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Georgia’s Task Now is to WIN This WAR”
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GOVERNOR TALMADGE
[ “He reduced debt and taxes
at the same time.”
GEORGIA HAS
$9,663,535.72 SURPLUS
Bitors-ArniiU-Blalo('k
Plunder Bunders
Want That Money
They Left a Debt of
$29,759,642.18
STATE ON CASH BASIS
Under the budget all departments
are on a cash basis. They must
have the cash money on hand be
fore they make any purchases. Tal
madge enforces the budget law
which keeps the State from making
new debts and helps him to pay
off old debts left by the Rivers-
Arnall regime.
HERE’S THE
REEORB
DEBTS REDUCED BY-
- MILLION DOLLARS |
IN 18 MONTHS
AUDITOR’S REPORT
• •
JANUARY 12, 1937
Governor Rivers Took Office
Obligations All Paid—Page XIX
Cash on Hand—511,289,524.63 —Page 5
• _____
JANUARY 14, 1941
Governor Talmadge Took Office
Obligations Unpaid at
Jan. 1, 1941 $29,759,642.18—Page 513
(Current Debt)
.U-’.
JUNE 30, 1942
> Governor Talmadge in Office
18 Months
Obligations for Which Cash Must
Be Provided $7,648,545.07 —Page A*
(All in Highway Dept.)
Surplus $9,663,535.72 (War Chest)
"■Refers to budget summary of High
way Department, only department with
any unpaid current obligations. • All
references are to pages in the State
Auditor’s figures and may be verified
by merely looking at a copy of the
State Auditor’s report for the proper
year.
Current obligations only, as bonded
debts are made by the Legislature and
to mature over a fixed period. Bond
holders would not accept it if the State
offered the cash. The Governor does
not make the bonds and can pay them
only when due.
, GEORGIA IS WORTH
DEFENDING
Why doesn’t Clark Howell publish
things in his .Atlanta Constitution
that would promote the best inter
ests of Georgia? He seems proud
to ridicule and condemn his native
State, but offers nothing construc
tive.
ftidaie off Georgia theck Cashed in
Copenhagen by Halph McGill
And Ellis Arnall was running for office with the blood
hounds of the newspapers; Mr. Ralph McGill, he of Rosenwald
fame, who drew $1,950.00 from the Rivers Administration State
Payroll in addition to his salary from the Constitution, and in
addition to his pay from the foundation to tour Europe and
teach social equality between the Negroes and the Whites in
Georgia. He cashed a State of Georgia check for $50.00 in Copen
hagen while on that trip. He signed his own State checks while
here, but while away Ed Rivers signed them as Governor and
Chairman of the Athletic Commission, and sent them to him
away over there in Copenhagen, Berlin, Vienna and Switzer
land (What Poet has not read of the beauties of Switzerland?).
Mr. Gladstone Williams, Washington observer for the Con
stitution, who drew $3,900.00 from the State and had his checks
cashed in Washington and Philadelphia.
Mr. Howard Leavy (C. H. Leavy, Jr.) Brunswick News.
58.575. and he didn’t spend a day in the State Capitol working
for the State.
No wonder the Brunswick News has a running fit for the
Rivers-Arnall Crowd.
22: t a JkJ— 2-2 About It—Convince Tourself lYhether Ltd True or
(ADVERTISEMENT)
Debt Control Needed Now More
Than Ever
Georgia is faced with a financial crisis greater than
when Governor Talmadge took office January 14,
1941, and found the State in debt $29,759,642.18.
The Ed Rivers administration had left that debt.
Now Governor Talmadge has reduced it to the point
where only $7,648,545.07 is needed to wipe the slate
clean again and he has built up a surplus of $9,663,-
535.72 as of June 30,1942.
That surplus, built up by Governor Talmadge as a
War Chest against the day when the State, on the
Seaboard, in time of war, may need cash for dire
emergency, has attracted the attention of the same
Old Rivers crowd, especially the fair-haired boys of
the race, E. D. Rivers and Ellis Arnall.
Mr. Arnall is critical of that surplus, and he and
his associates are looking upon it with greedy eyes
while he makes public a statement about it. He can’t
say now it isn’t there, because he admitted that when
he criticized it.
Mr. Arnall was appointed Assistant Attorney Gen
eral on January 15, 1937, by Former Governor
Rivers.
