Newspaper Page Text
-THE FORSYTH COUNTY NEWS-WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 14, 1973
PAGE 16
Espaliers Valuable
For Smaller Yards
By WALTER H. RUCKER
County Agent
Many homes in Forsyth
County could use espaliers to
beautify their landscape.
Espaliers’ real value is in
beautifying grounds with
limited space. When lots are
small and walks and
driveways prohibit the use of
shrubs with depth, these
plants are a natural.
There are other uses also.
Some of these would include
providing a background for a
lawn or garden, screening a
patio or other special area for
privacy, baffling noises,
eliminating monotonous
architectural lines,
separating one area from
another, and providing focal
points. You may think of
other uses.
Several “formal” designs
are illustrated in our
Extension leaflet by this title.
Such patterns as the cordon
and the double cordon, the u
shape, the palmate verrier,
horizontal tee or Belgian
fence offer a great challenge
to the amateur gardener.
The leaflet contains tips on
Bob and Natalie
TV Debut Soon
By NANCY ANDERSON
Copley News Service
HOLLYWOOD - Though
you'll see Bob and Natalie
Wood Wagner making their
debut as a television team on
Nov. 20, they’re not bucking to
become the new Ozzie and
Harriet.
The Wagners, perhaps the
public’s favorite married
lovers, costar in “Love Song,”
a TV movie for the ABC net
work to be aired then. But the
drama won’t spin off into a se
ries, and Natalie says from
here on she may not work
much in television or anything
else other than the nursery.
Bob and Natalie expect a
baby in March (her second,
his second, but their first),
and, the little mother ex
plains, “I think it’s awfully
hard to work when you have
little children.”
“I haven’t worked very
much in the past few years,”
Natalie adds. “Very little in
fact. Making ‘Love Song’ was
my first time at work in four
years.
“I enjoyed doing that. I re
ally didn’t know how I’d like
going back to work. But the
fact that Bob and I would be
working together was an in
ducement, and, when I got on
the set, I was pleasantly sur
prised, because making the
picture was such a nice ex
perience.”
In happier times, Richard
Burton and Elizabeth Taylor
were a husband and wife who
worked together successfully,
as are Paul Newman and
Joanne Woodward. And we al
so have the shining example
of the Nelsons, happy on
camera as well as off year-in,
year-out.
But what about the Wag
ners?
Woodall
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WALTER H. RUCKER
training, the various types of
hardware that might be
needed, and some of the
plants that you might use for
an espalier. If you are in
terested, call or come by the
Extension office and ask for
Leaflet No. 108, entitled,
“Espaliers”.
+ + +
ABOUT FIREWOOD
With the threatened fuel
shortage this year it’s a good
bet that a lot of us will be
cleaning out that fireplace
and getting it ready to furnish
some welcome heat on cold
days. And along with this
Did Bob’s and Nat’s person
alities and talents interlard as
well on the sound stage as
they do at home? Was either a
scene stealer? Did they try to
direct each other? Would they
like to repeat the experience
of working in tandem? How
did things go?
“Well,” says Natalie, “we’d
worked together once before,
but that was quite a long time
ago. We enjoyed working to
gether the first time, but I’d
say that I enjoyed this most
recent experience more than
anything else I’ve ever done.
“I knew before we began
that we’d work well together,
because we’re not competi
tive.”
“Also,” Bob interjects,
“our acting styles are quite
different. We are each dedi
cated to the material and to
the overall project, and we
have a give-and-take relation
ship.”
“And we didn’t try to direct
each other,” Natalie says.
“But if one of us had a feel
ing that something should be
changed or done a certain
way, it was nothing we kept to
ourselves. If R.J. had a sug
gestion for me, I always wel
comed it.
“We are very open with
each other.
“We always ask each
other’s advice in professional
matters.”
Bob says, “We’re really
very compatible. We don’t try
to avoid subjects on which we
differ. We just happen to
share the same ideas and to
react to things the same
way.”
“I can’t think of a single
subject we have to avoid dis
cussing,” Nat concludes tri
umphantly.
