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this is your DREAM HOUSE
ileo M. Zamory, Architect House No. A-130
and
. XX '■/ i
jP lanned for your present needs, and with built-in
A space insurance for your future, this ranch house
has many outstanding features. It’s the ideal choice
ifor a narrow lot but by no means could you call it
I a “little” house. Everything you’d want is here:
spacious living room with fireplace and a ten-foot
picture window; separate dining room with double
exposure; a fifteen-foot “U”-shaped kitchen, a guest
closet at the front entrance, and a bathroom on the
main floor level. On the first floor, there are two
bedrooms with double exposure and plenty of closet
space. The upstahrs area can expand into two
additional bedrooms and a second bathroom. The
full basement wifi take care of your laundry center,
plus your hobby activities and a play area for the
youngsters.
For the convenience of readers who wish to study this
house in greater detail, we have prepared a complete
sketch plan which can be obtained by sending 25* in
coin to Modern Plan Service, Department 130, Lincoln
Building, Mount Vernon- New York.
Area: 1,448 sq- fc. Cubage: 37,648 cu. ft
j
the switch _|L. is
why smart to
t ^ Cl\ fy ^ 0 (Here, brief)-, are some reasons why
so many owners of other makes . . . low priced and high priced ... are switching to Chevrolet this year.)
ROOMIER BODY BY FISHER: features wider
seats, more luggage space; it’s new in every¬
thing but its famous soundness. MAGIC
MIRROR FINISH: a hew type that keeps its
shine without waxing or polishing for up to
three years. NEW' BIGGER BRAKES: better
cooled with deeper drums for safer stopping
and up to 66% longer life. SWEEPING OVER¬
HEAD CURVED WINDSHIELD and bigger
windows—all of Safety Plate Glass. SLIMLINE
DESIGN: fresh, fine and fashionable with a
practical slant. HI-THRIFT 6: up to 10% more
miles per gallon, improved normal-speed per¬
formance. VIM-PACKED V8’s: eight to choose
' v.-’.-v: ,v jy;: •!
The 6-passetiger Nomad and the Impala 1,-Door Sport Sedan.
now—see the wider selection of models at your local authorized Chevro^^
Stamey Chevrolet Co
CLEVELAND, GA
r " ,,r 1
r-i ---4
--liii
from, with compression ratios ranging up to
11.25 to 1. FULL COIL SUSPENSION: further
refined for a smoother, steadier ride on any
kind of road. EASY-RATIO STEERING: brings
you reduced wheel-turning effort, new ease of
handling. TRIPLE-TURBINE TURBOGLIDE ,
POWERGLIDE AND LEVEL AIR suspension
head a full list of extra-cost options that make
for happier driving. No other car in its price
field (or above it) offers quite such a satisfying
return for the money you pay. One short drive
and you’ll know the smart switch is to Chevy.
Come in and be our guest for a pleasure test,
first chance you get.
THE CLEVELAND (GA.) COURIER
Carroll County
FIRST GOLD RUSH
IN GEORGIA
Carroll County was the site of Georgia’s first gold rush in
1826; it centered around Villa Rica, Spanish for "City of
Riches.” Today, Carroll’s "gold” comes from its factories
and farms rather than its mines; for in industry, as well as
agriculture, counties. New Carroll is one of Georgia’s most progressive
chemical and auto trim plants in Carrollton,
the county seat, add strength to an already healthy industrial
community. has increased And on the farm front, chicken broiler produc¬
tion so rapidly in recent years that Carroll now
ranks 17th among Georgia broiler-prouuoing counties.
i the In United enterprising States Carroll County, and throughout Georgia,
Brewers Foundation works constantly to
assure the sale of beer and ale under pleasant, orderly condi¬
tions. Believing that strict law enforcement serves the best in¬
terest of the people of Georgia, the Foundation stresses dose
cooperation officials with the Armed Forces, law enforcement and
governing in its continuing "self-regulation” program.
raznnan
HiW* 6 Unite,! States s Brewers Brewers 1
* ioundat tiori ion m 1 I
' j 9 ^ Suite 224. ^Georgia 710 Peach,r, Division htree vision St., TV. B. 1
Atlanta, Ceorgi rtrgia J|
* FOR REN i 4
SPACE IN THIS PAfbf:
W 4 I Arrange To Suit
GOOD NEIGHBORS-PRICES TO
FIT YOUR BUSINESS
«s* -yinm
NOW—PROMPT DELIVERY
i>N NEW CHEVROLET'S!
Stepped-up shipments of ’59 Chev
rolets have assured you a wide
selection of models and colors.
Drop in and look them over. We
can promise you prompt delivery
on a new Chevrolet—and it’s
an ideal time for you to buy!
