North Georgia tribune. (Canton, Ga.) 1934-1973, October 13, 1939, Image 4

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    PAGE FOUR
NORTH GEORGIA TRIBUNE
FRIDAY, OCT. 13, 1939
Mapping War on Crime
Published Every Friday at Canton, Georgia, by the
Tribune Printing Co., Inc.
North Georgia Tribute
The North Coorgia Tribune will not be liable for errors in advertising be-
yond cost of advertisement.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
One Year, in advance (In Cherokee and adjoining counties) ....
Six Months, in advance (In Cherokee and adjoining counties)..
In distant Georgia, one year in advance
Outside Georgia, one year in advance
Enteres as Second-Class Matter
April 6, 1934, at the Post Office at
Canton, Ga., under the act 01 March
3, 1879.
Advertising rates on request
Splendid Job
Done by Fair
MORE THAN 10,000 persons
- paid admissions to the 1939
Cherokee County Fair.
The American Legion that spon
sors the Fair and the Fair Asso-
ciation that the Legion operates
to conduct the fair are justly proud
of that record.
The Fair proved a low-priced
entertainment. The Fair has the
exact record of spending by the
public. Visitors to the Fair didn’t
spend much more than 25 cents a-
verage on each visit.
That’s not costly entertainment.
And when you consider the Fair
gets about half of it, and puts it
all into the Fair and premiums, it
is a satisfactory arrangement for
everybody.
Barfield’s Cosmopolitan Shows,
that have been coming here, have
brought that entertainment that is
clean and wholesome. It is necess
ary to have such entertainment if
you are to finance an agricultural
fair.
We hope that the Fair will be
able to carry out plans to make
a bigger event next year. We be-
lieve that more afternoon activi
ties, centered principally around
livestock, with perhaps a livestock
auction or some other activity pro
fitable to the farmers would be
good.
The Fair has proved a splendid
institution, one that receives the
support of the entire public. It
apparently tries to merit that sup
port.
DR. N. J. COKER
WAS PRESIDENT
Success of the Fair required a
a lot of work.
That work was made more dif-
ficult by the absence of Dr. N. J.
Coker, who was president of the
Fair Association until his recent
death.
Dr. Coker was one of the most
enthusiastic men when develop-
ment of livestock and agriculture
was concerned. He would work
night and day to improve condi-
tions on farms in Cherokee Coun-
square to be friends to the con
victs with whom he is serving, and
to the guards, their taskmasters.
Fox achieved that.
Fox knows prison rules. If he
didn’t violate them in the ten long
years he served, it is ridiculous to
accuse him now.
Likewise, it isn’t helping former
convicts to rehabilitate themselves.
That is an official’s duty. Sullivan
said he had no evidence that Fox
was implicated in Gallogly’s es
cape. Just surmise. But his disap
pointment at the inefficiency of
his own state government—two
hours escaped before officials were
notified—caused him to stoop to
try to find a scapegoat.
You can find your scapegoat
right here in Georgia, Mr. Sulli-
van. You don’t have to go to Tex
as to slander a good man who once
did wrong.
The Gallogly escape in Georgia
stinks of official complicity in
Georgia. It was to oeasy for Gal-
logly to escape. Why was he not
guarded, Mr. Sullivan?
We sympathized with you and
your efforts to catch the fugitive.
You lost the sympathy of respect-
able men when you tried to shift
the blame to somebody away out
there in Texas.
Even if Fox had engineered the
whole thing-which you know he
didn‘t---he would still have had to
corrupt a lot of Georgia officials
to make the escape that easy; and
the delays of reporting the escape
so long ond so certain.
Wild rumors were flying. You e-
ven jumped on a poor Atlanta pa-
trolman for not reporting one of
those rumors —something about a
car away off the patrolman’s
beat—a car that might be Gallog-|
ly’s and was. You want to make a
goat of that patrolman, too.
