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Every Thursday
Every Week
For Everybody
Devoted to the Best Interests and Process of Dade County ♦ Only Newspaper in thJf
OL. XLIV
•armers union
To be Organized
In This State
1 (GN'A)— Reorgan’zation o
|he 159 separate county admin¬
istrative Ljon of units the FERA of the into Georgia 31 di-
tricts, of 1 to 10 counties, is ai
live immediately.
These changes, according to
Ufiss Shepperson, are expected
[save $8,000 a week without
lessitating lemploye discharge of a single
and with no drastic gen
I eral | salary | cut
,
Instead of county ...
tors in each of the 159 counties,
[the new districts plan provides be for charge each
the 31 to in Of
a district administrator, with the
former county J heads remaining ;
county supervisory aides under
the district heads.
Each Comity Group Will Oper- r
sfe Independently , of , Other „ State
Groups. Organizer Announced,
FOR SALE-- A good Jersey
cow with young calf.
Mrs. M. E. Stephens, Morgan-
viile, Ga.
Hunting Licenses
Are Not Needed
On Own Land
(GNA)— Land owners who
hunt on their own lands do n 0 t
have to buy hunting licenses un¬
less they want to do so. Commiss
ioner Cravey of the Game and
Fish department called attention
to this provision of the law in an
interview last week in
stating that he had found some
farmers who had bought
to hunt on their own lands w! en
it was not necessary.
“I expect to see tnat every
man whom the law says must
have a license, gets that license be¬
fore he hunts. I don’t want land
owner, especially the
farmers, to spend money that it
not necessary for them to spend-
Of course, if the landowner appre
-dates the work of the Game and
hish department and wants t
contribute to that work bv
ing a license, that is nis privilege.
“I know of one case where
happened. A man wrote to
thanking me for the work m
fl dd men had done ir.
hunters under control on his
perty and said that although h
had never hunted in his life
never expected to, he had
hay bought a state hunting
to help support the goad
appreciate Mr. Cooper’s atti¬
tude very deeply, of course,
*»°pe all landowners will feel
same way toward our
After all, we are working for the
Georgia landowner in helping
him develop his assets, hut h
hoes not need to buy a
hcenseunless he 30 desires/’
TRENTON, DADE COl NTY, GEORGIA, THURSDAY, DEC?
COTTON WINNER
i | ggg^. U| r
||||| 111111 k , 1..... A
Pictured above is Oscar. Weaver,
Jr or Jackson, Ga., winner of the
■ Arcadian Nitrate of Soda 4-11 Club
j Cotton Contest. Young Mr Wea-
ver’s winning yield was 2,590 lbs.
of seed cotton Iro n an acre He is
I 17 and a frtMhman at the Abraham
j ^ dwin Agricultural School, to-
I Twelve trips to the 4-H Club
Congress in Chicn; o were awarded
thls year t0 the "' lliner8 ® f the 4-11
crop growing contests throughout
j the South which were Development sponsored by
The Agricultural Bu-
Te ™ of The Barrett Company.
rhe corn contest m Georgia was
won by Paul Motes, of Statesboro,
with a yield of 109.6 bushels. The
• • ® Edwin Balmer and
Philip Wylie tell the most
unusual story that has
appeared in years and
we have been fortunate
enough to secure it for pub¬
lication in these columns.
IF YOU lived in t!ve
I twilight of doom... be¬ if
you hed to choose
tween two years with
the one you loved and
life... if you could es¬
cape, but only to stand
again at the dawn of
time...friends gone,
home gone, everything
gone save the *ood you
ate, the air you breathed
and the s uprerm adven¬
ture of being alive...
What Would YOU Do?
Read the story of
and a woman who
this choice ...you wi
want to miss any of it.
STEADY WORK-GOOD
RELIABLE MAN WANTED
call on farmers in Dade
No experience or capital
Write today. McNKSSCO.,
B, Freepors, III.
ftjgjJi^cotton h
•“ has
seems
[oppertunity receive for
ier to
M^tis labor
I/ *kys mstrous
^
*
PP^^ne ed with b jse
a
potent which
in 1934.
: e :s
/jleavily il, hare he is again thy joil)
laden witrk Christ
uddy and rotund;, y-yG^/ thii
The life and spirit of
(the (times utishes it’s Seabers a joijau ;* <i
Auit a Happy, prnspermis 2mu Hear. - 2* 5
pro (HI A)— Detfembjgr 2
been announced date lie yet by thebiK^~J"
offer the best i
the cotton funn¬ '•■ 111(1 act v ,
greatest returns and one of tlWSm#.
investment, and tory of the
ie urrence of 30 cohtracts,
s of 1931 and will ba^ntirely of federj
L. Brown, Di Between 3,500 and
men will be emplojHr
l,i 01,000 various projects.
signed in Liu Six of the largest cont
which have for two new ■w J£B* rOgris s inttf c
on- 19.35, ptM pm- -of aTj §M
(lf -5
as
of
conlr»P aceujM^H
Wr, finjf 9
I wants V
Act modified to take care of (
*small farmers.
This y ar's crop totaled a pa
-imalely 9,700,000 bales, M.
the Bankhead la !M
■Vf agricultural depi ■ ]
of 10 million to produce bales next year r|
on 34 p
acres. Only 28 million acrel',^
planted in cotton in 1934.
One of the 117 votes regial^
against the bill in Monr^jO
•v here 830 voted
'hat of Governor '1 „ •
owns from a the far.n capital there to and cafmfg" j£ r*3|
against the measure. '/ /
executive had consist at. life ti¬
ed the Bankhead acG .j,
ments and in
advisetUhe 'ti„. far t# ■ ■ JjJ
grounds last wejek, andttai cv Mkg 1
spread speculation
delight to those emnloraJ
s ill remember SantrH ,
It developesfOa*/
Talmadge plan for had^yy, «mf-
to a a
ty Christmas tre'V f
before Christmas;.! f />' j
each state department
the names of lellow^em^yc gi^uress
whom they must wjpPW*
will) a limit of I§F
cost himself of the has gij L- N ^t‘7'}
/
at the tree and i
Clause. . :*
Various depg ’ t
Capitol have h
in the past but it war*' M *
have with a joint celebrahY High .Jffc
the State
ment, Military DepartnJ
other departments out»i^ 4
Capitol building taking psffc’
We are glad to note Miss Iris
Scruggs who was injured in an
automobile accident Halloween
night is 1 ble to be up and walk
about in her room.
Mrs. Gen Davis of Columbus*
Ga., will come to Trenton, to
spend the Christmas holidays
with her mother, Mrs. G. W. M.
Tatum.