Newspaper Page Text
PAGE EIGHTEEN
— I I I.llli ■!■■■ -
News Notes From
MANSFIELD
By MRS. C. R. GOODRICH
Sherrod Campbell Sr.. ac
companied his daughters. Mrs.
Doyle Tatum, of Griffin, and
Miss Ann Campbell, of Atlanta.
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i Compare the DIFFERENCE in "Xj
L NATURAL CHILEAN NITRATE, ft
|| See the DIFFERENCE in results! H
03 difference between Natural
m duk an Nitrate and other ni-
M| tropin ferlihzers is quality —
jiTS nattrrnl quality. It is theworld’a
ES only natural source of nitrate
nitrogen.
Ffi® wOob®" «<>"••"• of Chilean
Isß Nitrate e 100 C nitrate nitro
gen — lOOCr available — 100%
fast-ai t ing - KHtC dependable.
■ No ontidote is necessary Chit*
3 ran Nitrate is non at id forming.
|| Rich in sodium and minor ele-
H menH. Chilean Nitrate is rich
% in beneficial sodium that makes
, a stronger, deeper root system
J — improves crop health, vigor
and nutritive value. It also
I 5 rontaine small quantities of es
sential minor elements.
i Nitrote it the ONLY
fertilirer that supplies ni-
I Utf - \ ] Irate nitroften.beneficial
XuL^f J M ^ lum nn ^ essential
f minor elements.
XHILEAN NITRATE of SODA
No Fumes...No Wait For Drying Xx " '
ftr ~~~~
"Winter is an .
j^BHWWRp idegl time to use
The Wonder Paint"
Wlfl« S
y J, "al
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k> . .4s %ipi Jr ' IfL *VL|jM^7frg^Sg^^ ■•
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v &B|^hi $ $-!£KswsM||flKS|feiMß?gMMßp|apßKOT 1 "" ' n "'"" "'
'X *py ^udgr .*h9|EßH9bmmP /- “ v# - "' “
SPRED SATIN
FOR WALLS • CEILINGS • WOODWORK
You ain paint with rhe windows cloned when you use
SPRFD SATIN'. There is no tedious, long wait for
drying, because SPRFD SATlty dries in just 20 min
utes! Why not decorate your rooms now? Have more
lime for spring garden work. I se ready-mixed SPRFD
SATIN, the 100% latex base wall paint.
• Goes on in half the time.
• Dries in 20 minutes.
• No laps or brushmarks;
• No offensive or painty odor.
• Use room right away.
• No messy brush clean-up
I ; t just soap and water.
H. W. DUKE
BICYCLE AND AUTO SUPPLY COMPANY
hk (Next Door To Cohen's)
!our Advertisers Are Assured Os Results)
on a pleasure trip and visited
I Mr. Campbell’s brother. Doyle
Campbell, in Tampa, Florida
; last week.
Mrs. Aldine Kitchens is visit
; Ing friends in Miami and other
, points of interest in Florida.
Miss Dorothea Spears, a stu
j dent at Bessie Tift in Forsyth,
Noted for all-round efficiency.
Oui< k acting ]oo7o nitrate ni
trogen make; rapid, sturdy
growth. Its 26% sodium con
tent acts like potash when nec- >/i.:
essary and helps to im rease
the tuipply of available phos- IhS
phate in the soil. i w
Chilean Nitrote's free Rowing p;®
pellets guarantee rapid, accu- |B|
rah- di-tribution under all ton- H
■
ditions. No special precautions
needed.
Helps maintain productivity of *
your land. W hen used consist
ently in a sound farming pro
gram. Chilean Nitrate builds
up fertility, increases efficiency.
Year after year. Natural Chilean
Nitrate increases yields — im- ;
proves quality — defends
against disease — fortifies
against insect injury — coun
teracts soil acidity. I se Chilean
Nitrate for solid satisfaction!
Y<xi »eul<l poor harok Iyo o«
te . . . not that you'll want to
— but it indicates the ability of
SPRED SAHN to withstand all
kind* of abuse in your home.
spent the weekend with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. J.
Spears.
Clyde Granade, of Conyers,
visited his sister. Mrs. Lillie
Greer. Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. T. B Manning
and Mrs. D. L. Smith spent
Wednesday night in Atlanta with
Mrs. W. F. Hollis They also visit
ed Miss Barbara Manning, a stu
dent nurse at Georgia Baptist
Hospital.
Mrs. W. L. Lee. of Atlanta,
visited her mother. Mrs. Lillie
Greer, over the weekend.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Jenkins'
guests Sunday were Mr. and
Mrs. Jerry Brand, of Atlanta, and
Mrs. Eugene Brand, and Wayne,
of Tucker.
Mr. and Mrs. Allen Savage's
visitors Sunday were Mrs. Sav
age's parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Whatley, of Milstead.
