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About The Dade County times. (Trenton, Ga.) 1908-1965 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 15, 1945)
CLASSIFIED department clS .vf:ss^ & invest, oppor. - AsentS , n(1 Sales Managers wanted. Por- , paintings, styles, "■‘fi'rSes mhiiatures, many easy sales. Excel. com.Amer- f old ArMl‘S Edgeworth. Greensboro,N,C. MISCELL ANEO US qWELL * - ‘—..........— -----ration on f vlo”et Pieces. (Note Something paper). Straw- $1 nr design. new. Spd Brow" Studios, Foun tain City, In d. , ,« A\ NOVELTY mailed interesting. postpaid, 1 dollar doUar._ Useful, use different, ne box ^ j n neau, Alaska. _____________ SEEDS , PLANTS , ETC. 6t IV« from simple S chem. solutions. $1. Mai- Tabor, par k Hills, Huntington, W. Va. ^ ?mfll rpFN d mVlE ornaments FRUIT and & NUT general TREES. nurs- S fruits, Combined catalogue and plant- fry ctnck S'iree CUMBERLAND VALLEY 3 ?EBSEKIES. Inc., McMinnville, Xenn. Keep Posted on Values By Reading the Ads StJoseph ASPIRIN WORLD 5 LARGEST SELLER AT IM COTA COLD? 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Jiemomu «■ nnm WOMEN'38to52’| are you embarrassed by JOTFLASHES? ............. ^k\lf D^feel you Buffer from hot flashes, a bit blue weak, nervous, hlghstrung, at times—due to the func¬ tional “middle-age” period peculiar to women—try E- Plnkham’s this great medicine—Lydia Compound to relieve Vegetable Plnkham’s Compound such symptoms. helps nature. It’s one of the best known medicines for this purpose. Follow label directions. Watch Kidneys/ Your Help Them Cleanse the Blood of Harmful Body Waste Your kidney* are constantly filtering Jaste kidneys matter from the blood itream. Bui aometimea lag in their work—do not act aa Nature intended—fail to re- ttove Impurities that, if retained, may Poison the system and upBet the whole body machinery. Persistent Symptoms may b® nagging backacha* headache, attacks of dizziness, Ratting under up nights, swelling, puffinese the eyes—a feeling of nervous * n ^*aty Other *nd i os g 0 f p g p an <j strength. dis¬ order eigne of kidney or bladder too (requent are sometimes burning, scanty or 1 here urination. treatment should be no doubt that prompt Use Uoon 1* wiser than neglect. « Pills. Doan’s have been winning SS* they hienda have for more than forty years, Are a nation-wide reputation. people th# country recommended by grateful over. Ask your neighbor! Until further notice the Carrollton canning plant will operate on Tues¬ days and Saturdays, according to R. L. McGuire, manager. The University of Georgia's School of Medicine at Augusta ended the fiscal year on June 30, 1945, with a cash surplus of $32,138.53, State Aud¬ itor R. E. Thrasher, Jr., reported. Atlanta banks cleared $29,300,000 the first day of November, compared with $25,000,000 on the correspond¬ ing day last year, it is reported by the Atlanta Clearing House Associ¬ ation. The anti-tuberculosis commission of Bibb county has given $11,000 to Hopewell sanatorium, maintained by Macon and the county for tuber¬ culosis patients. The money will fi¬ nance a refrigeration system so per¬ ishable foods no longer will have to be stored at the Macon hospital. Dr. C. E. Erwin, chief surgeon of the Georgia Warm Springs Founda¬ tion, is heading a special medical mission to Belgium. The mission is being sent at the request of the Bel¬ gian government by the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis. The mission will attempt to arrest an epidemic of infantile paralysis in Belgium. The last bond drive of World War II—the Victory Loan—dedicated to help “keep faith with those who fought for a better world,” reached unexpected proportions in Terrell county the opening day of the cam¬ paign, as citizens oversubscribed their quotas of Victory Bonds by more than 80 per cent, according to Ed Stevens, chairman of the cam¬ paign in Terrell county. Stockholders of the Morris Plan Bank of Georgia voted to increase its capital stock by $100,000 to a total of $300,000 and to increase its surplus by $50,000 to $150,000 at a special meeting in Atlanta. The new capital will consist of 1,000 additional shares with a par value of $100 which will be offered to present stock¬ holders on a pro rata basis of their present holdings at $150 per share. The Rev. F. M. Gaines, pastor of Epworth church in Savannah, has been elected general manager of the Wesleyan Christian Advocate, official publication of the Methodist churcji Ma¬ in Georgia, with