Newspaper Page Text
Cbc <llmlant>
Qtfutal Organ of White Count), G
Fublishert Weekly *t Cleveland *»*.
P. Davidson, Editor.
Eu u-ed at the »< Cleveland
Gh.« hh heuoihA das® mail lua'iar.
Md/nbci Ninth District Press Asaociainn
“ Georgia Press
“ National Editorial
Press Congress Of The World
Subscription, * 1.50 per year
in advance
Judge I. H. Sutton has been in¬
dorsed by the Gainesville Bar As¬
sociation to Governor Russell urg¬
ing him to appoint Judge Sutton
to fill the vacancy caused by the
death of Associatie Justice of the
Supreme Court James K. Hines.
According to rumors in Gaines¬
ville, should Judge Sutton be ap¬
pointed to the Supreme Court, in
all probability Solicitor General
Robt. McMillan would be appoint¬
ed Judge of the Northeastern Cir¬
cuit, and Boyd Sloan would be ap¬
pointed Solicitor.
Besides Judge Sutton several
able lawyers names’ have been pre¬
sented to the Governor for|his con¬
sideration.
TESNATEE VALLEY NEWS
Several from this part have been
attending commencement at Cleve¬
land the past week.
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Allen, of
Clarkesviile,, spent Saturday night
and Sunday "with their brothers,
Messrs Charlie and Joseph Min, on
Tesnatee.
The people of Mt.' View are
planing on a Children’s Day in the
near future come on everybody and
let’s pull together and have a good
day.
The Mt. View and TesnateeBal!
Game played again Saturday after¬
noon. The score was 13 to 23 in
favor of Tesnatee.
Miss Frances Westmoreland
speut Saturday niget 011 lesnatee.
College Station, Texas.—Wil¬
liam Mark Curtis,CovingtonOkla.,
■senior in the department of archi¬
tecture at Texas A. & M. College.
has been notified of his appoint¬
ment to the JosephEveleth
ship in architecture at Harvard
University, effective next Septem¬
ber. The appointment was made
upon basis of 'excellent scholastic
standing anp following
dution of the department of
lecture. The scholarship is
at|$300,
Curtis is a candidate for
lor’s degree in architectural design
at commencement Jexeicises to
held this mould. For three years
has been a candidate for that honoi
during his senior year. He holds
the rank of major and adjutant 01
Staff of the cadet corps.
While working toward the mas¬
ter’s degree in architecture ai
llirvard, Curtis will devote most
ol his time to study of architectural
d. sign and the history of archilec
ture.
Mark is tlie oldest soli of Mr.and
Mrs. B. W. Curtis and is fa gradu¬
ate of Covington High School. Mr.
Curiis says that Mark plans to use
the scholarship awarded him.—
C ivington Record, Covington,
d Jkla.
Send your Kodak Films to Floy
ad i Hefner, Cleveland, Gy,, R £
Developing and printing 40 cents
per roll for six exposurts, prints
3 cents each for 3 or more prints ol
same negative. Add postage.
Read The Courier
Closing-Out Sale
The entire stock of the J. P.
Cooley Store is now being closed
out at ridiculously low prices. The
public is invited to come and see
for themselves. Strictly cash or
produce.
L. R, Cooley,
L®eal Nows
Mrs. M. B. Crews,who hits been
teaching in Cleveland High School
left Wednesday. Mrs. Crews will
visit her brother in her former
hometown, Iloschton, before go¬
ing to Arlington where site will
spend awhile witli her parents.
Mr. Frank Carroll visited Chat¬
tanooga and Atlanta Wednesday
and Thursday.
Prof, and Mrs. A. W. Ash and
children, of Lakemont, visited Dr.
and Mrs. L. G. Neal Thursday.
Mr. G. C. Adams spent Thurs¬
day in Atlanta on business.
Piedmont College commence¬
ment begins May 87 and continues
through tlie 31st.
Prof, and Mrs. Hal Farguson, of
Stockbridge, are visiting the latte’s
parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. L, Rus
* -ell.
Burn to Mr. and Mrs. Andrew
Saxon Saturday night a boy.
Mr. Grady Henley visited New
*ort, Tenn., since our last week.
Mr. Fred Henson, of Newport,
I'enu., spent a few days last week
,vith lit, sister, Mrs. Grady Henley
Mr. II. D. Wiley is visiting his
ister, Mrs. Grady Henley.
