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The Dade County
Times
TRENTON, GEORGIA
Published Weekly
Every Thursday
Entered at the Poetofflee at
ton, Gfa., as second class mall
ter.
ELBERT FORESTER
Editor and Publisher
C. S. TURNER
Advertising Manager
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printed as a matter of news
do not necessarily reflect the
or ideas of The Times.
THURSDAY, JULY 3, 1941.
THE HESS trick
isn’t going to work.
• • •
STRIKES ARE the bombs
are taking their toll in
country in the defense
• • •
MOST FOLKS LIKE to be
ed and flattered. Even
they have a suspicion that
praise is not altogether
and the flattery is not
sincere.
• • •
IT WAS NOT necessary for
mencement speakers this
to warn the listening
that an uncertain future
before them.
• • •
THE WAR ISN’T over for
United States if Hitler
England. It will be just
If Hitler is not destroyed it
mean a long and costly
of preparedness and even
preparedness.
• • •
SOME ONE HAS figured
that 12,000 tons of tin
are dumped annually in
country. The sad part of it
that most of them are
along the highways leading
town.
• • •
REPEAL AND EQUAL r
have produced the female
fly. A bar fly is a creature
lolls over a bar until it
silly drunk and then persists
continuing to loll.
• • •
NEARLY EVERY man has
desire, if not the ambition, to
a good public speaker,
to respond at any time or
casion with a good speeth
merits and receives a
round of applause.
• • •
IN SPITE OF THE fact that
in the Kansas wheat
there is a great demand for
ed labor and little to be
at five dollars a day, the
has almost as large a relief
as it did in the depths of the
pression.
• • •
TIMES CHANGE: A
ster, who, during the
War, threw a conniption fit
ry time she heard of
sending cigarettes to the
can soldiers in France, now
one cigarette off of another.
• • •
ONE OF THE RISKS
days in building
ships that require three
to build in this modern
moving age, is that it may
come obsolete before it is
pleted. The Hood, the
battleship in the world,
built but a few years, was
lete. It was outclassed by a
er, smaller, faster ship.
• • •
WE ENJOY READING
contrary to our own way
thinking. It stimulates the
and prevents one from
into a rut. No one ever
his view point who persists
reading only the viewpoint
those with whom he is in
Contrary viewpoint often
ables a reader to discover
aspect of a situation that he
reviously overlooked.
TOMORROW’S’
By J. C. WILSON
Newspaper Features, Inc.
This week, in the interest
the future and well being of
Empire State of the South,
wish to bring certain politics
the attention of th e public.
On Friday of this week,
gia’s Attorney General, Ellis
nall, charged that Governor
madge was attempting by
means at his command to
the State of Georgia
to his own plans and those
his chosen “yes men.”
Mr. Arnall made the
in Brunswick before the
meeting of the Superior
Clerks of Georgia. The
ers considered his statement
of the best ever issued
Dictatorship.
In view of the fact of Mr.
nall’s prominence and his
mendous popularity,
Sun is sending excerpts
his speech to the press.
“Democracy will never
ate the tyrant, the despot or
dictator. Democracy requires
men to conform to a
rule of right expressed by
Democracy allows no man to
above the law. Liberty for
necessarily means special
lege for none. Democracy
quires every man, hich or
high or low, in office or out
office, to be subservient to
accountable to law.
The people of Georgia will
long tolerate an imitation
power crazy, who seeks to
his orders on all who come
er his dictorial way.
Our educational system
ever remain free from the
of any “hum-bug” dictator.
grant that the University
Georgia will never become
other LSU, politically
by a second Huey Long,
meshed in scandal with
President ending up in the
eral penitentiary.
I pray that my native
will ever keep ablaze the
the people of Georgia wili
of democracy which our
fathers planted here. I pray
denounce any tyrant who
law and spurns rules of right
decency in order to carry out
own political whim and
caprice.
For the past two years I
been going up and down
flaying Communism,
and un-American and
doctrines. While others who
this late date become
were silent, I have been
ating with the Federal
of Investigation in
the peace officers, sheriffs,
law enforcement officials into
state-wide organization to
wielded against
Hitlerism and un-American
vities. Ag Attorney General,
ruled Earl Browder, the
munist candidate for
from the general election
last fall and am proud that
other states followed my
ship.
It occurs to me that if we
to save democracy from
tion to declare “war” on
ism we need first to start
Georgia by denouncing
and would be Hiters who
drunk with political power
hallucinations of greatness.
I detest any man in high
lic office who attempts to
the mad-dog dictators of
and their damnable despotism.
