Newspaper Page Text
June 16.19^?
i® CD ral for
Mrs. J. J- Austin
loved Conyer» Woman
pit, At An Atlanta
Hospital.
services for Mrs. John J
Z fla i woman who
^oved Conyers
" Atlanta hospital Sunday,
in an Tuesday afternoon at
* ‘ Hill in Atlanta, Rev. C. C.
108 officiated. Interment was
kale«' ithonia cemetery.
L. Live i ,
of Doraville, Mrs. Aus
‘ /’.“tv h ”d lived near and Conyers her associa- for the
Lh years throughout this
' the people most loved
Ids her one of the of Georgia,
„ in this section
the mother of Hal Austin,
was and her hus
ivers postmaster, known farmer of
id is a well
-.kdtle County. The many ex
of s.vmpathy from friends
dons Georgia a token of
Uhout was
I esteem in which she was held.
L de her husband and son, she
Lvived by her two sisters, Mrs.
b Mobley, of Conyers, and Mrs.
j McGahee, of Tucson, Arizona;
granddaughter, Miss Mariann
!
tin. of Conyers.
r. Harvey Clark
Vi Deliver Message
jrty years in Japan as a mis
ary will furnish the background
the special message to be de
ed Sunday morning at 11:30
the Baptist Church. At the
f hour fathers’ will be given
,j a l recognition. All of the fath
m the city and surrounding
imunity not otherwise engaged
vorship are urged to attend thi»
ial service.
'he Conquest of Christ In the
nt” will be the subject' of the
rung hour. At the evening hour,
H p r Clark will give a lecture
Ktrated by electric slides. Tnis
|ice will be of special interest
Luse of the pictures and all ages
[invited. The and children will are be urged given
Aral be present
Lnday attention.
School will meet as usual
*10:30, L? and Training Union at
ie Vacation Bible School has
Hhine I jking lied daily 140 students at the Baptist with all Church classes
o’clock.
Smyrna And
Q fcmvrna Lithonia Presbyterian Churches Church
Hgular I third Sunday services will
held in the Smyrna Presbyterian
Larch on next Sunday, June 19th.
■day School will meet at ten
■y. At the morning worship hour
■pastor will preach on "The City
■Truth.’ Afternoon worship Will
In at three-thirty.
■'ervone is cordially invited to
■hip God in these services. A
Borne is assured.
■ithonia Presbyterian Church
Bering I worship will be held in
Litimnia Presbyterian Church
Bcxt Sunday, June 19th, at eight
Bek. The pastor wall preach.
Bay School will begin promptly
Bine-forty-five.
Ir and Mrs. Guy Stowers had as
r guests Sunday and Monday
and Mrs. Page Pryor of Vienna.
Pryor is the brother of Mrs.
r ers.
•Ith-Wrecking Functional
PAINS
pvere tion, functional cramping spells pains and of men
| jan
nerves scon rob a woman of her
pal, in youthful freshness. PAIN
p into a woman’s face too often
r AGi. lines!
pousands lipful of women have found
to take Cardui. They say
pemed to ease their pains, and
[ fctites nriiced and finally an increase strengthened in their
a
Itance to the discomfort of
ply p Cardui. periods.
O; course if it doesn’t
you, see yr'tr doctor.
rr—"v
i o' Futures I
:
A Depend
I'l.VV j On I
V< sit
I sil II Homes
^PPmess, security, comfort . . . they spring from
r “ams and hopes into the realism of the finished
‘fucture. Few things in life provide a greater thrill
an moving into a home of your own, and now, when
• opportunity presents itself, you t________ shouldn’t fail to
e advantage of it. We offer a complete building
j-’rvice at prices you can afford.
Phone Number 31 for All Information
ampbell Lumber Co.
^HONE 31 COVINGTON
(Our Advertisers Are Assured of Results)
>< ECAL
oncEs
APPLICATION FOR CHARTER
GEORGIA, NEWTON COUNTY.
To the Superior Court of Said
bounty:
The petition of JOHN E. GAY,
of Newton County, Georgia, H. A.
