Newspaper Page Text
o - * Ase A#«iMd Os Rwuliel
“ 11 — ■
■^Letter From Our Congressman"
I Ry A. Sidney Camp, M. C.
I
KIGTON, » c
Ki 1953
M ' constit upnts: *
^Ade Afi.ee-
■J Jut f-' P asspd )
has been ex- ,
B’ th P Cor on seven
■’ nee then will expire
■’"' : ^53 For the past
■"V (he Committee on
K Means ha< been hold-
Kchw' ll - before the
ot wheth-
ter r- commended its
t and pracmaiiv every
toMhe Cabinet as well
■ Oireeto! for Mutual Vc
^■ur Stassen, hare appeal -
■f W e the Comrmttee urging I
■e propram ne extended.
■j 5 most gralify mg for it
■ the fart mat bhe leaders
■Republican Part) are con
■ that America must do
King possible to increase its j
B trade.
■ Wlin i>' does not now poss
■ natural resources it form-
Also, as our industry
■^rf. ।r find the need
1$ rm DOLLAR HYS MHE $
I AT YAM IHMEY STHE
I MORE SUCCESS WITH
Kirdsey's ^UFleui 52.29
■ 2$ Lb.
I MORE FLAVOR PER CUP WITH
I irdsey’s Best Coffee 91C -
■ 1 Lb. Vacuum Can
I MORE SATISFACTION WITH
BRirHcov^ ^one-Ground CORN 83c
prosey s i#ib
liMM FLOUR AND FEED MUIS STORE
h $
I COVINGTON, GEORGIA
UVEUPTOW
■ternational trucks at new low prices
’■ ’***** d '’'v‘'tai—octak, • S« poml modi* tadri. body
Q **"*>*«B tb.. G***, 7Vi 90 octal. A**«ta body.
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■ *«< Wta Arty Ceme m «^’ **.r <>M t™<4 may
■ bj. Compare the <r-rf- «r«< the *.«« W n M aU. (>»v«Menb
'<•*• Ar mirti tgMMH, a tn— p.
I Hays Truck & Tractor Co.
MAMamtß. «*
for many of the products of the
earth in far greater quantity than
heretofore, for we depend upon
other countries for 100 per cant
of our tin, 100 per cent of our
mica. 100 per cent of our asbest
os. 100 per cen of our chrome, 99
per cent of our nickel, 93 per cent
of our cobalt, 95 per cent of our
manganese, 67 per cent of our
wool, 65 per cent of our bauxite.
55 per cent of our lead, 42 per
cent or our copper ad large am
ounts of many other products.
On the other hand we have
great surpluses which the rest
of the world need, and last year
we exported 48 per cent of our
wheat, 37 per cent of our cotton.
25 per cent of our tobacco, 11 per
cent of our machine tools and
23 per cent of our tractor pro
duction.
Nothing will help establish
peace more than the easy flow
of goods from one country to an
other. Recently one of our off
icials returned from a world trip
in connection witih the Point Four
Program. He said that he found
many of the backward countries
starving while at the same time
it possessed rich and fertile lands.
He found these same people with
no farm tools, plowing bullocks
Two Recitals Given
At Junion H. Gym
Fupils of Miss Fletcher Lou
Lunsford were presented tn piano
recitals aat the Junior High Gym
on Tuesday and Wednesday
nights of this week.
The third, fourtn, and filth
grade girls performed on Tues
day. and were demure and sweet
' in their pretty evening dresses.
Flowers were presented from
’ the garden of David Butler.
