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t’REET ADDRESS-
JtFD
rr.
i’ATR.
Lew Cost-Rigid. Frame-Metal Building
For information and free esti¬
mate callj Carroll Daniel Con
struction Co., Gainesville. GA
636*3241
NOTICE
f Very strict zomg regulation
u ould be made NOW on the* ul
r modern 129 south of Lie; ;ve
and Don’t wait too long,
need A J FI ON
SALESMEN WANTED
Person over 25 to supply Kawleigb pro
ducts to families in White County
Rabun county. It tntei e.tetl in a
Income with security for the future
Mrs, SnO'isGerrt It, Rt, Cleveland or
awleigb, 160 1126, Memphis Tenn.
SPINET PIANO BARGAIN
Wanted: Responsible patty
ake over ,ow monthly
on a spinet piano. Can tie
locally- Write Credit
P. O. Box 176, Hope Mills, N,
Pigs For Sale
If you want extra good pigs
F. M. Glover
Rt. 3
NOTICE BY EXECUTRIX TO CEDITORS
TO THE CREDITORS OF JOHN W.
FORD, DECEASED.
You are hereby notified to render an
to the undersigned of your demands
the estate of the above named deceased, or
priority as to your claim.
This 5 day of January. 1965.
Justine E. Willeford, as
Executrix of the Estate of
John W. Willeford, deceased,
White County, Georgia
LIKE THE AIR
THE SPOKEN WORD IS
BUT THE PRINTED WORD
IS ALWAYS THERE
Yes, For Really Effective Advertising
None Even Approach The Printed Word
For Pleasure and Profit, Read The
Advertisements In
THE CLEVELAND COURIER
FOMOEWNERS, if you need
MONEY
You Can Borrow Up To
$5,000
SECOND MOSTGAGE
CONSOLIDATE ALL YOUR
DEBTS into One Low Payment!!
60 Months to Repay
LOANS ANYWHERE IN GEORGIA
Out-of-Towners Mail for Mortgage Loans
NAME ......
ADDRESS ......
CITY..... ...... PHONE .....
FIRST GAINESVILLE MORTGAGE
AND & TITLE COMAANY
4 Fir it Federal I uilding Gancsville, Ga
3 OI
it if
WSWlinTF!
“
't
'•s4*& >r wXuf&L
Cleveland Uethodlst Wmrch
Church Announcements
Sunday School 10a. m.
Morning Worship 11 a m,
M. Y. F. 6:30 p. m.
Evening Worship 7=3° P 111
Prayer Service Wed. 7:30 p ni
Frank Barfield, Pastor
Official Organ of White Connty, i
Published Weekly at Cleveland, Ga.
JAS. P. DAVIDSON, EDITOR
Entered at the Post Office at Cleve
land, Georgia aa Second Class Mall
Matter.
Subscription Price Annually
In Advance
White County $3.09
•uitet $3.61
NOTICE;
When v<'U need ANY
Printing please give ALL of
THU CLEVELAND COURIL,
*Want To Buy
LOGS
All species, pines and
wood—even hickory.
to us at Cleveland, Ga . at
site of Cleveland Lumber
sawmill- Come to see us
price list.
Will pay top price for good
Will buy standing timber
JELLICO CO.
Box 411
Cleveland, Ga.
Phone 865—6721
; , • - ** ; ^ '« f
OP GEORGIA, WHITE COUNTY.
All to Whom it May Concern:
Arthur C. Abernathy having, in proper
applied to me for Permanent letters of
on the estate of Coiner C.
late of said County, this is to cite
and singular the creditors and next of kin
Comer C. Abernathy to be and appear at
office within the time allowed by law, and
cause, if any they can, why permanent
should not be granted to Arthur
Abernathy on Comer C. Abernathy estate.
Witness myJhand and official signature, this
day of January, 1965. Satterfield,
Roy Ordinary.
GEORGIA, COURT WHITE COUNTY
OF ORDINARY.
The appraisers January 4, 1965
Lora upon application of Mrs..
B. Allison widow of said Marvin Allison
for a twelve! r^onths’ support for herself and
one all minor children, concerned having hereby filed cited- their return; show
persons are to
cause, if any they have, at the next regular
February term of this court, why said applica
tion should not be granted.
Roy Satterfield, Ordinary.
White County Georgia.
*•
GEORGIA. WHITE COUNTY
COURT OF ORDINARY.
The appraisers application January 4, 1965
Maggie upon of Mrs.
York widow of said Dilmous D. York
for a twelve months’ support for herself and
no minor children, having filed their return;
all persons concerned hereby are cited to
show cause, if any they have, at the next
regular February term of this court, why said
application should not he granted.
