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IXhc Cleveland Cornier
Oftutat Organ of White County, 6
rnblmtied Weekly at Cleveland Ga.
.1 as. P, Davidson, 1 editor.
En'aied at tlie P<>n : dliee at Cleveland
(ia.. «h seeimd cliisu mail manor.
Me.ulJei N.j’tli District Prj*s »*ociai«
“ Georgia Pres»*
“ National Editorial
ti Prew Congresi Of The World
ascription, *1,50 per year
in a ivance
Mr. A. C. Bowen sent into our
office the first cotton bloom. He
Mates that it Was found on the 27th
That's fine Mr. Bovven, can any¬
one beat him?.
From what study we have given
to the cotton plow ing-up plan of¬
fered by the government we think
ii is the finest legislation ever pass
ed in behalf of the cotton farmer.
(J. A, Cobb, editor ol the South¬
ern Cu'tivator, heads. A® do
know Mr Cobb is for the farmers,
and that don’t mean for any politi¬
cal aspirations uilher, as he lias
never sought political, but was
drafted for this job by the goveifi
merit for his knowledge ol cotton.
On July yth the new tax on
whut will go into effect.
Retailers who have u supply of
flour 011 hand when the tax goes
into effect have a month in which
to exhaust tiie supply. Alter that
they must pay the lax. That
means good flour will sell toi
around $6 in Cleveland retail.
Alter the store has* exhausted their
supply now hand they must, pa)
the tax and that means the price
will be higher. They will not be
permitted to add tins tax on the
flour they now have on hand
I.aUrange, Ga.
June 26, 193,1 ■
Mrs. C. II. Krise,
Nucoochee Valley,
Sail tee, Ga,
Dear Mr*. lvrise :
I11 J.YIr. Cason Callaway’s ah
sence we acknowledge receipt of
your letter of juna 22nd,
with check for *5.00, contribution
from Nucoochee Woman’s Club to
Georgia llali fund. Acknowledge
nient certificate has already been
made out and forwarded to the
Club,
We appreciate your inleiest and
aid in this great endeavor, which
in our opinion i» going to consti¬
tute an important development
the history of our st at e.
Final records Jire now
compiled and ill Hinds ate
consolidated so that tile
letting ol contracts may lit'
following submission ol architect'
plans on July 1st. Should
hive any additional cont 1 1 hut ions,
vs e will appreciate your
them m as quickly as possib e
th it tlu v also may be included in
the ‘‘Builders of Georgia Hall
hook
Sincerely yours,
C. W, Coleman.
Send $1 lor months “•' x of ' 5
THE
ATLANTIC MONTHLY
^J AKL the most v*t your leading
hours. Fiijoy the wit, the wisdom,
the companionship, the charm that
have made tie An. antic, lot
seventy-five year*. America s most
quoted a d most cheifshed
zine.
Send $ 1 . *fnic-Hti«udiig this a.A
Jo
Ttie Aila.t.c Monthly, 8 Arlington. St..
Boston
Have you paid your
e enu’t continue to send it
u. so if you want it to keep visit
t you each week the only
• you to do is to pay up NOW.
HEAD THE COI'RIEK.4
the Cleveland guurikr. Cleveland. Georgia.
L©e&l News
The W. M. S. met at the church
Tuesday, June 27th. After the
business meeting Mrs. W. L. Alli¬
son had charge of a very interest¬
ing program put on by No. 2. We
had as a welcome visitor Miss Fan
hie West, No. 2 will meet with
Mrs, Clinton Faulknet Tuesday,
July nth, at 3 o’clock.
Mrs. Bertha Mauney conducted
quite an interesting Bible Study at
lie regular meeting of the Metho¬
dist Society held at the home ol
Sirs. D G. Head Wednesday after¬
noon, July 5. Following the busi
uess session. Mrs. Head assisted
by Miss Dorsey served delighted
refreshments. We were glad to
have Mrs. ). B. R. Barrett a visit
Mr. A. K. Wofford, of Okla.,
trrived last week to visit her
.laughter, Mrs. W.C. Henderson.
Dr. A. C. Shuler, of Jackson¬
ville, Fla,, is visiting relatives in
Mils sect ion.
Mr. Luther Rutland, of Craw¬
ford, Ga.. spent the weekend in
Cleveland.
The runners must receive n
profit on what he produces before
this depression is over. Mr, Wal¬
lace is doing his best.
