Newspaper Page Text
Thursday, November 12. 1964 (Our Advertisers Are Assured Os Best Results)
% ‘Reading
By J, Shelby Cook, Pastor
y Loganville and Walnut Grove
■ Methodist Churches.
WILLIAM FAULKNER by Robert
Coughlan, Harper and Brothers,
151 pages, $2.95.
This Is the touching drama In
cluding both strength and weak-
/
I ** 29 1
i WERE
k president . .
I’d still come all the way from Washington
to get my vacation needs from
EVANS
DRUG STORE
Phone 786-2241 Night 786-3065
Covington, Georgia East Square
COOK - VINING
INSURANCE ACENCV
INVITES YOU TO COMPARE
YOUR REPLACEMENT COST
WITH YOUR INSURANCE COVERAGE
300 Washington St. Telephone
Covington, Georgia 786-7088-9
I NEWTON FEDERAL Savings and Loan |
» Association I
•I ? p inoo nekt ?JH ~ .rt; B
’ i c »^9l A 1/.
i "■ “ I
fl ^hIbIIM^H current rate
j lIM insi red savings I
! W l ^ ■ *W'Wb HOME LOANS
“ 300 Washington Street— Covington, Georgia
TO THE CITIZENS
OF
COVINGTON, GEORGIA
WE ARE IN THE PROCESS OF CLEARING THE ELECTRIC
LINES IN THE CITY OF COVINGTON. THIS IS BEING DONE
IN ORDER THAT WE MIGHT GIVE YOU MORE EFFICIENT, UN
INTERRUPTED SERVICE DURING THE COMING WINTER
MONTHS, AND POSSIBLE SLEET STORMS.
YOUR COOPERATION IN ALLOWING THE NATIONALLY
KNOWN DAVEY TREE EXPERTS, ALONG WITH THE CITY LINE
CREW, TO CLEAR THE NECESSARY TREES AND LIMBS FROM
THE ELECTRIC LINES NEAR YOUR HOME WILL BE APPREC
IATED.
GEORGE C. JOLLEY
EFFECTIVE DATE: CITY MANAGER
NOVEMBER 16, 1964
* WALKER HARRIS
MAYOR
nesses of William Faulkner, one
of our most eminent writers. Suc
cess did not come to him suddenly
but was the result of work and
failure and then more work.
Starting as a young man, with
out even a high school education,
he aspired to be a poet. Later
he tried writing short shorles,but
they, too, were rejected. Filled
with a strong determination he
browsed curiously through all
sorts of books at the library.
This became the material he used
later tn his writings.
The Faulkner family was obli
vious to the opinions of others.
As evidence of this, William •
. . grew a beard, wore old, dirty
clothes and in the summer often
went without shoes.” It Is not sur
prising to read that ” .... the
town regarded him not only as a
loafer but as a sort of mild luna
tic ... .”
The author relates how in 1923
Faulkner went to New York, seek
ing to Interest someone in his
literary abilities. He stayed six
months and returned to Oxford
as a postmaster. Again he met
with failure, for he could not tol
erate the demands of people.
In 1925, while in Europe, he re
ceived two-hundred dollars ad
vance on his first novel, SOL
DIER’S PAY. This was the first
substantial money he had earned
for ten years of writing. His most
impressive book, THE SOUND
AND THE FURY, was published in
1929. This was the same year he
married Estelle Oldham. After
the publication of several addi
tional novels, he was then able to
sell all his old rejected manu
scripts at a big price, even to the
same magazines that had rejected
them earlier.
The author states that in Faulk
ner’s writings “ ... .life has no
meaning expect to the individual.
“There Is no moral law beyond
what in an older day might have
been called,‘The code of the gen
tlemen.’ ” To Faulkner, the land
Itself Imposes the punishment,
for it is the living hero. “ ...
. the people don’t own the land,
the land owns the people.”
We are told that, as lie grew
confident of his own genius, he
became more determined to write
according to his own taste, and
not that of the public. He became
increasingly anti Intellectual,
and thought of himself as “ . .
. . a simple, rough farmer who
happened to write sometimes.”
On the morning of November
10, 1950, he was busy liming a
field, when the word came that
he had been selected for a Nobel
Prize. The award was made on
December 10 at Stockholm. His
speech of acceptance has been
described as “one of the great
est speeches of this century.”
Mr. Coughlan, in his book, THE
PRIVATE WORLD OF WILLIAM
(Continued On Page 5 )
THE COVINGTON NEWS
SPEAKING OF TRAFFIC JAMS
ft S
Wool!' PrV
Z Ai 1
■•XL . '-sL 3
vm Im\ -
TWO Bl H V>\
THE LINE FORMS HERE
The Urban Mass Transit Act which is supposed
to eliminate commuter tie-ups could, instead, bring
about a massive traffic jam—right smack in front
of the U. S. Treasury.
