Newspaper Page Text
, .. 1954 (Our Advertisers Are Assured Os Results) "
rCD t®' ___ । — - ——
B fish Control Methods
Ld in Commission Booklet
I > lll
■ l O'
■ ..County ■ ■ ■ Slaie
i
■ from p aae One
■ P
■ oiin
■ "C 6 i
■
H tn.s ' la ‘
handling 1 9 pH '
■ -
■ 1,1
B ■ ■ ■ Ue
yp H<; -"I! has.
H from an attack of old I
■ " ,1 ,hP |ob
a little penicillin reac-
M ;„ t * -i.erhlllfi
■ Street in that splendid
H.ndnuck of I
M' he a special
^■ace in our hearts for |
■• n( .ahties .. . . Carl |
■ :ng his morning Coga ।
K ro>> from
■ and Herbert and Gai-
Hners looking over plans ,
subdivision. . . . ever
Hie needs of Conyers . . .
M' . [ am quite sure
Mze this i the Boss sub
fl for the Office Boy
H the U. D. C. rally here
Hgton while we do her
Kweepin’ up.
■Automobile Insurance
I Your best safeguard against disaster is
I proper automobile liability and property
■ I damage insurance. Our insurance meets
i the law's requirements, protects you from
J financial loss, and assures you top-notch
f service in any accident emergency. Tele
[ phone or visit our office to get details with
out obligation.
Wahee Insurance Agency
NEWTON FEDERAL BUILDING
Covington, Ga.
FREE! FREE!
I sT w
wf WM. A. ROOIRS
•HVIRFIAII f
Made enri QuwranHMf Ki
by ONUBA lit y
OUR NEW CO-OPERATIVE ADVERTISING PLAN
SPECIAL OFFER
Are Now Giving Our Business Cards to Our Customers
t HESE BUSINESS CARDS ARE GOOD FOR WM. A. ROGERS
SILVERWARE MADE AND GUARANTEED BY ONEIDA, LTD.
marl nl, of AII y° u •» ,av « f bo*e businesi cards given you with P^^ ses
SILVFOw?s r r lt . Ore ’ and fhe y are redeemable for beautiful WM. A. ROGERS
end * in your choice of three exquisite designs. Start your set oay
u| afp yOU Wl ' ke agreeably surprised how fast your silverware cards will accum-
*ith?k^ de P°»ible for you through a special arrangement we have made
York l J° 9ers Sil *«rware Redemption Bureau Inc. of 855 Sixth Avenue, New
ork L New York.
tolalon P / e ^L U ' re ^ amoun t of cards listed on the back of each card or in the
Urr.?i> ° she New York Office and the silverware will be forwarded to you
Cel P °«» Insured Prepaid.
Remember to ask for ROGERS SILVERWARE CARDS’
THEY ARE TRULY VALUABLE
WILLARD REED & SONS
^.,oT‘ k •=• - c S Z^„,g..
Detailed information on the
hunting, trapping and fishing
seasons and regulations for 1954-
55, plus diagrams giving specifi
cations for the legal fish baskets
to be used in the rough fish con
trol program are available from
the State Game and Fish Com
! mission in a newly published
pamphlet.
All details concerning the
rough fish control program, plus
valuable helpful hints are con
tained in the new booklet. Ap
plications for permits which will
. be issued with metal tags to be
attached to baskets for identifi
cation purposes are now avail
able at the Game and Fish
Commission, 412 State Captiol,
Atlanta, Georgia.
The Rough Fish Bill, House
Bill 270, was passed by the last
General Assembly and provides
for the use of special type bas-
I kets to reduce and control the
i populations of undesirable fish in
Georgia waters. All rules and
| regulations governing this Actin
! addition to drawings of many
of the rough fish are contained
. in the new booklet.
“Any person,” Director Fulton
Lovell declared, ‘is eligible to
operate baskets provided their
traps meet the specifications,
। metal tags are attached to each
' basket, permits are secured and
proper conduct compatible to
regulations is observed.”
Dingus Attends Bar
Association Meeting
p
Col. William J. Dingus Jr. at
tended the American Bar Associa
tion Southern Regional Meeting
and Midwinter Meeting of House
of Delegates, March 3-9. Biltmore
Hotel. Atlanta.
GO TO CHURCH
NEXT SUNDAY
Ida Cason Gardens Open Sunday For Tour
, fry,-
tEmMaPy?? SSSSgSHSssaMHawss®
v JI l
■P-mW;.
