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New *66 Fords... *'00* '
i
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For having fUn I
RANCHERO. all-new < K
sizzling performance ^ 'P I
Longer wheelbase, wider tread ,^ti \
and new suspension give the ■
Ranchero new riding smooth¬ |
ness. Bucket seats, center
console, wall-to-wall carpeting,
air-conditioning—are all ottered.
Choice of smooth Six or
powerful V-8’s, 3- or 4-speed
stick shift. m
BRONCO, a new kind'of 4-wheel- S •V;
drive excitement from-Ford 1 ;1
We’ve got the Bronco you want...
Roadster, Wagon or Sports Utility- r
Ml •*& Bronco’s 4-wheel drive and frisky
$ 6-cylinder engine take you places you
; :
snsg;.gSi x : wouldn’t believe... beach sand,
•»aa~ n - SUSP over *f.
r through deep snow, up hills too steep for t
<#• roads. Bronco features clashless gear
shifting, no annoying whine in 2-wheel v i
drive, smooth front coil-spring ride.
or getting jobs done t
STYLESIDE, new with the
smooth ride of two front axles
Styleside’s Twin-I-Beam suspension
smooths every road. Steering’s J
side sway’s J ■AMrri
surer, gone, stops are
steadier. Ford's Styleside is as m
tough as they come, too. It’s
built with forged axles, husky
radius rods, choice of two power¬ .€0
ful Sixes and a big V-8 engine.
Powered by Ford...Presented by Your Ford Dealer!
Sosebee-CIine Ford Snc
Cleveland, Ga. - >■
Annual Winterizing Is Vital Phase
Of Economical Home Maintenance
-T
"Careful Checkup
1 "; Fall May Saye
Big Repair Bills
Getting a house ready for win¬
ter doesn’t end merely with
hanging storm windows and
having the heating plant in¬
spected. in¬
Equally important is an
spection of the entire house and
grounds to discover weak points
that might break down under
the onslaught of winter winds,
snow, ice, and sleet.
Roof Important
These include loose shutters
and siding, dead tree limbs that
might be blown down to cause
damage, a tottering in TV chimneys antenna,
crumbling foundation, mortar things
and and such
as loose screening in attic vents
that might entice squirrels or
other rodents to take up resi¬
dence.
Perhaps most important of all
to a home’s winter welfare is
the condition of the roof. This
is where winter’s hardest blows
land: scraping ice, melting snow,
severe temperature changes,
harsh winds.
Leaks Are Tlireat
Most any homo owner can get
a fair idea of whether his roof
will protect the houso through
the long winter by merely look¬
ing at it. If it looks shabby, it
probably is worn out and will
have to be replaced. A closer in¬
spection can be made in the attic
during a rainstorm. Darkened
areas along deck boards and
rafters indicate leaks. This means
the entire roof is weak, since uni
roofing material wears
formly. -
When a roofing contractor
confirms the home owner’s an¬
alysis, chances are he’ll recom¬
mend a new roof that of asphalt
shingles at a price surprise. general¬ This is
ly because is a pleasant asphalt shingles in
roofing go
place quickly over eld
material, keeping the labor cost
Of applying them at a low level.
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Wise home owner swarms all
inspection. over his house for caulks pre-winter cracks
He
around doors and windows, checks 1;
repairs broken siding, aerial, 2; 8;
chimney and TV
lates attic ventilating floor, 4; checks screen
ing In louvers, 5; in
spects roofing material, 6;
around foundation, 7; and
sheets furnace, 8; A similar
nual pre-winter check can
any home owner a lot of
weather headaches.
1BE CLEVELAND (GA.) COURIER
.... ........... .......
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- with flameless electric heat!
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Flameless electricity . . . Convenient, clean, economical
. . . and safe. Lets you select from many combinations
of heating systems, for both new and existing homes . . .
to get just what suits you best.
In our area, both farm and non-farm homes are en¬
joying the advantages of electric heating and cooling,
which low-cost electric power helps make possible . . .
