Newspaper Page Text
Forest Park Free Press
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 29 ft
Jonesboro Socials
By MRS. A. A. CAMP
105 Smith Street —Phone 478-6841
■®ss■.•- ■ : > -
Miss Grace Porter entertained
at a birthday luncheon for her
mother, Mrs. J. P. Porter, at her
home on North Avenue, Monday,
September 21. Guests were: Mrs.
L. C. Bowen of Marietta, Mrs.
J. W. Kinard and son, Glenn, |
Mrs. R. L. Johnson and Mrs.
H. O. Little all of Atlanta.
Mrs. Betty Kilpatrick and
daughter, Jeannie, spent Thurs
day in Blue Ridge, Ga. as guests
of Douglas Job.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Tysinger and
son, Bill, of McLain, Va., and Mr.
and Mrs. Floyd Hutchetson of
Augusta, Ga., were luncheon
guests of Mr. and Mrs. G. L.
Brogdon and Bruce on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Jackson at
tended the funeral of Mr. Jack
son’s mother. Mrs. J. R. Jackson,
at Carmichael’s Chapel in East
Point on Wednesday, September
23.
Mr and Mrs. B. J. Turner at
tended the funeral of Mr.
Turner’s uncle, Dr. J. W. Turner,
on Wednesday, 10:30 a.m. at
Patterson’s Funeral Home. They
were over-night guests of Mr.
Turner’s sister, Mrs. J. E.
Waldrop, and Mr. Waldrop at
their home in Avondale.
Mrs. J. I. Youngblood of Ash
burn, Ga., spent last week with
her daughter, Mrs. Roy Watson,
Mr. Watson and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy Norred
and daughter, Angie spent last
week-end as guests of their
parents, the Norreds and the
Wrights, in LaGrange, Ga.
A dinner dance was held at the
Lakeshore Country Club for the
members and their guests on
May Davis Garden Club
Studies Care of Plants
The May Davis Garden Club
held their September meeting at
the home of Mrs. J. J. Thomas
Sept. 15 with 13 members pres
ent. Mrs. Mildred Coleman was
co-hostess.
The program on “The Care of
House Plants” given by Mrs.
Annette Brooks had a very effec
tive and charming setting in the
lovely home of the hostess,
lending added interest to the
subject. Door prizes were won by
Mrs. Brooks and Mrs. Louis
Brennen.
A short business meeting was
conducted by President, Mrs.
Bertie Jobson.
Delicious refreshments were
enjoyed before the meeting ad
journed.
BOWENS HAVE
BABY SON
ATLANTA ARMY DEPOT—
First Lieutenant and Mrs. Paul
J. Bowen, 70 N. Ash Street, For
est Park, announce the birth of
a baby son on September 20 at
Fort McPherson Hospital. The
baby’s mother is the former Miss
Joan Tarpley of Athens, Ga.,
who formerly taught the third
grade at Morrow Elementary
School. The maternal grandpar
ents are Mr. and Mrs. L. R.
Tarpley of Athens. The paternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Harold J. Bowen of Horseheads,
New York. Lt. Bowen is stationed
at the Depot with the 14th Air
craft Depot Battalion.
SALE
NYLON SLIPS $2.98 i
ELKIN S DEPT. STORE
HAPEVILLE
BETWEEN POST OFFICES
_ THANK YOU, FRIENDS
placed so much confidence in me in the run off Sept. 23rd.
placed so much confidence in me in the run off ofSept.23rd.
My s P ec| d thanks 1 o those who worked so hard in my cam-
L a i^ n ‘ jMy su PPorters Vvorked free and hard for a principal they
believed in.
My own communirty gave me a 659 to 130 vote of confi
dence, which makes me hold my head high even in defeat.
Again let me express my deepest thanks and appreciation
to you tor your support.
I will join the rriajority and work hard for a better 44th Dis
trict. To my opponent, congratulations and best wishes for a
successful race.
Sincerely,
LAMAR NORTHCUTT
Friday evening. Music was fur
nished by Kenny Brown and his
orchestra. A special floor show
was presented by Lillian Kinney
and Chuck Murray, well known
' dancers.
Mrs. C. F. Duffee and Miss
Ruth Brown were guests of
Misses Janie and Cutie Peebles
on Thursday. Miss Janie Peebles
is convalescing at home after
returning from the Spalding
County Hospital in Griffin.
Mrs. C. M. Fisher and daugh- :
ter, Becky, of Savannah, spent ।
last week with Mr. and Mrs. <
Charles Fisher.
Miss Carole Job, daughter of
Mr, and Mrs. D. W. Job, entered
the Georgia Baptist Hospital ■
School of Nursing on Monday,
September 14.
Mr. and Mrs. Tyler Durst and
daughter, Gail, of Atlanta, spent
Sunday with Mrs. Durst’s par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. B. J. Turner.