On February 2, 1939, Attorney General M. J. Yeo
mans, a grand old Georgia gentleman, was persuaded
in his declining years to accept the position of Coun-
- COUNTIES GET THEIR MONEY
Governor Talmadge pegged the 1-cent a gallon gas
tax at $365,003 a month. Despite revenue loss by less
gasoline sales, the counties have been paid so that they
can carry on this emergency which reaches into the
counties every time it touches the State.
sel and General Manager of the Milledgeville Hospital
Authority. After the bright picture had been painted
he was persuaded to resign from the office to which
he had been elected.
Governor Rivers on the same day appointed Ellis
Arnall Attorney General. Judge Yeomans died of a
broken heart, April 10, 1939. And it developed that
Mr. Arnall, two weeks before he was appointed At-
S/ torney General, had caused to be printed the new
stationery for his new office, with HIS name on it as
Iy Attorney General. That shows how close the ties
were then between Rivers and Ellis Arnall, and how
■j: fast they worked.
Mr. Arnall, as Attorney General, busied himself
with opinions, as one on September 16,1939, for Gov-
Must Save Money Now for War Emergencies
as Failing Revenues Face Georgia
Governor Talmadge carried on his program of advance
ment of the State. He was paying her debts and establishing
a cash reserve for war emergency that may strike desper
ately any moment.
He was improving the services of the public health depart
ments, the hospitals, institutions for the deaf, blind, insane,
tubercular; increasing pension rolls, aiding the University
System as it never was aided before, giving the counties
their gasoline money when reductions in gasoline sales re
> duced the income.
Common Schools are financed by Talmadge fully for the
first time with $15,506,400, teachers paid promptly; State
Highways were alloted $12,546,800 in addition to allotment
>' to reduce highway debt; and highway overhead was cut 59
per cent; Public Health Department was financed with $600,-
000; Alto Tuberculosis services doubled and $400,000 provid
ed for its operation; Training Schools for Boys, School for
the Deaf and Academy for the Blind on improved basis; to
Public Welfare Rolls were added 25,484 to make the total
80,272; University System of Georgia alloted $1,700,000 to
keep it on par with other years and special appropriations
of $92,250.63 to expand the Medical School at Augusta and
$108,200 for the Pre-Flight Naval School at Athens; Coun
ties paid their gas funds because Governor Talmadge pegged
the i-cent gas tax at $365,000 a month.
Every other issue pales into insignificance beside the duty
and the necessity of winning this war. There can be no other
issue in the hearts of Georgians. That is the Talmadge Cam
paign issue.
On the other side is the old plunderbund group, the Arnall,
Rivers, Blalock gang, and the State-paid bloodhounds of the
daily press, licking their chops at the sight of money,
money, money in the State treasury on which they would all
lay violent hands.
Now is the time when Georgia needs the experience of
tried men. The people well know how Governor Talmadge
reduced taxes and reduced debts at the same time, a thing
almost unheard-of in government administration.
Read what the Savannah Morning News said in its issue
of July 15th:
“Certainly it comes with poor grace from a man who is
trying to unseat the Governor to condemn him for provid
ing against the uncertainties of State revenues of the
future by laying by something for a rainy day.”
Governor Eugene Talmadge
Same Old Spendthrifts
Want $9,000,000.00 Surplus TALMADGE Saved!
Mr. Bryan Lumpkin, Athens Banner-Herald, $5,450.00, and we
are advised by good citizens of Athens that he divided it with
another newspaper man named McGill, Dan McGill, whose
specialty is eating with Negroes, and having the picture taken
of the feast.
Paul Stevenson, who wrote that wonderful book about Rivers
and his crowd, with Ed Rivers’ picture on the front cover of
it; the State paid Paul Stevenson $3,775.70 to extoll the Rivers-
Arnall Crowd, and he did such a good job of it the Journal
hired him right after Talmadge fired him and named him
Piney Woods Pete and pushed Sergeant York off the front
page and put Piney Woods Pete on every day to cuss Talmadge.
Piney Woods Pete drew that money from the Old Age Pension
rolls. Think how many old age pensions could be paid with
$3,775.76, which he drew.
