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About The Dade County times. (Trenton, Ga.) 1908-1965 | View Entire Issue (March 7, 1946)
THE DADE COUNTY TIMES Trenton, Georgia Entered c; the Postoffice at Trenton, Ga., as second class mail. I. B. GEDDIE..............................I PUBLISHERS C. E. EYZSR ..............................f ELBERT FORESTER, Associate Editor - Advertising Representative I. B. GEDDIE...................................... Editor. National Advertising Representative American Press Association New York Chicago Detroit Philadelphia MEMBER GEORGIA PRESS ASSOCIATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES: IN ADVANCE: 12 Months, $1.50; 6 Months, 75c; 3 Months, 50c. Advertising rates furnished upon application. Legal Advertis- ments payable in advance. Parties writing to the paper for publication are requested be to pub¬ fur¬ nish their names, otherwise the communication will not lished. It will be withheld on request, but the name must be given. All communication and news items are received for pub¬ lication 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. Added Features To Improve Your Paper Beginning this issue the Times brings this community a news¬ paper with more pages, more features and pictures than it has offered before. This expansion is made possible through an ar- arngement with the Western Newspaper Union, one of the old¬ est and largest newspaper syn- cates in the world. WNU Fea¬ tures are used in some form or other by more than 4,000 of the nation’s newspapers. Through the purchase of WNU Features in printed service form, the Times now has at its com¬ mand all the editorial resources of WNU, which has branches in 35 key cities, including Washing¬ ° aooooooqoooooooooOQOQP ( ULnJUL!L(L(LlLOJL!UL!LOJlJLiL(LOJL&T| CHURCH IS E l WHAT THE CATHOLIC AND WHAT SHE TEACHES A STATEMENT OF CATHOLIC DOCTRINE Pamphlet mailed on request Address: 2699 Peachtree Road, NE, Atlanta, Ga. fjTrmra b b~b~b (nrfnVtnnnnrBqrtiinnnnnnnrin^^grnra * Better Be Safe Than Sorry I INSURE YOUR CAR AGAINST INJURY TO OTHERS AT A VERY SMALL COST PER YEAR. ALSO FIRE INSURANCE ON YOUR HOME. SEE— ★ ★ H. F. Allison TIMES BUILDING TRENTON, GEORGIA : , ,'jr Earn & Learn Young women and girls of this vicinity who have good eye sight, steady nerves, A & and a grade school education will be paid while learning Hosiery Mill Looping. f, Training done at Trenton, Georgia. Register with U. S. E. S. Representative at Dade County Court House on February 28, March 7, March 21, April 4, and X April 18. DONT THROW THAT RADIO AWAY I It May be a year before a better one can be purchased and it may take but a TUBE to put it back in service. RADIOS may be ordered for future delivery. See sample i in our w'ndow. RADIOS—TUBES—BATTERIES—ELEC. HEATERS, Etc. Use our MAIL ORDER service, or EXPRESS that faulty RADIO or ELECTRICAL APPLIANCE to us for repair. Superior Radio Service "Sole owner of the name" 119-121 W. Sixth St Phone 7-4710 CHATTANOOGA sjar: r. > ^ J TIMES, TRENTON, GE ORGIA, THURSDAY, MARCH 7, 19 6 . THE DADE COUNTY ton, New York City, and Chica¬ go. WNU columnists, foreign correspondents, feature and fic¬ tion writers, camera men, ex¬ perts in agriculture and women’s interests, as well as cartoonists and artists, are now a part of the staff of this paper. Many of the names appearing on WNU Features will be recog¬ nized at once, for they are na¬ tionally known in the journal¬ istic world. Some are corres¬ pondents for city dailies and large magazines, while others are heard over radio networks. The Times will continue to provide its full quota of local and regional news, but the ad¬ dition of WNU Features brings departments which should prove of wide interest to people of this community. BUY VICTORY BONDS! ; jfp jP. LOOKING AHEAD Wkmm ilk by GEORGE President— Searcy. Harding Arkansas S. BENSON Celine King Customer Catering to the customer has been America’s most