maybe pretty sor n /’aul Wisniorstan t tails that Hi- owls are giving an unusual Ion s nj * soun and he suspects that points lo » lotijt’ haul wintei (jeotire W, Davidson continues In, Ksucrously supply us with an ample supply of yellow Imnatose, curntield lealra, and oilier line ve^stahles. They reslly stick lo our ritu. Folks ere caunitiK like never before ur. an 1 Mrs Wiluta Dixon nud Nancv ol Atlanta spent eevt-ial <l«ys with Mrs Bonnie Dixon t'b<- lufaul ilaiiKhter of Mr, nud MtS| jerry Black tiled at Stephens Co liospils, Sunday Mr, and Mrs. Hubert McDonald < f Atlanta spent the weekend here Mr, and Mia, Ed Trotter of llainee. yills visited Mrs. Lucy Palmer Sunils) Mr. anil Mrs. Charlie Hears visited Mrs Sears’ brother in Greenville, S. 0, over the weekend Funeral nervier* lor James Turner, nephew of Ollie Turner, was held in Greenville, S. 0„ Aiijr 4, H* was killed io an automobile accident Mr. and Mrs Jerry Chambers of Augusta are visilinK here this week Mi. anil Mrs Herbert Bell of Haines villa were at the Methorliet Church Sun Mr and Mrs Kola. Keniner of Vs. ate visiting mis- Unlit Keniuiar Hr Mr. and airs. M. W, O’KclIey of Biro,inith tin are viaifinK ms, J Kiel oid Mrs. Joe Telford drove her parents Mr and Mre T V. Cantrell, to Asheville, N. D., fora week's visit wilh friends Boh Owehe’ brother and wife visited him Sunday Mrs. Don Hlirdley of New York is here for a vieD witn her mo’hrr, mi» Cora Allison George W. Davidson *toutly pro¬ claims Fal} will come sooner than you think. Well, George is out where he observes nature and from his close observation he has come to the conclusion that you can expect Detroit weather in White County very early in December. Cleveland, Georgia AUG. 18 1967 The Yacketeur Yakt Dear Mister Editor: A great dream and a promise is in the process of ing true. Our school gym will be a reality. With the of this building other promises have been made to the of White County hy inference when the school officials made the ment that this gym “will be of the most functional education buildings in the state.” A political promise is a very pecular promise within itself. Like many others, it is made to broken. The people were promised this building at a cost of approxi¬ mately $125,000. Your paper stated the actual cost will be $225,000 not counting the cost of land prepara¬ tion. Why was this cost net in¬ cluded? This promise has taken the guise of inflation. We are pro¬ mised adequate physical education facilities for our young people. What guise will this promise take in the future? Will our children be allowed to use this building for their own improvement or will it be utilized only for the benefit of the coaches along with a chosen few? Physical education classes are somewhat of a joke in that adults do not practice what they preach. Sports are entertaining, physical exercise improving luoth mental and physical development. Will our children be barred from using (he gymnasium because our school officials prefer smooth and shining floors rather than a well rounded educational program for our child¬ ren? “It is the custom.” Yours truly, THE YACKETEUR Saw a young statuesque lady in Cleveland a day or so ago that would make you blow Yonah Moun¬ tain down. She had everything and wore a very, very tight fHfing shorts and graciously proved is when she walked along the street. You don’t encounter such enticing scenes often. Garnet make learning fun. This old adage is cropping up all over the educational scene. Business school students "play” the »tock market. Student investors look into “Monopoly.” In some instances game.- are carefully worked out with rules and regulations. In others, game, are made out of situations. This summer Arena Stage actors in Washington helped teachers learn to dramatize spelling, geo graphy, arid concepts in math. Children learning to spell “choco¬ late,” first tried to look like t he configuration of the word. Then they tried symbolizing the word by being a piece of chocolate thern s«lv*». Employment "Freeze Sen. John J. Williams (R) of Delaware looks for a "great wave of economy propaganda,” He expects it to start gushing out of administration information spigots soon to prepare the public for a tax increase. One more executive order freez¬ ing federal civilian employment at current levels will be an early sign, he figures. But Senator Williams is skepti¬ cal. He says earlier freeze order*, played as economy moves, were deceptive. In December, 19B5, President Johnson announced he would reduce civilian employment by 25,000 in seven months. Instead, point* out Mr. Williams, 190,323 employees were