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Legal Notice
Court of Ordinary; Sitting
County Purposes, at
Vo the Peop’e of Dade County:
Notice is hereby given that
as Ordinary, will on the first
of March, 1935, make
t® the Prison Commission of
.gia, for the establishment of
chain gang, and for ten (10)
oners to serve therein.
This the first day of
iy35. w.t. McCauley,
Ordinary.
HAVING
confidence in your dentist
your teeth, or your Optomerist
cerning the condition of
YOUR EYES
is a very consoling factor-your eyes
require glasses. We can tell you
having
EXAMINED
chem-at our offices we emphasize
VICE You may or may not neeo
es.
Harris & Hogshead
OPTOMETRISTS
For Appointments Call 6-7545
Chattanooga, Tennessee
(13 E. Eighth Street)
Galvannealed!
Copper Bearing!
This famous fence
once sold as pre¬
mium quality at
an extra price.
However, you can
now buy genuine
Red Brand at no
more than stand¬
ard market prices.
It’s an outstanding
value. By all means
come in and inves¬
tigate. u-A)
Brown Fence Co.
Chattanooga Distributors
McBRYAR BROS.
Trenton Dealers
-0--
Citation
To All Whom it May
Carl Langston having, in
form, applied to me for
ent Letters of Administration
the estate of Oscar Langston,
of said County, this is to cite
and singular the creditors and
uext of kin of Oscar Langston
be and appear at my office
the time allowed by law,
show cause, if any they can,
permanent administration
not be granted to Carl
on Oscar Langston estate.
Witness my hand and offi .ial
signature, this 4dav of
1935.
W. T, McCauley, Ordinary.
Mr. Pope Derryberry a n <1
Miss Irma Dickerson
married at New England
urday night; Rev. John
officiating. The couple art*
siding at Eden, Ala.
-o---
The Times
$1.50
A Year
PLANTS FOR SALE:
I’omato and Collard
AH assorted, 500 plants,
1000 plants, $1.25, prepaid.
Sweet Potato. Pepper a n
Lgg Plants, All assorted
plants $1.00, 1000 plants
prepaid. Good plants,
shipment.
DORRIS PLANT CO.
Valdosta, Ga.
DADE COUNTY TIMES; FERRUARY 28 , 1985
L—
The Mrncd Lon tiers lii|» i n Living
Finds GEORGIA nt the Front!
f 'O A DEGREE before known in his- of 931.3 kilowatt hours higher than the gladly what Georgia’s record really means.
JL | the of never electric service in home is erage Georgia average, far higher than — the national av¬
# tory, use a
conceded to be a highly significant measure of that erage.
home’s well-being and progressiveness. That word But Athens and the territory that extends from
has down from high places; it has been Madison and Greensboro in the south on up to
come ac¬ the Northeast Georgia mountains surpassed At¬
cepted far and wide. lanta. It scored an average of 960 kilowatt hours
What does it mean in Georgia? — in a thinly populated Georgia section that cov¬
L miles!
It that homes, measured by that ers 8,500 square
means Georgia On top of that, 35 Georgia towns, taken indi¬
“yardstick,” are nearly 50 per cent better off than vidually, scored 1,000 kilowatt hours or more —
the average for all America. It means that many 35 Georgia towns can say that their citizens use
Georgia towns — small towns, too — are nearly nearly twice as much electric service as the aver¬
three times as well-provided w ith the factors that age for all American homes.
make up REAL LIVING than the average And LOUISVILLE, GEORGIA, with a popu¬
throughout the United States; it means that Geor¬ lation of 1,650, leads the list with an average of
gia is in the forefront of the nation’s advance 1,700 kilowatt hours a year! Double the average
toward those new and better things.
Georgia is setting goals for the rest of the na¬
tion to strive for! the homes served by the These Towns Rank Highest
During 1934, 120,000 R.v nrtijnl rhrrU nt electric hills, resi¬ 1 LOUISVILLE ................. .............146.1 19 Gainesville 108.7 108.1
Georgia Power Company used an average of 888.3 dential customers in 35 Georgia towns .............141.2 ........... .. - 107 .*
used an average of 101) kilowatt hours .............137.2 Social Circle 107.4
kilowatt hours home giving Georgia a com¬ or more during October, 1934. These 1 Manchester .............133.0 21 ................... .......-
per — towns .Wand at the top of the more than ......_................. .............132.0 22 Dublin .............................. ......... I 104.4 04 .T
manding lead in worthwhile living. 400 towns served by this Company and G Perry .............128.6 ......... 104.1
would rank high in any national com¬ ................................... ......... 103.8
parison. 7 Jonesboro ............................ .............127.2 ........
