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PAGE THIRTY
ATTEND CHURCH
SUNDAY
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hetel,
Completely Air-Conditioned
with individval Roem Control
Every Room with Private Bath
end Shower
Olympic Size Swimming Pool
and Cabana Club
snack Bar
Beach ¢ Solarium
Ceocldtail Lounge
Card Room
Television Room !
Free Parking
OVERLOOKING THE OCEAN.
COLLINS AVE, AT 307TH ST
MIAMI BEACH
|
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./ ||l Make flameless
.b., _. ‘, ,‘:ni ;-» ,‘;(‘ w’ SSsevsssens e :
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“inw® .. electric heating
part of your plans
BUILDING vour home? Make your blueprint ’
for better living complete by including mod
ern electric heating.
Clean! That’s electric heat. There is no ’
eombustion to create soot, no waste particles
to clutter the air.
An electric heating system is efficient, too.
Every bit of electrical energy is converted
into usable heat. The warmth is evenly dis
tributed throughout the house. Or control
it room by room if you like.
Fconomy is another important feature of
electric home heating. Installation and main
tenance costs are low, and so is the price you
pay per kilowatt-hour of electricity.
More than a million modern American
homes are heated by electricity, and only by
electricity. It's exciting to watch the list “
grow. It's solid comfort to join it! 1
|
TAX-PAYING © INVESTOR-OWNED ‘
|
|
A CITIZTEN WHEREVER Wi SERVIE ‘
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PASTURES + FERTILIZER = _ ¢l €
For weeks of extra grazing, higher nutritive value, greater yields, >TRN » |
top dress pastures this fall with CPA plant food m Get new & ’ ]
plantings off to a faster start, get better stands, quicker grazing % D i
with recommended amounts of CPA plant food. @ Ge by your ama St / !
local Cooperative Service Agency today. w -t i i
COTTON PRODUCERS ASSOCIATION : i
Farmers Mutual Exchange, Inc.
DENVER DAY, Manager HOWARD PICKETT, Asst. Manager ;
HIGHWAY -278 PHONE 786 3403-3404 COVINGTON, GEORGIA ‘
(Targest Coverace Any Weekly In The State
| Southern Tech
- Registration
- Date Oct. 2nd
Southern Technical Institute
;of Marietta, Georgia, has chang
jed its registration date for the
‘fall quarter. The change w a s
(made necessary because of the
‘moving of the college from its
temporary location to the new,
permanent campus in Marietta,
1 Georgia.
Under the new registration |
schedule, students will register|
at the Marietta campus on
Monday, October 2, rather than
the previously announced date,
September 235. i
The change in registration|
will not affect any courses ex
cept those offered through the
Southern Tech Day School.
Southern Tech is a Unit of the
Engineering Extension Division
of Georgia Tech, but all other
extension courses, including
night school courses, will have
registration on September 25,
jon Geergia Tech’s main campus.
! L. V. Johnson, Director of
'the Engineering Extension Di
|vision of Georgia Tech, point
ied out that the change in reg
istration for Southern Tech will
‘enable the college to begin the
i‘new quarter with its facilities
|in best possible condition.
I e— e
- IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE
IN THE COVINGTON NEWS |
Research Holds '
Hope For MD Viciims
| | mmee Y R
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R RT S RO 0 T T T
’ One little girl, and one big com
| plicated scientific machine. What
i do they have in common? The
| listle girl has muscular dystrophy,
’ a disease that defies analysis; the
I big machine is an electron micro- |
. scope, capable of magnifying mus- !
cle tissue 160,000 times. !
| The microscope is installed at
‘ the Institute for Muscle Dinne,’
' New York City, the modern re- |
search center built at a cost of |
more than $5,000,000 by Muscular ;
| Dystrophy Associations of Aw-é
ica, Ine.,, with funds raised in the |
| annual March for Muscular
Dystrophy. ‘
Robin Balnis, MDAA's 19()0\i
| National Poster Child, asked, while |
Nator=| Campaion Launched To
l Alert Teachers On Epilepsy
WASHINGTON, D. C. — This
month some 38 million stu
dents will be enrolled in the
nation’s public schools accord
ing to the U. S. Office of Edu
cation.
