The Forsyth County news. (Cumming, Ga.) 19??-current, April 09, 1959, Image 5

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Cumming, Georgia. SOCIETY MRS. ROY OTWELL, JR, Society Editor, Phone: Tu. 7—2965 Mrs. Thomas Owen spent Friday in Atlanta Mrs. Emory Williams and daugh ter of Alpharetta visited Mrs. H. J. Wolfe one day last week Mr. Johnny Lawrence Merritt of University of Georgia spent the weekend at home Mrs. E. L. Hardin has accepted a position in the bookkeeping de partment at Bank of Cumming Mr. and Mrs. Billy Hughes and son visited Mrs. H. J. Wolfe Sun day Mrs. R. A. Ingram and Mrs. W. J. Poole visited Mrs. Anita Christ enson in Atlanta Saturday Miss Louise Fisher of College Park is spending this week with her sister Mrs. Joe Summerour Mr. and Mrs. Hershel Stephens and son Ray of Norcross visited Mrs. H. J. Wolfe Sunday j Mr. and Mrs. James Kemp of Thomason visited their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Phillips Sunday Mrs. G. H. Rountree is spending several days in Decatur with her sister Mrs. Fred Allgood. Mr. and Mrs. Joe S. Tallant and family of Decatur visited Mr. and i Mrs. Virgil Chamblee Saturday Mrs. W. J. Poole and Mrs. Wel don Bramblett were in Atlanta Tuesday Mr. and Mrs. William Hughes, Mrs. A. C. Thomas and Miss Peggy Thomas were in Atlanta Friday night Mr. Miles Wolfe, City Water works Superintendent is attending the Annual Water Works Conven tion in Columbia, S. C., this week Mrs. J. H. Dunaway who has been spending the winter in Winter Haven Folrida is visiting her sister Mrs. James L. Reeves Mr. R. A. Ingram, Mrs. Harris Moore and Mrs. Ivan Otwell attend ed the funeral of Mrs. Charlie Brown in Gainesville last Wednes day Mrs. J. V. Merritt is visiting her wither, Mrs. George W. Johnson, who has recently undergone a Ma jor operation in the Memorial Hos pital in Lynchburg, Va. Mr. and Mrs. E. D. Whatley and son, Mr. W. E. Williams of Oxford Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Williams and son and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Allgood of Atlanta spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. G. H. Rountree Mr. and Mrs. James Martin and children of Rovston, Ga., Mr. and Mrs. Charles Garner and daughter of Doraville and Mrs. Addie West brook of Doraville visited Mrs. Rosalee Moore and families Sun day PREACHING NOTICE Rev. Jimmie Milum will preach at Silver Shoals Baptist Church on Sunday night April 12 at 7:30. You are cordially invited to be with us. PREACHING NOTICE Rev. A. C. Evans will preach at Cross Roads Baptist Church Sun day April 12 at 11 A. M. ALSO Sunday night at 8 P. M. Rev. Billy Nix will preach here. IMPORTANT NOTICE Staff Sgt. Edward H. Pykosz Re cruiter for the U. S. Air Force will be here in Cumming each Wednes day at 1:00 p. m. at the Selective Service Headquarters to discuss the service with anv youngster that is interested. Please meet him there on time. SINGING NOTICE Everyone has an invitation to attend the Singing at Coal Moun tain Baptist Church the Second Sunday night. April 12. We are expecting a lot of singers to be with us. J. C. WHITMIRE CLYDE CRONIC KEITH TAYLOR Oil prices face U. S. controls un der import curbs. BIRTH ANNOUNCEMENT Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Bagley of Jacksonville, Florida announce the birth of their son, Jeffery Thomas, born April 6. Mrs. Bagley will be remembered as the former Miss Diane Vaughan of Cumming and is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roy alton C. Vaughan of Cumming Those attending the Jaycee Beauty Pageant in Buford Saturday night were Mr. and Mrs. D. B. Carroll, Mrs. R. A. Ingram, Mr. and Mrs. Morris Gravitt, Mr. and Mrs. Bo Bagley, Mr. Garland Rob erts, Mr. Bobby Joe Wofford, Mr. William Chamblee, Mrs. A. Y. Howell, and Miss Nancy Phillips PREACHING NOTICE Bro. Elmer Stowe will preach at Mt. Tabor Baptist Church Sun day night April 12 at 7:30 p. m. Everybody cordially invited to come and be with us. PREACHING NOTICE Brother Hal Whitmire of Atlanta will preach at Zion Hill Baptist Church Saturday night April 11 at 7:30. Everyone cordially invited. ASSOCTATIONAL WMU MEET ING SHARON BAPTIST CHURCH FRIDAY, APRIL 10 THEME: LIBERTY AND LIGHT 4.30 Hymn No. 444—Christ for the Whole Wide World 4:35: Worship Period—Scripture & Prayer—Rev. C. E. Warren, Pas tor Sharon Church 4:50 Welcome—Miss Grace Buice, President W. M. U. Sharon 4:55 Response—Mrs. Carl Curtis, Cumming 5:00 Introductions— Mrs. Rachel Parks, Assn. President 15:10 Third Jubilee Advance —Mrs. Rachel Parks 5:20 Era of Prayer—Mrs. Channing Hayes, Div. Vice President 5:40 Sepcial Song—Do You Know My Jesus? Little Rita Grogan 5:50 Roll Call of Churches —Mrs. H. P. Matthews. Assn. Secretarv 6:00 Associational Goals —Rev. Mar\ cus Reed, Pastor First Baptist Church, Cumming 6:20 Hymn No. 117—Send the Light 6:25 Offering 6:30 —Lunch,Served by Sharon Church 