Newspaper Page Text
THE CLEVEL COURIER
\'OL. XXXV, No. 29
Cleveland High Sehool ^
1 want to take this opportunity
through The Cleveland Coulter to
thank the people of Cleveland and
the Cleveland High School com
inunitv for the kindnesses and
courte-ic shown me while 1 was
supeiintendant ol the Cleveland
High School. My work with the
school was pleasant. 1 have nevet
worked with a student body more
loyal. 1 found the pupils courte¬
ous and polite.
1 worked hard to improved the
standard of the school and to raise
the standard of work done by the
pupils. In tiiis undertaking I was
not altogether successful. W ilh
the cooperation of the teachers tne
library has been increased, but the
laboratory equipment is lacking.
Some classes ,n High School were
too large but this is due to the large
number of pupils repeating sub
jrfCts, i'll is should not be 11 a
pupil gaits his grade work through
and it his teacher will not promote
him until it. is thorough, these con¬
ditions wili not exist when the
pupil gets ill High School Too
many pupils failed to pass their
subjects in High School the past
two years. This should be cor¬
rected some way.
1 want to thank the teachers,
pupils, tiie board of tiusiees, nev
and old, the parents and every one
who contributed to the success o!
the school for the splendid coopera¬
tion given me. 1 trust all mat
work tor a better school the coin
mg year. T am interested in tilt
school. I wont to see it ttnprovi
in standing and in the grade of
work being dune. 1 am interested
in every pumt and 1 utn wishing
each pupil the best lile has in stem
•Several parents ami pupils askec
me about teaching a .summer scltoo
1 will be gold to teach the sumriun
school if enough pupils will regis
ter to pi} me lor toy time. 1 wii
appreciate it tf .hose who are in
terested will register with .Mr
Kobt. Kemmer giving him tin
subjects to be made up.
\V. L. Bowen.
1 fie .MeLhodist \1 isstonaryboc.cly
members met at the home ol Mr
Bertha Miiuney Wednesday alter
dooti. May cq, lor their meeting
‘•The place and function if tin
Church in the life Nation, W l!
the tt >g mp lor dtscussiot
Mrs. 11 A. Jarrard [ed the devo
.
tiomil service, reading the lessot
1st Cor. 12 :I2—1« to 27. ‘‘Tin
Unity of the Church,” the jnstruc
live and interesting discussion ot
the church work was presented by
Mrs. W. A. Russeil, Mrs. Tims. I
Underwood and -Mrs, A. 11 . lien
dersou.
We were glad to enroll Mrs.
Fred Palmer as a new member am
her sittei. Miss Dicie Thomas, wa¬
ll welcomed visitor.
Mrs. Maunev served enjoyablt
retreslinxenls during tiie social hou,
Tite Billie Study Class will rnee
with Mrs. W. A. Russell June 711
The ouciety members expresset
much regret that titeir efficient am
highly esteemed member, Mrs. \*
A. Whitmire. ,wiil not be vvitt
toein any longer since tier family
1 „ moving to Dabioneg 1 tor lutuii
residence. We extend best wisher
to tier in her new home.
\v. e w ill accepl ; 1 roin farineis any
kind ot j produce grown on tliei
tarrn for re n e w a i of their subscrip
Hull or 1 j) be add ted to our list as
hew hUt j-enber. We trust this
proposil ion wii i appeal to every
farmer.
It is a sin t iigtiinate
business without a God-
Devoted to the Agricultural, Commercial and industrial Interests of White County
Make Contributions To
Georgia Hall.
Tiie people of White county have
been asked to make contributions
to a fund to construct Georgiuil til,
which is to house those unfortun¬
ate. cripple children and others suf¬
fering from infantile paralysis, it
will provide rooms for them and
free them from their present quar¬
ters in an ancient and dangerous
woaden building.
Warm Springs Foundation was
organized by President Franklin
IV Roosevelt in 1924 when he was
making his courageous fight to cure
hnnself when he determined that
.hose similiariy crippled through
out the United States should have
i chance also, to he cured. He
brought the Springs, the old hotel
property, and many acres around.
He began bringing in the crippled.
lie largely financed the work He
insured his life for $500,000 in
favor of the Foundation. He used
tfis own credit. Merchants atm
others carried their bills for months
on his personal notes. He sunk
two thiids ol his personal fortune
io Warm Springs, fur the sake of
cripple humanity.
Georgia Halt is to be the central
structure of a large group of build
mgs at Warm Springs. Th
Foundation is not a money-making ;
institution. No individual cat
profit by its operation. A certain j
tmount of free treatment am
iodgtt'g is available to those win
■ moot pay ; which is taiseu by the
patients themselves As mor. :
contributions ate teceived moi't
lire treatment can be provided.
\ ou are earnestly requested It
make your contribution at onct
payable to W arm Springs 1 ‘outH. i
tion for Georgia Hall, LiGrattge.
