Newspaper Page Text
THE [’CLEVELAND COURIER
43 ‘
V 31.. XXXV. Va.
Harris Dam Work Started,
Equipment !ms been moved to
the site of the Norris D un prepura
tory to starting tests e.riy this
week to determine the underlying
nature of tire place where this great
wall of masonry will rear its height
250 above bed rock.
An exploration shaft measuring
six by nine feet will be. sunk on
the west bank of the Clinch river
at a point to reach bed rock at a
depth of about too feet. In con¬
junction, two other tunnels wil[ be
bored into fbe opposite hill on
which will rest lie other end ol
the 3,000 foot gravity type barrier
that wi I impound water tor t] -oil
control and incidental power anri
nrvigation pnrp >ses.
Some of the drilling equipment
comes Prom M use'e Shoals; t he
rest of it has been obtained locally
in Knoxville, 20 miles southeast of
the dam site. It has ail been haul¬
ed to the point of operation. There
is a fairly good road to the site ex
cejut for the last mile.
Roy Whittlesy is in charge of
the drilling. Twenty men will
work in two shifts, This force in¬
cludes 10 drillers, (wo powder men
and the rest helpers. About 800
tons of material will be removed.
The foundation tests are under the
supervision of John L. Savage,one
of the designers of the Boulder and
Madden dams, who has been loan¬
ed to the Authority by the Recla¬
mation Bureau of the Interior De¬
partment.
Arrangements have been made
to carry on this work pending ac¬
quisition of land at the dam site by
fames YV Cooper, land attorney
for the Authority. This p-elimi
aty job will consume about two
weeks.
The next step will be stripping
the dam site to a width of about
too feet. .It will require about
two weeks to remove trees and top
soil. This work will be done by
50 men from the immediate locality
It is the poliqy of the] Authority to
employ local help wherever pos
stble. There are more unemploy¬
ed in the vicinity than can be ust^l
at present. It is possible that
foundation plans may have to be
changed when excavations expose
the character of the underlying
rock. If so, the Authority can dr
this work more readily with :t
own force.
About 2 oo men are conducting
surveys in the locality pending ac¬
quisition of land for a town site as
as well as for the dam and reser¬
voir. Mr. Cooper, who has es
tablished his office at Jacksboro,
Tennessee, is doing the appraising
Meanwhile the Authority s
geologists have assembled 750 bag
of samples of rock and other ma¬
terials from the locality which may
be used in construction workjThe-sr
bags will be shipped to the office
of the Reclamation Bureau at Den¬
ver which will test the materials
with this purpose in view.
All these activities give but a
meager idea of the vast amount ol
preliminary work necessary to in
sure tne stability and safetygof this
mass of more than 600,000 cube
yards of concrete that, according
to tentative plans, will be 185 feet
wide at its base.
\Ve will accept from farmers any
kind of produce grown on then
farm for renewal of their subscrip
tion or to be added to our list as a
hew subscriber. YY'e trust tills
proposition will appeal to every
tanner.
Have von paid your subscrip
tion to The Couues? It’s abou
time you were making arrange
meats about it.
Devoted to the Agricultural, Commercial and Industrial Interests of White County
OAKES CHAPEL NEWS
Mr. Frank 'Latum and son, Bill,
and Miss Nellie Grady, of Atlanta.
Mr. and Mrs. \V. R. Latum and
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Franklin and
children, of Cornelia, spent Sun¬
day afternoon with Mr. j. 1 ).
Latum.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Turner am
little daughter, Frances, have re¬
turned to Atlanta after spending
a few days with relatives here
Mrs. Corbet Johnson, MissesDaisy
Miles and \ iolet Sisk accompanied
them home.
Mr. and Mrs. George Edwards
of Atlanta, visited relatives here
awhile Sunday morning. Liter
were enroute to Burton Lake.
Mrs. ). YV. Whitworth is visit¬
ing her father, Mr. J. T. Collier
at Toccoa this week.
Mrs. J. D. Tatum spent Sunday
with Mr. and Mrs. John Sosebee
in Nacoocltee Valley.
Mr. Raymond Stovall, of YY*y
nesville, N. C., visited homelolks
Sunday.
Mrs, YY'E B, Freeman spent last
week with her daughter, Mrs.Ross
Sosebee, in Nacoochee Valley. Mr.
and Mrs. Ross Sosebee are the
proud parents of a baqy boy horn¬
ed August 14., who has been
christened Samuel Ross.
LOUISVILLE LINES
Miss Eleanor Thacker spent one
night last week with Miss Lois
Glover.
Mr. Carl Smith, of U. S. Forest
Camp, of Atlanta, spent the week¬
end here with parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Henry Smith.
Miss Florence Headers spent the
weekend here with Mr. and .Mrs
Claude Sims,
Mr. Ervin Ledford has moved
from Jefferson to Mr. B. 11 . Mid
dlebrook \ farm.
'Lite best camprneeting at Louds
vilie in several years has passed.
Good preaching and several addi¬
tions to the church.
