Newspaper Page Text
, „ January ” 1953 (Our A « Agsured Os Results
ift w® y' _—-—«—■—■■■ \ ———■———
Lrterdale Personals
g - L '
V *5 with a lovely dinner |
rprc”! Saturday night
■ ° n L f n North Coving
'h“
■ .nn Hie* "ere: Mrs.
E^ ° w- B. B. Hand.
Is/ - D
ft/ and Mr. and Mrs. C E
K silos Covington.
ft ni weekend guests of Mj.
flu,, J° hn Carler ° f C °\‘
E^erc M: « nri Ml ' Mark
El J L Savage and Mrs. B.
E n d of Atlanta, were recent
■ of Mt. and Mrs. H. L. •
■ .vr a weekend visit.
E and Mrs D. B. Hill and
■ Gary of Newnan were
End guest? of Mr.-. Sam
E « nd faml ‘ V-
E and Mr? Bill Finley were
K v visitors at the home of
■ Sam Finley and family.
B C Mrs William Prince
H ; happy ’o iearn that she
EuPCiati - at home iollow
fl, appt um '."my at Craw
fl Long Hospital. Her hus
fl Seaman William Prince
fl. spending an emergency
his family before re-
■>ng to San Francisco. Cali
fl
B: J, B. Savage entered
■ • Hospital on Sunday,
Er 25th and underwent
B' His. friends
fl r. him a speedy recovery
E- Ne'dre King is recupera
■at her home following hos-
Biatior at the Porterdale
fl
m
Hit family of Pvt. Bobby
fl Savage received cable-
E^”*'
■ww-wn f n , r
M HUUIMIW K
■WnHIWWK
r
lIWFIT NEWS FOR HOG MEN!
I ■
I /7 ^>7 yv
’ *‘ generally agreed that it takes on average of
I P'qs per litter to break even raising hogs.
IWWwJ
I '* year the average hog man saved 6.44 pigs
11 P ' llMer be bad 1.4 profit pigs.
nW#
I TH* Purina Farm Duroc herd recently averaged
115 P‘9* per lifter. That left 4.1 pigs, about three
I ” the profits the average hog man made.
I W z h ।
I n ot let the Purina Hog Program help you
I TRIPLE PROFITS’
H c -
I Ui" 1 ' * ’ usnc,t, dmeyou 're in town.
I about the profii- /
II ire your own neighbors
I P w . MC, “ ng on th * wsy-to-follow
p rogr.m. Make it soon! fJ J™* r HU
I Hsow^picw
‘ /ri £!iP W Zii -
^^MMMMiMiii^CTggg34
lu »u«ih*|B
K HOG J
hws FLOUR & FEED CO.
COVINGTON, GEORGIA 1
grams on Saturday, January 24,
I informing them of his safe ar
i rival in Europe where he will
I spend sixteen months in Ger
many.
♦ * ♦ •
Monty Laster, son of Mr. and
.Mrs. J. T. Laster, has returned
I to school after having flu.
♦ * * ♦
Mrs. Emory Shaw and son,
Bob, returned to their home in
Porterdale last weekend follow
ing a visit with Mrs. Lucile
Wisenbaker in Valdosta. Mrs.
Shaw was called to Valdosta due
to the illness of her mother.
♦ ♦ ♦ ♦
Mr. and Mrs. Carroll Cason,
j Debbie and Phil, visited rela
tives in Atlanta Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Shaw
were weekend guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Hubert Shropshire and
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Daniel in
Columbus.
• • ♦ ♦
Mr. Jack Drennan is spend
ing an extended visit with his
mother, Mrs. Lola Drennan, and
his sister, Mrs. Grace Hord.
* * * •
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Allen
and family visited Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Turner in Atlanta Sun
day.
* • • •
Mr. Irby S. Sharpton has been
a recent patient at the Porter
dale Hospital.
* ♦ ♦ ♦
Mrs. Aubrey Sharpton of
; Jacksonville, Florida, and Mrs.
Joe Martin and Ray Martin
spent a part of last weekend
with Mr. and Mrs. I. S. Sharp
ton and family,
♦ * ♦ *
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Thomas,
Betty Ann, and Sonny spent
Saturday with Mr. and Mrs. R.
J. Cason.
• * • •
Mr and Mrs. Johnnie Bowen
and family spent the weekend
! with Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Pitt
man of Atlanta.
♦ ♦ • ♦
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Millwood
and family spent Sunday with
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Millwood and
i family at Gainesville.
• « « «
Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Smith of
I Covington visited Mr. and Mrs.
Alva Autry and children Sun
day afternoon.
• • * *
Cadet Stanley Day. a student
.at GMC in Milledgeville, has
i been ill at the home of his par
, ents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Day.
On Sunday, Mrs. Day and Mrs.
