Newspaper Page Text
THE DADE COUNTY TIMES: TRENTON. GEORGIA. THURSDAY. JULY 26. 1945.
Weekly Roundup of OPA Price
And Rationing News
RATION CALENDAR FOR WEEK OF JULY 23,1945.
PROCESSED FOODS
BLUE STAMPS: T2, U2, W2, X2 now valid; expire July 31;
Y2, Z2, Al. Bl, Cl, now valid; expire August 31; Dl, El, FI, Gl,
HI, now valid; expire September 30; Jl, Kl, LI, Ml, Nl, now
valid; expire October 31.
MEATS AND FATS
RED STAMPS: K2, L2, M2, N2, P2, now valid; expire July 31;
Q2, R2, S2, T2, U2, now valid; expire August 31; V2, W2, X2, Y2,
Y2, now valid; expire September 30; Al, Bl, Cl, Dl, El, now
valid; expire October 31.
SUGAR
Sugar Stamp No. 36 good for 5 pounds; expires August 31.
SHOES
Airplane Stamps No. 1, No. 2 and No. 3 now good.
FUEL OIL
Periods 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 valid for 10 gallons each.
GASOLINE
A-16 coupons valid through September 21. Each car owner
must write his license number and state on each gas coupon as
soon as it is issued to him. Mileage rationing record must be
presented when applying for all passengtr car gasoline rations.
Jurists want Food
in CLEAN Restaurants /
The tourists will be “on the You can flag them to a halt
march” by the thousands, with a cup of good coffee, a
just as soon as gas rationing plate of tasty food! And
ends. But will y our town the whole town will profit
benefit ? Or will they burry
on to some more attractive if your restaurants are good
town ? enough to stop them.
Get behind the Georgia Better Home Towns Pro¬
gram— or organize a BHT Committee if your town
hasn’t one. Sead for FREE booklet that explains
this Wartime Plan for Peacetime Progress. Write:
GEORGIA POWER COMPANY, Atlanta
»
•'**V '• s
NEW LOW PRICES! •
Any Magazine Listed and This
Newspaper, Both for Price Shown
□ American Fruit Grower ....$1.75
O American Girl ...........2.50
□ American Home, 2 Yrs. ... 2.95
□ American Poultry Journal.. 1.65
□ Aviation in Review.......3.45
□ Better Cooking fr Hmkg. .. 3.45
□ Child Life ..............3.45
O Christian Herald.........2.50
□ Coronet ................3.50
□ Correct English ..........3.45
□ Country Gentleman, 5 Yrs. . 2.00
THE BIG SEVEN VICTORY SPECIAL! □ □ Etude Farm Jrnl. Music & Magazine Farmer's Wife ... 3.50 1.65
THIS NEWSPAPER (I YEAH) AND □ Flower Grower...........2.95
□ Household ....... 1.65
SIX GREAT MAGAZINES □ Hygeia .................2.95
□ Magazine Digest.........3.45 3.45
□ National Digest Monthly ..
The Biggest Value in Years! D □ Open Nature Road (10 (12 Iss., Iss., 12 14 Mo.).. Mo.) 2.50 3.45
•TRUE STORY...........1 Yr. □ Outdoors (12 Iss., 14 Mo.) . 2.50
PATHFINDER (Weekly) .,.. 1 Yr. ALL □ Parents’ Magazine .......2.75
SILVER SCREEN.........6 Mo. SEVEN □ Pathfinder ..............2.00
HOUSEHOLD............ 1 Yr. FOR □ Photoplay ............ 2.50
FARM JOURNAL & □ Poultry Tribune.......... 1.65
PROGRESSIVE FARMER'S WIFE . . T7T. .2 Yr. ONLY □ Progressive Farmer....... 1.65
FARMER .... 1 Yr. □ Reader’s Digest.......... 4.25
O Send me Southern Agriculturist Instead of Progressive Farmer □ Redbook ................3.25
*You may select out of the following /■ plate of True Story If you prefen O Science Illustrated .......3.45
AMERICAN GIRL Yr. □ Scientific Detective ......3.45
. 1 □ OPEN ROAD (Boys) □ Screenland ..............2.50
CHRISTIAN 02 Issues).... 14 Mo. □ Silver Screen ............2.50
HERALD ..... . 1 Yr. O PARENTS' MAG. ..lYr. □ Southern Agriculturist .... 1.65
TRUE COMICS .. . 1 Yr. □ SCREENLAND.....1 Yr. D Sports Afield ............2.50
COUNTRY □ SPORTS AFIELD . . .1 Yr. □ The Woman.............2.50
GENTLEMAN . .5 Yr. □ PROTESTANT VOICE □ True Story ..............2.50
B CHILD U. S. CAMERA LIFE..... .. .6 . 1 Mo. Yr. □ SCIENCE (Weekly) ......1 Yr. □ □ Walt U. S. Disney’s Camera Comics.....2.35 ...........2.15
THE WOMAN .. .1 Yr. ILLUSTRATED .6 Mo. □ Your Life...............3.45
NEWSPAPER AND MAGAZINES
1 TEAR, UNLESS TERM SH0WM •
THE SUPER f mi ■'■M r' | ...... —
ECONOMY OFFER
This Newspaper, lYr.
