Newspaper Page Text
2
& Farmer, Thurs., April 18, 1968
111 Woman s Page J
Jonesboro Socials
By MRS A A CAMP
105 Smith Street — Phone 478-6841
Mr and Mrs Albert Wal
lace and family spent Easter
week-end in Darlington,
South Carolina, as guests of
Mrs. Wallace's mother, Mrs.
M. L Thomas, Mr Wallace
attended the Masters Golt
Tournament in Augusta be
fore returning home.
Mr and Mrs Ed Daniel
and daughter. Dawn left on
Thursday for Oxford, Missis
sippi. and spent the week
end with Mrs. Daniel's par
ents. the Robins
Mr and Mrs K A. Godfrey
were guests of Mr. and Mrs
Carlton Stewart in Gaines
ville for several days last
week
Mr and Mrs T W Cole
were hosts at a dinner party
at their home on the South
Expressway on Thursday
evening lor the Past Ma
tron's and Patron's Club of
the Order of the Eastern
Star
Mr and Mrs J R Sandifer
and children. Mr and Mrs
D W Ethridge and children
of Atlanta, and Mr. and Mrs
W T Taylor Jr and son
Keith of Forest Park, spent
Easter Sunday with their
parents, Mr and Mrs. W F
Taylor The children enjoyed
their annual Easter egg
hunt
Mrs. John Todd and son
left on Wednesday lor Au
gusta to visit Mrs Todd's
mother for the Easter holi
days
Mr and Mrs Bernard
Seideman returned from a
trip to Key West. Florida, on
Saturday. April 6. While in
Florida they received word
of the death of Mr Seide
man s father in Bradley
Beach, New Jersey, and they
flew up for the funeral on
April 9
Miss Janet Rawls, bride
elect of May 6. was honored
at a linen shower and tea at
Davisons Tea Room on Sat
urday. April 6, Hostesses were
Mrs Dorsey Day and Mrs.
Simpson Andrews of Mari
etta
Private Douglas E. Murray,
stationed at Ft Benning,
spent the week-end with his
wife and with his parents.
Mr and Mrs Bill C. Murray
Mr and Mrs J O. Oliver
and family left on Wednes
day for Key West. Florida, to
spend the Easter holidays
with Captain and Mrs. L. E
Oliver Jr and Ken.
Mrs Dorothy Stokes who
has been visiting her daugh
ter. Mrs P G Shepherd, and
Mr Shepherd for several
months, is the guest of Mr
and Mrs Dick White in Mel
bourne, Florida
Mr and Mrs. Henry
Yongue have returned from
a vacation of a week tn Al
buquerque, New Mexico. They
sh °p Bonnie ’s
Sportswear
Co-ordinated J
SLACKS
SHORTS
SHELLS
in
Pastime
Jeannie CinjßlaMk\
Maverick \
Shapely Classics \ I
Swim Suits \ \
Beach Party / y
® '4
— Bonnie’s, in-
store Dress Shop
HOURS: PHONE 366 8906
9:30 to 6 p.m. 812 A»h-Morrow Plaza
Fridays to 7 FOREST PARK
। saw Carlsbad Caverns and
1 the blown glass factories;
they also went into Mexico ।
l and to Texas.
Mr. and Mrs. Lamar Beck
with and family who have
made their home in Camelot ;
! for a year, have moved to |
i 2801 Emerald Drive, La Re |
i Spivey.
Mr and Mrs. Dan Troy ,
with a group from Atlanta '
returned on Wednesday eve- ;
ning from Augusta where
they stayed three days view- I
ing the Masters warmup j
rounds.
Mrs. Josie Goss spent Fri
day night with Mr. and Mrs
Paul Duncan in Atlanta.
* • ♦
HOSPITAL NOTES
Byron Turner—Emory.
Jerry Crumbaker—Mont
gomery Baptist.
Arthur Manning—Dekalb.
Mrs. W. A Key—Bright- i
moor Medical Care Home— |
Griffin.
• • ♦
CRADLE ROLL
To Mr. and Mrs. Roger M.
Dean, a son. James Chris
topher. Friday. April 12,
Georgia Baptist.
Mr and Mrs. R. H. Wall of
Fort Valley were guests of
Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Jones on
Sunday
$25 Prize
For "Best
In Show’
A $25 purchase prize lin !
cash) will be awarded by
Woodward Academy for the
"Best in Show. - ' Revere bowls ,
and ribbons will be awarded
in each class All pictures
hung will receive certificates.