WADE, of Fulton County, Geor
gia, and W. P. RAYMOND, of
Mecklenburg County, N. C., re
spectively shows to the court as
(1) That the petitioners desire
for themselves and their associ
ates and successors to be incorpo
rated under the name and style
of SOUTHERN SHADES –
BLIND MFG. COMPANY for a
period of twenty years with privi
lege of renewal at the expiration
of that time.
(2) The object of said corpora
tion is pecuniary gain to itself and
stockholders.
(3) The principal business to be
carried on by said corporation is:
(a) The manufacture of vene
tian blinds, fabricated wood-slat
shades and any and all other types
of products made of wood or other
materials as may be undertaken
during the existence of said corpo
ration
(b) To apply for, buy, acquire,
sell, assign, lease, pledge, mort
gage or otherwise dispose of let- j
ters of patent of the United States
or of any foreign country, or any
rights, territorial or otherwise,
thereunder.
(c) To apply for, acquire, hold,
1 sell, assign or lease, mortgage or
otherwise dispose of patent rights,
license privileges, inventions.
trademark, trade names and pend
ing applications therefor relative
to or useful in connection with any
business of the corporation.
(d) To conduct a general . mer
j cantile business and to buy, sell,
a nd dispose of goods of its manu
facture or of other manufacture,
0 f any articles necessary and prop
er or desired in connection with
said business.
( e ) To purchase, improve, de
j velop, hold and enjoy ground real estate lease
in fee simple, Upon
or rent; to lien, mortgage or sell
the same and such parcel or par
cels, improved or unimproved, and
on such terms as to time and man
ner of payment as may be agreed
upon.
(f) To have such other and
further powers and authority as
now or may hereafter be granted
to corporations for profit under
the laws of the State of Georgia,
(4) The Capital Stock of said
corporation shall be Five Thou
sand Dollars, consisting of:
( a ) 20 Shares of Preferred
Stock, (Series "A”) of par value
$100.00 each, bearing 7% interest,
payable annually out of the net
profits of Corporation; otherwise
accumulative;
(b) 30 Shares of Preferred
Stock, (Series “B”) of par value
$100.00 bearing 8% interest, pay
able quarterly (guaranteed) (Re
deemable at option of Corporation
after one year at 105% of par
j value).
(c) 150 Shares of Common Stock
j of no par value.
Petitions desire privilege of is
suance of above stock either for
cash or properties of any nature
taken upon a fair valuation to be
fixed by the Corporation by reso
lution of the Common Stock Hold
ers or by the Board of Directors.
(5) The principal place of bus
iness of said ..Corporation shall be
in Newton County, Georgia, but
petitioners desire that said corpo
ration shall have the right and
power, by vote of the majority of
the Directors thereof, to establish
and maintain such branch offices,
either within or without the State
of Georgia, as it may desire.
(6) Petitioners desire for Said
Corporation a right to make all
necessary By-Laws and regula
tions, and the right and power to
apply for and procure and accept
amendments tc its charter, and
to make any changes in its busi
ness as may be voted upon by a
majority of the holders of its com
mon stock.
(7) Petitioners pray that this
petition be filed and recorded, as
provided by Law, and that an
order be passed incorporating
them under the above corporate
name, and with the rights, priv
ileges and powers as prayed for
in this petition. GAY,
JNO. E.
Attorney for the Petitioners
Filed in office this the 23 day
of April, 1938.
C. O. NIXON,
Clerk Superior Court,
Newton County, Georgia
GEORGIA, NEWTON COUNTY.
I, C. O. Nixon, Clerk of the Su
perior Court of Newton County,
Georgia, do hereby certify that the
foregoing is a true and correct
urged to attend this Commence
ment Service. A free will offering
will be received to cover expenses
of the school. About thirty-five dol
lars will be needed.
Any practice that slows down the
I cutting effect of rushing water
means that more soil on sloping land
t will stay in place.
Marriage of Miss
Sara E. Jernigan
To W. C. Stewart
The marriage of Miss Sarah Eve
Jernigan to William Clark Stewart
was solemnized Wednesday after
noon, June 15th at 5:30 o’clock at
the home of the bride's parents.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Eve Jernigan, In
White Plains. Rev. E. A. Cottrell
officiated in the presence of a group
of friends and relatives.
