Newspaper Page Text
PAGE FOUR
KATE SMITH asked
to write His message
c i Saving Used Fats!
"The help of every woman is needed in saving
used fats for hundreds of battlefield and home-
from essentials. But some of us don t know «<//
the v/fij'S ive can do it. Here are a few points I’ve
found helpful:’— Kate Smith
___ 3,
OTHEI.j TELL ME: "Eut my fats are often too dark to turn
in." It doesn’t make a mite of difference how dark or blackened ,
...or what smelly things like onion or fish you’ve cooked in your
fat. Every drop of it will help make para'' ates, synthetic rubber, 1
soaps for the fightii , rn 1 war f : :.*•«. D r t fe * oil: r ! * and
it in to your butcher. If you save every bit of fat you poisloly .. i, ;
you’re doing a job to be proud of! ~
I
i
I
I |
^s,yp4/a ■ ' • % •vY'Vj. 1
EMI* * 'Yu-''
THEN YOU HEAP: "Eut what sort of co m 4 ' ter will I use?"
Any kind of tin can will do. The nevt time you '—en a can of fruit
or juice or soup or vu t tables, save it. Eut rV' ; don’t use gk.us
...it almost always bieatcs and . tae tuc c--ici.lt to salvage.
When b e can i: full, take it to your butcher. For every pound,
you’ll get 2 red points. If you have any difficulty disposing of your
fats, call your Home ' .mens' a* nr Agent.
ipprored by J* 1 A and OP. I. Paid for by Industry
v.
ivlviw.v.v.v: •
v. ■
.
THE DADE COUNTY TIMES: TRENTON, GEORGIA, THURSDAY, APRIL 12, 1945,
PARTY-LINE FIGHT LOOMS
House Ways and Means
Chairman Robert L. Doughton
cuggests Jhaf existing tariffs
under the reciprocal trade law
be continued with new author¬
ity to negotiate increases or
reductions, in the rates of as
much as 50 per cen, with the
approval of the Departmen of
State. Representative Dough-
ton says that House hearings
will be held on this legislation,
Shirtwaist Dre.;3
Helps Buy Bonds
!
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;
j i
Tiny pinks are combined with
gray-green background in this modi¬
fied shirtwai t drees. A rutile of
self-fabric edges the neckline, giv¬
ing softness. ^ 1 -v’" a 4 . home it saves
money for War Bonds. Patterns at
local stores. c/, S. Treasury Department
News At A Glance
About Peope And
ATLANTA, Ga.—(GPS)—If you
haven't purchased your 1945
auto license tag, Mr. Motorist,
he 1 better do it pronto.
Teg ins pec* ore from all over
ilio state were in Atlanta last
week being schooled on how to
catch license law violators—
Miiiedgeville, one-time state
ccp led, has been placed on the
honor roll of the National Traf-
fic Safety Contest for going
through 1944 with a single tra*
iic locality. It was in the 5,000
to 10,000 population group—
Speeding of traffic and safety,
Georgia's highway totalities
showed a 44 per cent reduction
in February, compared with the
seme month a year ago. Fifty
fewer persons were killed in
motor vehicle accidents. Urban
traffic dea’hs increased 50 per
cent, but federal highway
deaths in rural areas dropped
80 per cent and store highway
deaths dropped 69 per cent, re¬
cords show — Highest price
paid for a Hereford at the sec¬
ond annual sale of the Geor¬
gia Hereford Association, hold
last week at the Southeastern
Fair Crounds in Atlanta last
week, was $1,300. The prize
heifer was Mollie Domino III,
bought by Atlanta's Orin Dodd
from Jake Hughes, of the
Hughes Hereford Farm, near
Atlanta. In all 75 of Georgia's
finest bred Hereford bulls and
heifers passed over the auction
block—With all principal "hold¬
out" trouble settled, the 1945
edition of the Atlanta Crack¬
ers gradually is taking shape.
Both President Earl Mann and
Manager Ki Ki Cuyle r are con¬
fident that out of the 40 players
who turned out for spring train¬
ing at Ponce De Leon Park, a
pretty good club will be assem¬
bled by the time the Crackers
open the season in Chatta¬
nooga April 27.
popular Georgia newspaper-
We believe that all person
and all organizations are en¬
titled to fair play in the col
umns of th's newspaper.
e believe in the right
acy of individuals i:
ters not of public conc.v
and he predicts it will develop
into the "biggest pariy-line
fight of the sesion", when it
gets under way this spring-
YANKEE DOODLE DOO
RULES THE WAVES
Two-thirds of the world's
merchant fleet now flies the
American flag.
In 1939 the British Empire
controlled the waves. It had
one-third of the world's ocean
shipping.
CADET NURSE CORPS
CALLING FOR GIRLS
As the demand for nurses
grows each day because of the
increasing needs of the armed
forces, therjn are still oppor¬
tunities for girls in Georgia to
cin the Cadet Nurse Corps of
the U. S. Public Health Serv¬
ice, accordingto Mrs. Marietta
L. Carrigan, state recruiting of-
ficer.
Created by the Bolton Act at
tire request of leaders in nurs-
and hospital fields, the
Cadet Nurse Corps offers all-ex¬
pense scholarships monthly
personal allowances for its
members, and official outdoor
uniforms. In turn, Cadet
Nurses pledge, healthperm jfcf
ting, that they will remain in
essential rursing for the dura¬
tion of the war. High school
graduates and college girls
with sound health and scholas¬
tic records who can meet the
requirements of the nursing
school selected are eligibl Age
limit is from seventeen and
ighteen to thirty-five years.
