Houston home journal. (Perry, Houston County, Ga.) 1924-1994, January 11, 1951, Image 7
HOME JOURNAL, Perry, Ga., Thursday, Jan. 11, 1951 NELL’S RESTAURANT I Mow Under Management of 1 MR. & MRS. R. E. SMITH Our Friends in Perry and Vicinity Are Invited To Come By To See Us. NELL’S [RESTAURANT AT SAME LOCATION 1012 Ball St. Perry, Ga. ■ —■ ■ ■ ■ It’s your cheapest insurance against moisture, rot, decay and insect damage You save hundreds of dollars clean and dry, has no lasting in repair bills when you use odor. It puts an end to year- Pcata-protected lumber for after-year expensive replace foundation timbers, framing ment of water-rotted or insect and sheathing ... in every part riddled timbers. Lumber treated of the building that is exposed with moisture-resistant Penta to attack by wood-destroying in- WR resists shrinking, swelling, sects or rot damage from mois- warping, checking—and can be ture or weather. painted perfectly. Call today TOLLESON LUMBER CO. Retail Sfore-Bti: St. Phone 15 Pit Your Equipment In Tip-Top Condition With Genuine I-H Parts BATTERIES disk . BLADES // j Eli _ // // ((j/ Get ready now for the season ahead- Hard, knife-sharp IH disk blades las Install a new IH battery-buik to de- longer-do a better, faster job on th. liver strong current and to hut a long toughest of soils. Get set now for th. time. scason abeacL I dl ||| OH^HITIRS Protect your tractor engine Ifrom metal-wearing dust and rjs - dirt with quick-absorbing IH oil filter elements. Change them regularly, and be safe. | brake bands and BIfIFIfTONS Lllllll«^<®g& k and Slave I ©]| Give your Farmall Trac- '• tor added power and vk~~~- V W save on fuel costs with a a /iffifv' matched set of IH Pis- 8 ® tons and Sleeves. Install | —_||| a set and be ready for | \ o o H S the season ahead. | V|R| ° 1 If your tractor brakes slip. | chatter or grab, it's time lor g a new set of bands or l.n.ngs, h 3 Jp' have a complete stock. | ANDREW TRUCK & TRACTOR CO. Farmall Tractors - International I rucks i 1 i hh ! | asos&iA war: health n| | (MOTORIZED FOR HEALTH— The Georgia Department of Public Health Is prepared to take part of Its. service througtout the State with a mobile testing unit (Inset) equipped to test citizens for five different diseases and physical abnormalities. Shown above, In one of the unit’s testing stations, are, left to right, | Dr. T. F. Sellers, Director, State Health Department; M. J. Hickey, Health Department Chief X-ray Tech- , = I niclan who designed the huge trailer; and Governor Herman Talmadge, shown giving the unit’s keys to the . I designer following an Inspection tour. fj ■ H_B_B mm. . MJLMJB ■■■■■■ ■\V^V.\VVbWVAi , V%i , WVVW Georgia One oi First States To Carry on Gold Mining BY GUS BERND Historical Assistant, Ottice ot Secretary of State Georgia was one of the first states of the Union in which commercial gold mining was car ried on. It is not known when the first bits of gold were re moved form the hills of North SGeorgia. Whether it was by a! I white man, a Cherokee, or by a ; member of some departed race j of ancients is all part of the un- ' known past. It seems logical to believe that the Cherokee Indians must have' found and become familiar with i the precious metal in someway. The discovery and mining of gold in Georgia is generally as- ■ sociated with the area about Dah donega in northeastern Georgia. The name Dahlonega comes from the Indian language and means ‘yellow money’ or ‘yellow metal. ’ = Thus more reason to believe the j Cherokees knew there was gold ( in the hills and streams of their homeland. In 1826, before the beginning of commercial operations in the gold fields of Northeast Georgia, 1 cold was discovered near the present town of Villa Rica in Carroll County in western Geor gia. The name Villa Rica mean \ ing ‘cit yof riches’ was thus ap i| plied. The Villa Rica mines never ' proved as profitable as those ' near Dahlonega. White County Fair There has long been a contro- i versy as to where the first great strike in northeastern Georgia occurred. The claim that history tends to accept is that of White ** County, since cut from Lumpkin ie nr ’d Babe-sham Gold was found fV mre on Duke’s Creek, the .old