That’s because there is certain to be intense
rivalry among communities seeking shares of this
latest of a long line of federal handouts. So much
so that the initial outlay of $375 million will soon
be dissipated and demands will be made for much
larger appropriations of taxpayers' funds.
As Senator Frank J. Lausche (Dem.-O.) has
pointed out, the $375 million is merely “seed"
money and that, over the years, the cost of the pro
gram could hit a range of anywhere between $6
billion and SSO billion.
There is absolutely no guarantee that the new
aid plan will work. Actually, all the evidence points
in the opposite direction. Sen. Lausche, in oppos
ing the legislation, showed that in areas where fed
eral money was expended to ease commuter trans
portation problems, the efforts failed. On the other
hand a Chicago project, which neither sought nor
received aid from the central government, proved
an outstanding success.
Meats In A Freezer
A home freezer is convenient
for modern living. It gives op
portunities to buy meats during
heavy supply when the prices are
lower and aids in increasing the
standard of living of a family.
The storage life of all meats
is Increased by freezing. Meats
for the home freezer should be
slaughtered and aged under sani
tary refrigerated conditions.
Pork should not be aged more
than three days and beef not
more than ten days to two weeks
under refrigeration before It is
packaged and wrapped for the
home freezer.
Odor proof, high quality lock
er paper that does not permit
the transmission of air or mois
ture from the meats should be
used. A good wrap needs to be
used in order to eliminate air
pockets. Such paper as lami
nates, aluminium foil, and many
films are satisfactory for wrap
ping meats for the home freezer.
The fat or pork is of a dif
ferent quality than that of beef
and lamb. Pork has a keeping
quality of from four to six months
in the deep freeze, beef and lamb
approximately twelve months,
and cured sausage only three
months.
The temperature of the home
freezer is what controls the stor
age life of meats. The proper
temperature of a home freezer
should be minus 10 degrees Fah
renheit but zero degrees Fah
renheit will be satisfactory in
most cases. If the tempera-
STRAND
THEATRE
COVINGTON. GEORGIA
Thurs - fri. • Sat.
Nov. 12-13-14
Adult Entertainment
Caroil Baker-Alan Ladd-
Robert Cummings-George
Peppard in
"The Carpetbaggers"
in Technicolor
Adults 75c Children 35c
Mon.-Tues., Nov. 16-17
A Spy Shocker That
Shook England
Brenda Lee-Margaret
Tyzack-William Sylvester
in
"Ring Os Treason"
Wed.-Thurs.-Fri.Sat~
Nov. 18-19-20-21
Brand New—The Immortal
Hank Williams Lives Again
Sings Again-—
—Hear His Great Hits!
George Hamilton-Susan
Oliver-Red Buttons-Arthur
O'Connell in
Panavision
"Your Cheating Heart"
Matinee—Mon.-Thurs-
Saturday 3:30
Shows each night begin
at 7:30
ture of the home freezer is 15
degrees, off-flavors are likely
to develop in frozen meat much
faster than they would if the
temperature were Oto 10degrees
below.
Freezer-burn is dehydration of
meats while they are frozen.
HUB
DRIVE-IN
COVINGTON, GA.
Fri. Sat., Nov. 13-14
"Island Os The
Blue Dolphins"
Color
with George Kennedy-
Lelia Kaye
Plus Color Cartoon
Sun., Nov. 15
Bob Hope-Lilo Pulver
"A Global Affair"
(in Color)
Plus "Cartoon"
Fri., Sat., Nov. 20-21
"A Distant Trumpet”
(in Color)
with Troy Donahue-
Suianne Pleshete
MOONLIT
DRIVE-IN
CONYERS. GEORGIA
Thur. & Fri. Nov. 11-12
"The Wonderful World
Os The Brothers Grimm"
with Lawrence Harvey-
Claire Bloom-
Yvette Mimieux
in color
Saturday Nov. 14
Susan Hayward in
"Stolen Hours"
Color by Deluxe
and also
"The Traitors”
Sun. A Mon., Nov. 15-16
John Wayne in
"Donovan's Reef”
and
Debbie Reynolds in
"My Six Loves"
both in technicolor
Closed Tues. & Wed.
Nov. 17-18
Thur. & fri., Nov. 19-29
"From Russia With Love"
with Sean Connery as
James Bond
in color
(Be»t Coverage: News, Pictures, and Features)
DRAWING
WITH PINCH.