^We're pioneers in the bringing of modern electric liv¬
ing to rural areas . . . and everyone benefits when our
Members live better -- electrically!
Habersham Electric
Membership Corp
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(cj ICjl COMMUNITY OWNED • COMMUNITY BUILT
Qn »fC* • COMMUNITY BUILDER
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House ‘Detective’
! Can Find, Arrest
Budget Robbers
Proper home maintenance ta
’one of the most important as¬
pects in the economics of home
owning today. fuel Is costly to
Heating too
be wasted. Labor costs for
major repair jobs—often high. the Even re¬
sult of neglect—are a
leaky water faucet can waste
dollars worth of water if it I;
Ignored for long.
Waste Avoided
Waste and damage through
neglect can. be avoided by semi¬
annual InspectiO-S by the home
owner. He can caulk heat-wast¬
ing cracks at the foundation and
around window weatherstripping. and door frames,
and install
New washers elimin* *# ^ater
waste, and a fresh coal <rf paint
can protect exposed westhar surfaces
against severe winter
mg. the major of
Among loss insufficient causes
excess heat are
insulation and the lack of storm
sash, and doors. Accessible areas
such as attic floors, floors above
crawl spaces, and the ceiling
and wall of an attached, insulated un¬
heated garage can be
easily by the home owner with
batts or blankets of mineral
wooL Other wall and mineral ceiling
areas can be filled with
wool by a contractor with equip¬
ment that blows insulation into
enclosed spaces.
Storm Sash Vital
Combination storm and screen
doors and windows of ponderosa
pine can material be purchased dealers from in
building fit all _
sizes to requirements, units
• These wood combination
are preferred because wood is a
natural insulating material and
can be painted to harmonize
with exterior color schemes,
A properly insulated house
with storm sash and doors can
be heated for as much as 50 per
cent less per year than a house
insulated to minimum FHA re
| quiremenh and doors. ^« + hout “to*”u — sasa
WHEN FRANCE vecognized
Red China in January, 1964, the
French foreign minister made
the statement that the Chinese
Communists were “modern, dis¬
ciplined, and progressive” and
ready to live in peace and har¬
mony with the Free World.
It was view then, and is
now, that the ?
French official %
must have tem- | «
porarily lost
tonch with
reality. Appar¬
ently, he has %
not ed from yet eraerg- this | |
world,
for he still argues that Red
rfrinft is a fit candidate for ad
mission to the United Nations,
and should be let in.
The United Nations, with all
its faults and problems, is an
organization dedicated to the
preservation of world peace, and
it Is difficult for me to envision
Red China sitting in its councils.
Red China, at whose doorstep
aan be laid most of the existing
problems in Southeast Asia, in
^n^fng- the Viet Nam war, has
yi .Ai it exceedingly clear that
Jfc to not interested in peace.
Under the Mao Tse-Tung re¬
gime, warmongering and ag
gresslon are the order of the
toy, and {ha Communist Chinese
moke bo secret of the fact that
they hope someday to dominate
aR of Asia from Japan to India,
and ultimately to rule the Com
xmnast world.
(V«l inpartd or printed : R ; ffc.’-.-rnment ts f en ti )
DOLLARS SEN!
\ AWAY FOR
'?y PRINTING
Never Come Beck
irflt Us Do Yew Prtnttof
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ARGUMENTS FOR admitting
Red China to the United Nations
become even more ludicrous m
light of the fact that about the
same time the French foreign
minister was urging the seating
of Mao’s delegates, the Chinese
foreign minister was declaring
that if Red China were to join
the U.N. certain demands would
‘
have to be met first, g,
Peking said toe U.N. would
have to withdraw its condemna¬
tion of China as an aggressor in
the Korean War, call all the
nations together for a review of
the U.N. Charter and probably
rewrite it along Chinese lines*
and also expel Nationalist C hina
and “all imperialistic puppets" would
which, according to Mao,
include virtually all non-Com
munist nations.
