Newspaper Page Text
Cumming, Georgia
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 Joe’s Good Morning Show
7:30 Joe’s Good Morning Show
8:00 World News Roundup
8:15 Joe’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 —20 Black June Cherry
Trees, 2 to 6 foot, SI.OO each, 3
for $2.00 —T. W. Gunter, West of
Hospital, Cumming, Georgia.
FOR SALE —OIC and Land Race
Pigs, now ready to go— L. B.
Honea, Rt. 3, Silver City.
VEST DRIVE THE /In)
T RUCK THAT GIVES L~U QlsO LUJ L/kJ
M^S
: 33 FORD SIX
delivers 25.2 % more miles per gallon than the average
of all other pickups in "ECONOMY SHOWDOWN USA”?
42 6% more than make “D” Economy Showdown USA-biggest test of truck gas
31 1% more than make “l” mileage ever conducted by an independent research
25.2% more than make “C” firm! New ’59 models of the six leading P?'* 1 "”* tested
22.0% more than make “S” in all kinds of driving.
v 9.6% more than make “G” In every test, the ’59 Ford Si.-.-u - a vc gas
AU trucks were standard six-cylinder models mileage than every other make. The ’59 Ford Pickup
bought through authorized dealers, given 600 avera g e Q f a H other pickups by 25.2%.
reoommended"spe^i ficat*ionß. " Come in today and see the certified report of Economy
. inrffy|af> ■ Showdown tests. It can save you over a hundred
SjjSj of gas in just one year!
/■‘4t l b*4S on toot* eondueto* n<* MA**
•CERTIFIED 1 bofrtmO-WAfiO MX
,;’ v automotive rtMtrch organisation* Jj&jk FORD TRUCKS COST LESS
VOijiH -name available on reouest jog mmmmmm
||] M c.°/£U‘.7. mm*. jg| # See where and how you can save.
gggHfi Coll vs now!
OTWELL MOTOR COM.? ANY, Cummins, Gco-gia.
Phones: Tu. 7-2311-12 “The Houce Service Built'’
It is not what a man makes but what he
saves that gives him security.
Education is a lifelong process, brought to a
halt only by death itself.
Many of our most-accepted theories are the
ones that got the best publicity.
Mom, J,.t L„, Dod'i Mow Truot'
Today's children play with toys so similar in appearance to
their parents' paraphernalia that even the factories turning them
out have become images of those manufacturing for the adult
world.
Take, for example, the vehicle segment of the 51 >4 billion toy
industry. The realistic products stemming from this world of
miniature reflect painstaking design and manufacturing pro
cesses not unlike those of the giant automotive industry. Even
the secrecy surrounding introduction of new models is just as
tight.
Assembly line techniques
that can turn out 10,000 toys
daily (the case at Tonka Toys,
Inc. in Mound, Minnesota), my
riad dies, electronic painting
devices, giant presses and
skilled workers contribute to
product authenticity.
But authenticity is net
enough. Toys with constant
popularity must withstand a
child’s abuse. Built of the same
gauge steel used in the Ameri
can car, Tonka's vehicles can
support a 200-pound weight.
At one factory that of
Tonka Toys—the small coun
terparts of highway vehicles
are produced in an 18 to 1 inch
scale to impart added realism.
But this scale model detail is
not the only technique the
manufacturer uses to supply a
child with reproductions of his
dad’s world. Wrap-around
windshields, dual headlights,
chromate plated grilles, bum
pers and wheel disks, treaded
The Forsyth County News
tires and real truck paint:
these are among the styling
characteristics of one promin
ent line of toys.
At Christmastide—when the
1958 toy vehicles will be new to
many homes recipients will
find new models and design
changes nearly as startling as
those visible every fall in auto
motive showrooms around the
country. New cab and grille
dies, brighter paints, improved
techniques and the toy makers’
imagination will have produced
variations in appearance and
function.
Considering that toy vehicles
account for more than sllO
million of the consumers’ toy
purchases each year, the tastes
and desires of the young be
come even more important in
the toy makers’ decisions. The
result is a fleet of toy vehicles
that rival, in appearance and
quantity, those that travel
dad's highways.
FOR RENT—Several Houses, some
with Chicken Houses MARK
HEARD, JR. Th: 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
Wm. H. “Bill” MILUM, Owner
Ph: TU. 7-5764
One mile from Coal Mountain on
Brown Bridge Road Guaranteed
Service on TV. All electric appli
ances Refrigeration —Air Con
ditioners —Lawn Mowers —Oil Car
buretors.
“SERVICE IS OUK 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 Kawleigii 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.
GA8—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 $5,500
Carroll Realty Cos., Alpharetta, Ga.
Phone 5114 or H. L. (Corky) Val
entine, Phone Roswell, 2204
How does
ffF.W fit-into
jjpll ®. ;: the picture?
REA is simp-/ the banket him * ’>•. a (\\A
group of your neighbors borrowed
money to build their Rural Electric system
as the only way they could get electricity. -7
Since 1935, the REA has lent $3 billion to
make it possible for our nation's Rural Elec
tries and other borrowers to build their own,
locally-controlled systems . . These are loans, mind F ,
you, being paid back when due, and which pvi \
have returned to the government over SSO- Ji \
000,000 in interest! *
The REA does not tell us how to run our business
America's Rural Electrics are owned and managed b\
those they serve striving always to provide
able electric service at the lowest possible c
vib’C' TfrV’y73// memeensHiP
VC\ CORPORBTJOn^^^
BUILT • COMMUNITY UIUHO
If you read everything in the newspapers you
have more stamina than we have.
We are not among those who devote their
time to the playing of verbal bridge.
After a limited amount of work, we incline to
inventing something for the royalties.
FEED \ Wfp 3s
YOUR Wl/
SAVINGS
ACCOUNT / \
REGULARLY l J
If your savings account is to become a
“living and growing thing”, you must
feed it regularly. Resolve today to begin
caving a small amount each month on a
regular basis. You’ll be surprised how
quickly your savings account will grow
and become “fat”.
CUMMING
ROY P. OTWELL, SR„ PRESIDENT
"WHERE BANKING IS A PLEASURE”
Thursday, March sth, 1959.