Judge Underwood will settle the
highway row between Governot
falmadge and Cupt. Barnett and
Mr. Veieeu Saturday.
Mrs. C. C. Jarrard spent the
weekend in Atlanta.
Mr. and Mrs. Haul Mauney and
Mrs. Frasier Miller spent the
weekend with relatives in South
Georgia.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence spent ;
few days here last week.
Mr. Hubert McDonald spent tin
weekend with f tnily here.
Graves London is the only ex
service man from this county Unit
been called to the forestry camps.
Mr. Thus. G. Humphries and
non. of Birmingham, Ala., spent
lhe weekend at the bedside ol his
marker,J
Tee 4th went off very quite lure
Letters th.it are delivered from
any post office where they are
mailed have been reduced to 2ceuts
except window delivery which i»
mains 1 cent.
lodge J. U II. I inter wood lias
been ill for the past week.
Dr. Hetiliallegon went to Bir
inmghain Saturday and returner
Monday with a load ol furniture.
From reports considerable troubh
seems to take place at Skeel’s Placi
Something should be done.
Mi-s lsabell Lumsden and Miss
Annie Lee |ilood, of Nucoochee,
visited Miss Janie Telford las'
week.
Mis- Janie Telford is visiting
Miss Isabel Lumsden in Nacoochei
Valley this week.'
Miss Jvoslyn Ferguson, of At¬
lanta, is visiting Mr. and Mis, Ha
Ferguson.
Miss livelyn Shuler, of Jackson¬
ville, f . .1,, is v isiting relatives in
Cleveland.
Roy Head Po*jt ty'j .11 next Friday
night, July 7.
Governor i’uhiludge deu-ied in a
speech at Albany Tuesday that la
called the boys in the forestry
camps ‘•bums and loafers.’ Guest
lie read }he handwriting ou tin
wgl 1 foi none of these hoys parents
or relatives will vote for him next
year and that means v jusJ lots ol
votes. \\ e thought lie would soon
or later ie.tr his Isold loose.
Around 100 enjoyed one ot
finest burLtyeue s at Isaac Jackson’s
)uiv 41 h that they have ever uc
casion to participate jn. Foui
diflurent kinds ot meat wta* -erv
ed besides bi uunv ick stew
chicken which weie all -plendidly
predared.
\N D AT THEY ARE SAYING
Malcom Andre. 43. died at the
home ol Mr. Jim London Monday
afternoon from ruptured appendix
Mac, us he was familiarly known
in this section, come into this
county some five or six years ago.
lie was not known to but. a few
people, due to his dispoition of
aloof t ness, which we contribute
directly to his service for his coun¬
try under heavy shell fire in the
World war. He served witii the
82nd Division in at leu-t four
major engagements.
Members of Roy Head Host se¬
cured for him his compensation
md adjusted serv'ce certificate,
and besides got him into a hospital
at Augusta. Tins post was also
represented at the funeral.
lie leaves to survive him, a
brother, of Jacksonville, Fla., and
some neices at East Point, Ga,
Funeral seevices were held at
1 he Chapel of Newton-Ward &Co,,
Gainesville, Wednesday afternoon
at which tile members of Haul E.
Bolding Host and Roy Head Hosr
icted as pall bearers.
Hay Your Subscription Now
Advertising is the oil that lubri
-utes the machinery of business.
Try it.
We will accept from farmers any
kind of produce grown on tLeit
tarm for renewal of their subscrip
lion or to be added to our list as a
hew subscriber, Me tru-t this
proposition will appeal to every
farmer.
Subscribe For Ibe Courier
Have you paid your subscrip
ion to The Couries? It’s about
■ime you were making arrange
nents about it.
Runs Fi-iy-two Financing Insti¬
tutions With Investment of
Two Billion Dollars—Thir¬
ty-nine Agricultural
A MERICA’S biggest banker today is
** me Federal Government, which Is
uow operating fifty-two financing insti¬
tutions, says Professoi John Hanna ot
Columbia University in the American
Bankers Association Journal,
“Forty of these are owned entirely
by the Government.’’ he says, “I 11
twelve more the Government has al¬
ready a two-thirds interest. Thirty
seven are intended to be permanent.
Twenty-five of the permanent ones and
fourteen ot the temporary ones are
agricultural.
