Funding for the digitization of this title was provided by Georgia HomePLACE, a project of the Georgia Public Library Service.
About The Dade County times. (Trenton, Ga.) 1908-1965 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 4, 1945)
Evangelist G.E. Carter, of Floral Crest Day Adventist Church Will Conduct Evangelist G. E. Carter, the newly appointed pastor of the Floral Crest, Long Island (Ala.) Church, who is a native of New¬ foundland will conduct a special 11-day revival at the Floral Crest Seventh-Day Adventist Church, beginning Saturday, Oct. 13, and confin: ing through Tuesday. Oct. 23 These services begin each night at 7:45 p.m., with gospel singing. The Bible lecture follows at 8 p.m. During these days of perplexity many are turning to God’s word. The prophecies of the Bible, rightly understood, throw great light upon our present time. Prophecy is being rapidly ful¬ filled before our very eyes. Everyone should study God’s word as never before. Come to these special meetings and bring your Bible. You will be richly blessed. THE FACT IS By GENERAL ELECTRIC WEIRD AUTO WITH 22"EVES"wAS USED TO TEST SEALED-BEAM HEADLIGHTS DEVELOPED BY GENERAL ELECTRIC BEFORE THE WAR. NOW OUR WAR PLANES HAVE SIMILAR G-E LANDIN6 LAMPS TWENTY TIMES BRIGHTER. ONE EXTRA EGG A DAY FROM A FLOCK OF 300 HENS WILL PAY FOR U6HTIN6 THE POULTRY HOUSE AND WARMING THEIR DRINKING WATER ALL WINTER. 4,735 WAR VETS WERE EMPLOYED BY GENERAL ELECTRIC AND AFFILIATED COMPANIES BY THE H'i- END OF 1944. tteei the G-€ tedfo programs: The G-E All-girl Orchestra, Sun. 10 p. m. EWT, NBC—The World Today Mm, Mon. through Frt. 6:45 p.m.EWT, CBS—The G-E House Party, Von. through Fri. 4:00 p.m, EWT, CBS. FOR VICTORY-BUY ANO HOLD WAR BONDS • General Electric Company, Schenectady, N. Y. GENERAL f§ ELECTRIC 'P'teef A $560 ViSTORY BOND FOR YOU ■ ■■ $509 m YOUR TOWN... It won’t be hard to get these awards —valued at S6,200.00! > V We've made it easy tor you. Watc.V this newspaper tor announcement* that'll tell you “how." •wit week (favtqia POWER COMPANY A Citizen Wherever We Serve w Subscribe To The 4, » DADE COUNTY TIMES $1.50 A Year! THE DADE COUNTY TIMES: TRENTON, GEORGIA, THURSDA Y, OCTOBER 4, 1345. ‘ LOOKING AJMAD 8Y'GEORGE S. BENSON President—Harding College Scarry, /riaxsas British Coal England is a coal country; 70% of the island’s export tonnage is coal and it goes all over the world. Eng¬ land’s 706,000 miners produce 200 million tons of coal a year. These are big figureg until you compare fengland and America. We have only 393,000 miners in the United States but they produce 586 million tons of coal a year; more than five times as much per man as in Eng¬ land. Coal miners in England draw $25 a week. American coal miaers get $52 a week and they earn it. Don’t let anybody tell you that American workers are super-men who hit harder and work more hours a day, because it’s not true. Don’t let any¬ body tell you that coal veins in the western hemisphere are richer and better and easier to work, because that's not true either. Modern Machinery In America miners use power cut¬ ters. Automatic loaders put the coal in cars and electric locomotives pull them away. In England men dig coal out with picks and pitch it in cars with shovels. The power that pulls the car to daylight is a scrub mule with a rag over his eyes. That’s how they used to mine coal In America when grandpa was a boy. Getting a ton of English coal to the top of the ground costs $4.20 for labor alone; $1.40 in America. The manpower shortage, incidental to war, ran the price of British coal to $6.50 a ton—twice its pre-war price. American coal advanced only 60j a ton. Hand work is what com¬ mands the premium when men are scarce. This economic fact has worked a hardship on the English. Food and Clothing England does not raise enough food for her people, nor enough fibre to clothe them. Such necessities are imported by the shipload. In a prac¬ tical sense, they are bought with coal. Plain to see, with coal costs doubled, things to eat and wear be¬ came very dear in England. People blamed the war, of course, but the real trouble was lack of modern coal mining machinery. With a nation so dependent on coal, why didn’t the mine owners equip their properties with modern ma¬ chinery, get out more coal per man and pay