AND FOUR BIG . ^
MAGAZINES ^^6=
ALL FIVE
FOR ONLY
□ TRUE STORY.........«Mo. .1 Yr.
□ MOTHER'S HOME LIFE.
□ AMERICAN FRUIT
GROWER..........1 Yr.
□ AMERICAN POULTRY AND MAIL TO
JOURNAL .........1 Yr. FILL IN
□ FARM JOURNAL WIFE----1 & Yr. THIS NEWSPAPER TODAY
FARMER'S
□ NATIONAL LIVESTOCK Yr.
PRODUCER ........1 desired and enclose with coupon.
□ POULTRY TRIBUNE____1 Yr. Check magazines the offer checked,
□ HOUSEHOLD .........2Yr. Gentlemen: I enclose $..............Please send me
□ PATHFINDER .....26 Dsuea ■with a year’s subscription to your paper.
□ PROGRESSIVE FARMER. .1 Yr.
□ BREEDER'S GAZETTE . .6Mo. name--
□ SOUTHERN .1 Yr.
AGRICULTURIST ... STREET OR RTD_^~
POSTOFFICE...
Hooker News
By MRS. THELMA BELL
Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Strawn, Mrs.
Lillian Strawn and son, Howard,
attended the funeral of Mrs.
Sam Parker at St. Elmo Church
of Christ Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Ballard and
children have returned from an
extended stay in Jacksonville,
Fla.
Miss Josephine Wells is visit¬
ing friends in Charleston, S. C.
Mrs. Millard Durham and
children were recent guests of
Mr. and Mrs. D. E. Haswell.
Mrs. Bob Hamill and son, Jim¬
mie, have returned home after
spending several days with Mr.
and Mrs. Brown Hamill in Chat¬
tanooga.
Mrs. Bill Drew and children
visited Mr. and Mrs. Jim Drew
Sunday.
Mrs. W. C. Warnix is improv¬
ing from a serious illness.
Mr. and Mrs. Martin Street cf
Slygo, were recent guests of
Mrs. Charles Smith.
Rev. M. Latham, pastor of '„he
Hooker Methodist Church, spent
Saturday night with Mr. and
Mrs. J. J. Adams.
Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Tittle and
Mrs. Rufus Barry of Chattanoo¬
ga, were recent guests of Mr. and
Mrs. J. E. Tittle.
Bro. Joe Mayhew filled his
regular appointment at Hooker
Church of Christ Sunday at 11
o’clock.
Revival Meeting
To Start At R. Fawn
On Sunday evening, following
the home coming and ordination
services, a revival meeting will
be held at the Rising Fawn Bap¬
tist Church, beginning at 8
o’clock. Rev. Charles Tucker, of
Chattanooga, will be the minis-
tre conducting the services. Rev.
Tucker is an able, conscientious
gospel speaker, and his series of
gospel sermons will be greatly
enjoyed by all who hear him.
The public is invited to attend
these services.
FOR SALE: A lot of odds and
ends of household goods at my
residence east of A. G. S. rail¬
way. —Mrs. Ada Simpson, Tren¬
LOCAL-PERSONAL
Mr. and Mrs. I. H. Wheeler, Jr.,
have as their guests this week,
Mrs. Wheeler’s sister, Mrs. V. C.
Collier, an cousin, Mrs. C. L.
Weatherly, both of Big Stone
Gap, Va.
Miss Edna Scruggs, of Wash¬
ington, D. C., who holds a splen¬
did position as Secretary in the
U. S. War Department, is spend¬
ing her vacation here with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. A.
Scruggs.
Mr. and Mrs. Reed Bethurum,
of Nashville, Tenn., are also the
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Scruggs
this week.
Miss Mauline Morrison, of
Chattanooga, spent the week¬
end with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. W. F. Morrison.
Mrs. Fannie (Cureton) Fowler,
of Chattanooga, was the guest of
her brother, W B. Cureton, and
sister, Mrs. Jim Pace, Sunday.
