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ICKOITS
- By -
ION KINNEY
fever . . . Some
■j weather . . . Others
•X n d fishing weather,
just plain ol<1 la y
^B>ck'' weather . . . it _
-
Hg weather dates for than Snig he
Hat more
he has decided to
teeth put in . •
Knty Hnds of knock, knocks
after those ser
Wonder how
ere are in the "be-
1 ? . The Oxford
.
ville S. C., will hold
at Mill Church Satur
t 7:30 o'clock , . •
vited to attend . . ■
[from South Carolina
[ until Sunday and and
■village who can
m share their home
lirday L nite . . ■ Here
that we truly ap
Ki v:
oo much to ask you
something in your
ir ^■this ^Hxpress week? apprecia
our
^Kks Hin to each play, to person the
our
or ^ftperating ■ so their beauti- at
and in
at B, the merchants who
a] dated your kind as
way.
t yours,
vington Mill School.
Ft
hsure for me to co
'it Bie school and Mrs.
[mail way that. I did
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EN E.
WELL
Bp 169-W
GA.
W. C, MgGAHEE, agent
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NSURANCE /
PUBLIC SQUARE
MRU 111 I 111 COVIMTOH, 6A.
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C. MEADORS
I —TRANSFER
m Covington • Atlanta
F l ■liable Efficient
Registered Truck*
Certificate No. Ill
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ONE 154 -W NIGHT PHONE 154 -J
hulance Service Day and Night
yd St. Covington, Ga.
TT>tfr A«*e¥H**r» Xr® Assured of
Boy Scouts Building World’s Fair; Gimp
BOY SCOUT CAMP
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Layout of the two-acre Boy Scout camp at the NwYiJ ^ W °° d,ffefC *‘ SCl ' U ‘ S “ d
tea ion.
. . . Will say that the play as a
whole was grand ... All the kids
did swell and we are looking for
ward to more school plays . . . They
expand the education of the kids
and give us all good entertainment.
In cleaning the brooder house
with cement or wooden floor, try
using one can of lye mixed with
20 gallons of hot water, and scrub
the floor with this solution.
If the sitting hen is bothered with
mites, paint, the nest box with car
bolineum, carbo soda or oil of creo
sote, and use clean straw for nest
ing.
In brooding chicks with hens,
keep the hen confined in a coop and
let tha chicks range outside the
coop Move to fresh ground once
a week.
CLASSIFIED
Rawleigh Route now open. Real op
portunity for man who wants per
manent, profitable work. Sales way
up this year. Start promptly. Write
Rawleigh - *, Dept. GAC1X3-K, Mem
phis, Tenn.
FOR SALE—About 400 barred rock
baby chicks, delivered 28th. S. G.
i,owe, Mansfield 2tml6*
FOR SALE—Crawford Deluxe Elec
tric Range, 1 kitchen cabinet.
Breakfast table, 4 chairs used, 90
days. Good as new. Sell dirt cheap.
Apply J. R. McCord, 'Phone 183-W.
ltcm-16
FOR SALE—P. O. 3. Ribbon Cane
for planting. R. D. Dorsey, Starrs
ville, Ga. 1TP-18
WANTED — General calves 3
months old and up. Reasonably
priced. Heifers preferred. R. D. Dor
sey. Starrsville, Ga. 1TCM-16
FOR SALE—One 8-room house on
Floyd St. Phone 122-J ltml6c
FOR SALE—32 acys of land near
Pine Grove, adjoining Mr. Era
tt Robertson’s farm, Newton
county. Apply Mrs. George Rabun,
Covington, Ga. 3t*M9
FOR RENT — 5-room apartment
with bath, large lot, on Monttcel
lo. Phone 64.
FOR RENT—Six room house. All
modern conveniences, In North
Covington. Apply XZ, Care Coving
t News tfM9
FOR RENT—Rooms or apartment.
furnished or unfurnished, with
water and lights. Mrs. R. L. Paine
Oxford. Ga. 2t-M-9
Any qualified member of the Boy
Scouts of America may apply for an
opportunity to take part in a unique
demonstration and service camp at
the New York World's Fair, Dr.
James E. West, Chief Scout Execu
tive of the National Council, Boy
Scouts of America, ha- announced.