Mr. H. D. Wiley is visiting Ins
,011, Henry, in Ocalla, Fla.
Next Monday is Mamorial Day,
.0 there will be no Rural Mail Ser¬
vice.
Mr. G. D. Adams, of Atlanta,
-pent a few days since our last is
,ue in Cleveland.
Misses Willie Mae Cooley, Bon-1
ne Lothridge, Mary Jackson and
.Veil Nix are attending summer
-chool at V oung Harris.
Mas. V. E. Head is critically ill
The American Legion Auxiliary
if Rof Head Post meets next Fri¬
day night. This is also Legion
meeting night.
Hon. Hoke O’Kelley, candidate
for Governor, was in town lasiFri
• day in the interest of his candidacy
We appreciate the extra large
strawberries given 14 s hnq Saturday
afternoon by Mr. Lee Head. One
of them measured 4 IS 4 inches
• around
The Stale Board of Education
, _ that
’ re¬
quires . to teach school . after Sep¬
tember 1st a full year of college
I
| work tor Elemenlery Certificate.
j We are very grateful Mr
Joseph Nix tor the mess ,of winter
beans that were produced in his
garden.
BEAD THE COURIER
Schedule of Neel Gap Bus
Line From Cleveland
South Bound
4:15 P. M. S :20 A. M.
North Bound
4 T5 P. M. 4:15 P. M. to A. M
j
S Subscribe For The Courier
ROBKRTSTOWN NEWS
The farmers are getting behind
with their work since so much ram
We are glad Mrs. Henry' has re¬
turned from the hospital.
There were several from here al
ended the singing in Towns coun
iy last Sunday and report a good
time.
The Baptist and Methodist Sun¬
day Schools are planning on hav¬
ing a Children’s Day at theMetho-
1 dist church the first Sunday in June
Mrs. Pharris is still improving.
; Mrs - Vandiver is improving, but
^ owl V
Cannibals Respect Whites
Although cannibals of the African
jungle place little value nn a human
life, they will never kill a white man,
,T. E. Wendes, Naugatuck (Conn.) rub¬
ber manufacturer, asserted after three
years among the savage tribes. Kind
treatment and a government check on
all whites entering the jungle assures
their safety, he said.
1ME CLEVELAND
FOR SALE
Several Jersey cows; fresh in
For sale cheap.
!. B. R. B irrett.
Test For Tuberculosis
Will be made at 2 130 P. M. on
Thursday afternoon, June 2. in the
office of the Mobil Health Unit up¬
stairs in the Court House at Cleve¬
land. This test is made free of
charge. Every child should be
tested.
FO R SALE
Call and see our line of proprie¬
tary medicines and we have a small
line of groceriesi Toilet articles.
We have the Allied Drug products
for sale. Also Allied fly spray,
kills bugs, roaches and bed bugs.
Safeguard your health and get
rid of the By. They carry germs
from one place to another,
McDonald’s
We are prepared to do your auto
repair work at the right price Give
us a trial.
Saxon & Crane.
Blue Ridge Dots
Rev. A. C. Cantrell, of Smyna,
wds here last week doing some
about the cemetery at Mt. Pleasant
Mr. Hubert AdamsMs quite ill
with kidney trouble.
Mr. A'bert Jarrard and brother,
Coy, have swapped residences on
their father’s farm,
Mrs. Charlie Nix is very ill.
Mr and Mrs. L. D. Carpenter,
Hr. and Mrs. Emory Carpenter
md two small sons, of MossyCreek
visited their daughter and sister,
Mrs. S. IJ. Head.
Mr. and Mrs. R. F. Hanie and
son, of Atlanta, gave S. H. Head
.1 visit Sunday afternoon.
SO THEY SAY
By 1. O. U. Morethan
lias anybody noticed that wt
failed to have anything written tne
iast two issues of J’he Courier J' We
read both issues but never missed
anything. But, anyway we de¬
cided to write and tel! every body
we hove been having some good
rains down here, and the little old
.rollon, like an uninvited guest
; tireadin^g to make its self known,11
last has decided to come on out and
o.vn up to being a cheap article.
