Newspaper Page Text
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Editorial
COMMENTS
A Girl Scout is not a hippie; but she’s not a
square either.
She *s the kind of girl who knows how to give
a good party and how to pitch a tent. She’s an
articulate representative of the U.S.A, at inter
national conferences. She’s an eager worker in
the slums and ghettos of American cities.
It’s hard to put a label on this kind of girl.
Maybe the best word for her is “involved.” She
cares about herself and about others. She’s where
the action is.
People Have Got To Help People
The offer of help to one human being by another
is one of the most ancient traditions. It is just
as true today as it was in the Biblical time
of the “good Samaritan.”
Today, each of us is even more conscious
of the debt we owe our brothers. This aware
ness, many believe, lias played an important part
in making our community, our state, nation and
our world a better place in which to live.
The Easter Seal Society puts itthis way: “People
have got to help people.”
That’s the theme of the 1968 Easter Seal cam
paign to raise funds for crippled children and
adults to help them walk, talk, and do all the
things most of us take for granted.
Last year, the Georgia Easter Seal Society
provided 42,251 treatment service units to help
Men Without A Country
When word came that Sweden had granted political
asylum to the four American sailors who deserted
the USS Enterprise, the incident brought to mind a
classic story of yesteryear, “The Man Without a
Country.” Possibly because of its “superpatriot
ism,” this tale by Edward Everett Hale is not as
widely read as it used to be, the more’s the pity.
Maybe if it were there would be fewer incidents
like that of the four sailors.
By now everyone knows their story. They jumped
ship at Japan, where “leftists” took them in tow.
Under “leftist” sponsorship they held a press con
ference at which they damned this country for its
role in Vietnam. They next surfaced in the Soviet
Union where again they provided grist for the Com
munist propaganda mill with their anti-American
statements. Following this they turned up in Swe
den where they asked for political asylum, which
was granted.
Those who have read the tale of Philip Nolan
know how it tells of a young West Point lieuten
ant who fell under the spell of Aaron Burr in
1807 and was court-martialed for a role he played
in Burr’s plot to set up an empire. When, at
the close of the trial, he was asked if he wished
to say anything to show he had been faithful to the
United States, he cried out in away reminiscent
In our Iree enterprise economy, the modern
corporation lias proven capable of drawing together
the financial and material resources and the human
talent necessary to undertake the complex and
immense feats of research, production and dis
tribution that are the material fabric of modern
society. But, the accelerating pace of change
and the challenge of solving problems that re
main will demand even more from the corpora
tion of tomorrow.
The head of a major industrial company, North
American Rockwell Corporation, has said, ”... that
ten years from now three-fourths of the people
employed in American industry will be turning
out products that we here today don’t even know
about. Thus, the central problem we face in
building the corporation of the future is building
a commercially feasible organization that can
master this change and harness it to the crucial
problems of our society.” To gain the talent
in the many different fields of technology required
to direct management, material and financial re
sources most effectively is the challenge facing
Liberty Never Old-Fashioned
Whether we like it or not Viet Nam has be
come a war effort of the first magnitude. It
can be nothing else when hundreds of thousands
of U. S. citizens are called upon to leave their
homes and families for military service. In past
wars, there have been differences of opinion as
to the wisdom and policies of leadership, but never
as at present, has there been evidence oi lack of
support of the basic principles of freedom for
which we have always fought.
In spite of this weakening of first principles
at home, it is encouraging to read the comment of
Admiral E. M. Eller, director of Naval History,
concerning the attitudes and feelings of servicemen
in Viet Nam. He says; “From my conver
sations with those who have served there, from
correspondence, and from the flow of official re
ports that come into our archives, I am convin
ced that nearly all the Americans in Viet Nam know
why they are the re--de fending freedom against
tyranny of the cruelest kind. When one people
loses freedom, all lose in part.” The idea of
THE COVINGTON NEWS
1118-1122 FACE STREET. N.E., COVINGTON GA. 30209
MABEL SESSIONS DENNIS
Editor .nd Fubliihor
LEO S. MALLARD
Attiilanf to Publith.r
OFFICIAL ORGAN OF
NEWTON COUNTY
AND THE
u CITY OF COVINGTON
Girl Scouts Are Leaders
We Must Think Big
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(Best Coverage: News, Pictures, and Features)
Her kind of caring -- and acting — probably
began when, as a seven-year-old Brownie, she
adopted a tree in distress and helped make it
grow. Then she helped a person grow strong.
For a girl like that, the caring and acting and
growing never stops.
