Newspaper Page Text
COURIER:
Devoted to the Agricultural, Commercial ana inausrtrial Interacts or White County
OL. XXXVIll No. 34
Farm planning has a new mean¬
ing to the farm in While County
who have borrowed from the Re
settlement Adtuitii-tuition to curry
them through tin crop ye.it, ac¬
cording to Mr. James M. Oxford,
county supervisor, who recently
announced that 75.families in this
county are receiving rural rel abili
tatiau aid this year.
“Those families who have re¬
ceived siicdi loans,” said Mr. Ox¬
ford, “are learning that budgeting
and other business methods tire just
as important in their comeback as
their money advanced to them.
Most of our furnie; were fore d
on relief by condit mis over which
they had no control, but uadoub
edly some of them .ent on relief
becnuse they failed to u-e busiruss
metnods ami employ sound judg¬
ment in planning their farm opera
tion.
••The Resettlement Administra
tion recognizes its responsibility
to gutird such families uganist a
return to relief status, and that is
what is back ol our farm and home
management plans.”.
Each ^family, Mr, Oxtord ex¬
plained, agrees when his loan is
advanced that both farm and home
wip be managed according to plans
drawn up with the help of E. J
Huff, county agricultural agent,
Miss Surah Thompson, Resettle
ment Administration home super
visor, and the county supervisor.
Under this plan, according to
Mr. Oxford, farm produce is divid
ed into three groups—food crops,
feed crops, and cash crops. The
major emphasis in determii in a
crops to plant is placed first on a
comfortable living tor the family,
and second, on feed f»r faun ani
mTiTC This, he said, is based on
the fact that living at home is less
expensive and more certain than
living out of store.-.
Notice To Wholesale Groceries, Meat Packer
And Stock Feed Mills and Dealers
Sealed bids will be received by the
State Highway hoard of Georgia,2 Capi
t d Squm e. Atlanta, Georgia, until 10
o’ojock A. AJ. June. 2a, lOilO for fur¬
nishing groceries, supplies and feed foi
Uionth of July various convict camps
maintained by said Board. Bid blank
and full information as to quantities arm
delivery points can tie obtained from tin
Purchasing Department at t lie above ad¬
dress. Uni bid blanks must tie used it.
submitting bids. Payment to be in tide
30 days from date of delivery atnl accej
t nice of go ids. Goods must be equa f o
or belter than" that used by the Highway
Board and found satisfactory. Qualiti¬
es shown .'.re approximate only anu
may he iuoronsed or decreas-t as th>
Board sets tit. Right is reserved to re¬
ject any and ail bids and to waive at
ormaliths. Contract of purchaet
awards pursuant hereto to be binding On
the Slate High w iy Department as such
and not on any employee or individual
This notice is in aecordanee with the Ac
Of the General Assembly ot Georgia, ap
provedA ug 20, 1022. Envelope mus
be marked “S., led bid to lie opens June
25th’. Georgia.
State IJignway B ;■ 1 of
\V. K. W iburn, Cluti nan; Max L.
McRae, Memb r, John A. 'deck, Member
June 2, 1 DBG
Mg DONALD’S
IJas Jce Cream now on sale. We
invite the public to vi-dr our store.
We also carry a nice line of Toilet
articles and Proprietary med cutes,
Cigar#, Cigarettes and Candies.
Paper plate-, Sanitary diiokidg
cups, I 5 .itij >, Violin,mil Guinn
Strings, Jews and French harp:.
We appreciate all patronage
Everybody should trade at home as
Hl.icli as possible. Help Duild your
hometown.
McDonald's
Wanted Chickens and Eggs
Will pay highest cash market
Car lot shipping- Sea us a Single¬
ton warehouse, Gainesville, Ga.,
C. o. Morgan,
Tomorrow’s Sun
(Newspaper Features, Inc.)
t 5 y Roger Winter
This week the Georgia Press As¬
sociation is holding its ‘ Golden
Jubilee” convention in the old
historic city of Milledgville, where
fifty years ago tlie A-sociulion wtis
organized in the old and historic
Staye Capitol. In that building
the State of Georgia seceded from
the Union and now in that build¬
ing are taught the students of
Georgia Military College.
From a relatively small beginning
the Georgia Press Association lias
grown to be the most powerful?
single influence in toe State for
Agricultural, Industrial, Educa¬
tional and Civic better along all
lines. Against its united opposi¬
tion no evil 1 lung can be accom¬
plished in Georgia, but with its
support all good and constructive
enterprises can be carried to success
Five men who attended the ini
tial meeting at Milledgevi.le in the
summer of 1886 are still in life.
They are Douglas Wtkle, a lawyer
of Franklin, Tenn,, who then was
editor of the Carterville Courant
American, w.>s the Association’s
first recording secretary ; P. T.Mc
Cutcheon, then and now editor ot
the Franklin News and Banner:
CUm G. Moore, then editor of the
Crawfordville Advocate, now ordi
ti try of Taliaferro county ; R. B.
