Newspaper Page Text
* Governor.
THOMPSON
Governor Thompson has made an en¬
viable record in the short period he
has served as your Chief Executive.
He will bring you, in his radio talks
eoch week, specific examples of his
administration's accomplishments, and
he will clearly outline to you his plans
for Georgia's future.
HEAR HIM EACH WEEK
MONDAY NIGHTS 8 to 9 P.
Atlanta WUST
Albany WOPC
Athens WGAU
Augusta WRDW
Brunswick WMOO
Columbus WRBL
Macon WMAZ
Rome WRGA
Savannah WDAR
Valdosta WGOV
Gainesville WGGA
Waycross WAYX
Moultrie WMGA
TUESDAYS 12:00 to 1:00
Augusta WTNT
Albany WALB- -12:30 to 1:30
Columbus WSAC
Savannah WSAV—12:30 to 1:30
Macon WBML
AND YOUR LOCAL STATION
SATURDAYS 4.00 to 5.00
Atlanta WAGA
Albany WALB
Macon WMAZ
SATl RDA'VS 4:00 to 5:00
Savannah WTOC
Columbus WDAK
Augusta WGAC
AND YOUR LOCAL STATION
ELECT
THOMPSON
GOVERNOR SEPT. 8
>00000 0 0300000 0 000 0 0 0 0 0 5
Health Through Chiropractic
DR. G. K. MacVANE
CHIROPRACTOR
PH YSIO—THERAPY
Natural Curative Methods
OFFICE HOURS 9 am.-5 p m.
(Closed Thursdays)
"20 North Gault Phone 445
At Mill Crossing—Fort Payne
8 Alabama
OSOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQOO OOOC
. . . HELPFUL HINTFOR
A CHAMPION, I HOME TOWN
*
Sttcounoye necu
o&wice <utd
When folks can find in town the
things they want to buy, they
won’t go to big cities to do their
shopping. This keeps money cir¬
culating in town, and everybody
in town benefits!
A Champion Home Town rec¬
ognizes the fact that service estab¬
lishments provide jobs and in¬
comes, just as small industries do.
So check your service stores and
shops—shoe repair, overnight laun¬
dries, dry cleaners, barber shops,
freezer-lockers, auto repair, etc.
Make sure your town offers enough
of these important facilities for its
size and needs.
4?
C.O* v-
•
v . GEORGIA POWER COMPANY
“Deviate k
Piney Grove News
Mrs. I. J. Orton
i mty Drove Baptist Church
.,ih ii.cci at 9:00 A. M. C. S. T.
ouiiuuy Jury id lor a picnic at
..iuos Boads at Sulphur Springs.
a.-v. Pearl Tinker in charge.
I Con Hampton is still at Newell
sanitarium doing fairly well.
Mr. and Mrs. C. W Taylor have
returned from Jacksonville, Fla.,
alter spending their vacation and
visited Mr. and Mrs. Tom Taylor.
Mr. Aivin Taylor spent the
week end with his sister, Mrs.
i'Jnzabetn.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Pryor ol
Cliat.anooga and Mr. and Mrs.
John Dennis of Chattanooga
.pent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
LiuKe Sullivan.
Mxs. Annie Broom taken ill at
Piney Church Sunday, was
taken to the home of her brother,
| Mr. Tom Taylor. She seems to
be a little better Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Medley and
chi.dren and Mrs. L. A. Mitchell
-.pent Sunday with Mrs. Lydia
Allison at New England.
Miss Carolyn Henson of Nash¬
ville spent the week end with
Miss Anna Gene McDonald.
Charles McDonald has return-
d home from Chattanooga. He
p<jnt a, week with his sister,
drs. G. D. Clark.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Mahan and
children visited Mrs. Mahan’s
parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. L.
Simpson of South Trenton Sun¬
day.
Rev. and Mrs. Pearl Tinker
.vent to the home coming Sunday
fternoon at New England.