So we’ll leave labels for the hippies and squares.
A Girl Scout is something else. Happy Birthday
to her and to the almost three and three-quar
ter million members of Girl Scouts of the U.S.A.,
-a 56 year old organization that is always young.
Georgians through its rehabilitation services and
programs.
The real credit belongs to the many thousands
who contribute each year to enable the Easter
Seal Society to help people. For in the world
of today, it takes a lot more than one or two
“good Samaritans.”
Without the dollars we give, the Society could
not maintain the specially designed and equipped
centers that offer modern therapy and other
services. Even if you haven’t given to Easter
Seals in the past, please do this year. Despite
the march of progress, the ranks of the handi
capped are growing, and more money than ever
before is needed to continue helping them.
Be a person who helps people. You’ll feel
good if you are.
of many modern young Americans;
“Damn the United States! I wish I may never
hear of the United States again!”
The story then tells how he got his wish. Placed
on a succession of naval vessels he never again set
foot on US soil, and for more than half a century
all news of the United States was withheld from
him. But in that time his love for the country he
had renounced grew great, as did his remorse for
the renunciation.
That’s the old tale. However, we think the case
of the four young sailors will have a different end
ing. In a year or so, we predict, this precious four
some will tire of life in Sweden. They will want
to come home, and they’ll get their wish. Here
they will not be looked upon as pariahs or traitors.
Rather, throngs of like-minded anti-Americans will
greet them, and their utterances will be recorded
bv batteries of TV cameras and by battalions of
reporters. Inevitably, they will be featured on var
ious TV shows.
What will they say? Will they express feelings
of remorse as that earlier man without a coun
try did? We doubt it. That would be a superpa
triotism, foreign to a quartet who scarcely rate
as patriots.
business enterprise. Many firms have found that
merging with other companies having experience
in different related fields has given them a head
start in meeting this challenge. Successful joining
of two companies often facilitates development of
new and better products and the realization of
benefits to employees, stockholders, the consuming
public and the national economy that would have
otherwise been impossible.
Bigness for the purpose of taking monopolistic
advantage in the marketplace is indefensible, but
bigness for the purpose of fully realizing the
potential of our economic system and the era
in wtiich we live is indispensable. Government
alone cannot solve problems of hunger, air and
water pollution, poverty, overcrowded and blighted
areas. An energetic and productive free people
can and the diversified corporation of tomorrow
now being developed, with broad technical ability
and the resources to utilize it, will play a vital
role in raising the quality as well as the quantity
of our national accomplishments.
believing in one’s country and in the ideal of
liberty under representative government is never
old-fashioned.
NEW BERN, N. C., SUN-JOURNAL: “The
superintendent of schools in a small mountain
town in North Carolina made a ... plea for more
financial help for the high school student who isn’t
a scholastic hot-shot . . . ‘Most scholarship
programs are aimed at top-ranking high school
seniors who are headed for college.. .But how about
the senior who isn’t top-ranked and whoneeds, say,
$250 upon graduation to take a machine course in a
technical school, or to learn how to become a
painter, or to become skilled at some other job?
Wouldn’t it be better to help this boy than to have
him panic and drop out of school to take an un
skilled job in the belief that this is the best bet
to make a living?. . .There is no better invest
ment for banks, businessmen or educators than to
develop a future taxpaying average citizen instead
of a future welfare client. Think it overl*”
MARY SESSIONS MALLARD
Asiocioto Editor
LEO MALLARD
Advertising Manager
Entered et the Post Office
at Covington, Georgia, as
mail matter of the Second
Class.
gi WEEKLY LESSON j
FOR I
inday School \
THE PROMISE OF
THE SPIRIT
Devotional Reading: John 16:7-
15
Memory Selection: I will pray
the Father, and he will give you
another Comforter, that he may
abide with you forever. John
14:16.
Intermediate - Senior Topic:
The Helper by Your Side
Young People — Adult Topic:
The Holy Spirit, Our Helper
Last week we observed Jesus,
the humble servant, going from
one to another of his disciples
washing their feet. Ordinarily
in Eastern homes there would
have been a slave or servant
at the door, lowest in the order
of service, who washed the feet
of arriving guests. The disciples
refused to wash one another’s
feet. Why should I be wash
ing his feet? they probably mut
tered to themselves. So Jesus
girder! himself with a towel, and
after he had poured water into
a basin, he “began to wash the
disciples’ feet, and to wipe them
with the towel wherewith he was
girded (John 13:5).
