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About The Dade County times. (Trenton, Ga.) 1908-1965 | View Entire Issue (March 7, 1946)
THE DADE COUNTY TRENTON, GEORGIA, THURSDAY, MARCH 7, 1946. THE TURNING POINT By Mary Imlay Taylor • Eight bitter years behind stone walls for a crime he did not commit hardened John Sherwin, who dedicated his life to revenge. Then he met Jane Kellerl This story by Mary Imlay Taylor, author of many short stories and serials, will give you plenty of thrills. READ IT NOW IN THIS PAPER NOTICE! We are prepared to do EXPERT AUTO and TRUCK REPAIRING. We also do High Class ACETELYNE and ELECTRIC WELDING. Prices are Very Reasonable. GIVE US A TRIAL t Jimmy Wilson's Garage ► Across From Dyers Trenton, Georgia REAL ESTATE Sand Mountain Property School Bus Road—'Brow Frontage For Sale If you have Mountain or Valley Property For Sale, See MADDOX J. HALE Trenton, Georgia Yes, Right HERE Is Where Busy People Can Bank! When shortage of time, or any other reason, does not permit you to bank conveniently in person_ Just mail your deposit to us and it will be handled just as though it had been made in person. Your in¬ quiries are invited. ILTON NATIONAL BANK Of CHATTAftOOCA tlNNESSEE Main at Market—East Chattanooga—Market at Seventh 1424 McCallie—RossviUe. Ga.-Tenn. Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Member Federal Reserve System GUNS! BOtJGHT — TRADED REPAIRED Buy Old Guns Write C. W. McCurdy 4411 Alabama Avenue DRINK Chattanooga, Tenn, TRADf-MAIK LOOKING AHEAD .GEORGES. BENSON President—Hardin} CatU/e I Sen ref. Arkansas With Thanks Free schools are still free institu¬ tions in the United States, thanks to the bravery of ten congressmen, five Democrats and five Republicans. Jointly, last December 12, they broke up a piece of lawmaking strategy that might have wrecked American freedom completely. Thus ended Round 5 of a long and costly fight to top our public schools with a bureaucratic boss in Washington. The House Committee on Educa¬ tion, by a ten-to-nine vote, rejected the famous bill to provide federal aid (?) to education. The threat of collectivism to American liberty was greater at no time during World War II than it is now, and all people who appreciate the privileges our pioneer grandfathers won with flint¬ lock rifles, may be thankful to a sane congress. Many Good Reasons What happened that day made the best news of the week but, impor¬ tant as it was, did not eclipse the brilliant tidings of the previous week when President Truman signed a bill to place a group of government corporations under control of Con¬ gress. These highly privileged, wild entities had been foraging without restraint in rich fields of industry for varying numbers of years. The Chief Executive compliment¬ ed Congress for roping and brand¬ ing these freebooters, as well he might. Indeed the 79th Congress deserves a great deal of commenda¬ tion. One of its most notable achievements of the First Session was that exhaustive job by the Manasco Committee, X-raying the so-called Full Employment Bill. It deserved to be diagnosed thorough¬ and was. Toothless Enactment Several well informed Washington observers are predicting that a de¬ horned and fangless version of the Full Employment Bill will pass— Into oblivion. As originally written, it was a viper, a sort of two-edged Townsend plan of pensions with an appended government guarantee of every-ready, gainful employment to everybody out of jails and hospi¬ tals, drunk or sober, on borrowed government money. Addressing a few belated travel¬ ers in a highway hamburger em¬ porium recently, a red-nosed tramp declared: “There’s plenty of every¬ thing in the world for everybody to live easy, If greedy guys would quit grabbing everything and holding us up for our share.” I submit that as a parallel to the philosophy of the Full Employment Bill. It is sim¬ ply not true. Good living depends on work. Wealth and Plenty I wish every American could live