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About The Dade County times. (Trenton, Ga.) 1908-1965 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 8, 1946)
=ss 'The Churches of Christ Salute You.' 1 —ROMANS 16:16. DID JESUS PURCHASE A GOLD BRICK? We are all familiar with teaching that “it don’t make difference which church you a member of.” We have that “one church is as good another.” Many teach that don’t have to be a member the church to be saved.” These and all other like ments make us conclude Jesus Christ was the victim the most vicious racket” that the world has known. Never in the annals history has there been such great “swindle” as that' was perpetrated upon the Son God. Deceit and fraud had a field day when Jesus “taken in.” The only Son of God was robbed of blood for naught. Yes, if all the teachers said about the church, and it’s not being necessary to be member of it are so, then gave His blood for the most les.i thing in the world. He thought He was buying thing so valuable that He His life for it. Paul said “Feed the church God which He purchased His own blood.” Acts cospel of Christ, Post Office Box 15, Trenton, Georgia. Welcome to the Church of Christ at Trenton [ LOCALS PERSONALS) ] - < By NETTIE M. FLEMING Mr. and Mrs. John F. Gayler, We are sorry to note that Mrs. and Tenn., were week end guests Mr. Gayler’s mother, Mrs. P. Gates, and family. Mrs. and the children, Bobby Harrison, remained over for week s visit. Mr. and Mrs. John L. and little daughter, Marie, of Chattanooga, week end guests of relatives Mr. and Mrs. J. W. announce the birth of a Aug. 5. The baby has named Kenneth Warren. McDaniel will be remembered Miss Donie Lacy. Mrs. Wiley Gass was in Chattanooga Monday. Miss Delories Baty who been ill is reported to be much improved. Mrs. J. B. Geddie and recently spent a week with parents, Mr. and Mrs. G. Frazer, and family in Charleston, Tennessee. Mrs. Netttie Mae Fleming spent Wednesday with her Mrs. Andrew Jenkins, and family in East Lake. Mrs. Ernest Keith and chil¬ dren, of Chattanooga, are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. P. M. Keith and family in South Trenton. Mr. and Mrs. Shorty Minor Mrs. Emma Brown and Mr. and Mrs. Willard Hardeman visited Mr. and Mrs. Wiley Gass Sunday. t GUARANTEED USED WATCHES—At and Used Adjusting Watch Pnc 4 4 Precision Watch Repairing You 4 r a Trial Will Convince SHOP ► /-• TRENTON WATCH < ► Trenton, Georgia 4 GOOCOOOOQ^y 0 ^ Ur» nnr >LX» nr ^ ir fOO DOQOOOOC OO C O OCKftOO OC CQ S OOOOCrX OOOCOQQO<sq W c Made MELCIG o< ^‘ * , to tO W hast. L&St. w%T^«~ 1 $ 69 ' RtAArimr Steering WpII Well *........ •••••• * * YAH-* Wheel twal Covers, /’'•/wore ... WANTED! Hundreds of students desiring FREE Ka Service Course. No obligations or catches to this. Ma 12c to cover mailing cost on ENTERPRISES’ complete^ course / HAZELTON \ 301 Temple Court Building ' : tnoonfwxM j mui i n r imT" ■ .il the DADE COUNTY TIMES, TRENTON, GEOItfctA, THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1948. Now Christ made an even ex-: change in that transaction: He gave His blood for the church. If this church is non-essential, then Christ was swindled; He fnrfpitori tj;„ S u, °f d for : ’ that * ; without. IS,, which u-p are )USt • as weI1 ott If one can be saved outside the church just as easily as he can inside, then he can be ed just as easily without the blood as he can with the Jesus shed all His blood for the church. He never did buy a single thing with His blood ex- dept the church. Now we are taught that the thing He pur¬ chased is useless and non-essen¬ tial. THIS TEACHING CANNOT BE THE TRUTH. Men have originated churches by the score. A rabble-rouser works up a feeling bordering on hysteria in a meeting, then an¬ nounces that he is starting a new church; he calls for joiners, and without it costing him a cent he starts a church, which he says, and which others say, is just as good, as any other church—in¬ cluding the one which Jesus pur¬ chased with His blood. What a pitiable victim Jesus was! .Trenton is confined to a Chat- tanoga hospital by illness. May she have a quick recovery, Mra Ruby Broclt spent ^ week end at Boston, Mass., with her son, W. M. Davenport, and Mr. and Mrs. Brent Brock. Mrs. Jim Breedlove continues serionsly ill at her home on the Mountain Road. Mrs. Robert Woolbright and children spent the week end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles McMahan, at Valley Head, Ala. j Miss Billie Chapman, who has ben eemployed in Atlanta, Ga., has returned home. Wilburn Hardeman, of the U. S. Navy, stationed in Memphis, Tenn., spent the week end with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Hardeman and family at Avans. Miss Kathleen Morrison is at¬ tending camp at Hiwassee Col lege, Madisonville, Tenn., this week. Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Morrison and children visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Tate at Dun¬ lap, Tenn., Sunday. Miss Billie Chapman, Jiles Wooten, Leo Bradford and Mr. and Mrs. Willard Hardeman vis¬ ited Miss Charlotte Sullivan ‘Saturday night. gave His blood for a church that isn’t worth any more than the church which cost no man any¬ thing! Be w it thoroughly uiorougmy unlerstood umersrooa one church of Humon origin * lust as good as any other church of HUMAN origin. And be it further understood that it is not necessary to be a mem- of any one of them to be saved, or to be a member of any of them to be a Christian, either, On the other hand, it is abso lutely necessary to be a member of the church of the Lord, the blood-bought group, to be saved. “For the husband is the head of the wife, even as Christ is the head of the church; AND HE IS THE SAVIOUR OF THE BODY. Eph. 5:23. Saviour of what? Saviour of the body. What is the body? The same chapter says the CHURCH IS THE BODY, and verse 30 says “We are members of His body.” Then Jesus is the Saviour of “us” only on condition that we are in the body which is the church. No, Jesus was not swindled! His church is not "non-essen- All the saved are in it Hunter and Spence Fields Will Have University Units Unable to accommodate the flood of applicants at the state’s larger colleges, the State Board of Regents has voted to establish University System branches at surplus Army Airfields at Sa¬ vannah and Moultrie. The college at Savannah, larg¬ er of the two, will be located at Hunter Field and be available to approximately 3,000 boarding students. Male veterans of the freshman and sophomore classes will have priority in enrollment. The unit at Moultrie, a branch of Abraham Baldwin Agriculture College, will occupy Spence Field and provide facilities for 200 to 300 male students who wish to study farming. Request for the Savannah unit came from a delegation of World War II veterans, headed by Frank Myers of Americus. Over 60 per cent of the 1,500 male students already turned away from the State University at Athens have indicated they would attend the Savannah Col¬ lege, Myers asserted. Favorable action on a request to Governor Arnall for funds in the amount of $250,000 was expected, it was said, and the Regents will also provide allocation for the ABC branch at Moultrie. The Regents have allotted funds also to renovate buildings at the Naval Air Station for use by Georgia Tech. Here, 724 stu dents will be accommodated. e Other State colleges to receive finances for renovating or build¬ ing additional facilities are: South Georgia College at Doug¬ las, $4,000; Georgia State Wo¬ man’s College in Valdosta, $9,- 500; West Georgia College in Carrollton, $3,000; and Georgia Southwestern College, $4,000. FOR SALE FIVE ACRE PLACE NEAR WILDWOOD FIVE-ROOM DWELLING GOOD GARDEN IT'S A REAL NICE HOME H. F. ALLISON Trenton, Georgia _ LOOKING AHEAD GEORGE S. BENSON Praid(*l~Mtrdl*( Setrcjf. J rl unfit Cflltf* -- ---— .....wys w Frozen Hopes Saying what a man earns, ex¬ it In cents * houy per or per year, does not tell {auch the measure of prosperity be Good living depends on so things that change from time time and differ from place tp Prosperity depends, in very part, on what people must for the things they need and Putting the conveniences and lux¬ of life in reach of a large of people helps to build a prosperity. Franklin’s dis¬ of electricity became a great when electric lights be¬ costing less than oil lamps. The became a gi*at inven¬ when cars were priced down only rich people could afford own carriage horses. Paying for Service Plain people pay richly for favors; people are so many. Names like McCormick and Ford stand huge estates because these men a real service for a lot of plain It is because they hoisted wholesome standard of living in a country. Thousands of men done the same thing on a scale and profited hand¬ Actually, the thing that inspires inventors to invent, the that fires scientific explorers explore, is the change to earn a free people the rich reward a valuable service. Once upon time in the United States of Amer¬ men who had ideas could afford develop them. They can’t do it How I hope those days soon Big Ideas on Sale Edison, McCormick and Ford need to hawk their ideas, nei¬ did Bissell, Denton, Parker and but Foster Gunnison had sell his. Gunnison’s inventions later. Do you ask, “Who Is Gunnison man?” Well, he is a inventor, not yet famous. But, I miss my guess, he is Amer¬ post-war Henry Ford. Gunnison invented a prefabricated and worked out a