Newspaper Page Text
Cummincr, Georgia.
NEED A WELL
Cheapest way known to get a Permanent Sup
ply of Water - Over 400 satisfied Customers.
WELLS FOUNDATION & TEST HOLES
ALL PURPOSE BORING COMPANY
Phone 6302
ROSWELL, GEORGIA
AUDIT OF CITY OF CUMMING
The following Audit made by James E. Bel- j
ther and Associates, certified public account
ants, Marietta, Georgia who were employed by j
Marcus Mashburn, Jr., former Mayor. Said au-i
dit completed and delivered to present Mayor J
and Council Wednesday, March 25, 1959.
CITY OF CUMMING, GEORGIA
GENERAL FUND
OPERATING STATEMENT
January 1, 1957 Through December 31, 1958
Income:
Ad Valorem Taxes S 21,842.88
Husinoss Licenses 9,227.24
Vines and Forfeitures 16,487.25
Georgia Power 3 4,663.34
Water Revenue Fund 11,000.00
Miscellaneous 1,071.65
64,292.36
Kxepnses:
General &■ Administrative
.Salaries Mayor & Council $ 600.00
Salaries & Wages 3,855.18
Office Supplies 626.39
la*gal & Accounting 1,556.00
Utilities 1.262.67
Insurance 2,016.60
sk>cial Security 287.43
Miscellaneous 964.55 $ 11,165.82
I*olloo Department
Salaries & Wages 00 079 9°
Supplies 1,437.34
Auto Expense 1.890.77
Repair- & Maintenance 618.46
Jail Fees 2.401.50
Arrest Fees & Warrants 1.107.00
Miscellaneous 154.90 27,809.95
Sitnif tv Department
Salaries & Wages 8,775 20
Triic'- > ' nso
■Repair Miinton >r.-e I.* 17.7.1
Miscellaneous 293.26 13,741.63
Street Dep irtment -
Salaries & Wages 1.255.10
Power 1 lights 1 2P 26
„ , ,1 i i-Q 3 991.71
Supplies ,v Kepae. s 1 t;s. >
Fire Department " 925 ‘ 45
Comi'f
Recreation Parks 386.00
Civi] Defense 760.57
City PI,-i.ini;vT E';ornses 1.917.50 61.320.0!
~ , .. f r r.„onco,. 2 972.32
Exce inc >m< (n ■. }■. >e
ts & Improvement ( 4 - 22 '
Amount Charged to Surplus Si 1,256.49)
CITY OF CUMMING, GEORGIA
WATER REVENUE FUND
OPERATING STATEMENT
January 1, 1957 Through December 31, 1958
$ 71.354.46
Income
Expenses: $ 5,599.10
4,110.01
Chemicals
Salaries & Wages ''J." 1 '
Truck Expense lA' ~
. w —* nJ4.3b
Office Expense 620 . 58
y tilit,eS 150.57
': ,S! .' r ;" t UV 163.59
1 OI " ' , 213.31
Social Security 199 '>0 21.280.75
Miscellaneous
50,073.71
Operating Profit
Appropriations: , lia 7 k
Payment Bond Principal & Interest
Sinking Fund 11.000.00
Oeneral fund 17K99 94 55.329.33
Extensions & Improvements ’
„ , S( 5.255.62)
Aanount Charged to Surplus
Tho Forsvtb Cnuntv News
HOPEWELL NEWS
Mrs. Kenneth Shaw and little son j
Kenneth, Jr. of Grantville visited
her parents, Rev. and Mrs. W. R. J
Callaway recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Wallis Reed of
Atlanta spent the weekend with
Mr. Wendell Reed.
Mr. Jerry McCord, a student at
Young Harris College spent his
Spring holidays with his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Emmett McCord and
family
Mrs. Ernest Harris of Lawrence
ville spent Sunday with her mother
Mrs. L. C. Hughes and family
Miss Margaret Wallis, who is
teaching at Dodd School, Fulton
County spent the Spring holidays
with her mother, Mrs. Amelia Wal
lis and family
Rev. W. R. Callaway who teaches
in Truett-McConnell College was at
home for Easter.
BUFORD DRIVE-IN
THEATRE
BUFORD, GEORGIA
On Buford -Cumming
Highway
Thursday & Friday
APRIL 2 & 3
THESE
TH&OUSAND HILLS
Double Feature
SATURDAY
APRIL 4
SIERRA BARON
- ALSO
THE
WAYWARD GIRL
MUTUAL of OMAHA
Has Nov/ Paid Cul
I billion dollars
r 0 The Side and: Injured
‘Y, Le today for details
For Information on the
non-cancelable policy-
Write Atlanta 19, P. O.
Box 9837.
•■'OR SALE The Forsyth County
Cll 1 '•t '1 ; ■ r c f 11 1 ‘
on Gumming Canton HigiYvaiy, <
miles from Cu,mming. CONTACT:
Pittard Realty Company, or Call
Tu. 7—7033 after 6 P. M
FOR SALE 6-room Residence in
City of Cumming, central oil heat,
City water, Electric heater, carport,
concrete drive, patio. Shown by
appointment Forsyth County Real
Estate Brokerage, Main Street,
Cumming, Ga. Phones: Tu. 7—5164
and Tu. 7 5539.
REGULAR MEETING OF CUM
MING CHAPTER NO. 316 O. E. S
w
?