News of all this accord
should cheer the Wood and
Psj§
comes the necessity for
getting out that axe or saw
and going to the woods for
firewood. Or maybe you’re
going to buy yours and let
someone else do the cutting.
What kind are you going to
buy? Will it make any dif
ference? Ted Walker, one of
our Extension foresters, says
that it does. Woods do burn
differently according to
Walker. Pine generates more
heat per pound of wood than
hardwoods, and this, he says
is contrary to the belief of
many people.
But while pine gives off
more heat, it burns faster and
generates more smoke. For
this reason, pine wood is
generally used as a starter.
Which hardwoods are best
for the fireplace? Walker
recommends these: ash, red
oak, birch, beech, hickory,
hard maple, pecan, dogwood
and white oak. -
All broakleaf and hardwood
trees do not make good
firewood. Elm, sycamore and
gum, for example are rated
only fair. And yellow poplar is
poor.
Wagner fans who are legion
and who are thrilled to pieces
when the handsome couple re
married last year after hav
ing been married, divorced,
married to others and di
vorced again.
The reconcilliation was well
received, because, as one of
their admirers put it, they are
beautiful, and you can tell
which is the boy and which is
the girl a somewhat novel
circumstance these days.
“The fact that we’ve gotten
back together does seem to
have struck a chord,” Bob
happily concedes, “with peo
ple who wish they’d gotten
back together with someone.”
“We’ve gotten a few letters
from couples who’ve gotten
back together because of us,”
Natalie says.
Miss Sebert’s
Wedding Set
Mr. and Mrs. James E.
Sebert of Long Beach,
California weekend guests of
Lt. Col (Ret.) and Mrs.
Lawton K. Bannister an
nounce the engagement of
their daughter Miss
Rebekkah Mae Sebert to
Steve John Bannister.
Miss Sebert is the grand
daughter of the late Mr. and
Mrs. Matthew Hoffman of
Pennsylvania, and
Harold Sebert and late Mrs.
Sebert of Oxnard, California.
Bannister is grandson of
late Mr. and Mrs. Ben F.
Garner of College Park,
Georgia and the only grand
son of the late Mr. and Mrs. H.
Elmer Bannister of Forsyth
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Tollroads Soon for Georgia
State Transporation Board
members Thursday express
ed approval to use
tollroads to complete the
interstates in Georgia, but
delayed in approving State
Sen. J. H. Henderson’s
recommendation that the
board adopt the proposal at
its regular monthly meeting.
Instead the board asked the
State Department of Tran
sportation to prepare a report
to supplement the Senate
Tollroad Sub-committee’s
material gathered during its
July fact-finding trip to
Florida.
Tollroad financing would be
used to finish the incompleted
portions of the interstate and
as federal money became
available to pay for this
construction the tolls would
be removed.
The Tollway Authority
would sell the bonds to
finance the projects. The
Georgia General Assembly
would have to approve the
bond issue and appropriate
“general obligation funds for
Secondhand Smoke
Bad for Allergies
By MARION WELLS
Copley News Service
Have you ever been driven
from a cigarette smoke pol
luted room with eyes water
ing, nose itching, a “hazy
headache” and a coughing
cry for clean air? Then you
know what it means to suffer
from “secondhand smoke.”
If you have allergies, “sec
ondhand smoke” may worsen
your discomfort. If you suffer
Center Has
Open House
Open House and
Thanksgiving Supper is set
for the 16 at the Forsyth
County Day Care Center
located in the old Sharon
Elementary school building.
Supper is at 7 p.m. with
Turkey, dressing and
beverages provided.
Everyone is invited. Come
and bring a covered dish for
your family and have
Thanksgiving supper with us.
County.
Miss Sebert attended the
University of California-
Irvine, and University of
Georgia. She received a
Bachelor of Science in Math
Education. She is teaching at
Greene County High.
Bannister attended the
University of California-
Irvine and is currently at
tending the University of
Georgia, School of Pharmacy.
He is employed by the United
States Environmental
Protective Agency in Athens
as a Computer Programmer.
