Newspaper Page Text
Sly go Briefs
The Sewing Circle met
Mrs. R. L. Cureton this week.
Mrs. Della Genung is
her daughter, Mrs. L. H.
Mias Ophelia Harp spent
week-end on Lookout
13. W and Beatrice Cole
Miss Cathleen Cureton
night.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd
were Sunday guests of the
ers parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Thompson.
Beatrice Cole spent
with Cynthia Cole.
Everyone was surprised
hear of the marriage of
Jackie Thompson to Fred
(One broken-hearted.)
Leon Moore spent
in Hooker as the guest of
Smith.
Mr. and Mrs. C. W.
spent Sunday with Mr. and
E.A. Cureton.
WAN TE D-Man with
Route experience
but not necessary.
Dept. GAD-279-M.,
Ten ii.
Head River
Mrs. John Konrad has
quite sick, but glad to report
some better.
Misses Christine and
Forester of Cloverdale,
Miss Marjorie Forester
night.
Some of our young
made a sight seeing trip to
Soto Falls Sunday p. m.
Mr. and Mrs. Max
visited his mother and
here the week-end.
The Rev. Joe Massey filled
regular monthly appointment
Mt. Carmel Sunday.
Hugh Forester attended
School Board Meeting at
ton Tuesday.
Miss Jean Bearden of
visited Misses Janie, Sue,
beth and Mary Lou Forester
week-end.
Don't Borrow —
The Times, $1.50 a year.
THE NEW GENERAL ELECTRIC
COMPLETELY
MODERN
ELECTRIC RANGE!
1 TEL-A-COOK LIGHTS
I Inform you in-
I stantly when and
w here the current is
on. Save electric cur¬
rent by eliminating
needless waste.
A / SELECT-A-SPEED
CALROD COOKING
mm UNIT. Five cook-
'T-’HIS NEW General Electric inj? heats from on«
A for unit, with one switch!
Range 1938 has Three Quarter-Speed Hi-Speed, Half-Speed. and
Thrifty Features that make it the Thrift-Speed; for
completely modern electric range! keeping foods warm,
a new Low-Speed.
Here it a NEW range—-not merely O TRIPl- OVEN.
new in modern design but also NEW V ^ Three one! 1 —Speed ovens in
in how it saves you kitchen time and Oven for single shelf
work and worry and waste! It’s cooking . . . 2 —Extra
NEW in downright dollar value, too! large Master Oven.
3 —Generous Sized
Super-Broiler.
Come in soon and see a demonstration
FRED A. MORGAN
Authorized Dealer Trenton , Ga.
Twin Foes
of Democracy
By RAYMOND PITCAIRN
National Chairman
_____ Sentinels of the Republic , ---
With shocked amazement America
has been reading the tragic tale of
what is happening under Communism
and Dictatorship abroad.
Trials that are travesties, wholesale
executions, widespread death by bomb
and gunfire, reckless disregard of
treaty rights, of national rights and of
human rights—so run dispatches from
Europe and Asia.
What are the purposes behind all
this? What brought it about?
Essentially both Dictatorship and
Communism, whatever their preten¬
sions, are twin foes of representative
democracy, as we have always known
it in America.
Their aim is to subordinate the in¬
dividual to the State. Their theory is
that the citizen is incapable of run¬
ning his own life, thinking his own
thoughts, choosing his own religion,
producing his own and the nation’s
goods under his own direction.
These things, they believe, can be
better directed by the politicians in
power.
The men who founded America and
built it into a great nation established
a different pattern. They held that
government was bf, by and for the
people, and that the politicians were
the servants of the people, not the
masters.
They believed in the intelligence, the
enterprise, the ability and the freedom
of the individual citizen, and planned
a government to encourage those vir¬
tues. The American epic proves how
right they were.
But there are among us theorists and
bureaucrats who disagree with the
founders and builders of America. They
would discourage initiative and enter¬
prise—by vitriolic attack, by confisca¬
tory legislation, by destructive schemes
of taxation. They seek to stifle enter¬
prise by law. They prefer to see the
politician in power, the individual citi¬
zen submerged.