Will be held each Second and
Fourth Tuesday Nights at 7:30
O’clock.
All members are erg id to attend
OLANNA PIKKI.E. VV. M.
CLARA MAE COX, Secretary
FOR SALE—One farm consisting
of 19 acres with 1 4-room house
with running water, 5.000 block
chicken house with metal roof, lo
cated on Post Road highway 141.
one mile off Cumming—Canton
highway. Contact: Pittard Realty
Company or call Tu. 7—7033, after
6 P. M.
With the aid of x-ray examinat
ions in certain patients, radiologists
are now better able to judge the
amount of calcium in a child’s
bones. Thus, an underdeveloped
boy or girl can be given medical
treatment and grow up into a well
formed healthy adult.
British take new step to relax
credit.
Color Gives
Tracts Lift
In California
More courage in the use of ex
terior color is helping Califor
nia’s big home developers build
attractive communities today in
stead of the faceless tracts of
yesterday.
These builders are guided in
bold, tasteful uses of color by
-killed color stylists such as Miss
Margaret Hargreaves, of South
Pasadena.
Miss Hargreaves, one of the
West Coast's leading color con
;ultants, says that the color styl
ists and developers work toward
a constant goal of “making the
tract look like a pleasant com
munity and not a drab develop
ment after the houses are oc
cupied and the signs are taken
iown.”
"Builders came to color styl
ists for help,” Miss Hargreaves
says, “after they learned that
varying architectural styles, ele
vations, curving streets and the
.ike weren’t enough. Bright,
asteful color was needed to get
.way from the dull, tract look.”
Miss Hargreaves uses what
<he calls “color engineering” to
achieve an integrated commu
nity. This is a process by which
hree harmonizing colors are
.hosen for each house—one of
ne roof, another for the siding,
nd another for the trim.
“If the siding color is sharp.”
he says, “I prefer to use a sub
iued accent color. I like a deep
tone in the asphalt shingles, a
stronger color in the siding, and
a lot of white on the trim.
“The roof color is selected first
because the roof is the common
denominator in color styling a
single home or an entire devel
opment,” Miss Hargreaves points
out.
‘This is because the roof is
the largest visible area, whether
seen on a single house oi as part
of the entire development from
a moving car.
“You need color here, you see,
to keep individual houses from
being lost in a sea of rooftops.”
w H sTE SAN D8 WIOTEL
1122 No. Atlantic Ave, (Rt. AIA)
DAYTONA BEACH, FLORIDA
Tel. CL. 3-7461
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DIRECTLY ON THE WORLD’S MOST
FAMOUS BEACH!
Beautiful, Ultra Modern Efficiency Apartments
and Hotel Rooms. Latest Type Combination
AIR-CONDITIONING and HEATING FACI
LITIES. The Utmost in Comfort. Stay a Night
or Spend the Season. We’re open all year.
TV SET IN EVERY ROOM
’Frankly, the longer vve travel this road of
life, the less we know about it.
Using discrimination in the reading of news
makes for an informed person.
ft&RftlA'N TAIMAD6fc
Reports from
" u I ' \tt .:
Washington
THOSE OF L'S who believ ■ in |
constitutional government are j
laboring under the handicap of I
bei-g perpetually on the defen
sive.
m „,**•* ■> 11 is m
ifeV-V" v. fi r m bel i e I
: - that tt,e one
irjL. I last hope for
5 saving the
t,, jL, v - f right of Amer
icans to mun-
X &||g local affairs
tS&Slik. on the local
level lies in taking a positive ap
proach to resolving the crisis
which threatens to destroy that
heritage. It is out of that con
viction that I am sponsoring at
this Session of Congress a series
of five measures constituting
what I consider to be an affirm
ative program for restoring a
constitutional balance of power
between the federal government
on the one hand and the rights of
the individual citizen on the other.
* *
FOREMOST AMONG those
proposals is the constitutional
amendment which I have intro
duced to vest exclusive adminis
trative control over public schools
in the states and their local sub
divisions. It is supplemented by
four companion bills which
would:
1. require Supreme Court
Jus,ices to have as a minimum
q ualification at least live years
of substantial judicial experi
ence.
2 require the Supreme Court
to accord full hearings to all
parties before acting upon low
er court decisions.
3. require jury trials in ail
casts of contempt arising from
Thursday, April 2, 1959.
the disob dience oi an;, f-deral
court ord.r.
4. withdraw the jurisdiction
of all federal courts over mat
ters relating to the administra
tion of public schools by the
slates and their subdivisions.
The first three of the above
named bills already have been
presented and it is my plan to
submit the fourth shortly after
the present Easter Recess.
* *
POLITICAL REALITIES being
what they are, the odds are
against the enactment of any of
those measures unless the Amer
ican people speak out louder for
them than the organized pressure
groups are shouting against
them. While my mail indicates
that the overwhelming majority
of the citizens of this country be
lieve that local schools should be
run by people on the State and
local levels and that the Supreme
Court should interpret rather
than try to make the laws of the
land, their voices are not now be
ing heard in Washington.
Since positive bills make ef
fective talking points for our
viewpoint, I am trying through
sponsoring and speaking out in
support of such legislation to get
our message across in an affirm
ative way to those people in other
regions who think for themselves
and thus to elicit an expression
from them. At worst, it is an ap
proach through which we can
force our attackers to fight on our
terms for a change; at best, it
could be our salvation.
*