7:30 Hymn—The Forming Light is Breaking 7:3s—Business 7:40 Diamond Jubilee —Miss Nona Saturday, State WMU Worker S:00 Inspirational Message—Miss Lucv Wright, Medical Missionary in Korea 8:40 Hvmn No. 330 -The Light of the World 8:50 —Announcements CLOSING CIVIL DEFENSE MEETING The Regular Civil Res ent ryiP'Uirws will be Forsvth Countv High School Tuesdav April 1 4th at 8 n. m. Meedng will con tinue each Second and Fourth Tues jrlay night thereafter. ROY E. MOORE Rescue Chief girl scout news Troup One met on April 6, at [the VFW Clubhouse. We held our meeting outside because it was so ! sunny. We first formed circle and said ' our promise. Then Mrs. Mashburn ; told us about our cook-out which | will be on April 27 and about our j over-night camp-out which will be [on May 15—16, 1959. We all chose partners for our Camp-out. Mrs. ! Mashburn told us how to make Tin-can stoves and buddy-burners and gave us the cans for our stoves We then met in our Patrols to i collect dues. The neatest Girl Scout jvvas Flora Mangum. Refreshments were served by Marv Helen Mashbburn. Sara Dean Otwell, Pat Otwell and Ginger Lips ' comb. Each Patrol built a fire with the I help of the Patrol leaders. We then played a game, had taps and were dismissed. Troupe Scribe Marian Wheeler j Developing plans for providing satisfactory living arrangements for senior citizens is a major prob lem of community leaders, points out. Miss Audrey Morgan, family life specialist, Agricultural Exten sion Service. The Forsyth County News COLORED WOMANLESS WED DING AND HOMEMADE CAKE SALE AT DUCKTOWN, APRIL II There will be a Colored Woman [ less Wedding at Ducktown School | Saturday night, April 11 at 8 P. M. j Minister—Cliff Carnes Bride—Almon Hill | Groom—Lamar Ledbetter Flower Girls—E. W. McConnell Rudolph Tribble | Bridesmaids —Jack Tribble & Steve Grogan | Bride’s Mother—Fred Watson Bride’s Father —Winfred Hawkins Matron of Honor-Roy Samples ! Ring Bearers —Lawton Sewell Dene Evans , Best Man—Linden Porter [Groom’s Mother—C. N. Lambert I Groom’s Father Hansel Haygood Ushers —Edd Estes, J. T. Sewell, Eugene Croy, Tillman Collett Also we w'ill have lots of good Home Made Cakes for Sale. Come out and have fun with us. Sponsored by Ductown P. T. A. West Coast City Likes Georgia School Fire Safety Plan ATLANTA—Georgia’s original Jun ior Fire Marshal program of school fire safety education, already adopted in 11 sister states and many Cittes, continues to darw nationwide attention, Safety Fire Commissioner Zack D. Cravey de clared ttoday. He cited a letter just received from Fire Marshal Dale F. Gilman of Portland, Oregon, asking for details regarding the life-saving project. Marshal Gilman wrote that he had read a complimentary article on Georgia’s Junior Fire Marshal set-up in the Fireman magazine, monthly publication of the Nat ional Fire Protection Association, Boston, Massachusetts. He request ed all brochures, pamphlets and literature pertaining to its organi zation. “We are happy to share this in formation with our neighbors, wherever they may be, who are also interested in the fire safety of their children,” Commissioner Cravey said. “Our program is the success it is because of the un stinted cooperation we are receiv ing from all sides; our school officials, parents, teachers, local and state officers and the press, radio and TV.” Soil Conservation District News I* ’'- A 1 •JAMES T COOTS SOIL CONSERVATION SERVICE J. W. Tatum near Matt in co operation with the Upper Chatta hoochee River Soil Conservation District has thinned approximately four acres of pines in accordance with good woodland management. This area will serve as an obser vation plot. It is across the road from the home of Mr. Tatum. This woodland area is on class VII land and will need thinning again in six years. Anyone niterested in thinning their woodland similar to Mr. Tatum’s get in touch with your local SCS technicians or other agricultural agencies. Many cooperators of the District are purchasing District signs to identify their farms. Any cooper ator interested in a sign should see your local District supervisor Jay L. Holbrook. Make your plans now to parti cipate in Soil Stewardship Week May 3-10, 1959. PREFERRED RISK MUTUAL INSURANCE CO., GAINS FOR FIRST QUARTER IN 1959 DES MOINES. IOWA Premium writings by the Preferred Risk Mutual Insurance Company of Des Moines for the first Quarter of 1959 were the highest of any quar ter of the 12 year history of this company which writes automobile insurance exclusively for non-drink ers. The ppremuims collected for the quartetr totaled $3,187,000 com pared with $2,580,000 for a smilar period in 1958, a 23.5 per cent in crease. The local agent for Preferred Risk in Cumming is Tally Insur ance Agency, P, O. Cox 155 Phone Tu 7—5164—5339. WITH YOUR COUNTY AGENT Walter H. Rucker Outbreaks of New Castle disease | are still occurring in