It once was a great tiling to heat
of a new railroad being built
through the country, and the hop
■s of getting a new road in an>
part of the Country was a great
stimulant to business, as to the road
; after it was built. People wen
■ roud of the road. They frequent¬
ly termed the road running througl
heir community, and they wen
glad to patronize the road, whict
in turn was a great benefit to then
iiul today they are slow to under¬
stand how the railroads made it
possible for us to put them out o
oust ness. The way is looks to us
s: Just like we had quit feeding
he old horse until we found 011
whether 01 not the coil would wort
How natural it is lor tis to g<
dong unconcerned when there is 1
very poor family near us, maybe
some of our owg tenants, who as a
1 member of the family at tin
point of death. We never bothei
mrselves about condescending love
enough to even ask them if the\
need any assistance,and meet them
»n the highway and hardly notice
them. After those who have cared
for the sick ones are worn out and
the 8 j ck one has died we will go
slipping in with an arm full of
/lowers. Flowers are alright, but
they are sometimes used and
handled by some terrible hypo¬
crites.
Nobody is getting married
getting rich nor satisfied here lately
READ THE COURIER
Legal Advertisements
‘Georgia, White County.
will be sold before the court house door
ill said coil Illy on the lirst Tuesday in
•lime, between the legal hours of sale, to
the highest and heat bidder tor cash,, th
following real property:
"A,certftin tract or parcel of land situ
ated, lying and being in White County
Georgia. in lot of land No. 1 51 in theUud
District, containing Hit acres of land and
bounded as follows: O 11 the North by
lands of II. K. Gerrels, on East by Ed¬
wards Skelton, on the South by lands of
O. H. Barrett, on the Wesi by the lands
■ d'G. 11 . Barrett, being the South part of
land sold to It, G. Gej-rel 1 byMrs.Rachel
Jarrard."
1 he above ami foregoing levied on
under and by virtue of a ti fa issued up¬
on a judgment from the Superior Court
of Whi e County, Georgia, April Term
ti» 8 d, in favor of Industrial Credit Com¬
pany and against (f. B. Barrett, being a
special lien on said above described pro¬
perty.
This 2 nd day of May 19B2.
VV. A. Jackson, Sheriff.
Georgia, White County.
IV all to whom it may concern:
C.M.Cooley having in proper form ap¬
plied to me for Permanent Letters of
Administration on the estate of J. P.
ooley, late of said county, this is to cite
ill and singular the creditors and next
d kin of J, P. Cooley to be and appear
it my office within the time allowed by
aw and show cause, it arty they can,why
.’ermaneut Administration should not be
'ranted to C. AI. Cooley on J T Cooley’s
■state.
Witness my Hand and official signature
his 2th day of May 11132 .
A. L. Dorsey, Ordinary
IV all whom it may concern :
Notice is hereby given that application
■vill be made to the Court of Ordinary of
iVhite County, Georgia, ai the next
■egular term, which is the June term of
■aid court, for leave to sell the land be¬
longing to the estate of J. R. Palmer,
ate of said county, deceased.
This 2nd day of May 1932.
Mrs. Tura Palmer, Administratrix.
Estate of J. R. Palmer, deceased.
Georgia, White County.
Will be sold before the court house
loor in said county on the first Tuesday
in June 1932 within the legal hours of
-ale to the highest bidder for cash the
following described property to wit.
Certain Town Lots in the Town of
Robertstowu, Georgia, and known as
the lots on which the residence of 15. F.
Caudell was located and where the said
B. F. Caudell lived on the 3rd day of
April 1922. Bait] property levied on as
the property of B. F. Caudell to satisfy a
Superior Court execution, issued from
the .Superior Court of said court in favor
of Albert Wilbanks and against B. E.
Caudell and John Robinson.
This May 11, i9-,2.
W, A. Jackson, Sheriff
White Court of Ordinary—At Chambers
May 10th, 1932.
The appraisers upon application of!
Mrs. Maggie Palmer, widow of saidEben !
Palmer for a twelve months' for herself ,
and 7 minor children, haying tijed their
return j all persons concerned hereby
are cited to show cause, if any they have 1
at the next regular June Term of this!
court, why said application should not
be granted.
A. L. Dorsey, Ordinary, j
Notice To Wholesale Grocers,Meat
Packers and Stock Feed Mills
and Dealers
Sealed bids will lie received by tin ;
State Highway Board of Georgia. 2 Capi I
tol Square, Atlanta, Ga.. until Jo o’clock j
AM May 24,1932 for furnishing groceries
supplies and feed for the month of June. I
o the six convict camps maintained b}
said Board. Bid blanks and full in for- |
mation as to puaulities and deliver} }
ooiiits can be obtained from the Purchas¬
ing Department at the above address.
