Newspaper Page Text
Cummins.
We have yet to meet a man who cannot ex
plain how you can make a fortune.
Education is either worth supporting or it
should be dropped as a state activity.
The opinions of your neighbors are not im
portant to anybody but your neighbor.
Humor depends largely upon whether you
are the maker or the receiver of the joke.
There are now suggestions that Congressmen
he given combat pay when under fire.
Advertising is business, not charity spend
your advertising dollars with this in mind.
Nobody is going to buy what you have to
sell unless they know you have it for sale.
Grammas is in the process of growth, but
some folks are trying to overdo the process.
A tight-fitting skirt and sweater looks out of
place, on men.
HERMAN TALMADGi
; Reports From II
I
' NO OTHER INDUSTRY in the
history of the world ever has
been forced to compete for its
existence under handicaps like
those imposed on the American
textile industry by this country's
trade and foreign aid policies.
IT As the re-
I ‘ y t suit of those
jj i policies, the
M tages of being
HBBk jW *9B able
their capital from the United
States Treasury in the form of
foreign aid grants and loans, to
buy American surplus cotton with
borrowed American dollars 20 per
cent cheaper than it sells this
country, to sell their finished
products back to the American
Government through so-called
“three-way deals" under the for
eign aid program, to learn Amer
ican trade secrets and production
know-how merely by asking, and,
because American tariffs and
quotas have been reduced so
drastically, to undersell compara
ble American products on the
American markets.
THOSE ADVANTAGES are
compounded by the facts that
wage scales in many of the com
peting countries, particul .rly in
the Far East, are one-tenth or
less of the American legal min
imum and that there are no bars
in those countries to the imposi
tion of working conditions which
would be illegal here in the
United States.
It is small wonder in the light
of those facts that the American
textile industry has lost markets
equivalent to 10 per cent of the
national production and that,
since 1917, 717 textile mills have
(not prepared or printed at government expense)
Special Notice!
VVE WILL OPERATE OUR GIN, LOCATED
IN DULUTH DURING THE COMING 1959 60
SEASON.
WE ALSO CAN FURNISH CERTIFIED
EMPIRE PLANTING SEED ONE for ONE
SAAP. PLEASE DROP US A CARD OR SEE
US FOR MORE INFORMATION ON THIS
CONTRACT.
We have a good stock of Nitrate of Soda
A-N-L and Amonimun Nitrate. FOR i RUCK
LOAD LOTS COME TO SEE US.
Findley Brothers
Ph. 3465 Duluth, Ga.
...Call us Collect...
closed their doors and 345,000
textile jobs have been discon
tinued. It is a tribute to the
vitality of the industry that its
losses have been contained within
those bounds.
Prom the things which have
been done to the industry in the
name of global goodness, it i3 no
exaggeration to ude that it
is the actual, if not officially
expressed, policy of the Govern
ment of the United States that
the American textile industry is
expendable and should be forced
to help finance its own liquidation.
FORTUNATELY, THIS pi •*£
has received recognition in *
study recently complet by 4
Special Subcommittee of the Sen
ate Committee on Interstate and
Foreign Commerce which, in its
report, recommended a 10-point
program of help and relief for
the textile industry. Essentially,
its recommendations entail more
stringent import quo faster
relief action under the Trade
Agreements Acts, a better tax
break particularly as regards
depreciation and elimination of
„he two-price system on Amer
ican cotton.
it is my resolute conviction
that the American textile indus
try, as well as all other domestic
industries, has a right not only
to expect but also to demand that
both Congress and the Executive
Branch by statute and policy give
it and the jobs of it' wo-kers ef
fective protection from unfair
foreign competition. For the sake
of the one out of every three
Georgians employed by the tex
tile industry, it is my hope that
Congress will act to give it relief
and protection at this Session.
Forsvth Countv News
REGULAR MEETING OF CUM
.MING CHAPTER NO. 346 O. E. S.
*
i Will lw* held each Second and
Fourth Tuesday Nights at 8:00
O’clock.
All members are urged to attend
.IOI.ENE WALLS, W. M.
CLARA MAE COX, Secretary
j Miss Audrey Morgan, family life
specialist, Agricultural Extension
Service, states children react ac
cording to conditions, feelings, and
situations around them. A happy
climates does much to create a
cheerful disposition, she says.
BUFORD DRIVE-IN
THEATRE
BUFORD, GEORGIA
On Buford Cumming
Highway
Double Feature
Thursday & Friday
MAY 21 & 22
KARLOFF in his new
horror hit!
THE HUNTED
STRANGLER
FIEND
without a
FACE
1
Double Feature
SATURDAY
MAY 23
RIDE A
CROOKED TRAIL
-ALSO
THE
LINEUP
SUNDAY
MAY 24
SENIOR PROM
Monday & Tuesday
MAY 25 & 26
“LONEYHEARTS”
WEDNESDAY
MAY 27
THE MAN
INSIDE
NOTICE Fuller Brush Company
has opening for local man to take
over established territory in For
syth County. Earnings over 570.00
per week. Permanent. Car Needed.