“The capital stock held by the United
States In these banks has a par value
of $1,3S0,000,1)00. The Government's
total investment is nearly $ 2 ,000,000,
000. Resources of these institutions ex¬
ceed 13,000,000,000 In addition the
Government has detailed supervision
over fifty-one mortgage banks, operat¬
ing under Federal charter.
“The Government also supervises
4,600 local agricultural loan associa¬
tions with Federal charters. All this
takes no account of the relations of the
Government to the twelve Federal Re
serve banks, nor of the authority re¬
cently given to the Reconstruction
Finance Corporation to buy preferred
stock in national and state commercial
banks.”
The President has ordered the con
solidation of the agricultural credit
agencies into the new Farm Credit Ad¬
ministration, says Professor Hanna.
He expresses the opinion that before
the consolidation of the agricultural
financing agencies too much machinery
ha,d beep created to administer the
financing institutions which the Gov¬
ernment either owns or supervises.
“Existing institutions represent a
considerable differentiation of func¬
tion and any consolidations should be
preceded by a careful survey of the ae
tual activities of the various institu
tious,” he continues. “The only con
solidation the Administration has an¬
nounced 4g *h»J of the agricultural
credit agencies iu the Farm Credit Ad¬
ministration. As a permanent solution
j this arrangement i- too closely bound
up with polices.
j “A better scheme would be to create
a finance corporation under Federal
charter to take over either the agricui
tura! finance activities of the Govern
ijjent or a!! its lending agencies.
“The Government’s financing and
banking activities should be kept
severely apart nop: subsidy and other
schemes for raising the prices of farm
products. One is business, the other is
major political policy. The advantages
of the corporation over bureau control
for the business functions are real and
significant.”
FRUIT PIES
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T [ F it’s good enough for Wasd
A ington, the saying goes—it’s
good enough for me. Thai
George Washington ate apple pies
is revealed in an interestin':;
letter written by him in 1779—
interesting because it gives us
Washington in his lighter mood
instead of crossing Delawares and
weathering Valley Forges. In this
letter he confides to a friend that,
lie lias invited two ladies to dins
with him, and he feels that he
should warn them of the scanty
fare available.
Washington's Letter
“When the cook has a mind to
cut a figure (which I presume will
be the case tomorrow), we have
two Beef-steak pyes, or dishes of
crabs in addition, one on each
side of the center dish, dividing
the space & reducing the distance
between dish & dish to about six
feet, which without them would
be near 12 feet apart. Of late h
has had the surprising sagacity to
discover that apples will make
pyes; and it’s a question, in
violence of his efforts, we do not
get one of apples, instead of hav¬
ing both of Beef-steaks . .
Those were the days before
cooks could look over the canned
fruits in their larders and choose
recklessiy between apple pies,
A WHALE OF A TIME
?**’*• Rv . *V - J
uKir Si§llp
A SHIPLOAD of sea - going
scientists, out to learn the
way of the whale, which lias
always been the great enigma of
the sea, have discovered a (due
in one of the ocean’s tiniest crea¬
tures—the shrimp. It is the shrtn.p
who controls the whale's destin;.
It seems that no one has ever
known much about ihe habits of
the whale not even scion: is
except that the whale prob Ay
n:i
.‘lit
or*
•ra
of whaling is killing off win.
faster than they are repine ng
;iie
b: t
out for the work of whale in efV
tigation cruising the Am ::
;lie
whalers. International control <n
whaling waters is being built on
the foundation of facts \vl eh
these scientists have on:
And right now, they . re end a or
ing to ascertain why shrimps, the
food of whales, are more abundant
at some times and i.i some ok. • >s.
f Studying the Shrimp
Whales naturally go where they
find tii'e kjr.il of food they war. to
eat. In the Far aoutjj and Far
North the waters swarm With . :
i. 7 -
Pay Your
I cherry pies, pies made of peach,
j j pineapple, blackberry, loganberry,
raspberry, strawberry—or any of
the scores of delicious fruits
which housewives at this season
of the year find especially good
“when the cook has a mind to
cut a figure.”
