Newspaper Page Text
* ••«»"» t»< • M'l iniiilttlitlii i i i i •
Comity grimes
TRENTON, GEORGIA
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Published Weekly •Every Thursday
Entered at the Posteffice at Trenton, Georgia as second class
mail matter.
1 Only Newspaper in Dade County
Elbert Forester Editor ami Publisher
Lee Forester Managing Editor
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I names otherwise the communication will not be published. It will be
witheld on request, but the name must be given.
s AU communications and news items are received for pulication subject to
being re-edited, re-written and changed. Such are printed as a matter of
news and do not reflect the idea or views of the Times.
I Thursday, April 21. 1938.
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The Centennial Edition should he off ihe press Thursday,
28lli. Watch for it!
- D -
Taxation can be pushed down, down and down, but it has
to stop when it reaches the consumer.
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Sunday was a had day for those who had planned to
their Easter “frocks” (not us) clue to the all day’s rain.
We’ll admit that everyone is not a subscriber to the
hut if you’ll make a check, you will find thul practically
one reads it.
You’ll have to “hand it to” Joe Engel in gelling a
out to the opening game of the Lookouts, even though lie
have loslagean elephant hunt.
Tlv State Democratic Executive Committee meets
day to map plans for the biennial primary to be held in
tember. A United States Senator, Governor, state house of¬
ficials, Congressmen and other public officials are to be chosen
in the primary. Anyway, after this committee meets, the
hoys will he making “themselves known.”
April 30th Final Date to Accept Work Sheets
Saturday, April 30th, has been set as the closing date
county officers of the Agricultural Adjustment Administration
to accept work sheets 10 make farms eligible to he covered by
application for payment under the 1938 program, Frank
Ward, Triple-A administrative officer, announced in
last week.
“Operators of farms covered by unsigned work
should sigh work sheets before the closing date in order
make a farm eligible to be covered by application for pay¬
ments under the 1938 program,” Ward said
‘‘Producers who participated in thel937 Agricultural
servation program have, of course, already signed 1937
sheets and many of the producers who did not participate
the 1937 program have signed 1937 non-applicant work
in connect ion with the work of making 1938 farm cot ton
age allotments.
“Producers who have not signed 1937 work sheets
do so before midnight, April 30, in order to he eligible to
ceive payments under the 1938 Agricultural Conservation
gram.”
Child Health Day Will be Observed May
Child Health Day will he observed in Georgia on May 2
year. It is the day of the year on which major emphsis is
placed on tne health of those who will make the Georgia
tomorrow. In recent years great strides have been made
throughout the nation, hut more praticularly in Georgia, in
improving health conditions of the children, yet much re¬
mains to he accomplished. Too many children have not receiv¬
ed the major benefits of the program. Too great a stress can¬
not be placed on the importance of Child Health Day in spread
ing the gospel of better physical conditions throughout
schools.
As education in the state advances, health work
the children keeps pace. The expanded program of the
board of health in co-operation with the school department,
is beginning to hear fruit, bringing more regular attendance
and higher scholastic averages.
It is not work which can be carried to a point and drop¬
ped, however. It becomes a waste of money when a child in
poor health is allowed to continue in classes without some
correction of the defect or ailment. The youngster cannot
sorb® knowledge when ill. The rtsult is wasted youth
DADE COUNTY TIMES APRIL 21, 3938
Farm W ork Has
Advanced
(Continued from page 1)
on April I was about 1,872,000
bushels, an increase of 30 per
cent over the 1937 indicated
production Snd 100 percent
greater than the 10-year aver¬
age, 1927-36.
Condition of the Georaia
peach crop, the report also
showed, was 70Percent of nor¬
mal, the same as the 10-year
average, compared with 11 per
cent a year ago.
Favored by unusually warm
weather in February and
March and by adequate mois¬
ture in most areas, pastures
started early this year, and, by
the end March, were supply¬
ing considerable feed for live¬
stock.
In the District Court
Of the United States
For the Northern District of
Georgia.
In re: William H. Kenimer and
Richard P. Fricks, individually
and as composing a partnership
known as Kerwmer & Fricks,
bankrupts. No. 5734 in Bankrupt¬
cy.
A petition for discharge having
been filed in conformity with law
by above-named bankrupt, and
the Court having ordered that
the hearing upon the said petition
be had on May 16th. 1938, at ten
o’clock A. M*, at the United States
District Courtroom, in the City
of ROME, Georgia, notice is here
by given to all creditors and other
persons in interest to appear at
said time and place and show
cause, if any they have, why the
prayer of the bankrupt should
not be granted.
J. D. STEWARD, Clerk.
FARMERS’ HEADQUARTERS!
IMPLEMENTS — TOOLS
HARNESSS— FENCE WIRE
POULTRY 8c DAIRY SUPPLIES
Chattanooga lid we. Co.
CHESTER C. VARNKLL, M«r.
2615 South Ilroail St. 6-0157
CHATTANOOGA, TENN.
Labor Convention to Hear Gov.
Rivers, Senator Walter F. George
Savannah, Ga.—The fortieth
annual convention of the
Georgia Federation of Labor,
opening April 20th, will hear
Senator Walter F. George and
Governor E. D. Rivers during
their four-day session in this
city, according to Charles B.