profitable and high¬ ly diversified craft for several gen¬ erations, and it must never stop if this country is to stay great and free. Catering to the customer is an hon¬ orable and interesting activity, and there is nothing to stop it but man¬ made laws. May they never be enacted! Certainly 1946 is no time to experiment with silly ideas. Take the automotive industry for an example. It is probably the best example. Automobile men have gone to great lengths to please the American buyer. His wish for speed has been served, seasoned with safety. His need as to seating capacity, his taste in design, his whim in color, and (most important) his buying power, have been taken into account. Result: A car for a king. Primitive Notions Perhaps the first time a car manu¬ facturer decided suddenly to rip the insides out of his plant and put in new machinery to give King Customer a better dollar’s worth, the stockholders winced. Maybe, in that long-gone day, stockholders con¬ sidered such expenses wasteful, but they learned better. Catering to the customer is exactly what makes dividends grow bigger each year. We may imagine also that, back in the early days of the horseless carriage, some factory workers wor¬ ried about their jobs for a while aft¬ er lower prices were announced. Probably some good workmen asked, “How long can the big boss keep paying us after he starts giv¬ ing his profits to the consumer?” These doubters are wiser now too, same as the old-style stockholders. Imitating Nobody Yearly better machines, more handsome and loss costly, have built big industries and created thousands of good jobs. Wage earners and stockholders prospered together while shrewd management studied King Customer’s needs and met them. When the Japs struck at Pearl Harbor the United States had one automobile for every four people —one for each 139 people in the rest of the world. American manufacturers know the route that leads to national pros¬ perity. Just the same, they are be¬ ing urged to turn aside and try a course completely strange to west¬ ern industry. It’s an old jungle road that has ^ost many great races in poverty. It means business servile to power. It means opening private records to be thumbed at will by partisan fact-finding committees. Looking for What? I Such a committee will be con¬ cerned with wages — only with wages. It will have small interest in prices of cars to the user; less in returns to investors. Its job will be to say what wages an employer is able to pay. Rightly, W’ages are de¬ termined by a workman’s ability to produce. The new concept seems to be that an employer’s savings have a bearing on wage levels. Such a scheme would ear-mark for wages all but a paltry share of a firm’s earnings and investors would turn away. Down would come cash reserves, plant equipment and output. Quality would suffer, prices would advance and sales drop off. Paying men, not by whdK they pro¬ duce but according to the employ¬ er’s ability to pay, is the surest (if not the fastest) way to hopelessly low wages and a dog’s life for us all. Standard Oil Products R. W. Suggs, Agt. Trenton, Georgia Girls/ softer ftom Do you nervous tension On ‘CERTAIN DAYS’ of the month? m Helps fluild Up Resistance Against Such Distress! Do functional periodic disturbances cause you to feel "nervous as a witch,” so restless. Jittery, highstrung, perhaps tired, “dragged out”—at such times? Then don’t delay! Try this great med¬ icine—Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound to relieve such symptoms. It's one of the best known and most effective medicines for this purpose. Pinkham’s Compound helps nature! Taken regularly — it helps build up resistance against such distress. A very sensible thing to do! Positively no harmful opiates or habit forming in¬ gredients in Pinkham's Compound. Also a grand stomachic tonic! Follow label directions. Buy today! dgcUa, £. (PirJthantd VEGETABLE COMPOUND