The Covington news. (Covington, Ga.) 1908-current, August 27, 1942, Page PAGE ELEVEN, Image 11

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August 27, 1942 Georgia, being located one mile West of Conyers, Georgia, State Highway on No. 12 and being twelve (12) acres, more or less bounded as follows; North by State Highway No 12 South by lands of Mrs. L. L. John son; East by lands of Mrs Peari Cook Fincher; West by lands of Dr. P. J. Brown, the same having built thereon a filling station, and being the same property described in Deed Book X, Page 284, Rock dale County Records. The improvements on the above described property consist of the following: A frame store building, a barbecue pit, electric pump in well, equipment, counters, tables, electric refrigerator, cash register. two water toilets and fixtures, ana electric stove. Said sale will be made under the j power of sale contained in a deed to secure debt recorded in the Clerk’s Office of the Superior Court of Rockdale County, Geor gia, in Deed Book X, Page 434, given on Februray 21, 1942, by I------ Mrs Gertrude M. Brown, to 1 Louis L. Brooks. Default having : occurred in the ayment p of the . note due April 21> lQ42 and the j note due Qn May 21 1942j the gn _ j 1ire debt seC ured by said deed to secure debt has been declared Bnd payab i e and lhe power of gale i contained in said deed to secure debt has been' operative. The f > mount due on the debt secured by said deed to secure debt as of August 4, 1942, is $511.08. Said property wni be sold and a deed will be made to the pur chaser, subject to the lien of a se curity deed dated Februray 22nd, i 1942 > given to Ralph B. Martin 1 as Trustee, securing $1,100.00. The proceeds of said sale will be applied as provided in said securi ty deed. This 26 day of June, 1942. MRS. GERTRUDE M. BROWN Mrs. Gertrude M. Brown By Her Attorney-In-Fact Louis L. Brooks. J. S. Slicer Attorney for Louis L. Brooks. ItDtlE [GALS CITATION Rockdale County. I whom it may concern: tranade having in proper [lied to me [or Permanent [ f Administration estate of with Mrs. pxed on the McDaniel, late of said this is to cite all and -(he creditors and next of Mrs. annie McDaniel to "pear at my law, office ar.d within show allowed by „ ny they can, why per administration with will should not be granted to ranade on Mrs. Fannie ,, estate. „ hand and official this 3 day of Aug., 1942. Luther Morris, Ordinary Rockl i A a ' Pnnntv ' e sold on Tuesday, Sept it, 1942, before the cour - D or in Rockdale county, during the legal hours ot hehigh* s - bic '• or cas ■ wing property: it tract or parcel of land d being in the Sixteenth listrict of Rockdale Coun oniiCAi IIIMIVIIM v announce my candidacy iber of the House of Rep -es in the coming election If elected, I shall strive the people of Newton to the very best of my Your vote and support sppreciated. Sincerely, P. (PAT) CAMPBELL. ew Soda Fount •T Bindwiches of All Kinds | one drinks—and of our new have soda * I It one lour tasty sandwiches ^ |i ious. every day — They’ jF tl A E0PLES ug Store 5 s ; HEAR - I GOVERNOR TALMADGE SPEAK W 1 A Wednesday, m c > r September m / :: 2nd , ;»mr if At McDonough Program 11:30 A. M. Everybody Invited! WAITED! <■ k ■■ 0 BUY-100,000 Tons SCRAP IRON AT ONCE For National Defense very Auto Wrecking Co ■ / fl3 rterdale Road O f ■ j (Our Advertiser's Are Assured of Results) SCOUTING THROUGH BY DAN GREER The weekly meeting of the Boy Scouts of America was held last Tuesday night at the American Legion Hall. The meeting was opened with Scout Oath and Law and Pledge of Allegiance to the Flag. The date selected for the camp was from Thursday, September 3 through Sunday, September 6. Scouts will leave after school Thursday and return Sunday after neon. Any donations of money, camping materials, food, or other necessary articles by the public wiu be greatly appreciated. If you have an y thin – that we could use ’ P iease g et in touch with Mr - Vason - The necessar y equipment for btddin g for one b °y is 2 sheetS ’ cover - such as a blanket or and Pi llow if one is desired. All boys planning to go will please check on this before leaving. The committee appointed for planning the camp menu was as iollows: Rucker Ginn, Joe Vason Jr., and Emmett Floyd. The camp, we hope, is going to be a successful venture and that the boys will benefit by it greatly. Another important item of last meeting was the change of meeting from Tuesday night to Wednesday night, effective last night, August 26. The meeting was closed