Crumling, president.
State Report Shows Great
Progress in Cancer Education
(Continued
will do and show that Presi¬
dent Roosevelt’s proclamation
termed ‘the necessity’ of ef¬
forts to control the disease of
cancer through education.
“Unquestionably, very many
if not all of these patients
would have died from earn er
if they had not heeded the
warning to apply to their doc¬
tors for diagnosis at the first
sign of the disease.
“Doctors tell us that ‘early
and a frustrated manhood or womanhood. Hence come the
relief problem and full jails. Health must always hear a large
proportion of the blame for these conditions.
Child Health Day is one which all Georgians can well af¬
ford to observe. The principles that guide observance of the
day are principles that grow with the years. — The Atlanta
Constitution.
Well, sir, the curtain ha* been raised on the 1938 baseball
season. Big leagues, minor leagues and many semi-pro loops
have started their regular schedule, which will afford many
rabid fans much wholesome pleasure during the next live
i months.
TET’S keep Georgia in its traditional attitude
1 J of encouragement to industrial and business
development. Such grow tli will add to the pros¬
perity of agriculture - the bedrock on which
our state is founded.. It will furnish employment
to men and boys on the farms, men and boys
not now profitably employed. It will add to
their purchasing power. It will furnish rich new
markets for farm produce—and it will leave
fewer among whom farm income must be
shared; fewer to depend on agriculture for their
sole support. .. Georgia always will be funda¬
■*: mentally agricultural, but in the interest of
everybody in the state — in the interest of better
road , better educational facilities, better insti¬
tutions and added social security — let’s give
serious thought to industry and business, the
forces which must create ihe new wealth essen¬
tial to support all these governmental services
so desirable for the welfare of the state.— P. S.
1 ARKWRIGHT , president of the Georgia Power
Company, in a speech delivered in Columbus. 5
It’s Georgia, April 6. 1030,
as 7/v.v.v.-.v.v.w.v.v.*.v.v.v.v.v.v.v^vjwuv(!f
Simple as A-B ■ G
EVER! straight-thinking Georgian wants Georgia to have better roads,
belter educational facilities, better-equipped institutions, belter pro¬
visions lor social security.for old and young.
Georgia, however, always has been and always will be primarily an
agricultural stale— and AGRICULTURE CAN KOv BAA THE BILL!
Agriculture, today, is paying all it can afford to pay. It can’t stand
anv ¥ heavier burdens.
If our state is lo have wiial it Uueus— wi at it MUST HA VE — in
the way of governmental sen ses, there is on y one solution. Business
and industry in Georgia mast be encouraged to grow, to prosper. That’s
the only way the slate’s material weaidi, its purchasing power can be in¬
creased so that we can afford these desirable improvements in Georgia.
Any blow at industry or business in Georgia is a direct blow at
Georgia’s farmers—and a blow at every man, woman and child in
Georgia. Georgia’s ONLY hope for her rightful, brighter future is that
industry and business find the sort of treatment and consideration in
Georgia that will enable them to expand in confidence, to grow with
assurance — and thereby create in Georgia the new and added wealth
which is absolutely essential to the forward march of the state.
GEORGIA POWER
COMPANY
♦ ♦ ♦
■»
What JlelpA, BwUna&i — Helps You!
Other speakers on the pro¬
gram idclude Bishop Gerald P,
O’Hara, of the Savannah-At-
lanta diocese; Lewis G. Hines,
organization director of the
American Federation of Labor,
and Frank Weikel, president of
the American Federation of
Office Employes.
page one)
is curable; neglected
fatal,’ so we are fight¬
disease with knowledfie, in
the public as to how
painless symptoms may
recognized, and urging
to see a doctor at the
indication of the disease.
are working with the co¬
and under the super
of doctors, undertaking
get curable patients to them
it is too late.”
THE NEW EkiSM ELECTRIC
MODERN
ELECTRIC RAMGE!
fiCS ,1 I 3 ll »0 ’
i I
i TEL-A-C00K LIGHTS
Is I £ Inform stantly when you and in-
where the current is
on. Save electric cur¬
v rent by eliminating
* Ik needless waste.
lu . ! A / CALR0D SBECT-A-SPEED COOKING
<fea UNIT. Five cook¬
r 8 V HIS NEW General Electric ing heats from one
Range for unit, with one switch!
1938 has Three Hi-Speed, Ilalf-Speea,
Thrifty Features that make it the Quarter-Speed and
Thrift-Speed; for
completely modern electric range! keeping foods warm,
a new Low-Speed.
Here is a NEW range — not merely TR! Pi -OVEN.
new in modern design but also NEW 8 j Three ovens in
in how it saves you kitchen time and one! 1 —Speed
Oven for single shelf
work and worry and waste! It’s cooking . . . 2 —Extra Oven.
NEW in downright dollar value, too! large Master Sized
3—Generous
Super-Broiler.
Come in soon and see a demonstration
Fred A. Morgan
G-E Appliances
Trenton, Georgia
Patronize Our Advertizers