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TO TRENTON
Yo-nite I dream of
Valley and the hills of home.
And yearn with all my heart to
be there once again,
The only place I call my own,
no matter where I roam.
But ah my longings and my
grievings are in vain.
1 used to wonder if old age could
___ ________ - „
be bothered by such things,
could remember other pla-
ces or departed days!
And its senseless groanings,
could it be a nameless
For forgotten things or friends
long gone away?
I know the answer now, this
lonely bitter night;
I-or where there was pure gold,
now it’s streaked with gray.
I listen to the night bird’s song
far off in pale star light,
And bow my head, for I am old,
my heart is far away.
I see the purple muscadines so
sweet,
Hanging by the waterfall’s
white stream,
And in the quiet little village
streets
I meet old friends I knew ’way
back then.
I wander kneedeep in daisies
beside the creek,
Where long lazy meadows tin¬
kle with bells,
Once more I wade the village
brook with ...v.. tingling ...-o____c feet. --
And lie beneath the ancient elms
where sunlite fell,
ln dappled shadows. And the
lonesome dove
Caused me to dream of unknown
places far away,
Of Heaven, and the strange un-
trodden path of love,
ooooooooooooooooooQQ Qa O&SLSL&JlJULSULSLSLSLSLSLSLSUISLSLSLSLSULSt
FOR YOUR INTERIOR
PAINTING AND PAPERING
CLAUDE L OWENS, JR.
We Serve GOOD FOOD and We ◄
► Appreciate Your Business 4
► TRENTON CAFE 4
► 4
► 4
V
TATUM & CASE RADIO ELECTRIC
TRENTON
RELIABLE RADIO SERVICE
WIRING — INSTALLATIONS
‘« JOOOOOO OO O CO OOOCOPOOQOCOOOOOOOO O OO C OOOOOQOOOOOfl
WANTED! Hundreds of students desiring FREE Radio
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12c to cover mailing cost on complete course under one
cover.
HAZELTON ENTERPRISES
301 Temple Court Building
Chattanooga, 2, Tennessee
iOOOOOOOOOOOG OO Q O OOOOOOCOOOOOQOOOOCOOOOOOOOOOOOOo!
TARPAULINS
FORGES :: ANVILS :: VISES
CORN SHELLERS :: ROOFING
* * * *
CHATTANOOGA HARDWARE CO.
2615 South Broad Street :: Chattanooga Tennessee
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
wwv.vw.vv.-. .• -W.*-
A
DEAD ANIMALS
REMOVED?*^
HORSES • COWS • HOCS • SHEEP • MULES
DEAD OR INJURED ANIMALS Weighing Over 200 Pounds
Within A 30 Mile Radius Removed FREE OF CHARGE
If Not Skmfted or Decomposed. WE WILL PAY PHONE
CHARGES and GUARANTEE PROMPT REMOVAL
__ fl&mm 3-27QR
CHATTANOOGA RENDERING CO.
3119 ST ELMO AVE.
DADE COUNTY TIMES, TR ENTON , G EORGIA, THU RSD AY, SEPTE MBER 26, 1946.
THE
Dreams that were bright and
bold and gay
The little church where good
friends meet,
Keeps coming up before my
sight—
I hear its bell with tones so
sweet,
Calling country folk far and
wide.
i can see the old mill,
Beside the winding willowed
j stream, huts the hills,
jAnd the among
how they haunt me in my
dreams!
For here they dwell, my friends
of old,
Which I shall love down to the
end—
Treasured deeply, like purest
gold,
Dogwood Valley of my dreams.
—Polly.
STAIN REMOVAL
Never use soap in trying to
remove fruit, coffee or tea stains
from clothing and linens, spe¬
cialists of the Agricultural Ex¬
tension Service adivise. Treat
such stains immediately with
boiling water, poured from a
kettle held several feet above
the stained fabric.
SOUP OR BROTH
Meat broth or any clear soup
made of meat and vegetable
juices is a popular first course
for dinner the year around, ac-
cording to nutritionists of the
Agricultural Extension Service.
These nutritious dishes can be
served hot in winter or cold
and jelled during the summer
months.