headquarters in con. He will succeed on December 1 the Rev. Frank Q. Echols, who has been general manager of the Advocate for the past five years. Mr. Echols will return to an appoint¬ ment in the North Georgia Confer¬ ence, of which he is a member. The Albany Herald, one of the America’s distinguished newspapers and one of Georgia’s best known in¬ stitutions, has celebrated its 54th birthday and is now “going strong’’ on its 55th milestone. Because of the paper shortage, the Herald staged no formal celebration of the event. But the Herald “family,” consisting of its employees, gathered for a small party to cut a huge birthday cake. Henry T. McIntosh, majority owner and editor, presided at the event. Department store sales in the 'Sixth Federal Reserve Bank dis¬ trict increased nine per cent in Oc¬ tober over the preceding month, the Atlanta Federal Reserve Bank re¬ ports in its monthly bulletin. “Sales made during October by the dis¬ trict’s department stores ... in contrast to the small increases in August and September, have ap¬ parently gained more than they usu¬ ally do in October,” according to the bank’s October review. Nearly 100,000 Atlantans get peri¬ odic tuberculosis tests, and as soon as a 70 millimeter photo--flurographic machine is delivered by the state tuberculosis X-rays will add thou¬ sands a year to the total as a result of activities by the city health de¬ partment. Dr. James F. Hackney, director of the Atlanta health de¬ partment and Dr. Eddie Armstrong, director in charge of both the VD and tuberculosis programs, released figures showing that more than 6,- 000 persons a month are treated for VD. Looking to the erection in Gaines¬ ville of a $150-bed hospital and nurses’ home at a cost of approx¬ imately $1,000,000, resolutions were passed at a joint session of the city commissioners of Gainesville and county commissioners of Hall to make effective an act of the general assembly in 1941 known as the Hos¬ pital Authorities Law for the J ty and county. The action, taken after recent petition of the members of a medical and dental pro- Hall Son”, county board*trustees sets »P a residents of the composed P of nine govern¬ dty and county to form a ment body for the hospital author- lty. problems In order to discuss the radio Paul Porter, chairman of of Communications Com¬ the Federal to attend a mission, is in Atlanta hel< * ^ series of conferences being Biltmore hotel with the rep the the broadcasting sta, sentatives of U p’oi [ c? 0 u r Htaately cos.lns mar. 500 000,000 rivers and har- in the c=r^%i $ , r Washington. THK DADE COUNTY TIMES, TRENTON, C,A„ THURSDAY NOVEMBER 15, 1915 Hep&iieJi in WASHINGTON By Walter Shead WN U Correspondent WNU Washington Bureau. 1616 Eye St., N. W. The Little Red Schoolhouse Is Out of Step With the Times Celebration of the first anniver¬ sary of the White House conference on rural education, in October, served to bring into focus again the shortcomings and problems of rural education in the country schools. Moreover it has brought to the fore once again the long-standing debate over the merits of the one-room, one-teacher school, versus the con¬ solidated country school. There is, however, one fact that proponents of both the one-room school and the consolidated school can agree on, and that is the rural youth of the nation is not getting an even break with his city cousin in the matter of education. With this in mind, a 24-point pro¬ gram for improvement of rural edu¬ cation has been drawn up for a long- range fight for adoption by federal, state and local school authorities. This is an effort to bring rural edu¬ cation up to a higher level to give the boys and girls of rural communi¬ ties the type of education they need and the most education possible in the rural public schools of the na¬ tion. Dr. Howard A. Dawson of Arkan¬ sas, director of the rural services of the National Education association, at a recent press conference here announced that shortly after the first of the year nine regional conferences on rural life and education will be held in various sections of the coun¬ try. Representatives of farmers, business, labor and educational groups will participate in an effort to stimulate greater interest in the program. Country Schools Need Help Here are some vital statistics and facts which become problems before any gathering of rural school au¬ thorities: Farmers have 31 per cent of the children and only 10 per cent of the national income, so