come for Nacoochee River, in .Tiilv 1829. Discoveries were made in Lumnkin County at about the samo time: and the old John C. j Calhoun mine lust south of Dab- \ lenorrq vrq s soon opened. If, be. 1 came one of the richest gold | mines in America- about sour 1 millions in the yellow metal be- ! ing taken from jt. Senator rS]. I houn, the South Carolina nullifi- I cation leader, came over with his slaves and ran the mine for a number of years. ,tortmr ouo l ''n?nm-y? /■-trcti-w'-'’ mine was first closed as being | Many years after the Calhoun | f-raham Dimas made a strike wH-i- tie thought was a j profitable - 'ein and celebrated h ,r ndiri te F'nrida m a eold-nlated V rutomoh’le, r>nv hi = bubble soon )] I'urst "'her the vein proved not ' to Kp substantial. Manv famous nponle. including the late Samuel «J. Tilden who h°d the n r esid O r ntr J stole from him in tggn. ononod gold mines in the Dahlonega area. The Bario wmmes is said to have furnished about seve n million dollars worth-of co’d. Be fore the discovery of gold in California, the Georgia mines " r or e considered among the '■•orld’s richest., Lawless Elements cia in substantial quanties and j the influx of people to the area following the spread of the news in 1829-30 is tied in historically with tlje Cherokee Indian ques tion. There was a stampeded of lawless elements of the w’hite population into the Cherokee I Country in search of gold. The , ! agitation for removal of the In- , idians proved irrestible. Gover ! nor George R. Gilmer tried to i handle the situation by having Kho legislature pass laws for re- ' ; filiation and by requiring white •settiers of the area to secure re-' permits. This method of control proved j ifutile as many of the people .would not obey Georgia’s laws. | i’hus began the famous Supreme Court cases of Cherokee Nation : vs, Georgia and Worchester vs. i Georgia. Whe n Wilson Lumpkin ; became governor he moved fas ter than Gilmer. With the final | j removal of the Cherokees in, (‘B3B. the United States Govern-I merit established a mint at Dah-j ,; nega. It was operated suecess i fully until the outbreak of the |War in 1861 when it was seized by the Confederates. Dahloneva and the old mining! town of Nuckollsville or Auraria nrsrby were in ante-bellum days wide-open mining towns amid a "'amorous setting. Mountain bandits ocassionally made raids j-ard shot up the town. Whiskey, gambling, and fighting were icommonly mixed in an unciviliz ed way in this early Georgia 1 gold-rush atmosphere. 1843 Best Year The year 1843 seems to I been the peak year at the old mint, more than a half million dollars being coined that year. In total production of gold over the years Georgia ranks second the South to North Carolina. "'Tor- than <U7.500,0n0 dollars j worth of the metal hnd been tak -1"“ w, m Georgia’s field prior to , World War I. I /' TV, ong oddities of gold-seek ling in Georgia is the apparently jauthentic story of th" finding of' | ‘■mall o'o-nc of gold ooeasional- j I’v on the grounds ahont the j I Lumpkin Countv courthouse, and I r;"npoi a l] v V.O-H r.poitT-'fS T ’rior to the W - r Retween the j manv companies for the mining of gold p,nd other mota 1 s were formed in Georgia. Th°v ~ror|f"d ppcejal nrivileeec; and the"p was much promotion ’oi-ongcanda too. The Georgia pf th" perio'd d’’d t'-e.r. nrrf nod left no stone u* 1 - '••-ned m the of keeping u "fore TJpe]o the necessity o' the mint at Dah -1 one <ra r, old had beennae scarce m D-o State hef ore jf>f;j. an d the " n r did not dron the curtain too "oen on the glamorous part o c "old mining in Georgia. has heen sone recen+ mining of gold in Georgia on a barely paying basis; and hope springs eternally in many brests for another great strike. How- j metallic. About a dozen counties • in the State have shared in Geor- ■ gia’s production of gold since the I discoveries of the 1820 s. J Trie Cocke Calls j For China Bombing ; ATLANTA (GPS) Back in j ,his native state after a whirl- « wind speaking tour across the , nation, Georgia’s Erie Cocke. Jr., * of Dawson, National Command er of the American Legion, did some straight-from-lhe-shoulder talking to his homefolks. Speaking before Atlanta’s