Newspaper Page Text
Cumming, Georgia
Legal AJs
GEORGIA, FORSYTH COUNTY.
Neer Sewell having applied to
the Ordinary by petition asking
that Mrs. Effie Chambers, as ad
ministratrix of the estate of
E. G. Chambers, deceased, be re
quired to make him a deed to the
following described land, to-w'it:
"All that tract or parcel of land
lying and being in the 14th dis
trict and first section of Forsyth
County, Georgia, and being in the
Northeast corner of lot of land No.
511, and beginning at a point on
East original line of said land lot
112 feet South of the Northeast
corner thereof; thence North 85
degrees West 665 feet to point
on East side of public road; thence
South 20 degrees West along said
road 390 feet to point; thence South
72 1-2 degrees East 834 feet to
point near branch on East original
line; thence North 1 degree West
along said East original line 573
feet to the point of beginning, all
as shown on and by plat from
survey made by T. P. Thomas,
January 15, 1959, containing in all
8.28 acres, more or less.” in pur
suance of a bond for title made
by E. G. Chambers in his lifetime
to Neer Sewell, alleging that he
has fully met his obligations in
said bond:
This is to notify all the heirs
at law of the said deceased to be
and appear at the March 1959 Term
of the Court of Ordinry of Forsyth
County, Georgia, and show cause,
if any they can, why the said
administratrix should not be re
quired to make said deed as prayed
This 2 day of February, 1959.
A. B. Tollison, Ordinary.
GEORGIA, FORSYTH COUNTY.
To Whom It May Concern:
Cora Lee Ingram having in prop
er form, applied to me for Per
manent Letters of Administration
on the estate of Roy McAfee, de
ceased late of Forsyth County, this
is to cite all and singular the credi
tors and next of kin of the said
Roy McAfee to be and appear at
my office within the time allowed
bv law. ar.d show cause, if any
they can, why Permanent Letters
cl Administration should not be
grar/ed dto Cora Lee Ingram.
Witness mv hand seal, this 2nd
day ct February, 1959.
A. B. Tollison, Ordinary.
THE SMILE ON THE DIAL
1460 RADIO
SERVING ALL THE LAKE
LANIER EMPIRE
WDMF Program Schedule
MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
5:28 Sign On
5:30 News
5:35 Strength For The Day
5:50 Gospel Time
6:00 Farm News Roundup
6:10 Daybreak in Dixie
6:30 Daybreak in Dixie
7:00 News
7:05 .Toe’s Good Morning Show
7:30 .Toe’s Good Morning Show
8:00 World News Roundup
8:15 .Toe’s Good Morning Show
8:30 Joe's Good Morning Show
9:00 News
9:05 Radio Obituary Column
9:10 Gospel Music and Thought
For The Day
9:30 Country Music Time
10:00 News
10:05 Country Music Time
11:00 News
11:05 Housewife Time
12:00 World News
12:05 Georgia News
12:10 Local News
12:15 Farm Markets
12:20 Hillbilly Hits
12:30 Hillbilly Hits
12:45 Radio Obituary Column
12:50 Gospel Time
1:00 World News
1:05 Hayloft Jamboree
2:00 News
2:05 Old Time Gospel Hour
3:00 News
3:05 The Sid Young Show
3:45 Big Top Ten
4:30 Jive Til Five
5:15 News
5:20 Sports Roundup
5:30 Sign Off
Times of special, Religious, and
Public service programs will be
announced over the station.
FOR SALE—2S Meat Type Pigs—
Mac Holbrook, Rt. 4, Cumming,
Phone Tu. 7 —6878.
The first women’s secret society
was organized at Wesleyan College,
Macon, May 15, 1851.
Business is always better for advertisers.
There is something to be said for the good
old days when neighbors shared their fruits and
vegetables, their joys and their sorrows.
EFFICIENT FEEDING
and LIVESTOCKjfcjfI/, MANAGEMENT *
By Dr. Gustav Bohstedt
Emeritus Professor of Animul Husbandry
_ University of Wisconsin
P'"-
Recommend “Watered Stock”
Fed and watered both, that
is. Water is the most impor
tant and also the cheapest feed.
Actually, livestock would live
longer without feed than with
out water. Reduce the water
content of the body to ten per
cent below normal, and the
animal dies.
During cold weather it is
more difficult _ ,
to have water
readily acces
sible to ani- 4IL
mals, and to ,
have it in
wholesome
condition to ~
be consumed
in large WiS.
quantities, as
needed. BhuSHi'
If the water „ Bohstedt
is too cold,
particularly if cows are wa
tered only once a day, they re
duce their milk production for
the simple reason that it takes
from four to five pounds of
water for every pound of milk
produced. So it is especially
important with high producers
to take care of their water re
quirement.
The state of Maine would
seem to have a sufficiently
severe climate for a good test
in this respect. On some 500
farms there it was found that
cows watered from drinking
cups produced 19 per cent
more milk than cows watered
outdoors, and 9 per cent more
milk than cows watered from
a tub in the barn.
But even in states with much
milder temperatures than
Maine it has paid to have
drinking bowls from which the
cows can drink at will. Cows
usually drink about ten times
during a 24 hour period, one
third of the water being drunk
during the night.
Dairy cows of about average
production drink from 10 to 15
gallons a day, but water con
sumption may go up to twice
that much for high produc - 'S.
Telephone , i
Talk ■ ‘
bv '\3||
BILL DAVIS . A ■
Your Telephone Manager
EVER NOTICED how often you hear the phrase- ‘ It’s
as near as your phone!” Just an example of how v,e
the convenience and comfort of our telephones for granted.
