Cleveland courier. (Cleveland, White County, Ga.) 1896-1975, February 27, 1931, Image 1
THE CLEVELAND COU IER V YL. XXX 1 I 1 . No. IV) ASBESTOS BUZZING Just from the Mountains. this month has j The weather for been fine but March no doubt will be cold a' d squa 1 iv. Mr. and Mr-. John O'Kelley. Mr. Bur'ou lohnson, Mr, Louis Thom a- and three of Mr. Frank White's youngest girl- were in this part Sunday The Federal government intend to make improvements on the road, leading from the Blake property by Loudsville catnpgroun DnkesCreek Robeitstown and Hickory Xut Sahool this spring. Mr. and Mrs. Oiiie Burner and Mrs. Linton Adams spent Sunday ■ over in 1 label sham. Several of our pd pie attended 1 In- funeral of M rs. L D, Thurmond art Tuesday, Miss Uave.d Menders and sister •were out tins way recently. Mrs. Cora Thurmond departed -.this life last Sunday night and was •brought hack here tor burial She \\ as t he daughter ot M and Mrs. Warren Howard. Site had lived IIiere ail of her Hie until i fe w months ugo.| She joined the.Metho rlisi church early in life and lived a consistent member. Sue leaves be¬ hind a husband, several children and man) relatives to nmurii her s id departure. 1 here is hope that her lit He children wit ®:aine t ullgll 1 I a right and try to follow the fonts' eps of their dear in ted I mot lier. .Some of utir people in i e pin in ted J 1 heir gardens. from i The t\ ild evergreens our hills ties are going away very fas? these times. -----—*SSaB«m~— Notice ^ i o Creditors Ol \Y lute L Util y If ink Cievela nd,(> i In accordance witn provisions ot Sect ions i ^ and : I of Article 7 oi the Hanking Act <pproved Augttrt j6, lytq. vial are notified to pie »enl your claim, properly atti ■s te d. on or before ninet)' days from this date. Also depositors arc hi terebs notified to bring their p books to be balanced and comparer b the hooks of the bank, ft trig same with M r (f. C. Adams, Litjuul.it tug Agent- Tills t lie J 2th das oi February , toft. a. b m< • v, lerii.tendent ot Banks Blue Ridgo Dot M Howard Lain e returner! born Saturday from (faittesv ilie, xv 11 e 1 he under .vent a 11 operation for a ipemiicitis and i- doing line. Mrs. Louis Luusiorri leils 1 s that one of her tiephesvs. Lari \\ i kins. w o k 1 le 1 by being run over by an tut- mobile whit i.e was engager! nt ms work on a bridge in Term Hi w ife liivm id 1 un to t lie g 1 aVt S i X ii re 1 yive h : m. Mr. uni Mrs. 1 timer at tended the funer Mr. Robert Sutton ot To vt) church last Sunday. - Ad vi rti-ing eat 1: Trv is Subscribe lor The Courier THE RIGHT WAY TO TRAVEL is by train. The safest. Most®com portable. Most reliable. Costs less, Inquire of Ticket Agents regarding greatly reduced fares for short®trips. SOUTHERN RAILWAY SYSTEM 9nbserilw> For »'iv j Courier j Devoted to the Agricultural, Commercial and Industrial Interests of White County CHAPEL NEWS Mr. Dewey Stovall, of W aynes X. C., spent the weekend at Mrs. II. A. Tatum is visiting \|r. and Mrs. j. IJ. Tatum at Mrs. A. T. Whitworth lias re¬ home alter a few* weeks visit m Cornelia. Mr. and Mrs. [. H. Stovall and Farrell >|>ent Saturday in Gaines¬ ville. Mr Homer Tatum has returned home after a fe ■' days visit with relatives in Cornelia. Mi-. Film Tomlin and Miss lava Bowen, of New Bridge, visited Mi-s Pauline McConnell Sunday. Misses Mary and Louise Free¬ man spent Sunday wite Misses ()l t Mae and Georgia McCoMum. Mrs. W. M. Barker and, Elbert, , I Clarkesvill. visited relatives here t\l otiiLiy, Rev. Horner Thomtts will fill his regular appointment at Blue Creek ext Saturday and Sunday Every oody conic and be on time. Leaf Leaflets .