Serve others—this is at the
heart of the gospel. No one
lives unto himself or dies unto
himself. Because we are ser
vants of Christ we live in and
with and through and by him.
In today’s lesson we see our
Lord speaking to a group of fol
lowers who had become discour
aged because they were more
and more convinced that things
were not going well with this
movement—if we can call it so—
that Jesus had started. He had
uttered wonderful truths. He had
healed the sick and afflicted. He
had denounced evil. Like all
their fellow Jews, these disciples
must have cherished the hope that
when the Messiah came he would
free them from the yoke of foreign
domination. The yoke of Rome
was not onerous, but it was a
yoke, and they wanted to be free
of it.
What they could not understand
was that this Jesus was indeed
the Messiah, the Deliverer, who
had come to save them not from
political servitude but from mor
al and spiritual bondage.
These three verses need to be
taken out of their context and con
sidered separately because they
set forth one of the basic truths
of the gospel, namely, that there
is no sound religion without right
eousness.
The prophets had inveighed
against Idolatry, and one of the
horrifying aspects of Idolatry was
its teaching that so long as one
met certain religious require
ments he could live whatever kind
of life he chose to live. Against
this the whole testimony of scrip-
WORDS TO LIVE BY
Rev. W. G. Davis
Are you living your life by
carefully selected, socially ap
proved words? If you had to
choose three words to live by
today, what would they be? They
should give you stability and a
sense of worthwhileness; moti
vation to do your work well; lead
you into civic, Church and social
activities which would result in a
better community. They should
undergird the strength of your
responsibility toward yourself,
your family, your community and
your God and make life a chal
lenge and a joy.
Our Ix>rd chose one word. He
said that Love is the word. When
the lawyer asked Him “which
is the great commandment in the
law?” He answered, “You shall
love the Lord your God with all
your heart, and with all your soul,
and with all your mind. This is
the great and first commandment.
And a second is like it, you
shall love your neighbor as your
self.” (Mat. 22:36-8). St. Paul
Indicated that he chose three.
So, faith, hope, love abide, these
three, but the greatest of these
is love.” (I Cor. 13:13). By any
chance, did you choose any of
these three?
I chose faith, hope and love,
for I believe that by living these
three words daily, one can
achieve the Christian goals of
commitment, loyalty and victory
as promised by our Lord. Faith:
A Christian always looks far out
into the future and does not fear,
for he recognizes that the future
belongs to God’s judgment. He
takes the hand of God and steps
out with confidence, not knowing
what is to come other than what
God has promised. With God’s
guidance and strength, faith will
lead one through the crises with
which we all have to contend.
Hope: That is the next step from
faith. One makes the step by
faith and just hopes that one is
on solid ground. When I had the
“flu” last month, every day I
hoped that tomorrow would be a
better day. The day did come
when I began to feel better and
one day I was able to be out
again. So, it is with our dally
lives, one hopes for a better
day tomorrow, regardless of what
THE COVINGTON NEWS
ture, both in the Old and in the
New Testaments, cries out vehe
mently.
There is no sound religion
without soundness of moral life.
There is no Christianity without
a life of clean living and think
ing, honesty, and love for one’s
neighbor.
Too often, even today, we en
tertain the Idea—perhaps only
half consciously—that if we meet
certain church requirements we
are religious. Creeds have their
place in the religious life. So
do church organizations, liturgy
(either high or low), preaching,
church attendance, charity. Yet
none of these—or all of them
taken together—constitute what
the world has come to call
Christianity. For Christianity
is the name given to thatrelig
lon which grew up about the per
son of Jesus Christ. Basic to
that religion—and the Judaism
out of which it grew—is the
Insistence that soundness of faith
and righteousness of life belong
together.
“If ye love me, keep my com
mandments.” “He that hath my
commandments, and keepeth
them, he it is that loveth me;
and I will love him, and will
manifest myself to him.” “He
that loveth me not keepeth not
my sayings: and the word which
ye hear is not mine, but the
Father’s which sent me.”
These three verses confirm
what has been said above about
the absolute requirement of
righteousness as an accompani
ment of sound Christian faith.
We may give away everything
we have with both hands, but if
while we do it we also live a
hateful, lustful, and designing
life, we are not pleasing In God’s
sight. We may be most regu
lar, “orthodox,” devoted to all
the requirements of church mem
bership, yet if we do not live
lives of goodness, we are not
Christ’s followers in the true
sense of the term.