Try These “Pyes"
Here are some tested recipes
for fruit pies made with canned
fruits, which lamentably came
{ | along his guests too late to enjoy: for Washington and
Deep Dish Blackberry Pic: Mix
together three tablespoons flour
and six tablespoons sugar and add
to the contents of one No. 2 can
of blackberries. Pour into a but¬
tered baking dish. Cover with a
thin sheet of pastry made of one
cup flour, one-third cup shorten¬
ing, one-half teaspoon salt and
ice water. Trim the edges, and
press onto the edge of a baking
dish with the tines of a fork. Cut
several slits in tile middle to al¬
low the steam to escape. Bake
for about ten minutes in a hot
oven, 470 degrees, and then lower
the oven to 330 degrees, and con¬
tinue baking for twenty-five min¬
utes. Serve cold, with whipped
cream, if you like.
Peach Pie with Whole Wheat
Crust: Drain the contents of one
1 tidbits that delight
| palates. Whale bait itf
I where cold water me
! The flow of the Gu
j 1 of northward water carries into a 1
warm 1
j On its borders team
j utiired of shrimp-like to feed tilings the t
j of the whales. vas
t
I Shrimn provemh.-r, t
! 1 the whales. const s; tS of mi
I I seopic one-cell ed ere; itares, mo
j the tiny plant s called diatoms.
j ; 1 into ia on prolific these 1 < Uatc:n.< ?, encoura
j [by abundance of che m!eal mat
; als to work Jr ito tne gtuff q£- fj -
bodies. t\ Tt the shrimp - 3 ike
! ! hearth's feed. The chain of life
! 1 is thus complete: ele
! raents, warmc h. dial tojns, shri:
] ! whales.
The Why of the Whale
{ There is one fact, however,
! which science doesn’t explain,
j That is, why the »hales f have
I such a whale-of-a-ti: e wish
I shrimp. But it is easy to imagine
: when one eats these tender, a
j lectabie iittie morsels of sea food
j other which edible are so of different the from any
sea, the es ti:
or the air. Shrimps are r. n:-. st.
i tasty food—for people ana :. r
' whales. So delicious hrimp,
are .
No. 21s can of sliced peaches and
lay them evenly in a pie tin lined
with whole wheat pastry. Mix
one-half cup sugar with four
tablespoons white flour, and sprin¬
kle over. Dot with two table¬
spoons butter, and pour over two
thirds cup of peach syrup. Cover
with an upper crust and bake iu
a hot oven, 425 degrees to 450
degrees, for thirty minutes. This
cuts into six to eight pieces.
Whole Wheat Pastry: Sift one
and two-thirds cup of whole wheat
tl air with three-fourths teaspoon
sc 1» and cut in one-half cup of
shortening. Add ice water until
Uia proper consistency to roll,
u ing as little as possible and
bundling as lightly as can tie.
This makes the crust for one large
pie.
Apple and Cream Cheese Pie:
Season the contents of one No. 2
curt of apple sauce with one-fourth
t noon clove and a few grains
of salt, and pour into a crust,
n i*. with one tablespoon butter
a’;-:l bake for ten minutes in a
i5>-degree oven then lower the
heat to 330 degrees and bake for
twenty minutes longer. Cool.
T;. at three-fourths cun of cream,
add one cream cheese which has
l> 'ii forced through a sieve, mix
thoroughly and piie on the pie,
which should be very cold.*
Ui.it were they not available in
. It; ,-very corner grocery and
can - son store, we might be
: si to go the way of the
. hale to procure them.
Da you prefer your shrimp
rwd in a tempting cocktail,
auk d with a golden butter
■;;st, creamed to a succulent
■ hr.'ss. or in an enticing salad?
■ is a v.-ay that you probably
t n’t di e ivered to have a
. i. A -of-a-ti; .with shrimps:
sires fn PA ■ apples: Soften
iabL.spor.-a gelatin in four
. :s e::s of cold water. Drain
Contents of an 8-ounee can ol
aivaiian pineapple tidbits, add
t.ibi'-rp.oons lemon juice to
pineapple syrup, and then
isugh xvat ?r to make two cups of
lid. Bring to boiling, pour
vr the gelatin, add four tabie
oo:i> s :gur. and stir until dis
Cool Put a shrimp (from
5 Vo unco can of shrimps) and
• r;.S pin. apple tidbits into each
:: iividn il mold, and add a couple
. ; r'r.fuls of gelatin. Let harden
. the re fries rater. Then add an
.her layer of shrimps, tidbits and
’.atin. Continue filling in this
..tanner, as each layer hardens,
:mil the molds are full. Chiii.
;-Tve on lettuce with mayonnaise,
garnish with lettuce hearts
watercress,* w