Newspaper Page Text
The Jackson Herald
Single Copy Five Cents
■
Bgsl NOTICES
■ divorce notice
■Alexander,
■ Alexander
1,513 Suit for Divorce in Su
| Court of Jackson County,
■rv Term. l 9^-
Ejbert Alexander, Defendant
K M atter: J t .
I a: , rcby commanded to be
tear at the next term of the
for Court of Jackson County,
C to answer the complaint of
tntiff. mentioned in the cap-
I h er suit against yod for di
-1 s the Honorable Clifford
■ judge of said court.
I C. T. STOREY,
I clerk of Superior Court.
H3, J. 6-21)
NOTICE
Jackson County:
H , Tober Kortecius
■ Ys.
Kortecius
■ In Jackson Superior
H. : : 1 lot Divorce. Febru
i.mt William Korte-
;> 'o Tolbert Kor
■ her petition for
Ct d . a ;;>t Wiiiiam Kortecius,
/ naMc to this term
H,e c and it being made to
u.e defendant is not a
unity, and also that
the State, and
made for ser
■ i.uii. by publication, this
notify you William
1 . ; : ear at the
. hit,day in Feb-
Hy IMA the n and there to
this complaint.
the Honorable Clifford
Hr.. J-,.,:...- of the Superior Court.
December 6th., 1948.
■ C. T. STOREY, Clerk
B Dec. 9-16; Jan. 6-13
■iTATiON-ADMINISTRATON
HOKGIA. Jackson County.
■All Whom It May Concern:
■ .A Sprutlm having in proper
Bn ar.i.iod to me for Permanent
■tea uf Administration on the
■Bte cf Mrs. W. H. Spratlin, Sr.,
■ dbaid C unity, this is to cite all
■ - tne ci editors and next
|u> of Mrs. \V. 11. Spratlin, Sr., to
Hard appear at my office within
■ time allowed by law, and show
■*• t: they can, why perma
| WH.mistrat m should not be
■tted to G. A. Spratlin on Mrs.
■H. Spratlin's estate.
my hand and official sig
■>ire, this Bth day of December,
B.
I L. B. MOON, Ordinary
H :: - • NO ADMINSTRATON
■ necessary
of Ordinary.
County, Georgia.
H, A 'r C:ed;t is and All Parties
■ Interest:
I; of Mrs. M. A. I
H * d!jie , funnerly of Jefferson
■“f" C,!Unt .v. Georgia, notice is
F-. n th.at R. M. Venable,
,lu! ' o', has filed applica
■ declare no Admin-
necessary.
opj ; ii ( .. ltitin w j[j b e heard at
■ January 3rd,
■,." ection is made an
H r X, A ,s ' f 'd saying no Ad
■““s-t-ation necessary
■ °ecember 6th. 1948.
I k ’ON, Ordinary
I Nation dismission from
■ administration
■ WlTTor Juckson County.
7 C. Alexander, Ad-
KL a n 0r 01 Mrs - Cynthia C.
■a,- a " ,e i ,! 'esents to the Court in
KareJ'? n ’ iuly and entered
ke has fully admlft
■stete r? ' Cynthia C. Freeman’s
|H ’ .
lions - , 0 t 0 ci fe all per
l^to? n l ed - kindred and.credi
|*hy if Btly they can,
iich- ra dm!mstra tor shbcfld' not
■V gea rom his administra
■<;.;! C n VC hedtefs 'of Dfs
-1949 6 * rst Monda y in Jan '
| L B MOON, Ordinary.
HONOR ROLL
Alvin Cruce, Pendergrass.
J. A. Hutson, Gainesville.
Sara J. Elrod, Calhoun.
J. J. Hendrix, Rutledge.
J. L. Bridges, Bakersfield, Calif.
H. C. Marlowe, Pendergrass.
Miss Willie Jewell, Nicholson.
W. R. Thurmond, Route 3.
P. J. Roberts, Route 1.
H. M. Roberts, Douglas.
H. S. Coker, Pendergrass.
J. V. Alexander, Route 2.
Mrs. W. T. Bryan, City.
Billy Bryan, Oxford.
Homer Bone, Route 2.
Mrs. Venie Daniel, Route 3.
C. R. Ash, Pendergrass.
A. S. Roberts, Route 2.
H. S. Fite, City.
Mrs. R. S. Johnson, City.
Mrs. John Ballenger, Seneca, S. C.