plan to build in mass production. His units scientifically constructed, insu¬ built in, thoroughly modern every detail. Individually, his models are so different that a might drive past 100 of them a row and never guess that they drawn by the same architect. Alike and Different I could talk for hours about Gun¬ houses. They come in eight with great variety in looks. are far better than any house to build of old-line materi¬ In any community for the same They have everything from to garbage grinder, econo¬ and convenience; a poor man’s amortized to $1 a day. But inventor sold to the U. S. Steel He lacked capital and, under to¬ tax laws, never could make profit. The giant corporation run the project in the red and early losses from war profits, of which the government will anyway. Unless our war-time laws are changed, every fertile In this inventive nation will to hatch under the wing of huge corporation that exists al¬ FOR SALE THE J. B. BOYD PLACE Located on 'the East Brow of Sand Mountain. New house fine water; 64% acres fine land; % mile from Chris¬ tian’s Store. H. F. ALLISON Trenton, Georgia 0 oqqooqQQOGQQQQQQQOOO Q^ Pure Drug*— 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. ~HEADACHE Capudinc relieves headache fast because it's liquid. Its In¬ gredients are already dissolved —all ready to begin easing the pain. It also soothes nerve ten¬ sion due to the pein. Use mu id only es directed. 10c, 30c, 60c APUDIN New Higher Pay for the Army! NEW PAY SCALE IN ADDITION TO CLOTHING, FOOD, LODGING, MEDICAL AND DENTAL CAKE, AND UBERAL RETIREMENT PRIVILEGES Starting Monthly Retirement Income Afler: Base Pay 20 Years’ 30 Years’ Master Sergeant Per Month Service Service or First Sergeant $165.00 $107.25 $185.63 Technical Sergeant 135.00 87.75 151.88 Staff Sergeant . . 115.00 74.75 129.38 Sergeant .... 100.00 65.00 112.50 Corporal .... 90.00 58.50 101.25 Private First Class 80.00 52.00 90.C0 Private..... 75.00 48.75 84.38 IN ADDITION TO COLUMN ONE OF THE ABOVE: 20 % Increase for Service Overseas. 50% Increase if Member of Flying or Glidar Crews. 5% Increase in Pay for Each 3 Years of Service, of Enlistment 1. Enlistments for IV 2 , 2 or 3 years. (One-year enlistments per¬ mitted for men now in the Army with 6 or more months of service.) 2. Enlistment age from 18 to 34 years inclusive (17 with parents’ consent) except for men now in Army, who may reenlist at any age, and former service men depending on length of service. 3. A reenlistment bonus of $50 for each year of active service since such bonus was last paid, or since last entry into service, provided re¬ enlistment is within 90 days after last honorable discharge. 4. Up to 90 days’ reenlistment furlough with pay, depending on length of service, with prescribed travel allowance paid to home and return, for men now in the Army who reenlist. 5. Consult your Army Recruiting Officer for other furlough privileges. 6. Mustering-out pay (based upon length of service) to all men who are discharged to enlist or reenlist. * 7. Option to retire at half pay for the rest of your life after 20 oooooooooooooo o oooooooooooooo oo coooooccoooocoooq: Attention Motorists! W/’HEN jour Auto or Truck needs at ten- ™ it Expert Repairman. tion bring to an WE ARE EQUIPPED to give the auto or truck that it may be months before it can he replaced with a new one, the ex¬ pert attention that it requires to keep it in tip-top condion. Our prices are most reasonable, and we are in a position to install most critical parts. GIVE US A TRIAL Dewell Breedlove's Garage Next to Kyzer’s Service Station TRENTON GEORGIA . ’gOOOl X EO O O O OOOOOOQOOOOOOiO O OOOOOOCOOSQOOOOOCCeOOOOLJ READY TO MAKE THE TRIP FOR YOU TO THE BANK. We are always glad to see our friends in per¬ son, but if for any reason it isn’t convenient to come into the bank— send your deposits by mail. Your inquiries are invited. AMILTON NATIONAL BANK Of CHATTANOOGA fENNESSE* Main at Market—East Chattanooga— Market at Seventh 1424 McCallle—Rossville, Ga.-Tenn.—22 Frazier Ave. 3200 Brainerd Road Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Member Federal Reserve System Subscribe To The DADE COUNTY TIMES years’ service—increasing to three- quarters pay after 30 years’ service. (Retirement income in grade of Master or First Sergeant up to $185.63 per month for life.) Ail previous active federal military ser¬ vice counts toward retirement. C. Benefits under the GI Bill of Rights assured for men who enlist on or before October 5, 1946. 9. Choice of branch of service and overseas theater (of those still open) on 3-year enlistments. ENLIST NOW AT YOUR NEAREST U. S. ARMY RECRUITING STATION A GOOD JOB FOR YOU U# S. Army MicVD ffiii'i'. FIHE t* - f*HOPE$SI0f/ NbvVf