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THE CLEVELANDYCOURIER
VOL. XXXVI No, 8»
Canning Demonstration Well Attended.
The canning demonstration held
in Cleveland recently by Miss
Willie Vie Dowdy was very much
enjoyed by about thirty of the
leading ladies interested in canning
of White County. The demon¬
stration brought out many helpful
pointers in the canning of vegeta¬
bles and fruits. The preparation
of tomato juices was one of the
most stressed points during the
demonstration. This food is fast
becoming one of the leading break
fast foods.
IIow to make tomato juice : cut
tomatoes, cook until tender, put
through.a sieve, add two teaspoons
of salt and sugar mixture to each
quart of juice. Pour into jars or
bottles exhaust tins five minutes
and process twenty minutes. One
medium size onion added to two
quarts of chopped tomatoes give
juice a good flavor.
IIow to make soup mixture: any
desired mixture of vegetables may
be packed for home use. For the
standard products use one-half
tomato pulp, one-fourth corn, or
tiny lima beans, and one-fourth
okra, with seasoning of salt, sugar,
pepper, and slice of onion for each
can Cook the tomatoes, put
through a sieve to remove seeds
and cook down to a consistency of
ketchup. Measure, add the corn
or beans or okia and seasoning.
Cook together for ten minutes,then
pack in No. 2 cans or glass jars.
Exhaust five minutes and process
two hours continuously or inter
mittently. With tomatoes not red
enough add one cup pimentoes to
each gulion of pulp. This also adds
flavor.
How to make salt and sugar
mixture : mix two parts of sugar
and one part of salt.
E. J. Huff
County Agent
Man Wanted lor Rawleigh
Route of 8oo families. Write iin
mediately. Rawleigh Co., Dept.
GA—i 25 —SAMemphis, Tenn.
Nacoochee News
Mr. James Williams, who has
been sick at bis brother’s, Allan,
died Monday. His remains were
carried to Atlanta for burial. Their
many friends sympathize with
them,
Mr. Edwin Paris, of Atlanta, is
here for the summer with his aunt,
Mrs. C. H. Krise.
Mr. and Mrs. James Westbrooks
and children, of Philadelphia,
arrived last week to spend the
summer with Mrs. West brook’.
parents, Mi. and Mrs. K. A. Wtl
iiains. Mr. Westbrook left for
home Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. John Keuitner, ol
New York, are visiting aunts,
Misses Annie and Lizzie Glen. *
Miss Mazie Oakes speut the
wsekerul in Atlanta.
Mrs. R. A. Williams left Moa
diy to visit her son, Epwin, in
Greensboro.
Messrs W, 1 . Stovall and T. B.
Henderson went to Chicago to the
Fair lust week.
Miss Emily Logan spent Sun
day in Gainesville with her sister,
Mrs. Walter Brandon.
Kodak Films Developed
Any size roll 4 oc. pet roll
Printing from negatives 5 each.
Mrs. Floyada Denton
* Cleveland, Ga.
Let Fred Tell It
Devoted to the Agricultural, and Industrial Interests ol White County
BOB JONES
OMMENTS
ON
HERE and
HEREAFTER.
The prodigal son “came to him¬
self.” He was sitting on the rocks
of a hillsipe or at the root of a tree
and he sat himself out 111 front of
nitnself and looked v himself in the
face. That is something few men
ever do. That is the hardest thing
a man ever tried to do.
When the prodigal son came to
himself he didn’t blame Providence
There was a famine in the land.
He could have said, “God is to
blame. He sent a famine.” That
is what some people would have
said. Men are inclined to “pass
the buck.” But men who “pass
the buck” have not come to them¬
selves. If the prodigal son had
been like some people I know he
would have said, “My father at
home was too strict on me. I
couldn’t stand tbe discipline and
the restraint. 1 was born with a
restless temperament. My father
should not have been so hard on
me.” The reason lie didn't say
that was because “he came to him¬
self.”. lie located the trouble
and he located it in his own heart.
When we locate our trouble we al
ways locate it in the center of our¬
selves.
When the prodigal son came to
himself he wanted what he had
not wanted before. He had not
wanted his father’s house. He
wanted - hia own liberty. He
wanted to get away from home.
But sitting down and looking him¬
self in the face he decided he was
mistaken, lie didn’t want what
tie thought he wanted. The
trouble with most people is they
think they want what they don’t
want. They think they want
money until they get it and they
land it doesn’t satisfy. They think
they want their liberty until they
get liberty and then they turn
liberty into license and become
reckless.
When the prodigal son came to
himself he hud an humble heart.
Before he left home he asked for
nis rights and nis property. Now
lie doesn’t ask for the place of a
■>011. He simply wishes to have
the place of a servant. People
who are tilled with pride have not
come to themselves.
Court proceedings will be
orought against ull contractors
who violate the NRA minimum
wage scale of 40 cents per hours,
it is announced by Geo.ge L.Googe
.Southern representative of the
American Federation of Labor m
Atlanta.
OAKES CHAPEL NEKS
Mr. Farrell Stovall has returned
mine from Young ilarris.
Mr. and Mrs. Loy Sosebee speut
sunday with Mr. T. N. Hicks
Mr. Charlie Dean had a light
itroke of paralysis Monday. We
nope he will soon recover.
Little James Tatum, ofCoruetia,
spent last week with his grand
mother, Mrs. 11 . A. Tatum.
The infant sou of Mr. and Mrs.
Ed Murphy was buried at Blue
Creek last Saturday.
A large crowd of young folks
enjoyed the youtid supper at the
home of Mr. Gainice Chambers
Saturday night of last week in
honor of his birthday,
FOR SALE
CLEVELAND; GEORGIA, JUNE. 29, 19H4.