The Atlanta Journal of Sunday, July 12, 1942, printed its
statement of policy on its front page. It said it does not permit
its men to draw state pay, never has and never will. The sub
stitute Constitution is alone in this, says the Journal.
W’hat about C. E. Gregory, who was an Oil Inspector for J. J.
Brown, until Talmadge exposed him on the stump in 1926, and
Gregory was short $3,098.81 and was not paid until the next
year? Yet the Journal keeps him on to go all over the State
and write about this campaign like he hopes it will be.
(ADVERTISEMENT)
GEORGIA NEEDS A MAN WHO REDUCES
TAXES AND DEBTS AT ONE TIME
Governor Talmadge has never raised taxes. He re
duced the State debts while reducing State taxes, reduc
ing the cost of automobile tags, and reducing the cost of
electric, gas, and telephone services.
Today Georgia is faced with the loss of twelve to fif
teen million dollars in gasoline revenue.
How would the spendthrift opposition meet it? The
answer is simple—they would raise taxes.
How will Governor Talmadge meet it? His record
tells you. Read it here.
ernor Rivers, concluding that Rivers, as Governor,
had “effective powers over the spending agencies of
state.” That opinion turned the Highway Depart
ment money completely over to the then Governor,
who had appointed Mr. Arnall Attorney General.
He was handing down opinions that gave the state
power to buy 10,000 blankets in July and August,
without bids, to waste the state’s money while school
teachers went unpaid. That opinion permitted Rivers
to dictate every purchase of the State Highway De
partment. This gave him the same power over
every other department that bought anything. Text
books for the Schools, Shoes, Clothing and Bedding
for the Prisoners, Food, Oil, Gasoline and every
thing that the State buys and uses.
Georgia continued her dizzy plunge into debt while
Mr. Arnall fiddled with his new job and couldn’t
render an opinion for anybody except the Governor,
then Mr. Rivers.
Governor Talmadge was elected in 1940 and took
office January 14,1941, and Attorney General Arnall
was re-elected without opposition. Begging for of r
fice, he put on red suspenders and went among the
friends of Governor Talmadge, using the subterfuge
that he was a Talmadge man.
After Governor Talmadge was elected, Attorney
General Arnall could render any opinion for almost
anybody to help them try to defeat the aims of the
Talmadge Administration, and he couldn’t render an
opinion for the Governor to help Governor Talmadge
conserve the state’s resources and serve the people
of Georgia.
Governor Talmadge was busy with that debt of
$29,759,642.18.
Governor Talmadge has never had a chance to
administer the affairs of Georgia in a term starting
without debt. In his former term beginning January
Slate Defense Corps Is Praised by
Gen. Wood
He was setting up a State Defense Corps organization sec
ond to none in America today, and a Civilian Defense Organ
ization entirely without politics, to protect our people in time
of war; and placing the State once again on a firm founda
tion, to help win the war, cooperating with the National
Administration to do it.
At the Savannah meeting of the American Legion sat
Clark Howell, owner of the Atlanta Constitution, and heard
Brig. General Eric Fischer Wood, U. S. A., Fort Benning,
Georgia, June 23, 1942, say he wanted to give credit where
credit was due; and he said, with Clark Howell sitting in the
front row to hear him, that Georgia has the best Home De
fense organization in the United States and was helping first
of all the States in the Union toward a good home defense,
and that under Governor Eugene Talmadge of Georgia this
was done.
Clark Howell heard him and never wrote a line in his
paper commending the Governor of his State, which is ex
plainable.
But Clark Howell missed the greatest opportunity of his >.
life to brag on his State in news and editorials that would
resound all over the Nation, and he was so mad at Talmadge
that he wouldn’t write a single thing General W T ood said
about his own State of Georgia. He has been complaining
about the kind of publicity he gives Georgia by attacking
Governor Talmadge, and there was his golden opportunity
to correct it.
Clark Howell had the opportunity to encourage others in
patriotic duties, but instead Clark Howell was mad because
we have a sane, conservative administration and he wants
that plunderbund crowd back in his office and his own re
porters back on the State payrolls.
Clark Howell would rather give Talmadge bad publicity
than to give Georgia good publicity, the Georgia where he
was born and inherited his fortune from honest and honor
able forbears who would not stoop to defame their State for
any price or consideration. Clark Howell would debase Geor
gia to strike at Talmadge.