Mrs. Nelson Miller, of Atlanta,
is with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Harwell, who are on
the sick list. Friends are wish
ing for them a speedy' recovery.
Mrs. Willie Lunsford spent
last week in Atlanta with rela
tives and friends.
Mr. and Mrs. Hill P’atrick
visited Oscar Phillips who is
seriously ill in Monticello Sun
day,
^lr. and Mrs. Robert Curtis
and children, of Atlanta, visit
ed their parents over the week
end.
Mrs. L. H. Kelly and Misses
Laurie and Betty Curtis, of At
lanta, visited their father, A
C. Curtis, Saturday. Mr. Curtis
is making his home with Mr
and Mrs. Dana Smith.
Friends are delighted to know
Mr. Ewell Lunsford has im
proved after a visit to Georgia
Baptist Hospital this week.
Mr and Mrs. Fred Morris and
sons, Donald and Joe Dan. of
Rome, and Mr and Mrs. George
Ford, of Cornelia, were called
home due to the illness of their
father, Emmett Banks, last
week.
Jasper Brown, of Jonesboro,
and Floyd Brown, of Atlanta,
visited their sister. Mrs. Mary
| Hays. Sunday.
a
Yoa ooulsi *cr»b It 40,000
time* like this machine did
on a SPRFD SATIN r«*tel
, color — and nor affect the
color or aatin-tmooth ant
laoe Ya*, it'i gu^anieed
u’tuhahlt.
S
Ym cm woth H oetHy •*
^eer Htchon dak . . . Unser
mark*, ink. crayon, liptiick
•It come off in tecond* ~;
and no apou or xll ude
Mraaba v*M ahow.
THE COVINGTON NEWS
Chewton Q^lemories
By J. O. MARTIN
I would not cherish the thought
of being the editor of a necrology
column as I refer occasionally to
the passing of certain old friends
and acquaintances in this column,
out am constrained to-note the
pasing recently of three presons
who made, contributions to New
ton’s welfare. They *vere W. H.
Budd. Miss Emma Wicks, and
R C. Guinn.
Mr. Budd was a member of a
large family of Budds whose
members as Christian ministers
and business men of divergent
-gencies have contributed much
to their respective sections where
they have resided. As a citizen
of Newton County and a long
time employee of the Covington
NEWS, Mr. Budd had rendered
valuable service, faithful in the
discharge of every task set before
nim and courteous to everyone
in every detail, and a gentle
man to the manor born. He will
be greatly missed.
Miss Wicks was a native of the
county and a descendant of one
of her ol<'st families. As a child
Comments on—
HERE and HEREAFTER
By DR. 808 JONES
President of Bob Jones University
In the Book of Revelation we
have a marvelous p<ture of an
angel coming down from heaven,
binding satan, and shutting him
up in the bottomless pit so he can
deceive the nations no more for
a thousand years. That is glorious.
He is a mean old Devil. He has
deceived not only individuals
but nations. He has led kings and
emperors to believe that might
makes right. He has offered em
pires to rulers who would do
his bidding. He wishes to control
this world. He is a usurper. It is
not his world. He did not make
it. This world belongs to God.
Some day it is to have rest from
satanic influences for a thousand
years.
We read in Revelation that after
the Devil has been jn the bottom
less pit for a thousand years he
। is “let loose for a little season.'’
He goes out to stir up the nations
, again. The very fact that the
1 Devil got out of the pit after a
; thousand years proves that
God and not man is the Author
of the Bible Any man writing
this story would have let the
Devil stay in hell after he was
once chained there.
Mans story, which generally
winds up right, is usually left
this way. Prophecy is pre-written
history. God sees the end from
the beginning
There is to be a new heaven and
a new' earth, according to the
Bible. The old heaven and the old
earth will pass away. I do not
see how men go through this
world with no hope of heaven. I
have had a good time. I have
been busy. I, of course, have had
my share of sorrow. Man can
not be happy unless he absorbs
| himself in work or plans which
make him forget himself. Some
people try to drown the yearning
of their heart for immortality
and God in pleasure, rhoney
, making, and sensuality. Surely,
beyond this earth there must be
a “Heavenly City.” God says
there is. The human heart longs
for it. Jesus - has gone to pre
pare it.
Some who read these Im; ill
be there soon. Through the blue
IN MEMORY
In loving memory ol our
daughter, wife ^nd sister. Ma
tilda Brooks, who departed this
life one year ago January 30.
“How we miss you, darling,
but we know that Heaven is
brighter with you there.”
MRS. J. A SOWELL
AND FAMILY
MR. O. R. BROOKS
*
IN MEMORY
In meir^y of our dear w'ife
and mother, Mrs. E. E. Allen,
who passed away one year ago,
January 30, 1952.
“A precious one from us has
gone,
A voice we loved is still,.
A place is vacant in our home
That never can be filled.”