Mrs. Bell Haswell end J. S
larp of Rossville, Ga., spent
• he week end with Mr. and Mrs
L. Tinker.
Mrs. T. A. Conner and children
pent a week with her sister, in
Chattanooga, Mrs. Margaret
Burke.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Pryor were
shopping in Chattanooga Thurs¬
day.
Mr. Gene Andrews from Bob
Tones College and Miss Ros<
Wilkerson of Athens, Georgia
have just closed a very success-
ul vacation bible school. Whilt
here Mr. Andrews was a house
■uest of Rev. and Mrs. Pear
Tinker and Miss Wilkerson with
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Pryor
Mr. and Mrs. Farrell Bradford
ad as their guests Sunday Mr.
nd Mrs. Will Hartline and
hi’dren and Rev. Howell, Pastor
the Woodlawn Baptist Church
Miss Connie Johnson is visiting
Miss Jauntia Sammon at Mill-
stead, Georgia.
Times of general calamity and
■onfusion have ever been pro
ductive of the greatest minds
The purest ore is produced fror
the hottest furnace, and the
brightest thunderbolt from th<
darkest storm.—Colton.
COL'NTY TIMES, TRENTON. GEORGIA. THURSDAY. JCLY 15, 1948.
THE DADE
Health For All
TB FACTS AND FICTION
One of our great leaders in
modern medicine once ^aiu.
The battle against tuberculosis
,s not a doctor’s affair; it be
,ongs to the entire pubu-
To eradicate tuberculosis in
this country will require the in¬
telligent cooperation of many in¬
dividuals. • And people can lie.p
jefeat tuberuculosis only when
they know and act on correct,
.acts about the disease. Unfor¬
tunately, there are many w.u
.mow nothing about tuberculo¬
id or cling to faise and outmo-
ied notions about it.
One glaringly false idea abou
tuberculosis is that it is inherit-
d. No one inherts TB. Babiet
are not born with it. Tuberculo¬
sis may be caused by gernu
■pread from persons who have i>
to others. If the disease seems
to “run” in a family, it is because
close family contact gives the
germs an opportunity to spread
from the sick person to othai
members of the household.
It was once thought that tu¬
berculosis could be cured only in
the mountains or the desert
dome people are still influenced
iy that notion. Yet we know
day that climate has little to
’o with the cure; that supervis¬
’d medical care and complete
•est anywhere in the country are
/astly more important to cur.
than climate.
Some people remain convinced
~hat tuberculosis attacks only the
ery poor, the young adult and
‘naturally thin” people.’’ Actu¬
ally there are victims of the dis-
every walk of life, every ag r
lase in every walk of life, every
age group and every physical
type.
There is a widespreed notion
hat anyone who looks and feels
healthy must be free of tubercu¬
losis. The disease in its early
;tage has no pronounce outward
symptoms. But by means of r
•hest X-ray, tuberculosis can b
-etected in its early stage
Therefore, even people who seen
'ealthy should get a chest X-raj
at least once a year.
Everyone should know that tu¬
berculosis can be prevented and
that it can be cured. Your fam
llv doctor and your local tub v
miosis association can give voi
additional facts about the dis
ease which will help protect you
against tuberculosis and will en
able you to help prevent th'
spread of this disease which kill?
0 000 Amerisans a year.
This column is sponsored, in
he interest of better health, b'
*he Dade County Tuberculcsi
' -soeiation.
New Fnpfond New'
Mrs. Mary Patterson
Rev. and Mrs. John Merrell of
Tiftonia visited friends here
Saturday afternoon.
Mrs. Joe L. Tatum and son
spent Monday night with her pa
rents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Dun¬
lap, at Henegar, Ala.
Virginia Jo Blevins is spending
the week with Doris North.
Mrs. Annie Conner visited Mrs
l vdia Allison last week.
Mrs. Estelle Lay of Chattanoo¬
ga visited her mother, Mrs. R.