Friends of Mrs. E. P. Reeves
will learn with regret that she
continnues ill at her home in
North Trenton, with little im¬
provement noted in her condi¬
tion.
D. H. Hadley, of San Antonio,
Texas, is the guest of his neph¬
ew, Early A. Ellis, this week. Mr.
Hadley is a former Tennesseean,
having been born and reared at
Hadley’s Bend, where his par¬
ents owend large fertile farms
in the bend of the Cumberland
River, where the large Dupont
Munitions Plant is now located.
Mr. Hadley is a delightful old
gentleman, and The Times force
greatly enjoyed his visit with us
Wednesday.
Pfc. Chas. T. Sims, U. S. A., who
has been spending a 30-day fur¬
lough here with his family, left
Wednesday afternoon, via East¬
ern Air Lines, for Mitchell Field,
N. Y., to report for reassignment.
Mr. Frank Gardner, popular
mechanic of The Chattanooga
Times, was in Trenton a short
while Wednesday.
Mrs, Frank Hall, of Rising
Fawn, was a visitor to Trenton,
Wednesday, paying The Times
office a pleasant visit.
Among the many friends of
The Times’ force calling at our
office this week were, Mr. and
Mrs. Ordell Ginn, of Wildwood,
and Mrs. H. H. Bodenhamer, of
Higdon, Ala.
After having been “laid up”
for the past several days, suffer¬
ing with pleurasy, genial Harold
Cox, county superintendent of
road work in Dade County, is
now able to be out on the job
again.
NEWS CORRESPONDENTS
WANTED
A newspaper is what the citi¬
zens of the respective county or
community make it. To make a
country newspaper of interest
and really worthwhile in a com¬
munity, it must publish the local
activities of the citizens residing
in that particular county or com¬
munity.
The Dade County Times is
making an effort to give you a
paper that is interesting and
worthwhile, but in our efforts to
accomplish this, we are handi¬
capped because we do not have
the facilities to gather the news
in all the surrounding districts,
and must depend upon our
friends for this information.
What we need very badly is a
correspondent in every com¬
munity in Dade County who will
write us the local happenings in
their respective communities
regularly each week.
If there is any news of very
special importance, we will also
appreciate it very much if some
of our friends will call us by
phone or drop us a line, giving
correct details of the event.
If any of our friends will as¬
sume the duties of correspondent
to The Times, please write your
items and mail them so as not to
reach our desk later than Wed¬
nesday at noon.
We will greatly appreciate your
assistance in helping us to make
The Times a paper that is real¬
ly worthwhile to the county and
our many friends we are trying
to serve.
MALARIA
IN 7 DAYS WITH
6 LIQUID FOR
MALARIAL
SYMPTOMS
Take only as directed
Mrs. William
Leaves for Texas Soon
After a residence of nearly 40
years in Dade County, Mrs. Ada
Simpson, widow of the late Wm.
Simpson, has sold her residence
and store building and will leave
soon for Texas, her former home
state, to reside with relatives.
Mrs. Simpson was associated
with her late husband in the op¬
eration of a general
store and telephone exchange,
and has a wide acquaintance
throughout the Dade County,
and has made many
friends here, who regret
she is leaving Dade County.
County Tax Commissioner
F. Morrison has purchased
store and residence of Mrs.
Simpson, and will probably use
the buildings for residence ren¬
tal property, as both
are now occupied by tenants.
MRS. LOTTIE D. WATKINS
Mrs. Lottie D. Watkins, 77,
passed away at the home of her
daughter, Mrs. Lula Gibson, of
Ft. Payne, at 2 A. M., Tuesday
July 17. She had been in failing
health for some time. She came
to Alabama at an early age, and
spent most of her life in DeKalb
County. She professed a hope in
Christ at 18 years of age, and be¬
came a member of the Violet Hill
Baptist Church. She will be
greatly missed by all who knew
her.
She is survived by two daugh¬
ters, Mrs. Loney Barnett, of Val¬
ley Head, and Mrs. Lula Gibson,
of Ft. Payne; five sons, A. C., and
Luke of Ft. Payne; J. O., of Val¬
ley Head; Raymon, of Spring
Hill, La., and Dan Wadkins, of
Taylor, Ark.; one sister, Mrs.
Wiley Bryant, of Ft. Payne; one
brother, Mr. Ross Dean, of
Pane. Funeral services were held
in the Mt. Carmel Church at 2
P. M„ Wednesday afternoon,
with the Revs. Lynas Shankles
and Jonnie Boatner officiating.