That isn’t the American ideal of rep¬
resentative democracy. It approaches
the way of the totaiitar.an states.
If Americans want to know where
that path can lead, let them study the
headlines from abroad, then route our
own course to avoid it
BEATY’S
BARBER SHOP
TWO CHAIRS
sxiin F. C. BEATY, Proprietor *===?
i Open Every Day Except Sunday
We specialize in Ladies and Childrens Hair Cuts
! Cold Hot Bath At All Times
.* or :
HAIR CUTS 25c
---ANY STYLE
PUBLIC SQUARE TRENTON, GEORGIA
I
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DADE COUNTY TIMES: APRIL7, 1938
Wildwood News
Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Murray
and son Richard, and Mrs. John
Mosley and grandson Bob, were
Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. J.
W. Frye, Jr.
Mr. Huel Neely, of St. Louis,
is visiting relatives here.
Mrs. R. S. Townsend of this
place, and Mrs. W. E. Hines of
Trenton, attended the Rural-
Urban Womens Conference in
Atlanta March 29-30tn, While in
Atlanta, they were guests of Mr.
and Mrs. J. M. C. Townsend.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Dodson
were weekend guests of Mr. and
Mrs. J. W. Frye, Jr. Mrs. Dodson
was formerly Miss Elizabeih
Horne.
Mrs. Elizbeth Townsend is
visiting her brother. John Mur¬
phy at Byrds Chapel.
Bill Hart is spending a few
days with relatives in Rossville.
Mrs. Ralph Bird ol Chattanoo¬
ga, was the luncheon guest of
Mrs. R. S. Townsend last Thurs¬
day.
Mr. and Mrs Ker.nit Holland
and children, of Flat Rock. Aia ,
are guests of the latter's parents,
Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Straw n.
FARMERS’ HEADQUARTERS!
IMPLEMENTS — TOOLS
HARNESSS- FENCE WIRE
POULTRY& DAI RY SUPPLIES
Chattanooga Hdwe. Co.
CHESTER C. VAKNELL. Mgr.
26X5 South llroud St. 6-0157
CHATTANOOGA, TENN.
Don't Borrow — Subscribe!
The Times, $1.50 a year.
If You Have Something to Sell. ..
Then
• . . You Have Something to ADVERTISE!
Make the Dollars Roll Your Way by
Advertising Regularly. The public keeps
posted by reading the ads of the Merch¬
ants who know the Value of Advertising.
n
Let the Times Carry Your Message into every Section
Of Dade County . The but Cost little of an and ad
the Results are “BIG”
Dade County Times
Lower Production Costs e
Necessary for Cotton Profits
vyrHETHER farmers should
vY plant and till a lot of acres
make their quota of cotton in
coming year—or whether it is
ter to produce the desired
of bales on fewer acres through
tensive cultivation and
—is a problem being widely
cussed and considered today.
Basically, according to an
torial in the Arcadian
"Handbook for Farmers”
issued by The Barrett
this problem is the same as
encountered in any other line
business, in that a profit is
on cotton, or anything else, when
its production cost is less than the
value or return when it is sold—and
the difference, obivously, is
“If you reduce your production
cost per pound,” the editorial
states, “you automatically
your profit per pound. The prob¬
lem, then, is really how to reduce
the cost of producing each pound
of your crop.”
That costs per pound or bale are
low when yields per acre are high
has been shown by many studies
by the various experiment stations
Of- ms
A Sign of Wise investment
Fortunate are the communities where a highway is
closed for paving with concrete. Temporary incon¬
venience is quickly turned into lasting satisfaction.
This means the end of spring break-up ills—-frost
boils, mud and ruts. Seasonal load restrictions, dust
and the inconvenience of constant road tinkering
can be forgotten.
Concrete stands up under all legal loads in all
weather. It permits speed with safety. It cuts driving
costs to motorists. It reduces road maintenance costs.
