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DADE COUNTY—
A GOOD PLACE IN WHICH TO LIVE
Good Schools and Churches
True “Dade” and “Southern” Hospitality
“Split” by U. S. No. 11 Paved Highway
Garden Spot of The South
The Dade County
Times
TRENTON, GEORGIA
Published Weekly — Every
Thursday
Entered at the Posto-wce at
Trenton, Ga., as second class
mail matter.
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>r publication are requested to
irnish their names otherwise
ae communication will not be
ublished. It will be withheld
n request, but the name must
e given.
All communications and news
items are received for publica¬
tion subject to being re-edited,
re-written and changed. Such
are printed as a matter of news
and do not necessarily reflect
the views or ideas of The Times.
THURSDAY, JANUARY 15, 1942.
★★★★★★★★★★★★
★★★★★★★★★★★★
AROUND THE
CLOCK
This year will be a critical one
for America. Everyone knows
that. And everyone knows that
we must work as we never have
before to produce the weapons
we’ll need to begin the offensive
that is planned for 1943.
Many companies are already
working the clock around to
speed up war production, and
others will follow their lead.
Money can’t be voted into weap¬
ons, however, and plants can’t
change over night to a 168-hour
week. There are enormous prob¬
lems involved in such a shift.
How can we get skilled labor
where we need it most? How can
we keep machinery in constant
repair so that breakdowns do
not delay production? Obstacles
like these must be overcome be¬
fore industries can operate full
time.
Through its training programs
industry is helping to eliminate
the current shortage of skilled
workers, and, in addition, it is
breaking down many complicat¬
ed jobs so that skilled men and
women can learn to do them
quickly. It is expanding indus¬
trial health programs in an ef¬
fort to reduce accidents, illness
and labor turnover so that em¬
ployees can work full time. And
it is taking extra
to keep machinery in
repair.
All told, it’s a complicated
this 168-hour week. But
tions are that industry is
of the problems involved and
working out solutions as
idly as existing conditions
FOOD GUARD
The recent appeal of Dr.
tor G. Heiser, well-known
cal authority, for a Home Nutri
tion Guard of the “fifteen
lion women-folk who
the food for the men in
nation’s factories’’
the fact that today’s war
extends to all fronts.
Dr. Heiser, who is
consultant to the National
ciation of Manufacturers,
out that “the stamina of
industrial workmen is the
solute measure of our
stamina to support our
power, airpower and land
“Our enemies, by a
stroke at Pearl Harbor,
the vitality of our
fighting forces in a single
However, a common
Awildli Southern
HISTORY OF HUSH
PUPPIES
Hush puppies originated some
where in the southern moun¬
tain regions. As usual around
these homes were always a lot
of hound dogs and where there
are hound dogs there are al¬
ways plenty puppies. While the
folks ate, the puppies whined
and in order to stop this, an
extra pone of cornbread was
made for the puppies—thus the
following ingredients:
1 cup of com meal
V 4 cup of flour
2 tsps. baking powder
Mitsp. salt
Mix at home; put in jar for
convenience sake, and just be¬
fore frying your fish, add e-
nough water to this mixture to
make pasty. Add an egg to this
and beat well. Drop a spoonful
at a time in the hot grease with
the fish as they fry. Chopped
onion can be added if desired.
This recipe makes enough for
two hungry campers.
SOMETHING NEW
Something new in the gun
sight business we note is the
circle sight. You’ve had game to
show through a circle of vines,
limbs, or an opening in the
trees, haven’t you? It always
gave you a feeling of aiming
dead center in the circle and
you would get your game. The
circle sight is for shotguns. You
have the game within your
pattern when it shows within
the circle. Pretty interesting.
They’ll tell you all about it
writing Perrine Manufacturing
Company, Department SS, 706
South 4th Street, Minneapolis,
Minnesota.
SPORTSMANSHIP
A Louisiana game warden has
listed what he believes to be the
essentials of a good sportsman.
His list follows:
(1) Be as courteous to me as
I am to you.
(2) Display game and lic¬
enses without being ask¬
ed when I identify myself
as a warden.
(3) Think of a warden as an
aid to better fishing
hunting, rather than
obstacle to your
and fishing happiness.
NO SIT-DOWN
STRIKES, EITHER
By building dams and
producing ponds, beaver
considered very valuable.
ponds they build furnish
habitats , provide
places for deer and turkey,
duce migratory birds to
in areas where there is
and provide habitats for
fur-bearing animals.
u
Ethical Optometrical Service
We Analyze Vision and
Prescribe Glasses
HARRIS & HOGSHEAD
OPTOMETRISTS
For appointment Dial 6-7545
Chattanooga, Tenn.
underneath—due to gigantic
et deficiency, has practiced
same treachery for
within our own borders.
trial management has
and reduced the striking
of this enemy with all
modern weapons at its
mand—improved lighting,
tation, medical care and a
of other devices.”