A June wedding is planned
at Christ Lutheran Church in
Long Beach, Calif.
the nest egg money needed as
security for the bond issue,”
the Senator said.
According to Henderson,
this “nest egg” would
probably be about $lO million.
DOT Deputy Commissioner
Parrish emphasized the fact
that federal funds could be
used only to pay for the
construction of the highway
and not pay the interest on the
bonds.
One board member said
that the “idea sounded ex
citing but we need more facts
and figures before we can
vote on this matter.”
Another added that the DOT
report would “help the board
make an educated
decision.” Still anmother said
that at this time “we don’t
know enough now to vote on a
half billion dollar proposal.”
When asked what other
legislators thought of the
idea, Sen. Henderson re
plied, “I don’t see how anyone
can vote against this,” adding
from heart or respiratory ail
ments, a smoky atmosphere
may be potentially hazardous
to your health. Your children
may be even more sensitive
than you are to the ill effects
of the pollutants in tobacco
smoke, as their tolerance is
lower.
Carbon monoxide is one in
gredient of a smoky environ
ment which is a recognized
health hazard, especially if
you have heart or respiratory
trouble. In a poorly venti
lated, enclosed environment,
smoking can reportedly raise
the carbon monoxide level to
several times the concentra
tion needed to put up to 5 per
cent of the body’s oxygen-car
rying hemoglobin out of com
mission and cause dizziness,
headache and lassitude.
Are you an employer? It’s
to your advantage not to per
mit smoking in rooms where
several employes work to
gether. Jesse L. Steinfeld,
M.D., a U.S. surgeon general,
reported that carbon monox
ide levels as low as 20 to 80
parts per million could have
detrimental effects on work
performance, seeing and
hearing.
The carbon monoxide in
cigarette smoke is not the
Al ra
I POINT REALTOR ’
Inorih
Realty Company
Bald Ridge Road, Cumming Georgia
523-5696
CUM. 887-2306
LOTS
Large Lake front lot, Six Mile Creek area, paved
street, gentle sloping, in area of nice homes, make
offer!
200 Ft. lake front lot in Surfside, excellent building
site. Priced to sell at $8,900.
6 large lots in Greenwood Acres, Cumming, Georgia.
Area of exclusive homes.
Six interior lots with lake access, good road frontage,
PRICED TO SELL.
2Vi acre building lot near Bald Ridge Marina, Paved
streets and city water. In area ot nice homes.
LAKE HOMES
2 Br., 1 ba., on large lake front lot, good deep water
with beautiful view, close to Cannongate Country
Club.
3 Br., 2Vi ba., on 3 lots with fabulous view of
main part of lake, central heat and air.
2 Br., IVi ba., lake cottage, good water with nice view
2 Br., 1 Ba., with sleeping loft, full basement with
wrap-around deck, paved streets, water system. NEW
Week-end cottage close to Holiday Marina, PRICED
TO SELL.
Large lake home, 3 Br., 2 ba., excellent for entertain
ing, located on 4 lake front lots, close in to Cumming
and Bald Ridge Marina.
that the lives saved and the
energy crisis made the
completion of the interstates
critical, and the tollroads
were the fastest means of
accomplishing this goal.
“We can be riding on these
roads by 1978 compared to the
late 1980’s at the present
funding rate,” the Cobb
County lawmaker em
phasized. “Anyone who
doesn’t wish to ride on a
tollroad can ride on the same
roads he is riding on today.”
The proposal, if approved
by the DOT Board, would
have to be approved by the
U.S. Secretary of Tran
sporation, before it could be
implemented.
Section 129 of Title 23 of the
U.S. Code is the source Sen.
Henderson quoted as being
the Secretary’s authority to
allow states to complete their
interstates.
“The Secretary has the
authority to do this, if he
determines that it is in the
public interest to do so,” the
Deputy Commissioner said.
only threat to your respirato
ry system. Cigarettes also
contain hydrogen cyanide,
which gets in the way of en
zymes that function in the
body to help the breathing
process.
