Newspaper Page Text
STATE PARKS
Hon. William H. Key, Chair¬
man of the Appropriations
Committee of the Georgia
House of Representatives, has
introduced a bill inlo the Spc*
eial Session of the General
Assembly, asking for a $100,-
000 Revolving Fund for con¬
struction in State Parks, i his
bill does not embody a direct
appropriation, but is intended
merely as a source of funds
from which ihe Division can
borrow money to help out in
its construction program in
State Parks, and to which the
net prjfits from State Park
operation will he returned.
All monies spent from this
spseial fund will he subject to
the same approval as regularly
appropriated funds. The Divis
ion feels that while CCClabor
and Federal funds are avail¬
able, any Stale money expend¬
ed for construction purposes
at this time woidd go much
further than it would if the
Civilian Conservation Corps
should be abandoned.
To date, the State Parks of
Georgia have received the bene
fit of some three quarters of a
million dollars per year iu la¬
bor and materials from the
National Park Service, through
CCC, and only a very small
portion of this has been match
cd by Stute funds.
THE SOLDIER
BY GRADY D. WILLIAMS
W ho in service in Panama Canal.
The soldier is a nobody,
Wc hear the people say;
lie is an outcast from the world
And always in the way.
We do admit there is some
bud ones
From the Army to Marines,
But you’ll find the majority
The most worthy ever seen.
Most people condemn a soldier
When he takes a drink or two,
But does he he condemn you,
When you just take a few?
Now don’t scorn the soldier,
But clasp him by the hand;
For the uniform lie’s wearing,
Means protection for our land.
The government pick* her
soldiers
From the millions far and
wide,
So place him us your equal--
A good buddy by your side.
When a soldier goes to battle,
You cheer him on his way,
And say he was a hero
When in his grave he lays.
But the hardest battle of the
Soldier,
Is in the time of peace.
When people mock and scorn
him
And treat him like a beast.
And with these few lines I close,
I hope I do not offend.
But when you meet a soldier—
Treat him like a friend,
Pofitable Reading
No matter what newspaper
you may pick up—read the
ads along with the news and
usual features. You’ll not
only find the ads carry much
informatio n of interest,
but they also point the way to
reaf economy. Men of wisdom
no longer argue that advertis¬
ing no longer pays. If it didn’t
pay, for instance, Henry Ford
would not be spending over
six million dollars a year to
advertise a ear that is so well
known already it is a house¬
hold word. Campbell wouldn’t
lie spending around two mil¬
lion dollars a year to sell soups
and soon down the line with
50 to 100 other concerns spend
ing as much as $1,000,000 each
to advertise their products for
a single year. And the best
part of it is it pays those who
buy the same as it pays those
who sell. So always read the
ads—aud always remember
, ■ ,11 ■ III I I I • I I > ■ ■ • > ■ *11 III 111! II 1,11
iDa&p County Cimea
TRENTON, GEORGIA
Published Weekly Every Thursday
Entered at the Postoffice at Trenton, Georgia as second class
5 mail matter.
1
I Only Newspaper in Dade County
i Elbert Forester Editor and Publisher
Lee Forester Managing Editor
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Thursday, January 13, 1938.
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What wc would like to know is where the nudist camps
go in the winter time.
They used to give Kaiser Wilhelm the laugh when he
mentioned the yellow peril. Maybe he was just ahead of his
time.
Japan is now threatening a 1,000-mille drive into the in¬
terior of China. The Japs should remember that the trip
home is just as long and the roads aren’t any too good.
- D -
In deciding any issue or question we all should remember
that usually there are three sides—ours, the other fellow’s
and the right side.
-□-
One fellow says that the bath tub is a cure for nervous¬
ness. Well, we can’t say about that, but it is reported that
one of our good friends went sound asleep recently while tak
ing his usually bath, which, by the way, might more or less
tend to substantiate this statement.
-□-
Dudley Glass in the Atlanta Georgian suggests the follow
ing as the best child story, if there l»e such: ‘‘Mama: ‘Why
Gladys, wliat do you mean by kicking your little brother in
the stomach?’ Gladys: ‘It was his fault. He shouldn’t
have turned around just then’.”