BAD WEATHER
By Menchew Macbeth
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
She stood near the lunch
counter drinking a glaes of or¬
ange juice, the voico ol the Ne¬
gro was echoing '.'P and down
the building calling out the train
leaving for Jacksonville, 'lheie
was a rush of people in the early
morning hours, and she stood,
empty glass in hand, looking at
Carl Smith’s untidy face- it al¬
most was like the grey of death,
his eyes looked as if he hao been
weeping, so bloodshotten they
were. He would soon be gone—
and she would be on her own
S„r £ “wo'Z ,t
at if they would everl and|
wondered
meet again, the'pain in his heart
was indescribable, the lost feel¬
ing worse than it had ever been
before. “I hate to leave you,”
he said once again. She said
to herself it was the first sensi¬
ble thing she had done since
meeting him, sending him away
without any promise of any
ear. ‘You could go with
if you would, you know,” hel
went on, crushing one cigarette
to light another. “I’d better
not," she said. "I better go on
with what I’ve promised to do ”
■would you take some money
11 I give it to you to keep for
me?” he asked her, taking hold
of her old bag and starting to
open it. “If you want me to
keep it for you, well I guess I
can.” He tucked a bill or two
inside and snapped it shut and
handed it back to her, somehow
this money would serve as a
link between them, a token to j
bring them together again, if
sho had to he felt she’d spend
it if she was the type of woman
ZvT^lZeyVhlnVy met
again, and they’d meet again,
soon too. She was use to peo¬
ple having her keep things for
them, even money, so she tho’t
nothing of it, since she had
come to trust him somewhat.
She stood near the train and
watched him get on—saw him
look once more longingly in her
direction, and the train was
puffing out of the station. She
went back in and sat down near
the telephone and waited for the
woman who wouldn’t come in
for an hour yet. Fainter and
fainter she could hear the whis¬
tle of the train on its way to the
coast and Jacksonville. A great
melancholy filled her soul. “I
sure could cry good this time,”
she thought, “if ony I had a
place to cry.” Instead she al¬
lowed a dozen hot tears to roll
down her cheeks and quickly
wiped them away with her
sleeve. Handkershiefs and hats
were two things she despised, so
she carried neither. “No use
crying over something I can’t
help,” she told herself and pre¬
pared to give her every thought
and energy to the task ahead of
her. If God meant for some
kind fate to step in and help her,
alright—so far there hadn’t
been any help for her—ever.
People had found it easy to cry
on her plump shoulder and she
had never let a person down yet,
but she could not help but in¬
dulge in a bit of purely
wishful thinking once in awhile.
Curiously she drew out the snap¬
shot and held it up before her
unhappy eyes. After a
careful study she mannaged to
smile at the boy and girl there¬
on, then wept—for a
(To be continued)
It is a good practice to re¬
place the laying flock with pul¬
lets each year, poultrymen of
Extension Service say.
SKIRT-TUGGER ?
Is your child irritable, fret¬
ful This —tugging at your is often skirts? the
crossness
sign a laxative is needed.
/%Triena CHILDREN FOR
Most children have times
when faulty elimination
makes them tired, sluggish,
with a coated tongue. When
this happens, remember, the
quick relief Triena brings.
Made with famous senna, it’s
effective, gentle.
TRIENA won’t
1 upset your child.
It tastes good
because it’s
flavored with
pure juice. prune 30c,
large Use size
50c. as
directed on > .
label.
Dade County
Is Planning Soil
Conservation District
(Continued from last week)
Whaf Cooperative Projects Can
p. District Carry On?
A soil conservation district can:
1. Buy equipment for terrac¬
ing and operate it on a self-fi¬
basis to do terracing for
cooperating farmers at the
cost of operating on each
farm.
2. Participate in group drain¬
age projects with the cost being
prorated among the farmers
benefitting.
3. Purchase seeds and plants
and ~ at cost,
*■ nurseriees for pro-
soil conservation seeds
and plants to farmers at cost.
5. Cooperate with any agency
that has something to offer in
assisting farmers to carry on
soil conservation farming.
Are Landowner in a District Re¬
quired to Participate?
No. The district program is
voluntary applying for d.s-
tnc ‘, assistance. No rule or
regulation* “n be made in a
strict unless the majority of
the landowners want it and vote
on ^he ^strict is mdepend-
ent - self-governing, and based
democratic principles It of-
fers a means of getting help co¬
operatively that would be diffi¬
cult for farmers to do individ¬
ually. It is a democracy of the
land, for the benefit of the soil
and the people who make their
living therefrom.
