Newspaper Page Text
■COND
■Receive Certificates At
lyAtOxford 116th Graduation
■ . thP 116th annual commencement of Emory
H^ VP been announced by Dr. Virgil Y. C. Eady,
Ha"'smn executive. Thirty-three studnts are cand-
H n; ninr college certificates.
Kmmencement season will begin Sunday. May 31,
■ -h tlw -^■calau--
Kn being given by
H Long, pastor of the
H Rnad Methodist
Htlanta. Born at Pen-
Heorgia. Dr. Long ree-
R rkgroe from the
■ , Georgia and the
Hw from Yale Uni-
B also <ompleted
■ . PG ,’remrnn the
K ph, 0. degree at
H . cone further grad-
N at the University
[HEHIB
[drive in 7
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11 ■ ■ —-JI W
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I YOUR FAMILY THEATRE
Junction highway 11-12
|wsday and Friday
I MAY 28 and 29 .
lie Murphy Stephen McNally in
hl AT SILVER CREEK"
Also Paramount News
I Saturday
I MAY 30
John Wayne in
kIEGHANY UPRISING'
I Comedy "Chost Busters"
l*nday and Monday
I may 31-JUNE 1
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MY MAN AND I"
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I’'day A Wednesday
I JUNE 2-3
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I Our Refreshment Counter For Good
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of Chicago, Union Theological
Seminary, New York: the Uni
versity of Edinburgh, Scotland;
and the University of Marburgh,
Germany.
Dr. Long has been a member
of the North Georgia Conference
of the Methodist Church for
twenty-three years. Prior to that
time he served in various public
schools in Georgia During 1928-
30 he was Assistant Director of
Religious Education with the
ffinningintt
EAO's No. 1 Citizen
W Owl
-
.■T'MinH
penn McWhorter
Penn McWhorter, son of Mrs.
Geraldine F. McWhorter, of
। Winder, has been named Emory- j
1 at-Oxford's Number 1 Citizen by |
j a majority vote of the student 1
body. The announcement came ;
with the release of the student
yearbook, The Memory. I
I While at Oxford, McWhorter
has made an outstanding acad- :
emic record and has also been
very active in extra-curricular
activities. As president of the
student body, he served as chair
an of the Student Activities
Council and the Student Judici
ary Council. He is also chairman
of the Junior Board of Stewards
and is a member of Athletic
Company C, The Memory Staff
and Phi Gamma Literary So
ciety.
I ... .
General Board pf Education,
Methodist Church. South. Nash
ville Tennessee. In this position
he travels to colleges to the
South delivering sermons and
addresses in 75 colleges and uni
versities. He has served as past
or of the Allen Memorial Chur
ch. Oxford: the Glenn Memorial
Church, Emory University, and
has been pastor of the Peach
tree Boad Methodist Church
since 1942.
He was a delegate to the
Southeastern Jurisdictional Con
ference of the Methodist Chur
ch in 1940. 1944. and 1948. and
to the Eighth Methodist Ecumen
ical Conference in Oxford. Eng
land. in 1951. He has contribut
ed numerous articles to church
papers and is the author of
the book “Guide Posts.”
Following the sermon, lunch
will be served in Haygood Din
ing Hall. Dean and Mrs. Eady
will have a coffee hour at their
home at 1:30 p. m. The grad
uates. their guests, and mem
bers of the faculty are invited.
On Friday evening, June 5. at
7 p. m„ a buffet supper honor
ing the graduates will be given
in Haygood Dining Hall. The
graduates, their parents, and
members of the faculty are in
vited to attend.
Dr. Myron F. Wicke. Sec
retary, the Division of Educat
ional Institutions, the General j
Board of Education, The Meth
odist Church. Nashville, Tenn- !
esse., will deliver the com- :
I mencenment address on Satur- ,
dav. June 6, at 11 a. m. Both
the Blaccaloureate sermon and
the commencement exercise will
take place in the historic Old .
Church,
Dean Eady will preside and
award certificates. Candidates
for the junior college cert
ificate who completed the
requirements for graduation
on Dec. 18, 1952 are: Melvin
Mitchell. Miami Beach Fla.,
Johhny Carson Rhodes. Wood
land. Ala.; James Delbert Satter
field. Canton, and David Otto
Williams. Dalton. Those who
completed the requirements on
March 14. 1953 are: John Ald
nlpus Abromet. Merritt Island,
Fla; Victor Philip Mackqul.
