Newspaper Page Text
WEDNESDAY, JULY 13, 1932
PERSONALS
AND LOCALS
Master E. T. Griffin is visiting
relatives in Atlanta.
Miss Frances Morgan is visit- ..
ing relatives in Thomson.
Miss Lillie Mae Griffin spent
the past week-end at her home.
Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Griffin, of
Wrens, were visitors here Sun
day.
Mr. Willis Kent of Avera, was
the gue«t of Mr. and Mrs. Ether
Kent Sunday.
Mrs R. R. Raley and
ters, Bula and Nelle were visit
ors here last Friday’. ’
Mi. hd Williams, ot Lyons,
spent the week-end the guest of
Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Griffin.
Miss Inez Kelley was the
week-end guest of Misses Bula
and Nelle Raley at Mitchell.
Mr. J. L. Kitchens and Mrs .
Kate MIcLane spent Monday in
Dublin the guests of relatives.
Everyone is cordially invited
to come out and join our B. Y.
P. U. every Sunday night at 8:00
o’clock.
Quite a number of
guests attended the funeral
Mrs. Martha Whiteley Sunday
afternoon.
Misses Katie I M and
Dahlia Hooks left O for
... where , they ., will ... visit . .. . ^ r
r
and I Irs. J. Prince.
Mr. and Mrs. G. R. Wiggins,
Mrs. T. E. Usry and
Elizabeth Usry and Helen Jones
spent Saturday in Augusta.
Mr and Mrs son’ 'returned I W
and little home
last week after spending some
time with their parents at Spar
ta.
Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Hadden
little daughter, Helen, of Bealls
Crossing, spe»it Sunday the
guests of Mjr. and Mrs. J. A.
Griffin.
Mr. Cleon Williams and Mrs.
Cooper, of Atlanta, and Miss
Gladys Stanley, of Lyons, were
spend-the-day guests of Mr.
Mrs. E. E. Griffin last I uesday.
Dr. and Mrs. W. H. Bennett
and little son, Billy, of
and Mr. W.S. Bennett, of
phis, Tenn., were guests ot Mr.
and Mrs. H. A. Williams Sun
day.
Misses Moya Lyons, lone Sni
der and Ruth Walden are the
4-H club girls of Glascock coun
ty that left Monday to attend
camp at Williams’ pond, near
Gibson.
Protracted services will begin
at the Methodist church Sunday,
July 17th. Rev. Gilbert, of Da
visboro, will assist Rev. I. C.
Walker. Everybody is cordially
invited to attend.
Mrs. J. G. Vincent and chil
dren, Evelyn and Layton, re
turned to their home in Jack
sonville, Fla., last Saturday, af
ter spending two weeks with
Mrs. I. S. Peebles.
TALMADGE TO SPEAK AT
SPARTA AND THOMSON
Hon. Eugene Talmadge, com
missioner of agriculture, and a
candidate for governor, will
speak at Thomson Thursday,
JMy 21st at 11 o clock a. ___.
at Sparta the same day at
oast past three tnree o’clock o clock in in the m e after- aner
noon. Peop e from this county
are invited • •» j , to , hear him . • at » u. the
place to which it will be most
convenient for them to go.
MRS. JOSEPHINE KELLEY
Sparta, Ga„ July 6.—(Special)
—Funeral and interment of Mrs.
Josephine Kelley, aged 72 years,
who succumbed after a pro
longed illness at her home in
Mitchell, Ga.. Monday afternoon
were had in the cemetery at
Bethlehem Baptist church, near
here, at three o’clock Tuesday
afternoon. Before her marriage
to J. C. Kelley, who survives her,
Mrs. Kelley was the widow of
William Lozier, of which union
there are five surviving chil
dren: I. N. Lozier Atlanta;
Joshua Lozier. Warthen; Dr. N.
H. Lozier, Sandersville; Mrs.
Mia r y Patterson, Knoxville,
Tenn.; Mrs. H. S. Woodall, San
dersville. Two brothers and
two sisters survive: W. S. John
son, D. P. Johnson. Mrs. W. J.
Johnson, Sparta, and Mrs. C. O.
Walker, Warthen. The late Mrs.
W. L. Dickens and U. G. John
son, Sparta. were a brother and
sister.