Lay off, Lon. Get the one or
ones who helped Gallogly to es-
Inspired by search for racketeer Louis (Lepke) Buchalter,
greatest attack on crime is launched. Here are three of the "generals,"
in New York, planning their strategy. Seated, is U. S. Attorney John T.
Cahill: standing (1. to r.), William Young and Jerome Doyle, assistants.
GREAT ANNUAL
October Sale
BARGAINS! Extra Values!!
ON SALE EACH SATURDAY IN OCTOBER
CP ECPAIS 0,1 Sale
on EVIALO All Day
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 14th
Too Many Subs
Prof. Charles Wharton Stork, 58,
English professor at Bryn Mawr
College, shown at New York, sur-
vived the Athenia disaster, was
aboard the United States freighter
Wacosta when it was stopped and
searched by a German submarine
skipper. Prof. Stork acted as inter-
preter. "I’ll see you at a tea dance
in New York," the U-boat captain
promised as he left.
cape. But let innocent people a-
lone. And don’t, just because they 1
have to take it, jump on ex-con-'
victs who are making good.
Household Hint
His last active concern, the last
time he ever attended to any busi-
ness before he fell ill, was for the
Fair. His hand was felt at all
times, an dhis absence is felt now
Paint brushes should be soaked
in turpentine and washed in warm
soapsuds before they are stored
away.
by those that carry on.
So that in the the joy
Fair Association
take in having
on so well, there is
that the
carried
a touch
of sadness for a departed fellow-
worker, together with complete sat-
isfaction in the reflection that his
work was so good and so lasting.
Stinking Mess,
Scurvy Trick
DICK GALLOGLY, life - termer,
escaped, went to Texas.
Several years ago Phil Fox,
long-termer, was released from
Georgia's prison.
Fox went to Texas, his former
home. Everybody knew him there.
Everybody knew he had been in
prison. Everybody knew he had
paid his penalty. They helped him.
Fox reinstated himself, and has
become a good citizen.
Fox and Gallogly served time
together here in Georgia.
Word flashed back to Georgia
that Gallogly had surrendered in
Dallas, to fight extradition. Dal-
las is the home of Fox.
Lon Sullivan, Georgia patrol
chief, was disappointed that Gal-
logly escaped. No sooner had he
heard Gallogly was in Dallas than
he publicly accused Fox of com-
plicity.
A scurvy trick, that.
Fox was a model prisoner in
Georgia. The record, Mr. Sullivan,
shows he never violated a prison
rule. But he was not a bootlicker.
Prison officials respected him,
made him trusty, but prisoners lo-
ved him. He was the friend to all.
A man must be honest, straight.
GEORGIA CHEROKEE COUN
TY:
Will be sold before the Court
House Door of said County on the
first Tuesday in November, 1939,
between the legal hours of sale, to
the highest bidder for cash. Lot of
land No. 302 in the 22nd. District
and 2nd. Section of said County,
containing 160 acres, more or less.
Said property levied upon and to
be sold as the property of F. M.
Blackwell, to satisfy an execution
issued from the Justice Court of
the 792nd. District of said County
in favor of Jacob Massey, and a-
gainst the said F. M. Blackwell.
Levy made by T. J. Howard, L.
C., and turned over to me for ad
vertisement and sale. This Oct.
12th. 1939.
Lee Spears, Sheriff.
"Dixie Crystal"
SUGAR
1059
LIMIT — One 10-Lb. Bag to a Customer.
Kessler’s for Values! This is one of Many.
Come and See!!
Dress Prints
36 INCH
FAST COLORS
10c
Yd.
ALL NEW FALL
11-3
Be Sure Your Breath is Sweet —
BORALINE
is delightfully refreshing to the mouth. Use this
odors that often contribute to an unpleasant
Cherokee Drug Company
FARMS FOR SALE
Special Consideration will be given any reason
able offer for either of the following Federal Land
Bank farms if contract is submitted prior to Nov
ember 15, 1939. Small down payment, easy terms,
low interest. For information, write or see:
R.S. Clark
Field Representative
J. B. Brown
Secretary - Treasurer, Box 184, Marietta, Ga.