It’s so easy to pick up your phone ... for almost any
thing you want or need without ever taking a step from
the house. Comforting, too, to know that you’re never
really alone when your phone's nearby. It makes modern
living mighty convenient and pleasant all the way around
•—just telephone!
* * *
SHE KNEW WHAT SHE WANTED. Not long ago a
woman came into our business office with a swatch of
material in her hand. She held it against the new color
phones, then selected the one she liked best. Some ladies
like phones that blend with their color schemes and others
prefer a contrast. It’s fun to pick out just the right color,
because there are nine lovely shades to choose from. Why
not drop into our office and see for yourself, and treat
yourself to extension phones to suit your taste?
* * *
FEBRUARY was once described as “the greyest month
of the year.” Sometimes the lingering cold winter days
seem depressing, and we feel that spring will never come.
Well, here’s a suggestion
" ' it’s always cheaper to cull
Station-to-Station —that’s wffien you’ll talk to an} one who
answers at the number you’re calling. You save, too, by
calling after six P.M. or anytime on Sundays. Why not
make someone’s grey day “rosy” by Long Distance today!
The Forsyth County News
Beef cattle and horses, de
pending on size, will need from
10 to 12 gallons or more daily.
Sheep need at least a gallon a
day, nursing ewes twice that
much.
Swine need from about one
to one and one-half gallons of
water per 100 pounds of live
weight, the larger proportion
when young. For all livestock,
of course, more water is needed
in hot weather than cold.
It is fortunate that during
recent years more and more
watering systems have been in
stalled on stock farms whereby
a constant supply of water in a
sanitary condition is being de
livered to howls that can be
heated to keep water from
freezing during cold weather.
-O
Question: We keep losing
lambs that we have on feed,
and post-mortem examinations
show urinary calculi as the
cause of death. Reading of pos
sible causes and preventives of
this trouble we recently learned
that salt is used as a preven
tive. How should the salt be
fed?
Answer: The cause of uri
nary calculi in the bladder or
kidney has been variously
ascribed to feeds high in sili
cates, as present in some for
ages, or high in other minerals,
while low in vitamin A. Insuffi
cient water consumption is
sometimes blamed for urinary
calculi. *
The various causes given are
not always consistent, but Dr.
T. D. Bell of Kansas State Col
lege observed that after having
lost lambs from urinary calculi,
he included 5 per cent salt in
their rations and thereafter
lost no more lambs. State Col
lege of Washington workers
found that 10 per cent salt in
the rations of experimental
wethers prevented calculi, but
think that 5 per cent salt might
be a3 beneficial as the larger
amount.
FOR RENT—Several Houses, some
with Chicken Houses MARK
HEARD, JR. Rh: TU. 7—2337.
'FOR SALE-I have plenty of Fire,
, Heater and Stove Wood, all kinds
See INMON STREETMAN, Canton
Rt. 3, or ph. Tu. 7—6342
MILUM ELECTRIC
COMPANY
Win. H. "Bill” MILUM, Owner
Ph: TU. 7-5764
One mile from Coal Mountain on
Brown Bridge Hoad Guaranteed
Service on TV. All electric appli
ances Refrigeration —Air Con
ditioners —Lawn Mowers —Oil Car
buretors.
“SERVICE IS OUR BUSINESS—
OUR ONLY BUSINESS"
WELL
DRILLING
OASIS
Well Drillers, Inc.
Ph. Cumming, Ga.
TU. 7-5460
HELP WANTED
WANTED AT ONCE Man or wo
man to supply Rawleigh household
necessities to consumers in For
syth County. Steady year-round in
come. See R. S. Britt, Rt. 1, Nor
cross or write Rawleigh’s, Dept.
GAB —220 —243, Memphis, Tenn. —
Feb. 12—26—March 12—26, Aprl. 2
HOUSE FOR SALE
5-Room modern dwelling, bath,
hot and cold water, 1 1-2 miles
West of Cumming on Cumming—
, Canton highway. Priced 85,500
Carroll Realty Cos., Alpharetta, Ga.
iPhone 5114 or H. L. (Corky) Val
entine, Phone Roswell, 2204
|i|'
Rum! Etectrifte*!* 5 '
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O /'
.*
More than 20 years ago a small group or
L / far-sighted, progressive Americans set out to
0,0 / prove that Rural Electric Cooperatives could
H r-'-) \ bring low-ccst, dependable electric service
Jh to the farms of America-when no one
‘‘ else WCU ' IC * unc * er^a ' <e i ob ■■ ■
\T\ With Rural Electrification came a new
1 LJ\\ way of life for the farm .. . higher pro
ductivity ... anew market for goods
]H|I and services . . .
'JW |SI \ j Now, after almost a quarter-century of
\ JH jjjy '• —* experience, the Rural Electrics are serving
'H m \ wall, helping each day to bring about better
II * standards of living ... e' ’ tasics
/ H \ which lie ahead .. .
\ *
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• COMMUKITY BUILT • COMMUNITY tuiuto
Life’s L ittle Lesson: The more money you
get the more money you need.
The accident toll in this country is ibig enough
to warrant serious attention, and so, if you want
to save your own life, be careful.
College students who shed teal’s over team
losses eventually learn it doesn’t make much
difference.
GROW
YOUR # fs?
own
MONEY (
TREE i j Jp
A savings account at the Bank of Cum
ming is one way to “grow your own mon
ey”. Save a little each payday, and soon
you’ll have enough to “pick” a little off
the tree whenever you need money for
an emergency, a big opportunity, or for
whatever you desire.
CUMMING
Y ROY P. OTWELL, SR., PRESIDENT
"WHERE BANKING IS A PLEASURE”
Thursday, February 26, 1959.