There are other advantages to
be derived from a soil conserva¬
tion district, but we are of the
opinion that the foregoing will
be a sufficiency for all progress¬
ive farmers who love their land
lihood therefrom, to investigate
fully and join hands with their
neighbor farmers for the com¬
mon good.
CANNING MEATS
Canning meat in the home is
a safe and profitable practice
for spreading the meat supply
throughout the year if a steam
pressure cooker is used and if
the meat is processed properly,
according to food preservation
specialists of the Agricultural
Extension Service.
Buy Victory Bonds
Toys, Toys! Toys!
We have been very fortunate in
purchasing a large supply of
TOYS
BEFORE the Increase in Price, and urge every¬
one to Buy Now and Save Money.
A DEPOSIT WILL HOLD ANYTHING!
We Have Dolls... All Sizes... Scooters... Trucks
Games... and Practically Every Kind of Toy Imaginable.
Onr Prices Are BELOW the Market!
So Come Early, Select your Toys and Save Money*
Kyzer Auto Parts
Trenton, Georgia
SET YOUR SIGHTS
It takes
planning
to achieve
a goal
Some young men know what they want and plan for it. Others are
still looking for their niche. The new Regular Army can help both.
Perhaps you want to go to college but can’t afford it. If you
enlist in the Army, you’ll get your chance. Honorably discharged
after a three-year enlistment, you are eligible for 48 months of edu¬
cation at any college, trade, or business school for which you can
qualify. The Government will pay vour tuition, laboratory fees,
etc., up to $500 per ordinary school year, plus $65 a month living
allowance—$90 a month if you have dependents.
If you haven’t found your spot, an Army enlistment offers you
training in any of 200 trades and skills. You leave the service eligible
for further training at the best civilian schools.
You can assure yourself of the benefits of the GI Bill of
Rights if you enter the Army on or before October 5, 1946.
See your nearest Army Recruiting Station for details.
of regular army
1. Enlistments for IV 2 , 2 or 3 years.
(1-year enlistments permitted 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 reenliatment bonus of $50 for
each year of active service since such
bonus was last paid, or since last
entry into service, provided reenlist¬
ment is within 3 months after last
honorable discharge.
MONTHLY
NEW, HIGHER PAY FOR ARMY MEN Starting RETIREMENT
Bate Pay INCOME AFTER:
In Addition to Food, Lodgint, Per 20 Yeart ’ 30 Yeart'
Clothes and Medical Care Master Sergeant Month Service Service
Addition Column One or First Sergeant £165.00 £107.25 £185.63
In to Technical Sergeant 135.00 87.75 151.88
at the Right: 20% In¬ Staff Sergeant 115.00 74.75 129.38
crease for Service Over¬ « .
seas. 50 % Increase if Mem¬ Sergeant .... 100.00 65.00 112.50
ber of Flying or Glider Corporal .... 90.00 58.50 101.25
Crews. 5% Increase in Pay Private First Class 80.00 52.00 90.00
for Each 3 Years of Service Private 75.00 48.75 84.38
May Be Added. ....
Listen to: "Warriors of Peace," "Yoke of A GOOD JOB FOR YOU
fhe Army" "Proudly We Hail," and Major II. S. Army
Football Broadcasts on your radio.
ENLIST NOW AT YOUR NEAREST i 1 CHOOSE THIS
RECRUITING STATION FINE PROFESSION NOW!
U.S. ARMY
215 Post Office Building ROME
* GUARANTEED USED WATCHES—At Used Watch Prices 4
Precision Watch Repairing and Adjusting 4
A Trial Will Convince You a
TRENTON WATCH SHOP
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA^ Trenton, Georgia *
4. A furlough for men who reenliit
within 20 days. Full details of other
furlough privileges can be obtained
from Recruiting Officers.
5. Mustering-out pay (based upon
length of service) to all men who
are discharged to enlist or reenlist.
6. Option to retire at half pay for
the rest of your life after 20 years'
service—increasing to three-quarters
pay after 30 years’ service. All pre¬
vious active federal military service
counts toward retirement.
7. Choice of branch of service and
overseas theater (of those still open)
on 3-year enlistments.