FNP 51 Page 22 knows where every penny is going. She won't spend a copper penny on anything that's not an absolute necessity. So, she's really kind of fallen in there. P: So she took over that paper? G: She became our bookkeeper and our general manager. We moved these two papers in, and then I stopped publishing the Carrier on Fridays and came back to once a week with the Madison County Carrier and moved in the Madison Enterprise Recorder (from also a Wednesday publication because we [were] butting heads, Wednesday-Wednesday) to a Friday publication. So, rather than putting out two Madison County Carriers, one on Wednesday and one on Friday, we're now putting one Madison County Carrier out every Wednesday and a Madison Enterprise Recorder out every Friday. The Madison Enterprise Recorder carries certain columns every week, that these people that like those columns can look forward to, and weekend-type news. We also carry hard front-page news, the same as the Madison County Carrier does. And we got certain columns [that] run in the Madison County Carrier every week that do not run in the Enterprise Recorder. So, there are two separate banners in one respect, but they are still owned by us. P: When you started out, what were your ultimate goals for that paper? G: I guess I kept telling myself that I wanted to show my daddy and my mother that I could do it on my own and that I wanted to prove this to the other people. I guess the real bottom line was that I proved to myself that I could make it. I guess I felt, you know, I had grown up in a family that was driven and had been successful. All of my daddy's eight brothers and sisters in Pavo, Georgia, grew up on a little old tiny farm up there, poor as dirt, and all of them managed to be successful. P: What goals other than personal goals? What did you want this paper to be, to represent? G: I wanted to let the folks of Madison County know that if it happened in Madison County, Florida, they could read about it in the Madison County Carrier, period. I didn't want anything missed, and we worked desperately to cover the county. P: Both when you began and today, what do you consider the most important functions of a newspaper? G: Truth. There's no truth on this planet that I'm afraid of, period, and when I find, especially a government official, elected, hired, appointed, any way, shape, fashion or form, that is not totally leveling with me, I instantly smell a skeleton in his closet, and we don't quit digging till we destroy that closet, or find that skeleton. I think the editorial pages, the letters to the editor, [are] first and foremost. We need pages there that the public can sound off in. We need to be an alarm clock, not to alarm people but to awaken