Newspaper Page Text
Gumming, Georgia.
Barrington
ALUMINUM
AWNING ~ —J
WINDOWS T
ENJOY LASTING
IWINDOW MM
♦BEAUTY Atm
fIN YOUR HOME
ftp. * mk&m ||
these Barrington aluminum windows are
unmatched for convenience and performance
Here is an easy-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
weatherstripped, 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” x5O 5-8” Complete
GLAZED with Double Strength Glass —with
Aluminum SCREEN and Integral FINS
George Elliott
STANDARD SUPPLY COMPANY
Ph: Am-5-2221 Dawsonville, Ga.
ATTENTION FOLKS!!
YOU CAN ALWAYS GET A BARGAIN ON G E APPLIANCES
* FURNITURE A1 OUR STORE We Carry A Complete Line.
SEE US FOR YOUR PLUMBING, HEATING & ELECTRICAL WIRING
Free Estimate on any job GIVE US A TRIAL.
Complete Septic Tank Installation
Also Ditch Digging & Holes
MIDWAY SERVICE CENTER
“WHAT WE SELL WE SERVICE”
Don Covington BUD BOLES
PH. COLLECT, ALPHARETTA 5061 NEAR MIDWAY CHURCH
PROPERTY FOR SALE
Cattle Farm:
70 Acres, good pasture, 5-room house with
bath, Reconditioned - 1 mile off Buford high
way, near Haw Creek.
New House:
4-room new house with bath-Priced to sell—
Haw Creek Community.
Modern Home:
Nice modern home, six miles of Cumming on
highway No. 19, 3 acres, more or less, good com
munity Priced to Sell.
Six Room House:
Six room house with one acre in Cumming
on Highway No. 19.
22 Acre Farm:
22 acre farm near Salem. Church with front
age on Keith Bridge highway, 8 acres of bottom
land. Good house.
Houses, Lots, Farms, Lake Front Property
For Sale - SEE
RICHARD WILLIAMS Broker
Ph: Tu 7-2442 P. O. Box 549
CUMMING, GEORGIA
1
*
The Forsyth County News
REGULAR MEETING OF CUM
MING CHAPTER NO. 346 O. E. S.
¥
Will Ik* held each Second and
Fourth Tuesday Nights at 8:00
O’clock.
All members are urgrd to attend
JOLENE WALLS, W. M.
CLARA MAE COX, Secretary
NOTICE—Fuller Brush Company
has opening for local man to take
[over established territory in For
|syth County. Earnings over $70.00
per week. Permanent. Car Needed.
Write E. M. Pritchett, 526 E.
Spring St., Gainesville, Georgia,
j Phone Lenox 2 —6971.
Call Alpharetta 5243
FOR
Asphalt Paving
i Driveways—
Parking Lots—
! Soiling—
C. R. SIMS
Contractor
Alpharetta, Ga.
BUFORD DRIVE-IN
THEATRE
BUFORD, GEORGIA
On Buford-Cumming
Highway
Thursday & Friday
JUNE 18 & 19
RALLY ROUND
THE FLAG BOYS!
Double Feature
SATURDAY
JUNE 20
Rory Calhoun
THE SAGA OF
HEMP BROWN
-ALSO-
Walt Disney
JOHNNY TREMAIN
SUNDAY
JUNE 21
WIND ACROSS
THE EVERGLADES
Monday & Tuesday
JUNE 22 & 23
THE OLD MAN
AND THE SEA
Wednesday
JUNE 24
REVOLT IN THE
BIG HOUS
FOR SALE--Land Race from Prize
winning Stock Breeding Boars and
Gilts, Registered in buyer’s name
Rupert or Everett Harris, Route 4,
Ph: Tu. 7—6183, Cumming, Ga.
HOUSES FOR RENT —One 5-room
house. Two 4-room houses, in good
neighborhood Contact Roy P.
Otwell or John McClure at Otwell
Motor Company, Phone Tu. 7 —2311
Never underestimate people of
small statue.
Edward H. Shannon
OITOMETRIIST
OFFICE IN HOWELL—BRAMB
LETT PROFESSIONAL BLDG.
FIRST * THIRD WEDNESDAY
OF EACH MONTH
| FOR RENT—Several Houses, some
with Chicken Houses MARK
HEARD, JR. Ph: TU. 7—2337.