\loore,Jthen and now editor of the
Mi. edgeville Unien Recorder, the
oldest weekly newspaper in Geor¬
gia, founded in 181 y; and Major
Robert J. Gninn, of Atlanta, then
;ditor of the Conyers Weekly,now
general agent of the New England
Vlutml Life Insurance Company.
Major Guinn, who is on the pro
r im for an address at Thursday's,
ession of the cometition, was te
.t illing to the writer some striking
contrasts between conditions in
r886 and conditions today.
“When we assembled utMilledge
ville to organize the Georgia Press
Association,” said the Major there
iv is not a paved street in Atlanta,
much less a paved road in Georgia.
There was not an electric car tier
fiectric lights in Georgia. There
was not a telephone. The automo¬
bile was undreamed ot and a radio
irobably would have frightened
people out of their senses. A jour
ley of forty miles in a day was
c msidered rapid transit by horse
an 1 buggy, and yon couldn’t make
forty miles with one horse. \ ou
bad to have a pair of horses, and a
good pair at [that.”
Since the last convention of the
Georgia Press Association, held at
Carrollton in 1935, ten outstanding
members have been summoned to
he Great Beyond, and their ab¬
sence is missed with aching hearts
• I Milledgeville this week. They
were as tollows :
Theron 8. Shope, editor of the
D 1 lion citizen ; J mes C- Willi,in s
editor of t e G eet.sboro Journal
•V. E. Boatwright, editor of the
-Swain-boro Forest Blade, wl o
lied in September, and whose son,
D nights, succeeding him, died four
Months later; Mark D. Irwin,
>awrenceville lawyer, who fifty
years ago was editor of the Law
rmceville Solid South, and who
served as first and fourth president
,f the Association ; Walter S.Cole
nan, who served thirteen years as
.resident; Harry R. Powell,editor
if the Calhoun County Courier;
Janies Harrison, general manager
if the Augusta Herald; Jack Pat¬
erson, who wrote tne present|cor -
titutiou and by laws of the Asso
atiou. j
Although the daily newspapers
f Georgia are members of the
Georgio Press As-ociution arid take
t prominent part in its activities,
,e predominant membership from
a numerical standpoint is compos-
CLEVELAND, GEORGIA, J1JNK. 12 , 1986
• '
We are of the opifiion, ami
excellent and sutfirietrt reasons
b.ise that opinion on, that there
no u•<: tor the republicans to
a convention this year except
bold the p <rty together. Do
i.-atis want' WMinin
d flpb II::. r l lo write 'heir plat
torm? Then they will
E n ten. Toe republican* have,
m re show - ol cling u
q?e -r than Gene T.ilmadge has
moving Gtono Mumtain
s. a. s.
PLEASE
Pa/ Your Subscription
We 11 ,ve GREAT NEED of it
M oney RIGHT NOW
Have a Heart
THANK YOU
THE COURIER
DENTAL NOnCE
Wave your Dental work done
bottle. Help tho-e who help pay
taxes, Thai keep the old Ghip
St-ate moving
At; work guaranteed.
Dr. T. J. McDonald.
READ THE COURIER
:r-.rev .
Savannah, Go,, Jane 8— lJ)Ji
The carryi g of a liquor still
an automobile is no violation
Geoigi 1 law. Solicitor Gene
A. Lamr, decided.
A in n arrested in possession
such equunv-nt was freed after
authorities could fi d no statute
judicial ruling under which
cou-d be prosecuted, '
/• '» "
Pay Your Sttbscritdlhm
Senator Steivverhs keynote act,
dres-. to the republican
w as only criticism. Hr
giving jobs but failed'to sir's
h<Jw they acre to ' be done',
know how, ilit'ii why don’t
drtfimitely say so? ’ Iipovcx
to the c'.•nveiitio'i
niget, and ill ce could do was
crittztf, W.. ivhar did he do
those four horrible year* be
preside/); ?
We wi 1 accept from farmer* any
kind of produce grown • on
farm for renewal of their moscfip
tior , or to be added to our list ay
hew subscriber. We trust
proposition wvl appeal to
farr.iv r.
ed of rklv - iiitor ..rid in think
i ig of the As-oci.w.ion. the
always thinks ot v x ky
Iu a ue spaper c irt- > / i a qu.ntci
■ f a Century, tie .1 ter has-hardly
passed a U ry without direct ct>
lact with one dr m re
edi:or-, an i no ex <criet.ee of
paper Woia Ii is bee 1 so
as these contacts.
It has been remarked before
this column, 11 id i . w orth of re
mark ag mi, tlr.it.- weekly
more and receive less in ti
service oi their respective
nities than any other class ot
zens. They co staidly
enterprises of a -c igicu ,
educational and in s. -lliti euus im
pop; and Uitia ly r ceive
in return except ti e '.tranks of
fellow c it its ;ne, ana not alwavs
much B a S they d •
Philasthn pists aid worths lau-ei
a till gifts of dal ,irs, we kiv t dr
iixrs aid them wittj gilts of person¬
al service and #p..ce iu tacit p
m,i)E RIDGE news
‘The farmers of this par.
gi id to sec ttje ram Saturday.