L. Wilson, here recently.
Mr. and Mrs T. A. Hallum of
Chatanooga were recent guests
of Mrs. R. L. Wilson and Mrs
Mary Patterson.
We had a home coming at New
England. It was a good day and
a large crowd enjoyed preaching
and singing during the day.
WINTER GRAZING
No better roughage can be fed
to livestock than lush pasture,
and pound for pound, actively
growing pasture is by far the
most economical milk-producing
feed. Extra water at the right
time, in some form of irrigation,
can increase winter grazing two¬
fold.
CRICKET CONTROL
Crickets in garages and out¬
houses can be destroyed by dust¬
ing cracks and crevices in walls
and baseboards or on floors and
In dark corners with sodium
flouride or sodium flousilicate
powder, but these must not be
"?ed where they can be reached
by children or pets.
WILDLIFE HABITAT IMPROVE
Living conditions that enable
fish and game to find more food
and cover provide them with a
habitat in which they can in¬
crease naturally and with best
results.
land sale
GEORGIA, DADE COUNTY.
By virtue of an order of the
oruinary of said o.ace and coun¬
ty, granted at tne Juiy Term,
ol the Court of c*rcunar>
or baiu County, tne undarsigiicu
ouaruian of Betiy Sue Staten, a
minor oi said County, will onex
ior saie and will sen at pubiu.
uuicry, on the first Tuesaay in
Auguot, ie4a, at ihe courtncuse
cioor in Trenton, Dade County,
creorgia, between tne legal hours
ox ^aie, to the highest and best
mutter ior casii, tne ioaowing de
scnocd land in said county, be¬
ing part of tne corpus oi sail
warus estate, to-wit: —
Three sixteenths (3-16ths)
undivided interest in and to
the following lands, to-
wit:—
FIRST TRACT: Thirteen
acres, more or less, in the
southwest part of Land Lot
I\o. Forty-live (45) in tne
loth district and 4th secaon
of Dade County, Georgia,
Beginning at the Southwest
corner oi said lot; tnenee
North on original line izl)
feet more or iess to a rock
corner; thence East, parallel
with the souih lot line, cross¬
ing the Chattanooga-Birm-
ingham Highway, a total dis¬
tance of 525 feet to the
Northeast corner of the orig¬
inal James Long 5 acre tract;
thence continuing on East¬
ward along the South line of
the Maggie Fischer lands
passing a water oak tree
which is a center line tree
and on to a Black Gum tree,
the Northeast corner of this
tract; thence Southwardly
along the West line of the
Maggie Fischer lands 420
feet more or less to the South
lot line which is the line be¬
tween this property and the
Cureton property; ihenee
West along the Lot Line to
the beginning point. This
tract includes the tract of 5
acres more or less conveyed
by L. H. Payne to James Long
by deed dated August lb,
1883, recorded in deed book I,
page 256, and the tract of 8
acres, more or less, convey¬
ed by M. A. Castleberry to
W. J. W. Jenkins and M. M.
Jenkins by deed dated De¬
cember 13, 1912, recorded in
office of Clerk of Superior
Court of Dade County, Ga.,
in deed book No. 29, page 249.
The mineral interests in said
8 acre tract are excepted.
SECOND TRACT: Part of
Land Lot No. Forty-four
(44) in the 18th district and
4th section of Dade County,
Georgia, beginning at a fence
corner on the East lot line
which is 395 feet more or less
North of the Southeast cor¬
ner of said lot, being the
Northeast corner of the Fis¬
cher tract; thence West-
wardly along the fence
which is on the line between
this tract and the Fischer
tract to the East side of the
Public Road ; thence North¬
wardly along said road to
the South line of what wa:
formerly known as the Bettie
Tinker lands, now the Whit¬
lock lands; thence along the
fence which is on the line
between this tract, and the
Whitlock lands, Eastwardly
to the East lot line of said
Lot 44; thence South along
said lot line to the beginning
point, said tract containing
eleven and six-sevenths
(11-6/7) acres, more or less.
