Cleveland courier. (Cleveland, White County, Ga.) 1896-1975, April 25, 1930, Image 1
THE CLEVELAND COURIER Devoted to the Agricultural, Commercial and Industrial Interests of White County VOl.. XXXII No. >7 ASBESTOS BUZZING Just from the Mountains. J j | ft was our pleasure to be out on Blue Creek last week. There has been great improvement made there in the farming conditions in the last eleven years. j The cold spell, as predicted for j Easter, has Jnot arrived yet. It j now looks like cold weather is j ubout past. The pears and peach ex are killed but apples seem to be i sate up to date. . ’ Mr. and Mrs. O. B. West and their Sunday School class of Mon roe church ^ascended the he.ghts of j Neel Gap and Blood mountainSun day and eat supper out this way in j ’ lhe evening. The farmers of tins , . section are Dow planting their corn and cotton , with a rush. It is best to pltuU some early and some late. So it the seasons miss the early it.benefit lu I,te Rev. R. \\ . Allison had a little talk with us one d ly last week He told us to keep on writing for they all liked to read The Courier down ■ at Dacula, especially the laic sex. Bob is mother ot our mountain bo\s who has gone out and is .nak i„g good. He is becoming one the brighest stars in the firmament of the North Georgia conference. We were school boys together at old Yotuth school house several years ago. They had exhibitions then but now they call them com¬ mencements, probably because it is then they begin to find out how little they know. L°ng aster you have passed awoy others will tu» got how you looked but they will not forge your little speech nor little song you sang and the kind deeds you did in lite. Bob’s speech was about at fol¬ lows : Listen, my boy, and you shall k now A thing that happened a long time ago When I was a boy — not as old as you Tiie youngest of the children and the oldest too. 1 was a ground hog case you know For the preuener was coming next d The big pot must he put in the lit tie one All must he spick and span Pol it was no show. On a dark starles, night Matilda Jane told me to go with her To where the old rooster was -high So he was caught there by night. When sf.e caught him it was a sight To •>ee that children for liberty to fight She rang apd rung again And with might and main she rung again. She threw hint down for dead He moved, he lived, he crowed She had rung off his tail Insterd of his head. I f Allen Plumbing Co. I I Gainesville, Ga. WHOLESALE DISTRIBUTORS SHOAL < liEKIv ITEMS L,et evei vbfwly look for the eclipse of llie sioi April - 2 S. As this wand jvliencnnetioti occurs let every person offer a wont of praise to God, the great ruler of the planets and of mankind. We are informed that the closing exercise of t he .Shoal Creek school was spltndid. yijss Lillie Smith took her de p ar t tire fur Washington stale as sool) ., s | ler school closed. yjj ss >J e 11 ie I’almer lett forMari e tta Monday, ^ Am)erson retuVned from M;trletta sevenll diiy , apo . Tvir. Hugh O Kelley »■ health is cntical. Rev. Scruggs Rodgers visited him Sunday. Mr. Gibbs Rogers 'Kited nis Aster, Mrs. Caroline O'Kelley, Sunday, MOSSY CREEK NEWS. _ Mrs. William Horsey gave the (unjwr SuiuUv School class an jc ^ ter ef ,g | lom Sunday afternoon, Mrs. Rose IJanie has returned to her home in Atlanta alter spend *»K a “>' s with parents, Mr. l,,u ^ r *' b-mltis Autry, Miss Oree Simmons, of Cler spent Tuesday night v\ith Miss Winifred and Pauline Dorsey Mr. Oliver Simmons, of Alto, visited his wife’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. T, ). llanie and family. Mrs. \V. T. Dorsey and daugh¬ ter spent Tuesday with Mr. and Mrs. Hoyt Crane, of Cleveland. Born to Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Turner a eight pound boy last week Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Dorsey and children spent Easter with .Mrs. Dorsey's parents on Shoal Creek,J Denial Notice. - Office in old Farmers & Mer Chants Bank Bldg. All patronage appreciated. Will accept old gold j crowns and bridges as cash on work, or will pay cash for old j scrap gold. T. J. McDonald, Dentist. ■ _______________ ______ NOTICE One second hand new perfection iil stove, four burners; excellent condition. Bargain. Mrs. L. G. Neal. THE RIGHT WAY TO TRAVEL is by train. The safest. Most com¬ fortable. Most reliable. Costs less. Inquire of Ticket Agents regarding greatly reduced fares for short trips. SOU THERN RAILWAY SYS TEM Advertising is the oil that lubri cafes the machinery of business. Day Your Subscription Now CLEVELAND. GEORGIA, APRIL 25, i»3(i. Blue Ridge Dots Miss Lillie Roper informs tnjthat Antioch organized u