MR. E. E. ALLEN
MR. LEWIS ALLEN
MR. AND MRS. OLIN
ALLEN
MR. AND MRS. HORANCE
ALLEN
MR. AND MRS. CHARLES
GEIGER
Communist Poland has abol-
I ished rationing because it "re
stricted free buying and there
fore reduced the economic in-
I centive for increases in the pro
ductivity of labor, and lowered
the standard of living of the
working classes. The govern
ment announced price rises of
25 to 100 percent as a substitute
for the rationing law. i
■ she evidenced strong tendencies ;
lor book knowledge and as she
grew older these desiaes were ful
filled by her avid quest for achi
evement in the several fields of
study in which she aspire<l. In
the college libraries of Young
Harris College, the University of
Georgia, and Emory University,
trom which institutions she
seceived degrees, she reveled in
j the contents of their volumes and
xhere she found her soul’s content.
She was one of the few remain
ing teachers of Newton who
•aught in the first regime of Prof.
Adams who began his term as
County School Commissioner
back in June, 1902.
“Uncle’’ Chess Guinn was born
in Conyers, eighty-five years ago,
while his father, Prof. Robert A.
Guinn, one of Georgia’s noted
teachers of his day, was principal
of the Conyers Public School.
Prof. Guinn, however, was a
native of Flint Hill and a des
' cendant of one of the original
families who settled in that com
jrr unity. He chose teaching as his
there are hands that are now
beckoning. One of these hands
is nail-tom. It is the hand of the
Saviour who was “wounded for
our transgressions and bruised for
our iniquities.” It win be wonder
ful to get to heaven. Some of us
have loved ones there. I am one
of a large family. AU of the
others are gone. Best of all. Je
sus is there. He has His way
there. There is no night there
because He shines unhindered. I
We love Him. We are going to
see Him some day face to face
with our eyes undimmed. He may
come soon, and all of us who
know Him will go together to
meet Him in the air. He may
delay His coming and one by one
we may go home through the val-
; ley of death.
Whether we die or whether He
. conges, it wall not be long until
all the saints of this generation
। will be gathered home. If one
should chance to read these lines
who does not know' Him, it is
the prayer of the writer that
such a one may trust Him as a
Saviour. It will be wonderful
to share in the glory of that
fellowship under the cloudless
sky of the Eternal City.
As Advertised in
LIFE n
Approved by
—I SOUTHERN CROSS I
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1 19!BRi b»i i lift
THt SECRET < IrA I
OF SPRINGWALL A TSt t 1 111X>
'w .& > -ijhF
Twelve carbon sfeel Rhomboid t ya> 1 t t iSiJk |
springs absorb the shocks that I X®!W» |t I t
make an ordinary mattress sag | »g ।
at the edges. This amazing rein- I —IB II *
fomment adds yMM d comfort
and wear! I
6 I
COVINGTON FURNITURE COMPANY
Low Prices — Easy Ttrms
(Largest Coverage Any Weekly In The State} _ Thursday, January 29. [
profession and as a beginner he
ergenized the Flint Hill School
in 1850 and after teaching there
tour or five yeays, he went to
Conyers where he taught the
remainder of his life,
“R. C.,” a 'son. chose railroad
ing as his profession and as a
result, came to Covington as an
। employee of the Georgia Rail
road in the depot where he later
became the superintendent — the
second or third to hold that
position in the history 7 *of the
road. In this position he remained
until he retired a few years ago.
His tenure there was said to be
one of the longest and most
satisfactory of any person in the
railroad service anywhere. Mr.
Guinn was the same person to all
LOOK!
In Every Paper You Will See —
Where a FIRE has destroyed a home and its furnishings
Where a car or personal belongings has been STOLEN
Where someone was involved in an ACCIDENT
This could have been YOU!
Would you be fully covered should this happen to you 1
There are those too who pass away prematurely without having
provided sufficiently for the future of their loved ones.
We are happy at al! times, without obligation, to discuss with
you any and all of your insurance problems.
JIMMY MORGAN AGENCY
- ALL KINDS OF INSURANCE -
FIRE - CASULTY - LIFE
114 Qlark Street — Covington, Georgia
— TELEPHONE 2416 — (3008 -or 2143 Nites and Sunday)
^The Agency Os Friendly Service”
“Protecting YOLR Interest Is OUR Policy ”
PS: We are in position to assist you in securing low cost automobile
financing.
people. He knew no difference
and evidenced no partiality in his
business dealings. He made
friends easily and they were
constant and devoted. People
respected him because he respect
ed himself and all others. His
good name and good deeds will
become a part of the history of
Newton County.
DR. £. L. TRIBBLE
- OPTOMETRIST —
Eye Sight Specialist
> our Eyas Deserve Attention — Have Them Checked At
Least Once A Year.
OFFICE HOURS: 8 A. M. to S P M.
Excepl Wednesdays
Tel. 2145 Covtagjon
tale vQ
m Matm-Mae