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THE CLEVELAND COURIER, CLEVELAND, GEORGIA.
1 ^Martisements!
While G'outry.
whtH Court of Ordinary, Fi'bru;. y |
Term, (Feb 1 ), 1*3 4 .
The app! ai^i rs \jpoh application of
Mrs Sal;!-.' W'inki'.vr, wi i* j\V « i hhiiI
»viiikler. f >r twelve months' t
j .j h.-isair, having tile 1 their return. . li
. ms m,i rind hereby are cited to
m >.v c i j <v t if any they have, at the next
. , v xi-i Ms r : a t nn of * his Court, why
v m ttljouhi not be granted.
A, L. D irfey, Ordinary.
i W stile Court of Oi dinar ,, Ft'brut r \
j Terri'., (Feb. Sib), lflji.
Ti : ii f ,, stUiira up <n application .4
| Mis. J. {£. Wheelei, widow of suit J- K
tY heeler. f..r a twelve moMVij* support
f )• hei-eeif, having filed taeir return; a.U
; gtcraous cioire r eu hereby .ire cited to
show c.iuaj, if any they have, at the next
regular Ain, eh, iuji term 01 lure Cow t,
, said ,'ratio.1 should 1 -. . be
q ranted.,,
A . L. D r.< . Ordinary,
Georgia-) White County
To all ,u/.tl it in : } eoiicorii
C. C. .-ii el, having m proper form, 1
ippiied rue for Permanent Lei ers 01
id ai 1 ■: 1 a, lou on the siito of Y, U.
'ciiidain, -A said county, tnis is 10
' cite nil and sii.^uin.!' the creditors auu
;n. at ,t l.iu of Y . C. Skelton 10 tie ami
,1 j.c.ii- hi 111; ' -’i i- ivi 'iiu the time no
i.....i 1 . a 1 : aiio'.T cause, if an
iii.-vi: u, wo,. permanent Hhuiiuisiriui'/i
1,mill no! i.e inline'', lo G. C. Skelton
1 mi Y. Skeii a 1 •. t ite. Witness my
,i old an . ill i.ai si. 11 uul'e, tills 5^ 1 1 ■ ’
,.»i Feijniu; y i.ljl.
a. 1 . Dorsey, Ordinary
iiWhile Os»unty.
j\> ail wiK>:.u ii may concern:
C Sk'/iitm* slaving :n proper form,
,!,t' i tt» inc for iVnnanont Letters oi
s , i ;uor on tin; estate of John
, , ;,i:e of c-aid county, this is t
-.-.it- .til ami .Cm ular die creditors u.h
N. xi of kin id John W . Shelton to beau .
appear &» iuy otiice within the time al¬
ow ad b j i - and s raw cause, if an;
ih m.i, wny pertiiclient a imiiUslratuu
• i!n m/t t> g’iitii ed to U« f > iSkv ..
I mu .k .. u\s eatale. W 1 n.'bs up
f-i o i.: are, this i)i.h d.-i,
oi reurual';
A. ii. Dorsey, Ordinary.
nrp,;;, W hitc County,
ah -o vvnom it may concern:
, ", ^iji.uh, having in proper forin, !]>
: i,iL t.u me lor Terman oi Letters <*i
, nini.eiraiion uii the estate of M. F.
, ii ail all i sd.j.. ■il.ir tile crciiitoru and
tea. of k... id .1. 1 '. omilh 10 be and up
p!.-u.r «! y utu.ic vfdlnn me iiuic allow
■j.. . j i...., and diuw 1 use, 1'. any r.cy
pef .tnlileut iidmiljiotl ation
,
) . lie; .y,suite i t.) J. ii. aulitll on
fiy ifimit 1 on AI. 1 “. .-iiiiith's estate.
• ii„■.... my .i.iuil noil offiuiai signature
uiis fnu a.iy of Kebruury
A. L. Dorsey. Urdinary,
OFg i vi, / W l'»: te C u u H t .
l* nil id whkHii it niiij Csinaern.