Atlanta and its metropolitan area made an av- The month of October was selected 8 Canton ................................. .............124.2 .............123.2 ......... 103.3 103.1
for the survey because it has neither ex¬ 9 Ciaj ton ............................. ......... 103.0
cessive darkness nor daylight and is 10 Hartnell .............................. .............118.0 ........
therefore a typical month in Ihe use of 11 Sopcrton .............................. ............117.5 29 Marshallville ....................... ......... 103.0
electricity. An estimate of the annual 12 Tilton .................................... .............116.7 ....... 104.0
use of electricity in these towns may be ............. ......... 102.6
obtained by multiplying the figures at 14 Ocilla .................................... ........ 102.1
the right by t> live. This annual figure, 15 McRae .................................. .............112.2 ......... 101.7
however, is only an estimate. Here are 16 Vidalia .................................. ............110.7 ....... 100.0
the leading averages for October: 17 Baxley ................................ ............110.0 35 Leesburg ........................... ___ 100.0
4
Georgia Power Company
MORE LIGHT - MORE LEISURE - FOR GEORGIA HOMES
Not Fault of
With reference to item
last week’s issue of the 1
reporting accident of train
hitting John E. Price’s
bus, it was staled that
“brakes were not working
they should”. This, Mr.
tells us was a mistake,
his bus brakes were in
condition, and applying
brakes as he did, Air. Price
no doubt saved his bus
being completely
rather than merely
the front of it, as was the
Mr. Price and witnesses
the train was going at a
rate of speed.
Mrs. Josie Oneal os
her son Frank White and
ily at Memphis.
Highway certificates
$27,000,000 issued to
for road construction
held valid and binding
tions of the state in a
handed down Saturday
Judge II. II. Hawkins of
superior court. The
Sales company of Atlanta
brought suit as a taxpayer
the ground that the
tional amendment
ing the state to pay the
icates was not properly
tised. Attorneys for the
tiff said tiie decision
“probably he appealed”.
The $27,000,000 is to he
ed counties in annual
ments of 10percent, with
first payment coming due
March, 1936.
Renew your Subscription.
in the
MAKING
That is what is covered in our Weekly
Sews Review feature each week.
It is an interpretation of the events
of each week that are making the
history of the nation and the world.
It is prepared by Edward W Pickard,
one of the highly trained newspa¬
per observers of the nation, and
syndicated to a limited number of
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1 Renew your Subscription.
for Georgia, nearly three times the United State#
average — a high-ranking comparison, nation-wide
or world-wide!
* * * k
What do these figures mean? Forget “kilowatt
hours” and semi-technical terms. Answer the ques-
tion in everyday language.
Do they merely mean that the power company
is doing a big business? Are they simply a peg on
which to hang local pride? We think not.
As a guide, here are some things this achieve¬
ment does NOT mean*
It doesn’t mean smelly oil lamps, dim and
smoky at night.... it doesn’t mean sending the
children to bed in the dark for fear they will tip
over the lamp and set fire to the house.... it
doesn’t mean filling long rows of lamps, today polish¬ and
tomorrow and the day after that, endlessly , of
ing chimneys, scrubbing your hands to get rid
the smell of kerosene, trying to keep that smell out
of the food.
It doesn’t mean carrying heavy buckets of water
from the well.... it doesn’t mean milk soured,
foods spoiled, no better refrigerator than the old
spring house.
It doesn’t mean wood to be cut, fires to be made,
ashes to be carried out, sweat, soot and grime in
the kitchen, blistering heat on baking days, nearly
as hot on other days, bad in winter, worse in
summer.
It doesn’t mean a never-ending daily round of
nagging duties for every woman in the home ....
young wives changed into old women before they
are thirty.
What DOES it mean to the home of today?.
Ask the women w ho began housekeeping before
electric service came in .... ask the daughters, or
the sons, of mothers who cooked and kept house
in that old-fashioned way. THEY will tell you
FIGHT CRIME!
You can no longer afford to be finicky
about the hideous reality of the new war
on the home front # SEE IT!!
. . .
3 Full Pages ol Actual
Photographs of CRIME
Now Appear Every Sunday in The
Atlanta Sunday American.
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Try a Want Ad in The Time*
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