Mrs. W. F. Rutherford re
turned home on Saturday, Sep
tember 19, after visiting a month
with Mr. and Mrs. Rabun Ruth
erford and family in Richmond,
Va. Mr. Rutherford accompanied
her and remained a week.
♦ ♦ ♦
CRADLE ROLL
To Mr. and Mrs. Marion Rob
erts, a son, John Keith, Septem
ber 21, Georgia Baptist Hospital.
♦ ♦ ♦
The “Bethany Class” of the
First Baptist Sunday School was
honored at a luncheon by their
teacher, Mrs. B. J. Turner, at her
home on Lake Jodeco, on Thurs
day. Ten members enjoyed her
hospitality.
Rock Springs
HD Club
Meets
Rock Springs HD Club met
Sept. 22 at Jonesboro in the HD
Kitchen, with Mrs. Joyce Spates,
the HD Agent.
The program was on food and
nutrition—especially the egg.
Several dishes on eggs were
made and served. Recipes were
given each member.
A short business session was
held afterwards. Discussed items
for entering the fair and going
Homemakers Day Oct. 8.
Meeting adjourned by presi
dent.
—MIRIAM FARMER
Publicity
Project HOPE has earned en
dorsements fro m Presidents
Eisenhower, Kennedy and John
son, who has said: “. . . they
(the people of HOPE) demon
strate for all the world a simple
exercise in the brotherhood of
man.”
HOLLINGSWORTH
JEWELERS
Clayton Piaza—366-2776
FREE—Engraving on Jewelry
purchased here. Watches com
pletely overhauled, $5.00. We
repair jewelry, size rings, elec
tric shavers, cigarette light-
I ers, fountain pens, etc.
Beads restrung, pearls hand
knotted, school jewelry. All
kinds of charms and brace
! lets.
'Edgar Forio Named
Heart Fund Chairman
Edgar J. Forio, Senior Vice-
President of The Coca-Cola
Company, Atlanta, will be chair
man of Georgia’s 1965 Heart
Fund campaign, it was an
nounced today by Carter L.
Redd, Board Chairman of the
Georgia Heart Association.
Mr. Forio is a Director and
. Past-President of the Georgia
। State Chamber of Commerce;
I Past-President of the Atlanta
Chamber of Commerce; member
of the Board of Governors, Na
tional Better Business Bureau
Association and President of the
Atlanta Better Business Bureau;
Vice-President of the Kiwanis
Club; member of American Le
gion Post No. 134, and Hospital
Advisory Council; Trustee,
Northside Hospital Association,
Inc.; and member of the Board
of Trustees, Fulton-DeKalb Hos
pital Authority.
In accepting the Heart Fund
Chairmanship for Georgia, Mr.
Forio pointed up the importance
of the fight against heart dis
ease to business as well as to the
individual.
‘This assignment is challenging
for several reasons,” he said.
“First, it provides an opportunity
to attack in a single effort a
great complex of 25 or more dif
ferent diseases of the heart and
blood vessels which include such
major diseases as heart attack,
stroke, high blood pressure,
rheumatic fever, inborn heart
defects, and others.
“Secondly, it provides an op
portunity for business to attack
the economic problems created
by heart disease in a manner
that not even the largest indus
tries in this country could do
alone.
“Finally, the Heart Association
has demonstrated its ability to
deal with this problem. Since
1950, the death rate from hyper
tension among middle-aged men
has been reduced by 50% and
from stroke by 26%. These re
sults could not have been ob
tained had not the Heart Asso
ciation provided the vehicle
through which the people of
George Newton
Aboard Destroyer
USS JOHN PAUL JONES
(FHTNC) — Midshipman First
Class George E. Newton, son of
Mr. and Mrs. James H. Newton
of 4079 Boulder Vista Drive, Con
ley, Ga., is aboard the destroyer
USS John Paul Jones for a
summer Midshipman Training
Cruise in the Mediterranean.
He is receiving practical train
ing in anti-submarine warfare,
gunnery, seamanship, navigation
and shipboard routine in pre
paring for duties as a naval of
ficer.
Jones is a part of an anti-sub
marine “Hunter-Killer” group
composed of surface, sub-surface
and air units designed to find
and destroy enemy submarines.
He will have an opportunity to
visit ports in France, Morocco
and Italy.
Good /
SUPERVISED
ROLLER SKATING
Forest Park Youth
Center Skating Rink
91 South Ave.
FOREST PARK, GA.
PAGE 6
America could concentrate their
efforts. The Georgia Heart Asso
ciation is the only organization
in the state giving full time to
the fight against heart disease
and to no other problem.”
Mr. Forio pointed out that the
1965 Heart Fund Drive will be
conducted throughout the state
in February in support of a pro
jected budget of $640,000.
I" 4 — i EVERYTHING MUST GO!