- □ -
The British government Is going to match the Italian
propaganda to the Arabs hv having radio talks of its own. In
this radio battle we predict victory for the British. When it
comes to propaganda they have the rest of the world out¬
distanced. They made us believe we were fighting to niukethe
world safe for democracy, and will probably do it again.
The process of giving the Public Square a new “dress” is
well under way, and since there has been quite a bit of rain,
a sea of mud ami water make the situation very disagreeable.
However, the construction company seems to he doing a good
job in getting the square in shape for the side walks, sewerage
system, etc., and when the work is completed our Public
Square and City as a whole should he very much improved.
-□-
We went to a meeting recently and listened to one after
another get up and expound with reference to a question of
vital importance. Finally, a rather indifferent, sarcastic look¬
ing gentleman stood up and made a statement that he did
not come to the meeting with the expectations of saying any¬
thing, and by doggies, after about forty-five minutes he
thoroughly convinced us that he really didn’tjntend to speak.
(It was here in Atlanta, however, not in Dade County.)
GEORGIA’S LIFE-SAVING PATPOL
What is the highest function and the greatest service of
Georgia’s Highway Pttrol? The question was answered in
three short words by Major Phil Brewster, State Commission¬
er of Public Safety, in a radio interview last Friday evening
on the Journal’s Editorial Hour over WSB. SAVING HUMAN
Ll\ ES—that is the vital objective of all the activities of the
Highway Patrol and of the laws under which it operates. Its
purpose and its policies are, not to make trouble for drivers,
but to save them from the sort of trouble that ends in dis¬
aster and death. It is a friendly arm of the government,
bringing first aid to accident victims, but striving above all
to prevent accidents by removing their causes.
Most of the causes lie in reckless or careless driving, in
failure to observe the laws and rules, the signs and signals
provided for public safety. Every such failure, though seem¬
ingly trivial, involves the possibility of a human life being
lost. Thus even the routine duties of the Highway Patrol are
immensely important and should have the good citizen’*
wholehearted cooperation. Next Saturday, January 15, is the
deadline for Georgia motorists who have not yet obtained
their drivers’licenses. Let none complain if the Patrol finds
him at the steering wheel without that essential bit of paper
and «lulv enforce the law against him; for that will be a part
*»1 ihe great business of life-saving. —The Atlanta Journal.
DADE COUNTY TIMES: JANUAR Y 13 I9.1l?
Freedom of
Religion
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NEW YORK—This chaste figure of
a young girl lifting her face to the
skies will be dedicated to freedom
pf rgligioii in the “Four Freedom"
statuary group on the Central Mall
of the New York World’s Fair 1939.
The Threat
of Foreign r lsms”
By RAYMOND PITCAIRN
National Chairman
, — Sentinels oj the Republic -
In many of the messages of encour¬
agement Issued with the New Year,
appeared a recurrent note of serious
concern.
ft witnjed of the dark threat that
the ambitions of Fascist nations abroad
have brorght to the peace and the
Welfare of humanity.
By Americans, as well as by the peo¬
ple of every democratic nation on earth,
that y arning should be heeded. For
the ultimate victim of these foreign
philosophies of government — whether
Fascism or Nazism or Communism —
is always the average man and citizen.
Current history proves it.
War rages hideously today where
bucU nations prevail, while the great
democracies are at peace.
Standards of living are lower today
among the peon-e of the dictator na¬
tions than in the democracies.
Freedom of religion, of the press,
and of speech; the advancement of
science and of education — all suffer
under dictatorships. In democracies
Jhey flourish.
That is because the democratic ideal
— to which America has been dedicated
since her birth as a nation —is the
freedom, the well-being, the advance¬
ment of every citizen. In the dictator
nations, the individual becomes a robot,
to serve as cannon fodder in war, as
a “producing unit" in peace, for the
benefit, not of himself or of humanity,
but of the pien in power.
Under such conditions freedom, as
we know it in America, cannot survive.
Yet it was to find or win such freedom
that the great majority of our ancestors
migrated to and developed this nation.
It was to defend it that they suffered
the hardship and privations of the
pioneer, the wounds and the deaths of
battle.
If we fail to guard vigilantly against
the threat of foreign isms — from what¬
ever source—we betray the ideals t ' iph
are so inextricably woven into our nag,
our traditions, and our very lives,
you can profit most by
from flit: men that
all the time.—Telfair
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