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Cumming, Georgia
Card Of Thanks
— s—
wish to thank our many
friends and neighbors for their
help and kindness shown us during
the sickness and death of our hus
band and father.
We thank the Ministers, for the
words of comfort and all the sing
ers, Ingram Funeral Home for the
kind and efficient services. Also
each and everyone for the floral
offerings and food brought to our
home.
Mrs. H. C. Major and Children
l0(i INOCULATION
SCHEDULE ANNOUNCED
Dr. Jim Kupper, Veterinarian
and son of Mr. and Mrs. R. J.
Kupper of the Hig Creek Communi
ty, will do the dog inoculations in
the county beginning Saturday
June 1,3 according to the Local
Health Department.
His charges will be $1.50 per
dog for the three year shot pups
three months old can get it.
The State Health Department
does not furnish free dog vaccine
unless there is an epedimic of
rabies over some area. It is better
to take advantage of this cheap
cost while everyone is getting this
service than to wait untl rabies
breaks out maybe among your
pets or livestock when free vaccine
would then be available for dogs
that had not been bitten.
The dates of the inoculation
Bchedule is as follows:
SATURDAY, JUNE 13-
Haw Creek Service Station —8:3(1
9:00. A. M.
Cecil Buice ol i store 9:10 9:40
Glen Buices Store 9:50 10:40
Major's Store 10:59 11:30
Vaughans Store (Brookvvoodt
11:40 12:30.
Brandywine School Site 12:40 1:15 I
Moore’s Store 1:25 2:30.
Everett Bettis Store 2:40 3:40
Frank Stripland Store 3:45 4:45
SATURDAY, JUNE 20
A. C. Smith Hatchery 8:30 9:30
Hurt & Moore Store 9:40 10:30
Silas Pruitt Stem 10:40—11:20
Sewells Store, Heardsville—ll:3o
12:00
Evans Rag Cos 12:10 1:15
Steve Grogans 1:25 2:15
Greens Store 2:25 3:00
Drew 3:10 3:50
Bethelview School 4:00 4:30
John Collins Store 4:35—5:20
SATURDAY, JUNE 27
Hammond Store 8:30 9:15
Paul Cagles Place 9:20. .9:50
Whitmire Store 10:00 10:50
Winfred Durand’s Store 11 11:30
Clarence Bagwells place 11:35
12:00
D. O. Freeman's Store 1210 1:10
Cross Roads Church 1:15 1:40
Fay Wallis Store 1:45 2:15
Woffords Hatchery 2:25 3:15
Walter Hardins Store 3.25 4:10
Olin Chadwick Store 4:25 5:00
WEDNESDAY, JULY I
Cumming Courthouse 1:00 5 pm.
Waste Space Chased
!
Old Screened Porch Now Family Room
Award-winning porch enclosure in Darien, Conn., features special installation of ponderosa pine
windows to create more space, plus heat pump for winter heating, summer cooling.
Complete, year-around comfort
and making full use of wasted
space were the principal aims of
Loyd Dunning in converting an
old screened porch into a family
room for his home in Darien,
Conn.
Dunning did such an excellent
job that his porch enclosure is
featured in the current issue of
House Beautiful's Building Man
ual. It is one of the first homes
to win the electrical industry’s
Modernized Home Medallion.
Among its many features is a
heat pump tha f cools the room
in summer and neats it in win
ter. Another fea ure is a bank of
awning win-' ' ponderosa
pine installs outward I
to add mors ess.
An advertised product will be chosen over
an unadvertised one by nine out of ten shoppers.
Advertising is what puts the other fellow out
of business.
The ’’authoritative” voices one finds in every
community are quite numerous.
A good product, plus a fair price, and ad
vertising - equals the road to success.
Most people listen to loud talkers, and that
explains much of the confusion prevalent.
A self-made man is more often accepted than
is a self-made woman.
Then there are some men who are actuated
by two motives only; the drive to get money and
the fight to keep it.
Barrington ■
ALUMINUM
AWNING if [
WINDOWS . x J
these Barrington aluminum windows are
unmatched for convenience and performance
Here is an eas.v-to-live with window that offers
freedom from all maintenance and upkeep. Noth
ing to rot, nothing to paint. Each window is fac
tory glazed and ready to install. Moving parts
are insulated with Du Pont Nylon Bearings to
provide smooth, trouble-free operation. No lu
brication is necessary. Strongly built, perfectly
vveatherstripped, the Barrington Window is a
beautiful example of functional design. Examine
the Barrington Aluminum Awning Window and
you’ll see why it is best for your home.