How violently this moral re
quirement lays hold on our lives
and brings us for judgment be
fore the demands of conscience
and the demands of God! There
are many externals in organized
religious life, and these externals
have their rightful place. We
could not have a church without
them. But the externals—creeds,
programs, administration, cor
dial fellowship—are, although
necessary, not of primary impor
tance. The matter of primary
Importance is that our lives be
a continual attempt on our part
to attain the righteous standards
Christ set up for us.
And Christ is pleased not so
much by our achievements as by
our sincerity and persistence.
.VorbsJßn
Sturißy
one desires and what are the sub
jects. One has many, many hopes
for tomorrow, too. Someone has
written, “Hope springs eternal in
the human breast.” So it does,
and I hope that your hope gives
your sufficient days of grace in
which you must do your best to
make your hopes become a re
ality. You see, you have an im
portant place in this living.
Love: The ultimate and su
preme step in “words to live by.”
One cannot be or have a friendly
and good neighbor without love.
And a community would be in
chaos without it. Christian love
is that emotion which does good
to and for others without any
expectation of reward. It is the
power in a believing Christian
that wants every person to be
able to grow into his full sta
ture of good health, happiness
and success and helps them to
attain this status. Real love
is a maturing experience which
gives understanding, wisdom and
peace of mind. And love will
guide one into the right paths.
So, I suggest that faith, hope
and love are three words to live
by. Won’t you join me in these
choices and let us make our
Community and County a better
place in which to live?
State Farm Now
Insures Over
10-Million Cars
State Farm Mutual increased
the number of cars it insures by
nearly three-fourths million and
topped the billion dollar mark in
premiums for the first time in
1967.
Grady Hubbard, who repre
sents State Farm in Covington and
has his office at 2116 Washington
Street, said today that he had
recived this advance report from
the State Farm Home Office in
Bloomington, Illinois.
The world’s largest car in
surer added 748,444 cars to its
insured list in 1967, bringing the
total to 9,894,720. Including cars
insured by its affiliates, State
Farm now protects 10,253,509
automobiles in the U. S and
Canada. A year ago the figure
was 9,443,316 cars.
(Our Advertisers Are Assured of Best Results)
Dear Mrs. Dennis:
It Is Easter Seal time again.
The 1968 Easter Seal campaign
opens March 15 and ends on
Easter Sunday, April 14. We
are hoping that we can count
on your usual fine help. We
must depend on friends like you
to carry the message of crip
pled children and adults’ needs
to the public and we hope that
you will find it possible to use
some of the material in the en
closed kit.
Last year, Easter Seals pro
vided 42,251 treatment service
units to help Georgians, of all
ages, with all kinds of crippling
conditions through rehabilitation
services and programs.
Your use of the enclosed ma
terials sometime during the cam
paign will help our handicapped
in a very positive way. On
their behalf, we say “thank you”
In advance.
Easter Seal volunteer leaders
in your county are: Your News
paper Editor - Publisher, Mrs.
Belmont Dennis, Chairman; C. G.
Henderson, Jr., Bank of Coving
ton, Treasurer.
Sincerely,
Vince Dooley,
Easter Seals’ “Head Coach”
1968 Easter Seal Campaign
P.S. The Newton County Chair
man of Easter Seals has named
Mr. Milton Me Laney to work with
the Project again this year. She
also named a Committee consist
ing of Mrs. Terry Avery, Chair
man, Mrs. Cleon Dial and Mrs.
Roger Mclntosh. Others will be
named soon. Materials have
not arrived, except pictures.
Dear Mr. Editor:
Please print the following open
letter to the Newton County
Sheriff, his deputies and staff:
On behalf of many Rockdale
County “Bulldog” fans we wish
to thank you for your aid in es
corting our motorcades through
your district Friday and Saturday
as we were en route to the basket
ball tournament in Macon. We
are indeed proud to say our
team placed first runner-up in the
state for Class A school.
We feel your assistance in ex
corting our motorcades aided us
in reaching our destination swift
ly and safely. Thank you again
for the cooperation extended us.
Most Sincerely
Laverne Hall
Hospital
Notes
Patients admitted during the
week of March 4th thru March
10th, 1968:
Charles H. Collins, Ruth S.
Benton, Mrs. Virginia Brumba
low, Nancy Finley, Danny Hod
ges, William McMichael, Her
schel Whitehead, Dan Ballard,
Rosalind A. Harrell, Lillie Grace
Womack, Oscar E. White, Lois
Marie Allen, Shellie Mitchell,
Rita Turner, Anita Shadix, Trea
sey McDaniel, Mrs. Clara Mar
tin, Mrs. Ethel Underwood, Wil
liam Whatley, Jr., Kathy Knight,
Patricia Jane Fuller, Mrs. Elaine
Bowden, Ulemas O. Garner, Tina
Capell, Mrs. Mattie Head, Mrs.
