Newspaper Page Text
Thursday, October 7, 1965
DIETZ’S
SPECIALS
LADIES
tDARK COTTON
SKIRTS BLOUSES
ANO
SLIM JIMS
REDUCED
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LADIES
DARK COTTON
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REDUCED
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OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT
TIL 9:00 PM
(Best Coverage: News, Pictures, and Features)
THE COVINGTON NEWS
London Is First Stop For
All Georgia Goodwill Tours
Businessmen, housewives, ed
itors, civic leaders, children and
families from all over Georgia
will be taking part in the Georgia
Press International Goodwill
Tours during 1966. Many people
from all walks of life will be
among the various groups leaving
on these special trips.
There will be four different
Itineraries available for these
foreign travelers, and four dif
ferent departure dates available
for all four tours. Different
groups will be leaving on April
25, June 6, July 11, and Septem
ber 19.
All groups will be departing
from New York City, where
Alitalia Airlines will provide
their latest luxury jets for a
brief hop across the Atlantic.
The first stop on all the tours
will be London, the first bridge
able point on the River Thames,
England’s historic entrance’ to
the Continent.
All travelers will have one
full day of planned sightseeing,
and two additional days at lei
sure to "discover” any points
of particular personal Interest.
The guided tours of London will
include visits to Trafalgar
‘Piacticat amity *
Do the meals you serve pro
vide the basis for good nutrit
ion? Are they easy to prepare
and delicious to eat? Here are
a few simple helps to guide
you In planning such meals.
Plan meals that are "good
for you.” That Is a simple
task 1 Choose foods that pro
vide protein at every meal. Have
a dark green or a yellow vege
table at least once each day
along with a food that is vit
amin C rich. Add milk and
you have laid the basis for good
nutrition.
At every meal serve a protein
rich food. This is a most essen
tial food. Children need it for
growth and adults need it to
maintain and repair the body.
Protein foods are also import
ant for the vitamins and min
erals they contain.
Meat, fish, poultry, eggs, dried
peas and beans and nuts contain
protein. Milk and milk prod
ucts such as cheese and ice
cream furnish proteins and they
are also excellent sources of
calcium which builds strong
bones and teeth.
One serving of a dark green
or yellow vegetable each day
helps your family to get vitamin
A for healthy eyes and skin,
to resist Infection and also fur
nishes Iron for blood building.
Roughage which helps for good
elimination is found in these
foods. Try such foods as carr
ots, spinach, turnip greens, coll
ards, sweet potatoes and ruta
bagas for this requirement.
Once a day be sure to serve
such foods as oranges, grape
fruit, tomato or tomato juice,
strawberries o r cantaloupe.
These are vitamin C rich foods.
Vitamin C must be included in
meals each day for it cannot be
stored. It is needed for healthy
teeth, bones, gums and blood
vessels.
Don’t forget to provide in cook-
City Court Had
Usual Docket Monday
Monday’s Covington City Court
session with Judge E. W. Strozler
on the bench heard a diversified
docket of cases involving five
particular violations.
Leading the list Monday for
persons drawing fines or for
feiting their bonds were nine
charged with drunkenness. Seven
heard their cases called for
wreckless driving and six for
disorderly. Five drew stiff fines
for speeding and four were fined
for driving without a driver’s
license.
Single cases were heard
against persons charged with re
sisting arrest and running a red
light.
BSA Training
Course Continues
At Ficquett School
The second session of the Basic
Training course for Scout leaders
will be held Monday night at the
Ficquett School at 7:30. Last
Monday there were 18 Cub Scout
leaders and eight Boy scout lead
ers In attendance. Homer Sharp
and Roy Cox conducted the Boy
Scout leader training and George
Hutchinson the Cub leader train
ing.
Monday night the Cub leaders
will have "Planning the Cub Scout
Program for Dens and Packs”
and the Boy Scout leaders will
have a session on "Troop Opera
tion.”
Covington
Temperatures
Temperatures In Covington
during the past week, according
to Jack Chapman, were:
High Low
Wed. Sept. 29 70 60
Thurs. Sept. 30 73 64
FrL Oct. 1 84 71
Sat. Oct. 2 80 60
Sun. Oct. 3 79 52
Mon. Oct. 4 72 47
Tues. Oct. 5 66 55
Rainfall during the week tot
aled 5.36 inches with 4.89 inches
recorded on Friday.
