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Thursday, June 5, 1969
To Toke Trip With Student Bond Os America Group
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DURING A SEASON when congratulatory remarks are in order, the R. L. Cousins Elementary and Kgh
School, along with its community at large, congratulate those students who will represent them this
summer on the Ist Annual American Concert of the Jr. High School Band of America. The parti
cipants of this tour are shown above with their families. They are from left to right, front to back:
Kathy Manuel and Mrs. Einier Barnes (grandmother); Debbie Hillman and Mr. and Mrs. Garland
Hillman (parents); Bobby Henri Taylor and Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Taylor (parents) along with his sister,
Toni, and his brother, Michael. They win leave from the Atlanta Airport on June 9, and will arrive in
Peoria, Illinois for registration and rehearsals which will begin June 9. They will terminate their tour
on June 19, 1969. They wIU also tour Indiana, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Washington, D. C., and
West Virginia.
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(Best Coverage: News, Pictures, and Features)
HORN FLY TIME
What external parasite causes
the most concern to beef cattle
during the summer months? In
Georgia it is the horn fly.
These pests occur in large
numbers. If not controlled, they
can remove up to a pound of
weight gain per head per day.
Cattle rubbing devices are ef
fective means of controlling horn
flies on beef cattle.
My office has details on con
struction, location, maintenance
and treatment of cable-type rubb
ing devices and self-treatment
dust bags. Ask for copies of En
tomology Fact Sheets 6L-1
“Cattle Rubbing Devices,” and
6L-3, “Cattle Dusting Stattion.”
♦* * *
THE COVINGTON NEWS
County Agents
Column
By Ed Hunt
COUNTY AGENT
LACE BUGS
Lace bugs are considered a
major pest on azaleas during the
summertime. Nymphs and adults
suck sap from the underside of
leaves. This causes a grayish,
stippled or blanched appearance
to the upper surface. Plants be
come unsightly, and their growth
is greatly reduced.
In addition to the Insects, you
will find shed skins and dried
specks of excrement on the un
derside of infested leaves.
If evidence of lace bugs is
found, here is what to do for
control. Mix two teaspoons of
dimethoate (Cygon 2E) or one
tablespoon of malathion 57 per
ce n t emulsifiable concentrate
with each gallon of water. Direct
the spray nozzle so that the un-
(Our Advertisers Are Assured of Best Results)
dersides of leaves are thorough
ly covered with the spray.
♦♦ * *
TRAINING PLANTS
Plants used in a landscape pat
tern often need to be pruned or
shaped to fit a particular need.
When shrubs are allowed to grow
freely year after year, the en
tire theme may be so changed
that the original design is lost.
As new growth appears on sh
rubs, it can be “pinched out”
or pruned to force a more com
pact growth. With regular prun
ing during the growth period, a
plant may be trained to grow
into the desired shape. In addi
tion, this may save severe cutt
ing back of plants during the
dormant season. This is parti
curlarly true with broadleaved
evergreens.
Begin pruning operations when
the plant is small. If it is allow
ed to grow for several years
before any training is done, the
shaping will be more difficult.
Hall, Forsyth and Lumpkin Co
unties are the three largest egg
producing counties in Georgia,
according to University of Geor
gia Cooperative Extension Ser
vice poultry specialists.
Report Sheds New Light
On Poor In United States
WASHINGTON - Contrary to
popular belief, two-thirds of all
the poor in this country live out
side the central cities of metro
politan areas -about the same
proportion as for the total pop
ulation.
About half of all poor people
live in small towns and rural
areas, with approximately 44
percent of the Negro poor and
only 26 percent of the white poor
residing in central cities.
These are among the facts
brought out in a report, Changes
in Urban America, just issued
by the Department of Labor’s
Bureau of Labor Statistics.
According to the report, the
stereotype of Uk monolithic core
city “is just as faxse as the myth
about single-status suburbs” in
the United States.
The report reveals, for ex
ample, that;
— 14 percent of the population
in the central cities of the metro
politan areas is poor (according
to the Social Security Adminis
tration index.)
—Contrary to popular belief,
whites outnumber Negroes in the
central cities (of Standard Me
tropolitan Statistical Areas) by
a 5-to-l ratio.
—Population density in cen
tral cities is declining <*because
of urban renewal and the move
ment toward the suburbs.”
Other highlights of the report
are:
—Nonwhites make up about 25
percent unemployed workers in
central cities but almost 40 per
cent of the unemployed (1968).
TTiey represent about one-third
of the jobless adult men and
nearly half of the jobless teen
agers.
—Nonwhite teenagers have an
unemployment rate of 25.3 per
cent - well over twice as great
as their white counterparts.
Nevertheless, the number of
unemployed white teenagers is
greater than the number of un
employed nonwhite youth.
-Two-thirds of the employ
ment in large metropolitan areas
is still inside the central city,
even though recent Increases have
been mainly outside the city.
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