Roy Satterfield, Ordinary.
White County Georgia.
CITATION
GEORGIA, WHITE COUNTY.
To All Whom it May Concern:
Miss Sevilla M. Wright having applied
guardianship Andrew of the person and property
Lowery incompetent of Route
Sautee, said County, notice is given that
application will be heard at my office at
o’clock A. M., on the first Monday in
ary next.
This 4th day of January. 1965.
Roy Satterfield,
Ordinary and ex officio
Clerk Court of Ordinary.
HENRIETTA’S
BEAUTY SHOP
Complete
Beautv
Service
If
Your Patronage Will be
-For Appointment Call 5-3151
Mrs. Henrietta Oavidson Harris,
Operator
NOTICE: Sewing Machine
D,- uxe id! A ' tiled <\u» malic ZIQ
ZAG, (54 0-biuet Monel like new
party can pay men Is of
monthly or pay <■ mplitte t fcldttCep $
If infer #te:i wi ite : National '8
Dept.,” Box 1161 os, Ga.
« Farm Facts *
Farmers have long relied
on signs to forecast the wea¬
ther, hut today’s operations
demand more precise infor¬
mation.' Bad weather may
hinder application or nullify
effectiveness of materials in
which they have invested
heavily.
The U. S. Weather Bureau,
therefore, is providing fore¬
casts tailored specifically to
agricultural operations in key X-/
areas. News media, the U, S.
Department of Agriculture,
and other agencies are co¬
operating.
These services include Farmers "
an
agricultural interpretation of get special
the 30-day and 5-day outlook,
as well as hourly reports weather
and information at Intervals •forecasts.
throughout the day on the
kind of weather to expect for •
the next 36 hours- and for 24
additional hours.
Also issued are agricultural ances or severe conditions as
aviation weather forecasts lndicated ...... b F radar . «“ d . other ..
and summaries during the equipment,
spraying and dusting seasons. Sob temperatures, wind
Foresters are kept posted on speed and direction, dew,
“fire weather." Warnings also temperatures, and other fac
are issued of unusual disturb- tors are duly noted.
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EXPRESSWAYS MEET in this gigantic Interchange In Detroit, a
key part of the freeway system which could carry some of the Mo
tor City’s auto-riding populace to rural safety. Although civil de¬
fense studies show that COMPLETE evacuation of large cities after
warning of likely attack is not generally feasible under today’s i
warning times, a big start toward more evacuation capacity is be¬
ing made in urban freeway construction tinder the new National
Interstate Highway program, cniato oourtoa j Bureau ot PubUe SmSO
Ci Puzzles; Win CashPrizef
Match your wits against the expert.
I t j solving the Jackpot Crossword Pax*
e»cn Hundtj in the Baltimore Ameri
•an. The prize is never lnes than 9300,
,nd it it goes unclaimed, $100 is added
aach week nntil someone w|ns.
Look for clues, word list, rules and
lie week’s prize in the
BALTIMORE
SUNDAY AMERICAN
Order from Vo si L >* Ns waieuler
.
!
I I GEORGIA, WHITE COUNTY,
TO THE SUPERIOR COURT
{ OF SAID COUNTY:
The petition of W. H. SLACK, III, W. P.
I I WESTBROOK and MRS. MINNIE HOOPER,
hereinafter called applicants, bring this appli¬
cation for the granting of a charter for a
private corporation and show:
FIRST: They desire for themselves, their
associates, and successors to be incorporated
under the name of SLACK CLEVELAND
PARTS CO., INC. of said
SECOND: The principal office Hall County, cor¬
poration shall be located in
Georgia, and the principal place of business
of said corporation shall be located in White
County, Georgia, with the privilege of estab¬
lishing branch offices and places of business in
such other places as may be determined.
THIRD: All applicants are residents of Hall
County, Georgia, and their post office address
is Gainesville, Georgia. of the busi¬
FOURTH: The general nature
ness to be transacted and the corporate powers
desired are: and other¬
(a) To buy, sell, exchange, lease automobile
wise deal in all types and sorts of
and vehicle parts, accessories and equipment;
to repair, recondition and remake automobile
and vehicle parts, accessories and equipment;
to sell, handle and distribute, exchange, lease
and repair all types of mechanical, automotive,
filling station equipment and accessories; and
to do all things necessary and incidental to
the business of an auto ports dealer,
(b) To buy, sell, acquire, own, hold, rent,
lease, transfer and assign both real estate and
personal property and choses in action of every
kind and character and to deal with the same
in any way and manner that may seem expe¬
dient.