/ Room / MOVING TO NEW LOCATION
i ALL KINDS NEW FURNITURE!
I * 5 CHAIR S f
/ 139 / ALL THE BEST HOME FURNISHINGS!
/ AIL FROM BASS " KNOWN FOR
T . 7 ~ QUALITY FOR OVER 75 YEARS!
/ f r ^7" s ° h / SAVE AT MOVING OUT PRICES!
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All | "»“' Ch °' C U^- —
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N » Hold Orrf ", YOU KNOW QUALITY
I MANY, MANY ITEMS WE CAN'T LIST. WE MUST SELL EVERY PIECE OF ::
| Luigi'S Wglcomfi j I ” FURNITURE BEFORE WE MOVE —ACCORDING TO THE BUILDER OUR j:
!****^>^ ! I i; NEW STORE WILL BE TURNED OVER TO BASS FRIDAY, OCTOBER 2. SO
" ************— ****~~~ / “ HURRY IN!!
'Morrow HD Club' Hears
Agent Mrs. Joye Spates
The Morrow Home Demonstra
tion Club met in the Demonstra
tion Kitchen in the courthouse
in Jonesboro September 15 with
twelve members and three vis
itors present.
Mrs. Lee, president, opened the
meeting and turned it over to
Mrs. Joye Spates, who had
charge of the program “Foods
'"and Nutrition”. She demon
strated the “Versatile Egg” by
preparing dishes and cooked
and the members in turn sam
pled.
The Southeastern Fair was
Church. Conference
ATLANTA—A nationwide Con
vocation on the Church in Town
and Country will attract more
than 750 persons from 23 reli
gious denominations to Georgia’s
capital, October 13-15.
Purpose of the meeting is to
explore means of bettering rural
and small town communities
across the United States. Numer
ous areas ranging from eco
nomics to cultural development
will be considered in the three
day sessions. The theme will be
“The Church Meeting Human
the main discussion and plans
were..made ...to . enter articles
made by the members during
the year. Delegates were ap
pointed to work demonstrating
electrical appliances and in the
Food and Drug Administration.
Members registered for the
Refinishing and Antiquing Fur
niture Class October 20-21.
The October meeting will be
on Interior Decorating.
Mrs. R. J. Kelly, Eubanks
Drive, Lake City, was welcomed
as a new member.
Needs.”
Governor Carl Sanders and
Mayor Ivan Allen of Atlanta will
welcome the delegates at 9:30
a.m. on October 13. Secretary of
Agriculture, Orville L. Freeman
will deliver the keynote address.
Host to the meeting, which is
held every four years, is St. Mark
Methodist Church in downtown
Atlanta. Dr. L. Bevel Jones is
pastor of the church.
Progress is born of experience.
—Mary Baker Eddy
First Baptist Holds
Worker's Banquet
Private Tanner
In Training
Parris Island, S. C. 1 FHTNC)—
Marine Private Jesse L. Tanner,
son of John H. Tanner of 6 De
pot St., Conley Ga., is scheduled
to complete recruit training Sept.
' 123 at the Marine Corps Recruit
Depot, Parris Island, S. C.
The intensive training course
includes drill, bayonet training,'
physical fitness, parades and
ceremonies and other military
subjects.
Three weeks were spent on the
rifle range firing the M-14 rifle
and other infantry weapons.
This recruit training prepares |
Marines for further specialized
training or for duty with a unit
of the Fleet Marine Force. He
will report to Camp Lejeune,
N. C., for further combat infan
try training.
The South’s pulp and paper
industry spends S2O million a
week for pulpwood and the
wages and salaries paid to 90,000
employees.
The First Baptist Church of
Jonesboro held a 1964 Worker’s
Banquet at the social hall on
Wednesday evening, September
23. The theme was “Onward and
Upward For Christ”.
The decorations, created by
Mrs. Lamar Beckwith and Arthur
Swahler, carried out the motif of
“Orbiting” in line with the trend
of the times.
Taking part on the program
were: Invocation—Dr. W. W.
Long, Solar Pleasure — (Let’s
Eat)—.Sonic Booms — (Let’s
Sing), The Sound of the Moon
beams—Ladies’ Sextet, Count
down and Blastoff—Led by Dr.
Long, Soaring In Space—At the
i controls: Sunday School—Lamar
' Beckwith, Training Union—Guy
Maynard, W.M.U.—Mrs. Troy
Bedingfield, Brotherhood —Willie
Huddleston, Music—Alec Hopper,
Introduction of Speaker — Ed
Rawls, The Song of the Astro
notes—The Adult Choir, “Let Us
Arise and Sing”, Speaker—Dr.
Eugene Poston, President of
Gardner Webb College, Boiling
Springs, N. C., and a former Pas
! tor of the Church. Benediction
by Dr. Poston.