Os this vast army of young
Americans marching into class
rooms this Fall, The Epilepsy
Foundation (Federal Associa
tion for Epilepsy) estimates that
200 thousand may have some}
form of epilepsy. They will|
need the understanding and en
teachers and fellow students if
they are to gain an equal op
portunity toward normal edu
cetion and social development,
the Foundation points out. }
In order to help teachers
work effectively with these
thousands of children in normal
classroom settings, The Epilepsy
Foundation will conduct a na
tional professional information
campaign. Distribution of a
booklet entitled, ‘“Educating
Children Who Have Epilepsy”,
to public and parochial school
principals is a major part of the
program. The leaflets are sche
duled to be mailed from Wash
ington on October 13. {
In a covering letter, princi-|
pals will be asked to order cop- i
ies of the leaflet for each tea-|
cher and school nurse on their |
staff. |
Teachers will be asked to|
watch for spells of seeming in-~!
attention — or day dreaming — |
by students which may be the
first symptom of a form of epi- |
lepsy which is hardest to de-|
tect. Such seizures usually can|
be brought under control easily
by adequate medical attention. |
Dr. Norris G. Haring, edu- |
cational advisor to the Foun-§
dation, writing for the Nationali
Education Journal, points out
that “in a frightening number |
of cases these types of symp-|
toms (day dreaming) may ac-l
THE COVINGTON NEWS
DR IR R Smm———
on a recent wheel chair tour of the
Institute, “Will that machine help
me walk?”
In time it may, because it en
! ables scientists to explore the mys
| terious processes by which normal
| and diseased musele develops and
g functions—or, as in Rohin’s case,
| ceases to function.
' In time. In time for Robin?
| In time for the thousands of other
i children suffering from muscular
: dystrophy? Their only hope for
j recovery lies in the kind of re
i search being done at the Institute,
{ and in nearly one hundred scien
‘lifit institutions acreoss the world
'i under MDAA’s grant-in-aid pro- ‘
| gram, |
tually be petit mal seizures of|
epilepsy.” ’,
i Dr. Haring points out in the |
NEA article the most importantl
‘fact about children with epilep
'sy: The attitudes others have
‘toward these children can make
the difference between a near
normal life for them and a life
\ot fear, rejection, and emotion- |
al problems. |
t “The understanding of- epi
|lepsy and its problems by the
zteachers of America is of vital
limportance to the thousands of
children who have epilepsy and
’win be entering school this
! fall,” Haring wrote,
} »
Stokley Joins
Georgia Power
Athens Division
The Georgia Power Company
'has named Theodore P. Stokely
to serve in its Athens division
as an agricultural engineer. He
is one of three power company
agricultural engineers serving
the Athens division area. }
g A native of Crowford, Ga,
{Mr. Stokely attended Ogle-‘
{thorpe County High School. He
|holds the bachelor of science
! degree in agricultural engineer
!ing from the University of
| Georgia.
{ Prior to joining the power
| company, he was employed by
't h e International Harvester
| Company.
{ Mr. Stokely is a member of |
'the American Society of Agri-|
'eultural Engineers, the Junior |
gChamber of Commerce, and the |
| Masonic Order. He is marriedi
|to the former Miss Elsie Mae|
| Wilson of Chamblee. They have |
| four children. ;
| The new agricultural engi-|
‘neer will work with farmers|
' throughout the Athens division |
area aiding them in selecting |
and installing electrical equip-‘
ment on the farm and in plan
ning farm wiring and lighting
The Georgia Power Company
has operated a rural division
since 1927, and a groyp of 15}
agricultural engineers are as-|
signed to full - time duties in!
this field. ‘
- My Neighbors ‘
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“Os course that price
doesn’t include the federal,
state, local, excise or sales |
taxes...” ‘
|
sraueling 'l
through | |
: |
| Georgia |
1
e
Georgia’s Magnificent Rock y
By Glenn McCullough |
Natives prefer to call it “the
eighth wonder of the world”,
and others sometimes call it
the “grey monolith”. But what
ever they call it, Georgians
love it and flock in increasing
numbers to view it in awe.
Stone Mountain, largest ex
posed piece of granite on the
continent, predominates the
flatlands near Atlanta like the
great natural phenomena that
it is. Now in the fulfilling is
the dream of thousands of
Southerners as the area emer
ges as a state park.