■
CHIPLEY, Ga.—The beautiful Ida Cason Gardens, will be hosts beginning next Sunday to
Ty era \ thousand members of the Garden Club of Georgia, according to an announcement by
Howard Callaway. Gardens Director, and Mrs. A. N. Dykes, ot Columbus. Club President. By special
arrangement. Garden Clubbers will be taken on a tour of the Gardens that will include not only
th' i k .” ower tra ^ s a nd other horticulteral areas, but a visit to the golf course, the beach, and
iiic ciuu nouse.
All Garden Members are invited and are asked lo notify their dub president that they want
to visit the Ida Cason Gardens. *
Extension Staff
Members Receive
National Honor
Two members of the Univer
sity of Georgia Agricultural Ex
tension Service staff, Mrs. Mar
tha Harrison and Miss Audrey
Morgan, have been initiated into
Mu chapter of Pi Lambda Theta,
national honorary fraternity for
women in the field of education.
Both are doing graduate work
toward their Master of Exten
sion Education degrees at Cor
nell University.
Miss Morgan, native of Clyo,
is district agent in Southeast
Georgia and has been in Ex
tension work since 1937 when
she was home demonstration
agent in Southeast Georgia and
has been in Extension work
since 1937 when she was home
demonstration agent in Lowndes
County. She is a graduate of
Georgia State College for
Women, and in 1942 was award
ed a fellowship in Community
Improvement to Furman Uni
versity. She has taught school
in Clyo and Metter, Georgia,
and in Groveland, Florida, and
worked with Farm Rehibilita
tion, Farm Resettlement and
Farm Securtiy before coming to
Extension Service. In 1943 she
was featured in National 4-H
Club News as a typical home
demonstration agent.
Mrs. Harrison, assistant state
4-H Club leader, was born in
Bartow and is a graduate of
Sandersville High School. She
attended G. S. C. W. and re
ceived her degree in Home
Economics from the University
of Georgia. She began work
with the Agricultural Extension
Service as home demonstration
agent in Monroe in 1942, where
she served for one year before
going to Thomas county as home
demonstration agent from 1943
to 1946.
THE COVINGTON NEWS
Newton Corn
Clubs of 1905
Sire Ga. 4-H
Newton County farm boys, 151
to be exact, and the county school
I superintendent in 1905 have the
| credit for starting 4-H club work
in Georgia. Last week as the na-
j tion observed National 4-H Club
week, the 151 had grown to 131,-
385 in Georgia lone.
The 4-H Club program began
I in Georgia about the same time
it did in other states, and in
about the same way-with corn
i clubs.
Probably the first boys’ agri
cultural organization in the state
: was the corn club organized here
by County School Superintendent
| G. C. Adams. The 151 members
grew an acre of corn each. After
harvest, each boy exhibited 10
ears of corn in a county show.
Thus began 4-H.
Girls became a part of the
; movement in 1911 when tomato
i growing and canning clubs were
' inaugurated by the State College
' of Agriculture.
| By then, boys’ corn clubs had
1 I grown, and the first southern
I corn show was held that year at
the city auditorium in Atlanta.
Citizens of Atlanta opened their
homes and entertained the corn
club boys from all over the state.
The event was held at the state
capitol in 1912 and 1913, with
some 1,200 farm boys attending
each year.
An eventful year was 1914
That saw the beginning of the
Southeastern Fair inAAtlant a
direct result of the corn shows in
, previous years. The fair has con
tinued to be an annual event,
with 4-H Club work as one of its
main features.
Boys’, and girls’ poultry clubs
had their beginning in 1914, too.
To become a member, a young
ster had to set at least one set
ting of purebred eggs. These
clubs elected officers and held
regular meeting. With the ex
ception of the poultry project
very little of the early 4-H work
' was done jointly with boys and
girls.
The Smith-Lever Act also was
passed in 1914. This created the
Agricultural Extension Service
as a part of the U. S.. Depart
ment of Agriculture and the land
grant college in each state.
More county and home demon
stration agents were added to the
staff, and at the writing of the
first annual report in 1915. Geor
gia had' 5.507 club girls and 14,-
275 club boys.
140016 Economists
Meet In Macon„
Indirect Sunlight
The 1954 annual meeting of •
the Georgia Home Economics
Association will be held in
Macon at the Dempsey Hotel,
March 26th and 27th. The theme
of the convention is “Leader- I
: ship Through Home Economics I
Professions.”