According to Dr. Heiser,
industrial campaigns will
be supplemented by a
wide drive to guide the
of our factory workers in
tific planning of meals. The
portance of such a drive
be over emphasized at this
As a nation we’ve got to be
that we eat correctly, that
get enough vitamins and
erals in leafy vegetables,
fruit, milk, meat and
wheat or enriched white
so that our health will
up under the strain of war.
THE DADE COUNTY TIMES: THURSDAY, JANUARY 15, 1942.
EDIIYCHCIaU. pace
Jh& ®ad& County. Jjlmqa
STRIKES FOR FREEDOM ,
&
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m sss=fcj-
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||
OMORROW i
SUN
*BY J. C. WILSON
Newspaper Fcataru, Inc
The Fulton county grand jury
indictments returned against
former Governor Ed Rivers and
his son and numerous men con¬
nected with his administration
might be taken seriously if Gov.
Talmadge had not instigated
and paid the cost of the inves¬
tigation with $10,000 of State
funds.
For many months Gov. Tal¬
madge has been receiving un¬
favorable publicity in the news¬
papers, both state-wide and na¬
tion-wide. He raided the faculty
of the University System of
Georgia and cried up a fake
Negro issue to justify his fight
on various educators. Crying up
the Negro issue is playing Hit¬
ler’s game. At one stage of the
University controversy Talmadge
changed the record on Miller
Bell, of Milledgeville, and made
no bones about admitting it. He
gave his friend John Whitley
the contract to build the new
State Market without competi¬
tive bids. He sold highway ma¬
chinery which had cost the
State $422,201 and received for
it only $164,014. This machinery
was less than a year old and
some of it only a few weeks old.
The State on this transaction
took a loss of sixty-three per¬
cent of what the machinery
cost. When convicted floggers
came before him with an appli¬
cation for pardon or parole,
Governor Talmadge told them
he was interested in their case
because he had once taken part
in a flogging himself.
These shocking matters, and
numerous others which reflect¬
ed no credit on Governor Tal¬
madge, were in the newspapers
during 1941 in a steady stream.
It became absolutely necessary
for Governor Talmadge to
switch the publicity spotlight
away from himself and focus it
on somebody else. So he put up
$10,000 of the State’s money to
pay the expenses of a Fulton
county grand jury investigation
of the Rivers administration. He
put his own employees in charge
of the investigation, after keep¬
ing out the records for a whole
year. And besides the State’s
money, he is reported to have
expended a huge amount priv¬
ately raised among private in¬
dividuals.
When Ed Rivers went into of¬
fice as Governor, there was a
strong demand in the Legisla¬
ture for an investigation of the
Talmadge administration. Tal¬
madge had issue paroles and
pardons to the number of 4,863,
and members of the Legislature j
wanted this investigated. They
wanted an investigation of the
swarm of fugitives from justice
who had come to Georgia from
other States and found refuge
here behind the protection of
Talmadge’s refusal to extradite
them. There were plenty of Leg-
SILVER LINING
We Americans must pull in
belts. For a long time
hearing that the time
when we’d have to
Now the time is here. Ra¬
of automobiles and
home the fact that
production speeds up,
be other shortages, and
to get along with less.
In some cases, of course,
able to buy substitute pro¬
for industrial
been busy developing
that will come
now than ever
other words we’ll have to
and get more use
things we already have.
There are many ways in
shall have to adapt
of living to the
of war. As we do it, we can
glad of one fact: most of the
that we are
are going into
the men in our armed
our shortages are a con¬
reminder that industry
with war production
our victory certain.
who were ready to
proceedings a-
Talmadge. (An ex-Gov-
can be impeached in
But it was not Ed Rivers’
to start his administration
a wholesale muckraking of
He was against it.
so stated to his friends in
Legislature. He took the po¬
that Talmadge’s
four years as Governor were
much water across the dam,
far as he was
he wanted, instead
was to get in
the great constructive
he had advocated as a
for Governor. He ask¬
the Legislature to take
and they did.
A Fulton County grand
of Rivers
a favorable impression
did not have any
with it. Such is not
Not only was he
it—he instigated and
it.
Talmadge may use the
a grand jury smear of
to divert attention
himself,
both combined will not
him successfully past
election day next
This is the matter that
Talmadge’s m i n d—a n
weighs heavily. It’s enough
him do funny things,
falling on a rug and
couple of ribs.
