Newspaper Page Text
Cumminpr, Georgia
The NEWS renders various public services,
without much horn blowing, and, be it also ad
mitted, seeks to keep operating by exacting a
slight profit from advertisers and subscribe! s.
Young and old will enjoy du eaciiing new veidon ol Italian Piaia.
Tie yea* rained (rod ii KraiJed over a mmaio and che.-ae filling auil
able for either a meal or snack.
BRAIDED PIZZA
ij cup milk Vi cup warm, not hot, water
2^' tablespoon* su ß* r 1 package active dr> yeas
11-2 teaspoons salt # 3 cups Hour (about) j smJ
tablespoons shortening 1 egg yolk
1 tablespoon water
Scald milk. Stir in sugar, salt and shortening. CooltoJ“ k ;'?',*T n
ure warm, not hot. water into a large mixing li.YLIfX
Stir until dissolved. Stir in lukewarm milk mixture. Add about half the
hour and beat until smooth. Stir in additional dour. I urn out °" ;
homed hoard. Knead until smexuh and elastic. Place m k-ased lx
let rise in a warm place, free from draft, until doubled in hulk, about an
hour Punch down and turn out on lightly floured board. Roll into a
rectangle 16 x 9 inches. Spread the *P,rra Filling down center third o
the length of the rectangle. Cut I 5 slits in dough .long each s;kW
filling, making strips about 1 inch wide. Fold Slr T* * n *' e * c .
filling, alternating from side to side. Place on greased baking sheet. Let
r ein warm place, free from draft, until doubled bu‘t about 1 hour.
Brush With egg yolk combined with water. Bake at 350 F (moderate
©\en ) about 35 minutes. Serve hot w ith tomato sauce.
•PIZZA FILLING
1 ettp tomato paste 1A teaspoon salt \
1 ..ible poon salad oil M teaspoon oregano
1 cup grated American cheese
mi me tomato paste w ith salad oil, salt and oregano. Spread on
c jg.i. Sprinkle with grated cheese. _
PROPERTY FOR SALE
45 acres -4-room House and Chicken House with
lots of good timber and pulp wood, 1-2 mile East
of Haw Creek church on Pirkle Ferry Road.
20 acres-18,000 capacity Chicken houses in
good condition with all equipment.
4-room house reconditioned 1-2 mile south of
Haw Creek School house.
A Jim Dandy good Chicken farm-Priced to sell.
Other bargains in homes and farms See us
before you buy.
RICHARD WILLIAMS, Broker
Ph: Tu. 7 2442 - P. O. Box 549
CUMMING, GEORGIA
SPECIAL!
ONE ONLY
Brand New
1959 Ford
2 door with heater
Priced $19373&
Plus Georgia Sales Tax
See Frank Roper
Otwell Motor Company
Phones: Tu. 7-2311 - Tu. 7-2312
Cumming, Ga.
The Forsyth County Newt
MUTUAL of OMAHA
Has Now Paid Out
1 BILLION DOLLARS
To The Sick & Injured
Write today for details
Box 128
Care News Office
REGULAR MEETING OF CLAI
MING CHAPTER NO. 346 O. E. S.
V
Will be held each Second and
Fourth Tuesday Nights at 7:30
O'clock.
All members are urgrd to attend
GLANNA PIRKLE, W. M.
CLARA MAE COX, Secretary
FOR SALE—IOO bales of Cobe
Leespedeza hay, at SIOO per bale—
Herman Bennett, Route 3, near
Matt School House.
FOR SALE 46 Foot Marlette
House Trailor, 2 bedrooms, auto
matic washer —Call Tu. 7 —5027
Cumming, Georgia.
For Electric Heat:
Utility Bases
Cost of Power
On Insulation
Customers of the Duke Power
Company. Charlotte, N.C., who
plan to heat their homes with
electricity have been advised
that they will be granted a spe
cial rate of 1.5 cents per kilowatt
hour only if their homes are
properly insulated.
The utility, in its manual. Resi
dential Electric Comfort Heat
ing. points out that:
"Every electric house heating
system served by the Duke
Power Company will receive
careful attention, and homes
which are improperly insulated
will be served at the regular
rate of 2 cents per KWH.
What does the company con
sider proper insuianon for elec
tric heating? It follows the rec
ommendations of mineral wool
engineers—a thickness of at least
6 inches in ceilings, at least 3
inches in walls, and 2 inches in
floors over unheated areas such
as crawl spaces and porches.
This formula of mineral wool
is one of the reasons electric
heating is growing rapid.y in
popularity ail over the U.3. It
has been estimated that 'here
now are about 400,000 electric
heat installations in the country.
The thick mineral wool makes
electric heating economically
feasible by keeping the heat in
s.de where it belongs, reducing
heat loss to a minimum. Asa
result, in areas where specs!
electric rates are available, the
seasonal costs of electric hr_:.r
compare favorably with :e
--heating methods.
SHORT
aTBMQ i
JT iiile Roof Reflects
Heat. Slops Weat'ier
A roof of white asphalt shin*!
rives any house three distinct ad
vantages. These are the modern
.mart appearance of white, the
ability of white to reflect mu. h
of the summer sun’s heat, ar and
the durability and weather r -
sistance of asphalt shingles su
raced with millions of rock-tough
mineral granules.