Number 24 $20.88
Size 37” x 50 5 8” - Complete
GLAZED with Double Strength Glass —with
Aluminum SCREEN and Integral FINS
George Elliott
STANDARD SUPPLY COMPANY
Ph: Arr-5 2221 Dawsonville, Ga.
Other features include the
most modern electrical system
! and lighting available, natural
j wood paneling, built in closets,
movable shelving, and an acous
j tical tile ceiling.
Extra-thick insulation and
double-glazed wood windows
are the keys to economical heat
ing and cooling. Mineral wool
baits six inches thick were in
stalled in the ceiling and batts
three inches thick were installed
in walls, according to specifica
tions for electric heating and
air conditioning. The floor,
above an unheated, two-car
garage, also was insulated with
mineral wool six inches thick.
This insulation, because it
keeps heat inside in winter and
The Forsyth County News
out in summer, made it possible
to heat and cool the room with
a smaller, less expensive heat
pump, which operates with
greater economy.
Wood windows and a combi
nation storm and screen en
trance door of ponderosa pine
were chosen for two reasons:
wood is a natural insulator, and
it could be stained to match the
wood paneling used on the
walls and wainscoting.
In connection with the porch
modernization, Dunning also
equipped the house with anew
electrical service entrance to
handle present and future needs.
Electrical modernization of the
entire house is planned for the
future.
BETHELVIEW H. D. C.
Bethelview HDC met with Mrs.
Rubye Holbrook May 26. The meet
ing was called to order by Presi
dent Mrs. Rubye Holbrook
There were seven members pre
sent. Report was given on our
Stanley party held in April at the
home of Mrs. Eugene Stone. Over
SIOO.OO worth of Stanley Products
were sold.
Delicious refreshments were serv
ed by the Hostess, Mrs. Rubye
Holbrook. Mrs. Bannister gave a
slide demonstration on the use of
evaporated milk. Many interesting
points were demonstrated which
will be helpful to everyone.
rMs. Lois Wheeler Reporter
Don’t worry too much about
your boy or girl just be sure
their parents set them an example
worth following.
The man who is always up with
his work must have little else to
do.
The chase after petty honors
consumes most of the time of
many club leaders.
We have always thought a tiger
would make a nice pet, but that
isn’t enough.
Most people, when confronted
with their favorite meal, make a
spectacle of themselves.
One of the strange things in
life is the number of poor people
who worry about what happens
to millionaires.
Attention All Parents
Student Guidance:
* How Does It Work?
EDITOR'S NOTE: Thi* is the sec
ond in a series of articles on student
guidance. Others will appear in sub
sequent editions of this newspaper.
By Dr. Edward C. Roeber
Have you ever thought about
why you are working in your
present occupation? Perhaps it
was an accident —or you may
have carefully planned it to the
last detail.
Accidents may have worked
well for some of us. But most
parents are not willing to have
their children’s success or fail
ure be an accidental thing.
In order to increase the prob
ability that vocational success
will depend upon some rhyme }
cr reason, student guidance;
leaders for more than fifty
years have been developing
ways in which to help students
p’ m and develop careers. j
Because it is a difficult task I
to help students make plans and
carry them out, guidance coun
selors cannot be sure of success
in every case. There is no doubt,
though, that their work greatly
improves the chances for satis
faction and success in life.
The professional guidance
counselor is interested in help
ing your child learn how to plan
for himself rather than be de
pendent upon someone else to
make his plans for him. He also
recognizes that career planning
and development cannot be set
tled in a short period of time
but, for almost everyone, is ac
tually a lifelong process. New
experiences change our inter
ests, attitudes, goals, and even
tually may affect our vocational
plans.
It is important that we fully
understand what is meant by
the word “career.” Research in
dicates that most of us work in
a series of occupations, some re
lated and some unrelated to our
final occupation at the time we
retire.
Bob White, for example, may j
have begun as a car washer,
then worked in numerous auto
service stations as an attendant,
before becoming an auto me
chanic and eventually the own
er of a small auto repair shop.
