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THE CKEVE0AND>COURIER
V >E. XXXin. No. 2V)
ASBESTOS BUZZING
Just from the Mountains.
Mr. and Mrs. \ irgil Glover and
children were e-riliei ing flow era out
thi- wav Monday.
Mr and Mrs. John 11 . Brown
spent Sunday with parents.
Several of our people have been
attending commencement exercises
at Cleveland.
There is hope that the planting
will be finished soon. Sometimes
the early planting does the best
and sometimes the late planting
does well. It all depends upon the
seasons. Last \eat some planted
corn on the totli id Inly and it did
very well. Jn the days past they
i wavs planted tl.eir corn in March
They are haling a very good
•Sunday School at Yonalt.
A small cyclone passed bv last.
Saturday evening. It was the first
one ever seen by many of our peo¬
ple. They had seen the damage
wrought by them in days past. No
suction seems to he free of them.
It lias been several years since I
county has had one. The old cy¬
clone pits are about tilled up, but it
may he a good time to mend them.
The cycoue alMays follows a cer¬
tain law. They move from the
southwest to the northeast and
south of the equator they move in
the opposite direction. The most
destructive one was at Gainesville
about 2^ years ago. All that have
seen its beaten path have decided
tliev do not care to be in one.
Georgia; Wliiti County.
Pursuant to a recommendation of the
lirand .Jury at the April Term of White
Superior Court the undersigned ordinary
of mud county lute railed an election on
the question of exempting from taxation
for a period of 5 years oil such property
as ie provided in Article 7 , Section 2,
I atngiHph d-a of the Constitution of the
State of Georgia to lie held on *t!ie doth
day of May !iCl 1 in all Hie Militia liis
tricts of said county to he held under the
same rules governing elections for the
mein tiers of the General Assembly.
. hose voting in hwo.i of said exemp¬
tion shall have written ot printed on
their ballots “In favor of exemption for
a period of live years.“ Those, voting
against exemption shall have written or
printed on thei i ballots “ AgoinstExeinp
tion' This the 4th day of May T.C51.
A. f.. 1 lorsey,
Ordinary, White County Georgia.
Dr. -Cleveland D. Whelchel, of
Hiis city, has recently returned
from Dalton, Ga., where he was
summoned by a group of physicians
of that city to perforin an opera¬
tion known as pbenic exeresis up¬
on, a patient suffering from tuber¬
culosis.
The operation is one of the most
intricate and delicate of operations
and is a new method in the treat¬
ment'of tuberculosis.
Dr. Whelchel has obtained fame
over Georgia and the South lor his
success as a surgeon and now has
added the distinction of being the
only one accorded the distinction of
success in this particular field ol
fighting tuberculosis by surgical
operation,—Gainesville News.
I'OR RENT.
One Cafe with fixtures 11 the
north side pf public square Cleve- I
Gild, Ga. See
T. 1 . McDonald.
NOTICE
'At! permits for fishing, hunting!
etc., on the Loud Mines property
ace. within drawn. Any trespass
will be prosecuted.
R. K. Reaves, Jr.. Agent.
Pay Your Subscription Now
Devoted to the Agricultural, Commercial and Industrial Interests of White County
SHOAL CREEK ITEMS
Mr. Oscar GtHsirap made a busi¬
ness trip to Lulu last Friday.
Mr and Mrs. Will McCarter
visited Mr, and Mrs. Henry Smith,
of Blue Ridge, last Sunday.
Some men become famous on ac¬
count of their popularity and some
because of their wealth, but very
tew win fame oil what they do,
compared with ti e number ot peo¬
ple that lias inhabited the earth,
tine generation of people till the
requirements of tlie times in which
they live about as well as another
generation. So who inis done the
most toward developing the earth?
Blue Ridge Dots
Rev. 11 . M. Edwards gave us a
lecture on tlit* line of Christianity
i a s t Sunday and using many points
of scripture, hut not all of thcBook
Some of ottr SunditvSchool went
to Cleveland and Antioch Sunday
W e would have liked to have heard
Rev. Henderson.
Miss Hattie Loti Lunsford was
knocked to the Hour and remained
unconscious tor a few minutes by
lightning one dav last week.
Miss Nannie Rose Thomas re¬
turned home from Alto last week
much improved.
It continues raining her, so (here
will be some corn planted late.
