Newspaper Page Text
customers Over 5*000 enjoy savings 4 I \%
insured safety and
4 home 1-2 % dividend federal at 2
Pay on savings
FREE GIFTS 111
We have chosen a beautiful 5-piece towel set by
Callaway Mills as an exclusive gift for our savers. The
package contains 2 large bath towels, 2 hand towels and
one wash cloth. You have a choice of 4 beautiful pastel
colors: antique gold, light pink, light tan and white.
Self-tone border, superbly absorbent — so treat yourself
to the deep, downy softness of these lovely towels.
Here's how to get your Callaway Towel Set:
Open a new savings account for $100.00 or more or
add $100.00 or more to your present savings account.
Save By Mail —
Send us a check or money order and by return mail
you will receive your passbook and a beautiful set
of towels.
Offer good from June 22 through July 10, 1964.
Limit One To A Family.
HOME FEDERAL SAVINGS
and Loan Association
«ON THE $QUARE”Gainesville, Georgia
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WE’LL TAKE THE 20’S if
all flappers looked as good as
Starlet Vera Miles does here.
(Cis'S PHOTO)
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® Your skin takes a beating in summer. It has all sorts of
irritations to contend with. You over-sun and it turns red and
sore. You subject it to constant doses of sun, sand, salt water
or the purifying chemicals used in pools and it gets dry and
flaky. You meander through the the woods, oblivious to the poison
ivy, oak or sumac along way and down it comes with an
itch. It’s a target for insect attacks, and depending on the
modus friend operandi of the standing biting bug, it’s in for a sting or an itch.
A of long to skin in dire distress is baking
soda. Add soda to your bath ... a half pound of it per tepid
tubful of water for dryness or sunburn, and if you just relax
in the tub, read, listen to the radio or have a cooling drink
and avoid the scrub brush or wash cloth, thefte’s blessed relief
in store. Extra dividend... you come clean, for soda is mildly
detergent If you’ll keep the baking soda .in an apothecary jar
in the bathroom with a sachet tucked in its midst, the bath
water is pleasantly scented. &
tions Apply baking poison ivy, soda oak in paste form to the other skin afflic¬
and . .. the itch sting subsides. and sumac and various insect bites
«t« or
-----1 How Take Balk I
——/Sen to A a *
■ ■ — by CYNTHIA MOOBB-*
Elver since Venus, Goddess 0? Beaoty, was born of the sea#
beauty bafts bare been enjoyed by the world’s loveliest
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Fashionable women of Rome
were devoted to their luxurious
public baths, the hub of the
city’s social life. Cleopatra’s
bath spices, flowers, fragrances disarming
and oils bad a more
effect cm rulers and warriors
than her armies!
Make your bath a ritual. Plan
ahead. Have all elegant From acces¬ the
sories in readiness.
moment you turn on the faucets
until you have lavishly coated
yourself with dusting masterful powder,
the bath should be a
composition from which you
emerge as the central harmony.
t Choice of fragrant? w*
CLEVELAND (GA J COTTRIEK
important. Match them—never
Tn«- Luxuriate with the name
hazmtfiig fragrance in bath o3»
silken-smooth soap, reviving
after-bath friction lotion, powder. ana clouds off
Personally, 1 find the Heart
Bendel Line one of the easiest
ways of coordinating bath ac¬
cessories. There are three ex
auisite to chnogfl.
Gene, 10 West and
Checkmate... and each comes hr
all bath items.
water...slightly Use warm to moderately less than hot
three-quarters of a tub is ample.
Now for your French milled
soap, perfume, foaming all bath oO and bath
especially fine compounded oils of
to nourish
and scent experience your body. Suddenly
you smoothness all a new, satiny
over.
Pat and blot yourself ary.
Don't rub or scrub...do it
quietly! head Splash yourself from
to too with refreshing and
tingling by puffing friction dusting lotion. Top off
you’ve on really had powder.
Now, a bath!
Make it a habit...one that's
custom-made to fade out tha
dissonance of today’s tensions.
Don’t run for a traaqoSfeer—
run a tubl
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OUR GREAT country
founded on the belief that
was never meant to be
wine ed, that he is endowed with
right to be free.
Hus belief set the tone
file Declaration of
which was signed 188. years ago
, at Philadel¬
phia. Embodied Declar
in the .'V.; m
' arion, ecDyoneoffhe nndoubt- |§ '
; greatest dis- m
sertations on
the rights of
) man ever writ¬
ten, is a phi¬
losophy based on the equality of
man, natural rights, consent of
the- governed, and the right of
revolution whenever a govern¬
ment become tyrannical. •
far Expressing a great passion
, freedom, Thomas Jefferson
; said man was the work of God
and was intended to be subject
’ to no one except the Creator
Himself. In writing the Declar
: at ion, this great Virginian said: 'be
"We hold these truths to
!& fielf-evident, that all men are
H created equal, that they are
endow ed by their Creator with
ig li certain unailenable rights,
that among these are life, lib
v erty and the pursuit of hap
phaess—That lights, to secure these
governments, are insti
§ their consent toted just among* of tee powers men, governed from deriving the 99
• » •
if AT NO * * *
; TIME since the Amer¬
^ ican colonists broke their-' ties
With England and threw off the
(Not prepared or printed at government expense)
■'s'4
THE PRESENT m HD
A Yea, tip •>
That Last, IW > I
A SUBSCRIPTION TO
The Home Newspaper 3 3 J j
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H • m mm • :S. i CHANGES i
« AHEAD
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9 . America!