(Our Advertisers Are Assured of Best Results)
Square, St. James’ Palace, Buck
ingham Palace (home of the Royal
Family since 1837) and many
other historic points. Tour mem
bers will witness the Changing
of the Guard, will see White
hall, Scotland Yard, the Tower
of London, the Bank of England,
St. Paul’s Cathedral, the Law
Courts and Dicken’s Old Curio
sity Shop. They will also visit
the famous Piccadilly Circus,
Oxford Circus, Marble Arch,
Hyde Park, the Kensington
Museum, Chelsea, Tate Gallery,
Downing Street (where No. 10
Is the residence of the Prime
Minister), Lambeth Palace and
Shaftesbury Avenue (the center
of London’s theatrical world).
All of these points have so
much to see and do that It Is
impossible to describe In one
brief news article. There are
museums and art galleries,
palaces and statues, multiple
points of historic significance
everywhere you turn. West
minster Abbey provides a
dramatic collection of British
history. Here all of the
sovereigns of the nation have
been crowned for centuries, and
ed foods or as a beverage three
to four glasses of milk for child
ren and two for adults.—By Nel
lie C. Boyd, Home Economist-
Nutrition, Cooperative Exten
sion Service, University of Geor
gia.
AN INCREASE OF IN
FLUENZA In the United states
may be in the offing this win
ter, says the American Medical
Association. The forecast Is
based on the three-year period
icity of the disease. The last
major outbreaks were In 1962-
63.
CHEMICAL STERILIZATION
of Insect pests Is a promising
method of controlling or erad
icating them, reports the U. S.
Department of Agriculture. In
laboratory tests designed to con
trol pink bollworms, only four
eggs hatched of 13,622 eggs laid
by females that had mated with
chemically sterilized males.
Later tests showed that even
these four probably would not
have developed into normal
adults. Egg laying by treated
females mated to untreated males
was reduced considerably, but
six per cent of those eggs hatch
ed.
SWEETHEARTS 5,800 years
ago may have had a choice of
moons to spoon under. Evidence
that a huge natural satellite broke
up in the atmosphere centuries
ago and deposited large frag
ments in northern Argentina has
been discovered by a group of
scientists led by a Columbia
University geologist.
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Major Appliance Company
202 Washington Street phone 786-2115 Covington, Georgia
royalty has been wed. In addition,
many of the great of England are
burled In Westminster Abbey;
much of the history of the English
people can be read In the mem
orials there.
Many other points of Interest
include Trafalgar Square, St.
Paul’s Cathedral (built by Chris
topher Wren), Madame Tussaud’s
Waxworks, Lloyds of London, the
Telephone
Talk
By
RAY REECE
Your Telephone Manager
WE’D LIKE TO CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO TWO
IMPORTANT EVENTS THIS MONTH. One is the
March Against Muscular Dystrophy which began October
1 and continues till November 31. We can all help conquer
this disease, by volunteering our services if we’re called
on during the campaign, and by contributing as generously
as possible. The other October event, Halloween, used to
be a fun time for the kids. But in recent years it’s taken
on greater significance. In many communities, the young
folks who come “trick or treating” are collecting for
UNICEF, the United Nations International Children’s
Emergency Fund. Both these fund campaigns, Muscular
Dystrophy and UNICEF, deserve our whole-hearted
support.
• * e
AN IMPORTANT PART OF THE TELEPHONE
SYSTEMS OF THE FUTURE is a transistor tiny enough
in to pass through the
eye of a needle! This
fl 1 * i midget transistor is
an example of micro
miniaturization, and
was developed by
The Bell Labora
tories and Western
Electric, the team
11 that invented the
original transistor just 17 years ago. The midget transistor is
another result of the continuing research and development
that improves your telephone service and keeps it low in cost.
• * *
Prominent state political leaders—and most of Georgia’s
Congressional delegation—will be present on October 16 to
see themselves spoofed at the Georgia Press Association’s
third annual "Cracker Crumble” show in Atlanta. The dinner
menu features steaks, but the big attraction of the evening
will be the "roasted politician” served by a group of volunteer
actors as entertainment after dinner.
The show, Georgia’s biggest annual political satire, Is for
the benefit of the Georgia Press Educational Foundation,
Inc., which administers the GPA journalism scholarship
fund. L.ast year’s event was a complete sellout. This year’s
event will be at the new Marriott Motor Hotel.
If you’d like to rub elbows with Georgia’s leaders—and
see a show—mall orders for tickets may be sent to the
Georgia Press Educational Foundation, 24 Ivy Street, S. E.,
Atlanta, Georgia, 30303. Tickets are sls each and the tickets
costs are tax deductible.
Page 5
Temple, Lincoln’s Inn and Gray’s
Inn, Cheshire Cheese and Fleet
Street, and many others.
More details on these tours
will be available In future Issues
of this newspaper, or can be had
by writing to DuPree Jordan,
Jr., Georgia Press International
Tours, c/o Georgia Press As
sociation, 24 Ivy Street, S. E.,
Atlanta, Georgia 30303.