Mix Lemon
4 mm AT HOME
TO RELIEVE
RHEUMATIC
Money Back—If This Recipe
Oooa news travels last—many of the
sands of folks who now take lemon
for rheumatic tablespoonfuls pain—have found that
adding two of AUenru to
tablespoonful of Lemon Juice In a glass
water, they get faster relief for the
and pains caused by rheumatism,
It's no surprise formula either, relieve for Allenru is
15 year old to
aches and pains. In fact—if it does not
—your money back. What could be
Oet Allenru today at any Jive druggist
86 cents—Do It Now,
LITTLE MOMENTS IN UVP.S
/ wait Sep Wat
mrq. Allen /s a think- £ not Catch You A
VUy the "Y WBour to let Arthur 60 in' Bare¬
Frost aujt \ V barefooted foot
oar o’TH- rm r,MB °‘ .
ground Yet!year !.
m £L -j-V W
INDEED YOU
Cant fake off M
AND r : •
<?T0CN>N6S ! You a C\\ Y
Catch your death > a
ColD a
J AuGZE.
* They hurt my
feet
mjpTHUQ Al£W, AIQ, OWE Of= V4? THE BEST FIRST KWOIW BOY CM'W W TUB C-TEQ.
OW T4E TUB
SPPIW6 TO GO 3AQBTOOT 4WD TUB LAST TO DON} OI-IOB9
4A)D $TOCmG9 IN 7WE FALL, VWEW ME WAQ IT TW& f
CHJCkTEA) 4 WD EGG BU9IA)E99. If0 GOVAHDA, AJ.V
r
“THAT LITTLE GAME”- •Wifie Pulls the Switch
C'fAoN , \ WILL
carrie l
IThDOUJ in upthereI THAT NOT
smuvtch Y<nj PROMISED
GNE os 5 OWE |dP PLAYING TO QUIT AT
LVOHT TO SaY, JIM- HUH?
Finish this ONE OCLOCk VOU*RE OUTA me help -
ONE HAND, AND YOU THIS HAN-Dr some other
THEN DUE'LL DIDN'T I UGHT SOME Guy win?I
to
aun\ so THIS IS ^Hatches \AND HOLD . EM NOTHIN'
MARRIED LIFE i US* STIRRIN'!
for
CrEE! GREAT! . 1
ITS
AINT IT 7
WE Got
twelve
Bring- in That CBHTS W
LIGHT LONCHrl
Then *>0 I sit Yi&ht
keep YouR. CAN SEt» A oNTIL #
Fingers out 1 daybreak.
op THE Vo T
■£>oYS„
IWE <GoT
DAGGER.
Card of Thanks
We wish to thank qur friends
and neighbors for the kindness
and sympathy shown us during
the accident and after the
death of our mother and grand¬
mother, Mrs. B. F. Holland; al¬
so, for the beautiful floral of¬
ferings. Especially do we thank
Brother Billo Gass for his com¬
forting words.
—The Holland Family.
GIVE LIVER BILE
FLOW * BOOST-
Snap out of Sick Headaches, so-called Bilious¬
ness, Poor Digestion with that half-sick, sour
feeling—get Take a bottle of Kruschen Salts tonight.
naif a teaspoonful in a glass of water
(hot or cold) half an hour before breakfast,
and keep it up for 30 days. Now you'll know
what it is to get up feeling fit and ready for a
real day's work. Try Kruschen for the next 30
days Flows and Freely. see Satisfaction what it means to you when Bile
refunded. All druggists. guaranteed or money
Mr. and Mrs. O. L. Lowery
entertained at dinner in honor
of their son, Sgt. Eldon F. Low¬
ery, of Camp Polk, La. Guests
were, Mr. and Mrs. Philipps
Lower, of Dalton, Mrs. Esther
Lowery, Mary and Doyle Low¬
ery, of Rocky Face, Mrs. B. G.
Carroll, Tom and Wilma Lee
Smith, Charlene and Jean Bird,
Mrs. J. C. Bird, Mr. and Mrs. M.
E. Carroll, M. E. Jr., and Mary
Florence Carroll, of Chattanoo¬
ga.
Renew your subscription to The
TIMES!
THE ORIGINAL “STATE OF DADE”
ONE OF NATURE'S MASTERPIECES
Historic Lookout Mountain
Sitton’s Gulch—“The Little Grand Canyon”
.Coal and Ore Mines
An Abundance of Water
THE POCKETBOOK
0/ KNOWLEDGE *
BRINGING BACK THE
BARREL —
6UORTASES OF METAL AmP
. PAPER SCARP ARE RESULT!^
/AMERICA TOPAy HAS MORE THAN 700 X lN WCR6A5EP F>ROPUCT W ^
STEEL COMPANIES WITH PiAnT-c INI ^ 8 ^ RREL INWT