The ceremony was performed in
the living room before an improvised
altar arranged with smilax, ferns.
lilies, and seven branched candlebra j
holding white tapers.
Miss Marguerite McCrary present
ed a program of nuptial music, dur
ing which the candles were lighted
by Dorothy Colquitt and Donald
Stewart. For the entrance of the
bridal party she played the Lohen
grin Wedding march.
Mrs. Charles J. Colquitt, aunt of
the bride, acted M matron of honor,
Miss Mary Jernigan, the bride’s only
sister, was her maid of honor. They
were dressed alike in gown., of
aquamarine net over taffeta with
puffed sleeves and full skirts. Com
pleting their costumes were soft
veils of net caught to the top of
their heads with clusters of dainty!
yellow flowers. Their slippers were
of yellow satin, and they carried
cascade bouquets of yellow gladioli
and sweet peas.
The bride entered with her father.
Paul Eve Jernigan. by whom she
was given in marriage. They were
joined at the altar by the groom
and his best man, Harry Canty
Stwart.
The bride's titian beauty was ac
centuated by her wedding gown of
ivory satin embroidered with seed
pearls, fashioned with high bodice
and circular train. Her veil of illu
sion tulle was caught to her hair
with a circlet of orange blossoms.
Immediately following the beauti
ful ring ceremony, Mr. and Mis
Jernigan were hosts at an informal
reception in compliment to the
bride and groom, the wedding party
and out-of-town guests.
In the dining room the bride s
table was overlaid with a lace cloth
and centered with a three tiered
cake, decorated with calla lilies and
orange blossoms. A shower of white
satin ribbon and lilies of the valley
bung from the chandelier above the
bride's table.
Mrs. Hugh Hicks and Miss Reba
Westbrook presided at the punch
table. Miss Evelyn Jernigan kept
the guest book which was the same
used seventeen years ago at the
celebration of the golden wedding
anniversary of the bride's paternal
grand-parents.
Mrs. Jernigan, mother of the
bride, gowned in blue lace wore a
corsage of pink roses and valley
lilips. Mrs. Stewart, mother of the
groom wore a model of blue crepe
with a shoulder cluster of pink roses.
Following the reception, Mr. and
Mrs. Stewart left for their wedding
trip, after which they will be at
home in Atlanta. For traveling the
bride wore a Parisanne ensemble
with accessories of white and a
corsage of talisman roses.
Commencement For
The Bible School
On next Friday night, June 24th.'
the Commencement exercises for
the Community Bible School will be
held in the Conyers Baptist church.
Beginning at eight o’clock.
An interesting program showing
the work done in the school will
be given. Then each department will
have its individual exhibit of hand
work in the departmental rooms.
A splendid school with a hundred
and twenty-five pupils in progress.
Those in charge of departments are:
Mrs. Bob Elliott, Beginners; Mrs.
Ralph Beasley, Primary; Miss Sarah
McDowell. Juniors; and Mrs. T. H.
Barksdale, Intermediate. These lead
ers are assisted by an able staff of
twenty or more volunteer teachers.
Everyone interested in the religious
development of our young people is
THE COVINGTON NEWS
| Men Who Were Marred
copy of the application for Char
ter of the SOUTHERN SHADES'
– BLIND MFG. COMPANY, a*
same appears on file in this office.
Witness my official signature
and the seal of this Court, this
April 26, 1938.
C. O. NIXON,
Clerk Superior Court,
Newton County, Georgia.