Mr. .Lewis Lunsford i- planting
a mixture of a crop.
prof. S. S. Allen contemplates
spending the summer at home with
his brother on the farm.
Mr. \V. C. Holcomb and
VVL B, Parker attended the
aL \\ ahoo Sunday.
There will be an all day
at. White Creek the first Sunday
June. Everybody invited.
Mr. and Mi's. 1 '. C. Cagle
family spent the weekend with
latives near Lula, (»u.
Miss Willie Mae Holcomb is at
iMi-s Willie Mae Holcomb is at
home now after being away at
school all winter.
Mr. Frank Emmett and Mr. Ben
and family, of Clermont, attended
the Sunday Sunday at WhiteCreek
school.
Mass Mary Henderson, of the
Shite Normal, Athens, spent the
weekend with parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Henderson.
Messrs Jerry Finley and Isaac
Paxon, Dr. and Mrs. Evan Taylor
illd Miss Jessie Davidson of At¬
lanta, spent the weekend with Mr.
and Mrs. Alex. Davidson.
Miss Lizzie West, who has been
n Greenville, .S. C., for several
years, is visiting parents, Mr. and
Mrs. E. P. West.
Mr |. P. Saxon has had charge
I working out some ol the street
■ I Cleveland this week and has
.nade-ain excellent job of it. In
act they are in the best shape they
ver been put in before. The peo
de are thankful.
We „ have ready for Cole
you
planters, ruling cult.vators.,
" l,,z " doul,lt * foot a,ul “"‘'
ale plow stocks hoes and mad-j
docks, picks. A good line ol
paints and repairs for turning of! j
plows. In fact a flood line
hardware.
Holcomb Bros. Hdwe. Co,
\\ e sell for cash and sell for less
Advertising is the ail that lubri¬
cates the machinery of business,
lry it.
CLEV ELAND, GEORGIA. M \ V t:,, i i
OAKES CHAPEL NEKS
Mrs J, IE Sheluult i- visiting
her daughter. Mrs. Mattie Glaze,
who hs very ill in Atlanta.
Mr. and Mrs. W. B Freeman
spent the weekend with their
daughter. Mrs. Ross Sosebee, near
Helen.
Mrs 11 . A. Tatum lias returned
home after a week’s visitiwitb re¬
latives at Blatrsville.
Mr. aud Mrs. J. II. Smith, of
Cornelia, spent Sunday with Mr.
and Mrs. R. I). McCollum.
Mrs, A. T. Whit worth was taken
to a hospital ill Atlanta Irst Tnuts
day \\ here she. will take a treat¬
ment for rheumatism,
Mr. and Mrs. W-illie Smith, of
Habersham, spent Sunday with
Mrs. Essie Cash and family.
M iss Mary Loudon and Mr. |
Charlie Dean motored to WuibaUu.
S. C., last Monday where (hex
were united in marriage. We
hope they will have a happy life
t ogel her.
Mr. and Mrs. (’urn Shelnutt
were the guesfs of Mr. and Mrs.
Mercer Ivy last Sunday.
Miss Eonuie Lee Curtis has re¬
home after a spending a
week with her sister, Mrs. Frank
I’hurmotui.
Misses Isabell and Willie Mae
and Mr. Pink Brown, ot
and also Mr. Hub Hol¬
of Habersham, were the
ufterdoon guests of Misses
Mae McCollum aud Mary Lee
and Mr. Hornet Tatum.
Don’t forget Rev. Bless. of
will preach at Blue
Creek next Saturday night May 16,
Everybody lias a cordial invitation
to attend this service.
Missionary News
Mrs. C. E. Head entertained the
Bible study class of the M. W. M.
Society Wednesday, May 13. The
Book of the Prophet Jeremiah was
interestingly discussed, being led
by Mrs. T. L. Rutland. Some
special songs were an enjoyable
teat tire of the program.
The hostess, assisted by Mrs, W.
Whitmire served a delicious sweet
course.
The 27th of May meeting will he
with Mrs. A. H. Henderson ,'113:30
o’clock.
Joe .Whitfield, reported
arrest in Amarillo, Texas, is
ed here by Federal authorities
violation of tiie Maun Act, it
stated by officials at the coutg
It is alleged that Whitfield, ac¬
companied by Miss Fannie Lee
Hunt, of Gainesville Mill, left
Gainesville in February of uj’ 2 S.