The six winners (three
from each of the two cate- i
goriest along with 10 other
prints selected by the panel |
of judges will form a Con
temporary Southern Photo
graphic Art Exhibition which
will tour southern states for
one year Such photographs
will be insured by Lloyds of
London for the entire tour.
Approximately 50,000 people
i will view exhibited prints in
I each town giving an appre
' ciative audience the thrill of
viewing photography as an
art form
Any further information I
; may be obtained from Mrs
W L. Rick. Jr . Fine Arts Di-
I rector at Woodward Acad- ,
emy.
Washington - The Federal
Bureau of Investigation is
in u ?stigating the theft of 485
pistols, some of them dating to
the Civil War, from a collection
in a basement storage room of
the Smithsonian Institute.
.
I
&
t Sb
Jackson - Johnson
Mr and Mrs. Vernon Ash
more of Mountain View,
Georgia, announce the en
gagement of her daughter,
Rebecca Elizabeth Jackson
to James Kendall Johnson,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Theron
■ Johnson of Social Circle,
Georgia.
Miss Jackson was gradu
ated from Forest Park High
j School and is a senior at the
! University of Georgia.
G ranger-Y arbrough
Mr. and Mrs. James B
Granger of 1746 Carla Dr.,
Morrow, announces the en
t gagement of their daughter,
Sandra Faye Granger, to
i L Cpl. Randy Lee Yar
brough, son of Mrs. Jesse
, Funderburk of 502 Hanes
j Dr., Forest Park.
The bride-elect attends
Forest Park High where she
is a senior.
L/Cpl. Yarbrough is in the
Marines and at the present
। is in Vietnam. The wedding
will be planned when L Cpl.
Yarbrough returns from
Viet Nam in September
SGT. WALLACE
WICHITA FALLS. Tex.—
Staff Sergeant Thaddeus C.
Wallace Jr., son of Mr. and
Mrs. T. C. Wallace Sr. of 5195
j Northfield Boulevard, Col
! lege Park, Ga., has been
1 graduated with honors from
a U.S. Air Force technical
school at Sheppard AFB, Tex
He was trained as an air
craft mechanic and has been
assigned to a unit of the
Strategic Air Command at
Loring AFB, Maine.
The sergeant is a graduate
of Lakeshore High School.
His wife is the former
Heidemarie Sourowietz.
I I S IS DETECT CANCER
i San Diego--A 17-year study
| has shown it is possible to
j determine "with reasonable
i accuracy” from the first examin-
I ation whether a woman nins
a high or low risk of developing
I cancer of the uterus, a cancer
expert reported.
■wffli federal!
SAVINGS ■
on AND LOAN
A'A°L passbook ASSOCIATION
/ X /O SAVINGS
I 5 25% * I
WFBBBbF /Wr hmmOHic* wu ’IUHa I
IN SMtb CMhal Avtm
ON SAVINGS CERTIFICATES ||
HUDDLESTON
CONCRETE COMPANY
' — Concrete Products —
W. H. Huddleston, Manager
|Phone 474-7271 -474-72721
Night: Charles Mundy 478-8019
Cecil H. Lyle 474-4381
W. H. Huddleston 478-8181
Mr. Johnson will be grad
uated from the University of
Georgia in August.. He is a
member of the Naval Re
serve, and after graduation
he will report to Newport,
Rhoda Island for the com
pletion of Officer Candidate
School.
The wedding will be June
7 at the First Baptist Church
of Mountain View.
।
FP Swim Team
Contributes to
Hall of Fame
Members of the Forest
Park Swimming Association
were 100% in their contribu-
• tion to the "Dollar to do it" I
i building fund to complete
i the $300,000.00 Swimming '
J Hall of Fame which is lo- :
cated on Seabreeze Avenue ■
in Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
, A petition was received
I from Buster Crabbe, former
I Olympian who is chairman .
of the fund raising drive to
complete the beautiful build
ing which will feature a his
tory of swimming and me
mentos of the great sport.
The Swimming Hall of
Fame is a non-profit educa
tional shrine built by
swimmers and swimming en
thusiasts. A special room will ।
be wallpapered with the pe
titions bearing the signatures ।
of swimmers from all over I
America and become a mem
ory forever to the boys and
girls who made it possible.