Mr. Joint Glover has gone to
Buford where he has employment
Mr. and Mrs. B. H. Middle
brooks, Sr,,who have been at their
summer cottage for the past few
weeks returned to their home in
Atlanta Monday.
Miss Mary Ash, of Atlanta, is
visiting her sister, Miss Laura.
Campground .News.
Mr. YV. G. Adkins, ot Gaines
ville, spent a few days in this part
last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Dorsey and
family, of Lula, speutSunday with
Mrs. U. G. Moore.
I
Mr, Ernest Barden attended the
singing convention at Calvary.
Mr. Clifford Hooper, of Florida,
was visiting his parents Sunday
Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Hooper.
YY'e were grieved to hear of tne
death of Mr. Dave Sargent who
died Sunday,
Rav. Posey filled his regular ap¬
pointment at Bethel and delivered
an interesting sermon Sunday.
The City Quartet will sing at
Bethel the first Sunday in Octobei
Have you paid your subscription
We can’t continue to send it to
you, so if you want it to keep visit
mg you each week the only thing
tor you to do is to pay up NOW.
Pay Your Jiubseription Now
CLEVELAND, GEORGIA, SEPT. 8, 1P88
Atlanta, (lit., Sept. 7—Falling
in line with the 19^3 "new deal”
and the movement to makeAmerica
economically safe and sound,South
eastern Fair, Atlanta, October 2 to
8. will be hack on the map in lull
swing this year, featuring more
specifically than it has in recent
rears the agricultural, horticultural
and 1 iveat.ock phases ol the expo-i
tion.
The cows and pigs, pushed oul
■ if the picture for several years, are
coming back under the program
this year. I be 4-H clubs wi W! 1
find Atlanta’s fair a haven to
ther their constructive teaching -
and see graplucallo the best
ducts of Georgia on gratul“display
Lbe horse will be giuen sway tot 1
two days with horse shows and ex
hibitions while King Cotton,
Corn vviH vie with the "machitiu
tge” phase of radio, automobile
and new type farm machinery in
the myriad of exihibits in the
splendid permanent type buildings
at Atlanta, which no fair south of
the Mason-Dixon litre can surpass.
“Educational, Insp-iiationnl and
Entertaining , Southeastern Fair,
with its slogan "It s Y our I 1 air
Be There” will be truly a "Fair
that Educates , a ‘ lair I hat Lit
ervates”, a "Fair that Entertains”
New blood, which is "young
blood”, is at the helm at theSoutli
eastern Fair this year backed by a
sage directorate of maturer years
"Young Mike” Benton is pres.
dent, "Young Johnn.e” Armour F ,
vice-piesident and "Young Vir¬
gil” Meigs is manager.
'Lite fair will be for six days this
year, starting on Monday, Octoltrer
2, and closing ou Sunday, Octobei
S. Children^ Day. Hcric F>r,. v\
Days, Military Maneuver Day,and
Auto Race Day, will be included
in the weekly program.
A chance to win an income of
$1,000 a year for life and other
cash prizes amounting to many
thousands of dollars will be offered
next Sunday in The American
YY'eekly,magazine distributed with..
The Atlanta Sunday American
and other Hearsl Sunday news
papers.
The amount of the first prize is
is greater than the average annua
incomes of the entire families in
many states in the Uniited States.
It will be paid at the rate of $i,o«jO
a year the winner lives after the
award is made may amount in all
to $50,000 or m»re if the winner
should live that long. The second
award is to be $500.00 a year for
life and eight otiier awards will be
large sums of cash to b.e paid at:
nually.
These big gills of money are to
be made simply for an idea, a few
words which will be suitable for a
slogan or sub title to be used by
Lite American YY'eekly, the maga
zine which goes into more than
5,000,000 American homes every
Sunday.
The contest, as it will be outlin
ed in next Sunday's ! A' ner ' C:,n lfi
one of the simplest ever conducted
by a newspaper and (he easiest to
enter. No subscriptions will be
required in order to quality for a
prize, no puzzles to work, word
lists to build or anything else tedi¬
ous or troublesome.
If you want to wm $ 1 ,000 a year
for life, with all the possibilities at!
travel, education, pleasure, security
from worry or unemployment that
-licit an assured inaotne will give,
just see next Sunday’s Atlanta
American for full information
about the contest.
Advertising is tiie oil that lubri¬
cates the machinery of business,
fry it.
READ THE CO TRIER
BOB JONES
OMMENTS
ON
HERE * N0
HEREAFTER
J
Billy Sunday, Sam [ones, and
other gteat evangelists of this
eration and tin* past
drew crowds and moved crowds
not just because they were job]
personalities. They did the
been use t hey could preach. Sami
Jones startled the crowds with lii.-s I
peculiar style of saying things. But 1
in every great meeting he conduct
ed, there were a tew services when
Jones preached the Gospei
with tremendous power,
were the services when
complished his results.
In the Bob Jones College we j
had last year about fifty young!
met) studying for the ministry. ! j
tell these boys that they cannot till i
be great preachers [but that they | ;
can all preach a great gospel They
human, but their message is j
divine. Men may reject the mes¬
senger, but they cannot reject the 1
message without doing it at the !
peril of their souls.