some areas. |lt may be that the vaccines are mot being administered properly. ,They may not be potent at the [time of administration. In adequate I isolation of flocks and disposal of | dead birds may also be causing some continued outbreaks. To be safe against the disease, breeders should revacciate against it every four months and should use only vaccines that are licensed for sale in the State of Georgia. For birds in production vaccination should be done using the dust, spra v or water method, but not by the wing web method. All the methods, including the wing web, can be used for birds that are NOT in production. Some egg producers are finding that using cotton seed hulls as nesting material or cotton seed meal in poultry mashes doesn’t pay off. With laying hens, it caus es dark splotches on egg yolks, which on short storage often turn green. And if the cotton seed hulls are used for nesting material, hens eating some of the hulls may pro duce eggs with discolored yolks. Anew watermelon variety has been released b ythe Georgia Ex periment Station. It’s called the “Spalding Watermelon,” and it is mainly an icebox or small family size melon. The researches say the Spalding produces small, round, smooth melons varying in weight from 10 to 21 pounds, with an aver age weight under most conditions of approximately 12 pounds. The melons are dark green with a darker, bluish-green stripe. The rind is extremely thin and tough. The flesh is red and firm and very sweet to the rind. The variety is resistant tto Fus arium wilt, anthracnose, and sun burn and remains free of pimples. It’s a late maturing variety, and under poor conditions, the melons tend to have hollow and white hearts. Farmers wishing to give the melon a try can obtain samples of seed by making a request to the Department of Plant Pathology, Georgia Experiment Station, Ex periment, Georgia. NEWS OF YOUR HEALTH DEPARTMENT We in the Health Department can onlv serve you if you will let us. We are flattered when you come to us for our services and happy if we can help. As most of you know we have recently occupied our new Forsyth County Health Center. It is located beside the County Building. We hope very soon to offer you some new services and most of all | we hope you will make use of them. Our regular immunization day is Wednesday of each week Recent lv we added to our services an 'Evaluation Clinic for Tuberculosis I Patients, their contacts and anyone who is suspected of having Tuber culosis. We attend this on the 4th Wednesday afternoon in each month. Remember to come in the mornings for immunizations on the 4th Wednesday. Perhaps you will understand the importance of the Evaluation Clinic when I tell you of one child car ried to the clinic. She is four years old, and a contact of her father who is a patient at Eattey State Hospital. A. was skin tested and had a positive reaction. I then had her in to the regula" X-ray clinic here at the Health Center. The X-ray showed some suspicion of Tuber culosis. I carried her to Evaluation Clinic where a doctor saw her and her X-rays and to make a long story short the following day she was admitted to Battey State Hos pital where she will be treated for six to nine months. Delay might have caused a number of compli cations that can be particularly serious in one so young. I hope this helps you to realize that the time I spend with these people is important, and we still have 3 1-3 days to 4 1-2 days in the office for immunizations each month. As we bring in new services I will write about them in the Coun ty Paper. I hope you will tell others of these services. We need you, especially as much as you need us. If we cannot render a service to you we aren’t accom plishing much. WANTED —Riders too and from I Atlanta See or call Henry M. 1 Willard—Phone Tu. 7—5315. Selective Service News Recent amendments to the Selee- I tive Service Regulations provide for greater recognition by local boards of service in the Reserve and National Guard, Colonel Mike Y. Hendrix, State Director of Se lective Service for Georgia said today. The changes reflect a policy of not inducting men satisfactorily participating in military training programs while sufficient numbers are available who are not taking part in any such training. I The chnges in regulations were made by the Pfesident by Execu- I tive Order No. 10809. Under the amended regulations, men who acquire deferments or exemptions on initial entry into the National Guard or Reserve keep those deferments or exempt ions on transfer to another com ponent so long as they continue to serve satisfactorily. | Some initial enlistments in the Reserve provide that men can dis charge their military obligation by eight years of satisfactory service including not less than three months of active duty for training. The amended regulations also pro jvide for the retention of this op