Mrs. J. W. P. Whiteley
Passed Away at 2
A. M. July Ninth
Afte . .. . being . confined „ , her
r to
home here for only a few days,
.Mrs. J. \V. P. Whiteley passed
awa >’ at 2 o’clock Saturday
morning, July fith. Mrs.
ley was the widow of the late
Mr. J. W. P. Whiteley, who died (
his home in Gibson a little
inore than 1(3 years ago. Mrs.
Whiteley was known practically
by every person residing in
Glascock county, as she was
K)rn in Glascock county,
s P ent a11 l ier Iite in the county
of * ler birth, and having been a
resident of Gibson since her
marriage to Mr. J. W. P. White
ley, following the War Between
the States.
Mrs. Whiteley i s the last mem
her of the family of her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. J. Madison
bams, her father mother, broth
f rs « nd sisters having preceded
“ death many years Mrs.
of her immediate fam
ily is survived by one son
W. Whiteley, of Warrenton,
Ga., he being her only child,
The deceased was 80 years of
a 8e at the (lale of her death,
Funeral services over the re
majns of the deceased were
conducted at the Methodist
church in Gibson Sunday after
July 10th, Rev. C. M.
pastor of -the Methodist
at Warrenton, officiating,
-phe attendance at the funeral
was unusually large, being com
posed of relatives and friends
in Glascock, Jefferson and War
ren counties.
< Mr - J - Cecil Whiteley, Mr. W.
[*°8 er Whitdey, and Mrs. W. G.
f sseter f .(Louise Whiteley) are
he surviving grandchildren of
[the , deceased. To the surviving
i relatives of the deceased the
heartfelt sympathy of a multi
tude of sorrowing friends is ex
tended,
Edgehill News
(Regular Correspondent)
Mr< and Mrs . Gettings Os
borne, of Aiken, S. C., were the
guests of Mr. J. C. Wiicher and
family Sunday,
Mr. Morris Wasden made a
business trip to Davisboro Frl
da y
Miss Lizzie Ruth Allen, of
Wrens, was the guest of Masses
Leslie and Carrie Reese Sunday.
Mr. R. M. Logue and son Joe,
of Perry, Ga., were called here
Tuesday to attend the funeral of
Mr. Logue’s brother, Mr. Henry
Logue.
Miss Kimble Sammons, of Au
gusta, is spending some time
with her' grandmother, Mrs.
)n ewey Hilson.
Miss Frances Horton spent
the past week-end as the guest
of Mr. and Mrs. S. L. Cooper.
Miss Julia Todd, of Wrens, is
spending some time the guest of
relatives here.
Mr. Robert Black of Warnes
ville, S. C., spent the past week
end the guest of Rev. and Mrs.
Charlie Morgan.
Mr. Thurmon Raley left Sun
day afternoon for Atlanta where
he will spend several days.
Mr. and Mrs. F. T. Williams
and daughters, J Gladys, Ruth and
Mi „ Vivian Raley J at _
,ended , , the , funeral , of . the,r ., . aunt
-
Martha Whiteley, J at Gib
son c Sunday , afternoon,
a ™ XC P ’™ rr -y to kn ow of
^ eatk Mr Henry T Logue,
which occurred July 4th, at his
home near here. He was laid to
rest in the Fellowship cemetery,
near Gibson, Tuesday afternoon
at five o’clock.
Smilin’ Otarl^e Says
-4?
/? i i‘
i J
/Si
(, 15
G)---rr;or”
Abouf {hi; time of
m* year fh’ average
wonder 6olfer* # if begins tor
have he wouldn’t
done better at
vice gardenin'- versa! - - ” a ncU
—*»*■>- ----
GIBSON RECORD, GIBSON, GA.
Hardwick To Speak
In Warrenton On
Saturday, July 16
Hon. Thomas W.
candidate for governor of
gia, will deliver an address in
the courthouse in Warrenton
Saturday afternoon, July 16th, at
three o’clock.
This will be the first political
address in Warrenton by any
candidate in the September 14th
primary in which there are about
fifty contestants for state offices..