Whitfield has a wile and four
children here. Mrs. Whitfield has
been working at a cotton mill here
since her husband left.stateriSheriff
Lawson—Gainesville News.
CARD.OF THANKS
V\ e take this method of express
ing to our Irieiuis the kindness
diown us during the illness and
4 e;lll , of our husband and father,
u - e p:i> , God>s ricl)<M blcsgi
may abide with you.
Mrs _ D N u , rwick ;tndcl)ildm ,
“
FO R SALE
Ford-on tractor, equipped
plow and harrow. In splendid j
condition. Will sell or piow
harrow lor anyone.
Ffirnest Craue. 1
The Baltic sea has an average of ,
one shipwreck every day throughout I
the year.
Pneumonia Takes
D. N. Warwick
Sunday, May 3 rd, Mr. D. N.
Warwick was taken ill at his home
near Cleveland with pneumonia,
and died the following Thursday
night, May 7'h. His illness was
-0 severe from the beginning that
his family were immediately notifi¬
ed and all but one, Willie, ol Kan¬
sas City, Mo., were at his bedside
when death came.
Mr. Warwick tias lived all his
!ite in \\ lute county, and is es¬
pecially well known by t tie more
iged and better class of citizens.
He was persuaded itito the politi¬
cal field many years ago and was
elected to the office of count \
rf.isiirer. Phis office he filled with
credit to himself and honor to tin
county.
church
m Cleveland sixty-one years ago.
and therein Ims served as steward,
trustee, aud Sunday School teacliei
Mr. Warwick was the sou of.Mr.
and Mrs. Asbury Warwick.
He was first married to Miss
June Palmer, and to that union
t welve children were born, eight of
whom are living. Hi- second mar¬
riage was to Miss Eileu.Nix, and to
union eight children were
born, seven survive him.
Mr. Warwick was a man of
and sensitive Sense of jus¬
He spoke no evil of any
but discussed a man’s quali¬
only from the point of fact,
rather than condemning
weak and wayward of earth.
a wonderfully good and
world this would tie for us
live in were all men as vuiet and
as was Mr, Warwick, but
it is not so. lie dealt just ly
men twenty-four hours in
the day and three hundred sixty
fixe days in the year, and he left
this world having hut little more of
its possessions than when he was
born 76 years ago. No wealth on
earth hut a reward awaiting him
xUcli as but one in a million may
possess at death—-jlist because his
was a life of purity.
Those whom lie leaves to mourn
are a devoted wife, T. W. W ar¬
wick, II. A. Warwick, Henry
Warwick and Hazel Warwick, ol
Cleveland; Mrs. W. 11 . Bell, ot
Gainesville; Mrs. F. (j. Bell, of
Athens; Miss Mae Warwick, of
Athens; Fred Warwick, ot Athens;
Rev, Jesse W irwick, of Augusta;
Lewis Warwick, of Athens; Wil
lie Warwick, of Kansas City,Mo. ;
VIrs. Curtis Stephens, of Athens;
Clifford and Horace Warwick, ot
Athens; two sisters Mrs. Catlie
Clams, of Alliens, and Mrs, Mat¬
tie Clark, of Texas. He had 33
grandchildren aud 3 great giatid
children.
^Revs. T. L. Rutland, 1 ). S, Pat¬
terson, of Clayton : J. B. Jones, ol
Athens; and Adrion W irwick, ot
Bishop, conducting the funeral ser¬
vices at the Methodist church
Saturday morning at 10 o’clock.
Newton A Ward, morticians, ol
Geinesville, had charge.
Capt. Dan McDonald, prism
evangelist, who is well known
throughout Georgia and south came
from Gainesville this afternoon and
will be here over Sunday and
preach in court house Friday, and
Saturday nights, Sunday and Sun¬
day night at usual hours. Every¬
body come.
For ACHES and PAINS
Snow BALLARD'S linimeNT _
Penetrates' Soothes/
/utf Like An Ostrich *
A medical authority saya that *
person who tries to cover up skin
blemishes and and powders pimples is Just with as foolish toilet
creams head
as an ostrich that buries its in
the sand to avoid danger. Skin erup¬
tions are nature’s warning that con¬
stipation is throwing poisons into your
blood stream and weakening constipated your whole
constitution. Remove the
condition and you will strengthen your
system against disease and clear up
your disfigured is with skin. The ot Berhine, best way the to
do this a course
vegetable medicine that acts natur¬
ally and easily, which you can get at
J. IL R. BARRETT Agent,
Your Subscription Now
Truly Good Man
“If I* indeed a good man,” sahl Hi
Ho. the sage of Chinatown, ’‘who is sc
living as truly to deserve the epitaph
sure to he written by generous
friends."’—-Washington Star.