better wages? Answer: Government Interference! Tax law 3 discouraged replacing old machin¬ ery. Regulations placed a penalty on efficient methods. The results were three: High prices, low wages, and a ruined export trade. Might Have Been Workers in British mines blamed the mine owners. The squeeze that pinched their wages to half the American scale was a political vice. Government regulations and taxes retarded production and choked prosperity. This was so craftily hid from the workers that they shouted loud for nationalization — govern¬ ment ownership. It will come now, with Churchill out and Attlee in. With most admirable fortitude the English came through fiendish abuse to victory. Peace might have brought England prosperity; ability to pay her 12 billion dollars of war debts. With business men free to compete and produce, earn profits and raise wages, it might have been. But socializing all industry will •tort a long detour off the road to a better England. Four California Dairymen Indicted ATLANTA. Opt. 4.—Proof that there are teeth in the govern¬ ment’s prosecution f<-»r violations of the dairy feed production pay¬ ment program came recently in Sacremento, Calif., with the in¬ dictment of four California rairymen. They were charged with filing false claims with in tent to defraud the government in connection with the Depart ment of Agriculture’s dairy feed production payment program. Each of the four previously had been prosecuted and convicted in California state courts for dulterating milk with water, and the action by the Federal grand jury followed their at¬ tempts to collect full subsidy payment on deliveries of the di¬ luted milk. The Atlanta field office of the Compliance and Investigation Branch. Production and Market¬ ing adminstration, USDA, has conducted a large number of in¬ vestigations on similar occasions, b“cause of presentation of false claims for subsidy payments on milk produced under the dairy feed production payment pro¬ gram. In numerous instances producers who have filed false '’’aims in this region have been required to make refunds of sums fraudulently received. Investiga¬ tors announced that criminal prosecutions of a number of pro¬ ducers who have filed such Tadulent claims are expected n the near future. The Atlanta field investigation office covers Kentucky. Tennessee, North CaroPna. Georgia. Florida, Alabama and Mississippi. Elimination of Class 11-B, 18 through 25, Announced by Keelin Col. James N. Keelin Jr., State Director of Selective Service to¬ day announced the elimination of Class II-B on registrants 18 through 25. Heretofore, he ex¬ plained. registrants deferred be¬ cause they were “necessary to and regularly engaged in an activity in war production,” were placed in this classification. Local boards have been in¬ structed to reclassify all II-B registrants in the age group 18- 25 to a Class II-A, which is de¬ fined as a registrant found to be “necessary to and regularly en¬ gaged in an activity in support of the National health, safety and interest.” “This does not mean,” Col. Keelin remarked, “that the new II-A is a permanent classifica¬ tion.” Such a registrant will be considered as being in II-A until the expiration of the period of his present deferment or until by reason of a change of status his classification is reopened and he is classified anew. Another new classification de¬ scribed by the state director as effective August 31 is Class IV-A. Inton this class, he said, will be placed practically all registraants 26 years of age or over. There are a few exceptions, viz: A registrant who volunteers for induction will be place in I-A; a registrant who is in the armed forces is designated as I-C; a minister is designated IV-D; a registrant in the armed forces of a co-ebelligerent nation as I-G, etc. Colonel Keelin concluded by saying that instructions have been given to local boards to give special consideration to regis¬ trants ages 18 through 25 when the local board determines that they are pursuing a full-time course of study in a recognized school of medicine, dentistry, vgterniary thy until their medicine graduation. or osteopa¬ Dade Soldier Serves ON Cruiser Astoria ON THE USS ASTORIA. SAN FRANCISCO, Calif.