I Jacksonville. Fla.; Robby Joe '
McClendon, LaGrange; Willi-1
am Wayne O' Connell. St. Aug-
I ustine, Fla.; Joseph William
Cagle, Newnan; and Granville
Newton Rainey, Fort Valley.
Candidates expected to com
plete the requirements by June
6. 1953 are: Otho Bell Jr., !
Irwinton; John Hayes Cobb.
Smyrna: Charles William Cress
ler. Starke, Fla.; George Pierce
F.zzard, Lawrenceville; Charles
Albert Farr, Jr., Atlanta; Clar-I
Raymond W. Gage. 11. Jackson
ence Finlayson. Finleyson; Geor
ge Irvin Fulmer, Leesburg. Fla.;
ville. Fla.; Norman Isaac Gold
man. Thomson; Bnb Flint Holl
is. Wrightsville; Richard Glenn
Hutchinson. Carrollton; Unwell
Young Jackson, Jr.. Tignall;
LefhueL Hugh Kemp. LaGiange;
Oscar Brunell Langford. Winder;
I Milton E McLain. Jr.. Buford:
Thaddeus Penn McWhorter.
1 Winder; Herbert Sidney Meltzer. .
Palatka, Fla., Dennis Irving 1
COVINGTON. GEORGIA. THURSDAY, MAY 28, 1953
Kiwanis Views
I Forestry Film
I “The Story of Trees for
| Paper”, in technicolor, featured
| the regular weekly meeting of
I the Kiwanis Club, held Thursday,
I May 21, th the Legion Hall.
E. E. (Buck) Callaway, prog
ham chairman, introduced Adrian
| Harden, County Agent Mr.
I Harden, presented Bob Aycock,
I County Forester, who, in turn,
| introduced Toombs Lewis, con
. servation forester, Union Bag
land Paper Corporation, Wood
[ lands Division, Savannah, Ga.
I Mr. Lewis, who makes head-
I quarters at Greensboro, discuss
led the economic importance of
J the industry; required wood
supply; management assistance,
and various aspects of this in
dustry.
The importance of forestry and
: agriculture was stressed by Mr.
i Lewis, who pointed out that 70
per cent of the land in the
Southeast is owned by individual
' landowner.
i Fire protection; wise harvest
'of present timberlands; and the
importance of more planting for
future needs, was treated by the
visiting speaker. Annual per
capita paper consumption in the
United States, according to Mr.
Morrow, Cleveland, Ohio: David
Edmond Parker, Jr. Savannah:
Edward Smith Pierce. Hapeville;
Lester Silas Smith, Jr.. Dalton;
Benjamin Homer Summerour.
Cumming: and David Wilson,
Quitman. Arkansas.
■
SWANS DOWN. Yellow, Whi’c sr Devil rood
CAKE MIXES 35c
BALLARD—-Plain or Self Rising
FLOUR 5 lbs 49c
ROYAL — No Cooking
INSTANT PUDDING 2 for 25c
7 MINUTE
PIE FILLING 26c
WFSCO—I2 ei Cello Bar
VANILLA WAFERS 19c
GESBERS OR BEECHNUT
BABY FOOD 11 jars 1.00
3 MINUTE
GRITS 15c
CLOVERLEAF—37c Sin
MILK, dried only 33c
JELLO 3 pkgs 25c
BET—Small Sl»
MILK 6 for 39c
TOMS
CANDY, Peanut Butter Log .29c
CAMPFIRE—ReguIar 34c
MARSHMALLOWS 1 lb 25c
WITH BOTTLES
COCA-COLA case 89c
SUNSHINE—With Pork
BLACK EYE PEAS 2 for 29c
LIPTON S—Regular $1.39 Value
TEA lib pkg 1.27
BEAVERS
.SAUSAGE IN OIL 3lb can 1,25
MAINE—FIat
SARDINES 3 for 25c
Market
STREET COVINGTON, GEORGIA
What God And
His Church
Mean To ME
(Continued from page one)
the days are not long enough to
seek to do His will. Long ago,
I learned that the secret, of vic
torious living is in trying to find
and do His will, not mine. My
will on these hot summer days
would be to sit in the cool of
a quiet spot and meditate on the
many blessings that have come
to me. However, I know that God
expects Us who love Him to not
be hearers only, but doers of the
Word. So many lack the peace
and security of anchoring their
lives, by accepting Christ into
their heart. My greatest joy
comes when any of my unsaved
friends repent of their sins,
confess Christ as their Saviour,
and become obedient followers
of His perfect example. My
greatest so; row comes as a re
sult of lack of faith to believe
that ‘‘all things are possible”
Lewis, is 385 pounds.