I shall always have
strength, courage and
tion to declare “war” an
enemy of democracy, of
ance, of decency, of education,
law, and of order
A LOCAL MAN recently
turned from a cross
trip. “The only thing I
most,” he said, “was how
they try to sell it to
Each town that we stopped at
our trip we would ask the
ing station man what were
chief points of interest of
town. Most of them replied
saying that there wasn’t
thing of special interest
the town that they knew of.
a number of occasions on
ing later to others we
ed that there were some very
teresting things about the
that we wouldn’t have
for anything. The
gave us the idea that most
tourist is interested in
the interesting things of
town that he passes
Local citizens of a town
see that every tourist who
cates a desire to see the
esting things of the town gets
opportunity to do so. It is
THE DADE COUNTY TIMES: TRENTON, GEORGIA T HURSDAY, JULY 3, 1941.
FLOATING LIVE INSECTS
To float live crickets, grasshop¬
pers, or any bug, slit a
bottle cork half through and
it on the shank of your hook.
“Dry bug’’ fishing in its
form! I like it—you can see
they hit!
CONSERVATION TREATY
Ten nations in North
South America have
signed a treaty for wildlife
ervation in the western
phere. The signatories are
via, Cuba, Ecuador, Mexico,
vador, Nicaragua, Peru,
nicana. United States and
ezuela.
COLORFUL
Jewfish are capable of
ing color so as to blend
their immediate background.
KNOW YOUR HAWKS
There is no excuse for the
discriminate shooting of
hawks. Very few are
and a number are actually
helpful. Study your hawks
kill only these that need
WEEDLESS LURE
The Southern bass
has spent long hours of
crying, emitting huge drops
salty despair at the lack of
effective weedless lure
which he could go back into
weeds and bring out the big
without losing alure on an
erage of one for each cast.
a company comes out with
lure which they guarantee to
weed proof. It looks good
right, but we haven’t had
chance to try it out as yet.
manufacturer is Sealand
facturing Company, 25-4th
North St. Petersburg, Florida.
TRUNKFISH
The trunkfish is most
priately named, for he
“lives in his trunk.” His
is completely enclosed within
hard, stiff, bony shell, the
movable portions of his
being his eyes, jaws, fins
tail.
The little pine-cone fish is
other whose thick scales unite
enclose the body in a sort of
SPONGY
Sponges, believe it or not,
classed as animals.
FATHER’S DAY
a The emu is one species of
in which the male hatches
eggs.
LITTLE BIT GOES LONG
I
Bob Vale, outdoor writer,
backing a new kind of
that he guarantees will make
little ones feel like
You merely place an
rubber band between the
and your main fishing line.
WAR PIGEONS
Word come s from the
air base at March Field in
fornia that through breeding
periments “camouflaged”
ing piegons have been
Birds of mixed colors have
obtained by cross breeding.
THESE TRICK WOMEN
It’s the truth, so help us!
ing from a boat in Clear
Louisiana, recenly, a
and his wife were having
little luck. His wife slipped
tail of a small fish on his
for a joke. After a few
her husband started pulling
his line to see if it was
Then the big bass struck.
weighed eight and
pounds!
THIS ONE SMELLS!
Skunks, in several
cities, have almost moved in
the populace. In Lexington,
tuck, we are told, police
summoned to rout a kitty
the cellar of a taxpayer’s
They used tear-gas bombs.
skunk came out all
tears in his eyes.
sible that long association
the things of a town has,
the local resident to cease
think of them as interesting.
is well to remember,
that to the tourist who has
er seen them may be very
esting. Lets tell all the
who give us a chance the
esting points about our town.”
THE TIDE HAS set in
the calling of strikes in
J’cdL
OfL 'ILl jMUfl/WJU)
Read l.’ is thoughtfully! It isn't careless talk or hysleria
or an irrtsponsible warning!
German “tourists" in the United States are this very hour
devising ways of destrojing our airplane factories in llie East
and West.
Our small towns, where vast quantities of vital aircraft
accessories and parts are now unde- manufacture, are also of
special interest to these Nazi "tourisls.
Unquestionably there is one tuch Nazi “tourist” in our
town, or in a neighboring community, where parts or other
materials vital to America's defense are manufactured.
Tomorrow, German bombs may crash on Main Street
America! That our Government believes this iikely was made |
plain last week when anti-aircraft units were placed in position j
on airplane-factory roofs and grounds in California and elsewhere.