All of these kinds of work rep
resent Bob's career. In his case,
his occupations were definitely
related to each other.
Roger Smith, on the other
hand, did many odd jobs around
his neighborhood and worked
part-time at all sorts of jobs
while getting a medical degree. ■
Most of the early jobs were not
related but depended upon cir
cumstances and accidents. After
getting his degree, Roger be
came a doctor in a small com-,
munity; but after a serious ill
ness, he became a doctor at a
university health service and la
ter director. Not too many years
passed before he became direc
tor of research for a national
drug firm. What will he do
next? It is safe to guess that it
will have something to do with
medicine, but in what capacity?
Whatever he does, Roger's ca
reer is the complete array of all
his occupations. •
It is important that parents
realize that a pattern of occupa-
Human nature changes very slowly and al
most imperceptibly; so dont expec
mation overnight.
Cumming people should patronize Camming
stores; this even applies to the owners of stoies.
which indicates a high decree of intelligence.
A balking, kicking mule attracts more atten
tion than a hard-working horse; the same ob
servation applies to people, including newspap
er editors.
ATTENTION
ALL TV & APPLIANCE OWNERS
We have purchased PATTERSON RADIO
& TV SERVICE and moved to the Old Pool
Room across the street from the Dairy Queen.
CALL OR SEE US FOR ANY TV
OR APPLIANCE SERVICE
CUMMING TV & APPLIANCE SERVICE
Odath Samples Jim Wilkins
Ph: Tu. 7-2322 Cumming, Ga.
1 •*; \
tions, or a career, cannot be pre- 1
dieted with certainty. Two chil
dren may be alike in most ways !
but react quite differently to the |
same’experiences at school or'
eventually at work. In the same
way, two students, who are very
much alike, may find economic
conditions affecting their chances!
for jobs in different ways.
The key to understands j vo
cational guidance rests up ;n an
understanding of these lifelong
careers. The target for vocation-!
al guidance becomes a series or
pattern of somewhat related oc
cupations rather than a single
| occupation, a mere speck among
the 40,000 or more kinds of em j
ployment in the world of work, j
Vocational guidance begins |
j with a child's many experiences
and decisions while he is still inj
school. It can eventually influ
ence his entry into the world of
; work. Vocational guidance can
also follow and assist in his
| progress once he is employed,
; but it is most important in his
! student life.
In order to see more clearly
just how complex adequate vo-j
cational guidance really is, par
ents might like to look at one
example. Be sure to remember
.that this is just one example—
|and each child’s planning is us
|ually quite different.
An organized program of vo
cational guidance provides a
counselor with special skills who
could talk over the student’s
ideas as well as those of his par
ents. These discussions occurred
many times during the high
school year and especially at
i those points when critical deci
sions and plans were important.
Whether to take . college pre
paratory courses or not? What
courses to take? Or what school
activities might be beneficial
Periodically, the student's in-
Thursday, June 4, 1959.
terests, abilities, aptitudes, and
achievements were checked with
tests of various kinds.
Records of school achieve
ment, as well as other in-school
and out-of-school activities were
kept from year to year.
An up-to-date collection of
materials provided the student
with all types of information re
garding vocational schools, col
leges, occupations, the armed
services, school adjustment, etc.
He was exposed to many
types of educational and occu
pational information through his
regular classes, assemblies, home
room, career days, college nights,
the school paper, and other
group activities.
In finding an appropriate col
lege, he was assisted by receiv
ing information, filling out ap
plication blanks, locating a
scholarship, and other such ac
tivities. If he had decided to
find a job or go into the armed
services, he would have found
an equal amount of assistance
provided through the vocational
guidance program.
In addition, while still in
i school and after leaving school,
this individual was contacted
from time to time in an attempt
to offer further assistance in
planning, preparing for, and
progressing in his career.
Adequate vocational guidance
requires special knowledge and
skills. Take the above example
and multiply him by a few mil
lion— you now can sense the
size of the task ahead in guid
| ance.
It is only good sense that a
school which helps a student
prepare for some career should
| help him explore, plan for, and
; progress at that career. Perhaps
| the years ahead will see less
jand less schools leave vocation
al guidance to chance, f