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Thursday, May 18, 198!
Covington Brownie Scouts Held "Flying Up" Ceremony at Girl Scout Hut
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LOVINGTON BROWNIE SCOUT "Flyin Up“ Ceremony was held Tuesday
afternoon at the Girl Scout Hut. Shown in the photo above, left to right:
Front Row: Connie McElreath, Joan Laseter, Sherry Carithers, Mrs. B. V.
Morris, Mrs. J. B. Mitchell, Harriet Parker, Debbie Lott and Lanelle Cog-
Pushing a child to learn too
rapidly beyond his rate and |
pattern of growth can contri- j
bute to mental illness, says
Miss Audrey Morgan, head of
the Georgia Extension family
life department.
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I STANDARD
_□JoiLci
[Dealer) . _
R.C. COOK STANDARD SERVICE
STATION
Highway — 278 and Emory Street
Telephone 786- 6313 Covington, Georgia
WHOLE OR HALF —
SUGAR CURED SLAB BACON Lb. 39c
PORK SPARE RIBS Lb. 39c
LEAN PORK CHOPS Lb. 69c
WIENERS 3 Lbs. SI.OO
! PACKERS LABEL —
VIENNA SAUSAGE Can 10c
NABISCO —
PREMIUM SALTINE CRACKERS lb. 29c
GREEN CABBAGE 3 Lbs. For 10c
' fancy —
FRESH YELLOW CORN 4 Ears For 29c
TOMATO AND SWEET POTATO PLANTS
SUPERLATIVE Market and Hdwe.
RUSSELL BRADEN - Manager — ALL QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED
PHONE — 786-2557 208 West Usher Street Covington. Georgia
(Our Advertisers Are Assured Os Results)
National Farm Safety Week,
July 23-29, cosponsored by the
U.S. Department of Agricul
' ture and the National Safety
Council, has as its theme this
year, “Safety Is a Family Af
fair.”
gins. Back Row: Teresa Adams, Sheila Head, Dorothy Cooper, Jane Mit
chell, Genell Tilson, June Brown, Debra Head, Ivy Summers, Jeannie
Walton, Cindy Corley, Jill Heard, Tana Morris, Cindy Moss and Linda
Maddox.
Patience Is A Rare Jewel
We Need To Wear
Sometimes the most diffi
cult thing in the world to do is
wait. Yet, patience is a crown
ing virtue that we should all
seek. People get sick and ner
vous because they lack the
golden possession of patience.
Often we act unwisely and
speak hasty words that we
later regret because of the con
spicious absence of patience.
Now some folks get patience
and complacence confused.
Complacence means to accept
things as they are without
concern. We simply accept all
of life with a sense of self-sat
isfaction. Patience, on the oth
er hand, is a more inclusive
word. It is the power of self
control. Webster points out
that one who is patient exer
cises “forbearance under pro
vocation.” We abstain from
any activity that would injure
another. It also means that we
face life calmly. When our
neighbors do things that irri
tate us we do not seek revenge.
Here is a little story that il
lustrates patience in a crude
but concrete manner. Just af
ter a tired woman had hung a
nice clean wash out to dry the
weight of heavy wet clothes
broke the line. This was just
bad luck. She held her temper
and washed them again and
after hanging them on the line
the old red cow rubbed up
against them. This was a mis
fortune. Again, she held her
tongue. She washed them the
third time and placed them on
the line to dry when a strong
wind blew dirt on them from
a freshly plowed field. The wo
man controlled her thoughts
and washed them again. This
my friend is patience.
If is frequently easy but not
always wise to strike back at
someone who has hurt us. It
Life Can
Ee Letter
ROBERT V. OZMENT, Ph. D.
St. James Church, Atlanta
often reflects more courage
and fortitude to refrain than
to act. The writer of Hebrews
advised us to “Lay aside every
weight and the sin which doth
so easily beset us, and let us
run with patience the race that
is set before us.” (Hebrews
12:1) I believe Shakespear was
right when he wrote, “how
poor are they that have no pa
tience.”
The story is told that when
Da Vinci was painting that
marvelous picture, “Last Sup
per” he was chided for stand
ing hours looking at the can
vas but not making a stroke.
“When I pause the longest,” he
replied, “I make the most tell
ing strokes with my brush.”
John Milton has reminded
us that “they also serve who
only stand and wait.” It is
sometimes hard to see any good
in waiting. The Bible tells us
that “they that wait upon the
Lord shall renew their streng
th; they shall walk and not
faint.” ((Isaiah 40:31) You
will notice that the key word
in this statement is ‘wait’. Our
strength shall be renewed, not
by rushing to and fro, but by
waiting.
Minor Children of
Deceased Veterans
May Get Pension
Unmarried minor children of
deceased veterans may be eli
gible for pension payments
even when their mother, the
veteran’s widow, is not eligi
ble, the Veterans Administra
tion pointed out today.
Cases in point are where the
widow is ineligible due to hav
ing remarried or due to hav
ing income in excess of estab
lished limits. The ineligibility
of the widow does not affect
the eligibility of the minor
children.
A. W. Tate, Manager, Vet
erans Administration Region
al Office, 449 West Peachtree
Street, N. E„ Atlanta, Georgia,
pointed out that when a widow
and children are already on
the pension rolls, the subse
quent ineligibility of the wid
ow poses no problem. Pension
payments to the children are
continued after the mother’s
name is removed from the rolls.
However, in cases where the
widow has never applied for
a pension, or whose application
was not allowed, due to her
remarriage or excessive in
come, the VA may have on re
cord of any minor children to
which payment should be made.
Unmarried minor children
of deceased veterans may be
eligible for pension until they
are 18, or 21 if attending
school, provided their own per
sonal incomes would not bar
them.
Full details may be obtain
ed at the Veterans Admini
stration Regional Office, 449
West Peachtree Street, N. E.,
Atlanta, Georgia.
Lumber Latticework
An open latticework of lum
ber makes an attractive canopy
for a patio or courtyard. Ac
cording to the Southern Pine
Association, this use requires
lumber that has been pressure
treated with chemical preser
vaties to offset the effects of
constant weather exposure.
THE COVINGTON NEWS
IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE
IN THE COVINGTON NEWS
HENSON
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HENSON FURN. CO. INC.
"Covington's Leading Furniture Store"
PHONE 786-2221 COVINGTON, GEORGIA
(Largest Coverage Any Weekly In The State)
Horace L. Payne
Participated In
Army Exercise
Army PFC Horace L. Payne,
son of Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Pay
ne, Route 1, Covington, Ga.,
participated in organization
day exercises in Germany, May
3, commemorating the 100th
anniversary of the Bth Divi
sion’s 16th Infantry.
The celebration included a
parade through the local com
munity of Baumholder, a unit
open house and a pageant de
picting the history of the 16th
since its reactivation at the
outbreak of the Civil War. The
16th existed as early as 1798
and has been on continuous ac
tive duty 1861.
Payne is a member of the
16th’s Company B. He entered
the Army last May, completed
basic training at Fort Jackson,
S. C„ and arrived overseas last
October.
Poultry and poultry pro
ducts accounted for about 63
percent of the total receipts
from livestock in Georgia last
year, according to the Georgia
Crop Reporting Service.
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JACKSON HIGHWAY 786-6110 ;
COVINGTON, GEORGIA .
PAGE ELEVEN