(c) To enter into guarantees or endorse¬
ments, and otherwise to act as surety when¬
ever in the Judgment of the Board of Directors
such action shall be for the benefit of the
corporation. the and privilege
(d) To have all power
■enumerated in the Code of Georgia and such
power as may hereafter be given by law.
FIFTH: The maximum number of shares of
capital stock of said corporation shall be five
thousand shares of common stock of the face
or par value of $10.00 each. However, the
amount of capital with which the corpora¬
tion shall begin business shall be not less than
$5,000.00. The corporation shall be authorized
to issue additional shares up to the maximum*
sum above stated, and from time to time to
reduce the amount of capital outstanding, but
not below the minimum above stated, and all
this, upon a majority vote of the Board of
Directors. the corporation
SIXTH: The time for which
is to have existence is thirty-five years, with
the privilege of renewal of the charter from
time to time upon the expiration of said period
of thirty-five years. Applicants to be in
WHEREFORE, pray
cprporated as aforesaid. ______ GREER,
TELFORD. WAYNE &
Attorneys for Applicants the Secretary
It appearing by Certificate of
of State that SLACK CLEVELAND PARTS
CO., INC., is not the name of any other Geor¬
gia Corporation; of the foregoing petition
The prayers their . are
granted and applicants and successors,
associates the and assigns of “SLACK are hereby CLEVELAND i^oiporated
under name the period of thirty
PARTS CO., INC.” for
five years, with the privilege of renewal or
extension of charter at the expiration of that
time according to the laws of Georgia, and
that said corporation is vested with all the
rights and privileges mentioned in said peti¬
tion. Ordered further that the first publication
of said petition and this order may be any
time within two weeks hereof.
‘ This 18th day of December, 1964.
(s) SIDNEY O. SMITH, JR.
Judge, Superior Court
Hall County, Georgia
Tank Service
If your Septic Tank needs cleaning csl|
S-pHc t auk Service, •ainee*
Le, B3B 32i’8 We li.Ve tr-ieae with
gallon lank* with pumps, We are
to give you quick service and a
job.
01 Intention To Introdnce
Legislation
Notice is h.tsby given »h»i there vui I
introduced at th« January 1965 R«?u
lir Session of too General Assembly o*
Georgia s bill lo plac* the Shi t iff of White
Count) on a salaiy in 'inu of the fee sys¬
tem; To provide cnmi>*'<*»tinn for deputy
sheriffs; To provide for th- coal of opera I
in|T sheriff department; '"o provide and
define the procedure therefore; To repea
any cotflriinple.ee; ana for other pur
poeee.
This 16tb day of Januarr. 1965,
Tout Msuney
H-pree-ntative, Whitt County,
G»otgi»
ss
'Slightly Poison' Brew
Couldnt Stop
Churchill In Atlanta
Sir Winston Churchill, known to
foe a competent man with a brandy
bottle, was afraid of the potent
products of the American pro¬
hibition era.
In a 1932 lecture tour of this
country, Churchill visited Atlanta.
When Russell Bridges, the man
who booked Churchill, entered his
guest’s suite the morning of his
arrival, Churchill summoned him
into a private room.
it Do you know a chemist?” he
asked. Bridges said yes.
n I have two quarts here which
given me in Charleston, tt
were
Churchill said, “but I always like
to have your native beverages tes¬
ted.” Then he handed him a sam¬
ple from each bottle.
That night before the lecture,
Bridges brought news the fourbon
was slightly poisonous.
Churchill, already in spirits and
surrounded by admirers, cried:
“Get me a doctor. Get me two doc¬
tors! I have been sick for two
hours. »»
Two physicians came, and Chur¬
chill recovered in time to speak.
Churchill’s bill was $171 at the
hotel where he spent one night
and ate four meals. His expenses
were covered by the Alkahest
Bureau which also paid him
$56,000 for the 40-lecture Ameri¬
can tour. — Atlanta Constitution.
Want to Live to
Ripe Old Age?
Get Married!
TOKYO A Japanese health ex¬
pert believes the secret to long¬
evity is marriage.
Dr. Taeko Morooka of Tokyo
Women’s Medical College cites sta¬
tistics that married Japanese men
and women outlive their single
counterparts by a 2-to-l ratio. She
says:
<< A bachelor often stays out late,
is often unduly active and eats ir¬
regular meals which are unbal¬
anced in theiT nutritional value.
it A married man or woman may
sometimes complain about a lack
of freedom after marriage, but this
very restraint insures longer life. »>
Dr. Morooka said statistics show
the mortality rate among single
men is highest between 35-40, and
for single women laround 30.