The plan for a Scout camp of ap
proximately 150 different Scouts and
leaders each week, on a two-acre site
within the Fair grounds from April
30 to October 31, was approved by of
formal action of the managers
the World’s Fair Corporation and
the National Council, Boy Scouts of
America.
The camp, so be located immedi
ately adjacent to the Federal Build
ing, will accommodate four Troops
of 32 Scouts and four leaders. Each
site will be equipped with tents of
various colors and designs. There
will be a large tent for the display
of Scouting including woodcraft,
handicraft and campcraft. There will
be opportunity for Troops that
Youth Possess Right to Lead
Own Lives, Asserts Writer
V/
is one of the most necessary and most painful achievements in evolu-
tion.” But painful or not, each par
ent owes it to his child to let him
grow up as an individual in his own
right, to see that he stand* on his
own feet, and that eventually he be
allowed to lead his own life.
And what if the parent is the self
ish, clinging or short-sighted type
who refuses to let the child grow
up normally and find a self-depend
ent life of his own? Ray mono G.
Fuller answers this question in the
March Cosmopolitan in his article,
“Should You Be Weaned from Your
Family, and Why?" He says (to the
growing child):
“In claiming a life of your own,
you are only claiming what right
fully belongs to you. So refuse to be
bullied into feelings of guilt when
you don’t always mind the parental
back-seat drivers."
Each child, Mr. Fuller claims, has
i HE ADVENTURES OF OZZIE Flirting With Trouble
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have produced outstanding articles
of handicraft and campcraft to have the
them shown in this tent at
World's Fair and the exhibit will
represent the finest craftsmanship so
far developed by Scout*.
Near this tent there will be an
open area for flag ceremonies, to
gether with a rustic campfire amphi
theatre for dramatics and other spec
tacular demonstrations and a dining
hail with full equipment.
Totem Pole at Gateway
The gateway is to be an imposing
one with a 40 foot totem pole. The
headquarters building will serve as
the administration center for the
camp, and a stockade will surround
the entire camp area. In line with the
symphony of colors of the World's
Fair the Scout camp will be ^nost
colorful with the flying flags of all
Scout nations waving aloft, a symbol
of world brotherhood and a friendly
greeting to visitors from *11 over
the world.
of our most famous psychologists has said that ’’the detach
ment of the growing individual from the authority of his parents
hi* own personal Bill of Rights in
regards to his parents. These are
the Rights:
1— To refuse to be coddled and
petted,
2— To have friend* of your own
age and choice.
3— To have friends of the oppo
site sex and to “go out” with them.
4— To choose your life work—
and a hobby or two.
5— To choose your mate and
marry.
Another way of winning his free
dom, Mr. Fuller advises the adoles
cent further, is to w’ean his parents
away from him. This method, which
requires great tact, simply means
thinking out way* of lessening 1
by bit parents’ dependence upon the
child, such as diverting their at
lention into other channels.
GOSM, LOOK CUTiES' AT
THOSE TWO
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Porterdale Set
To Stage Boxing
(Continued from Page Ten)
feated the Good Hope team of bas
keleers on the same night the boys
were defeated. The score in this
gam was 23-30 and was featured by
the excellence of the guarding on
both sides. /
Next week will see the final games
of the current basket ball season to
be conducted in the Porter Memorial
Gymnasium, This week will be
featured by a tournament solely for
the championship of Porterdale.
Five teams will be entered as fol
lows:
Four Square Club.
Night Hawks Club.
Osprey Club.
Sportanic Club.
Porterdale Maroons.
The first four clubs will play
amongst themselves for the honor
of playing against the Maroons for
the championship. The last few
days of the week will see a tourna
ment for girls teams which tourna
ment will say adieu to all basket
tossing for 1938-39.
Immediately following basket ball
wrestling and boxing will enter into
the picture in the gymnasium and
soft ball and bat tennis on the out
door playing fields. A ring is being
built at the present time and as
soon as it is completely installed,
wrestling and boxing exhibitions
will be frequent.
of our problem in America and the
world, is a revival of “honest-to
goodness,” old-time Christianity. It
is back to the Bible end the Gospel,
or on to blood and revolution for
the whole world. At Abilene it was
my pleasure to speak in two colleges.