"Student nurses areneeded
now," says Mrs. Carrigan," to
provide nursing care on the
home front and to help release
graduate nurses for active duty
with the military services." Re¬
cruitment headquarters are lo
cated at 875 West Peuclitrea
Street, N. W., Atlanta, Ca.
_______ _ _ ^ _________ j
ta District have been instructed
to rarrow sharply the list of es¬
sential users to who n tires are
issued during the month, A. L.
Dyer, chairman of the Dade
County War Price e nd Ration¬
ing Board, declared today. The
board has been fi e hed a
preferential list of occupations,
he added.
The creation of su-h groups
is necessary because alloca¬
tions for April by the War Pro¬
duction Board amount to less
than 60 per cent of the number
of tires available for March, he
stated. The Dade County War
3 rice and Rationing Board's
March quota of 87 passenger
car tires was redused to 49 for
April, he said.
It is necessary that such a
list be used in channeling this
reduced quota to persons
whose transportation needs are
regarded as most essential to
the war effort, he pc nted out.
The first priority crou pis lim¬
ited almost entirely topersons
whose occupations are of emer¬
gency nature and to workers at
establishments faced with pro¬
duction emergenceis. Includ¬
ed in this group are eligible
physicians, public health
nurses, police and employes at
critical war ind ns ries, he con¬
tinued.
The relative errurgency stat¬
us ofthe groups comprising the
priority lists has teen certified
by hte War Manpower Com-
mision, Mr. Dyer sa l
Trenton, Ga,
"DEEP DOWN IN TEXAS
Deep in the heart of Texas
Where the sky is always
blue,
Wherethe rain never falls,
Just a light morning dew!
Down in the heart of Texas,
For distant miles is only
sand.
: f-rd only knows how,
I got stationed in this God¬
forsaken land.
You almost want to die
When the days get so fiery
hot. j
Down in the dry and dutsy land
That God ust plain forgot.
All you can see at all
NEW LIST OF SUBSCRIBERS
E. J. .Luly 3-26-46
Buck Whitt 3-31-46
Dr. R. E. Owenby 4-5-46
Kelvey Gray 4-5-46
Willi West 4-5-46
E. T. Brown 4-6-46
O. N. Foster 4-7-46
Buster Cloud 10 £ 45
Ernest Stephens 10-8-45
E. E. Walraven 10 9-45
M. Gar: 4 9-46
Mrs. Jerry M. “ones
4-10-46
H. F. /lhson 10-11-45
L. S. nee 4-12-46
Vc _y Head Ala.
B. . Moore 4-12-46
Jenkins spent Sunday
Chattanooga
LOCALS......
| I Have Done Your Electric By The Work
— —
| Rossville Electric Co.
CONTRACTING IN ANY KIND OF
1 ELECTRIC WORK - FROM HOUSE
WIRING TO WHAT YOU MAY HAVE
| IN THE ELECTRIC LINE
| PHONE 4-1438 OR WRITE TO
Rossville E i ectriC Co.
723 Indian Avenue
Rossville, - Georgia
B. L. Moore Owner
- ** - ,
AHEMON FARMERS
Paints - Roofing - Bridles - Check
Lines - Cement - Farm Tools
2615 South Broad Street : : Chattanooga, Tennessee
wmmm
ATLANTA—(GPS)—"Just as
soon as the doctors say it's
okay for me to travel I'm head¬
ing for The Journal Building in
Atlanta.','
Thus said Wright Bryan, The
Atlanta Journal's liberated war
correspondent, in a reecnt dis¬
patch from Paris.
The many friends of the pop¬
ular Atlanta newspaper eexcu-
tive were thrilled to once again
see Bryan's by-line stories in
The Journal and hear him say
over the radio "This is Wright
Bryan speaking."
Wounded inthe leg and cap¬
tured by the Germans last Sep¬
tember, he was left behind in
Poland when they evacuated
the town in advance of the Rus¬
sian advance on January 21.
After being liberated by the
Russians, he started his long
trek to Paris, which required
over a month of traveling the
hard way. There he contacted
Major Charles Reiser, an At-
lantian, now on the medical
staff of the army general hos¬
pital. After writing a few dis¬
patches and doing a couple of
broadcasts, Bryan was admit¬
ted to the hospital for treat¬
ment. Of his leg wound he
said:
"I am going into his (Reis¬
er's! hospital to getanything
needful done for this leg, which
is not serious but has nagged
me for six months, because 1
never previously could get ade¬
quate mdeical facilities long
enough any one place to get it
cleared up."
And so it appears that the
Georgian who made history
last June by becoming the first
newspareman to give an eye¬
witness broadcast on the inva¬
sion of Europe will be coming
home soon. Atlanta and all
Georgia will give him a royal
welcome for Wright Bryan is a
hero in his own right-
Is dust and sand for miles
around.
seen my part; now give me
few hills toride up and down.
Mexico to the town of
San Antonio,
There is only land s oflat
and sandy.
people to be seen except
the spies
From Dallas to the Rio
Grande.
Texas,
Nor do you hear the whip-
poor-wills tune.
hear the song of the dia¬
mond back,
And the coyotes call to the
rising moon.
Air Crewman Selba
Khomer Beaty.
t appeal
construct
ships for the Battle of Japan,
and has begun work at the
Charlestion (S. C.) Navy Yard
as an electrican.
Critically needed at the
Charleston Navy Yard today
are electricians, shipfitters,
welders, machinists (inside and
outside), sheetmetal^ workers,
BLACK
MARKETS
MAKE THIS PLENE:
I Will pay no more than lop Legal Prices
I Will accept no rationed goods
without giving up Ration Stamps