Also, last week, “The Aeioplane," spokesman for Brill h ,
aircraft manufacturers, revealed that German “touris. in the
United States were “exploring the possibilities of. attai s on j
New York City, the Brewster, Grumman and Republic airplane
factories on long Island, the Glenn Martin Y, o. ..s at Baltimore,
the Sikorsky plants at Hartford, Conn., and other uircraft manu- ji
factoring centers." These plants now are under night nml-day j
guard — and the posting of these Army guards is no “practice
maneuver."
This suggests very powerfully that, in the defense of our
loved ones, our friends and our property, all of ns whose eyes
are open must unite immediately in this light for freedom.
We haven't a moment to lose.
Aside from organizing or joining our local Fight for
Freedom group, we should immediately write or telegraph our
Washington representatives, in both branches of the Congress,
that the full protection of the United Stales as well as the
Western Hemisphere demands immediate war upon Germany.
In the opt words of the Rgt. Rev. Ilenry W. IIoLscn,
national chairman of the Fight for Freedom Committee, “the
United States of America is in danger. Our people will disregard
all petty differences in the face of the common enemy. T! at
may mean occupation for the war's duration of the Azores, the
Cape Verde Islands, the Canaries and Madeira Islands — or it
may mean something entirely different."
Bob Jones Comments
On Here and
Hereafter
The writer has been engaged
in evangelistic work for a great
many years. Under the spell of
conviction which comes upon
audiences where the old time
Gospel is preached, I have had
many men and women confess
various kinds of sins. They have
confessed murder, lying and eve¬
ry sin which can possibly be
conceived except one sin. I have
never heard man, woman or
child confessed the sin of covet¬
ousness, yet there is no sin of
which the human race has been
more guilty. I seriously doubt if
any human being in all the his¬
tory of the world ever lived
completely free his entire life of
this sin.
****
Amid the thunder and lightn¬
ing of Mount Sinai when God
gave the commandments to
Moses, He made “Thou shalt
covet” one of the ten. We
in the Bible where God classes
the sin of covetousness with
whoremongery, idolatry, and
murder. It seems to be the most
subtle of all sins because often
the ones who are the most guilty
are the unconscious of then-
guilt. The sin of covetousness
has wrecked homes, damned cit¬
ies, overthrown kingdoms and de¬
stroyed empires. The sin of
covetousness turned Judas into
a traitor and handed his name
down to all generations as a
synonym of everlasting obloquy.
It was the sin of covetousness
which made Ananias and Sap-
phira lie to the Holy Ghost. It
was the sin of covetousness
which soiled the name of David,
the man after God’s own heart.
It was the sin of covetousness
in the lives of men which seems
to blind them to everything that
i s noblest and best. It is re¬
sponsible for wars, for the
tramping of armies and the flow¬
ing to blood on the battlefields
of world. The sin of covetousness
is more or less connected with
all other sins of which men are
guilty. God save us from this
terrible sin!
industries by radical leaders. Un¬
less labor checks up and asserts
its independence from such lead¬
ership it may see the public
turn against it. Once labor loses
the public good will its progress
toward further gains i s going to
j be very much slowed up.
Sand Mountain News
x»y irlxs. JESSIE GASS
A large crown atttnued the
rutn suuoay meeting at u.owu
i_rap Sunaay. speakers tor tne
morning were Kev. Will Wiiker-
son anu Rev Smitn ox nenagex,
nJa., in tne afternoon were Rev.
Morris ana Rev. lgou, oi llene-
gar, also, Bro. Michaels, layman
of Chattanooga. Singing was con-
aucted by the Rev Hosey Wii-
xerson, with the Rev. 1. O.
.Dowdy in charge of the program.
Everyone enjoyed tne speaking
very much.
Mrs. C. A. Pike, who has
been spending several days with
her daughter at Mentone, Ala.,
has returned home.
Mr. and Mrs. Troy Crisp and
little daughters, Virginia and
Cherry Stone spent the weekend
with the latter’s mother, Mrs.
Ida Crisp.
Mrs. Etta Stephens had as her
guests Sunday, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Forester, Miss Edna
Massey and Mr. and Mrs. Lester
Smith.
Dr. and Mrs. R. E. Ownby and
family are spending several days
in Illinois, as the guests of the
latter’s mother.
Misses Dorothy and Beatrice
Cloud were guests of Misses In-
ne s and Winoa Crisp Sunday.
Mr. Warner Adkins, who is
employed at the State Highway
camp on Lookout Mountain was
called home on account of the
illness of his wife.
Little J. D. Crisp, son of Mr.
and Mrs. J. D. Crisp, is suffer¬
ing from a broken arm.
Mrs. J. H. Davis, Mrs. Gar¬
field Wood and Miss Winoa
Crisp were dinner guests of
Mrs. Albert Gunnell Tuesday.