\irs. Xora May Bentley, wife ol Mr. Alton Bentley, departed this rile Feb iSth and was laid to rest in Tes*iatee cemetery Ft*b. tq i' 1 he presence of a large number ol friends and relatives. Rev. J. G. Young conducted the services. She gave birth to .1 beautiful daughter ibout three hours belqre she died, which was born dead Tin* i iifunt was hurried with her. Sbe w a - thirty-eight years r» old. SIh* > as t he daughter ot the late Mr Will Nix. She had been mnrried w ice. Her first husband Was Mr. Turner. I'o this union one J M. Turner was Inon. Al ,■! her first husband died she lived with her husband's lather and nurscil him in his sickness. She Mr Alton Bentley about years ago, and they lived ippily together until her death. Xuru May w as tt kind and atfec wije doing -all in his power 1 have 1 happy ami pleasant home was a good neighbor, always to help lose that were sick or , di-tje-s She lived a Christian and was ready to go when the iminutis came. She leaves a hus utie son, two brothers and a of relatives and friends to » her departure. The bercav d ii ive our sincere sympathy. Me-srs V. S. Xicholsou, 1 ). FI Bent 1 y and T. W. Watkins ran some boys down on the river Monday making a still. 1 hey ,v, re successful in making their es¬ cape, but they left the cojrper and s. Mr. H. W. Robinson and family Atlanta, were visiting his broth , amt family. Mr. W. B. Robin ■ m, Sunday. Pa v Your Subscription N<>" •nty-nvf miles of spider Hiryad WTigil Duly eight oUfieeS. !i( . person In every two hundred in United States is said to be deaf. San Marino, the world’s smallest re public. lias the second largest national anther a iu the worlrl. tt tuU ir, day- Tor the average l.u t in to roGovor from the loss of kvo copsechtive Lights’ steep. A n nvestigathm of the activities of 1 J (4 M j part-time continuation school girls between tiie ages of fourteen and seventeen in New York state discloses | that 23 per cent, or nearly one-fourth, spend i evenings a weef: at home j and l- per cent spend all tlicir eve nings there. CLEVELAND.' GEORGIA, FEU. 27 , 198 l. SHOAL CliEF.lv ITEMS This is 1931. A hundred ago it was s8.H- What a Fanning today is quite Machinery is employed by turist, Cyrus Hall McCormick, Virginia, made a great when he perfected the men invented machinery to be upon the farm, and now it is age of farming with power and so much by hand A hange in a hundred years. old wooden plow stock is no computed with the iron or foot, and so those who use farm machinery smile at us use the circle feet. tion has changed since a years ago. They rode hursdbtick, then had a sled, next the ox cart, then a covered wagon drawn by oxen, a stage coach, rough built ship, a last train, now an automo¬ bile and an airplane. Cooking made a change or rather the people that cook and prepare tilings to eat do. That art is different to a Inin ered years ago. Domestic Science or Home Economics, call it what you may, whether it is baking light pone or jnt, all has changed, The stoye has kiq.it the house-wife from bending over the lire place, and the in my up to date bakeries show how cooking is done today file style of clot lies or lasbiott has changed many times in the last one hundred years. A lady vv. s shopping at a store and was irytdg to purchase 1 dress a' a ju ice si e thought lar above ns value. The seller thought he could not reduce the price per yard, but if the lady would lake a quantity sufficient lor 1 pair of fashionable sieves lie would throw enough ill lor the skirl. This.was a hundred years I go. Short skirts have been worn II other times, pel trips not so ab¬ breviated in. those we favored jus! lately, but they do hark back to the d iys of long ago. A study of tiie h story ol fashion fur a hundred years would silence so much friti ci-tn. One hundred yeans ago Booth and Bate- were well