portunity on transfer. These chang j es reflect provisions of Public Law 85—722, approved during the last Congress. The amendments to the regulat ions also authorize the deferment of Guardsmen or Reservists for satisfactory participation in the Standby or Retired Reserve. Prev iously, only satisfactory partici pation n the Ready Reserve was basis for derment from induction. Another amendment provides that a man who ceases to be a member of any Reserve component after six years of satisfactory Ready Reserve service shall be considered as having completed service. A. S. C. NEWS Within the next few days you cotton farmers that requested extra cotton acreage will receive it. This | was made possible by farmers re leasing their acreage to the ASC County Office. I wuld like to em phasize the importance of you ! planting the cotton acreage you are receiving, and you that have been approved an new growers allot ment for 1959, the county will lose what acreage is not planted in either of these categories. For old cotton allotments, you will get automatic credit for the ybar 1959. This credit applied 1 whether you plant it or not, or | whether you released it or not. I Don’t forget the wool incentive payment fo rthe 1958 year, which ended March 31, 1959. You have until April 30, 1919 to make appli cation for payment under the wool program. he aim of the Agricultural Ex tension Service nutrition program is to supply the research facts, economic, consumer and other in formation needed for wise food decisions. North Korea agrees to parleys j with Japan. [ Thicker Insulation Prevents Wasted Heat, Lost Dollars b" IN CEILING ' R yIN WALLS I , 2" UNDER FLOOR In a recent magazine article, “The Latest About Home In .ulation,” the author explains that the new G-3-2 formula is the resuit of a modern-day oddity—air conditioning needs more insolation to Iceep house cool in summer than heating requires in inter. Rule calls for hefty 6-inch thieaness in ceiling, at least 3 in lies in walls, 2 inches under unhealed lioor. The 6 3-2 formula was developed by mineral wool engineers. Good insulation can do more to cut ym r fuel bills today than ever : ore, says Popular Sci ence Mont. in a recent article, "T 1 > Lv. ~-,t .vbout Home Insula t 01:. ’ “This is because fuel costs, have skyrocketed 100 per cent or more'in the last decade,” the magazine points out, “while in sulation cj. • have gone up rela tively iittle.” Results of the recent tests prove that proper insulation can reduce fuel’costs for both winter heating and summer cooling to Sl3O i or year—about sll per month. Most homo owners have a i vague awareness o: the value of | insulation, but few lecognize the | importance or thickness. What, then, is the proper thickness of insulation for com fort winter and summer, and economy for both heating and Thursday, April 9, 1959. SEE US SALES - SERVICE fffffffffffffff[ “MERCURY” MOTORS -“BOATS”- “GATOR” TRAILERS We will be at Forsyth County Park each Sunday Afternoon COME TAKE A FREE RIDE ROSWELL MOTOR COMPANY THE BIG PROBLEM A major problem in Georgia's agricultural program is low yields and resulting low income, say agro nomists of the Agricultural Exten sion Service. This can be corrected if all farmers adopt latest research findings in use of fertilizer and lime; cntrol weeds, insects and dis eases; use adapted and quality seed, and practice good soil and water conservation, the agronomist say. COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT The Community Development Program, conducted by the Agri cultural Extension Service, is a method of working with families for the purpose of improving in come, family living, and communi ty life through local community development organizations. Richard Smith, Extension community de velopment specialist, says the or ganizations are planned and car ried out by the people themselves. Telephone cable link to Europe is startetd. REGULAR MEETING OF CUM MING CHAPTER NO. 346 O. E. S. Will be held each Second and Fourth Tuesday Nights at 7:30 O’clock. All members are vrgi. d to attend GI.ANNA PIRKI.E. iV. M. CLARA MAE COX, Secretary cooling? Here’s what Popular Science has to say: “A good yardstick that is rap idly gaining nationwide accept ance is the 6-3-2 rule. “This means at least 6 inches of insulation under your roof, at least 3 inches in walls, and 2 j inches under a floor tha’s over | an unheated crawl space.” The super-thick 6-inch ceiling , insulation is available in mineral wool batts for new construction | and do-it-yourself insulation, or can be blown into ceilings of existing homes. Three-inch and 2-inch thickness of mineral wool come in both batts and blankets. Popular Science points out that manufacturers are fond of saying: “The best insulation is the most insulation.” “Within practical limits,” the magazine says, “experts agree that every inch you add will cut your fuel bill." __