Mr. Hardwick is almost as
well known in Warren county as
one of its own citizens, having
represented the Tenth District in
Congress several terms. He has
also been honored in the past
with the offices of United States
Senator and governor. His abil
itv as a statesman and his gift as
an orator have made for him a
nation-wide reputation. He has
many strong friends here and
m this section and it » certain
that a large audience of citizens
of Warren and adjoining coun
will come here Saturday the
16th to hear him speak on the
vital public issues now con
fronting the people of Georgia.
—From Warrenton Clipper.
Avera News Items
(Special)
Mrs. W T . T. Gibbs, of Augusta,
spent Wednesday with her
daughter, Mrs. R. A. Clark.
Miss Myrtice Williams, of Mit.
Vernon, Ga., who has been visit
ing relatives here several weeks,
returned home Sunday.
Mr. Ernest Mb this spent the
week-end in Savannah.
Mr. and Mrs. J. M. LaFavor
and children spent the past
week-end with relatives in Wad
ley.
Mr. William Phillips, of War
wick, Ga., is visiting his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Phillips.
Mr. Andrew Thigpen, of
Swainsboro, spent Sunday with
his sister, Mrs. Clarence Faglie.
Mr. and Mrs. Adam Hadden
and children spent Sunday with
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Adams, of
Wrens.
Miss Ethel Dixon, of Augusta,
is visiting her mother, Mrs. J. E.
Dixon.
IMirs. C. H. Williams and chil
dren, Murray, Dixon and Miss
Georgia Williams, of Augusta,
are visiting MSr,s. Claude Dixon.
Mr. R. W. Dixon has returned
from a visit to Mr. Francis
Thompson, of North Augusta, S.
C.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Wiggins,
of Atlanta, visited Mr. and Mrs.
J. M. Wiggins several days the
past week.
Mrs. Cleveland Denmark and
daughters, Camille and Winifred
of Tampa, Fla., are visiting Dr.
and Mrs. J. O. Kelley.
Mrs. Bessie Wiggins, of At
lanta, who has been visiting Mr.
and Mrs. J. M. Wiggins, left last
Wednesday for Savannah.
Quite a crowd from here at
tended the funeral of Mrs. Mar
tha Whiteley held in Gibson last
Sunday afternoon.
Mfessrs. Calvin Phillips, Seth
Usry and T. S. Ivey made a bus
iness trip to Augusta Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. Will Thompson
and son, John Lester, and Mr.
and Mrs. Buford Thompson and
children, Louis and Erma, of
North Augusta, S. C., spent the
Fourth with relatives here.
Mrs. H. J. Mickle and daugh
ters, Joyce and Louise, of
Franklin, Ga., are visiting her
sister, Mrs. B. E. Chalker.
Mrs-. Otis Hill and children,
Toney and Sarah Frances, of
Thomson, are visiting her par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Chalker.
Mrs. Henry Dye and children
spent the past week-end with
relatives in Augusta.
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. R. Hadden
spent Friday afternoon in Wad
ley.
Mrs. Garvin Hadden and Mrs.
Clovis Thigpen visited in Gibson
Wednesday.
Mr. Dick Smith, of Vidette,
Ga., was a visitor here Sunday.
Mrs. B. F. Walker, of Wrens,
was in town Saturday after
noon.
Mrs. Fannie Usry and daugh
ter, Miss Beulah Mae Usry, re
turned Sunday from a visit to
Mrs. J. T. Blankenship, of
Wrightsville, Ga.
DEATH OP MR. EARL HUFF
-
Mr. Earl Huff died the
of June 30 at his home near Bas
tonville after an illness of about
one week. He was 33 years old
at *the time of hi s death. His
passing has caused a sadness in
home. He leaves to mourn
his death his wife Mrs. Mamie
(Brooks) Huff; three sons, Ed
ward, Willie and Alvin; moth-
/ f *eaiT rne e 8
'"it\***r < **t s *’
t ***
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TUNE IN
Goodyear Radio Programs Wednesday Evenings
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ers, W. T. and J. F. Huff; two
Mrs. L. D, Palmer and
Mrs. Roy Landrum; several un
cles and aunts and a host of
cousins t friends.
and Funeral
services were conducted at Zoah
church Friday afternoon at 3:30
o’clock by Rev. Barton, of Sta
pleton. He was laid to rest in
the church yard cemetery.
Stone Funeral Home in charge.