A Ethical Optometrical Service 5
We Analyze Vision and g $
| ft Prescribe Glasses \
HARRIS & HOGSHEAD
OPTOMETRISTS ?
',p J For appointment Chattanooga, Dial Tenn. 6-7545
How Much Do You
Know?
1. What American boat was
torpedoed by German submarines
in the South Atlantic recently?
2. What was the name of the
airplane plant taken over by the
federal armed forces to end the
strike?
3. In what European country
now involved in the war is the
city of Brest located?
4. In what state of the Unit¬
ed States is the city of Tusca¬
loosa located?
5. For what is Leopold Stow-
kowski known in the news?
6 . For what i s Devils Island
known in the news?
7. For what is Billy Conn
known in the news?
8 . For what was Daniel Car¬
ter Beard, who died recently,
known in the news?
9. For what is Raymond Clap¬
per known in the news?
10. What organization i s des¬
ignated by the letters U.S.O.?
ANSWERS
1. The Robin Moor.
2. North American Aviation,
3. France.
4. Alabama.
5. He is an orchestra leader.
6 . The French penal colony is
located there.
7. He is a prize fighter.
%
8 . He was one of the founders
of the Boy Scout s of America.
9. He is a newspaper colum¬
nist and news commentator.
10 . United Service Organiza¬
tion.
Rising Fawn Nips
Dade County, 7-4
The Rising Fawn boys, under
their efficient leader, Mr. Albert
Johnston, slipped up on the Dade
County boys and spanked them
to the tune of 7-4 on th e Tren¬
ton diamond last Saturday.
John B. Harrison pitched e-
nough to hold the Dade boys at
bay for 7 innings, then Pinkney
Williams stood them off the oth¬
er two.
Cooper and Floyd Blevin s wer e
swinging the bat heavy for Ris¬
ing Fawn, each hitting the offer¬
ings of Raines and Stephens with
comparative ease.
Stephens, Raines and Scarber
were the spark plugs in both the
offense and defense for the Dade
boys.
Line up:
Rising Fawn
Cooper, ss
Allen, lb
Johnston, 2b
Smith, 3b
Guinn, c
P. Williams, If
R. Blevins, cf
F. Blevins, rf
Harrison, p
Dade County:
Daniel, cf
Durham, lb
Moree, 3b
Stephens, 2 b
Buffington, ss
Wilson, rf
Johnson, If
Raines, p
Scarber, c
Rising Fawn will play some
Chattanooga team on the Rising
Fawn Diamond Sunday p.m.
A Kindly Sympathetic
Service at a Reasonable Cost
NATIONAL
FUNERAL HOME
C. A. EPPERSON, Mgr.
541 McCallie Avenue
Chattanooga T win
Trenton Lodge No
F. 4 A. M. m» t! ,
ly ^
second^
night of each month. R I
called night. meeting, Visiting fourth WednS,^ cordial?
brethren
invited.
James C. Case, W. jj
W. A. Scruggs, Secy.
The James G. Nethery
Chapter O. E. S meetj
.
first and third Frid
nights at hall Lo<J a ,
of Trenton
No. 179, F. & A. M. A cord*
invitation is extended all members
of the Order.
Lolita Bird, W. M.
Faye B. Collier, Secy.
The Dade
County Li-
on s Club
tneets regu-
larly every
other Tues-
da y night
A -11 Lions
and visitors are cordially invited to
attend.
Luther M. Allison, Pres.
Raiy ;MdNair, Secretary,
Dade County
A [Ǥ1 Post of the Am-
erican Legion No,
106 meets regu¬
larly the first
and third Satur-
day nights at Legion Hall. All
Veterans of foreign wars are cor-
dially invited to attend the meet¬
ings.
Fred A. Morgan, Commander,
» E. A. Ellis, Adjutant.
The dates and place of meetings
of the Ladies Auxiliary are the
same as the Legion.
Mrs. Mary Townsend, Pres.
i
S^l « —-i!
In
^ CDLA ^
NEHI BOTTLING
COMPANY
Chattanooga, Tenn.
Farm Implements, Garden
Tools, Poultry Supplies,
Pruning and Spraying
Equipment, True Tag
Paint, Amoco Roofing and
Dairy Supplies
“LOOK FOR THE BIG KNIFE -
k
511 MARKET STREET
Chattanooga, Tens.
SPECIAL J
Beautiful Colors i
$1.35 X \
i
PER GALLON ’
VARNELL J j
HARDWARE CO.
Market at Rossville Ave. 4
nrr a rwxrvx a A IPIP'VV, A
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