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GIRLS WANTED
Georgia Shirt Company
Cornelia, Georgia
and needs power sewing machine
OPERATORS
suitable applicants will be put
TO WORK AS SOON AS POSSIBLE
Requirements: Age IS to 35; good health;
wilHn? to work.
Experience not necessary
Apply At Above Address
FOR SALE
410 Acres; Sixty-five in cultivation; good 6-rooui
dwelling, extra large barn; new broiler house,6,000
capacity. Ideal for summer home. The best view
iv Notth Georgia. Priced to sell.
ALSO
47 Acres; practically |new house, improvements,
on pavement
ALSO
100 Acres; good building; electricity, 20yds off
highway.
See C. O, Poland, Clevelaud, Ga:, Box 106
YOU CAN T QUIT ADVERTISING
YOU’RE TALKING TO A PARADE
NOT A MASS MEETING
Georgia—White County.
In the Court of Ordinary
of said County.
TO JOHN F. CANTRELL AND
ALL PERSONS CONCERNED:
P. L. Cantrell, next of kin of John
F. Cantrell, late of said county, ab¬
sent, unaccounted for and his where¬
abouts unknown for a period of more
than seven years, having made ap¬
plication to the Court for permanent
letters of administration upon the es¬
tate of said John F. Cantrell, and
for an order and adjudication by the
Court declaring said John F. Can¬
trell to be legally deceased, and upon
hearing on said application, it being
made to appear to the court by sat¬
isfactory evidence, that said John F.
Cantrell is absent and has been ab¬
sent, unaccounted for and his where¬
abouts unknown for a period of more
than seven years, next before the
filing of said application, an order
and judgment was entered by the
Court declaring said John F. Cantrell
to be legally deceased and that per¬
manent letters of administration is¬
sue upon his estate;
Therefore, as required by law, said
John F. Cantrell, if in life, and all
persons concerned are required to
produce to the Court of Ordinary of
White County, Georgia, within three
months from the date of the first
publication of this notice, satisfac¬
tory evidence proof that said John
F. Cantrell is still in life or in de¬
fault thereof the Court will proceed
with said administration of said es¬
tate in accordance with the Statute
in such cases made and provided.
This August 18, 1947.
J. P. SAXON,
Ordinary of White County, Ga.
Advertising regularly in The
Courier brings results. The peo¬
ple of White County read their
Home Newspaper — The Cleve¬
land Courier. An advertisement
in The Courier is an invitation
for the people to trade at your
store. A live town is where the
local merchants advertise regu¬
larly in their Home Newspaper.
Mr. Merchant, if you want more
business you can get it by ad¬
vertising regularly in your
Home Newspaper — The Cleve¬
land Courier.
Is anything being done to get an
industry for Cleveland. Isn’t it time
for ACTION? The business houses
in Cleveland should be willing to put
out plenty of cash to get an indus¬
try. We have talked long enough.
A man never strives harder for
perfection nor comes nearer to
achieving it than when he sets out
to make a perfect fool of himself.
- v- ..- ?•..... * t *
X— jj^V ELAND COURIER. CLEV ELAND GEORGIA.
Harry Warren Given Hish Honors
Harry Warren, who graduated last
spring from George Peabody College
for Teachers, Nashville, Tenn., has
had the honor of being chosen as a
member and initiated into the Kappa
Delta Pi and the Pi'Gamma Mu, na¬
tional honorary societies.
Kappa Delta Pi is a national hon¬
orary fraternity with the purpose of
advancing the interests of education
as a profession. The fraternity en¬
courages high professional, intellect¬
ual, and personal standards and rec¬
ognizes outstanding contributions to
education. Membership in Kappa
Delta Pi is the highest honor that
can come to students of education.
Pi Gamma Mu is a national honor¬
ary social science fraternity with
equally high standards and honors.
While attending Furman Univer¬
sity prior to his service in the United
States Navy, Mr. Warren was a
member of the Pi Kappa Phi social
fraternity.
Mr. Warren has been doing gradu¬
ate work this summer at Peabody
and will return for the regular term
in September. He hase been awarded
a graduate teaching fellowship for
next year and will assist in teaching
a new course of communication skills.
He will also serve as secretary of
Pi Gamma Mu.
A subscriber must have confidence
in the integrity of a newspaper and
must believe it to be truly devoted
to the interests of the people before
that newspaper is an influence and
power in the community. A news¬
paper must be something of a public
trust and must devote itself un¬
selfishly and wholeheadtedly for the
upbilding of the community before it
;s recognized as a guiding and mov¬
ing force in the community. True,
not all of them are, but when you
find a newspaper devoting its columns
to the constructive and elevative
forces of that community then it is
your duty as a good and progressive
citizen to lend all of your support to
that newspaper. Such a newspaper
is just as necessary and essential to
a community as schools and churches
and them right-thinking people so classify
as such. Then, we might ask,
are you home giving your full support to
your newspaper. The Cleveland
Courier? The Courier was establish¬
ed 1899 and has been a directing
force in all the constructive and ele¬
vating moves and plans that has come
to White county and will continue to
be in the forefront in the future.