The American Medical As
sociation has warned that
children who have asthma are
harmed by parental smoking.
Researchers have found evi
dence that if parents smoke in
the home, their youngsters
will be more susceptible to re
spiratory ailments.
14 Scouts
Hike Trail
Fourteen Scouts from troop
39 hiked the Appalachian trail
last Saturday from Neels Gap
to Tesnatee Gap.
The panoramip views were
even more beautiful due to the
excellent weather. At the
halfway point they had lunch
and then a leaf identifying
contest. On the return home a
stop was made at the
Dahlonega Court House Gold
Museum to see the new film
strip.
There is a total of some 250
miles of incompleted in
terstates in Georgia and the
idea of using tollroads have
been mentioned before but
apparently the former U.S.
DOT Secretary John Volpe
had indicated that it wouldn’t
be in the “public interest” at
that time.
At Thursday’s meeting
Parrish indicated that the
new Secretary, Claude S.
Brinegar, hadn’t been ap
proached with the idea.
Parrish also indicated that he
and the State Highway
Engineer, Tom Moreland
would be talking with the
Federal Highway
Administration the following
STARTS WEDNESDAY
NOV. 14—20
The Directors Company presents
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As P.T. Barnum put it,
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“MR. SUPERINVISIBLE”
VILLAGE CINEMA
CALL 887 —8855 forshowtimes
LANIER VILLAGE SHOPPING CENTER,
Cumming
RESIDENTIAL
Beautiful 3 BR., 2 Ba., brick home located on 3 level
lots inside city limits of Cumming. Built-in kitchen,
excellent location for school age children.
3 Br., 2 Ba., split level, Built-ins, close in to Cumming
PRICED TO SELL.
Large 3 Br., 2 Bath house on 1 % acre. Good location
south of Cumming with excellent 400 access, new
carpet and large playroom.
2 Br., 1 Ba., with fir beautiful lake front lot,
good deep water, • cpVireets, city water, excellent
location with 400 <. ~ss, all furniture and appliances.
COMMERCIAL PROPERTY
19 acres, potential commercial property south of
Atlanta, DeKalb County, close to Interstate 20 and
Candler Road.
North Ga.’s finest regional shopping center site, 25
acres on main Gainesville 365, U.S. 129 interchange,
zoned all utilities, investor price and terms.
Th acres, commercial property, 8 room house with
road frontage, Cumming, Georgia.
Roswell commercial, long Alpharetta Street frontage,
zoned, utilities, priced under market.
16 acres, excellent investment property, good terms,
3 miles from Lanier Island Development, off Hwy.
365.
ACREAGE
DAWSON COUNTY
180 acres, double paved road frontage, double county
maintained road frontage, heavily wooded, ideal in
vestment property.
FORSYTH COUNTY
42 acres, approximately 9 miles Northwest of Cum
ming, long paved road frontage, pastured and fenced,
good investment.
WASHINGTON COUNTY
411 Acre Ranch, 15% down, long interest only terms,
house drilled well and approximately 300 acres fenced
with large feeder barn.
FRANKLIN COUNTY
5 miles to 1-85, 65 acres, witn broad river frontage,
stream, old house, $695 per acre, Terms.
PICKENS COUNTY
Trout stream frontage. 276 acres, long Ga. 5 frontage
eautiful valley, pastured and fenced, terms available.
808 SEWELL, BROKER 887-7541
CURTIS COLEMAN 993-6870
EDNA POWERS 887-7250
SCOTT HAMES 887-8349
DAN P. JAMES 436-8328
PAT SPENCER 428-3006
week and wanted to know the
Board’s reaction to such a
proposal.
“One reason for asking Sen.
Henderson to today’s
(Thurs.) meeting was that
Commissioner (Downing
Musgrove) and I felt that the
(senate) committee has been
meeting and holding public
hearings and the board hasn’t
had an opportunity to express
its feelings on this matter,”
Parrish told the members.
NAN MOMMIE S
HOMEMADE DOLLS
24 inches Tall. Choice of
hair color.
Call 887-7642 or 837-8537