Mr.,. D ii.ii-.fggi.iS, having in prop ■
c .. ippiied 1 ppiied 10 :.c 1 !• P.-rm-vuciit Let
>T Adaiiawtrau ■■ - 011 the t-si-iHt; ,
i.ogg <, i ot s.n.i cimuty, IIji
. .) ,...j ;;.';d . g-.ll.ir tilt* 'I' —,Ii ..
t of kill 01 a. J. L-'ggins to ii
ear at my alii e witain tin- ini,.
ailo 1 • -j liy law, a»d show .:a-*s if in,;
tli ^ cc ., \v :y peiajau'iat adaiiiiistnitin
.-mould :ot ini g’ruiiind to Mrs. Delia
i-"v;gin- ,'ii A. -J. Loggia's estate.
Witness my i and ami offi ia] signature
til is (all day of Fubniary
\ . L. . ■ irst-y, Oi’ilinary.
| \Y kite Com t of 0 ; tey. A! 1 h unbers,
Fcbrutir;. Vlh, VV ;.
A he iiyemet; y- u application of
.Mrs. A, J I/O g 1 , wi-io.v of sai i J.
Logyi s for IAVfcl re lit >atl:H’ support for
licroe.f tnvl two 'll * * ctiiklisoi, liaviug
i (l t ha r rulurn ; iii parsons liteg.'Ll-a
o-.-reby <r:t cited to sltuiv cause, if-any
they ii.tve. at ihe next regular Mar ft
i'-'ri/i of iMscouD, why mat application
air aid to 1 be g.-.ndvd,
A. k. Uorsey, Oi'dinary
b her lit Valid enried Toll
Sackson lo t!:r ve Farm a no
O-'Car Turner !< i ; .. State Satti
torium Mond n.
: ■ ■ the inset ion si le of t lie c.
;• tle property S i urday. I
Mr. and Mrs W. C IJ ender
n .spent tl weeckend .'til Prof.
d Mrs \Y. L Bowen in Soul li
: off; Ft.
Li!tic !' e AVm Miller has been
yet; -us v ill for the past v eek with
- n,vi,motif .
T C< u.ity Conitni-sioaers vv>
o Atlantc Monday in be i i it it oi
tiug the o - onnt.c’ t: ! link to
Lumpkin.
Mr, Ernest Hendcrso; 1 e t u r 1
from a few ua> * \ i*it
W rshinoton.
FO?, FAirilE PROCF
BMMS BTDnrT V
U ii
S:: ’ rr O' Mms Threefold Co
r-k-zeen Bankers,
Officials end
Che Pui;:c to Maintain
Eank Standards
k 70 elements fjeside the hankerfi
themselves are required in order to
»• ve tlio nation universally the type of
bunking it should have, Francis H. Sis¬
son, president of the American Bank'
ers, AssopiaUon, declared in a recent
address. He said that the efficiency of
government officials upon whom the
people rely to supervise the banks
properly, and tlio patronage of the
people themselves are factors in the
kind of banka a community shall have.
“There can be no question that the
people of the United States should have
hanks immune from failure and wholly
free fiom bad or questionable banking,’’
Ktr. Sisson said. “It is not enough, as
President Roosevelt, has said, that
while some bankers had been incompe¬
tent or dishonest, this was not true in
the vast majority of our hanks. A sit¬
uation should exist in which there is
not even a small minority of bankers
open to question. There should be no
room for dishonesty or incompetency
to exercise any influence in banking
anywhere.
“While bad faith and bad manage¬
ment. enter the human factor in all
types of business, their effects in hank¬
ing should he surrounded by such spe¬
cial safeguards as to render them no
longer a factor in bank failures. The
responsibility for bringing this about,
however, cannot rest upon the bankers
alone, for the means to accomplish it
are not wholly in their hands. There
arc other essential, elements.
“One is the effimency of government
supervision. Since we rely so greatly
upon supervision, it. may, unless it is of
the highest order in safeguarding the
public interest, create a sense of false
secit’.iiy. Supervision should render
bad banking impossible, but it has
failed to do so. There was super¬
vision by presumably the highest type
of bank supervisors in •-very one of the
it.stances of q. . e enable banking that
has shocked the attention of the coun¬
try during the past three years. There
fore a thorough strengthening of super¬
vision is clearly called for if the people
are to rely on it to the fullest extent
for the protection of their interests.