Periods for thinning timber
was outlined briefly, and Mr.
Lewis declared that the present
timber industry would improve
2 1/2 to 3 times with a well
balanced program.
Homer F. Sharp. President,
presided. Vis tors included,
others than Messrs. Harden,
Aycock, and Levis, T T. Purdnm,
of Decatur, a guest of Everett
Pratt; and Marcus Bryant, now
associated with the Covington
News, a guest of Mr. Sharp.
with God. We, his fo l lowers, can
never attain perfection, for
Christ alone wa# perfect. But we
can strive or press toward flhe
mark of the prize of the high
calling in Christ Jesus. Such love
as Christ gave tn mankind con
, strains me to love, to serve and
to work while it is yet day for
the night comes too soon when
no man can work.
God not only inspires me to
forgive all whom I might other
wise hold a grudge against, but
will not let me hate anyone. That
alone could be the answer to the
end of war, dislike, tension, and
strife, among nations and indi
viduals. In the study of many
religions I find that fear, super
stition, greed, selfishness obscene
the lives of many. My greatest
fears have melted away as I
1 prayed! Prayer is the vital force
that can change those things that
. seem impossible. I have seen
, so many miracles in my life that
, when I hear a skeptic speak of
: miracles as ‘‘mystic or impos
sible” I yearn for the power to
be able to tell them what I
1 I know has been miraculous as a
result of prayer.
I surely am not a writer, but
1 am trying to answer the request
to speak my conviction and ji/d
' । a little of what I feel in my heart.
The abiding joy and satisfac
tion, the hope of eternal life,
■ the blessed assurance that I will
never be alone fills my inmos
being with such deep apprecia
tion of so wonderful a Savior. I
have found that as I turn over
the problems, that I can do no
: thing about, to God; and believe
His promise, then worry, doubt
and fear dissolve in the light of
His wisdom and power, and my
(horizons are changed to include
EATWEL i <i Can
JACK MACKERAL 2 for 38c
WITH 5 PERCENT D. D. T,
FLIT pint size 35c
HEINZ—I 4 OZ. BOTTLE
CATSUP 2 for 49c
SUREFRESH
SHORTENING 3lb can 69c
MAINE—NO. 1
POTATOES / 5 lbs 19c
GOLDEN RIPE
BANANAS 2 lbs 24c
FRESH CUT
TURNIP GREENS lb 5c
TRY OUR DELICIOUS
I' PURITAN
Franks. .. lb Vk
FRESH DRESSED FRESH GROUND
Fryers,.... lb49c Beef lb 39c
THIGHS AND
Drumsticks, lb 79c Beef 19c
BEfF OR MAL
Breasts lb 85c Roast hSc
CHICKEN VEAL GROPE M LON
Backs .1 lbs Ik Sleak bJk
CENTER CUT HOUR® ORMD
Pork Chops lb 69c Steak bßc
all men everywhere, for God so
loved the world!
My heartfelt desire is that I
might overcome my weakess and
imperfection, that I might more
^worthily represent my Lord.
These are my sentiments; my
prayers, in the words of another:
“Hold ahou my hand within ।
HVOBAULIC DUMPING CVUNOtF
. COTTON BASKO ?
’ BASKET SUPPORT FRAME X Y
DIUKIRi OUC! CRUIf I ■
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fc. z dhivfry diki :
AD.UOMINI j
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ADH-TMfNt :
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MHI FRONT BRUSH RC,I AOTU'.'MENr ..
The new low cost Dearborn Cotton Harvester shown above has heen
developed to bring mechanical harvesting within reach of thousands of
cotton growers who now pick by hand. Designed for mounting on Ford
tractors, the Harvester nses rotating nylon brushes to remove both
cotton and burs from the stalk. A blower delivers cotton and burs to a
special Cotton Basket or to a trailing wagon, blowing out dirt and trash.
Including basket, the Harvester weighs 1,850 pounds and harvests up
to P/i acres per hour.
McGuire tractor company
COVINGTON, GEORGIA
THIS PAJ>ER IS COVINGTON'S
INDEX TO CIVIC PRIDE
AND PROSPERITY
thine own
I would wot take one step alone
Help me the message tn hear
Christ’s gospel message every*
w l '»re
Shine through my fare till all
who see
Forget my face m finding Thee” t
Amen.
NUMBER 22