Concrete Is the Real Low Cost Road and Georgia Needs
Concrete Roads... Requests by your Local Delegations
will Insure Wise Investments on Your Highways.
I
For Concrete Facts, Write to
PORTLAND CEMENT ASSOCIATION
Hurt Bldg., Atlanta, Ga.
CONCRETE IS THE REAL LOW-COST ROAJB
: • ■ ; •
_________ . _
and the U. S. Department of Agri¬
culture. This chart, for example,
which is based on cost records ob¬
tained from 2,459 cotton growers,
shows the re¬
markable re¬
lationship be¬
tween high
yields and
1 o w -produc¬
tion costs.
Broadly
s peaking,
then, “the
higher the,
yield per acre, the lower the cost
per pound, andthegreatertheprofit”
As Dr. J. W. Tidmore of the
Alabama Experiment Station re¬
cently stated on this same subject:
“Again allow me to stress that we
are not trying to interest farmers
in a greater total cotton crop, but
rather we are interested in an
economic production of cotton. If
we can help lower the cost of pro¬
duction per unit, it will mean a
more profitable crop. The proper
use of fertilizers is one of the most
effective means of reducing the cost
of production.” j
Rising Fawn
Mrs. Jim Hall is seriously in a -
her home here. c
Mrs. Alice Gilbert and Mrs.
Will Lesley, of Birmingham, are
guests of Mr. and Mrs. S. W.
Woodin and Miss Edna White.
Mr and Mrs. R. L. Ruther.
ford, of Trion, Ga., and Miss
Fannie Hale of Chattanooga
were week end guests of Judge
and Mrs. VV. W. Hale and family.
Mr. and Mrs. James Hart, of
Chattanooga, were week-end
guests of relatives here.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hitt
were shopping in Chattanooga
Monday.
Miss Marry DeLina Case and
little Miss Margaret Woodyard
were in Trenton Tuesday.
Mr. Clyde Dulaney has relum¬
ed to his home in Athens, Ga.
after an extended visit with Mr.
and Mrs. Ray Smith.
Mr. B. G. Justus, of Ellijay,
Ga., spent the week-end with his
family here.
Willard Baker and Billy Smith
were in Chattanooga Saturday.
Mrs. Carl Scruggs, of Gaines¬
ville, Ga , joined her husband
here for the week-end.
B. W. Newsom and sen Lewis,
of Chattanooga, spent Monday
at their home here.
Mrs. Wash Lewis, of Villarica,
Ga., is spending several weeks
with her mother, Mrs. Louella
Tatum, who is ill at her home
here.
Mrs. Mary Highfield spent Sun
day with Mr. and Mrs. Bob Daw¬
kins and family.
Notice to the Public
My two brothers have be¬
trayed the trust I had in them
many times. Please do not pay
them money that is due me.
I am in position to dispiove
what was said ahoul the old
bed 72 years old ihat my fath¬
er bought and other assertions.
My neighbors have signed af¬
fidavits. See 1935.
G. H. INTSBET. (Adv.)
checks
666 COLDS
and
lets, Liquid Salve, Tab¬ FEVER
Noes Drops first day
Ileaduche, 30 minutes
Try “Rub-My-Tism’’-World’s
Best Liniment
BABY CHICKS and GAMES
Our best light mixed, $4.50
for 100. Heavy mixed, $6.50
per 100. Postpaid, live arrival,
C.O.D. Nothing to pay until
arrival. Have fighting game
cocks, pullets, eggs.
NICHOLS HATCHERY, Rock-
mart, Ga.
HENRY GRADY
HOTEL
Peachtree Street
ATLANTA, GEORGIA
Twelve assembly rooms of
varying sizes are available
for conventions, conferences,
meetings and committees.
Dinners, luncheons, banquets
for special groups in the Dixie
Ball Room, the Georgia Ball
Room, the Spanish Room, the
Pine Room and in Parlors on
Mezzanine Floor.
Information concerning these
facilities furnished
upon request.
J J. Page, Jr., Manager