OF Al l THE TOOLS that the
artist uses the most generally use
ful and dependable is the lead pen
cil It is an exer-tcady friend and
CM be called upon al .1 moment s
notice for the
making of either
oul '
TFWj| _. line sketch or an
— elaborate!) stud
—ied and finished
XS illustration. It is
the logical and
I I natural tool for
the beginner as
well as for the more advanced
student It can be bought for a few
cents at anj store and will make
a mark on the cheapest kind of
paper. This makes it the ideal me
dium for off hand sketching and
the making of quick studies and
effects under all conditions
Practically all illustrators, car
toonists and commercial artists
use lead pencil for making pre
liminary sketches and studies, and
in "laying in" or outlining all
drawings that are to be finished
in pen and ink
The fact that pencil lines can be
so easily erased and corrected
makes the pencil the best medium
for the beginner in object draw ing.
not only in quickly sketching in
the outlines or form of his model,
but also in rendering in light and
dark. In landscape sketching and
in getting quick effects from na
ture. the pencil is also the favorite
medium of the experienced artist
and sketcher.
In all experimental work and in
preliminary sketches submitted to
a prospective customer the pencil
is most generally used. Because of
the great freedom of handling
which it allows, as well as for the
crisp effect of its well-placed lines
and the generally pleasing quality
of its lights and darks, a pencil
drawing can be carried to the
highest degree of finish with the
least expenditure of time of any
medium, with the possible excep
tion of charcoal.
Always keep a sketch pad and
pencil handy wherever you may
Only Pearle Optical INCLUDES
a Professional Eye Examination
| in the price of your Glasses
for as low as $4 ASO
Including EXAMINATION, LENSES and FRAMES. 1
Your glasses made in Georgia's Largest Laboratory.
• ••••••• CONVENIENT CREDIT TERMS AVAILABLE AT NO EXTRA COST••••••••
VERILITE CONTACT LENSES, including
Eye Examination and Professional Fitting...
ONE LOW PRICE! £
You can’t buy finer Contact Lenses, f
even for $l5O, S2OO or more! f \J
•••eooeeeGaeoeooeeoooeeeeeeeeooeee
WWWWWWWW — — — — — —
f g OFFICES AU OVER GEORGIA
1U fl fIKI fl w athens:
I Eni IB 445 EAST CLAYTON
Al M I ■ W PHONE 546-6528
Z # / IN ATLANTA: 35 PEACHTREE at 5 Points • Ph. 523-5869
/IN MARIETTA: COBB COUNTY CENTER • Phone 436-4101
1 |N AUGUSTA: 718 BROAD STREET • Phone 722-6887
AeC-^OPT^BTAiST W
Just a price that starts below 30 models
with jow-price names... that’s al 11
J 'OS OLDSMOBILE
O The Rocket Action Car!
The Rockets are rolling...to your authorized Oldsmobile Quality Dealer’s!
ORDER YOURS NOW...for earliest delivery!
GINN MOTOR COMPANY, 202 CLARK STREIT
HU HMU TH HIT ITS MT Seisin BIT SKI WtMT IM W MC H ■ OHM UtM USUK TH Ml OSTHI _
^ecrefr World
by Van K*mp Walhington School of Art
be (In .1 stroll through the coun
try or on a week-end outing you
will find abundant material for the
exercise of sour ability as a
sketcher. and you will accumulate
valuable material and mental pic
tures foi future use.
h is very often possible to judge
IT’S AFACH
iffiuMAiw WERE ORCE USER^
j IN FAR-EASTERN HAREMS. -
1 THE GIRLS'ONLY JOB v
/ WAS SWAT TING BUGS AWAY - j
'FROM THE SULTAN'S FAVORITE WIVES/ -<4^
aQ w »* U
too YEARS AGO, THE RICH
SLEPT UNDER MOSQUITO NETTING...
tic * -St -11
<—bA.l^l r i . iL, fl
J j l
...OTHER FOLKS JUST SLAPPED
AT INSECTS AND SWORE.
the artistic potentials of a person
from a sketch or even "crude’
drawing Don’t be bashful about
what 'on diaw If sou want to
send me a copy of any drawing
you like, or one you think repre
sents your best efforts. 11l tell
you frankly whether I think you
should take up di awing as a hobby
or income producing occupation.
Ui lie me pcisonalh at the Wash
ington School of Art. Port Wash
ington. New York: or if you wish,
wine m care of this newspaper. In
fad I II be happx to answer anv
questions you max have with ref
erence to the Work! of Art.
I fIeWM AHfIMMS USE
500 MILLION SQUARE FEET OF
[ FLAME PROOF, ROT PROOF ALUMINUM
SCREENING A YEAR TO KEEP
INSECTS OUT - LET FRESH AIR IN/
Page 3