PAGE THREB
This Week
b Arthur Brisbane
If All Debts Vanished
The Turtle’s Head
As Cosmic Beings See Us
Wise Siamese King
Mr. and Airs. James Heunum o£
Sloan, Iowa, who believe in “forgiving
and forgetting,” own a general store
and hu»# canceled $75,(XX) worth of
bills and refuse to take money from
those that come to pay.
What would be the effect on pros
perity, etc., If all debts in the United
States were suddenly canceled, the
nation waking up one morning to find
nobody owing a dollar?
Should we be worse off or better off?
A friend informs the writer that in
ancient times the Jewish people once
every fifty years wiped out all debts,
everybody starting afresh. It might
not be such a bad idea, like taking
the barnacles off a ship, liut owners
of mortgages would not like it.
Coys of Fanwood, N. J., used to be
lieve that the head of a snapping tur
tle cut off did not die until sundown.
Superstition never dies, no matter how
often you cut off its head.
Port of Spain, Trinidad, tells of “a
frail, bearded Spanish mystic" sudden
ly coming from the mountains to the
village of St. Helena to announce that
within six months the world will be
burned up.
Chicago would say, coldly, *'Oo back
to the mountains and get more de
tails.” The credulous villagers have
given up work to devote all their time
to meditation and prayer.
The prophet has gone back to the
mountains. He will be annoyed six
months hence, but have a good excuse.
Through four gates, as Bunyan
would say, you find easy access to the
human mind, the gates of superstition,
greed, race hatred, religious hatred.
A hundred times the end of the
world has been announced und be
lieved. At the beginning of the year
1000 many sold their lands and goods
for next to nothing, put on white
robes, and went up into the mountains
to be as near heaven as possible when
the end came. It did not come and
won’t come In one hundred million
years.
The late Andrew D. White, presi
dent of Cornell university, tells of a
Jewish prophet who, long after Christ,
announced himself as “The Messiah,”
gathered a great following and an
nounced that he could walk upon the
water and that those that believed in
him could do the same. He walked
down a steep bank into deep water,
followed by a big crowd. All were
drowned. Leaders in superstition oft
en believe what they say. That makes
them dangerous.
We know how the world around us
looks. How do we look to one of the
cosmic beings that, presumably, sur
round us in space?
He sees our sun, a small star one
million times smaller than some other
suns, rolling in its mysterious Journey
toward the great star Vega above our
heads. Around our sun be sees little
planets, following the sun as newly
hatched chickens follow their mother,
traveling in a spiral round and round
the sun.
If he had a very powerful telescope,
with microscopic attachment, he might
see us and our little works—bridges,
houses, canals, railways, banks, pris
ons and libraries.
Looking even more closely, to read
newspaper headings about things that
Interest us, he would say, “Queer lit
tle creatures!”
Interesting Information from Bang
kok about Siam’s revolution--King
Prajadhlpok himself encouraged it.
He was worried about the drop In
rice exports, caused by Siam's foolish
gold standard. Rice to Siam is what
coffee is to Brazil. And gold seems
not to agree with eastern lauds.
Also, like wise Louis XI of France,
the King of Siam decided that his
great nobles were becoming too pow
erful and decided that it would he
wise to depend on the people, that
revere him.
Louis XI encouraged the nobles to
kill off each other, saying, “The less
they amount to the more I amount to,”
You remember how he disposed of
the foolhardy duke of Burgundy.
A sad story comes from the thlrty
secoud story of a Chicago hotel. A
young bride wept when her husband
said he did not think she could make
him happy, after they had been mar
ried only one day.
She replied, “I can only give you all
I have,” took off her wedding ring
and engagement ring, handed them to
him, and Jumped through the window
to death.
She suffered but a moment. He will
suffer while be lives. (
Mountain climbers, attacking Mont
Blanc every fine day, scaling the Jung- j
frau, Everest occasionally and failing, attempting are admirable. Mount j
little (
But you have in your home a ,
mountain climber called the dollar, i
with climbings that will surprise you. i
Starting from 1929, with the buying \
power at 100, it has climbed almost )
perpendicularly past 150, and is on j
its way to 100. The dollar will now i
buy 60 per cent more than in 1929,
and that Is maddening for those that
lack dollars and cannot take ad
vantage of bargains.
(©, 1932, by King Features Syndicate, Inc.)
(WNU Service! . 4
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