Iborthside Kiwanis club, the 29- \ear-old World War II veteran called for removal of all re | strictions under which Gen. jDouglas MacArthur has been fighting. Said Commander Cocke “The United Nations forces must be authorized to bomb China and do anything else necessary to r’lofoat the enemy and protect themselves. ... As it is now our commanders in Korea cannot bomb China; can not blockade Chinese ports; can mot use weapons and tactics necessary to support their es- I forts to defeat the Communists ?nd stay alive. "The United Nations must im mediately give General MacAr- ; |thur full authority to do what ever is necessary to defeat the enemy and protect UN troops. That includes bombing China. If the UN does not do so, the Pres- 5 ident of the United States should reject such restrictions and or der General MacArthur to go ahead without UN sanction,’’ Two Georgia 4-H’ers Win State Honors in Achievement Program Charles S. Ward Adrian Short STATE-WIDE recognition has been accorded Charles S. Ward, 17, Cairo, and Adrian Short, IC, Chipley, for having a brilliant record of achievement in 4-1 I Club work. Each recc tved an r ttstic pair of statues symbob- I achievement from the Na | Committee on Boys and O Chib Work. Charles, in his five years chib work, has completed 45 r ects including soil conservat forestry, field crops and lives! He has given 21 individual < , castrations, and has made county, five state, and two tional exhibits. In 1 719 b district and state winner in conservation, and in 1949 retc two trophies at the All-Amoi Jersey show in Columbus, O The youth also received mod: for his work in gardenir", dais projects and rural In 1949 he was club leader and he has been a junior loader tvc:*y other year since 1946. During seven years o f ebb work Adrian has completed <sl projects, given 47 speeches ,r.r ! made 285 district and 69 ?; ■ exhibits. In 1950 she has b i state winner both In project achievement and in bread con (test. She won a trip to the poul try science club Short Course, and she won a college scholarship for General Excellence. Adrian wants to be a Home Demonstra tion Agent and her 4-H achieve- HOTBED OOMSTKUCTION Since most crops require fre quent moving of hotbeds as a sanitary precaution against dis ease, it is more economical to use wood in constructing the teds. For construction of wood, it is preferable to use boards two inches i n thickness. • wwww vtvvu VI 'f wv UVV - 1 II BELLFLOWERS i ii MACHINE SHOP and GARAGE i i TRUCK BODIES BUILT i <i « i Wrecker Service : Complete Line of Hardware ; and Auto Parts ;; : LOCAL & LONG DISTANCE MOVING 1! ;; & HAULING ;; | Phone 42 Perry, Ga. •! General and Specialized i| WELDING and REPAIRING ji All Makes Tractors, Internal Combustion I; Engines and Farm Machinery ;j \ J. C. HELLER & SONS \ £ 1-4 Mile South, Perry, Ga., Hwy. 41 ——I——MHW—MHMMMW < WE ARE OUT FOR MORE BUSINESS! ! We carry a full line of Hardware in addition to Groceries, Fruits, Candies and all kind of Chicken and Hog Feed. Keep warm this winter; cover the outside of your house with Brick Siding. It keeps the house warm, preserves the lumber and takes the place of paint. We carry Brick Siding, Roofing. Nails, Wire Fence and a thousand other items. Give us a trial! J. V/. Bloodworth Groceries, Hardware and Feed Phone 94 Perry, <.«. WINTERTIME is OVERHAUL time Machinery Care is Part of Good Farming , After a heavy season particularly If your tractor is - several seasons old —a complete overhaul will make your engine work “like new.” This is the best time of year to have your tractor overhauled BECAUSE t • We can give you faster service • You can spare your tractor now • You won’t have to wait next spring • You reduce the chance of a breakdown during rush seasons Our factory-trained mechanics work on your tractor. Schedule your job by phone, or stop in and talk to us. (auss cHf iB/lERs') Every Saturday NBC SALES AND SE RVICE J GRAY-WALKER TRACTOR COMPANY I oAO I . a EXCITED ANIMALS DON’T BLEED At the time of killing a hog, the animai should not be unduly excited. Badly excited animals do not bleed out thoroughly. Consequently, tne meat is likely to be bloody. Such meat looks bad and spoils easily.