Miss Elizabeth Stephens, Pres- ;
. ident, of Macon, Georgia, will
open the convention Friday at
; 2:30 P. M. The afternoon speak
er, Mrs. Martha McCormick
Kelly, Consumer Service Depart
n.cmt of General Foods Corpora
ation. New York, will discuss
“Your Public Relations.’ Dr. H. j
B. Masters, Director Continuing
Education Program, University
of Georgia, will be the banquet ;
speaker. Other program speakers
include Miss Frances Urban, •
Field Representative, A. H. E. ■
A., and Miss Gale Ueland, Fed- ,
eral Extension Service. Wash- 1
ington, D. C. Miss Ueland s topic |
will be "Let’s Appeal to Mrs. I
Consumer.”
Miss Freida Matthews, Berry |
College, will introduce Miss i
CONTROLLING TOBACCO
INSECTS
Pointing out that Georgia to
bacco farmers will be t
planting their tobacco during the
next few weeks, tobacco sp.
ists warn that insects can Ue
controlled more easily and
cheaply in the bed than in the
field. They recommend two ap
plications of dust or spray con
taining parathion or TEPP dur
ing*the week before transplant
ing.
Olive C. Berry, Simplicity Pat
tern Company, New York, who
will present a fashion show for
a joint session of the College
Clubs and the senior organiza
tion.
The Home Economics Associa
tion membership includes home
demonstration agents, homemak
ing teachers, dietitians, and busi
ness home economists.
Wf " J. ,
embroidered
N batiste .• *
’14 95 —
I HI 11 7/
e ;'7 L u u I \ F
" l XI < . oaf v i v £■ f i
nil i l< L\
id # O v n- \ I ■ •
lick \l' 1 1 I f
* & "Pi S iH/v i i it ■ tUif
‘ W t >Hi H\\ ‘ I B 111 I
All nylon with Ml ever mi S n I j । I It jMF
broidery on a bodice front j I p. J । f I
that hes interest in the little J I 1 rj X<g.l | I
bow t»e coNet. Sues MH A t f Mk * J B I
k>2?H. pi I Wk J 1
Twin bends el ntnhro^e^ m* I ■ SI 4.^5 jkk
from shoulder to hem hee of , | -T ^1 L '"f ■ \ O
this shew I collared aH nylon . £ f v AYt IIP I IT i
charmer Sues 14^ N 22^. /M® « « Seen in VOGUE IU» SUW
*4, j Y f > z ’ J ■
A single band of embroidery 'T ( t— J f |
crosses the bodice and little tU g 5 \ | «**< Peg Pofmer Drewms from $8.95 1 I
sleeves of this notch collared \ I \ 1 \ 1
all nylon c esuet S«es M!4 ( \ I \ I |
*° 2? * IVll w
“• fill ♦* <♦• ’ es
HortronSel bends el embror 1 | I I
dery highlight the card igen If I \ XV/I— I I’T'IT ’ Q
neckhned bodice of this k. J \ 1 VV 1 111 I— a kJ
nyloa Spring seeAet Sires W \ \
14* N nvt wl COVINGTON
— (Largest Coverage Any Weekly In The Stale)
. WHITE’S
»
COVINGTON
To Bring New Youth and G’amour
to Your Beauty Zone *
WEAR
cj^e'Bras
by FORMFIT
If you or« one of the 47 out of 100
women who ore di*sali*fled with the
bro they're now weoring, know the thrill
of weoring the right LIFE BRA! Formfit
make* bro* for every figure need.
There’s not another woman on earth with
a figure exactly like yours. That is why
Formfit makes Ute Bras in such a wide
variety of stvles and designs. In our com
prehensive array, we’ve Lite Bras to fil as
if made for you ... to lilt, mold, correct,
hold. And this personalised fit is the secret
of Life Hra’s matchless freedom and com
fort. Come be fitted—you’ll see and Jcel
the difference instantly!
fife „
* f
*/■ ; i
• A W
* /
* ■ '
hhie
■ ■ ■ -I
A<>. .594 Life Bra shttum, with all-over ttitchmg.
Exclusive triangular cup sections above and below
reinforced for added /irmness and support. Nylon
Uiffeta, uhile or black, $2.98 Cotton, $2.50
Other Life Bre Styles from $1.25
PAGE THREE