Betty Sue Herring.
James Gregory Moore, Cheryl
S. Gregg, Chester B. Treadwell,
Patricia Lynn Whitley, Guy A.
Jones, Thelma Surrett, Barbara
Wilson, Mrs. Jayne Standard,
Charles Steven Ellis, Irene Dor
sey, C. C. King, Mrs. Corinne
Darby, Lottis Denny, Kevin Ma
son, James T. McCart, Mrs.
Ann Norwood, Mrs. Sara Coop
er, Mrs. Lina Whitten, Charles
Ellington, Robert H. McGiboney,
Mrs. Susie T. Denham, Betsy
Sue Turpin, Charlie Elkins, Shei
la Sorrells, Kim Austin, Brenda
Bailey, Greg Sullivan.
Ivey Reed, Edward J. Hill,
Carolyn Ann Carter, Mrs. Su
san Ransom, Julius Benton, Pa
tricia Middleton, Clinton W. Bel
cher, Lillie Ruth Garlington,
Franklin McGill, Jr., Livle M.
Tuggle, Carrie P. Lawrence,
Barbara Terrell, Lillie N.
Strong.
Patients remaining the week
of March 10th, 1968:
Mrs. Marie Allen, Mrs. Vir
ginia Brumbalow, Mrs. Ruth S.
Benton, Dan Ballard, Julius Ben
ton, Miss Annie Pearl Burney,
Franklin W. Black, Estil Crist,
Charles H. Collins, Mrs. Cor
inne Darby, Charlie Elkins,
Charles A. Ellington, Mrs. Nan
cy Finley, Mrs. Nora A. Free
man, Patricia Jane Fuller, Tho
mas O. Garner, Danny Michael
Hodges, Mrs. Rosalind A. Har
rell, Mrs. Mattie Head, Mrs.
Alberta Helton, Mrs. Mary Hays.
Mrs. .Annie Henderson, Mrs.
Artha Hall, Mrs. Lyda Sue Hall,
Guy Jones, Mrs. Beatrice Jones,
George W. Mitchell, Shellie Mit
chell, William McMichael, Mrs.
Clara Martin, Mrs. Mary Alice
Piper, Mrs. Jayne Standard,
Thelma Surrett, George W.
Smith, Herschel Whitehead, Mrs.
Ethel Underwood, Mrs. Barbara
Wilson.
Mrs. Filitia Andrews, Mrs.
Annie Duffey, Carrie P. Law
rence, Franklin McGill, Jr., Lil
lie N. Strong, Elizabeth Shep
herd, Barbara Terrell, Livle N.
Tuggle.
KEEP FREEDOM IN YOUR
FUTURE WITH U.S.
SAVINGS BONDS
Layona Glenn
Says . • •
If you keep on living you’ve
got to keep on giving! This is
the first unwritten law of na
ture, which means it is the first
law of God.
Every leaf of every plant ex
udes, or gives off oxygen. Every
animal absorbs it by breathing
in the life sustaining element,
and exhales the deoxidized air
necessary to sustain plant life.
Thus the vegetable, and the an
imal kingdoms give to each other,
or exchange the elements ne
cessary to their existence. This
exchange is necessary in all of
God’s creation. The need of one
department counterbalances that
of another. When one ceases to
give that one begins to die!
This truth holds true in every
department of human life; physi
cal, mental, and spiritual. God
did not “pigeon-hole” THIS PRO
CESS IN THE DEVELOPMENT
OF THE HUMAN RACE! As
long as we live we must GIVE,
or contribute to the general sup
ply.
For this reason the man-de
vised - law -of - retirement - at
65 goes against nature.
The retiree is supposed to only
SEN. PENNINGTON
AT THE CAPITOL
The 1968 Georgia General Ass
embly is now history. Shortly af
ter 11 p. m. on Friday night, the
House and Senate ad journed “ sine
die”, and one of the longest,bus
iest and most productive legis
lative sessions on record in this
state came to an end.
The Senate, which had been
hampered in its deliberations by
the fact they could not consider
the voluminous Appropriations
Bill until it had passed the House,
found that late night sessions
were the rule rather than the ex
ception the last two weeks.