Don’t you think we are entitled to
all your support?
PAY YOUR SUBSCRIPTION NOW.
WORLD °f C0 I 0 D
" LEO RUNT R —
BREAO KEPT A YEA/3 MAY STILL 9 A NEW CHEMICAL COMPOUND HAS
^OCESS^Sm^YWN^ACETATE CHALK AND TALC. IN FACT. THEY MAY BEEN AS SWEET AFFECT DISCOVERED AS SUGAR WHICH AND IS WHICH TWICE
CLAIM IT'S GOOD YEARS CANDY AND BEVERAGE
LATER INDUSTRIES
, IN A, /RECENT TASTE TEST
CONDUCTED SVA LEADING
HOT POTATOES WERE TAKEN TO MANUFACTURER OF MARGARINE,
CHURCH IN EARLY COLONIAL DAYS TO NEW YORK MAGAZINE AMO NEWSPAPER.
SERVE AS HAND WARMERS DURING FOOD EDITORS WERE HARD PRESSED .
LONG SERVICES IN UNHEATED TO TELL THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN
BUILDINGS VITAMINIZED MARGARINE AND BUTTER.*
WE WILL PAY S5.00 FOR EACH STRANGS FOOD FACT SUBMITTED AND USED.
ADDRESS, A WORLD OF FOOD. 239 WEST 39 STREET, NEW YORK N.Y.
John B. Spring, new assistant su¬
pervisor on the Chattahoochee Na¬
tional forest, has arrived in Gaines¬
ville. He will move his family as
soon as he can locate a house. His
wife and four children are living at
his former headquarters in Alexan¬
dria, La.
' Ex-Navy in Northeast Geor¬
men
gia who so gallantly served will their
country during the past war be
rewarded in part beginning August 1
when World War II Victory Medals
and American Defense Medals will
be distributed to all ex-sailors
through the Navy Recruiting serv¬
ice.
Any ex-Navy men or women who
rates either or both of the medals
may obtain them after August 1 by
applying at the Navy Recruiting of¬
fice in the Athens Post Office build¬
ing. Veterans must bring the origi¬
nal copies of their discharge papers
to the Recruiting Station when ap¬
plying for the medals.
ATLANTA. American Defense
Service Medals and Victory Medals
World War II will be distributed to
veterans, or next of kin, entitled to
receive them, from seven distribution
points in Georgia, starting August
15, Headquarters, Third Army an¬
nounced here today.
In general, the American Defense
Medal is to be awarded those who
served honorably between September
8, 1939 and December 7, 1941, inclu¬
sive.
The World War II Victory Medal
is for active service between De¬
cember 1, 1941 and December 31,
1946, inclusive.
PLAN NOW
Include PICARDY GLADS in
your 1948 planting. They will
make a bright spot in your yard
or garden. Our bulbs are grow¬
ing on new rich soil. Good
healthy stock is assured. Avail¬
able at digging time, cultural
leaflets included with order.
J. O. BROWN
‘‘Yonah View”
Nacoochee, Ga.
WHAT IS THE LEGION?
We of another war sometimes are
asked, what is The American Legion ?
The American Legion is not a club,
although many of its posts operate
clubhouses. It is not a fraternal or¬
ganization, although it offers the fel¬
lowship of comrades in arms. The
Legion is a service organization. It
is the trustee of a sacred responsi¬
bility and power. The beneficiaries of
this trust own the Legion. It belongs
to those men and women who bear
on their bodies and minds the marks
of the price they have paid for love
of country. It belongs to the father
and mother, the widow and the or¬
phans of those for whom there can
be no homecoming. It belongs to
those sons and daughters of ours who
yet serve America in the far-flung
spaces of the world. It belongs to
every man and woman of America
who has honorably served his nation
m the armed forces. While it serves
its membership and those who were
of the armed forces, it also has a
primary concern in the future of
America. It has offerer and will con¬
tinue to offer leadership in those
causes that promote the wellbeing of
the nation. It seeks the cooperation
and help of every citizen. It belongs
*2 the i! beneficiaries e natl0n * Those of its who serviee own it are
strength. Through it and its
America we who served
in times of war continue to
serve it and each other in time of
peace.—Chief Justice Robert G. Sim¬
mons, Supreme Court, State of Ne
Drasica.
THE GOOD NEIGHBOR .....................
Our happiness depends perhaps
three quarters on ourselves and one
quarter on our neighbors. There are
exceptional persons who can be hap¬
py, whatever the neighborhood, just
as there are exceptional persons who
will contrive to make themselves mis¬
erable, whatever the neighborhood;
but for a person of normally good
disposition whose happiness when he
is surrounded by good neighbors
might be reckoned at ninety per cent
the exchange of good neighbors for
disagreeable neighbors ought not to
reduce happiness by more than twen¬
ty-five per cent.