GEORGIA WOOD
Georgia is now growing
more wood each year than
any state in the nation ex
cept the state of Washing
ton, according to C. Dorsey
Dyer, head of the Extension
Service forestry department
at the University of Georgia.
The forest industries add
more than $1 billion annually
to the state’s economy.
Jones WSCS
Meets
Jones Memorial Wesleyan
Service Guild met April 3 at
8 p.m.
Rachel McGinnis gave the
devotion, a reading by Pierce
Harris.
Ann Yancey had the pro
gram, with Joe Lane as guest
speaker for the evening. His
talk was on Mental Health,
and told us that a wing on
the new hospital is to han
dle the mentally ill, 24 hours
a day.
Meeting adjourned with
refreshments in fellowship
hall. Hostesses were Miss
Julia Davenport and Mrs.
Mae Peek.
—Mrs. Miriam Farmer
Publicity
Rock Springs
Home Ec
Club
Did you know sea food is
less fattening than meat and
just as nutritional and eco
nomical. Mildred Huff from
the Florida Board of Conser
vation gave a talk on Sea
Food Preparation ana pre
pared five different fish
dishes. Everyone enjoyed the
food and was surprised at
how good fish actually tastes.
Iris Chasteen gave point
ers on the “New Sizing” in
patterns, measuring for a
better fit and the type of
clothes for different shapes,
a short woman looks taller in
long sleeves and long jackets,
women with large hips look
better in a-line skirts.
On April 17, we attended
the District Home Ec. meet
ing in Callaway Gardens,
had lunch and toured the
Gardens.
To remove the last bit of
soap from socks and make
them softer, Miss Margie Mc-
Intyre, home economist
clothing, with the University
of Georgia Cooperative Ex
tension Service suggests that
you add one-fourth cup of
vinegar to the last rinse
when washing the socks.
If We Knew Our Need,
Would We Make It Profitable to Us?
NO. 15-68
It is necessary for men to arise each morn
ing throughout their lifetime to pursue an
occupation by which life is sustained. Phys
ical bodies are created with naked, univer
sal and absolute needs that must be sup
plied in one way or another. But life of the
physical body is not a full life. We all also
labor for other ends, aware of our potential
of unfolding to a width, depth, length and
height that we have not yet realized, but
that can be reached if pursued with dili
gence and perseverance. By learning, by
accepting admonition and by faith that do
ing these things will indeed be our salva
tion, and by doing them we become the sons
of God, and inherit a birthright as sons of
God. But men cannot inherit their birth
right if they serve their physical bodies and
neglect their potential for unfolding in a
new life that is of God's Spirit.
Men are warned against neglecting their
birthright and exchanging it for a mess of
pottage, as Esau did. If ye live after the
flesh (serve the flesh) ye shall die, but if ye
live after the Spirit, mortifying the deeds
of the body, ye shall live. Rom. 8:13.
God has a purpose for men that they do not
fulfill. A height that they have not reached,
but is within their power to reach if they
wish it sufficiently to crucify the lusts of
the flesh, the lusts of the eyes, and the
pride of life and cease to love the world. If
any man love the world, the love of the
Father is not in him. 1 John 2:15-16. Men
need such a faith in a higher life: that such
things as the world considers to be gain,
they consider but dung, as did the apostle
Paul in order that he might gain Christ.
Phil. 3:8
Such things as Cadillac cars, wall-to-wall
carpeting, air conditioning, color TV, see
ing the world, a summer lodge on a lake,
boats, campers, storing goods for a life of
eating, drinking and making merry, the
pleasing of men, and the praise of men,
were things that were utterly thrown to the
dogs by Paul because his eye was single to
a higher life with joy unspeakable and full
of glory, and he gained the right to such a
life at great expense. In labors more abun
dant, in stripes above measure, in prisons
more frequent, in deaths oft, thrice was I
beaten with rods, once I was stoned, thrice
I suffered shipwreck, a night and a day have
511 PEGG ROAD
r
Stanford - Prock
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas E.
Stanford of Forest Park an
nounce the engagement of
their daughter, Ann Clarke
Stanford, to Kenneth Ray
Prock, son of Mr. and Mrs.
A. J. Prock, also of Forest
Park.
Both are graduates of For
est Park High. Miss Stanford
is presently employed by
Chit Chat Club
The April meeting of the
Chit Chat Club of Edgemoor
West was held at the home
of Mrs. Ronald Doster of
Parkwood Way. Her co-host
ess was Mrs. William Bry
ant.