L. R. Lavender, Jr., Athens.
Mrs. C. L. Roberts, Pendergrass.
Mrs. B. F. Wallace, Buckhead.
B. J. Yarbrough, Lakeland, Fla.
Lester Ragan, Maysville.
O. C. Snellings, Route 1.
Mollie Griffeth, City.
Mrs. C. J. Stewart, Lancaster, S.C.
Minnie Wilson, Route 2.
Mrs. Bill Langford, Route 3.
Elder B. Hanson, Wilmington,
Calif.
Rupert A. Brown, Athens.
Mrs. Tom Anglin, Wadley.
Mrs. R. O. Williamson, Athens.
Mrs. Guy Fleeman, Route 1.
Flora Morgan, Talmo.
J. W. Stockton, Crawford.
M. J. Huff, City.
L. C. Skelton, Route 1.
Miss Omie Marlowe, Pendergrass.
Mrs. W. J. Chapman, Poulan.
J. C. Carruth, Route 2.
DeWitt Mcßee, Athens.
J. H. Phillips, Hoschton.
Y. R. Glenn, Route 3.
John W. Hale, Athens.
O. L. Venable, Route 3.
Mrs. Marion Wade, Bogart.
W. W. Stark, Commerce.
Mrs. L. H. Archer, Route 3.
G. A. Spratlin, City.
J. H. Lancaster, Route 2.
C. B. Barrett, Route 2.
W. C. Randolph, Atlanta.
L. W. Mauldin, Route 3.
Mrs. W. C. Palmer, Forest Park.
M. H. Davis," Route 2.
Mrs. J. C. Spratlin, City.
James A. Alexander, Carney’s
Point, N. J.
J. V. Alexander, Route 2.
Claud Venable, Gainesville.
Mrs. M. A. Still, Atlanta.
Mrs. F. P. Ernst, Chapel Hill, N C.
L. L. Davis, Commerce.
S. H. Bolton, Route 2.
H. W. White, Braselton.
Jack Bennett, Spartanburg, S. C.
Mrs. Mary Hogan, Hoschton.
C. O. Maddox, Winder.
Dee Hinton Robinson, City.,
G. W. Shaw, Route 1.
Olin Whitehead, Nicholson.
Mamie Oliver, Route 3.
L. J. Lyle, City.
Jesse B. Jackson, Route 3.
Mrs. Lottie Coker, Gainesville.
M. M. Myers, Lula, Ga.
M. S. Morris, City.
Lillie Phillips, Hoschton.
Miss Mattie Bailey, City.
H. B. Hunter, Route 2.
A. M. Pethel, Talmo.
Y. D. Maddox, City.
J. B. Marlowe, Pendergrass.
Mrs. C. R. Armour, Atlanta.
Mrs. J. E. Medlin, Atlanta.
Mrs. G. B. Epps, Athens.
Mrs. G. S. Wright, Athens.
M. T. Cooper, Braselton.
Mrs. Rob Lyle, Route 2.
Ernest Brock, Route 2.
A. M. Davis, McKinney, Ky.
R. L. Voyles, Decatur.
Wiltdn Askew, Hapeville.
Frank Fricks. Pendergrass.
Miss Lela Bishop, Gainesville.
W. G. Freeman, Pendergrass.
J. S. Adams, Route 2.
J. B. Adams, Ochopee, Fla.
A. M. Head, Route 3.
R. D. Brooks, Pendergrass.
C. O. Hunt, Route 3.
B. W. Skelton, Hoschton.
G. O. Lavender, Athens.
R. L. Gee, Route 1.
Frank, Thurmond, Pendergrass.
Mrs. Adele Mize, Atlanta.
Mrs. W. M. Spencer, Athens.
Mrs. L. D. Nicholson, Greensboro.
L. M. Ginn, Route 2.
Mrs. D A. Frix, Route 1,
Carlton Perry. Maysville.
Miss Ruth Holliday, Route 2.
Mrs. Dbrcett Hale, Athens.
Mrs. Louise ‘Zeideman, Denver,
Colorado.
A. D. Mauldin, Route 3.
Mrs. J. P- Sims, Route 1.
B. J. Langford, Route .2.
Mrs. D. B. Mathis, Route 1.
Jefferson, Jackson County, Georgia
THE
JACKSON HERALD
Wishes One and AO
A HAPPY
NEW
YEAR!
Roy Mathis, Landis, N. C.