The Public's Part
“Another essential factor in main¬
taining good banks involves the part
played by the public in banking. There
is certainly a responsibility on the peo¬
ple themselves to support that type of
banker whose rigid adherence to sound
* prfitciptes^-nm-keSs "tr
going banker who may be cA
business with, but whose mE& t®#- -
ate a weak bank.
‘Bank customers are charged fflMi a
gr*at responsibility in protect:,thte
safety of their banks in respect tv tlutif
utilisation of the assets of the Banks as
borrowers. Banks have failed b* cause
many of their loans and securities, eye-,
ated hi good faith by bankers iff coop
ciwith the business intercuts of
tile t sntry, proved unsound tuiilSr sflb
sequi --t conditions. An unsound (pan re
erect 1 by the borrower as well -is the
fcahkt A bank is only as soaB«las its
comn iaity, and this applies alsOjfo iF the
banl ing structure as a whole rela
t;r ’ ’ > the economic condition of the
nation as a whole.
A hank is truly a serni-puAiicyinsti-
1 bat in a reciprocal sense- yit lms
its ol, igations to the public, but ,30 has
pabile equal obligations to the
1 :11K. Mo one who has not sound bank
in prinuiiffi .; at heart lias any busintias
in a bank whether as a banketj or as
a customer.
“The banker is a semi-public servant.
He is charged with the lieaviest-of re
spqnsibilities and obligations that occur
in our economic life. But lie can meet
these fuliy only through the cqdpera
' , :i of good laws, good public officials
who are empowered to exercise au¬
thority over his bank, and good Busi¬
ness methods on the part of business
non generally who utilize hisfbank.
Only through such cooperation ji^y all
e, ments in our nation’s oomiHunjffy life
eta we be assured of a failureproof
banking structure. Waslfegton t 1
“The Administration at
has taken hold of this y.volileni with a
linn grasp of essentials and is osert'is
tag splendid leadership toward the tie
sired etfd. T ie slrougest featunfof the
government pro ram will responsili&y be fo&M in
recognizing the joint of
tlie public, of business and of baffkers govern¬
ment officials together with the
themselves in creating the kind of
banking the nation should have?
Iiaj.i’oved Pasture Pays
|MPROVED ^ of l- for arcii are a .cheap
source feed stock. A farmer
in New Hampshire, onperatirg with
his comity agent top-dressed bi 3 6
acre,- cf pasture with 509 p .'tide 01
complete . a':. '- at a co t of .' 75 , re
ports the Unite, .States Deuaytmon:
cf Agriculture. Af.r-r I weeks he turned
his rows out Jpn this v ; vare. ' Tests
matle during Wi ■ika titty cows
grazed the; 0 - “ at it is Void pro
fbmrd 7 .() 0 i, ' |.l . - more mil’5 that
icy.Td in tin* an period the pre
ions year. c.Ui "Vi tlie farmer had
te cow fewer a “ ii 500 pounds lest
tin Based <; “at milk pricer
made MT' ■ tv j extra -ir.fjjk ant
ml -M.fi A" ■ mi, netting bin
- a of 512 U.-U. S
. .el. of /igi .CuIIUI’O.
...,z
Naeoochee News
Mr. S. 15 . Logan has been sick
for t lie lust J week.
Prof, nnd Mis. Bellamy spent
Sunday in Ashland.
Mr. Jim Westmoreland, of!
Franklin, N.'C., spent Friday
night at home, §1?J?i
Mr. and Mrs. Waller Brandon
and son, Walter, Jr., spent Sun¬
day with parents, Mr. and Mrs. S.
B. Logan.
Mr. Luther Lotiisire, of Atlanta,
ipcrnt llie weekend with Mis-cfi
Annie and Liz/he lilen.
Mr. and* Mrs. \Y. J. Slot y 11
pent the weekend with daughter,
of Flowery Brand), Mrs. I lurry
Williams.
On lastJSnnday’morning us the
nil began to rise over the easier n
o.ivsoii and the skies so clear and
, I 1 lie universe seemingly quite
md culm there came to Mrs. J. L.