added. In Septem¬ ber, 1966, the President ordered another freeze. This time 131,871 employees were hired. In both "freezes,” the total cost increase, due to enlarged payrolls, amounted to more than $2 billion annually. Looking Ahead Red China’s apparently success¬ ful test with the horrendous II bomb, and the reported estimates in the U. S. that belligerent Mao Tse-tung should develop missilery capable of delivering warheads in about six months, ought to put new urgency into demands that Defense Secretary Robert McNa¬ mara withdraw his oposition to de¬ ploying our anti-ballistic-missile systems throughout the United States, mysterious space vehicles established in 1899 $ 3.61 p. r Year which could be carriers of H-bomb clusters awaiting to be triggered and for four years Russia has been deploying an ABM defense system. In 1965, again in 1966 and 1967, the Joint Chiefs of Staff, whose primary responsibility is to recom¬ mend to the President and Defense Secretary military measures for the security of our nation, unan¬ imously urged the deployment of an antibalisticmisle network. De fense Secretary McNamara, over¬ riding his military advisors, ha* adamantely refused; and just re¬ cently McNamara’s Under-secretary said the ABM system would "never” be needed. Sober Warnings An authoritative source in Wash¬ ington, who wishes to remain anonymous, made the following disturbing observations on the grave danger of the "defenseless¬ ness” of the United States con¬ fronted with an aggressor who ha* deployed on ABM system: “Time factors are particularly crucial in the deployment of a major weapons system of this kind. The deployment of an American ABM system is estimated to re¬ quire five years at a minimum, starting with the moment of the decision to deploy . . . "The effect of the Soviet ABM deployment on America’s capacity to deter nuclear war — in the absence of any such defensive system in this country — is dra¬ matic and profound. Such a de¬ velopment raises doubts, at the very least, as to whether U. S. retaliatory strikes can destroy the Soviet Union, assuming the Soviet* strike first. Therefore, if the Soviets have confidence in the capability of their ABM system, the completed deployment of the system (our intelligence apparently is incapable of determining how extensive thus far the deployment is) could be the factor that tips the balance in favor of a Soviet decision to risk a nuclear strike.” Inviting Attack? Our Washington source contin¬ ues: “(The odds favoring such a lecision would, of course, be af¬ fected by the nature of the man ir group that holds power in Mo» ,'ow at the moment; while any -Soviet leadership must be assumed o be willing to make the strike ( the odds are right, the enemy ■stimato as to whether the odds ire right will necessarily reflect human and political factors not strictly connected with the mili¬ tary equation.) "A further consideration must he kept in mind. Even should the USSR’s confidence in the capacity of its ABM system has failed — it remains that the U. S. objective of deterrence would also have failed. The effectiveness of a de¬ terrent depends not on whether retaliation will inflict unsupport able damage on a potential attack¬ er, but on whether the- attacker think* he will incur such damage. Danger: Nuclear Blackmail "This is an important part of the reason why proponents oi immediate deployment of the Nike X system are approaching the problem with such urgency. They believe that nothing less than actual deployment by the U. S. will offset the all-too-subjective factors in the equation of deter¬ rence. . . “It goes without saying that whatever decision the United States makes regarding ABM de¬ ployment must take into account the emergence of Red China as ■ nuclear power, and its prospective entry into the ranks of nation* possessing delivery vehicles of in¬ tercontinental range. . . The gravity of the decision now facing U. S. policymakers is the result of a series of political mis judgments — above all, misjudg ments of the intentions of the Soviet Union ... To the charge of procrastination and failure to meet the challenge of Soviet stra¬ tegic weaponry developments, Sec¬ retary McNamara has consistently replied that the U. S„ through continued research, was ‘keeping the options open’ on various stra¬ tegic systems. But it is now clear that the option time is running out. Unless decisions are made soon, the danger of nuclear war could vastly increase, to say noth¬ ing of the danger of succewfui nuclear blackmail.” Concerned citizens ought to dis¬ cuss this situation with their Senators and Congressmen, ,____