under way with Shorthorn cattle, and since then the dairy business has grown and many a man has marie himself rich. Poultry a hundred years ago was Called childrens play until the old lien (lew on the little girl arid flogged tier, now it is c irried on by means hf large hatch¬ eries where incubators are. used. Xo such a tiling a- baby cloaks be¬ ing sold and shipped bv mail u Hundred years ago. It is interest¬ ing to take a retrospective view mil tijitke comparisons during the last one hundred years. Many older people live in the past, but would it not he better t live hundred years ahead. NOTICE h on can get your nits cleaned •aid pressed and niak to h>ok like new for 75 cents. Shoes half soled for 50 and 75 cents. Best place in North Georgia. Satisfaciion guaranteed. Scoggins Dry Cleaning Plant Gainesville, (Ft. Holcomb Bros. Hdwe. Go. GOOD HARDWARE Now is a good time to put a uesv coal of paint on yonr dwelling. M O IlHVe juHt wltat you want, We htive a good line of aluminum and enamel ware; holla, nails and washers. See our dishes before buying Come and see our stock be !oi*P but itl^. We sell lor cash and soli for loss Rtx Trotter Gives Himself Up To Sheriff, Tuesday Rex Trotter, accused slayer of Luther Kinney, who had not been apprehended since the shooting «f fray, Feb, 17, was reported to have surrendered to Sheriff C. P. MY banks on Tuesday night., and t, have been taken to Atlanta by tin sheriff and his dept 11 y, Mr. Popi Hill, and imprisoned in the Fulton county tower, awaiting trial. The deplorable tragedy which was said to be result <ri ill feeling between the two men, and was o! long standing, occurred in front of Jairaid’s filling station in Clarkes vide on Saturday night, Feb. 7, where Trotter had driven up tt supply his car with gas. Trotter’s car was found inW'hitt county the day after the shooting, bill no information was ascertained as to his whereabouts until Ins sur rentier to the officer Tuesday.- Tri-Covnty* Advertiser. $50,000.00 Cigarette Contest Under Way A. contest, offering $60,000.00 in prises fias been tuiuminceti by K. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, makers Of Came}, Cigarettes, with special announcements In practically every Newspaper in the United Strifes. Right days are allowed for shb jnfcftion of essays, the contest clqs pig at oriditigUt cm March 4t.li. Prison will he awarded for the beet answer# to the question: What tyisjnifietuU change has vwmly been made lit the wrapping of the Camel package, containing twenty cigar.* ettoB, and vvliat are Its advantages to the smoker? Answers are limit eel to two hundred words In length, must bo written on one side of the paper only and are to he mailed tt) jhe contest editor, I(, J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem. North Car olina , First prize Is $ 25 , 01 . 10 . 00 , with Bey¬ ond and third prizes of $.10,000.00 pml JujOftO.Oft. Numerous smaller prizes will also In 1 awfirih d. Judges of the coolest are Ray Long, Presi¬ dent of the International Magazine Company and Editor of Cosmopoli¬ tan Magazine: Hoy Howard, Chair¬ man of the Board of the Sr-iipps Hownril Newspapers, and Charles Dana Gibson, internationally known artist anil Publisher of Siify Maga¬ zine, The contest is part of what ad¬ vertising exports declare is one ot the most Intensive advertising cam¬ paigns ever staged. Practical!y ev¬ ery Daily and County Seat Weekly Newspaper in the country will be lined as well as College Periodicals and Financial Newspapers. Tiffs campaign is to ho followed by an aggressive advertising drive through Newspapers, Magazines, Radio and outdoor display. Tobacco Growers Meet Here Saturday, Feb, 28, A meeting of the tobacco grow- ! ers of S\ liite county and those