Suadny&chool Sunday. Profs. F, l>.. and S. S. Allen come home last week accompanied bv their sister. Mrs. \V. 11. Rich, of near Gainesville. Fletcher, brought a wife we understand. We are glad to know that Mrs. Dillard Satterfield’s hetdtff-i# great¬ ly improved. Mr. and. Mrs Lewis Taylor, of Roswell, were visitors-of the Li¬ ter's parents Mrs. W. M. Srltter* field, Sunday. Mr. ami .Mrs. J. W. Lunsford and family visited his father in Union county Sunday. While, there they went upon Black moun¬ tain tower ami had dinner with his brother, ). R., who is the lookout. Black mountain tower seems tb be a popular place, as there was about one hundred visitors f last Sunday. v I. W. Lunsford, Jr,, lookout on Yonah mountain tower, says that seventy-eight visitors to the tower registered Sunday and a number of visitors got away without register* mg. The Juniors at Mt. PleasdiU church have organized acluxs with Miss Naomi Lnnee as teacher arul expect to do some good work. IT.SXATKE VALLEY NEWS Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Brown, <if Gainesville, spent the weekend with their mother, Mrs. George Thomas. Miss Mollie Ferguson, of Atlan¬ ta, is at the beside of her sister, Miss Hester Ferguson, who is very sick. Miss Antiie Rose Thomas, of Gluett, Peabody (V Co., of Atlan¬ tal, spent the weekend with home folks. Sunday school and prayer meet¬ ing are. both progressing fiue.Gofne everybody and let us make it one ut gthe best churches in White county. Miss Ellen Alien gave the child¬ ren an egg hunt at her ttomeSuudny Arvil Loudon, who resides near Nacoochee, was found iu the toad near Hardman Springs Tueiduy afternoon by the Gainesville High School baseball team, who were returning from Nacoochee, and carried to a Gainesville hospital where he is now under treatment for a fractured skull. Arvil told the players that "Chick” Griffin hit him with a rock. Reports are •circulated that "Cluck” and his half-brother, Clifford Griffin, were walking along the mad and were overtook by Arvil, and an exchange of words began and Arvil got out ot his wagon and come toward "Chick” when he was stopped by the rock that penetrated his fore¬ head. Sheriff Jackson and his force destroyed a still near Ami's house Wednesday morning. "Chick” and Clifford have not been appre¬ hended as we go to press. i Mrs. J. Grank Cooley, 38 , of ! Atlanta, died early Wednesday {struck i morning from injuries after being by an automobile driven by I H. F. Cosby, of Port Orange,Flu., and Goshen, fnd., tnd druggeinjoft curb to board ,u street car when struck by the automobile. AJI 75 . 000 damage suit was filed against Cosby before the death of Mrs, Cooley. [PRICE 11.50 A YKAR IN ADVANC Auction Sale 6 Mi. North Of Cleveland, Ga. Saturday, April 26th, 3 P. M. Horse Range Mountain With all Gold interest. Suitable for Summer Homes, Could be Sub-divided for Several Chicken Farms, Contiguous to Gold Mine that Payed Big In Early Days the property of JIG. Wooten, consisting of 250 nereis of land located in l&tvd Lot No. 28 In the 4th. Dlst. of White county. Ga. Said property is 6 miles North of Cleveland, Ga.: J-2 mile Fast of the Clevelund-Neei (tap road. All property timber¬ ed, amiable for (.umber. Cross Ties. Telepeone Casts, Fence Costa, Tine property is a part of the South Side of Horse RanGe Mountain, hue plenty of Uke Sights, Springs and Steams, also plenty of Valley Land and Shrubbery. Ideal for Summer Homes and Camps. Property, is known as the Ryle Belton property. Terms: 1-2 Cash Balance Oct. 1st, 1930, 8 per cent on deferred payment Eree Sugars J. G. WOOTEN, Auctioneer. * 1 1 & mmm mimimmm “Industries Spreading to the Open Spaces” 4 V*f (A • ' K S ays Dr. Julius Klein Assistant SECRETARY of COMMERCE a One vital factor to be borne in mind is the role that will be played in the great future of Southern industry by electric power, transmitted over long distances. This will mean, inevitably, a progressive decentralization of hitherto highly concentrated industries. We shall doubtless see industries spreading, more and more, to the smalt towns, the ‘open spaces.’ One finds, in the South, remarkable opportunities for developments of this character.W From tui atkife&s at the Navel Stored Confumice, Jacksonville, Fla. Georgia communities are already experiencing the development which Dr. Klein predicts for the South. Industry is following the power lines into places where manufacture has never been be¬ fore. Industry must have adequate power, dependable power and low rates. The lines of this Company supply such power, and thus stimulate the progress of the communities we serve. POWER COMPANY CITIZEN WHEREVER WE SERVE