This July 5, 1948. 7-30
GEORGE SLATEN
Guardian of Betty Sue Slaten.
Wildwood Letter
The Ladies Aid of the Wild¬
wood Methodist Church made an
annual trip to Atlanta to meet
at the home of Mrs. J. M. C.
Townsend, last Wednesday July
.. Mr. Uladston Manning wat
die bus driver this year. Wt
uad such a good time, but we hao
our troubles too.
We started bright and eariy
,tt 6 A. M. Everyone was on time
nd we went merrily on oat
.ay. About Cartersville wt
neard a little pop. Bobby Fugatt
said, “That was a blow-out.”
dladston said, “I don't think
o.” But ah me! how wrong can
one be?
The hills got harder and hard¬
er to climb. Then a little piece
from the Bobby Jones golf course
on a long hill, the other tire
which had been carrying the
load gave up and went flat as
a flitter. What a hopeless feel¬
ing it is to have, not one, but
two flat tires.
A kind neighbor there called
a tire company and they sent a
man out to tell us the news
that we must buy two new tires
and tubes.
Well, we spent an hour and 4 r
minutes on that hill, just watch¬
ing the cars go by, but it wasn’t
so bad.
Finally we got to Eva’';. SV
had made gallons of iced water
which was a good thing, as we
were all dying of thirst.
We hrd a wonderful luneh
The cake for dessert was a birth-
hnne^irur little Mis'-
WPS V - n
“M on that day.
our ree'u’ar mee’ine
in the afternoon. While we had
on- rnnofjpo- voim" went to
Great Park to swim, etc.
L A N I) S A L E
GEORGIA, DADE COUNTY.
By virtue of an order of the
Ordinary of said btate and Coun¬
ty, granted at the July terra,
1948 of the Court oi ordinary
of said County, the undersignea
Guardian of Noah Buckles, a per¬
son of unsound mind of said
County, will ooffer for sale and
will sell, at public outcry, on the
first Tuesday in August, 1948, at
the courthouse door in Tremon,
Dade County, Georgia, between
the legal hours of sale, to the
best and highest didder for cash,
the following described real
propciuy in said county, being
part of the corpus of said Ward s
estate, to-wit:—
An undivided one-twelfth
<l-12th) interest in and to
the following described 1
lands, to-wit:—
FIRST TRACT: All that
part of land Lot No. 158 in
the 19th district and 4th
section of Dade County, Ga.,
which was conveyed by
R. S. Myers and wife Eliza- j
both Myers to J. A. Buckles
by deed dated November 6,
1943, recorded in office of
Clerk of Superior Court of
of Dade County, Georgia, in
deed bcok No. 30, page 97,
containing 24 acres, more or
less, excepting a tract of 10
acres, more or less, which
was sold by J. A. Buckles to
Arnold Daniel by deed dated
November 16, 1943, recorded
in office of Clerk of Superior
Court of Dade County, Geor¬
gia, in deed book No. 30, page
152 and excepting also three
, fronting the
certain tracts on
Mountain Road, one convey¬
ed to Hattie Wilson, one to
Earl McBryar and one to H. 1
B. Buckles, all three tracts
joining each other and con¬
taining altogether a little
less than one acre. The lands
herein described after de¬
ducting said excepted tracts,
containing 13 acres, more or
less, and being known as the
J. A. Buckles Home Place
and being the property upon the
which he was living at
time of his death.
SECOND TRACT: 30 acres,
more or iess, of land Lot. No.
142 in the 19th district and
4th section of Dade County,
Georgia, bounded on the
Nonh, East and South by
original lines of said lot, and
on the West by the hollow
that runs north and south
through said lot. Being the
property conveyed to J. A.
Buckles by R. E. Cole and S.
D. Cole on the 14th day of
September, 1942, and fully
described in security deed
made by the said J. A.
Buckles to the ssiid R. E.