—Clarence R. Chuble, steward’s mate, first class, Route 1, Trenton, is serving on this light cruiser, which was in the first group of warships to return to the United States Sept. 13, from the Pacific fleet. She brought several hundred navy men from other ships who are home for discharges under the point system. It was the first time her crew had seen the States for nearly a year. The Astoria saw action along the South China coast, at Iwo Jima, Okinawa and in raids on the Japanese homeland. Your child is suffering when he’s irritable. Watch for a coated tongue — often the sign a laxative is needed. %Triena CHILDREN FOR Faulty elimination often makes children sluggish and restless. Your child can get relief with Triena—the fam¬ ous laxative made with sen¬ na. And children like to take Triena, because it’s flavored with real prune juice. Don’t up¬ set your child— to give him medicine. Get TRIENA. Caution, use rected! only as di¬ 30c, large size only 50c. HLLIlU JM I irn DRUG PRODUCTS CO. Chattanooga, Tenn. MAKERS OK THE FAMOUS ALLIED BRAND \ NOTICE \ ► Evangelist Ben . F. 4 £ Hale Has Returned ’ ^ From Key West, Fla., ^ l and is in the Evange- j ► listic Work. Contact 4 £ Him by Mail or ^ ► Phone 4 ► BEN F. HALE < 404 W. Gordon Ave. 4 < Phone 4-1364 i Rossville, Georgia ^ The Atlanta Constitution FOR MORE THAN THREE-QUARTERS OF A CENTURY has been serving Georgia and the South The Consitiiution is proud of the part it has played in the development and progress of this section; and to¬ day—as never before—the Consitution intends to pur¬ sue the policies which have made it one of the out¬ standing newspapers in the United States. In addition to news gathered by the best press associations in the world and by local and state cor¬ respondents, the Constitution gives its readers a varie- o features unexcelled in the newspaper world. There are pictures of Georgia and the world taken by our own photographers and supplied by WIREPHOTO, complete sports pages and a woman's page. Each day the Constitution carries the market reports and an editorial page of independent thought. On Sunday, there is a big comic section in color and This Week azine. Readers of the Constitution receive the writings of Ralph McGill, Thos. L. Stokes, Robert Quillen, Jack Tarver, Evelyn Hanna, Gladstone Wil¬ liams, Westbrook Pegler, Ralph Jones, Channing Cope, Damon Runyan and a host of others. Read the Constitution daily and Sunday, and keep abreast of the news as it is being made. The Atlanta Constitution THE SOUTH'S STANDARD NEWSPAPER WARM MORNING HEATERS WE HAVE THE ONLY GENUINE WARM MORNING HEATERS SOLD IN TRENTON. TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE Buy Early While You Can get Prompt Delivery! Prepare for Winter Now And Keep Your Home Cozy and Warm when Frosty Mornings Come WARM MORNING HEATERS WILL REDUCE YOUR COAL BILLS AND KEEP YOUR HOMES FREE FROM WINTER'S CHILLING BLASTS! ASK TO SEE THESE WONDERFUL FUEL SAVING HEATERS! McBRYAR BROTHERS Trenton Georgia Wanted: Cedar Logs! FOUR INCHES AND OVER IN DIAMETER. EIGHT FEET, FOUR INCHES LONG. SOUND. ALSO, STUMPAGE. HIGHEST PRICES! WE ALSO BUY WHITE OAK, POPLAR AND WALNUT VENEER LOGS. PAY CASH! Write For Information MILLER & BRADLEY ABINGDON. VA. The Only Bargain In Dry Cleaning is QUALITY WE GIVE YOU PROMPT, COURTEOUS SERVICE For the Convenience of our Dade County Customers, our Downtown Office will Efficiently Serve You. BRANCH OFFICE: 616 BROAD STREET Vine Street Cleaners &. Dyers, Inc. PLANT OFFICE: 424 VINE STRRET PHONE 7-5415 CHATTANOOGA, TENN. BUS SCHEDULE CHATTANOOGA TO BIRMINGHAM SOUTH BOUND NORTH BOUND Chatta. Arrive Trenton Leave Trenton Arrive Chatta. 12:30 A. M. 1:08 A. M. 6:38 A. M. 7:15 A. M. 2:30 A. M. 3:08 A. M. 7:53 A. M. 8:30 A. M. 4:30 A. M. 5:08 A. M. 8:37 A. M. 9:15 A. M. 6:30 A. M. 7:08 A. M. 10:38 A. M. 11:15 A. M. 8:30 A. M. 9:08 A. M. 12:30 P. M. 1:15 P- M. 9:30 A. M. 10:08 A. M. 2:47 P. M. 3:25 P. M. 10:30 A. M. 11:08 A. M. 3:53 P. M. 4:30 P. M. 12:30 P. M. 1:08 P. M. 4:32 P. M. 5:10 P. M- 2:30 P. M. 3:08 P. M. 6:38 P. M. 7:15 P. M. 4:30 P. M. 5:08 P. M. 8:32 P. M. 9:10 P. M. 5:30 P. M. 6:08 P. M. 10:32 P. M. 11:10 P. M. 6:30 P. M. 7:08 P. M. 12:38 A. M. 1:15 A. M. 8:30 P. M. 9:08 P. M. 2:38 A. M. 3:15 A. U. 10:30 P. M. 11:08 P 4:38 A. M. 5:15 A. M. THE LOCAL GREYHOUND BUS STATION IS LOCATED IN TJil DRUG SUNDRIES STORE. Let Us Do Your Job Printing!