The program follows:
Spirit of U. S. A., Grier Steph
enson, Cynthia Harris; ' Yellow
. Butterfly, Madelyn Bates; Climb
! ing, Barbara Campbell: Water
Melon Pickaninnies, Seaborn
; Hardman; Little Prince, Lauree
Cook. Sidney Cook; Old Time
Dance, Harriett Dietz; The Hurdy
Gurdy, Margaret Rape; Pay Day,
David Smith; Little Tarantelle,
Elise Goode; Dance of the Wood
en Shoes. Kathleen Chambers;
Water Sprites. Beverly MacDon
ald: Banjo Picker, Janelle Wood,
Patsy Loyd; Peasant Dance, Lau
ree Cook; The Cricket and The
Bumble Bee. Elise Goode. Miss
I Lunsford; The Marine’s Hymn,
Sidney Cook; Uncle Remus. Jan
elle Wood; In the Firest Tall,
Helen Masten; The Lee Ballet,
Patsy Loyd; Viennese Waltz, Sea
born Hardman. Miss Lunsford;
The Little Red Mill. Roy Stead
ham; My Wooden Shoes, Delores
Malcolm; .Tulip Time, Margaret
Rape. Miss Lunsford; Swaying
Tree Tops, Cynthia Haarris; In
Dress Array, Rosemary Bond;
Wind Cradle, Dennis Trimpi;
Chinese Pranks, Karen Stone;
Little Lady, Stephanie Ginn;
Grandma, Karen Stone; Hanza
milla, Dennis Trimpi, Camilla
Dietz; Teresita, Betty Jean War
ren: Gypsy Thirl, Brenda Brooks,
Wintry Wind, Grier Stephenson;
Cossacks, Sara Margaret Patter
son; Havana, Camilla Dietz;
Reading. Sara Margaret Patter
on, Pupil of Mrs. Paul Ferren;
Swaying Roses. Diane Johnson,
and Pomp and Pageantry,
Charles Hays.
At Wednesday’s recital the I
ixth, seventh, and eighth grade
rupils, together with the Junior
High Band and Glee Club pre
ented a most delightful pro
hitched to forked poles for plows. j
He said that American farm
machinery widely distributed
could save these countries from
starving.
We need the products of other ■
lands. They need our surplus;
commodities and other goods and
this is certainly no time for the
erection of any trade barriers
like the old Smoot-Hawley Tariff
A”t of the 1920’s which practica
lly destroyed our commerce witih
other countries.
I predict that the Trade Agree
ment Act will be renewed for an
other year.
THS COVINGTON NEWS
gram, as follows: Selections:
Junior High Band, Pfiul Ferren,
Director; Spanish Dance, Hannah
Reynolds, Mozelle Biggers; The
First Butterfly, Harriett Johnson;
The Ballet Dancer, Polly Ann
Latham; Rushing River, Jane
Mask; To a Wild Rose, Peggy
Ann Wicks; A Song from the
East. Betty Ann Masten; To an
Indian Brave, Faye Greer; Rhap
sodic. Mozelle Biggers; Night in
Vienna. Diane Faulk; Witches in
the Wind. Diane Wright; Tumb
ling Creek, Camilla Dietz; Sing,
Sing. Birds on the Wing, Lucy
Floyd Morcock; Juba Dance, Sue
Pratt; By a Blue Lagoon, Han
nah Reynolds; Cantilene. Clara
Brenda Waites; Ave Maria. Lucy
Floyd Morcock; Theme from
Concerto in A Minor. Ernestine
Mann; Prelude, Joseph Morris,
and Selections by Glee Club,
George Hutchinson, Director.
Emory University is a liberal
arts college, offering students
opportunity for activity and fel
lowship in 17 social fraternities.
In addition there is recognition
through membership in the uni
versity's professional fraternites
and honor societies.
BEAT THE HEAT
Wlth
Fans
And ’
Air Con ditione rs
A SS
air circulator 1 V - 8-INCH Special
1^ 4>36.95 ° Nlr • R * pa Air
•Long, Faithful Service
Draft-Free.. Move, Three Time* ^5-95 • Low-cost Operation
fl? W as Much Air as a 12-jnch W
SUMMER COMFORT AT A Reversible Window Fen FU*
PRICE YOU CAN AFFORD
t II hi
\ FAN And 749 S
|| \ VENTILATOR > *•
U/ITM A L
rial WITH A
MITCHELL AIR CONDITIONER
trol of »ir stream. MOVES 850 CU. FT.