Mayor C, C, Jarrarf To
Attend Mayor’s Meeting
Mayor C. C. Jarrard, of yieve
land, has accepted Mayor (Key’s
invitation to join 500 other mayors
in a conference in Atlanta on July
1 4 , to consider reforms for [cities
and towns of Geoigia.
It is likely that some permanent
organization will develop at this
meeting that will act as a dealing
house for municipalities wit# re¬
gard to laws and taxes.
y
—------—<
Now is a good time to Iiegiii 1
thwiking about filling your ptuitry
with food supplies for next winter
I11 order to acquaint the houjjuf of
White County with the -latest j
canning methods and the ynosl
etlicient ways of canning fruits
and vegetables we are holding a
canning demonstration throughout
the county. J each community
there will he a demonstration field.
Miss Helen Walters is the Home Service Representative
who has been, assigned to work in yoeir community.
3orn in Augusta, she graduated from the University
!- of Georgia in 1929 with a degree in home economics.
Afterward, she was engaged Tor some time in the teach¬
k n ing of that subject. /• JF ># *
— £■ :. '■■■ m
T
i- A*-.
■
Hi uman
Jsefulness
She is entirely familiar with your electrical equip'
ment, from heatin; pad and curling irons to range,
refrigerator and elc nc water healer. Site can—and
will, if you wish it she"* you how to use each ap
plian.ee most ad van •geously. If there should ever be
anything wrong y.kii any of your equipment, she
will help you get it j . paired. Probably her most keenly
felt responsibility <.. all is to help you get the most
satisfactory use fro..; your electrical appliances most
economically, with (he least waste, at the very lowest
cost. If you have inplaints, she will adjust them.
She will show how you, individually, may best use
any of the Free I. clricity available to you under
1934’s New Low r.lectiic Rates. To these duties,
this college^rained home economist who now takes
up her work as a useful citizen of your community
adds something cl.;-: an active willingness to he of
genuine assistance to home-makers who want, or
need, her help, whether that help has to do with
electric service or not. She has at her finger-tips any
number of new recipes, new menus, new ideas in
household managetr. cnt.
Her duties, the accomplishments she hopes for,
are important. But she stands for something even
more important, She represents another forward
step in a rapid succession of important changes that
have tremendously broadened electricity’s USE¬
FULNESS in recent years.
Through successive reductions, since 1927, the
price of electric serv ice to homes on this Company’s
lines has been reduced 45 per cent — making it now
one of the nation’s lowest-—the lowest in Georgia’s
history — sc that even the most modest home may
use it in abundance. . . . No matter how small the
town in which you live, no matter if you live on a
farm, you get the benefit of the same low rates as the
■u
Georgia Power Company
Hear Miss Fern Snider—Director WSB’s Radio Kitchen—Mondays and Fridays — 0:15 A. M., C. S. T.
June 30, Saturday afternoon the
demonstration will be held at the
.Mountain Rauch Hotel from t uu-!
til 1 o’clock for the benefit'* of the
people of Helen and R-obertstown
Everyone throughout the county!
is cordially invited to attend t^iis
canning demonstration. Trusting I
that we will have your cooperation
at we need your presence to make
this canning demonstration what
it should he.
E, J. Huff, Co. Agent.
$540 in gold, including one nug¬
get worth $5, was taken from one j
of l he gold mines on the Hardman
estate ih Nacoochee Valley at a’j
recent clean up, according to Dr. !
L. G Hardman, Dr. Hardman
has leased this mine to a Mr. Hud
son for a period of fifteen years,
live of which have passed — Jack¬
son Herald.
Read The Courier
[PRICE #1.50 A l'LAIi IN AI>\ V
Lands Washing Away
Soil erosion (Lands washing away) is becoming a memtue to
prosperity. I'ewer cultivate*! acres mul beuter cart* and en¬
richment of lands offers the solution to the problem. Darren
hills and guides mean an impoverished people.
FIRST NATIONAL DANK
Cornelia, Ga,
r ' ADVER f ISING is like liniment. It*
cant be app.ied effectively with a
powder puff. It needs rubbing in
And the harder the rubbing the better
the results.
RUB 11 IN HARD—Increase your acvertis
ing—put in the sales pressure—create enthusi
asmand enrgy and optimism throughout your
organization—and watch the progrss you make
customer In the largest dty...., Twenty-four hour
electric service baa > ern extended by the Company
to 134 towns ioniii riy had no service at ail, 39
that Lad oriy p l-time service, 210 towns that had
no public water : vice, 2 !8 towns that had no sew¬
crage systems. A. ’d — throughout these recent years,
the service ri.se! !ias been so constantly improved
that even the slightest interruptions rarely mar ks
assuring dependbillty.
These are just a few items in a program of con'
stant improvement which this Company has carried
forward steadily. Because of them, Georgia pennri
are now USING their electric service. They are
translating its low-priced versatility into comfort,
convenience, new hours of useful leisure, new youth
for the women who make Georgia homes. Electricity
in the home has become a powerful social force,
adding to the public welfare.
Now, with two Home Service Representatives
before, adding their usefulness where but one had labored
another more human, more intimate service
is at your command. The Home Service Division of
the Company has been more than doubled in size,
and now is the largest of any electric company in
America. Regardless of where you may live, there is
a Home Service Representative assigned to your
neighborhood, if you arc a customer of the Georgia
Power Company.
Use this service. It costs you nothing; you assume
no obligation, no matter how fully or how often you
use it. The Home Service Representative in your
community is there to help, not to interfere, not to
sell you anything. Call on her, get to know her, she
is permanently one of yon and—yours to command.
We believe you will like her and benefit by her
work.