CITATION
Georgia ’ Newton County,
whom it Mav Concern:
chaIe-s H Ec h 0 ls Jr having in
form app]i ed to me for per
ma „ ent Lettera of Administration
on thg estate Qf cbar)es H . Echols,
j te Q{ SRid coun ^ v deceased. This
l^creditors and'next'of kin o/said j
, , ’ t show cause if any they
be » or . *h e nex t term of
M \ Court of Ordinary to be
I. f{ . Monday m July,
whv Dprmanen t adminlstra
tlon should * pot be granted on said
^ ,
™ , June ’ 6 1 1938
' L ' myo ordinary
CITATION
"... . Newlon County
n,L whom u having may concern i
M Gaither in due form
* P ^ the £ guardianship Robert
f e person and pr per ty of
minor child of Othis :
i^nn/ . . deceased on _ notice is hereby
. .^the ^ h application CoS will be
next of Ordinary
‘ county on the first Mon
R j ulv 193 8.
_ , June ’ g 1933
^ ^ lqyd Ordinary.
ADMi.MMKAiuKs ahministr \TOR’S SALE
Georgla , Newton County,
Undgr and by vjrtue of an ordPr
gd by Baldwin county Court
of ordinary will be sold before the
CouJ t thouse door In Covington, New
ton Count Georgia on the first Tues
day jn July 193g within the legal
hQurs Qf sa]e at pub i ic outcry to the
highest bidder, the following describ
^ land as property of the estate
Qf Mfs Lizzie Loyd B iackwell, de
ceased, to wi .
A one-fourth undivided interest
d t An that tract or parcel
the^^own f . . , of^Newborn , situated and being in
Newton Coun
Geor „ ia and described as follows
hounded on the north and west by
]ands o{ j j‘ j carter, on the East
b d of R EsteSi ^et. and on the
SQUth by Johnson str Said lot
,
bei Qne Hundred and
geven {eet SQU are, fronting on John
SQn street and on whlc h is located
one frame dwelling, known as the
w g Lovd bome
gtb day of June 193 8
T. E. LOYD, As Admr. Est
of Mrs. Lizzie Loyd Black
well, deceased.
Ill fares the land, to hastening ills a '
prey.
Where wealth accumulates and men
decay.
—GOLDSMITH
Dick Norman
Thus is not the whine or the en
snared culprit who can't take it;
nor is it the pious gesture of the
counterfeit individual who, on enter-1
ing prison, embraces
with fervent hope that it will en- j
hance his chance of parole. The
P urpose th!s article Is to parade
before you some of the outstanding
figures in the world of crime, and
let you thereby be convinced, per
haps ’ of the utter futilit y of a crim -
* naI care * r ' and tbe inevitable
fering and sorrow It entails.
There Is no such thing as a sue
cessfuI crook - ^ world has never
produced one. “What profit It
a U he gain the M world
and yet l0Se hls S0Ul? ’’ Why men
of marke< i cental capacity and en
vlabl * intellectual attainments will
deliberately engage in a life of crime
is ***** tha comprehension of the
norma i mind. Is It because they
cherish a hope of fabuloues rewards
85 the fruits oi th eir nefarious de
sedations? If so, they are chasing
a ™ inbow wHhout an end
Tbere “ about as much chanc,>
a man succeeding in a life of
cldme as there is of his drawing
of the “fourth dimension.
Jimmy Hope was one of the most
skilled and daring bank buglars
with whom the police ever matched
wits. He looted New York's Bank of
Manhattan for more than $1,000,000.
Yet he died penniless, in Sing Sing
Prison, clothed in the garb of a
felon.
The criminal ingenuity of Cassie
Chadwick was of such a character
as to startle and appall. She "trim
med’’ the smartest bankers in Ohio
Ifor millions, lived like a queen for
a moment ana then died - a broken
old w oman In a prison cell,
The newspapers proclaimed Gerald
Chapman a super-criminal, a mast
er-mind. He looted the sacred United
Slates MaU * 101 approximately
$ 3 .°° 0 000 Captured and convicted,
he was shunted off to the Atlanta
j Penitentiary^ for a long term of
J' ears Shortly after his impnson
ment he P lanned and executed one
i of the most daring and sensational
Pre-cooling helps such produce as
green peas, celery, broccoli,
asparagus and other vegetables
arrive at market in a good condi
tion.
SEE IT AT THE COOKING SCHOOL AND LEARN WHY!
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Electric Sales
(Largest Coverage Any Weekly In the State)
escapes in American prison annals, j
He was later captured and condemn
™ to dea.h for murdering a police
man.