Write ft. M. Pritchett, 526 E.
Spring St., Gainesville, Georgia,
Phone Lenox 2 6971.
FOR SALE —15 Acres of land, lo
cated in Forsyth County near
I Strickland Store and Fulton Coun
ty line. On School Ims route —If
interested write or call Janies
Bulan, A —2 Corsbie St. Hartselle,
Aalabama. Phone Spruce 3 —6342.
FOR SERVICE Nice Young Re
gistered Bull. 53.00 Fee. Contact
LON LITTLE, Route 4, Cumming.
, Georgia 7—9—59.
j NOTICE—CALL ME FOR DEM
ONTRATION ON GARDEN TRAC
TORS & EQUIPMENT— Plows,
Cultivators and Tillers Phone
JOHN ROPER. Tu. 7—5997, Rt. 4,
Cumming, Georgia.
Important Notice
THE LAKEVIEW MOTEL LAKE
NOW OPEN FOR FISHING. LO
CATED ON ATLANTA HIGH
WAY THREE MILES FROM
CUMMING. NO FISHING ON
SUNDAY sl.OO per day day.
$50.00 REWARD
Will pay a $50.00 Reward for a
lost Brown white Female Terrier
between Cumming and Gainesville
Georgia in vicinity of Brown’s
Bridge. May 3rd. Phone Cedar 3
4167 Collect, Atlanta.
Edward H. Shannon
OPTOMETRIIST
OFFICE IN HOWF.LL —BRAMB-
I.ETT PROFESSIONAL F.LDG.
FIRST * THIRD WEDNESDAY
OF EACH MONTH
FOR SALE—GRADE A FRESH
EGGS Prices 20 cents per dozen
and Up HORACE TRAMMEL
Ph: Tu. 7 —7095, Daves Creek
Church Road Rt. 5, Cumming.
NOTICE FOR SALE—If anyone
needs a clean Used Car See Cliff
Mcßrayer. Cumming Route 5. at
Claude Terry’s old home place
near Frank Stripland’s Store.
FOR RENT—Several Houses, some
with Chicken Houses MARK
HEARD, JR. Rh: TU. 7—2337.
‘REALLY OPEN” CONVENTION
Senator Humphrey has predicted
that at least four convention bal
lots will be needed to name the
Democratic presidential candidate
next year.
j “It will be a really open conven
tion, the way it looks now,” Hum
phrey said.
The 1960 convention opens July
11 in Los Angeles.
WELL
DRILLING
OASIS
Well Drillers, Inc.
CUMMING, GA.
Phone Tu. 7—5460
Sava iin t S-ive on
Save up to 162 on other accessories nonla— - loo*
on a Fairlane 500 with heater, '"*■
and Save on body fin.sh that never needs wa*ing
Save on the standard < •,.* "
offers surer starting i—
on regular gas and 0., A W $52 more than a Fairlane 500 hardtop.
Ef Jwjjf WV *Bosed on a comparison of
y (W* manufacturers' suggested retail prices
.h|, Y I l l\ A) IV {|) hi,v .| , V S
■'} \
g FREE BUYER S DIGEST | EXTR. ESY TERMS f | FREE MUFFLER CHECK jgs g (with wwy tub* tob) 0
OF NEW CAR FACTS Af- 59 Fo=ris are selling so o 2 out of 3 mufflers ere q, An Ato Z check o( brakes, ££
;li -m rf.mmwl lull ol ‘ f well lifat we can afford ! defective. We vail satetjr-dieek liftits, cteerms veir... Mt
V - I 1
4 toboy* end run your new cer & ■§ eeriest terms pose,tie gjg can save you money g be sate this somomr
It's Dividend Days .. . you can save more than '/ / ih / s
ever before on a59 Ford . Get our special trade-in 'J’lOMlj, .
dividends ... plus the dividends that go with own- L/ CdSU. tt\ dAWtCj rs
ing the world’s most beautifully proportioned car.
' DIVIDEND DAYS AT YOUR FORD DEALERS ’^
OTWELL MOTOR COMPANY, Cumm ’ng, Georgia
Phones: Tu. 7 2311-12 “The House Service Built”
IF YOU EE INTERESTED IN AN A-l USED CAE -CE SURE TO SEE YOUR FORD DEALER
Balance your life as you would balance your
bank account.
A good rule for highway travel is to let the
other car get there first.
Death has a puzzling method of approach and
arrives when we least suspect the end.
Strange as it seems, there are those who
wouldn’t turn around to see Marilyn Monroe.
Life has its disappointments, but there is no
reason to be one of them.
Litigants reserve their opinion of a judge
until his decision is made known.
feed
\y/ YOUR
SAVINGS
/ \ ACCOUNT
l y REGULARLY
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 besoms “fat”.
CUMMING
ROY P. OTWELL, SR., PRESIDENT
"WHERE BANKING IS A PLEASURE”
Thursday, May 21, 1959.