The good neighbor must neces¬
sarily have a friendly disposition.
Many people, though friendly enough
in their feelings, are so occupied
with their own affairs as to find no
time to give expression to their
friendliness. They are neighbors of
the negative sort; they do not make
life unpleasant for others ip the
community, but neither do they con¬
tribute much to it. Almost anyone
can name two or three persons in
his neighborhood who are distinctly
good neighbors. They wifi not always
be the persons who do the most en¬
tertaining,—for that is often as
much a matter of affluence as of
friendliness,—but they will be the
persons who in casual and frequent
ways show sympathetic interest, a
consciousness of their neighbors,’
lives and purposes, and, most of all,
a spirit of kindness to the young
people of the family. Good neighbors,
besides manifesting their good will
in those ways, are sparing of criti¬
cism, refrain from unkind and sharp
comments and try to add to the com¬
munity’s store of cheerfulness rather
than to its fund of spiteful gossip.
Do not be a good neighbor only
when your neighbor is ip trouble. Let
him see that when he meets with
good fortune you rejoice with him.
Do not fight s.hy of him because his
fortune has been better than yours;
do not give way to envy or jealousy.
But always show a special considera¬
tion for the less fortunate. They are
the ones who most need you as a
neighbor.
WANT A REAL TREAT?
SteHM
the “Beer
Drinker’s” Beer
STERLING BREWERS, INC., Evansville, M.
The secret of The Courier carrying
so many ads recently is that the
people read their home newspaper
and the advertisers km w it. Just as
soon as the Editor c i.n lay aside
these crutches you will lep.eive a bet¬
ter newspaper with more -ews of in¬
terest from every section of the
county, but we are going our limit
now hopping around on sticks.
"A house without books is like a
out surrounding them with books if
he has the means to buy them. It is
a wrong to his family. Children learn
t° read by being in the presence of
books. The love of knowledgt comes
with reading and grows upon it. And,
the love of knowledge in a young
mind is almost a warrant against the
inferior excitement of passion and
vices.”—Horace Mann.
make Advertising in The Courier will
your sales rise. Watch the cash
register ring for those who patronize
the columns of The Courier. Adver¬
tising in The Courier pulls trade.
Don’t you want more business?
It is better to light one small can¬
dle than to curse the darkness.—
Confucius.
FOR SALE
Waam Morning beater, shallow well
and tank complete; linolems, beds,
flame thrower, and other items.
Mrs. O. C. Bell
FOR SALE
One Cros'ey blieivador Frigidaire,
Mrs. C. W. Henderson.
Prompt shipment on Bray chicks—
crosses and New Hampshires.
hatching to order. Pullorum
Approval No. 67-18.
for pricelist. Bray Chicks, 116
Ave., Buffalo 4, N. Y.
ATHLETES FOOT GERM
HOW TO KILL IT.
IN ONE HOUR,
IT MOT PLEASED, your 35c bash,
laic any druggist for this STRONG
fungicide, cent TE-OL. Made with 90 per¬
and alcohol. kills It PENETRATES. Headl¬
MORE germs faster.
Today at T. J. McDONALD’S.
PAY YOUR SUBSCRIPTION NOW! PAY YOUR SUBSCRIPTION NOW.
ATTENTION LADIES
Yon still have time to take aduantage of the
August Clearance Sale of all summer merihPnaise
ai Williams Dress Shop
Limited quantity of Hats, jBags, Blouses, Gowns*
Slips, etc, now only $1.00 each.
All summer dresses, formerly retailed up lo $Jo,95
now onlr $4.93 and $7.93
Limited quality of Hose and Ladies Rayon Panties
now only 2 For $1.00
Visit Williams today, and take advantage of these
reductions.
The Williams Dess Shop
1 CLEVELAND, GA.
_ ,
SUMMER SPECIALS
$ 20.00 Wave 12.50 $17.50 Wave 10.00
$10.00 Wave 7.50 88.00 wave 6.00
$7,50 Wave 5.50
Prices good till Sept. 15
GALLENT-BKLK BEAUTY SHOP
Gainesville, Ga.
BEER WINE
We are constructing a modem tourist
court 1 mile north of Cleveland at Roy
Head bridge on the Neel Gap highway.
In temporary quarters we have a large as¬
sortment of Beer and Wine.
All standard beer 25 cents
We are here to help make Cleveland grow
Cleveland Tourist Gourt
Princess Theater a,
Program Week of Aug. 25
MON. TUES.
“Maigie”
JH“Jannne Crain G. Langan
WED.
“Durange Valley Raiders”
alse Serial
Bob Steele
Th urs.—Fri.
“Dishonored Lady”
II»dy Lamarr Dennis O’Keefe
SAT.
“South of Monteray” & Serial
Cisco Kid
Showing Mon.-Fri.-7:15-9:3®
Sat.— 8 : 4 . 5 - 5:30 7:00 9-3(1
No town in Georgia is growing
faster than Cleveland. Keep up that
boosting.