in- 5 (i rested in its production here will j be held in the court house Saturday | Feq 2 N, at 3 :y> P. M. lion. Herman P DeLsIYrriere, ; of Hoschton, (id , succe-slul far¬ mer arid businessman and legisla¬ tor, will address the grower-. Mr, DcLuPerriere has been very suc¬ cessful in growing tobacco on ln farm at Hoschton tor commercial purpose and he i» coiisidered to be an authority on growing tobacco for the market at a profit ip tin- -eclion. Mr. Linder, ot the state depart- j ment of agriculture, an expert on I tobacco growing, will also be j [jresent and address the meeting. Mr. L. ( . ’rice, who resides! near Zion church, informs The j Courier that his experience with tobacco grow ing on his farm is that it can be grown just as easily and cured just as well as m hi- j native state. Kentucky, and that he j will be glad to assisi anyone in [growing tobacco for the market. It is hoped that a large number o! farmers will attend this meeting fP’ni.R >1 50 A Y F, 11 IN ADVANCE A STATE!? 5 1 OF FACTS GAINESVILLE & NORT I WESTERN RAILROAD l ltc iulurrr operntiiHi o: t . 1 oi t.Lin.mis 011 the cooperation , ot citizens in communities it sciv. litis railroad is essential to 1 la 1 id-trial development of your comminuni; v. It i.- also essential to sectm an { re, liu the lowest possible trans¬ port! lion rates when- nil t'omniodii I . are i;*>n-idered. Some citi/.eiiR 1 ivur highway 1 r e. ks tor hnuiing the high revenue producing commodities and rely eat tui'road to haul their low revenue producing commodities. If highway trucks continue u. Mat cream off the tratfi: avail to this railroad we do not baii > it wtii ha possible to continue to much longer. \Y it bout rail 1 end facijit ie- 1 a ■ uvrage cost of hundiing alt com modi lies will maleriolly itie tea o Citizens must either bear tins uu-rcascd cost or stop produettug that are now Itauiod the railroad on low freight rates. litis raib'oad spends otro ;: ::- r . n '-.ago- and supplies in you and pay a substantia i *jr : * of your taxes. \Y e urge all citizens to hcl;i • .1 lit:- railroad by giving us all their business. (iAINESTI1.LL A NOKTN A '.TEliX RAILROAD ('O. <». Austin : d al im Smith, Receiver*. f © it C O M IF 0 II T Hip I Sitl'l is ||jj| 1 ii*? i.. -i# ,,,,,, I I I'illlllH :::X':*vgllS |l I iiM liifc t mm Every new F#r#I in equipped with four MoitduiHt' do ns hie-u e tiny hrjdveemUe .vis ek nhsovherH ONE of the fine ibiorr nL.r i X ing the new Ford is the way it takes you over - without strain or fatigue. No matter how long the n you know it will bring yon , eafely, quickly, comfort ’ to the journey’s end. The seats are generousH ■B< deeply cushioned and carefully designed to confo: to i < o curves of the body, Every new Ford lias • j eiat dr* Lined springs and four Iloudailie doubh’-arlii g L ..Y:tulle shock absorbers. These work both way*; — v; nd down. They absorb the force of road shocks and :> provide a cushion against the rebound of the springs. Other features that nrf. the new Ford a value far above the price are the 7 J ' x pLalter-proof glass wind¬ shield, siletst, fully eneL four-wheel brakes, more than twenty ball and rol Bearings, extensive use of fine steel forgings, aim,do: i p ions, chrome silicon alloy valves, torque-li it - !*..*, Rustless Steel and unusual accuracy In inanuf ring. In addition, you save j . dollars because of the low* first cost of the new For low cost of operation and up-keep, and low yearly tlei elation. ..C.;... . ..M K LOW PHI € Efs O F FOSD C A I* S *435 to «*€!€»# F.O.B. Detroit, plus freight ant! tlrli ••*•**. Dumpers and spare tire extra at small cost. You can purchase a l ord on economical terms through the Authorized Ford Finance Flans cf the Universal Credit Company . m