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THE FOREST PARK NEWS, THURSDAY, MARCH 5, 1964
I HOMEOWNERS!
WHY STRUGGLE WITH UNPAID BILLS?
f PAY OFF 1
/ EVERYTHING >
( YOU OWE! )
ALL YOUR DEBTS! ALL YOUR OBLIGATIONS!
REPAY EVERYTHING
AT ONE SINGLE PAYMENT UP TO
50% LESS
CALL OR WRITE
Metropolitan Mortgage Co.
P.O. BOX 2197, ATLANTA, GA. 30301 • PHONE 523 1249
For Cooperation With Our Cities
ELECT
TOMMY VAUGHAN
COUNTY COMMISSIONER
YOUR VOTE FOR
Colie Adamson
X’S FOR
CLAYTON COUNTY
C * COMMISSIONER
WILL BE GREATLY
APPRECIATED!
n Democratic Primary April 4
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Gainesville Family
Moves Into 10.000th .
Total-Electric Home
On
They're among 1 .6 million families
throughout the nation enjoying ■
the comfort and convenience S
flameless electric heating |
Recently, the James Smithsons of Gaines
ville moved into their new total-electric
home. It is the ll'.bOOth one on our lines.
But the Smithson family is more than just
a number. They're a symbol of Georgians
and Americans in step with the times.
In their new home,electricity makes pos
sible the leisure of modern living. It heats
and cools the air. washes and dries the
clothes, cleans the house, helps prepare
Read about ”The Big Shift to Electric Heat"
in the March issue of The Xmerican Home
GEORGIA POWER COMPANY
w
1,500 WOMEN
EXPECTED AT
WMU MEETING
The annual meeting of the Wo
man’s Missionary Union, Auxi
liary to the Georgia Baptist
Convention, convenes at Cur
tis Baptist church, Augusta,
March 23-25, with more than
1500 Georgia UMU leaders ex
pected to attend the sessions.
Beginning Monday the 23rd,
at 7:30 p.m., the convention
continues through noon, Wed
nesday the 25.
Theme for the sessions will
be "Praise Ye The Lord,”
and a special feature of the
opening session will be a re
port to the WMU Auxiliary by
Miss Dorothy Pryor, Atlanta,
Executive Secretary for Geor
gia, who is in her first term
as executive leader of WMU.
Speakers for the convention
Include several Southern Bap
tist Foreign Missionaries. They
are: Miss Majorie Jones, Den
ham Springs, La., Missionary
to Ghana; Miss Jessie Green,
Rome, Ga., Missionary to Mal
aysia; Mrs. John McTyre,
Georgia, Missionary to Chile.
Mrs. Ernest Miller, of At
lanta, president of Georgia
WMU, will preside over the ses
sions.
MOST DANAGING INSECTS
Georgia’s most damaging for
est insects are pine bark be
etles. Dorsey Dyer, head of
the Cooperative Extension Ser
vice forestry department, says
these insects usually attack
weakened trees. The best way
to prtevent bettie attack Is to
I maintain healthy timber stands.
ami helps cook the family meals. The
Smithsons 'agree. "Electricity’s truly the
most modern of all conveniences.”
And like the Smithsons’ you can enjoy
this most modern way of life at Georgia
Power Company’s low total-electric rate
whereby you can cut your whole electric
bill as much as'2o per cent. Go total
electric. We'd like to have you as our next
total-electric homeowner.
1
Mrs. Atlanta /
Mrs. Atlanta 1964 Is an at
tractive wife and mother of
three who enjoys cooking most
and ironing least of her home
making duties. She is Mrs. Guy
(Joyce) Hutchison of 955 Can
ter Road, N. E. Atlanta. "I
was so thrilled at being se
lected Mrs. Atlanta, I was abso
lutely numb,” was the way she
expressed her reaction to being
named the Atlanta area’s num
ber one homemaker. "But the
children were even more
excited and I think Guy was
too,”
Jonesboro
Socials
Mr. and Mrs. Shelly Mitchel,
and family of LaFayette, Ga.,
were recent guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Wray and family.
H. E. Camp, Sam Blalock and
C. R. Camp of Atlanta return
ed on Friday from a fishing trip
to Tavares, Fla.
Mr. and Mrs. R. T. Whitlock
and W. V. Whitlock attended the
funeral of Mr. Whitlock’s sis
ter, Mrs. Eva Landrum, at the
Tyrone Baptist Church in Ty
rone, Ga., on Friday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. George C. Sligh
and daughters, Robin and Lisa,
Mrs. Marshall Gaddis, and Mrs.
Sam Blalock attended the Inc
Follies on Thursday evening.
The Chitchat Club of Edge
moor West met at the home of
Mrs. Delores Hall, on Brook
wood Circle, with Mrs. Jean
Hoover as co-hostess on Tues
day, Feb. 18. The feature of
the meeting was the installa
tion of officers as follows:
President, Mrs. Barbara Bell;
vice-president, Mrs. Mildred
Powers; secretary, Mrs. Betty
Grist; treasurer, Mrs. Laverne
Shell. Glgts were presented to
the outgoing officers. The meet
ing will be held March 17 at
the home of Mrs. Sue Turner.
The Junior Department of the
First Baptist Church Training
Union, headed by Mrs. Arthur
Nyman, Mr. and Mrs. Trenon
Alford and Mr. and Mrs. F.
B. Elliott, was entertained at a
social on Friday evening at the
social hall of the church.
W. B. Casey returned on Sat
*urday from the Bahamas where
he spent aweek combiningbusi
ness with a vacation.