Ga., ot which Mr. Gason J. Calla
wav is chairman.
CARD OF THANKS
We wish to extend to friends
tnd neighbors our deepest appre¬
and thanks tor their loving
Mildness and helpfulness during
recent illnes- and death ol otn
death mother. Mrs. J. J’. Evans.
Mrs. I. H. Whiseiianl, Mrs. R.
U. Kylle, Mt-s Ciliie Evans, is. E
|. F. and G . H Evans.
OAKES CHAPEL NfcWS
Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Dean and
children spent last weekend will
VIr. and Mrs. \V. C. London.
Those who visited Mr Ray mono
ind Miss Ann Stovall last Sunday
were the following: Andrew
Moody and Ed Potts, of Waynes
viile, N. C., and Hazel Woodall
of Clarkesville, Nell Pulmour,
Clara Cantreil and Arthur Hum
j phries, ot Cleveland, J. G. Bui
I lock, Robbie Brown, BeulahGailey
] Ruth Helen Miller and Mr. Whit
j cenuurger, of Clermont,
I yjj s8 0 deli Whitworth is spend
ltl g this week with friends and re
;:tlives Jit 'r 0CC 4>u.
i Miss Ann Stovall lias returnee,
’home atter an enjoyable week’
visit with Mis- Beulah Gailey nea>
Clermont.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Bunion
j Satterfield May 2 J, a boy.
Next Saturday and [Sunday art
! tie regular preaching days at Bint
j Creek. Every body has an invita
j tton to come and come in time lot
! Sunday School at 9 130.
Have you paid your suoscrip
tion to The Courtesr It’s abou
time you were making arrange
meals about it.
CLEVELAND, (iEOKGIA, .H/NE 2 , 1988 ,
Let Fred Tell It
C1 tss legislation is sometime
justitiable. In 1917 the Selective
Service Act-called for that class ol
men between the ages of 2i an<| 31
m good physical and mental 6011
ditioti. President Wilson laid
congress had '.‘The welfare,* of
more than 125 million at heart.
So 4 million young men were cull¬
ed to arms in the interest of IJ5
million. This was just and right,
and the y.>uth responded to
counliy’s call without dissensiottyto
serve for .$30 per month, and iky¬
ing back to the government *7 f'H
month for insurance and $16 jjyer
month allotment. In other ivofq-.
he was cotndei’ed to sacrifice.. %i
time and liberty and jeopardizejan
life for *8 per month while i^il
honiures were springing up'.#ti
over this country overnight. 5§fiV
following ad appearing in the x\t
lanta Journal Journl of a 19x8
is typical of the ‘‘Help Wanted
ads of that time : Wanted — YotWfg
man not subject to drafts to lift id
position in chemistry and test|pg
department. Apply Amerittu
Vlfg.Co.”
The young man subject to
could not take advantage of
prevailing high wages. A * <|
Youth cannot last forever i ifiCt
especially so when hied by
nervous and mental strain of
Vitality has changed to ptycoJMk
more or less degree in the soicjtei
ol 1917 and lb and they are n<Xu*
a-ked to live on tiie glory of wi^
If you think tins is ju-tiee you mfus
“iell it to the Marines.”
One of tiie high milks told
Congressional committee they tieer
not consider the ex soldier for the,
couldn’t carry a singleCongressiou
tt | disuict in the Union. ThuiX
true enough, but there are thou
sands of other voters who believi
hi justice. Charles R. Crisp 11
congiess la t year received a tele
grunt signed by a mimbet ol citi
/.ens teliing him that 100,000 Gem
gums believed him to be wrong ii
trying to defeat certain soldiei
legislation. i’lxat proved to bi
rue and Crisp is not now in' con
gress.
YON AII NEWS
Mr. Joe Black, of Atlanta, wit
visiting his mother Saturday night
Mr. Frank Turner and family
were up this way one day las', week
Miss UucileFalmer gave a poun
supper Saturday night which wi
enjoyed by ail present.
Mr. and Mrs. J. II. Vandiver, ol
Gainesville, spent Sunday with
parents here.
Mr. Paul Allison has been very
>ick with flu for the past week,
but is improving some at piesent
Messrs L, K. Ivy and W . M
Hardy, of Cornelia, will sing at
Yotiah sciiooi house next Sunday
it 2 P. M. June 4th. Come out
and hear these good singers.
We have been having some gooc.
rains which makes crops iook good
and will give the bean beetle mort
Don’t think we cart supply them
this year as they are numerous.
Reuben A. Garland, attorney
for one of tiie beer prosecutions,
declared Friday in a public state¬
merit regarding the case, that the
prohibition law “is now and al¬
ways has been a farce and a fraud,
■n regard to its past and present
enforcement.” lie further declares
that “there are more religious
amities in Georgia today than
here are drunkards.”