on a farm long enough to learn how plenty depends on production. The more of anything people produce, the more of it they have. There’s a difference between abundance and prosperity; production is only one ingredient, but an essential ingredi¬ ent. Idleness and scarcity lead di¬ rectly to poverty and want. It is true of a man. It is true of a nation. Prosperous, productive people can afford to yield their substance freely to help genuinely unfortunate folk who are in need. On the other hand it is not a kindness to quench any man’s desire to make his own liv¬ ing and build his own success. Do¬ ing such things for people is unfair to them. We should be proud of our 79th Congress for holding that everlasting truth in mind. THE WORD OF GOD RADIO PROGRAM W A P O Saturday 12:30 p.m Monday through Friday 6:15 a.m. Address REV. ALBERT H. BATTS CHATTANOOGA B, TENNESSEE Him by Mail or ' Phone 4 < BEN F. HALE f 404 W. Gordon Ave. ^ RossviUe, Phone 4-1364 £ Georgia ► HEADACHE/^ Capodme contain, 4 tpcc’iUf ick'-Ut • fel » •elected . ingredien t* tlut %otk together to girt quick relief from headache and neur«!giju Follow direction* 00 label. mm ^T'TlTiTPia A HATEFUL CUSTOM Among the pet peeves of Dade travelers is the one requiring tipping. Staying at home saves money in more ways than one and tipping is the bane of trot¬ ters. If one is dependent upon tips for a living, the employer using this as a way of reducing salaries, then to attack may be a hardship. But not only is the system a nuisance, it is not a democratic way to earn. Tip¬ ping rather implies a form of begging handed down from the Dark Ages. It is not a salary, is NOT SUPPOSED to be payment for service but becomes a gift. Some believe tipping is so estab¬ lished in our economy that it can’t, be abolished. If employers won’t raise salaries to eliminate the need of tips, the man who suffers is the employee who lives by them. The question is, should the public refuse to help save money for the boss? Cooked a Fine Dinner; Then Threw It To Dog One lady recently stated that she used to throw her own din-^ ncr to the dog most of the time. It made her sick just to look at anything to eat. She was swoll¬ en with gas, full of bloat, had headaches, felt worn out and war; badly constipated. Final¬ ly she got INNER-AID and says she now eats everything in sight and digests it perfectly. Bowels are regular and normal. She is enjoying life once more and feel like "some other wo¬ man” since taking this New Compound- INNER-AID contains 12 Great Herbs; they cleanse bowels, clear gas from stomach, act on sluggish liver and kidneys. Miserable people soon feel dif¬ ferent all over. So don't go on suffering! Get INNER-AID. Sold by all drug stores here in Dade County. C Citation GEORGIA, DADE COUNTY. To all whom it may concern: Dewey Crisp having, in prop¬ er form, applied to me for Per¬ manent Letters of Administra¬ tion on the estate of Mrs. Ida Crisp, late of said County, this is to cite, all and singular, the creditors and next of kin of Mrs. Ida Crisp to be and appear at my office within the time al¬ lowed by law, and show cause if any they can, why permanent administration should not be granted to Dewey Crisp on Mrs. Ida Crisp estate. J. M. CARROLL, Ordinary. WANT ADS BABY CHICKS—Good Quality. Send for Price List and Save Money. WORTHWHILE CHICKS, 101 W. North Ave., Baltimore-1, Maryland. 3-14 FOR RENT —About 20 acres of land for corn, hay, or, and cotton. Will rent all or 'part; just land, no house. See Miss Hettie Stewart, on Back Val¬ ley Road, 2 V 2 or 3 miles from Trenton. 