there is a need for greater state and federal financing as aids to local adminis¬ tration of rural schools. Rural school teachers average ap¬ proximately $959 per year in salary as compared to an average of $1,955 for city teachers, so city schools are able to obtain better teachers. There are 50,000 school teachers now working under emergency cer¬ tificates who are not qualified to teach, and two-thirds of them are in rural schools. Rural school districts are too small and should be enlarged to pro¬ vide increased resources and to de¬ crease administrative costs. Of the 189,062 rural school build¬ ings, 108,000 are of the one-teacher variety and one recommendation of the White House conference is that schools should be consolidated wher¬ ever distances, topography and the best interests of the children and of community life permit, which, by the way, is a manner of straddling the question of whether the one-room or the consolidated school is for the best interest of the children. Enrollment in teachers’ colleges, the source from which school teach¬ ers are obtained, has dropped 50 per cent during these war years. As a result, 360,000 of the nation’s 900,000 teachers are new to their jobs, and, whereas city schools have been able to maintain staffs because of high¬ er salaries paid, country schools are bearing the brunt of the shortage. Bigger, Better High Schools It is pointed out that the curricu¬ lum established by the state boards of education in many states varies little in the city and country schools. It is a matter of common sense there is a vast difference in the edu¬ cational needs of country children and those who live in cities. So one of the problems is for a course of study particularly fitted to the needs of the rural youth, and a staff of teachers who have the kind and quality of preservice education which will qualify them to teach in rural schools as contrasted to city schools. The NEA believes also that there can be no adequate high school edu¬ cation in any rural high school where enrollment is less than 300 pupils. There can be no adequately formu¬ lated high school program which will give the student a well-rounded education where there are only a few students; there can be no school morale or spirit, nor can interest of the student in the teen ages be maintained through four years of high school work in small high schools, educators believe. Qualified Superintendents Furthermore, one of the planks in the 24-point program calls for care¬ ful selection of superintendents of rural schools on a basis of profes¬ sional qualifications and on non- i political considerations. Therefore, popular elections of county superin¬ tendents should be abandoned, i There are some 12,100,000 students enrolled in rural schools, which con¬ stitute 48 per cent of all public schools in the nation. The 451,660 rural teachers comprise 52 per cent 1 of the nation’s total. A SPORTS enthusiast asks this one: “What man in football, player or coach, would you pick as the top of the long list in the way of influence upon his team and the game itself?” Oddly enough this is easy to answer. His brilliant career came to an end on March 31, 1931, over 14 years ago, when they picked his broken body out of a wrecked plane in the midwest. The name is Knute Rockne. I know the lasting influence that such men as Yost, Zuppke, Haughton, Grange, Bierman, Little and many others have had. I Grantland Rice know what these men, and others, have meant to foot¬ ball. But I still say Rockne. Starting as head coach back in 1917 when Notre Dame was well down the football list, Rockne in the next 14 years made Notre Dame the synonym for football greatness, from Los Angeles to New York and Balti¬ more—from Chicago to Atlanta. Fac¬ ing a killing schedule of 10 games year after year, his winning record was a phenomenal thing. But Rockne’s winning record was only a small part of the job he did. Almost from the start he gave his squads the finest spirit, year after year, that I have seen. It wasn’t so much a matter of gameness, which most football players have. It was a matter of keeness, alertness, smart¬ ness, condition and love of the game. He gave his men a brand of sports¬ manship that has never been ques¬ tioned. An Inspiration I have never seen a Notre Dame player under Rockne’s reign who was not in superb physical condition, barring only those injured in play or practice. He had fine material as a rule, but a good part of this was