In one institution there were fifty
one young people definitely convert
ed in a single service. In a recent
article I said that certain radical j
religious leader* have told us that
Contact* with Official*
Service project* will be *n impof
tint part of a Scout’* program dur
ing four or five hour* each day. This
will put Scouts io touch with the
management of the enterprise, and
they will have many occasions to
meet the distinguished persons in
volved in the Fair.
There will be accommodations
for only 3,900 of the 1,271,000
present registered Scout membership,
most of whom, judging from re
quests already on hand, would like
to avail themselves of this privilege.
The opportunity will be open to
Scouts in any part of the United
States who meet the standards pre
*cribed by the National Council,
and preference will be given to ap
plications in the order of their
receipt.
All camp reservation* must be
made through local Scout Councils
and not directly with the National
CounciL
! BOB JONES
OMMENTS
ut ON
y ^ HERE AN#
HEREAFTER
This is being written in the office
of the president of the Bob Jones
College at Cleveland, Tennessee. The
writer has just returned from'evan
gelistic meetings in Lake Charles,
Louisiana and Abilene, Texas. The
modernistic ministers and certain
type educational leaders have been
saying that the day of evangelism is
gone. How little do the people who
talk like that know about the hu
man heart! In the palmiest days of
my evangelistic work I have never
seen a greater manifestation of the
power of God than I witnessed in
our last two evangelistic meetings.
Thinking ministers of the Gospel
are realizing that the only solution
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TME ROAD.
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WHY SPEND*500T0
HAVE YOOR BRAKES FIXED
WHEN YOU CAN BUY A
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young people are no longer inter
ested in creed* and dogmas and an
authoritative religion, but they want
to live their own lives in their own
way. These leaders convinced a
great many young people that they
were right in what they were say
ing, but young people have tried the
husks of modernistic religion and
behavioristic philosophy, and they
are crying now for the Bread of
Life. This is the golden opportunity
for Gospel preaching in America,
and in many other parts of the
world.
A few days ago in a certain city
the writer noted in practically all
store windows placards announcing
that Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt, the
wife of our President and the First
Lady of America, would lecture in
a certain building on a certain night
and that the admission price would
be so much. How times have
changed. A few years ago when the
Great Christian Commoner, William
Jennings Bryan, was Secretary of
State, he had made certain sub
scriptions to foreign mission work
and out of his income was unable to
meet his subscriptions. So he de
cided to accept a series of Chautau
qua lecture engagements in order to
pay his subscriptions. A protest
went up from all sections of the
country. "It is beneath the dignity
of the Secretary of State to lec
ture in Chautaugua tents, and for
the people to pay admission to hear
him. He has no right to capitalize
his position as Secretary of State."
The sentiment was so strong against
Mr. Brvan's filling the engagements
that he wrote the Chautauqua man
ager and asked to be released. Even
H. C. COOK
MUTUAL INSURANCE SAVES
Fire — Auto — Liability
Telephone for Information
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PAGE FIFTEEN
though Mrs. Roosevelt may be per
fectly sincere, and even though the
Is a very lovely woman and wishes
to do a great deal of good. I am
wondering if the abiding results of
this lecture business will not do
harm Instead of good. Bryan was as
orator. That had been his business
before he became Secretary of State.
Mrs. Roosevelt is not an orator. She
Is not a great speaker. If she were
not the wife of the President of
the United Statees, she could not
get a hear.ng. Of course, we are liv
ing in an abnormal world under ab
normal condition* and it is hard to
hold to some of i % old lron-elad
conventions of the past, but the
writer is convinced that the tenden
cy of women away from the home 1s
imperiling this nation. What Amer
ica needs is a movement to pull wo
men back to the home and not s
movement to pull them away from
husbands, children, domestic duty,
and the family fireside. Women can
speak and teach and transact busi
ness, but God meant for women to
build homes and stay in them. That
is according to the divine order and
according to the teaching of tha
Word of God.
The use of purebred bulls is the
best way to build up the quality at
our native beef cattle. 4
You can get most, anything oil
the average farm except the mort
gage. M
Typical cold cream contains
from 8 to 12 per cent of beeswax.
How well you feed the livestock
largely determines how well they
will feed you.