ejfOaooOOOO O OOOO O OO'O^ 0000 ^ ON THE AIR THE VOICE OF TEMPERANCE LISTEN TO SAM MORRIS STATION WHAS Louisville, Ky. 6:15 A. M. DAILY 840 On Your Dial 00-2000 0 0 0 00000500000006: Service Complete In Every Detail We honor Mutual Savings, Family Reserve, Emergency Aid Burial Policies and ALL insurance policies in Georgia. AMBULANCE SERVICE DAY OR NIGHT McBryar Funeral Home PHONE 65 FORT PAYNE. ALA. Acid Indigestion Relieved in 5 minutes or double your money back When excess stomach acid causes painful, suffocat¬ ing gas, sour stomach and heartburn, doctors usually prescribe the fastest-acting medicines known for symptomatic relief—medicines like thoee In Bell-ana Tablets. No laxative. BeU-ana brings comfort in s jiffy or double your money back on return of bottU to us. 25c at all druggists. SEE GRAHAM BLADE CO. YOUR LOCAL 1275 MARKET STREET DEALER CHATTANOOGA, TENNESSEE Notice, Taxpayers! Tax Commissioners Schedule Meet me at the following places listed below for the purpose of making your 1946 Tax Returns. Everyone who is eligible for the Home Exemtpion must make return and sign return blank. If you fail to do this, the Board of Tax Assessors cannot allow you any exemptions. If you do not have chance to make out your returns in my office, I will appreciate you meeting me at one of the places listed below. SLYGO—(873rd Dist.)—W. P. Cole’s Home............10 a. m. to 12 Noon, March 11th JBYRD’S CHAPEL—(875th Dist.)—Slaton’s Store......10 a. m. to 12 Noon, March 12th WILDWOOD—(974th Dist.)—Townsend’s Store........10 a. m. to 12 Noon, March 13th W’lLDWOOD—( 974th Dist.)—Hallum’s Store..........12 Noon to 2 p. m., March 13th jVIORGANVILLE—(974th Dist.)—Nell’s Store..........10 a. m. to 12 Noon, March 14th MORGANVILLE—(974th Dist.)—Cross’ Store..... .....12 Noon to 2 p. m., March 14th NEW ENGLAND—(1037th Dist) Forester’s Store......10 a. m. to 11 a. m., March 15th New England—(1037th Dist.)—Johnnie Crumley’s Store. 11 a. m. to 12 Noon, March 15th New England—(1037th Dist.)—D. T. Brown’ Store......1 p. m. to 3 p. m., March 15th RISING FAWN—(1038th Dist)—All Stores...........10 a. m. to 3 p. m., March 16th (Will Bradford) CAVE SPRINGS—(1129th Dist.)—Church House......10 a. m. to 11 a. m., Marsh 20th CAVE SPRINGS—(1129th Dist.)—Amos Mill..........12 Noon to 1 p. m., March 20th Sulphur Springs—(1129th Dist.)—J. G Forester’s Store.. 2 p. m. to 3 p. m., March 20th i NEW SALEM (1214th Dist.)—Leon Moore’s Store......10 a. m. to 12 Noon, March 21st 1 HOOKER—(1089th Dist.)—Winfrey’s Store............10 a. m. to 12 Noon, March 22nd m HEAD RIVER—(1129th Dist.)—Post Office............11 a. m. to 2 p. m., March 23rd COLE CITY (1222nd Dist.)—M. T. Patton’s..........10 a. m. to 1 'p m., March 25th COLE CIT1 (1222nd Dist.)—J. H. Davis’ Store.......3 p. m. to 4 p. m., March 25th COLE CITY (1222nd Dist.)—Christian’s Store........10 a. m. to 12 Noon, March 26th ( OLE CITY—(1222nd Dist.)—Avans Post Office.......1 p. m. to 2 p. m., March 27th COLE CITY—(1222nd Dist.)—Crisp’s Store 3 p. m., March 27th ....................... LOOKOUT MT.—(1037th Dist.)—Geo. W. Hale’s.......10 a. m. to 11 a. m., March 28th LOOKOUT MT.—(1037th Dist.)—H. B. Griffin’s.................1 p. m., March 28th My Books Will Close March 30th, 1946 W. F. MORRISON Tax Commissioner, Dade County, Georgia ’ yt v/;■■■■, * ■ ,* ■ v The Only Bargain In Dry Cleaning is QUALITY SOLDIERS’ UNIFORMS DYED IN FAST COLORS Blooming Shades — Quick Service 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. PROTECT YOUR HOMESTEAD EXEMPTION by filing your tax returns and making application through your County Tax Receiver BEFORE APRIL 1 Remember also that automobile tags must be purchased BEFORE APRIL 1. Income Tax and Intangible Tax Returns must be filed BEFORE MARCH 15. Taxpayers will save substantially by avoiding the penal¬ ties required for late filings. STATE REVENUE DEPARTMENT M. E. THOMPSON, COMMISSIONER Let Us Do Your Job Printing!