with the Scout Benediction after a thirty minute period of recreation which was enjoyed by all. Saying good-bye with “The Thought For Today”—"Buy Bonds and Lick the Bunds.” Por/prrfwfe CHURCH , JYcUXi The Young People’s Fellowship was held at the Methodist church Sunday night after evening serv j i ces a t the Baptist church, Miss Davis had charge of the ; devotional and a good crowd at ; tended, Mrs. H W. Pittman was the a Ue st speaker of the Intermediate <; U ndav school Sunday morning, Mrs. Pittman’s talk was timely and very interesting, The Epworth League of the Methodist church had as it’s speaker Sunday evening, Mr. Lewis Caldwell; teacher of "lhe Men’s Bible class of this church. Mr. Caldwell talked on “What Young People can do to Help Win the War.” ' The Revival at the Baptist church started Sunday night with Rev. Adams of Conyers, presiding, and will run throughout the week. This column will be glad to make any announcements or have any news from any of the three j churches, Any news you have please turn in to Bill Statham by Monday -of each week. , Lrirm _ . ^_ 4 kll\ rm\ 1 WVF Mill/ * Q(|P\ - RPiRfl , Ira u VlWl | J l/3l\llTW HI CVTDA POj|E|T\ r|T r I l\#4 ISW! I * J . Twice as much dried fruit and vegetables for home use, 200 ad ditional quarts of canned pro duce, doubled food crop acreage, a cane and potato patch, and : subsistence wheat crop — that is the Food for Freedom program of! the Lark A. Dingier family, Polk ^ year _ Mr. Dingier will raise enough food for his family of eight on his J have two-horse food to farm sell, and m addition The halves Dingier when family they was came farming on the | on Farm Security Administration pro gram in 1939, living in a small three-room house, stove falling down, and canning only 100 quarts a year, Now the Dinglers have bought new furniture for their home, a new stove, new shades, and cur tains. They have purchas£d a pressure cooker and have increas ed their canning budget to 100 quarts per person instead of 100 for the entire family. With help from the Farm Security farm and home management supervisors they have increased food crops and can and store enough for the winter months • Mr. Dingier has undertaken a diversified farming program. He has grown his feed, increased his food crops, and met his obliga tions each year. He is repaying his Farm Security loan with in terest as it comes due, and real ized $305 net income in 1941. REMOVING DODDER The Georgia Agricultural Ex tension Service advises cleaning dodder out of lespedeza fields, where there are only a few small ; spots of it, before it is eaten by livestock and scattered over more j land thr ough manure. Letter I roiii Our Congressman Capitol Hill - Washington, D. C. August 22, 1942 My dear Constituents: T receive many letters from j par ents, wives, etc., asking about the uIm y an d navy mails and wonder mg why it has been so long since they have heard from their boy in the service. Of course, the mails from the front are often delayed jo r many reasons, and I always try to explain this fact to those who write me, and tell them that some day, no doubt, they will re ceive a big lot of letters all at one time. I also suggest that they keep on writing to their boy just as regularly as if they were re ceiving their mail on time. j Nothing so cheers a soldier as a letter from home or a loved one. I know this fact from my own ex- | periences of the last war. I was ; away from hcme nearly two years with the AEF in France and Eng land, and our outfit was moving S o often that many times a month °r six weeks passed with no mail, When the mail finally caught up with us I would sometimes have a dozen or more letters at once. 1 certainly didn’t sleep or eat until I read them. I would sort them ac cording to their postmarks and read the oldest one first and hastily read them through, then go back and read them all care fully again. Our outfit seemed different a few hours after the mail came Men were cheerful and in good humor, and the gloom and blues left us for a while. They wouldn’t let them mail candy or chewing gum, but my home town paper al ways had a flat bar of chocolate, or chewing gum or a handkerchief folded in it, as if the ;e weekly home town papers were not pre cious literary gems without the gimcracks. So I decided to devote my letter this week to this important sub ject of soldier’s mail. And by sold iers, I mean sailors and marines too, officers and privates. Your pen is a weapon that will help greatly to win this war if you use it