Purdue a birthday. This day
h ouuli; forth the 87th year that
the great Lord hu-. permuted her
to live in this world. The part of
children and grand chi ci re ti and
great-grandchildren vulh their
families gathered at her home to
give her a birthday dinner the
tables were laden witli many good
tilings and each and a i w shed for:
,er many more years of happiness
ike tins day. Those present were :
Mr. and Mrs. j. K, Purdue, Mr.
,nd Mrs. Ben Al-eu and children,
','C.hie, Fred, Herbert, Burnett,
Ide! and E-telle, Mr. and Mis.
Heorge Purdue and four children,
I r. and Mis. Donald ;Pardue ,antt
in, Mr. and Mrs. Poy Purdue and
ihildren, Mr. and Mrs Ernest l’ai
lue and children, .Mi .J^and Mrs.
J. R. Lawson and cl)i|dren. Those
o.neis present L ivrie : Mr. and
lrs. F. M. Glover and son, Miss
Tmiui Alien,“Mr. J.^M. Glover,
lrs. M. B. Sesler utul son, \F.
if McIntyre,; J. C. Gibson and
Ru sell So 11 1 1
Me-srs Joint \Y Intej and Joe
o liuose at prc-ent on the Blake
property.^ 5^
, Messrs Marvin Furdlie John
Mover and Misses Mary I’ardtie
ant! Etiiel Allison motored Hij At¬
lanta, G 1., hist Sunday.
' Mr, Lutbea Glover Inis moved
from this settlement to Mossy Creek
district. M e regret .ilu ir leavino
Rev. Stanton Howard preached
at Loudsville Sunday. Ho \vi I
preaclt at Loudsville. each ^rtl Sun¬
day at li A. M.
Loudsville has a good Sutui.iy
School and we ate i it ci that the
Vonah folks have joined us. We
welcome them. Sunday School
each Sunday morning at lo, except
the 1st Sunday winch is at uF. jNi.
Come evei \ body and bririg a friend
Mr. Carl Smith, of CCC Camp,
Atlanta, spent Sunday here with
homefolks.
Miss I la Ledford, who lias been \
visiting relatives at Clarkesviile,
Ga., returned home hist v\eek.
Miss Icie Belle Gillstrap, oi
Cleveland, spent Sunday afternoon
vvith grand patents, Mr. and Mrs.
Fete Gillstrap. j
jjTlie little sou ol Mr ami Mrs.
Henry' Smith has whooping cough j
this writing, 1
at
'Mr. and Mrs. Henry Ledlord !'
md children spent hist ^Thursday
vVtth Mr. and Mrs. F. B l’aruue |
of near Cleveland.
^Mrs. Claude Situs lias been very j
. 1Ck for the past three, wtekspvMh i
.Oil,
jllave you [laid your subscript ion
,Ve Can’t continue to send it to j
/U, so if you want it to keep visit
ngyotteacli week the only thing;
.or you to do is to pay up NOW,
Nearly So Plus Maybe $o.%
Toy Town Likes Tomatoes
O' ,F course they iio— the (log
eartnl dog. the calico cal ami
even the bright-oyert bunny.
Perhaps because tb<y see the
mayor of toy town clriulting his
tomato juice cocktail every morn¬
ing utul eating such gay red to¬
matoes in his noonday salad.
Baked is one of tlie very best
ways to eat tomatoes, at this sea¬
son of the year. And whether t
they are fresh-off-the-virie or fresh
from-the-can doesn't matter, be¬
cause tlie same little good elves,
called vitamins, are hiding there
ready to make your checks rosy
and make von grow big. Have
you tried these ways:
Baked Tomatoes and Onion:
Put the contents of a iar-re can of
tomatoes, one cup of sliced onions,
two teaspoons salt and onn-tourth
The Great American Bean
HAT do you suppose would
happen if every bean, of j
every kind, should suddenly
i7rr.;,r. v,, -ftsr«Bt«r* ■*' 5 f'rvAfcrft«'' •• JiTtYitcwi United '
States? What, no baked beans? j
No limns? No string beans? Jt
is just unthinkable, dive and at the our mo- j j
l-alc takes a nose very
suggestion! I
However. you needn’t begin such to j
get despondent over any a 1
possibllitv, because that is one likely of I j
the last calamities that is
to Fappt 1 to us. I
In the first place the bean crop
’.j gencij ° n 0 | J! I f i..... 'l l A,l!!!’a ■' 1 eS, (.f ' an all "ou-
vegetables. .d in the second .