—BY BOOSEKEEPIN^HJ SIHRliY STUART . —------ -
Jeff, my sometimes-esteqmed
spouse, led Into the whole thing
smooth as a mink stole.
“I’ve found it,” says he. “A beau-]
tiful addition to your glassware col¬
lection 1”
With me that’s like saying you're :
the sole heir to a long-lost uncle's
estate. Jeff proudly brought forth
an exquisite frosted decanter in a
pure, simple tear drop designwith
a silver plated cap and a bluo velvet
label that read “Calvert Gin.” This
is the first time I’ve ever seen a
frosted decanter. For the winter
holidays it’s a natural as a gift, I
I g E
I ‘ “MIA v ‘ I9; S. a
I 1% .‘J,
4/
. ‘ \ ‘1
;
“Won’t it be terrific on the buffet?’*
For once I was way ahead of him.
Those Calvert people are really
on their toes: “There must be a
hundred ways to use it,” I enthused.
“With the Calvert label easy to re¬
move and that silver vacuum top it
could be a cocktail shaker or a bath
salt container or a really handsome
water bottle for the table or a vase
or it could even be wired as a lamp!
Bay, think of the shopping blues I’d
avoid if I could only get on the
’phone and order some for our
Christmas list.”
“Good idea. Why not?”
“Yfhoa,” old practical me put in.
“Won’t that fancy new packaging
put a dent in our budget?”
“Calvert makes no extra charge,”
answered Jeff happily. “That’s an¬
other good reason I bought it. Then
it occurred to me, just as an after¬
thought, you understand, that you
might like to whip up some sand¬
wiches and chips and things to go
with the contents.”
“Sandwiches? We just had din¬
ner.”
“Oh, I didn’t mean now,” he said
angelically, “I just sort of asked a
few of the fellows to drop In Satur¬
day to listen to the football game
and...”
See what I mean? Smooth. Aa4
| I’m trapped.
Speaking of
PUBLIC SAFETY
While much attention is devoted
to the cost of safe, modern street
lighting, the price overlooked, of inadequate
lighting is often ac¬
cording to the National Street and
Traffic Safety Lighting Council Bureau.
The National Safety acci¬ es¬
timates the composite traffic
dent cost — based on 35 personal
injury and 225 property damage
accidents for every fatal accident
— at $95,000 per fatality. all traf¬
Since only one-fourth of
fic moves at night, night traffic
fatalities should not exceed one
fourth of all traffic fatalities.
On this basis, we should have
9,575 deaths whereas actually the
annual night toll is 21,000 lives.
The difference night between expected
and actual deaths (11,425)
multiplied by $95,000 gives of
$1,085,375,000 as one measure
the economic cost of inadequate
lighting. adequate lighting <
Since modern
costs only $2.50 per capita per
year, it would appear that the na¬
tion’s streets and highways could
be adequately lighted at less than
half the cost of the economic lose,
SCIENCE IN
YOUR LIFE M
><
Cough It Up!
The cough mechanism is essen¬
tial to life, but it can also be a
nuisance-as anyone with a heavy
chest cold knows. Doctors divide
coughs into “productive” and “un¬
productive.” Productive coughs
push irritants and mucous up and
out of the lungs or bronchia]
tubes.
Unproductive coughing may be
too weak to do this, or may (such result
from throat irritation as
tured rib. For the seriously ill per¬
son, the fatigue of useless cough¬
ing may weaken ability to cough
adequately when there’s really
something to cough about.
ductive Doctors coughing, prefer to limit stop excessive unpro¬
productive cough untired. and keep us of com¬
fortable and Most the
older remedies combined an expec¬
torant with a narcotic. The former
was designed make to coughing thin heavy easier, mu¬
cous and
the latter to limit the cough reflex.
Unfortunately, narcotics to
soothe the cough usually made pa¬
tients drowsy; worse, Present they may
cause addiction. day re¬
search has found non-narcotic
cough medicines directly such the as cough Toclase,
which act on re¬
flex center to Toclase suppress is unproduc¬ and
tive cough. one a
half times as effective as codeine,
and one form is combined with an
effective expectorant. The drug
may be taken in tablet form, a
boon to people who can’t carry
around a bottle of cough syrup.
And a tip for the cough season:
keep steam-heated air moist with
water pans on radiators and pop
an occasional hard candy in your
mouth.
“Except for
the frosted fin¬
ish, it’s just
like the de¬
canter that the
famous de¬
signer Russell
Wright cre¬
ated for Cal¬
vert Reserve,”
Tip pvnlp inpr!
smoker’s cough),
or reflex cough
without reason.
U nproductive tiring
coughing harmful. is
and It
further irritates
the membranes,
occasionally ends
in gagging or,