It was the event of our an
nual "White Elephant” auc
tion. The auctioneer was our
hostess, Shirley Doster.
Many a pretty item went to
the top bidder. The pro-
Allan Grayson Realty Com
pany and Mr. Prock is with
the Georgia Power Company.
The bride-elect is the grand
daughter of Mrs. Fay W.
Clarke and the late H. A.
Clarke of Jonesboro.
The wedding will take
place June 1 at the Forest
Park Presbyterian Church.
ceeds go to the Smith Home
for Retarded Children in At
lanta. This home has been
our service project since the
conception of the neighbor
hood club.
Delicious refresh men t s
were served and enjoyed by
all.
—Mrs. C. N. Darner
Publicity Chairman
I been in the deep, in journeyings. Often, in
perils of water, in perils of robbers, in perils
by my own countrymen, in perils by the
heathen, in perils in the city, in perils in the
wilderness, in perils in the sea, in perils
among false breathren, in weariness and
painfulness, in watchings often, in hunger
and thirst, in fastings often, in cold and
nakedness. 2 Cor. 1 1:23-27.
Men should ask themselves if they have
gained the right to the joy unspeakable
and full of glory that Paul speaks of. Paul's
life is a demonstration of what the prayer
"Jesus Rose of Sharon, Bloom in Radiance
and in Love Within My Heart" should mean
to men. Men have a potential like a camel
lia bush, whose buds form and grow in a
hostile environment, where freezing causes
the buds to drop off without having opened
up in their glory. When buds form and grow
and open fully, they present a glorious ap
pearance to the eye. When buds which God
causes to form and grow in the minds of
men do not drop off as, it were, but mature
and open up to show forth the full beauty
of the glory of God, we have a sight that
truly enthralls the eye of the understanding
of men. Such is the result of the circum
cision made without hands, in the putting
off of the body of the sins of the flesh by
the circumcision of Christ. Col. 2:11.
Men need to see and accept Jesus as the
personification of the way, the truth and the
life, ordained of God for men, and demon
strated to them in the clearest possible way.
In him is found the fullness that every man
needs. It is his life that is given to those
who fashion not themselves according to
their former lusts in their ignorance, but
are holy in all manner of conversation; be
cause it is written, be ye holy; for I am holy.
1 Peter 1:14-15-16.
Through holiness men cease to be alienated
from the life of God through the ignorance
that is in them. God is not far from any
one of us; if we feel after him and find him
it will be through becoming holy as he is
holy. The plan of salvation calls for men
to be holy as he is holy. God is able to
strengthen men in the faith which accords
with the gospel, and the preaching the Jesus
Christ (Rom. 16:25) by which men can be
come perfect, even as he is perfect.
ATLANTA, GA. 30315
Notes on
Chiropractic
By DR. HENRY L. FOLEY
According to official sta
tistics, sacro - illiac strain
ranks third in compensable
injuries.
The sacro
illiac joints,
situated
where the
base of the
sp 1n e joins
the larger hip
bones, can be
and are, the
seat of much
pain felt in
the lower part
of the back.
Whether you call it lumbago,
rheumatism, or just plain
backache, much of the pain
felt in the lower part of the
back is the result of sacro
illiac strain.
In case of severe sacro
illiac strain, home remedies
can do little more than give
temporary relief. Such cases
require the services of a
Chiropractor skilled in the
correction of sacro-illiac dis
placements, for there is usu
ally a partial dislocation be
tween the base of the spine
and one of the large bones
on the pelvis.
CHIROPRACTIC OFFICES
780 Main St.,
Forest Park, Ga.
(Next door to Post Office)
366-3223
SGT. COUCH
U.S. AIR FORCES. Thai
land — Technical Sergeant
Robert W. Couch, son of Mr
and Mrs. Hugh B. Couch of
9623 Corinth Road, Jones
boro, Ga., is on duty at
Udorn Royal Thai AFB.
Thailand.
Sergeant Couch, a radar
technician, is a member of
the Air Force Communica
tions Service in support of
the Pacific Air Forces.
Before his arrival in Thai
land, he was assigned to
Keesler AFB, Miss.
The sergeant is a graduate
| of Fayette County High
। School. Fayetteville, Ga.
i His wife, Naomi, is the
I daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
I R. H. Sewell of 1345 LaSalle
| Avenue, Biloxi, Miss.