Mis, Felo Satterfield is sr
wD Mrs Will McCarter now.
T a hunting is being enjoyed 1
the raj 1 since it rained. We he
8 sffcl! race Saturday nigiit.
D■ • and Mrs. Bartley
went to Gaiuesvifle on
M ?»<tay. *
Mrs Lester Jones, of N. C.,
V'.sin.-rg Her daughter,
Turner, this week,
Rev. W N. Turner fiije.) I
regular appointment at
3 u; if i v
W.O Turner spent the week
end with his uncle, HowardTuit .
.Miss Celia Anderson an 1 pi-.;
■ isiteo Mrs, John Holton Sur.-d ;
So ir e, that when you c me 1
die d' ..veil the undertaker wil
be sor • ! — Mark Twain,
015 , 750,000 A Ti-'AP. v
t.iircds too liff to mom much, m’t it?
$1. ? ? 3,300 A TsONTH
te still c vague sort cf mm to ■■Host of •«*
TV H4 f Vv EK
& r.Cv i,
. a iiifle on Ihi dreamy su.e
h /' .5 "t 72 DAY
f 4 kC
< V %-U ’Ti.:;. >
ex now; wv «. ilaio at uvdt - itand it
’
Oi C: 3 AM HOUR
'
and 2 'HAT 7 3 <: lot of monc’i in anybody’s language
especially when, that wu :h money is going out
T ^ u u# rn DUR!
- ill;
fen
j
j to Georgians fc? Georgia
I More than 4 niiEVon r-i a Bwrttfi—-paid out in wages, spent with
chants ami dealer ., r. * 0 s* — is one of the Georgia Power Company’s
principal coptrib • • " 3 Georgia’s business activity, her prosperity
her social advance. ■
This sum ave.'-•ages' .<302.904 a week, H5,272 a day, { 1,803 m
iBVER Y HOUR—W. 1 .hours a day, seven days a week, 52 tree! 3 e
pouring out in"a C.-orpa channels of trade, giving jobs to Gaorg:
pie, sending men and wcnien and clulrlmi into Georgia stoics v’T
to spend, making more jobs possible, creating a bigger mar! ct i ; ’
for Georgia products, bn-teasing opportunities for Georgians m a.
This money Lv;J.T fur..Ways, i: educates children, it supports • res,
It touches the lift of every county in the state — not only the c t
To business in, but s£ tbz other counties as well. It benefits every CT r
gian—including you !
j The ^15,750,000 hdv- spent by the Company in 19-C —in payroll*,
i purchases and taxes afc.u- ’.-.eludes $0, 500,000 }.i sale tics
- . -c wares to
4,400 $7,000,000 employes, and ever)' one of them lives in Georgia. It includes
worth of : :er iv- and tpplies hr (it ;'--on’ Cct»c i firms or
from firms represented in Georgia via cmpT. ; -b'orgia • ->le. ft Li
cludes-over $2,253, C )0 b taxes, of .-bidi the = it ce: part . vein to tfcje
state, the counties. :.:e tov.-ns end the school arts of Geo. - 'a.
.
Your monthly electric b U buys for y..... x eleev.' , service that ranks with
tne best and the cher ; ; -yw-heJO. pit ’ dot.; •- h ? -ore ,i that, for
your payments, joined v ! hose of i ~3 ■) oti: Georgia I v ncs, offices, T?
stores and factories, arc ; *.g a f Mg part . ie spenty and prog
ress. That money, in i : ends of n O. *carr - interest-3 are all
Wrapped up with Gcor[ atcvrDs U rv- like : music in the song—
“It goes in here .... and res out hcre! r: Might • 1 ede of ret: tins irt
the hands of the Comnc'::-, "ighty 1 u. of j goes t • tside the stai. ; Most
cf it is paid cut £3<fast as i: comes hi —A> Gcsrgiavv, T? Gect-gla t
T : I { WOP™ «ai lot
oj
ft Citizen Wherever V r 3 Cerve power i • COMPANY
,
Gainesville Business To Add
j Course In Civil OJ: ,j .33
| We are going to give, in 1 to our regular
f Commercial cour t- ,1 Complete ■ t Civil Service.
'The text will cover in -mr >. tactically every
examination given under Civil £. It will enable
you to make u much higher • »• i V u know you mu it
be some where near Ike r 1 'Tilt to ; ; a job Tlrih
j will mean much iron? to ihtis try i.ig ;■ ge? it titrougb
We are standing on o . record tor he past year in
j Helping to place student* wl; ■ . h rve comp” .-J tneir work
Jp our schoo .
! u TMch Gr Shorthand
GAINESVILLE lit iNES.j COLLEGE
Box .'■Ml
(j iHPsvi/d, Ga