Our bid blanks must jbe used in sub
ini.ting bids. Payment to be made 30
days from dale of delivery and accep¬
tance of goods. Goods must be equal ti
■r better than that used by t he Highway
Board and found satisfactorA'. Right is
reserved to reject any or alt bids and to
waive all formalities. Mark envelope
•Scaled hid to he opened May 24lh”,
Phis notice, is in accordance with the Act
tire General Assemlby of Georgia, ap¬
proved August lfi, 1922.
J. W. Barnett, Chairman ;
W, U. Vereen, Member,
J. P. Willicit, Member,
10, 1932
Sometimes Sounds That Way
It. was the lirst. time a Chinese boy
hud seen a piano, and lie tried to de- i
scribe it to 11 friend in pidgin Eng¬
lish. “Them box,” he said, “you tight
him in teeth. He cry.’- 1 —Boston j
Transcript.
Quite Friendly
Burly Ruffian (to timid pedestrian)
—Got a penny, please, stranger? Me ;
an’ Bill ’ere wants ter toss up, an’ ■
see which of us takes yer watch, an’ !
which yer pocketbook!—Border Cities
•IT . ----- _______J
and that’s the way your
Electric Rates Behave
Eggs by the dozen, coal by the ton, lard by the
bucket, flour by the sack—everything comes cheaper
when we buy it in quantity.
The same is true of kilowatt hours, those skillful
little giants that make up your electric service. The
more you use, the less each unit costs.
Have you been wishing that you could have an
electric refrigerator or an electric range in your
home? Have you been hesitating because you
thought it would multiply your electric bill over and
over again?
When you bring that new appliance into your
—— __ home, it brings
One kilowatt hour will along lower with it a
ate a 50-watt lamp bulb for oper¬ 20 rate per kilo-
/ Mr ok' V run a Sewin 9 machine watt hour than you
)Or 20 hours; on- run a vacuum now pay for light
cleaner six full hours; or keep
make the radio the breakfast on for 12 hours; or ing service alone.
fu e ! C or do coffee other for jobs a And not only that,
7~- man y it will reduce sub¬
that bring new ease and pleas¬
ure to the ho-tpe. stantially the aver¬
age price per unit of
are „ now paying. . As „ the electricity that you
amount of electric service
you use steps up, your rate steps down. Our service
is priced not only to permit, but to ENCOURAGE
use.
For the first 50 kilowatt hours of energy
Z Y ° U h each month the you use
ur, r or T the £ next 150 kilowatt rate hours ia the 5c a kilowatt
from then rate drops
on you earn the thnfty
Its a peculiar sort of servant electricity. The
—
more hours of work you let it do for you, the less
you pay it by the hour. And nowhere else will pen
mes —mere pennies —buy so much.
G E O |LG IA
POWER. COMPANY h
\ £
A CITIZEN WHEREVER WE SERVE
CRISP FOR U. S. SENATE
Charles R. Crisp, for twenty
representative in Congress frem
Third District, has announce]
candidacy for the office of U. S.
Senate. Mr. Crisp is an
figure in the House, where he has
served with distinction in
capacities. As chairman of the
Ways and Means Committee, he
attained national note through
statesmanlike direction of the work
of this committee.
The Senate deals with both na¬
tional and international problems
Mr. Crisp served on the World War
Debt Funding Commission, which
was charged with the responsible
duty of salvaging as much as pos¬
sible of tho ten billion dollar debt
of the Allies to the United States.
He, therefore, has intimate knowl¬
edge of the attitude of for¬
eign governments and their re¬
lations to the United States.
Twice during the present session of
Congress lie lias declared on the
floor of the House his opposition to
reviving the War Debt Commission
as recommended by the President,
as there could be but one purpose
for it, namely, scaling down the
debts of foreign governments to this
country. The Senate must pass on
treaties with Foreign nations, so
Mr. Crisp s close study of European
conditions eminently qualifies him
for this type of service.
'He is earnestly advocating reduc¬
tion of government expense to the
Pag Tom SiiMpiloii
CHARLES R. CRISP
amount of five hundred million dol¬
lars, contending (hat present con¬
fiscatory expenses of the Govern¬
ment. must be reduced so taxes can
be lightened.
Known as a man of unimpeach¬
able integrity, lie ranks at the top
in the National Congress. Mr. Crisp’S
friends believe he is well qualified
to serve the nation In the present
crisis. Consideration of the citizens
of Georgia is invited to his record
of service.