Divested of the garish glitter and
the tawdry glamour that once clothed
his flagitious, but meteoric career,
broke and unfrlended-he died,
dangling at the end of a rope.
As a safe cracker, “Canada
Blackie" stood without a peer. His
was international in its
SC0 P«- In hi « wanderings about the
world he left a string of looted
safes in his wake. Broken in both
body and mind, without a dollar or
a friend. he died in Sing Sing Pri
son a few years ago whispering to j
his pals, “Boys, the game ain't worth
the while."
°l e am Minor “ {
America n * rattl s f ra pict^Mque ^ crook^ ™ C * H.st- “ "
l00t ran ln to the The b _ best
Kars of h; ;9 life were spent on the
u“*^ efti 1 8 s , a « " .nrt hi, mnnev
gone, he died in a So unuthern “ tbem b orison °"
a fe ". yea ”
tb , « Christten chari■»*«* a„n a
'
the heart of gold beneath the soiled „ nj ,„,
ex erior, was e sav
behind prison walls.
A1 Capone was for many years
the over-lord of gangland. Machine
guns roared his mandates, and po
litical pundits were at his beck and I
call. He well might have said with!
Louis XV., “The law! I am the law!”
The Amarican public stood stunned
and benumbed with amazement when
the Federal Government sent him,'
In chains, to bleak Alcatraz Prison.
Today, with his mind cracked and
his reasoning faculties gone, he j
babbles like a drooling imbecile as
he ceaselessly paces the limited
length of his narow cell on that
grim, fog-enshrouded rock in San
Francisco bay.
One of the most potent and pa
thetic pictures of the dead-sea fruits
of a life of crime is that of the two
Bidwell brothers, (Americans, they
were) who, through forgery, “clipped"
the staid and stable Bank of England
for $5,000,000. They fled to_Cuba.
where they lived in opulence until
captured by the Pinkertons. After
spending long years in an English
prison they died in Montana a few
years ago. One died of tuberculosis
contracted while in prison, and
within twenty-four hours after his
death his brother followed him to
the grave-dead of a broken heart
The fraternal attachment between
those two boys was sublime
beautiful to behold. They stole a
Union Community
The Union Home Improvement
Club taught by Mrs. Guy Stowers of
Conyers met at the home of Mrs.
Ca ^ 1 Ray ^ Tuesday afternoon
and reorganized for this summer,
The members decided to collect
dues from any member being absent
or late. This money to be used for
some improvement in the club house.
Miss Loucille Hammond and Mrs.
million, yet when they died they
were without sufficient funds to pay
the cost of their burial—and each
sank into a nameless grave.
Possibly “Canada Blackie" had
visioned the true path through life,
when from that foul, fetid cot in
Sing Sing Prison, swaying precari
ously on the brink of that Unknown,
he whispered hoarsely to his pals’,
“Boys, the game ain't worth the
while."
ITTAKESASTMl m m m
To PLAY THE
in the Cooking Motion School {W • n i
The story of "Star in My Kitchen” wouldn’t ring true
if flour of uncertain quality were used in the baking
scenes It takes a flour like Pillsbury’s Best to assure th®
,
fine baking results that give point to the story.
And in your own kitchen, it’s just as important to use
fine flour if you want your baking to turn out perfectly
—every time.
Pillsbury’s Best gives superior results because the wheats
that go into it are tested and blended with scientific pre
cision — and because its quality never
varies.
Why take ehances when Pillsbury’s Best
Flour costs so little more per recipe?
Ask your grocer for Pillsbury’s Best! #!■
\ xxxx / 5
,
PAGE ELEVEN
Prank Morris were ejected to take
charge of recreation. Mrs. Keen in
charge of magazine exchange and
Mrs. Arthur Toney in charge of good
cheer.
These meetings will be held regu*
i ar through June and July at the
C luh house at Union church. Every
body of this community is invited
1 to to these meetings.
come
- - ------------- — ■ —
hi m .............
THE BEST
IN TOWN FOR
DAD’S DAY
IS AT
| White’s