Dot Berry took Cadet Day back
to resume his work
• ♦ * •
Little Alvin Aldridge con
tinues to improve at the home I
of .Mr. and Mrs. Archie Patter
son on Poplar Street. Alvin, a
member of Mrs. Allgood’s first
grade, will be in a cast until
February 18 and would welcome
visits from any of his friends.
He sustained injuries when hit
by a station wagon while en
route to school in early Decem
ber.
• * • •
Mr. Wick Collum of LaGrange,
was a recent visitor of Mrs. Ida
Latham and Miss Nannie Mae
Latham at the Stone Hotel.
* ♦ • •
Mrs. M. B. Shaw, Mrs. Claud
Ellis, Mr. Terrell Johnson, Mrs.
Lamar Fincher, Mr. Joy Darby
and Mr. T. C. Parker are among
those who have been confined to
their homes with flu.
♦ • • •
Sympathy is extended to the
family of the late Mr. Horace
Bradford who passed away Fri
day, January 23. at the home of
Mr. William Bradford on 36
Pine Street.
♦ ♦ ♦ *
Friends of Mr. Jack Stubbs
are delighted that he has re
turned from service in Korea
with the U. S. Army and re
ceived his discharge at Fort
Jackson, S. C. He is the husband
of Mrs. Margaret Bowden
I Stubbs and the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Fred Stubbs.
♦ • • •
Friends of Mrs. Garfield Wil
banks regretted to learn of the
l death of her father, Mr. Brock,
in Commerce, recently.
• • ♦ •
Miss Betty Walker, Miss Shir
ley Thornton, Miss Nell, Duncan,
Miss Molly Fay Watson, Miss
Joan Bryant and Miss Phyllis
Vining, all student nurses at
Georgia Baptist Hospital were
guests of Mr. and Mrs. James
Vining on Saturday, January 24.
♦ • ♦ *
Miss Nell Durkan and Miss
Phyllis Vining spent the week
end in Porterdale with friends
and relatives.
♦ * • *
Miss Bobby Jean Parrish of
Chattanooga, Tennessee spent
last weekend with her mother,
Mrs. Trellis Parrish. On Sat
urday evening Miss Parrish was
the dinner guest of Mr. and
Mrs. W. L. Almand.
Items Os let erest From
SALEM
| By MRS. DOUGLAS YANCEY
—————
W. C. Bates is on a two week
trip to the West Coast. He is
attending the National R. E. A.
Conference in Los Angeles. Calif
ornia. along with roost of the
other directors of the R. E. A.
and the group will combine their
business trip with sightseeing
along the route, stopping at in
teresting places.
Miss Ann Ramsey spent the
weekend at home.
A large crowd from Salem at
tended the quarterly conference at
Prospect Church Sunday.
V
Sidney Bailey was borne from
Atlanta for the weekend.
Rayfnond Thompson continues
to be confined to Emory Hospital,
hut is improving, to the delight of
his friends. • e
Mrs. I>eonard Standard is" a
patient at the Porterdale Hospi
| tai, and we are wishing for her
■ a speedy recovery.
Mr. and Mrs. E. S. Dixon, of i
Conyers, and Mr. and Mrs. Jack j
Dixon and son. of Atlanta, were
the guests Sunday of Mr and
Mrs. Liney Fincher.
—
Mrs. G. W. Ramsey and Miss
Ann Ramsey spent Saturday in
Atlanta shopping.
Mr. and Mrs. George Ramsey
Jr. and sons, of Conyers, were
supper guests of Mr. and Mis.
G. W. Ramsey Sr. Saturday
night.
Miss Louise Johnson's friends
in Salem will be interested to
I know she is now in New Jersey
taking a special course in her
studies of nursing
Miss Pegggy Jaynes was home
from Atlanta for the weekend.
Several in Salem have received
| invitations to the weeding of
Miss Loquita Gates and Robert
C. Buchert which will take place
February 8. at Reynolds Baptist
Church. Miss Gates formerly lived
in Porterdale and she has many
friends in Newton County who
wish her much happiness.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Christian,!
of Covington, and Mr. and Mrs..
। Roy Moore went to Atlanta■
I Thursday night and were Iha I
THE COVINGTON NEWS
Parent Problems
May CLfVKLAND MYKM
Fftiri *tm» Fontnro Write*
SUPPOSE you were eight, had
a sister, two and a half, who was
considered perfect, and a brother
ofglO with whom you constant
ly quarrelled. Suppose you got
scolded a great deal and praised
only occasionally.
The mother of such a child,
who has tried very hard to be
a good parent to her. writes.
“My daughter, eight, is the
middle child. Her brother is 10.
her sister two and a half. Pier
teacher says she is very bright,
talented, persevering — until
lately — with everything she
undertakes, and is a born lead
er. She worries me with her
extreme bossiness, stubbornness,
habit of interrupting anybody at
any time, her loud, unpleasant
voice and tattling.