Mrs. Myrtice Willingham is
spending some time with her I
sister, Mrs. W. V. Whaley Sr.,
who is ill at her home.
HOSPITAL NOTES
Austin Whitlock (brother of
R. T. Whitlock)— Georgia Bap
tlst.
G. C. Wray (brother of Joe
Wray)--Piedmont.
Mrs. Birch Roberts--Toccoa.
Gordon Sorrow--St. Josephs.
Troy Conkle—Crawford Long.
Miss Diane Hollingsworth-
Crawford Long.
E. H. Ford—South Fulton.
Mrs. Ronald Fulp—Emory.
Mrs. C. N. Landers-- St. Jo
sephs.
Mrs. Vesta Mae Miller-
Georgia Baptist.
Charles Gee—South Fulton.
Miss Mae Vessell—South Ful
ton.
SELLING TIMBER
The head of the Cooperative
Extension Service forestry de
partment believes good timber
sales are perhaps the best in
centive for good management of
timber. Dorsey Dyer says poor
sales lead to poor cutting prac
tices, loss of income, and often 1
to a loss of interest in grow-f
ing timber as a crop. He adds I
that planning is the first major 1
step to take in selling timber.
Churches Need To Discover Some People As
Michelangelo’s Wooden Christ Was Unearthed
BY REV. CHARLES GOE
Pastor Ash St. Baptist Church
For four centuries a delic
ately carved and colored wo
oden Christ has hung in a sha
dowy corner of the monastery
of Santo Spirito in Florence,
blotched over by heavy coat
ings of later-year paint. This
is a wooden Christ which the
great architect, painter and
sculptor Michelangelo carved
when he was only seventeen.
It was known that Michelan
gelo had carved such a figure
during his youth but it was
supposed that it was lost. A
German woman scholar, Mar
grit Llsner, examined the carv
ing in 1962 and insisted it
must be Michalangelos’ miss
ing masterpiece. Later Flor
ence experts confirmed that she
was right and the figure has
been restored to almost per
fect condition.
Two great lessons came from
this discovery. One, often great
prospective servants of God be
hidden or undiscovered until
someone begins to probe into
these unlikely places. Many
people have been lying around
on dusty church rolls In the
corner of a file someplace when
all that Is needed is for some
one to discover them and bring
them Into usefulness.
Sometimes the best of God’s
handwork goes unused and un
discovered for years. Perhaps
they are already members of
a local church or on a pros
pect file or just a newcomer
to the city, but they need to
be challenged to use their ta
lents for the Lord.
LETS ELECT STARR REPRESENTATIVE
f
We, Friends and Supporters Os
& TERRELL A. STARR
*•*
v Know Him and Because Os What We Know
About Him, We Earnestly Ask You to Select
■H Him As Your REPRESENTATIVE in the
I Georgia General Assembly.
TERRELL STARR
Terrell was born and raised in Clayton County. Most of his
adult life has been spent in active community service In the
County he loves.
He has always supported, unselfishly, programs of civic in
terest. To name a few, the Boy Scouts, Red Croh, Heart
Fund and United Appeal campaigns. All athletic programs
and improvement of recreation facilities, Chamber of Com
merce activities and many others. You will always find him
on the scene carrying his fair share of the load on worth-
Vote Starr ★ ★ A Proven Record ★ ★ Elect Starr
Prepared and Submitted by Clayton County Friends and Supporters of TERRELL STARR. We Recommend Him.
RE-ELECT W. LOY DICKSON
SHERIFF
r M|
• PROVEN • MATURE
ABILITY JUDGMENT
"YOUR FRIEND AT ALL TIMES — NOT JUST AT ELECTION TIME"
NEVER A BIG "I" AND LITTLE "YOU" ATTITUDE
Your Vote and Support Sincerely Appreciated
The second lesson throws a
much-needed light on youth.
This masterpiece was fashioned
by a teen-ager. Often the years
of maturing are by-passed as
we send them away to school
or over look their abilities.
These years can be most pro
ductive and creative. Guidance
is needed and direction must
be given but the potential is
there in many young people.
The school activities often br-
WANTED ELECT
■ R. J. «-> OSBORNE
Candidate for
CLAYTON COUNTY
COMMISSION
CHAIRMAN
For Commissioner
Why Accept Combs And Promises When For
a Vote Yon Can Have OSBORNE And What
You Want! YOU’LL BE GLAD YOU DID
ing out great achievements and
reveal consistent devotion that
needs to be on display.
Many of our own Forest Park
young people gave up opportuni
ties for a good time Friday
night so they could be ready
to get up at 4:50a.m. to be
ready to leave for a band con
cert.
I am glad for the discoveries
of ancient art and its revela
tions, but I am doubly glad for
while projects. His experience is valuable, let's keep him
working for us in public service.
lie has been a stable leader in public responsibilities. We
have seen and like the results of his positive approach and
progressive ideas. He has served us well and faithfully
each and every time he has been called upon. Let’s work
together and send him to represent us in the General
Assembly where he will give Clayton County the ener udc
and conscientious representation it deserves and rhich we
know he is capable of providing.
current life in youth as it
displays character and devotion
j to duty and to God.
MORE MONEY FROM BEEF
The goal of more dollars from
beef cattle can be reached by
following three practices, says
Dr. O’Dell G. Daniel, head of
the Cooperative Extension Ser
vice animal husbandry depart
ment. The three practices are:
wean heavier calvies; weanbet-
I ter calves; wean more calves.