Adveitising is tiie oil that lubri
cates the machinery of business
Try it.
-r—
BOB JONES
OMMENTS
ON
HtRE and
HEREAFTER
A few years ago while 1 was
engaged in an evangelistic, cam
patgn in a West Virginia city I
heard the following story. It
Hold to me bv the pastor of the
First Methodist Church. 1 am gi\
dug it in almost the very words of
minister.
“When I came here as pastor
two years ago I was unpacking my
things at the Methodist parsonage.
A man came in. ‘My name is
John-and 1 want to talk to
you.’ That is the way the man
began his conversation. 'I want
to join the church next Sunday.
That is what 1 want to talk about,
i told him that 1 would be glad to
receive him and I began to write
his name in my little bottle. •Be¬
fore you write my name down I
want to tell you my story.'
‘You are pastor of a wonder¬
ful church in this town, 1 know
because they’ have tin tied tne out
numbers of times. They won't
let anybody stay in that church
.vim gets drunk and I tun awfulh
weak. 1 was born with a cravin,
tar whiskey. Every time 1 gui
drunk they turned me out and tne
H. joined again and they would lake
me in. The last time they turned;
ne out they told me they weren’t i
ever going to take me in any ittoa , |
rut I’ve been sober tor a monll
11 *1 il 1 •’o been praying hard. 1
1 Ion t believe 1 am evet going to
fail any more.’ 1 told him to conn
o church Sunday and J. would takt
tim and that 1 would pray for bin
“A few minutea later Ute Chair
man of theJBoard called me. i
told him that 1 was going to te
eive the man next Sunday. ‘J
iiooe you won't,' he-aid. tile ha
disgraced us many a time. \ ou’l
■ lave to turn him out within a
month,’ ‘All right, we’ll turn
aim nut and then take him in agait
if he wants to jo'ii, I replied
“The next Sunday 1 opened tin
doors ot the church. The man
came forward. 1 gave him the
vows of membership I he peoph
lowed their heads us if they wen
embarrassed. Only one man spoke
to him. lie came by at the close
of the service and said, “Well.
John, 1 hope you’ll stick thi. time.’
“The man stuck. Ae lived t
I -ober, manly Christum hie fur
j ye ., r< ji e Wiis always at prayer
meeting, at Sunday School, and a
preaching se> vice. People learner
to believe ui hurt and te pect him
One day he was taken ill. Severn
lays later he died, just before hi
passed away he said, ‘1 am dying
l want you to conduct my funeral
Tell the people 1 am sorry I eve
got drunk. Tell them there was
no excuse for it. Tell them I tel.
because I took my eyes oil oljesus.
and that their hope of victory ovet
temptation i» in Ilim. When you
have told them that, l want you to
say one good word lor me. 1 wan
them to know that 1 didn’t ful,
every time 1 was tempted, I wit,
tempted every conscious moment
day and night. During the las)
months I stayed sober, but many .,
night when everybody else was
sleeping 1 have warned the flooi
prayed God to save me. I d.
want my friends to know that
while 1 fell I didn’t fall every time
I was tempted.”
My preacher friend told me that
this incident gave him a new ap¬
preciation of the battles the average
man fights. Only God knows the
struggle that often goes on in the
souls of the pure-t men and the
purest woman whom we meet
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!■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■«■
Do You Eat Meat?
w T E mean do you eat enou;?!t
meat? An important group
of modern doctors holds
chat man from early childhood on
should eat meat three times a
day. In comparative anatomy,
these physicians say, the herbi
vora, or vegetable eaters, have a
long bowel, and the carnivora, or
meat eaters, have a short bowel.
Man’s interior shows most sim¬
ilarity to that of the wildcat, but
his diet has changed from that of
this carnivorous animal much
more than it should.
There are difficulties in the way
of eating meat nowadays because
most meat has become so ex
pensive.f Fortunately, however,
tbe eanners have come to the
rescue, and canned corn beef and
canned salmon, according to this
group of physicians, are both ex¬
cellent provender. They believe
that these products should be re¬
inforced three or four times a
week with some fresh kidneys, or
tripe, or sweetbread, or chicken
or calves liver or raw bone mar¬
row. The canned products do not
cost as much as fresh beef or fish.
A Tasty Recipe
There are many ways to serve
these succulent foods. Here, for
instance, Is a recipe for an ex¬
cellent breakfast dish.
Corned Href Hash with Baked
Eggs: Make hash of the contents
of one 10;-<-°unce can 0 f corned
beef, moisten with three table¬
spoons water, and divide among
four wide, shallow,® buttered
ramekins. Cover with buttered
crumbs and place in an oven until
browned on top. Then place a
raw egg on top of each, sprinkle
with salt and pepper, and return
to oven until eggs are done.
This serves four persons.*