She classified bachelors, wid¬
owers and divorced men as single
and spinisters, widows and divor¬
cees as single women.
u A man who marries at (the aver¬
age marriageable age of 25 often
has two or three children by the
time he gets to the 35-40 age brack¬
et,” Dr. Morooka said.
“At that age he is usually psy¬
chologically, physically, socially
and usualy eoonomicaly stable. All
this is good for the health. »»
Dr. Morooka based her findings
on 1960 statistics compiled by the
Japanese government from a cen¬
sus conducted every five years.
She said the statistics showed
that the death rate of single men
and women is 13.2 per cent in
every 10,000 cases examined, com¬
pared with 7.4 per cent of married
individuals.
How old is Dr. Morooka?
“I’m married and 45 — 15 years
past the high mortality age for
single women. tt
I WHY LET AN OLD
CAR DRIVE YOU
L \ a—i CRAZY?
eL J. BUY A GOOD USSD
CAR FROM THE ADS
In This Newspaper
WANT AD t
CASH IN ON s S
■*
STUFF /
IN
THE aYT!
In Memory
In Memory of Mrs. Spencer Roper
Her Memory Remains
this Woman lying here,
I shed ten millions of tears.
through all my grief
This dear, dear soul has found
heavenly relief.
A more righteous person I have
never known.
Her blue-gray eyes angellically
shone.
Her heart was better than silver
or gold,
And, oh, so brave, so very bold.
To me she was the queen of
queens.
The radiance of her face, the
beauty of her heart within my
heart shall always sing.
The paths she trod, she trod with
silent footfall.
She was so short, but yet so tall.
Her nature was of the grandest
kind.
She had the faith, the hope, the
charity of a great man’s mind.
She spoke of God in all her deeds.
She was a lily in a world of many
weeds.
She loved and praised God with
all her heart,
And assured am I that her spirit
to Him did impart.
And, noiw, I feel that if she were
yet alive,
She would say, once revived,
You may shed a tear,
But, fear not, God is forever here.
By Peggy Jo Clark,
her granddaughter
SALMON AND LOBSTER
DISHES POPULAR WITH
NEW BRUNSWICK FOLK
MIW BRUNSWICK
9
SI
d
0
A
O o
a I
TtfEW IN BRUNSWICK has some of I !
the most celebrated salmon
streams in North America — the
Miramlchl and Restigouche, just
to name two. New Brunswick lob¬
sters from the cool waters of
Northumberland Strait, the Bale
de Chaleurs and the Bay of Fund/
are the deHght of gourmets every¬
where.
Mrs. Robert H. Tivy, whose hue.
band is general superintendent of
transportation for the Canadian
National Railways and also an
enthusiastic salmon fisherman, has
her own recipe for 8almon Su¬
preme:
Bring to a boll In 6 cups water:
1% tegapoon salt; % cup vinegar,
% cup diced carrot, % cup diced
celery, % cup chopped onion, 4
whole cloves. Add 4 pounds salmon,
wrapped and tied loosely. Cook
tenderly, simmering slowly. Allow
>0 minutes per 1 inch thickness.
Remove to platter, cool slightly,
unwrap and skin. Mix % cup
melted butter, 1 tablespoon lemon
juice, pinch of rosemary. Pour
over salmon slowly. Garnish with
parsley, tiny pickled beets, sliced
cucumbers, etc.
George Stiven, the general pas¬
senger agent for the Canadian Na¬
tional Railways at Moncton, N. B,
does a.lot of traveling through thf
Atlantic Provinces and seldom rt
turns home without bringing a
few lobsters with him. And there’s
nothing Mrs. Stiven likes better
than to whip up her own brand
of "Lobster Delight” when George
gets home.
This Is how Mrs. Stiven makes
It:
• tablespoons butter
4 tablespoons flour
H H teaspoon salt
teaspoon pepper
• 1 cups chicken milk
cup stocks (canned
... t% or chicken bouillon cube)
• cups slices lobster meat, diced
thin onion
» I cup teaspoon cream
Melt Worcestershire sauce
and batter, «ttr in flour, salt
pepper. Add milk gradually,
chicken stock, lobster and onion.
Simmer for about 20 minutes,
•tlrring often. Remove onion. Add
eream and sauce. Heat thoroughly.
To each aorvtng, top with a tea
•poonful of batter, sprinkle of
paprika and sprig of parsley, rnt
<9
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Oh, Oh! y Wrong Way!
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