Cole and S. D. Cole which is
recorded in office of Clerk of
Superior Court of Dade
County, Georgia, in deed
book No. 29, page 244. There
is excepted from this tract a
tract of 3 acres, more or less,
off the south part of said
tract which has heretofore
been conveyed by J. A. Buck¬
les to Lee Moore and his
wife, and being the tract
where Lee Moore and wife
now.Jive. 7-30
This July 5, 1948.
MRS. LILLIE HANEY,
Guardian of Noah Buckles
CITATION
GEORGIA, DADE COUNTY.
TO MRS. W. D. PATTON, thq. j
Administratrix, and the Heirs
gt Law of W. D. Patton, de-
ceased:— You hereby notified to be j
are
and appear at the August Term,
1948, of the Court of Ordinary of
said County, to show cause, if i
any you can, why said Adminis-
tratrix should not be compelled :
to make titles to A. J. Clark as i
provided in a certain contract
for sale executed by W. D. Pat¬
ton to the said A. J. Clark on
July 2, 1946.
This July 2, 1948.
J. M. CARROLL, Ordinary.
We started for home about 5
P. m. Had an uneventful trip
home.
Ii was a most successful trip,
ind everyone seemed to enjoy it
very much. Maybe Gladston
didn’t—as he had to buy two new
tires.
Our next meeting will be a‘
the home of Mrs. Jas. A. Cash
on July 21. All members take
note and try to attend.
WASHING GLOVES
Be sure leather gloves are la¬
beled “washable” before trying
to wash them at home. Kid
gloves and some other kinds of
leather must be dry cleaned
Many gloves of suede, doeskin
capeskin and pigskin are finish-
so that they can be washed and
are labeled accordingly.
Obedience is what makes gov¬
ernment, and not the names fc T
which it is .called.—Burke.
T«ADf-MAml
guYTnFwatchYhof^ AVANS, GEORGIA
Precision Watch Repairing and \di
u *■ *
GENEARL LATHE WORK
Gun Stocks Made—and Parts
LOCATED NEAR OAK GAP
* A A A A
A ^
x» c oooc<300 00 0occ>oooc^^cc^y.t^oryr:.r-^r^.
|
Doors, Windows, Screens,
MADE TO YOUR SPECIFICATION,
Ask For Estimate On Your Require^
W. M. DOWDEY
Contractor and Builder
In the New Concrete BuiUl ng Opposite the fn
TRENTON, n P St ’
GEORGIA
<»s>;o©©oao©ooc©ecwooc-3CK.acoouc
INSURANCE REAL ESTApI
Complete Coverage Peal Estate
— on —
Fire & Automobile Listings
Policies Wanted
H. F. ALLISON
TIMES BUILDING TRENTON, CEORG
REG. NO. ni
Lookout Valley Drug Company
SAM STEFFNER, GRADUATE PHARMACIST
SERVING TIFTONIA
No.
STORE OF FRIENDLY SERVICE
ALADDIN LAMPS
AND SUPPLIES
METAL ROOFING
5 V 25 GA.
CHATTANOOGA HARDWARE COj
2615 BROAD STREET
i#.v4 I* .LxyftfUriililr • P
VISIT YOUR
ardware Store!
FOR
Plumbing Supplies
Electrical Supplies
Fireside Sets
Kitchen Utensils
Kem-Tone and Other Paint
D. D. T. — and
MANY OTHER USEFUL ITEMS
Morrison Hardware
& Supply Cc.
“QUALITY GOODS AT Georgia LOW PRICES]
Trenton
REMOVER
HORSES • COWS • HOGS • SHEEP •
DEAD OR INJURED ANIMALS Weighing FREE ^
Within A Tr Mile Radius Removed g
If Not Sleuthed or Decomposed. WE PROMP WILL^ nc Rt ' mOVAL
CHARGES and GUARANTEE ■ _ „
CHAfTANOOGAiRENDE A
3119 ST. ELMO