Newspaper Page Text
Series 100 tandem—powered for big loads and sleep grades!
1
No job’s too tough, for
d Chevrolet truck:!
Series 31 Fleetside—round-the-clock Series 60 stake shows its stuff on oft-the-road jobsl
About everywhere you look you’ll
find Chevies like that big tandem
dump, or that stake and pickup,
knuckling down and knocking all
the meanness out of rough jobs.
Jfo matter how tough the job, there’s
a Chevy truck cut out to cut it
down to size.
BEST YET OF TH •
BUT SELLERS
See your local authorized Chevrolet dealer
_____
Stamey Chevrolet Company
Cleveland, Ga.
ENJOY YOURSELF WITH THE.,
'*¥:**. FUNKY PAGF
EVERY WEEK
VIRGIL By Len Kiel*
MUTT AND JEFF BY AL SMITH
60W, A BUNDLE WROTE ? 2 V
LOV£ LETTERS I •
TO IWY WIFE WHEN I 1
WAS COORTiNGHER!
c
|ll l'/i 'fikfX
s£lt l aJn5
You don’t have to haul 30-ton loads
out of a stone quarry before your
job’s considered tough. The rough
ones come in every weight class.
And right there is where a whole
fleet of Task-Force Chevies comes
rolling in. As far back as they go,
Chevrolet trucks have always been
long on stamina and short on down-
Chevrolet Task -Force 59
THE CLEVELAND (GA.) COURIER
time. And now, with big tandems
in the line along with every kind
of model you can name . . . with
the latest ’59 ideas built into more
might and muscle than ever before
. . . you can bet a Chevy truck will
whistle through any size job you’ve
got. Your Chevrolet dealer can zero
in on the exact model you need.
’Swiss Chalef' Successful
In San Francisco Bay Area
* ' i
California’s newest home design, the “Swiss Chalet,’’ is being
built in Corte Madera, north of San Francisco. It features a steep
roof of rich brown asphalt shingles, along with traditional styles
of double-hung windows and panel doors of ponderosa pine.
A new development of homes
with a design that promises to
become a style-setter through¬
out California is rising in the
rugged hills of Marin County,
ten miles north of San Fran¬
cisco’s Golden Gate Bridge.
It is Marin Estates, a tract of
homes in Corte Madera, whose
style at first seems as alien to
the West Coast as New England
maple syrup.
This is because the houses are
designed somewhat along lines
of an Eastern Cape Cod dwell¬
ing with steeply pitched roofs,
dormers, and traditional double
hung windows.
A second look, however, re¬
veals why builder William
Blackfield, the who prefers to call
the style “Swiss Chalet,” chose
traditional design. The steep roofs and
exteriors seem to
“HOW TO GET ALONG
' WITH PEOPLE”
By Dr. Walter C. Alvarez
A new health series authored by Dr. Walter C.
Alvarez, emeritus consultant in medicine at Mayo
by your ability—or inability—to
get along with others.
“How to Get Along With Peo¬
ple,” an 18-part special, will be
published daily and Sunday except
Saturday, exclusive in Georgia, in
The Atlanta Journal. This reader
special is in addition to the regular
column by Dr. Alvarez in The
Journal.
You’ll find many hints to help you achieve
greater health and happiness. In sound, easy-to
understand terms, Dr. Alvarez discusses this how-to
get-along health problem and offers practical sugges¬
tions for its solution. “How to Get Along With
People” begins Sunday, Feb. 8, in
Stye Atlanta 2eunral
Covers Dixie Like the Dew
* AND A
THE ATLANTA CONSTITUTION
The South’s Standard Newspaper
HERE'S HOW B B .
MAKE A FIREPLACE BELLOWS
A bellows adds useful an¬
place. tique charm to the home fire¬
draw Using Vi-inch lumber, first
bellows a pattern and cut out two
boards. Clamp them
hole together, the and drill a %-inch
in end so that half the
hole is in each piece. The hole
ie 8 inches deep. Cut off 1 Vi
inches of the tip of one piece
and glue it to the other, form¬
ing a tube. The 1-inch intake
holes are drilled in only one
board.
For the metal tip, make a
pattern tha on .030 metal. Cut out
metal and roll it into a
cone, before lapping soldering. the edges % inch
Shape the
METAL TIP
- CLAMP S/DES t DRILLS LEATHER
National Lumber Manufacturers Association
THE PRESENT
That Lasts A Year
A SUBSCRIPTION TO
The Home Newspaper
be at home in the mountainous
terrain. A further advantage of
the steeply pitched roofs (many
have pitches of 12 inches per
foot) is that they enable him
to offer more living space for
less money.
be Asphalt shingles, which can
used on any roof pitch from
two inches up, were chosen in
a warm brown color to har¬
monize with local surroundings.
The model in the photograph
has four bedrooms, two baths,
a two-car garage, complete
in landscaping, and scores of built
extras. It sells for $19,750.
Blackfield says he chose win¬
dows of ponderosa pine because
they are available in a wide
selection of traditional designs,
and come in sash-plus-frame
units that can be quickiy in¬
stalled at a minimum of labor
costs.
3.11:, ‘, 4:" :__
.. I' 12‘ "2%
,
>
large end of the cone into a
square, and shape the end of
the bellows with a knife to fit
the square. Fasten the tip
into the square with glue and
Vi-inch brads.
A leather web is cut from
soft hide. From the scrap cut
inches. two flipper valves, 2 by 2
These are stretched
under the intake holes and
fastened with a tack at each
corner.
Fold the edge of the web to
produce Vi-inch double thick¬
ness, and fasten to the boards
with ornamental tacks.
Another piece of scrap
leather is glued over the metal
tip, and studded with orna¬
mental tacks.