Newspaper Page Text
PAGE 6
Newton Federal Pays Big Dividend
Newton Federal Savings and
Loan Association paid their
69th and 70th consecutive di
vidends during 1963 with a
record total of a $250,000.00
being earned by savers at
Newton Federal, based on an
annual dividend rate of 4
1/2%.
Herbert H. Vining. Execu
tive Vice President, comment
ed that the strong savings in
flow and substantially increas
ed home lending volume at
Newton Federal was indicative
of the consistently growing de-
: with our .
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Phon* 766-2205
Covington, Georgia
i
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: । now *
C\; •
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added
— h .
vitamin A ■
2 t ”
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Z There ii convincing evidence among dairymen todar
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“ ircoats are glossier . . . and voting stock grow taater
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SMALL EGGS
3 dozen SI.OO
HINTON BROS.
Z WE DELIVER
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wIU 7 E. Reynolds Street Phone 786-2234 Covington. Ga.
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’ mand for savings and loan ser- !
vices in this community andl
elsewhere in the nation.
“The savings and loan sys- ■
MO IB »
r T V
JH WK- A
HERBERT VINING
tern provides the most effici- i
ent employment of real sav
ings toward the investment in
long-term real estate lending,
particularly in the area of pri
vate single - family homes,
and,” he said, “we feel that
savings and loan institutions
have now achieved a critically I
important place in, our total |
economy and that their in
fluence will continue to ex
pand in the foreseeable fu
ture.”
Mr. Vining predicted a fur
ther increase in housing and
home financing activities dur
ing 1964.
Mrs. Jim Hopkins
Funeral Held al
Covington Mills
Funeral services for Mrs. Jim
F. Hopkins of Wheat Street,
Covington, were held Friday
afternoon, December 27, at
Covington Mills Methodist
Church with Rev. Marshall
Dale, pastor of the church, off
iciating. He was assisted in the
services by Rev. Edgar Calla
way and Rev. Carl Cassidy.
Mrs. Hopkins, 63, was a
native of Oconee County. Ai
member of Covington Mills
Methodist Church, she was a
former employee of Covington 1
Mills. She died at her home
here on Thursday. December
26. after a lingering illness. j
Surviving are her husband, •
, Jim F. Hopkins, three sons,!
Mansfield Riles
Held Sunday for
Mrs. Kenerly
Mrs. Dewey H. Kenerly of
Route 4, Covington, died in a
private hospital on Saturday,
December 28, after a lingering
illness. A native of Newton
County, she was 59 years old i
and a member of Carmel Bap- I
tist Church.
Funeral services were held
Sunday afternoon, December
29. at Carmel Baptist Church
in Mansfield with Rev. Jimmy
Thurman, pastor of Newborn
Methodist Church, officiating.
Interment wa s in Carmel
Churchyard Cemetery with J.
C. Harwell and Son Funeral
Home in charge of arrange
ments. Serving as pallbearers
were Walter Kenerly, Johnnie
Kenerly. Lee Hays, L. D.
Hodge, Jeff Bagby, W. E. Herr
ing and J. F. Slagle.
Surviving are her husband, !
Dewey Kenerly. parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Cagle H. Pace, all of
Covington; two sons, Hildreth
Kenerly, Smyrna: Thomas
i Kenerly, Covington: brother,
, Bennett B. Pace, Ellenwood;
I sisters, Mrs. Marion C. Herring,
I Atlanta; Mrs. H. J. Bagby,
Decatur and two grandchild- '
ren.
The NEWS joins the many
friends of the family in extend- I
ing deepest sympathy to them '
in their sorrow.
James Hopkins, George Hop- ■
kins, Robert Hopkins, two ;
daughters, Mrs. A. W. Bledsoe.
Mrs. Wallace Edwards, all of
Covington; brothers, Lewis
Bone, Spartanburg, South
Carolina; Esker Bone, Dan
ville: George Bone, Charlotte,
N. C.; Brad Bone, Madison;
sisters, Mrs. Ada Kiser, Byron: i
Mrs. Beil Silvey, Athens; Mrs. '
Minor Boatwright, Astabula,
Ohio and 11 grandchildren.
Interment was in Lawnwood |
Cemetery with J. C. Harwell !
and Son Funeral Home in i
charge of arrangements. Serv
ing as pallbearers were Alfred
Wagner, Dud Childers, Grady
Reynolds, Fred Hopkins, Don
ald Hopkins and Nunnally
Hopkins.
। The NEWS joins the many
; friends in extending deepest
. sympathy to the family in their
| sorrow.
|
Mrs. Kale Ewing
Dies in N. C.
Mrs. Kate E. Ewing of Con
cord, North Carolina, formerly
of Covington, died in a Concord
hospital on Wednesday, Dec
ember 25, after a lingering ill
ness. A native of Newton
County she was a member of
Shiloh Methodist Church and
having been a resident of Al
mon Community for most of
her life she had made her home
|in Concord for the past 15
years.
Funeral services were held !
at the Chapel of Harwell Fun- i
eral Home on Sunday after-'
noon, December 29, with Rev. ’
William Griffin, pastor of Shi
loh Church, officiating.
Surviving are two sons, Joe '
W. Ewing. Concord, North
Carolina: Charles Estes Ewing,
Dallas, Texas; two daughters,
Mrs. Clyde E. Paris, Atlanta;
Miss Grace Ewing. Concord,
North Carolina; one sister, Mrs.
Julia Whitten, Atlanta.
Interment was in Covington
Cemetery with J. C. Harwell
and Son Funeral Home in
charge of arrangements. Serv
ing as pallbearers were Glenn
Ewing, Howard Ewing, Charles
Ewing, Dixon Hays. Holland
Tuck and Franklin Dick.