CORLEY’S SALES ft SERVICE
Mils Chalmers Farm Equipment
Featuring Irrigation System#
Duluth, Georgia
Phone 39f i
FOR SALE One Bag Mueller
Plaster Mixer in good condition
BALD RIDGE MARINA.
SALESMEN WANTED
WANTED AT ONCE. Man with
car for Rawleigh Business in For
syth County. Buy on time. See Guy
Duncan PO Box 365 Canton, Ga.,
or write immediately to Rawleigh’s
Dept. GAF —22O—3OI, Memphis,
Tenn. —June 4 —l8 —July 16
$50.00 REWARD for lost Brown
and white spotted mixed Terrier
Bob tailed female “Boots" in vici
! nity of Brown’s Bridge May 3rd.
Call Newspaper or Atlanta, Cedar
3—4167 (Collect)
No two lawyers agree on any
thing, it seems.
WELL
DRILLING
OASIS
Well Drillers, Inc.
CUMMING, GA.
Phone Tu. 7-5460
WHIT! SANDS MOTEL
1122 No. Atlantic Ave. (Rt. AIA)
DAYTONA BEACH, FLORIDA
Tel. CL. 3-7461
*v . '
FAMILY
spent
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
11l PKM i'4
HERMAN TALMADGE j
Reports From I
WASHINGTON I
,f * u m
THE SAME OLD “divide-and
conquer" routine has won Secre
tary of Agriculture Ezra T Ben
eon hi cvr'.y f• • r another year.
1 Because the
• ' y ) Secretory has
\ succeeded
f <-%, X. \ a>fa,n ' p"*>-
\ 'c% mg otT the var-
J ious commod
-'u Br ° upB, ”■
against one another, the high
hopes which were entertained on
all sides at the beginning of the
86th Congress for the enactment
of anew and meaningful national
farm program this year have been
dashed or- the rocks of disagree
ment. Unit s the various mem
bers of Congress wake up to the
manner in which Mr. Benson is
manipulating their self interests
to defeat the national interest,
there will bo little prospect for
the passage of any comprehen
sive farm legislation as long as
he is in office.
WHILE IT WAS generally con
ceded that the Secretary likely
would prevail upon I’resident
Eisenhower to veto any farm hill
Congress might pass, the consen
sus among farm state legislators
in January was that Congress
should act this year to force the
President’s hand on the issue and
thus to place the responsibility
for the nation’s worsening agri
cultural situation where it be
longs—squarely on the steps of
the White House. The over
whelmingly - favorable reaction,
both in Congress and throughout
the nation, to the introduction of
the Talmadge Farm Plan led
m >it observers to the conclusion
’■hi.’ it offered the best hope of
being e hßis (or agreement on
rtTiHi- new legislation.
It vos with that goal in mind
I jouiea with several inter
ested Senate colleagues in en-
Jemoiing to perfect my bill to
1 not or printed at gooeemment eapeiue i
Thursday, June 18, 1959.
give it the broad base of farmer
consumer support necessary to
pass it through both houses of
Congress. That was when the
whipsawing started to the drum
beat of provocative speecnes and
statements by Mr. Benson and
his associates in the Department
of Agriculture. Some commodity
groups which were included in the
bill wanted to be excluded and
vice versa; others demanded spe
cial considerations. Critics called
it both “too conservative" and
“socialistic” and both small and
large farmers complained it bene
fited one at the expense of the
other.
Despairing of agreement, the
talks came to naught and with
them the chance for any accept
able farm bill this year.
IN THE RECENT debate on
agricultural appropriations, Geor
gia’s Senator Richard B. Russell
correctly observed that the Agri
culture Secretary “does not be
lieve farm commodity prices
should be supported and he has
just about convinced a majority
of the people of the nation that
there cannot be a successful sup
port program.” He observed that
Mr. Benson’s “principal aim in
life ... is to prove that price
supports will not work, even if
it costs S2O billion to prove it."
The only way in which the Sec
retary’s cynically-calculated bid
to destroy all farm programs by
destroying national confidence in
them car. he thwarted lies in *
recognition by ail interested
groups of the urgent need for
unity of purpose and action. Only
through sublimation of regional
and commodity interests to the
overall national interest can the
farmers of America ever hope to
get their just due. Mr. Benson Is
betting that that cannot be done.