Its seven miles of circum
ference, sprawling over near
ly 600 acres of land, fascinates
both young and old. To some
it is a challenge, and they
climb it; to others it is feartful,
and they respect it.
It has a colorful, often tur
bulent, history. Once Indians
met on its summit for confer
ences; gold prospectors have
poked and prodded its nooks
and crannies — and they've
come up with particles of many
metals; and it is said that
Ferdinand de Soto built a fort
on top with boulders. And as
exciting as all this ancient his
tory may be, it is the contem
porary history which has
caused tempers to rise and
tears to fall.
About 1915 the United
Daughters. of the Confederacy
in Atlanta took as a project an
idea suggested by many citi
zens in letters to editors: the
carving of a memorial to the
Confederacy onto the face of
the mountain. The famous
sculptor, Gutzon Borglum, was
{ commissioned to carve the head
of Robert E. Lee on Stone
Mountain.
l But after Borglum had look
| ed the mountain over, he sug
| gested instead a memoria! re
| constructing “the great chara
| cters of those days ... in action,
‘i mounted and on foot, moving
l across the granite mountain like
| two wings of an army”.
| The Stone Mountain Monu
| mental Association was set up
| to design and execute this
| panorama, and it agreed to
| pay the sculptor $250,000 and
allow him “complete” authority
in arrangements. He agreed to
complete the job in three
years.
But along came World War I|
land interrupted the work and|!
I 102 W. USHER ST. rHONE -786-3220 COVINGTON, GA.
} oy Now is the time to Plant for Fall ;" i -
|a : f f‘; Grazing. We are prepared to ;?j ‘
} .. "~ supply you with the best quality «%%g
i | §~ _ seed at Fair Prices. bBl P
q—————————————————— s ——————————
I FALL SHRUBS AND
FLOWER BULBS
} DIXIE RESEEDING ;
; CRIMSON CLOVER
? KY -3
FESCUE
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it was not until 1922 that he‘;!
was able to resume. By 1924 |
he had completed the head of ‘
General Lee and an unveiling |
ceremony was held.
Then things began to happen |
which are not now entirely|
clear—perhaps even then they |
were not clear. Money prob
lems arose, misunderstandings,
and finally political interfer- |
ence. The sculptor, enraged, |
destroyed his models and left
the state. Later he completed
the vast Mount Rushmore me
morial in South Dakota.
Many moons passed before
' another sculptor was employved.
He was Augustus Lukeman, a
Virginian, who had his own
ideas about how the memorial
ought to look. So, he set about
blasting off all of the first
scultotor’s work and began
anew with his own creation.,
bv 1928 his head of Lee was|
b m |
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. 'SQ’ CALF
' GROWER
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; ; . :‘?-*::»__\_l
t R E&é R
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Helps you raise good
uda'-ry_'yp.u h.,"en {‘
. . . economically!
{ SPARTAN GRAIN
' And MILL CO.
Jack McAlister,
, Local Representative |
| Phone 1165 Madison, Georgia
completed along with misty‘
outlines of other figures, then |
the money ran out again.
Since then various individ
uals and organizations have
come up with many plans and
projects, but not until recent
ly was a stable organization
put in charge of the operation.
Now, things are moving
along at a fast clip and a park
-m-__
' SELL YOUR TIMBER TO—
WILLIAMS BROTHERS
| LUMBER COMPANY
{ Call or Write To:
H. R. Williams, Phone: MA-7-8421
; 934 Glenwood Avenue, S. E. Atlonta
I Or: S. D. McCullers, Phone: Conyers 483-5662
i Route 1, Lithonia, Georgia
foioai Bi i ikt
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T. E. HATES, Owner
| Phone 786-3737 103 Washington St. Covington, Ga.
RYE GRASS
COMMON AND PERENNIAL
OATS
MOREGRAIN
(The Most Wilt Resistant)
MARCONE OR DAVIEE
BARLEY
i R
WE BUY
PECANS, CORN,
WHEAT, OATS,
and EGGS
it ———— |
Thursday, September 21, 1961
‘takes shape at the base of the
| mountain. Come now and en
joy this great grey mass. Your
neighborhood service station
will be happy to mark your
map. :
p oty joig e R BOOSR
The day’s quota of energy
foods should be distributed
'[evenly throughout the day, say
| Extension nutrionists.
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