Small houses get a fourth ad
vantage. A white roof gives an
illusion of height, making the
house look bigger.
Tiny Air Cells Stop
Heat Loss in House
Air is the best barrier to the
escape of heat from a house, but
this air must be confined to tiny
space so that it will not circulate
and carry off heat by convection.
This is why mineral wool is
such an efficient insulating ma
terial. Millions of fibers, packed
to the proper density, trap the
air in tiny cells which retard
the flow of heat.
INTEREST ADDS l?
At 6 per cent, generally the
highest interest charged today on
home mortgages, interest adds
up to $935 per SI,OOO for 25 years.
This totals $13,090 in interest
alone on a $14,000 mortgage.
WELL
DRILLING
FOWLER WELL &
SUPPLY
Canton, Georgia
PHONE GR.
COLLECT
i In 1929 one hour of factory'
i labor would buy 1.2 pounds of
steak. In 1956 one hour of factory
labor would buy 2.2 pounds of
steak, report economists at the
Agricultural Extension Service.
FOR SALE—Three farms located
in Forsyth County RICHARD
WILLIAMS, Broker. Phone Tu. 7
[ 2442, P. O. Box, 549, Cumming.
Unpaid Tax Notice
All tax receipts including interest
and cost will remain in the Tax
Commissioners Office until after
the tag season is closed, as the law
requires all taxes must be paid in
order to get your tag. After April
j Ist, by direction of County Com
missioners. all unpaid tax receipts
will be turned over to the Sheriff
for collection, which will mean
additonal costs.
VINNIE B. REDD, T. C.
WILL SELL:
MODERN RANCH
TYPE, 3 BEDROOM
HOME with small tract
of land, on good road,
near school. Good lo
cation-8 miles South of
Cumming. - This is a
real bargain.
SEE:
Je:s H. Watson
Attorney
NOTICE TO FARMERS
In Forsyth & Surrounding Counties
The National Biscuit Company e£
Woodbury Georgia, Still have Ap
proximately 300 to 350 Acres of
Pimento Pepper Contracts to let
to Growers who are interested for
1959 Season.
I $90.00 per ton delivered to Big
Creek Community Station.
Plants $2.35 per thousand CASH
Plants $2.60 per thousand to be
paid from first proceeds of pepper
5.000 plants will plant one acre.
Anyone interested get in touch
with your local County Agent, OR
NATIONAL BISCUIT CO.
WOODBURY GEORGIA
Opinions are necessary but it is not necessary
topersuade everyone else to agree with yours.
Life is full of hokum and bunkum and it is
often a great job to recognize the truth.
If you do not succeed in making a lot of
money, you will probably escape much needless
worry in life.
HERWIAH TAUUUttt
Reports Prom
H,NCrm -
OF AI.L THE rights enumerated
in the Constitution of the United
States, onl; one is specified more
than once.
W“ '.P That is the
right of trial by
'I jury which is
| T guaranteod in
# four separate
< * ejL nassages of the
Constitution
.and the Bill of
Lak ' -Vt. )TjSf| Rights —a fact
Mißhß S*-® which evidences
the s.rong feeling of our founding
fathers that jury trials are funda
mental to the preservation of indi
vidual liberty and the maintenance
of constitutional government. In
that light it obviously is more than
coincidental that those who cry the
loudest for the enactment of force
legislation are aiso those who are
must active in seeking *o weaken,
circumscribe and des‘ ’ f?ht
r' *-'*! by jury
is PASSING THE Civil Kiguts
/ of 1.-57. Congress placed an un
constitutional qualification upon
the right of trial by jury in that
it authorized federal judges to im
pose jail sentences up to 45 days
and fines up to S3OO without jury
trials in contempt cases. That pro
vision was enacted in violation of
the constitutional prohibition of
legislative infringement upon the
enjoyment *f rights enumerated in
the Bill of Rights.
Out of the conviction that the
right of trial by jury must be re
stored unconditionally, I have this
Thursday, March sth, 1959.
week introduced a hill to guarantee
that all individuals cited for con
tempt in federal courts, except in
cases of direct contempt in the
presence of the judge, shall have
“a speedy and public trial by an
impartial jury of the state and
district.wherein tie contempt stall
have been committed.”
My measure would further pro
vide that no person could be bound
by a federal court injunction unless
he is a party to the proceeding, is
named in the injunction and served
with a true cony of it or has tue
injunction read and explained to
him by a judge in open court.
* * *
THE BASIS OF American juris
prudence is that the accused is
presumed to be innocent until
proved guilty and, to my mind, it
would be far oetter for 100 guilty
men to go free than for one in
nocent person to be punished. No
free man should be forced by his
government to place h:s life, free
dom or property in jeopardy ex
cept upon the judgment of a jury
of 12 of his equals.
The enactment of such a law as
1 have proposed would protect all
Americans from abuses arising
through misuse of the judicial pow
er of contempt and would consti
tute the most significant civil
rights legislation *o come out of
Congress since the adoption of the
Bill of Rights.