AS LOW AS $229.95 Os AIR
A MOOCL FOR 14 U P ' F er A 47
EVERY HOME NMNUH \
y aM .P 319.95 / fl
27 45 vl-w/
one M.P 459.95 •
CONVFNIFNT TERMS Westinghouse
, . f ।. 12 lnch
MaHh» e OSCULATING FAN
A "^r Ku* e»»t a
FAN Lau 24-inch the mighty >o-m*ch
Q c 7 qo _ WINDOW FAN ,°WeS^ Y
$114.5° kRmJI
• up to 4000 CaFaM* ■■ $16.95
• Cools Small Homo '’’''■llLLtU . . ] IW 'i/
• pH* op »o 36-in. Windows v. 7 Ldflkl OcJy
• Two-Spood Motor V’ 75^ A WML
WHITE’STIRE & AUTO SUPPLY
101 Floyd St. —
Passing Fancy
For Nancy, Age 10
Nothing like teaching your
। children your business when
they are young, reasons W. W.
Haralson, proprietor of the
Washington D. C. Super-Mark
et of the same name.
When a peanut manufacturer
asked Mr. Haralson to hire a
demonstrator to launch a new ;
product, he thought of all the
women demonstrators he had
used in the past, then hit up
on a unique idea. What better
way, he reasoned, to merchand
ise candy, than by having a
personable young lady passing
it out to the customers.
So Saturday, shoppers will be
greeted by the girlish smile of
I Nancy Haralson, age 10, who
will hostess the new peanut
candy.
Dairymen for the Agricultural
Extension Service, University
of Georgia, say to control flies
by regular spraying.
Campbell Honored
At Emory Law School
Robert P. Campbell Jr., son
of Mr. and Mrs. R. P. Campbell
of Covington, has won office
as treausurer of the Law School
student body at Emory Universi
ty, during recent student elect
ions held there. Campbell and
others elected with him will
serve during the academic year
1953-54.
Local Bakery Adds
New Equipment
Luke Savage, proprietor of the
Dixie Creme Donut Shop an
nounced the purchase of addit
itional equipment for the pre
paration of pie and cake mixes.
‘ The new equipment which will
( give Covington a modern bakery
1 , will be delivered in the next
■ thirty days and will enable the
shop to turn out a greater vari
ety of cakes and pies.
' Ten records kept by National
r Junior Vegetable Growers show
s a return for labor of from $1 to
$6 per hour.
Legion Post To
Sponsor Lecture
On Radio-Relay
LEGION POST TO -8-2
LEGION POST TO 1-18-2
; American Legion Post No. 32
i cordially invites Members and
; the general public to attend a
lecture demonstration to be giv
en by a Southern Bell Tele
phone and Telegraph Company
I Radio-Relay expert on Tuesday,
June 2nd, at the Legion Hall at
8 p. m,
Frank Woods, Information
Supervisor for the Southern'
Bell Telephone Company, will,
; use working models of the ult
; rahigh frequency microwave
equipment to demonstrate how j
the new apparatus helps meet!
the ever growing demand for!
telephone and television in the j
South.
Radio-relay now serves the!
Southeastern section of the ।
U. S. Towers supporting the
antenna’s that link Atlanta with !
Charlotte, N. C. on to Washing
'ton, D. C.
PAGE SEVENTEEN
Hollis Lawrence
Promoted to New
Telephone Duties
HOLLIS LAWRENCE 1-18-1
J. Hollis Lawrence, native ol
Mansfield, and son of Mr. and
Mrs. Overton Lawrence, ha«
en appointed manager of the
Southern Bell Telephone and
Telegraph Company in Savan
nah. Georgia.
Mr. Lawrence started his car
eer with the telephone company
in New Orleans in 1949, and
was transferred later in the
year to Atlanta, where he rece
cived training in various de
partments of operations. He wae
transferred to Sava'nnah April
1, 1952 assuming duties as publie
office manager.
A graduate of Tulane Uni
versity. New Orleans, Mr. Law
rence is a veteran with four
years service in the U. S. Navy,
an dnow holds rank of Lieuten
ant in the N^val Reserve.
Mr. Lawrence is a member of