Governor Talmadge is helping Georgia and America in
military defense and in civilian defense. Not only is Gov
ernor Talmadge acting in his official way to help America,
but he has seen his only son, a young man with a young wife,
this son who was the Governor’s campaign manager two
years ago, walk out of his house and put on the Uniform
of the United States Navy to apftly for service on the dan
gerous PT boats to run down submarines on the stormy
seas. This young man’s name is Herman Talmadge.
And what about his son, C. E. Gregory, Jr., and the $10,062.50
he got from the Rivers-Arnall Administration? He got a lot of
that money, $3,487.50, from Ellis Arnall’s own Department of
Law, the Attorney General’s Department; he got s3,oso'from
the Secretary of State payroll and $3,525 from the Revenue
Department payroll. He was on them all and at big money.
James M. Cox, the Ohio politician-publisher, has an eye on
the Arnall-Rivers treasury. He likes gravy. Look at his record
in Florida, where he owns the political-minded Miami Daily
News, and where the only Governors satisfactory to him are
the spending kind of his own choosing.
Tidmadge Reduced ISudget
$10,840,0<)0
Governor Talmadge reduced the State bud
get $10,840,000, yet he has carried on ev<*ry
department of State without curtailing their
services.
(ADVERTISEMENT )
Rivers-Arnall Regime Debt
off $29,759,642.18 (
12, 1933, he had found a debt of $8,973,147.63.
He paid that off and left a surplus for the Rivers-
Administration of $11,289,524.23 in cash and the
state out of debt, and while Governor Rivers was ap
pointing Mr. Arnall Attorney General, and acting on:
his opinions, the state ate up that surplus of more
than 11 millions of dollars, and then sank into debt;
to the tune of $29,759,642.18. Rivers, Arnall, et. al.,
raised taxes at the same time.
Governor Talmadge then started his term follow
ing the Rivers Administration with that huge debt.
By policies of thrift, frugality and economy, without
impairing the state’s services, Governor Talmadge
has in 18 months reduced that debt to $7,648,545.07,
June 30,1942, auditor’s report.
And while he was doing this, the present Attor
ney General and would-be Governor, the Carbon Copy
of the Rivers Administration, was running for Gov
ernor.
He ran for Governor in his opinions, rendered on
the State’s time and by grace of the State’s money.
He ran for Governor in company with Brack Bla-
UNIVERSITY SYSTEM AIDED
The University System of Georgia has been supported
on a par with other years, with $1,700,900 the State’s part
of the operating expenses; Governor Talmadge approved
a special budget of $92,250.63 to expand the Medical
School at Augusta and another of $108,200 for the Naval
Pre-Flight School at Athens.
lock, another of the Old River’s favorites, who during
the Rivers Administration sold $3,700,000.00 worth
of machinery and in 1940 alone paid income tax on
$355,000 on profits he had made on the sales to the
State of Georgia during the Rivers-Arnall Adminis
tration.
No wonder Mr. Blalock is boasting around the
Ansley Hotel Lobby that he and his associates are
ready to spend half a million dollars to elect Ellis
Arnall Governor and put his old appointer, Ed. Riv
ers, in as Highway Chairman. It was through the
Highway Department that Mr. Blalock made his stu
pendous fortune, selling machinery to the State in
unprecedented quantities, at highly profitable prices.
It would be a good financial investment for him and
the rest of the Rivers-Arnall crowd to do so—if they
could win.
Herman Talir.adge’s message to his
friends in Georgia:
“I am on active duty with the (J. S.
Navy and regret that I cannot be with
you in the campaign as I was two years
ago.
“I am glad to know that you are carry
ing on the fight to re-elect my father.
You will have to carry on that fight for
me, because if anybody gets into a ficht
with me they'll have to join the Axis. My
full time is taken up with that right now.”
COMMON SCHOOLS
SUPPORTED
For the first time in their history
common schools of Georgia are
completely financed with $15,506,400
and the funds paid promptly. See
the report of Hon. J. I. Allman, As
sistant School Superintendent, and
ask any County Superintendent.
STATE SERVICES
MAINTAINED
Governor Talmadge reduced the
State budget $10,840,000, yet he has
carried on every department of
State without curtailing their ser
vices.
LIEUTENANT HERMAN TALMADGE
(J.g.)
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