Yielding to Truth
It is better, by yielding to the
truth, to conquer mere opinion,
then by yielding to opiutoii, i 0 he
defeated h.v truth.—Epictetus.
[PRICK * 1.50 A YF.aI, L\ ADVANCE
Printing
is the master key of our civilization,
the means through which we have
achieved art, education and industry.
It is well worth the very highest
• efforts of its craftsmen.
The Cleveland Courier
H Commercial Printing of Every Description
r ADVERTISING is like liniment. I 1
cant be applied effectively with a
powder puff. It needs rubbing in
And the harder the rubbing the better
the results.
RUB 11 IN HARD—Increase your acverUs¬
ing—put in the sales pressure—create enthusi¬
asm and enrgy and optimism throughout your
organization—-and watch the progrss you make
South’s Largest Negro Buried
Here Tuesday
James Finch, said to have
the South's largest negro,
buried last Tuesday at Beilton
lowing his death Monday in
York where be had gained
erable fame advertising a shoe
and dispensing sandwiches.
Janies, who was 26 years
weighed 678 pounds and was
most seven feet tall. His coat
a No. 70, his slices No. 24 and
body was interred in a coffin that
eight feet and two inches long,
ihree feet, tlnee inches wide and
l the
total weight of body, casket
mil box was i.opj pounds, requir
ing 15 pallbearers.
A native of this section, James
fived here a number.of years and
became widely known because of
11 is- enormous size and strength. It
was said that he became the brunt
>f many leaser-, with the result
that when his ire was aroused, lie
would pick up at least two of his
tormentors, one under each arm.
ind walk away from the crowd.
Literally thousands, both white
ind colored, viewed his body here
where it rested awaiting interment
It was said that he had been seen
wearing parts of discarded automo¬
bile tires for shoes,
With all his size and weight,
James was a very likable negro
and will be missed by his friends
here.—Gainesville Eagle,
“CLOSE” TYPES
The man wild puts off cleaning bis
cellar until tag day.
The hoy who slides down the ban¬
isters to save I)is sole.
1 ' The Vincent who change*
tits wuov
| to Viu to save the cent.
The doctor wla> quit because be had
to treat *00 many people.
The woman who saves her lied
Cross pin from year to year.
The father who plugged up half tiiv
holes iii his kill's Christmas baruion
iCH.
The man who peers over the top
j of liis spectacles to keep ‘them from
wearing out.
j The in an who runs up aud down
j through the linzc of a sxuoLiiig* car
j with his mouth open.
j The traveler who preferred to ait
at home and let his mi ml iwui,l*i.~
Paffiflniler Magazine.
LITTLE KNOWN FACTS
Clouds, fog and dust shut off four
fifths of the sun’s light from reaching
the earth.
Nearly one-fourth of all the Indiana
In fhe United States live in Ariaouw
anti New Mexico.
Fish meal and ground shrimp are
being mixed in dog biscuit to ward
off goiter in dogs.
Incoming and outgoing aircraft
traaic at Xeuipelhof airport In Berlin
Is controlled by signals from airdrome
police in a control tower.
Early settlers in America brought,
sheep from Spain, lie via ad aud Hol-t
land, hut improved breeds were nut
Introduced until the Nineteenth c«m
tury.
The blubber of a whale, which lu-s
Just beneath the epidermis, varies in
thickness from na iuch to U> or u>
Inches, depending on the six*, wad
species of the animal.
GEMS OF THOUGHT
Truth is eternal, and the son of
heave-m¬ •Swift.
Sorrows remembered sweetest pt-is
eat Joys.—Pollok.
Ooe enemy can do more hurt than
ten friends can do good.—Swift.
Is any uiaa tree uxeept Qut on*
who can pass his fife a* he pleases?
_ 4
To the roan who himself strives
God also lend* a heiplxig.
It is the peculiar qnalUy of a Cool
perceive the faults of others, avwvP
forget his own.—Cicero.
A man protesting against tmu Is,
tiie uoty towards uniting himself
ail mea that believe Ui truth.—