Interment was in
Cemetery. McBryar Funeral
Home in charge of arrange¬
ments.
DS and
.. JBBERS
And foUow instructions in
the Ball Blue Book. To get your copy
send 19c with your name and address to—
UU MOTHERS COMPANY, Muntie, Ind.
Pure Drug's—
Drug Sundries
EVERYTHING YOU NEED
Your Prescriptions Are
Carefully Filled at Reason-
Prices. Dade County Citi¬
zens, make this Your
Home Store!
Lee Pharmacy
South Broad Street
CHATTANOOGA, TENN.
See
H. F. ALLISON
For
LOANS
INSURANCE
REAL ESTATE
Times Building
TRENTON. GEORGIA
PAGE THREE
T. V. (Tine) McBryar
Found Murdered; Was
Former Dade Countian
T. V. (Tine) McBryar, age 72,
well known former citizen of
Dade County and DeKalb Coun¬
ty, Ala., was found dead in his
grocery store in Chattanooga,
Monday morning, apparently
having been foully murdered.
McBryar’s body, with that of
a companion, L. Ashbury Bain,
was found lying in the back
room of his store at 1927 Chest¬
nut Street, Chattanooga, when
the store was opened for busi¬
ness Monday morning.
Both bodies bore evidence of
having been horribly beaten by
a shot gun in the hands of an
assassian who made his escape.
Broken pieces of a gun were
found in the room, and there
was evidence of a frantic strug¬
gle, the victims evidently mak¬
ing a brave fight for their lives.
Chattanooga police have und¬
er arrest an ex-convict named
Noah Moore, 26, whom they al¬
ledge is the murderer, and are
making diligent search for his
brother, whom they claim is an
accomplice in the dastardly
crime.
J. V. McBryar leaves a number
of children, one of whom is Ar¬
thur McBryar, a leading mer¬
chant of East Lake community,
Chattanooga; also, a daughter
Mrs. Pear Tinker, of Trenton,
and a brother, Ike McBryar, who
resides on Sand Mountain, to
mourn his death.
The deceased victim’s body
was brought to the home of Rev.
and Mrs. Pearl Tinker Tuesday
morning where funeral rites
were conducted.
The remains were laid to rest
in the old McBryar family ceme¬
tery Tuesday afternoon.
Wowmen of Party
Launch Campaign
For Constitution
Mrs. H. Fay Gaffney of Colum¬
bus, state president of the Geor¬
gia Womens Division of the Dem¬
ocratic Party, has announced ap¬
pointment of ten district chair¬
men in a “get out the women
vote” campaign in behalf of rati¬
fication of the new state consti¬
tution in the August 7 election.
Mrs. Gaffney’s appointments
are:
First District, Mrs. Louis-J.
Roos, Savannah: second, Mrs. J.
W. Oglesby, Quitman; third, Miss
Lillian Thomas, Columbus; 4th,
Mrs. Lee Hand, Senoia; fifth,
Miss Byra Blankenship, Atlanta;
sixth, Mrs. L. I. Waxelbaum and
Mrs. A. F. McGoe, Macon; seven¬
th, Mrs. Elbert Forester, Tren¬
ton; eighth, Mrs. Robert Hend¬
ricks, Blackshear; ninth, Mrs.
Fred Stowe, Toccoa; tenth, Mrs.
Clyde Hunt, Thomson.
In announcing the woman’s
campaign, Mrs. Gaffney assert¬
ed:
“Revision of the state constitu¬
tion has been on the legislative
program of the women’s division
! of the Democratic Party organi-
' zation of Georgia since 1934. The
Georgia democratic women are
i now enthusiastically backing the
general campaign for ratifica¬
tion of the new constitution on
August 7th.
“As president of this state¬
wide organization, I am urging
the appointed district leaders to
contact county chairmen and all
enthusiastic members and begin
at once an active campaign to
get out the woman vote in behalf
of this cause so vital to the wel¬
fare and progress of Georgia.”
Home Coining Service
At Rising Fawn Baptist
Church Next Sunday
There will be a Home Coming
and Ordination Service at the
Rising Fawn Baptist Church,
Sunday, July 29, the services be¬
ginning at 10 A. M.
Among the ministers who have
been invited to speak are: Rev.
W. M. Steele, of Chattanooga;
Rev. W. S. Motley, of Tunnel
Hill; Rev. T. C. Nelson, of Valley
Head, Ala. There will also be
other special speakers on the
program prepared for the oc¬
casion. The public is cordially in¬
vited to attend this special meet¬
ing.
Lunch will be served on the
church grounds at noon.