2t-pd-3 14 LOST OR STOLEN—Black and tan female fox hound, bearing the label of C. 0. Giles, Wild¬ wood, Ga. Last seen in John¬ son Crook on Friday night, Feb, 22. Any information leading to the whereabouts of this dog will be liberally re¬ warded. . C. O. Giles, Wild¬ wood, Ga. itpd Children like to play grown¬ up, but they don’t like bad- force tasting adult laxatives. Don’t them on a child. ^Triena CHILDREN FOR Stop begging your child to take the laxative he needs. Get Triena. Flavored with delicious prunejuice.it tastes good. Triena is effective, too, it’s made with senna. It may be just what your child needs, if he’s suf¬ fering with faul¬ ty elimination. Use the laxative with prune juice. Just give TRIENA as directed. On¬ ly 30c for trial size, just large size 50c. MLLIlU A11 urn DRUG products CO. Chattanooga, Tenn. MAKERS OF THi FAMOUS ALLIED BRAND OPA To Give Five Pounds Extra Sugar Effective Next Monday Washington, March 6—House¬ wives may get a little more su¬ gar for home canning this year than last season. OPA revealed this yesterday, in announcing that Spare S amp 9 will become valid for five lbs. of sugar on next Monday, and it will be good thru Oct. 31. The agency said it expects to validate another home canning stamp in June or July. It add¬ ed that the value of the second stamp cannot be fixed now, but was not likely to be good for any more than five pounds. A grant of ten pounds a per¬ son would be three and a half pounds more than the average home canning allotment last year. Most consumers will find Spare Stamp No. 9 in War Ra¬ tion Book 4. Others, who have received their ration books only recently, including many return¬ ed servicemen, will find the stamp in a single-sheet sugar ration book issued them in place of book 4. OPA said no addition to the regular sugar ration—five lbs. per person each four months— can be foreseen at this time. The next regular stamp be¬ comes valid on May 1. Mr. and Mrs. John L. Warren of Chattanooga spent the week end with Mrs. Warren’s father and aunt, Mr and Mrs. P. A. Gates, and family. 'W ▼▼ W'W'V NT W W W’W’WW'W'WWV' GUARANTEED USED WATCHES—At Used Watch Prices i Precision Watch Repairing and Adjusting 4 A Trial Will Convince You d TRENTON WATCH SHOP < ^ Trenton, Georgia ^ ANNOUNCING THE OPENING OF TATUM & CASE ‘Back From the Service to Give You Service Radio and Appliance Repairs Wiring and Installations ON THE SQUARE PHONE 22 Trenton, Georgia TARPAULINS FORGES :: ANVILS :: VISES CORN SHELLERS :: ROOFING * * * CHATTANOOGA HARDWARE CO. 2615 South Broad Street :: Chattanooga Tennessee Eleven Hundred Pages HISTORY OF WORLD WAR II In this historical narrative from material collected by 200 authorities from 30 Nations during 6 years of war. BY AMERICA’S HISTORIAN OF 3 WARS Francis Trevelyan Miller, Lid., Litt. D. With staff of Military and Historical Experts covering the World’s Battlefronts HISTORY AND DRAMA COMBINE See Illustrations of Samples at the TRENTON PICTURE HOUSE. The price of this great book is only $5.50—yo u deposit $3.30 with order, and the balance is payable when bookis delivered. If you want to know about World War II, get this History. PLACE YOUR ORDER TODAY THE TRENTON PICTURE HOUSE MURPHY M. BURRELL TRENTON, GEORGIA An Ad in The Times WiU Brin g Results Picked Up Around Town “A Dab y may triple her weight during her fi rst year „ says Irene, “but divides it i n half if possible, during her f tv first.” or y ' * * * “The man who says he believes he will change his religion ” sar Rev. Orr, “generally never h one to start with.” ad * * * “Real estate agents should be small people,” says H. F. Allison “so the rooms they show to peo¬ ple would look large.” * * * Jimmy Wilson says a man likes music with his meals, but m most restaurants gets a boxed mixture of noise. * * * “A convenience in shaving i n an airplane,” suggests Ralph Frazier, “is that you don’t have to worry about what to do with the used blades.” * * * “A mouse can count itself lucky these days,’ says Terrell, “to find a piece of cheese in the trap.” * * * A Trenton man says it takes ten tools and ten days to get the old license plate of the car and a new one on it. * * * Coal is valued at $84 a ton in France, and not much less in Dade county when it comes time to pay the bill. * * * One way to learn how the other half lives is to buy and read a confessions magazine.