Constant Rivalry
;She adores her sister (who is
a perfect child) and can care for
her in every way. With her
brother she is fighting more often
than not; there is constant ri
valry and jealousy between
thenA I wouldn’t mind their
fighting so much if she were not
so raucous about it. Her incessant
chattering about anything that
enters her head irritates all of
us, and her excessive exub
erance completely exhausts me.
“She has many admirable qual
ities and is so very capable. She
guests of the Rev. and Mrs.
Eugene Drinkard. We are all
proud of the success the Rev.
Drinkard has made in his new
church.
■* * iiiSil
We give you UU||l|Ll
; ■ y 7 ; J£
■ ■ ■ 9 1 ’ ■ *
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' 1
-f l! Ki I bBIIB JjMFlnh
[Mf M|F| J it A Flggeit sellar in Ns weiah* Masi!
s f Ford F-5 offers i wheel baoe lengths io
f*rTjiOiJa r I : fit your load space requirement,
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itdXik B9U BUXflsw /Wa
'rrri-i ICEj • —< r
ttH’l y i Hillr
1111 l | |HH^r . PROOF that m imh
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| jdjMFy I*-** SBBIR |. ept daily records of what thev paid for
'.' W* Ca" ” .. gas. oil, maintenance and repairs You CAB
rB .see these revealing on-the-job eoM figmo*
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'-•i •'
ITj^. PROOF ^ at Trvtks
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FORD TRUCKING COSTS LESS
COVINGTON AUTO SERVICE
WITH EMPHASIS ON
122 CLARK STREET COVINGTON, GEORGIA PHONE 3432
is a Brownie Scout and quite
interested in it, At her piano
lesson, which I give her she is
an apt pupil and practices dili
gently. our pupil-teacher rela
tionship is good. For a while I
let her invite three or four girls
in once a week for a little
cooking club and found her
then to be very dictatorial and
untractable.
“I get more anxious and dis
tressed all the time for I want
to do the right thing for her
and I fear her habit patterns
may be set too firmly to change.’'
Here in part is my reply to
this mother: Many another
mother of a daughter with so
many fine traits and talents
DIXIE CREAM DONUT SHOP
Yeast Raised Donuts — Glazed or Chocolate
Fried Pies — Fresh Daily
T. H. AVERY R. LUKE SAVAGE
30 East Reynolds Street
Next To Wood And Company
Covington, Ga. Phone 3232
(Largest Coverage Any Weekly In The State,
would be thanking God every’
night for her. You should be
pretty proud of yourself for
. having been able to teach her
I music so happily and effectively.
1 Your self-mastery and achieve
' ment here should hearten you in
i other directions.
Wants Attention
No doubt she feels that with
her perfect little sister and old
er brother she does not win out
iin competition for attention in
the family. Too, her ease at learn
ing may incline her to grow
more intpatient about winning
recognition and to be over-bossy
as with those girls. Often she
may be the aggressor in quarrels
with her brother.
Perhaps when you know your
daughter needs restraint, you
wait till you are very angry
before you act. Be more decisive
even to the point of isolating her
to sit unamused for a period.
| Anything that would calm her
down and make her feel more
secure should help bring down
her voice.
Most of all, she needs your
patient, quiet, lovely mothering
and warm worthy words of ap
i provak
Surveys made in eight states
by State Chambers of Commerce
show that billions of dollars
worth of plant expansions which
would have provided several
■ hundred thousand jobs have been
I cancelled by American manu
facturing companies within the
past 12 to 18 months because of
high Federal taxes, the Council
of State Chambers of Commerce
| reported.
When We Say Lowest — We Mean Lowest!
Sf£ US’ FOK
WORK SHOES
FOR MEN AND BOYS
We Have A New Line Os Work Shoes For Men
And Boys. Save Meney Here — See Us Futt
— Next Door To Bus Station —
CHANCEY,S SHOE SHOP
PAGE NINETEEN
How Is Your "1
Colon Today?
f« dry, hard impacted waste matter in ycu»
lower bowel (the colon) cauline you to
at rain at t he etool, giving you bearing down
pains and stiffness in the hips and bark,
with gas. upset stomach, poor digestion?
Thia condition is quickly relieved by Dr.
Hitchcock's Laxative Powder. Thia ipecial
*ll-Vegetable powder causes a pouring out
n( r be intent inal juices, thus softening the
dry, impacted material and thoroughly
unloading the colon. Got Dr. Hitchcock s
Laxative Powder from your druggist —10e
and 26c sines. If he can’t supply you. order 1
direct. Hitchcock Medicine Co.. 610 White- •
ball St., S. W., Atlanta >, Ga. tadv.l