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The early symbol of co-op Rural Eleelirficahon was
the light in the farmhouse window . . . Today it might
be the mechanized farm . • • the modern home of a
w c!ty worker" Jiving out from town • • • the hum ot a
rural industry • • • *
The fufure holds more change. Rural America is m
a transition. People are learning that they can move
out from town and "live modern," enjoying low-cost
electric service which we first brought to many aban¬
doned rural areas, Industry Is finding locations, near
good, contented labor sources, away from crowded
cities. -»
Opr Members’ growing electric power requirements creating
are a boost for the nation's economy • pockets • •
business activity that puts money in your roads makes • ♦ •
helps build better schools • • • better • • •
prosperous communities . , . Benefits which are shared
by all * • •
1 HABERSHAM ELECTRIC
Membership Corp.
t )
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yoke of tyranny have the peo¬
ple of this country lived in sub¬
jection.
We have remained free and
grown and prospered and
achieved a greatness unmatched
by any other people on the face
of the earth. So long as we ad¬
here to the sound principles ex¬
pressed by Jefferson in the Dec¬
laration of Independence, free¬
dom will not be lost in the Unit¬
ed States.
In the final analysis, the fu¬
ture of this nation—both im¬
mediate and long-range, will be
determined by the people and no
one else.
* * *
FREEDOM SUCH AS we en¬
joy _ is perhaps difficult to appre¬
ciate. We have never known
anything else. On the other hand,
those who have been victimized
by political, economic, religious
and social oppression know the
true value of the American way
of life *
But those who have come up
in these times of plenty have a
tendency to take their freedom
for granted, and consequently
they become less vigilant and
alert to the dangers which could
someday destroy their heritage.
Freedom is generally lost not
because of any act of God, but
because of the action or inaction
of the people, who either set out
in a calculated attempt to de¬
stroy freedom or who stand by
and do. nothing to defend it.
Speaking of
PUBLIC SAFETY
Public officials have found that j
public education regarding night
driving hazards has paid big divi- i
dends. According to the National :
Street and Traffic Safety Lighting
Bureau, these are the rules that
have helped reduce night driving ia
accidents where street lighting
bad: regulate
1. Slow down. Don’t
your our speed speec by posted limits alone. .
Remember, speed — must -----— be gov- j
erned by conditions, and darkness
is a condition that calls for cau¬
tion. fre¬
2. Have your car checked
quently. In darkness, immediate ,
response of the vehicle is a must.'
Double-check all lights.
3. Be alert. Keept a constant! for
watch for pedestrians and ve¬
hicles with dim lights or no lights
at all.
4. Don’t wear tinted glasses at
night. The advantage they offer in i
reducing glare is more than offset
by the disadvantage in reduced
vision. properly. Use
6. Use headlights rural high
upper beam only on is
ways when no approaching lower car beam
within 1,000 feet. Use
when oncoming cars approach, another
when you are overtaking
car, and when driving in cities and
residential areas. though
6. Dim your lights, fails even dim
an oncoming driver to
his. Trying to get even by blinding
him is risking your neck. Maintain
control of your car by looking at
the right shoulder of lights the highway.
7. Be sure your are on
before you pull onto a thorough¬
fare at night. the travelled
8. Never stop on ;
portion of a roadway at night If ]
you must stop, pull completely off»
the roadway, leaving parking and j
dome lights emergencies. on. Carry flares for]
use in
better giving
for your family
families Nearly three million American
growing are taking advantage of the
trend to home food-freezer
been plans. And countless more have
bewitched — and a little be¬
wildered— by conflicting reports
about the genuine advantages of
this revolutionary shop-at-home
way of marketing by the month.
ilMMSrrtm .jg. Sales of meat
h and frozen foods
I delivered in bulk
to the home last
year totaled $1.7
billion—a sub¬
stantial slice of
the nation’s $73
K billion overall
food bilL
Families considering a plan great¬
ly appreciate guidance, reveals the
general manager of one of the
nation’s oldest home provisioning:
firms. Walter Blazer of Seacrest
Industries Corp. notes that it is
easier to pick the right plan if the.
family keeps a few key points in
mind.
Here are Seacrest’s six yardsticks,
for saving time and money when
choosing a plan:
• • Look for recognized govern¬
ment “Choice,” grading terms, such as
or “Prime,” for meats,
and identifiable brand names on
other foods and staples.
• Are the cuts and kinds of meat
offered those that your family wants
and is used to eating?
• If not, are members entitled to
substitution or exchange of cuts of
meat or other foods that prove un¬
satisfactory? Check
• salesmen’s money-saving
claims against company price lists.
It’s easy to tell whether a claim is
true.
• Check the choice of budget pay¬
ments and delivery schedules avail¬
able. Most clubs try to offer enough
range.
• If you already own a freezer,
check whether y»u will receive the
same benefits as families who buy
both freezer and food through the
plan.
By selecting the right plan ac¬
cording to these six simple points,
Seacrest officials have found, fami¬
lies can enjoy the time-saving bene¬
fits of home food plans — and poc¬
ket savings as well.
A
SLEEK MAILLOT — Tailored
tor swimming and fully lined to
keep Its shape is this sleek one
Piece suit by White Stag. The
suit features a pretty cotton
print accented by tiny buttons
at
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