W. A. Hendrix, Madison.
D. E. King, Commerce.
T. E. Ash, Pendergrass.
H. S. Hardy, Athens.
James Lay, Route 2.
Ralph Murphy, Hapeville.
J. D. Murphy, Chattanooga, Tenn.
J. R. Doss, Decatur.
George Anderson, Atlanta.
O. C. Churchwell, Rossville.
Mrs. J. D. Potts, Atlanta.
W. S. Pinson, Atlanta.
Miss Gladys Needham, Gaines
ville.
J. T. Holland, Maysville.
Mrs. I. T. Hogan, Route 2.
Henry McClesky, Route 2.
Boyd Kesler, Route 3.
Revf G. T. Shell, Maysville.
J. A. Jackson, Statham.
H. O. Kesler, Chicago, 111.
G. A. Reynolds, Athens.
C. G. Whitehead, Route 2.
Joe Wood, Hoschton.’
D. S. Berryman, Sr., Route 2.
Mrs. Leta Talmadge, Athens.
G. G. Williamson, Inverness, Fla.
Roy M. Whitehead, Decatur.
Lola Mae Dills, Greenwood, S. C.
BIG GRAIN CROP
TO HELP MENU
OF AMERICANS
WASHINGTON. More meat,
milk and eggs are on the way to
your table, the Agriculture Depart
ment said recently.
Because of this year's bountiful
crops of feed grain, farmers are giv
ing their livestock and poultry
heavier rations. The result is great
er volume of milk per cow, more
eggs per hen and heavier meat
animals.
The department said dairymen
are feeding their cattle 13 per cent
more grain and other feed than last
year and in return are getting rec
ord milk-per-cow production.
Likewise, hens are putting out
about 8% more per bird than a year
ago.
The department said field reports
indicate that at least as many beef
cattle will be grain-fed this winter
as last, and that the numbers of
hogs and chickens are expected to
increase in 1949.
STAY SOUTH,
YOUNG MAN,
STAY SOUTH!
Some years before the turn of the |
century Horace Greely, noted editor,
reformer and publicist of his time,
advised young men of that era to
“Go West, young man, go west.’’
Today, Hal S. Dumas, of Atlanta,
president of the Southern Bell Tele
phone & Telegraph Cos., is telling
young men of Georgia and other
Southern states to “Stay South,
young man, stay South.”
At least, in a recent address be
fore Alabama Polytechnic Institute
engineering students at Auburn, 1
Mr. Dumas urged them to remain in
the South after graduation “be-1
cause something is really hapoen
ing here.” He said the South has an
opportunity to build “the finest
civilization man has ever put to
gether.”
“In my own company,” said Mr.
Dumas, himself a graduate of Au
burn, “it took us 50 years to put
out our first million telephones; 17
years for the second million tele
phones, and less than three years
for the third million.” He said the
South can profit by mistakes of
other sections of the country m
building man’s “finest civilization. ’
Russians Fail to Wipe Out
U. S.; Women Sue "Prophet"
LOS ANGELES. Joe Jeffers,
founder of the Temple of Yahweh, is
accused in a damage suit of telling
his flock the Russians would bomb
the United States in 1947 and kill
everyone but them.
Jeffers’ accusers, Mrs. Anna Lee
and Mrs. Caroline Brunell of Los
Angeles, seek $12,857 damages, say
ing his story led them to part with
valuable property.
They say that Jeffers, now serving
time in McNeil Island federal prison
for auto theft, represented to his
congregation that they would more
into the WhiteTlouse and that he
would rule the United States as the
“King of Kings.”
The plaintiffs allege they were
told they would be "queens under the
new order, wearing diamond-studded
crowns.”
Thursday, December 30, 1948
OUR PROBLEM
CHILDREN—KEEP
THEM IN SCHOOL
There are an estimated 12,630,000
boys and girls in this country be
tween the ages of 14 and 19.
Of that number, according to a
survey by the Children’s Bureau of
the Department of Labor, 1,300,000
are in school but doing part-time
work; 3,600,000 are not in school at
all, but have quit to work, and
1,290,000 are neither in school nor
working. This means that almost
5,000,000 young boys and girls are
missing an education and are facing
a future without a high school edu
cation, which inevitably will handi
cap them vocationally and other
wise in the competition of occupa
tional life. The fact that a million
and a quarter are not able to find
employment is significant. Few
employers today will take for em
ployment a person who does not
have at least a high school educa
tion.