place, with the “packs put. tip b..
the earners each year there is
always n huge store of reserves. I
relic'ouo Bcnn Recipes j
Bo, just to soothe your feelings
and make up for the horrible idea
that wo put into your mind in
our first simBmeo, there are some
perfectly delicious bean recipes
• ilV*- *41 f 7 >•»- $C.V. Wm
■—ot.- -je .J i:' VM Vf-ttp
cC 1 -
'X
“Siilil
Better
■INCLMKA’j; Do you rais& for
a
eyebro^v l We sismiro tissui'c
that Mincemeat Breakfast F>un
without the slightest
tlon. In fact this whole
fast is a particularly good one
a brisk winter morning, when
human fuel supply must
adequate to withstand any ic
blasts that may meet you at tin
corner.
First the grapefruit gives
necessary stimulus to the
juices and then conies good
substantial ham and eggs, both
them good for stoking. Tlie
meat buns add the final touch.
Halved Crape fruit
Broiled Ham icith Fried or
Poached Eggs
Mincemeat Breakfast Buns
Coffee
popper in a pan. Cook
^jn the oven for two and
hours at 275 degrees.
two tablespoons butter when
Baked Tomatoes and Peppers:
one green pepper, and place
a baking dish vv^th the contents
one No. 2 can of tomatoes, one
spoon salt ami a few grains of
enner. Bake i.n a moderate oven
the peppers are tender. Add
tablespoon butter, and serve.
Baked ‘ Tomatoes and Cheese:
to the contents of a No. 2 can
tomatoes one teaspoon chopped
But alternate layers of to¬
grated cheese and bread
in a buttered linking dish,
the top layer of crumbs.
with butter, and bake for
minutes in a moderate oven
'bin degrees.* t
that will make your people call
for more and still more,
Boston Supper Rarebit: One
tHblespaoftdjuttec, one and one-half
cups grated cheese, a few grains
cayenne, one-fourth teaspoon salt,
one-fourth teaspoon mustard, one
egg, one-third cup cream, two
cans bean-hole beans. Melt but
ter, add cheese and cook very
slowly until melted. Add season
ii'SS. Beat eggs, add cream and
add very slowly to the cheese,
cooking until smooth, stirring
^rves’^ ^ ^
Ciina Bean Salad: One 8 -ounce
can lima beans, one tablespoon
one-fourth cup
' rth
,, ho pp e d celery . ono . foU cup
chopped cucumber, four teaspoons
.French dressing, two slices bacon
(fried), six leaves lettuce. Drain
beans, add onion, celery and cu¬
cumber, and marinate in the
French dressing for at least one
hour. Add bacon broken or cut
i»’.o smail pieces and ,erve in let
tuen lcavef Serves six.* r
j (bic-fourtlt Mitfcpvieffl Breakfast butter*
; cup of soft two
: lb iritis cup 1..,....... brown sutrar ..... {wo , onn^ fy- • •
. | Hour, fpiir teaspoons baking p 0
I l.nltr,,....... butter, 011c 0 .......- gg. two-thirds /____
diluted evaporated : miik, cup
ptiumj one 1 -
can mincemeat, one-third
clip brown sugar. Cream butter
with brown sugar and spread
over sides and bottom of a baking
pan. Sift together flour, baking
powder, suit and sugar, and rub
4 n. butter. Add beaten egg mixed
with the milk, Roll out in ol>
bmg shape. Heat, mincemeat with
brown sugar, eon! slightly, spread
over dough and roll up like jelly
roll. Cut in thick slices and lay,
cut side down and close together,
in (lie sugar and butter lined pam
Hake in a four hundred degree
oven for about twenty-flv mi n
.
utes. Makes eight buns 4 ®
.