"I don’t like the way he preach j
es.” That is what a young lady
siid to tne about a certain preacb
er .. llow do you like what don’t] he |
prenche8? » 1 inquired. "1
know”, she said ; "I just don't like
Ins style.” This young lady
thought site was very cultured and!
broad. As a matter of fact, she j
was very narrow. 1 go to a dtning
room and the waiter brings me ■
well cooked, palatable food. 1
d«n’t like the waiter, therefore, 1
won’t eat the food. That is not
my way of doing things. I don’t
eat the waijer, but id lie brings me
go*d food, 1 eat it. 1 make it a I
rule to accept truth from whatever j
source it may come, even though it ;
brought to me by by Ofudb tries -1
sengers. j
"I like Dr. So and-so. When!
lie preaches Ire makes me feel so ‘
good. I go to his church thinking
J am a sinner, and I come away
feeling like a saint.” 1 heard that
o-ne time from a very cultured
woman "Did you know Jvou can
give a mart who has cancer a hy¬
podermic of morphine and make
him feel good? But that is not
what he * needs. He needs at)
operation.” That was my answer
Nowhere does the Bible tell a
preacher to comfort sinners. It is
the business of a minister to make
sianers uncomfortable. Comfort
the saints—that is religious. Com¬
fort signers while they are in sin—
that is wicked.
Religion is reliance. Every
man has some kind of religion.
That is, he relies on something for
salvation. He may rely upon the
hope that there is no hell. He may
lely on his morality. He may rely
upon his church membefship. A
Christian is a person who refic
upon the atoning blood ot Je . 11 -«
Christ lor salvation. In othet
words,a man knowing that lie can
not save himself, depends upon
what Jesus Christ did lor him
when He died on the cross
’Lite Bible Study Class of the
of the Methodist Society met with.
Mrs. J. II. Telford YVednesday
afternoon, Aug. 30. An unusual¬
ly interesting and instructive study
on Prayer was ^discussed by th«
several members present. YY’e
were glad to have as a visitor Mrs.
J. C- Burns,of Maysville, Tlu
meeting on Sept. 13 will be with
Mi*. Ben Allison.
Read The Courier
fPRICE * 1.50 A YE u. IN ADVAN
Printing o f ’
<v
is the master key of »ur civilization,
the means through which we have /)'
achieved art, education and industry. )
It is well worth the very highv- *'
efforts of its craftsmen, <
> . f
vs
The Cleveland Courier
Commercial Printing of Every Description
\W
a ztn m in ( -
As Prosperity Returns
L-huracter, integrity, (lepeiulabijitv and cred t standing at a good
bank will be the factors if. success. Flits Bank earnestly solicits the
business of roe* and women of character and dependability.
MUST N A 1 IONAL HANK
Cornelia, (in.
' ADVERTISING is like liniment. It
c ant be appjed effectively with a ■0
powder puff. It needs robbing is
And the harder the rubbi <g itz better
the results.
RUB IT IN HARD—Increase your acvertis
mg put in the sales pressure—create enthusi¬
asm and enrgy and optimism throughout your
organization—and watch the pcogrs-s you make
«”Hfp ►.AY?
Opening Announcment
YY’e wish to ut h&unce to tin Farmers id' White
County that our gin at Cletm. ut will open tor business $
September 6th.
YY e have installed 3-70 saw Lumu.ia Air B ast gins
up to date and modern in ever, respect.
YY e also want to inform y u bat we w buy your
cotton seed at the highest market price and cat) sell you
cotton seed meal and hulls.
YY e earnestly solicit your patronage and we vs ill en¬
deavor to give saiisfactkon.
WHITTENBERG & WHELCHEL
Clermont, Ga.
*830 -**-*
wmsr—
\ J
I
Better
a , NLY a very dull person
serves a dull break-fast.
.June days are perfect days
and they should, by all means,
start off with a perfect breakfast
—so what shall 1 it he? Why not
take the table, out in the garden,
or^out Pjace oti the where breakfast porch or
sauna there are blue
sines, blrtebfc’ds and perhaps blue¬
berry muffins?
Lisa a gay checkered breakfast
cloth, be stire that your china
is cheerful and inviting, put a
bowl of Blossoms on the table,
blossom out in your sweetest
morning frock and play hostess
for your day-in-and-day-out guest
of-houor with a menu like this:
Mired Peaches with Cream
Ready-to-Eht Cereal
Eggs linked in Ramekins
Blueberry Gems
Coffee
Blueberry Gems: Mix and sift
two cups flour, three tablespoons
sugar, four teaspoons baking
powder and onedialf teaspoon salt.
Beat two egga. add one cup di¬
luted evaporated milk, and add to
dry ingredients. Then add three
tablespoons melted butter. Add
three-fourths cup fresh (or
canned) blueberries and bake in
well-buttered gem pans. Have the
oven hot—400 degrees—for about
twenty-five minutes. This makes
about twenty-six small gems.*