Reasons given for quitting senool
were led by an excuse which was
vague in that it merely expressed
dissatisfaction with school. Second
most frequently advanced was em
barrassment or discontent at not
having money for lunch, movies,
carfare and so on.
Obviously, there is a job for
every community to do in trying to
maintain its children in school and
for setting up machinery for proper
guidance and advice. Also indicat
ed is strict supervision of employ
ment laws.
Here in the South especially,
where our educational opportunities
are fewer, must we exercise even
greater diligence in trying to keep
our children in school.—Atlanta
Constitution.
Desire is prayer; and no loss can
occur from trusting God with our
desires, that they may be moulded
and exalted before they take form
in words and in deeds. —Mary Baker
Eddy.
Our nature is inseparable from de
sires, and the very word desire—the
craving for something not possessed
—implies that our present felicity is
not complete.—Thomas Hebbes.
4-H FOUNDATION
CREATED TO EXPAND
CLUB WORK IN STATE
Creation of a Georgia 4-H Club
Foundation to expand educational
and recreational work with Georgia
4-H clubs and to advance the inter
ests of club work in providing prac
tical and experimental training in
agriculture and related fields for
4-H club members was announced
this week by W. A. Sutton, state 4-H
leader for the Agricultural Exten
sion Service.
One of the foundation’s first
major projects will be the establish
ment of, an adequate, centrally
located camp to alleviate the acute
need for better 4-H camping facili
ties in the state.
Plans are being made for a big
fund raising campaign, Mr. Suite 11
said. The drive will get under way
around the first of the year. Mr.
Morris, who has worked closely with
Georgia’s 4-H club for several years,
has already made the first contribu
tion.
More than 1,000 Four-H boys and
girls at the 1948 State 4-H Club
Council in Milledgeville unanimous
ly endorsed the foundation and set
a goal of two dozen eggs each from
the more than 116,000 members in
the state.
The State 4-H Club Advisory
Committee, composed of 25 out
standing Georgia citizens, also en
dorsed the foundation as did the
Board of Regents of the University
system.
Talmadge Resolution
Condemning Civil Rights
Adopted By Conference
The Southern Governors’ Confer
ence, meeting in Savannah last
week, adopted a resolution con
demning President Truman’s civil
rights proposals and pledged their
support and cooperation with the
Southern members of Congress in
opposing this “unconstitutional
legislation”.
The resolution was introduced by
Governor Herman Talmadge who
has consistently been, outspoken in
his opposition to the President’s
civil rights program.
The resolution was adopted as
follows:
‘Whereas, there has been much
agitation of proposed acts intro
duced in Congress embraced under
the general head of ‘civil rights’.
“Whereas, the proposed acts
would foster federal intervention
in the several states seeking to con
trol matters that have been left to
the states under the United States
Constitution, and would further cen
tralize power in Washington.
‘Whereas, the Southern Gover
nors’ Conference in Tallahassee, Fla.,
last February, and in Washington,
D. C., on March 13, 1948, went on
record as opposing this so-called
civil rights program.
“Now, therefore, be it resolved
by the Southern Governors’ Confer
ence, convened at Savannah. Ga. r
that we reiterate our opposition to
the President’s so-called civil rights
program.
‘That we condemn outside inter
ference and the usuiping of purely
state rights by the Federal Govern
ment, and that we pledge anew cur
support and co-operation with the
Southern members of Congress in
opposing this unconstitutional legis
lation by every means at their com
mand; and be it resolved, further,
that a copy of this resolution be
sent to each member of the Congress
of the United States.”
OVERSEAS PROGRAM
The Christian Rural Overseas pro
gram has been organized in Jackson
County with the Rev. A. D. Coile
and the Rev. A. O. Hood as co-chair
man and Dr. C. C. Tooke, Vice
Chairman and Rev. H. R. Allegood.,
Secretary and Treasurer.
Let us be true: this is the highe. t
maxim of art and of life, the secret
of eloquence and virtue, and of all
moral authority.—Amiel’s Journal.
A wise man will desire no more
than he may get justly, use soberly,
distribute cheerfully, and leave con
tentedly.—Richard E. Burton.
A good character is, in all cases,,
the fruit of personal exertion.
Joel Hawes.
The essential factors in character
1 building are religion, morality, and,
knowledge.—J. L* Pickard.
No. 29.