The NEWS joins friends of
the family in extending deepest i
। sympathy to them in their sor-
I row.
CARD OF THANKS
I would like to express my
sincere thanks to the many
: friends who remembered me
during my recent stay at New
ton County Hospital.
\ our cards, flowers, phone
calls, visits and everj’ act of
k ndness was deeply appreci
ated.
Essie Kitchens
In recent years, report Ex
tension Service economists, to
tal demand for pork has about
held its own, Increases in pop
ulation and consumer income
were about offset by declining
preference for pork.
The vaccination level for hog
cholera is at a low level in
, many Georgia counties, says
। Dr. Charles N. Dobbins, head of
the Cooperative Extension Ser
i vice veterinary department. I
THE COVINGTON NEWS
Boy Scout Building Destroyed in Fire
aiff!fa'
-
B A; ’ , ' * /
H I | IBH9HI
FIRE LEVELED a "Trading Post" building at Camp Bert Adams Boy Scout Reservation
Saturday night with an approximate loss of $25,000. The charred remains of the post
at Camp Emerson is shown in the photo above. Ted Waller, Seoul Executive for Newton -
Rockdale District BSA, said yesterday that plans are underway io rebuild the trading
post immediately. The exact cause of the fire was not determined but it was thought to
have started from the electrical system leading into the building.
Southern Bell
Announces 19M
Expansion Plans
Southern Bell Telephone Com
pany has announced plans to spend
approximately $70.2 million so r
new facilities in Georgia in 1964 —
more than in any previous year
of its history.
Ray Reece, Manager said the
1964 construction of facilities is
expected to top those of 1963, the
previous high year, by approxi
mately $6.3 million.
“Our 1964 plans to improve and
expand our service reflect the
continuing fast pace of progress
in Georgia and the confidence we
have in the future,” Mr. Reece
said. “For example, we expect to |
spend more for facilities in 1964
than we did in the entire three -
year period from 1952 through
1954 or more than we had invest- !
ed in our entire telephone plant
in the state in 1941, after more
than 62 years of telephone opcra
i tions.”
“Our large construction pro
gram is keeping pace w’ith con
tinuing demand for service in
. Georgia,” Mr. Reece said. “We
have been able to keep the tele
phone one of the smaller expenses
in the household budget in spite
of rising costs. We feel this is ■
done by good planning and careful
development of our construction
program each year.”
As 1963 nears an end, Southern
Bell’s total plant investment tn
serving Georgia stands at about
$509 million. Its payroll in the
state will total about $54 million
for 1963 and its operating taxes
applicable to Georgia operations
about $35 million a year. Its pur
chases from businesses and manu
facturers in the state represents
additional large amounts.
Os the approximately $70.2 mil- I
lion expected to be spent in 1964.
some of it will be on items the
public can readily see, such as
new buildings, new cables and
new poles. However, much of it
will be behind-the-scenes equip
ment essential in providing more
and better telephone service.
For land and new or enlarged
YOU BUY A NEW
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S HOW CAR BUYERS 11
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GRADY HUBBARD
Phone 786 2017
Washington St., Covington, Ga.
I STATE FARM
Mvtwal Automobile
I Insurance Company
Nome Office • ■hsimki
Bk»mw»|to«, lllmoti _
I buildings, the Company expects to
invest slightly more than $6 mil
lion in 1964, with seven telephone
buildings to be placed in service
next year. About $26.3 million is
: expected to be spent for new cen
tral office equipment and some
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k*ratt-Dudley Building Supply, Inc. |
' "COVINGTON'S MOST COMPLETE BUILDING SUPPLY" I
Phone 786-3425 Atlanta Highway Covington, Ga. f
NOTICE!
SECTION 13-1, CODE OF ORDINANCES, CITY OF COVINGTON, I
GEORGIA: (THE CHARTER OF THE CITY AS ENACTED IN 1961). |
"It shall be unlawful to bring or carry on within the city any of the
occupations, uses or businesses hereinafter mentioned in this chapter with
out first applying to the Clerk and obtaining a license for carrying on each
said business or occupation as may be subject to the city business license
tax, occupation or use license, or license tax for the current year".
YOUR COOPERATION IN SECURING YOUR BUSINESS LICENSE FOR I
THE YEAR 1964, AT ONCE, WILL BE APPRECIATED. I
J. H. BRYAN
CITY MANAGER
(Best Coveraqe: News. Pictures and Features) Thursday, January 2, 1984
sl7 million for cables, poles and
| supplies for outside “plant” among
other items.
Southern Bell serves 140 ex
changes with approximately 1,-
2600.000 telephones in Georgia.
The 4-H plan has now been
adapted in more than 70 for
eign countries. These clubs
have an estimated membership
of more than 5 million boys
and girls.
Homogenized milk was first
j sold successfully in 1919.
LAKEVIEW BAPTIST MISSION
Located Just Across Water's Bridge, Jackson Lake
“For the wages of sinjs death; but the gift of God is eternal
life through Jesus Christ our Lord." Romans 6:23
The Lakeview Baptist Mission will hold its next preaching
service Sunday, January sth at 3:00 p.m. Rev. Aaron L.
Spinks will be doing the preaching. There will be special
Music and Special emphasis given to the true preaching
of the Gospel of Christ. This is a new work that has be
gun and many blessings have already been enjoyed. We
would like io share these blessings with you. A warm
welcome is extended to all friends to attend this special
service.
DON'T GET UP NIGHTS
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ARE YOU SURE
about tomorrow? Are you living
your life day by day not con
cerned about your future? Do you
positively know you are going to
heaven? Don't guess. Don't think.
You can be positively sure today.