due to the fact that many bud¬ ding stars wanted to come to Notre Dame and play under the baldheaded Norwegian. Strictly as a football coach on the technical side, it would be difficult to rank Rockne above such men as Pop Warner, Hurry-up Yost, Percy Haughton, Bernie Bierman and oth¬ ers who had exceptional coaching careers in their various primes. Rockne was a fine coach, but hard¬ ly the greatest. It was the inspira¬ tional side, his complete control of the squad on and off the field, that took him to the front. The bark of his voice had a lift to it that caught and held attention. I recall the night before an Army- Notre Dame game in New York. Army's scout for Notre Dame games filed this report to the head coach. “Whatever you do, take the kickoff starting the third period, if you can. Don’t let Notre Dame get the ball right after they have listened to Rockne between halves. I’ve found out what that means.” The advice was overlooked. Army kicked off to start the second half and a Notre Dame back on the first play thereafter ran 75 yards for a touchdown with practically ev¬ ery Army defender flat on the back of his neck from the blocking that followed. Knew Human Nature I also recall this—when a big game was being played by Notre Darqe in either New York or Chi¬ cago, visiting coaches sometimes numbering 10 or 12, immediately headed for Rockne’s room. They all wanted to visit with Rock, who also had a keen sense of humor, a gift for repartee and what it takes to supply cheerful, friendly entertain¬ ment. Rock’s personality was always an outstanding feature. He knew human nature, how to handle men, including his famous top sergeant, the redoubtable Hunjc Anderson, who on occasions was about as easy to handle as a Bengal tiger or a Numid- ian lion. Something like 80 of his players left Notre Dame to coach at other colleges. But it wasn’t so much the Notre Dame shift or any other part of the Rockne system that such coaches as Frank Thomas, Harry Mehre, Elmer Layden, Buck Shaw, Jimmy Crow¬ ley, Harry Stuhldreher, Rip Miller, and many, many others carried to their teams. It was more the Rockne contribution in the way of condition, spirit and smartness. I have seen many slightly dumb football teams. I never saw a dumb Notre Dame team that I can now recall. It is for these and other reasons that I rank Rockne on top when it comes to his influence upon the game—not only when he was alive, but 14 years after his death. * * * * Best Football Section The football query most often asked by servicemen is this: “Which section of the country turns out the strongest football teams, taking a general average year after year?” The only answer we could offci was that it is the Midwest. When you have a section year after year that can turn out such teams as Notre Dame, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio State, Illinois, Wisconsin, Iowa, you have a mass of gridiron talenl that is hard to beat. SEWING CIRCLE PATTERNS Two-Piecer Is n’ Smart A \ YOUTHFULLY smart two- a piece dress for those occa¬ sions when you want to look your best. The blouse buttons down the back and is cut to give that popu¬ lar nipped in look. Note the grace¬ ful gored skirt. • • • Pattern No. 1394 is designed for sizes 10, 12. 14, 16, 18 and 20. Size 12, short sleeves, requires 3 3 /a yards of 35 or 39- Inch material. RAF Uses Knot To simplify the work of its navi¬ gators, the Royal Air Force now uses the knot, or nautical mile per hour, as its official measure of speed, because its charts, like those of all other military flying forces, employ the Mercator pro¬ jection in which distances are measured in nautical miles. Due to an unusually large demand and current conditions, slightly more time Is required in filling orders for a few of ths most popular pattern numbers. Send your order to: SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT. 530 South Wells St. Chicago Enclose 25 cents In coins for each pattern desired. Pattern No. S iz e — Name Address-— ~ n Try Making Cough Syrup at Home. Quick Relief Saves Big D ollars. No Cooking. No matterwhat you usually use for coughs due to colds, you’ll be more than surprised when you make up this simple home mixture and give It a trial. You’ll wonder why you never used It before. 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I BEN-GAY—THE ORIGINAL ANALGE^SIQUE BAUME IT S fOri* -- ‘DAIN < T NEURALGIA RHEUMATISM 1 >^MHD THERE’S ALSO W fV*' / Landcolds J BEN GAY OUE TO for children