This impressive, guaranteed Studebaker is yours for
the same money as an ordinary lowest price car
0 NEW 1940
STUDEBAKER
AGAIN BY POPULAR REQUEST
$1.98 AND $2.98
Fall
Dresses
SATURDAY
ONLY
$1.00
each
Special purchase
brings you 200 of
these beautiful
dresses to choose
from!!
Broadcloth 10c
36 inches. Full Bolts 15c Value YARD
40 INCH PURE SILK
Satins 29c
Length's to 3 Yds.. 79c Yd. Value YARD
127a
PATTERN’S
SEW and SAVE
4000 yards of this
fine cloth for
Saturday only.
BUY AT
KESSLER’S
New Fall Woolens
Sew and Save at this low 570.
price. Regular $1.00 yd. value 4 JC
WASHABLE
SILKS AND CREPES
49c Yd. Value
All New Fall Patterns
Yd.
37c
Yd.
COTTON FLANNEL
OUTING
27 inches. 10c quality. 6c Yd.
36 INCH LL
SHEETING 6%c Yd
POSITIVELY 10c YD. QUALITY
EXTRA!!
SPECIAL PURCHASE
ENAMELWARE
WHITE WITH
RED OR SOLID
GREY BORDER
EACH PIECE
14 qt. Dish Pans, 6 qt. Pud-
ding Pan, 10 qt. Water Pails, 10 qt. Combinetts, No.
34 Wash Pans. 3 qt. Windsor Sauce Pan with Cover,
and many others.
FULL SIZE
BLANKETS
36 inches wide
Cotton Flannel Outing 9c
Good 15c grade stripes and solids YARD
*660
for a Champion coupe
delivered at factory,
• • South Bend. ...
CHAMPION
80 x 105
Jacquard Bedspreads 99c
Reg. $1.49 Value All Colors
81 x 90 Reg. 79c Value
Saturday only! While they last!
Good weight. All Cotton- Truly
Sensational Blanket Buy in Block
Plaids, Rose, Blue, Orchid and
Green.
EACH
HIS timewhen you golooking
around for the best buy in a
lowest price car, make it easy for
yourself and see and drive this
remarkable new 1940 Studebaker
Champion first.
Thousands of thrilled Cham-
pion owners have conclusively
proved that this powerful, bril
liant-performing, 6-cylinder
Studebaker uses 10% to 25%
less gas than other leading low-
est price cars.
You pay nothing extra for
sealed-beam headlamps, steer-
ing wheel gear shift, planar inde-
pendent suspension, non-slam
rotary door latches, front-com-
partment hood lock. Low down
payment; easy C.I.T. terms.
Reynolds & Sparkes
49c
EACH
Sheets
Seamless Fine Quality
Pillow Cases
Full Cut 36 x 42
8c
EACH
Curtain Goods
4c
36 Inch Wide 8c Yd. Value
YARD
Window Shades
25c
Window Shades. 39c Value
EACH
Cretonne
6c
Regular 15c Quality
YARD
Table Cloths
25c
48 x 48 All Colors
EACH
Chintz
25c Yd. Value
14c
YARD
LADIES EXTRA LONG, EXTRA FULL CUT
OUTING GOWNS
54 Inches Long — Fine Quality, White
Pink, Peach and Stripes. 59c value
Sizes 6%
Anklets
Sizes 6% to 10
Men’s Union Suits
Full Cut 69c Values
Men’s Work Shoes
Regular $1.69 Values
Men’s Overalls
Full Cut 8 oz. Sanforized
16 Oz. String Mops
Plain Handle 25c Value
Dunoleum Rugs
$4.98 Value Size 9 x 12
PAIR
5c
PAIR
44c
SUIT
$1.49
PAIR
88c
PAIR
10c
EACH
$3.79
EACH