to write letters to the men who fight. Write many letters—often and regularly. To receive them is the greatest thrill your solider boy can receive. And he is keenly disappointed when he does not re ceive them. Make each letter seem like a visit home. Give him all the news of the home and all the little in timacies — even the gossip and the community news. Fill your letters with smiles, joy, happiness and humor. Send cartoons that in terested you, jokes, riddles and puzzles. One writer on this subject closes with this admonition— “Taboo preaching and sob stuff, Though you are writing with a breaking heart, make your letter radiant with faith. Don t add an additional load of worry and fear to those whose burdens are already great. Put a lift in every line.” Letters from home are just as im portant to our men in the service as their clothing and supplies. The government will feed and clothe them, but only the loved ones can furnish the letters that mean so much to their morale. Sincerely, A. Sidney Camp, M. C. SHORT NOTES The Tallapoosa community can nery Carroll county, has put up •' food more than 30,000 cans oi pro a^gas^lineTcreven de^n members county home SoSg t on lub are recreation meetings in the f orm of backyard picnics for neighborhood groups - • . Farm women in Dodge county have made more*than 5 000 mattresses since June 1940 Elbert county farm . . women are preserving fruits by sulphuring, and are enthusiastic about this method which elimi nates standing over a hot stove. THE COVINGTON NEWS WONDER BRAND PEANUT v.-. ; •........... <e ........ w • ? v •* ""r. • HFMj; * •' y/fit*' A BUTTER » ; | I i'i : • /■ i ; i 4^ 1 e 2 41 iC v 1 V' m A___: m Lb. Jar % ; j VAN CAMP’S * I ft Cat UrG-E <g!bt TENDERONI i A | ■ ■: v P ■*>4, 10c f ¥. j J \W BOX LITTLE r .. STAR AUNT JEMIMA ✓ % / ^ GRITS I: -DAItr5AYIHCT LL-KHOWH BRAjtp qmWF s j SAVE GAS! SAVE TIRES! SAVE MONEY! 2 BOXES 15 C about” Get Car together Club in driving today. with to your With the neighbors Little two, three, Star—ALL and or organize four WILL taking a SHARE Little “turn- Star IN BUY WAR THE SAVINGS. It's the patriotic shopper's answer to gasoline rationing. SAVINGS CONSERVE FOR VICTORYI STAMPS POST’S BRAN FLAKES Assorted Desserts XYZ Salad Lovely-Jel ii DRESSING Pint Jar h 0 LG. BOX 15c * 5 C Enriched BREAD Long Pullman 2 20-Oz. ffi 0 Pks Loaves Enriched Our Pride BLUE RIBBON PICKLING Libby's Cooked BREAD 2 ID BRAINS . . No 1 Can 18c 1-Lb. 0 VINEGAR Baker's Loaves COCOA . . 1 Lb. Can 17C Potted Meat Armours 25c TREET JUICE Stokely’s Tomato . ■ “7-Oz. 12-Oz. Can Can 33c 21c LIBBY'S 2 No. Cans i i i* . . GAL. Corn Flakes Weston Assorted KELLOGG 6-oz. Pk 9 . 5c COOKIES 0(0 0 Standard Prepared i Roll * MUSTARD Qt j« 11c . COLONIAL Distilled Standard Apple VINEGAR . . Qt J«r 9c SAUCE CATSUP Stokely’s Cut - - No. 2 0 BEETS . 2 No 2 Cans 19c Can Sunshine Wheat Toast Macaroni or Spaghetti WAFERS . i Lb Pk 9 18c HOLSUM 3 0 14-OZ. 11 ‘Ac Green PEAS Giant 2 27c 6-Oz. 0 • 17-Oz. Cans Pkgs. BOTTLE CLAPP'S STANDARD CUT GREEN Rape's- 2 «*• ■ • . 21c Baby Foods BEANS peaches 1 :! . 23c 3 4J-0z. Cans 20“ Size 25c NO. 2 lie AVOCADOS, 2 tor . Fine for Salads "T CAN Greening Cooking 27c WESSON OIL Can 49c . Pillsbury’a ■ APPLES, 5 lbs. .. Sno-Sheen ■ • CAKE FLOUR 25a aU . . p*. SunkLst or Re* » 19 Standard ’lemons, C a lif. Doz. C CUT BEANS lie STANDARD SUGAR . h..2c I Stokely’s Mixed CORN CABBAGE, 2 '«»■ Sc VEGETABLES No aojcnHc • Standard Red Ripe Bnch. 13c Tomatoes 2 no. 2 can* 19c NO. 2 19c CARROTS, 2 Southern MILD CHEESE 28c 2 CANS VlTTUCMHds. 25c Rumford Baking . u,. . POWDER . . 12 -Oz. p^. 21c Fr Rutabaga*. „* Med. * , bs< . . 10C 0. Plain or K. Iodized SALT 3 10c Bis Boxei SUNSHINE DESSERT Long klM 25c Colonial or Standard Calif- Potatoes, 5 .. lbs. SPINACH 2 No lle, 29c PEACHES Sunshine PEACHES Georgia Dessert 2 no. 2 i c», 27c 2 NO. 21/ 27c gpg Colonial Evaporated Kinyan’s Corned Beef 2 milk 215* HASH 1-Lb 20* CANS ■ ■ ■ Can Pancake Flour Evaporated PlLLSBURY ZT 9* PEACHES Cello. 1-Lb. 19* PHILIPS TOMATO Cut-Rite Waxed Granulated Soap JUICE PAPER 2 “11* OCTAGON’ 9* Large Size Ivory northern Toilet SOAP ■ 2 - 19* TISSUE 4 - 21* 10-OZ. 5c CAN WESTERN 25c BAMA BEEF ROAST LB LEAN — CENTER CUT PRESERVES PORK CHOPS LB 37c FRESH 25c Asst’d Flavors SPARE RIBS LB 1-LB. 19c PIG LIVER LB 17c JAR BEEF AND PORK MIXED LARGE FRESH SAUSAGE ... 15c MULLET... 12 c GA. MAID SWEET MIXED PICKLES . * 22-OZ. 17c a St «■* ♦ o u- s n o u o n a Or. JAR Y 1 (Largest Local Coverage of Any Weekly in the State) „ PAGE ELEVEN