The Senate Agriculture and
Natural Resources Committee
met daily so that bills considered
by them could be passed on dally
and not get bogged down In the
heavy Senate Calendar. Senator
Brooks Pennington, Chairman
of this Committee, stated the
Georgia Farmer could be “proud
of his representation this year.
The bills considered and passed
by the Senate Agriculture and
Natural Resources Committee to
aid the cause of the agriculture
industry and conservation were
some of the finest and most bene
ficial ever passed in this state.”
In a speech to the annual Ladies
Night of the Monroe Kiwanis Club
last week, Senator Pennington ex
plained why he voted against the
final Appropriations Bill. “One
of the finest things the Legisla
ture did was to appropriate money
for the “Forgotten Children” in
Milledgeville, and I am proud of
of them for it, but there were
many items that could have been
eliminated. My main concern was
for the “Forgotten Taxpayer”
and I felt the Appropriations Bill
in its final form could possibly
provide for a tax increase in the
future so I was compelled to vote
against it as I felt the welfare of
our taxpayers was our first con
cern.”
Senator Pennington went on to
say that he was pleased, however,
the Senate provided the much
needed pay raise for teachers.
“Efforts were made to lower the
amount but after a hard fight a
compromise was reached on the
date the full amount was budget
ed to become effective Decem
ber 1 instead of September 1.
It was felt the teachers would
rather wait 3 months than have
to give up any of the increase.”
Senator Pennington also ex
plained why he voted against the
“point system” for drivers li
censes revocations. “The man
who uses a vehicle in earning his
livelihood would be treated in ex
actly the same manner as teen
agers, housewives and those who
drive only occasionally. There
were no provisions in this bill
for the man who spends hours
each day in a vehicle and the odds
were “built-in” against these ex
perienced drivers. Suspension of
their licenses would result In loss
of their income and these people
have the best driving records in
the State.”
Next week will mark the be
ginning of a series of articles
highlighting legislation passed
this Session. Senator Pennington
will explain those concerning ag
riculture and others of particular
interest to the 45th Senatorial
District.
He who is slow to anger has
great understanding.
—(Prov. 14:29).
Perhaps the most impor
tant spiritual quality that
should be expressed toward
life is the love of God. When
we are aware of His love and
make a sincere effort to pour
forth this love to all persons
and all situations, we have
the sure cure for any prob
lem. Let us build in a feeling
of God's love as we walk
through our days to meet only
love and understanding.
Thursday, March 14, 1968
RECEIVE. Every need is met,
and supplied; even to amusements
and entertainment.
As a consequence deteri
oration, or slow death sets in,
and the retiree’s only recourse
is to, as St. Paul says: “Kick
against the pricks”. And as
Paul clearly states, this is hard.
To avoid this gradual, long
drawn out demise, let us re
tirees refuse to relinquish our
rightful heritage of giving, and
continue to live and think as
though RETIREMENT had never
been invented. So, Do your own
thinking!
Give of your abilities.
Give of your neighborly in
terest,
Give of your Intellectual store,
Give of your love, and
Keep on giving, and
God will let you live and keep
on living.
ONCE IN A
LIFE TIME
SPECIAL
II
- -“I =
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Model RVH 05
Big Capacity with plenty of stor
age space—yet takes only 24"
of floor space.
53-Lb. Frozen Storage —4O lbs.
in Freezer and 13 lbs. in Storage
Tray.
Temperature Control that oper
ates on or between settings for
infinite number of temperatures.
Modern Design fits in to look
built-in.
Plus: Interior Light, Egg Storage,
Easy-Open Door Latch, Full-
Width, Full-Depth Shelves, Big
Door Storage, Whisper-Quiet
Mechanism, (g) Built-In Quality.
ft
MF «»•
S. ZE
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Model KFG3F
King-Size 0 ven —wi t h
enough room for big
company-coming dinners.
Full Coil Heating-surface
units heat all over even at
lowest settings. Fine tune
for infinite heat selection.
High Speed Broiling—tubular
Corox’ broiling element
distributes heat evenly
over entire broiling area.
Generous Storage Space-for
often-used utensils.
Lift-Off Doorand Plug-OutOven
Heaters-for easy cleaning.
Simple Dial Oven Control
starts oven, sets tempera
ture in a single turn.
BOTH
$299.95
COVINGTON
EIECIRIC CO.
PLUMBING-
HEATING-
ELECTRICAL
CONTRACTING
PHONE 786-7035
NORTH SQUARE
COVINGTON, GA.;