And, from the way toe Com¬
munist Chinese time, it are probably acting would a Hng
present the Soviet Umon as m *
include
SIMPLY STATED, if Bed
China came to the United Na¬
tions, it would do so with no
•other purpose la mind than to
wreek that organization.
The U.N. has more pressing
business to attend to than the ;
wasting of time considering the t
•admission of Red China to S3 ■
ranks. I see no good purpose to ,
be served by such a move. i
SCIENCE YOUR LIFE IN* i
the A long life ana a healthy Work MM W
goal as scientists to eonj
quer major and adversaries minor scourges Hkfl polio or
man. Ancient
and tuberculosis art bring over*
come; heart disease and cancer are
giving ground. another , ^
In the laboratories
Struggle rid continues: the effort to
man of the ailments which, if
they his do not threaten to cat short
life, certainly afford him an
r.oyance and discomfort.
-
patients A two-year suffering aldy from of the allergic 1,166
and chronic conjtanctivitis was con¬
ducted by prominent opthalmolo*
gist. Dr. H. C. Menger. Reporting
his findings in the American Medi¬
cal Association Journal, Dr. Men¬
ger revealed that a unique vas
coconstrietor, effective against Visine, allergic proved
tivitis in 96 conjunc¬
percent of the cases,
and prompt relief fro m chronic
conjunctivitis What this in 86 in pei simple rcent. lan¬
means
guage is that a preparation has
now been found which safely and
symptoms effectively of combats conjunctivitis the unpleasant
caused
by instance,. irritation “Dr. or allergies, <f In no
rebound effect Menger adds, In "did
a occur. addi¬
tion to the excellent decongestant
of action, Visine the is greatest its low factor almost in favor nil
or
side effects."
Reaction to the eye drop was re¬
within ported 16-80 to begin minutes immediately instil¬ or
after
lation, Response botira. last* from one
to four No ill effects were
discovered even after prolonged
VS&
The excellent development example of of Visine science's is
an
tireless efforts to provide more
answers problems, to medicine'# ji&ixful
*
MRS. T
FORUM
S- 7 STEWART
Time to oil five clock? Squirt an
atomizer filled with light oQ through the
any convenient opening will in de¬
clock’s back. The fine mist
m :.XX
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less likely to be knocked over.
• • •
You can straighten plastic them in knit¬ hot
ting needles by dipping flafi"sur¬
water, roiling them on's
face, then inserting" them In the
loops of corrugated'cardboard.
• • •
To clean garbage palls more eas¬
ily and'get rid'ojf bad odorjv use e
solution of Pine-Sol and mater.
Leaving will keep a little solution in eaffh fait
insects away.
* * *
clothesline Stockings if won’t blow around marble the to
each you put a
toe.
• • •
Stateiess steel i* the easiest kitch¬
en metal to clean. Worth remember¬
ing,nexttime youshop for pots and
pans?"
To\remove,a splinter from your
firfge^.painlesKly^ to^xour'fi n’ger tmfiLifelniunb^Ehaidf hold' an- ice- cub*
yotfwon’tferi V things
44 Recipes You
Will Remember^
a 1*
4 A
Q
i c • Jf
9
tNL
A handy recipe booklet listing
Canada's favorite foods with ex¬
pert Instructions how to prepare
these dishes has been compiled by
Canadian Naitonal Railways from
popular specialized recipes used by
chefs in Canadian National dining
cars and hotels.
The recipes range from succulent
codfish tongues as prepared in New¬
foundland, from through 8teauing pea
soup old Quebec, to sizzling
cowboy steak from the wide-open
spaces of the West and British
Columbia’s '“Cohoe Salmon Diplo
mate.’’
Copies of the “Recipes You Win
Remember" booklet may be otK
tained free by writing the Public
Relations Office. Canadian National
at MO Fifth Avenue, New .York.
NAt tOWAt IMTOllAi
iTI
is fronts reported One on this of
too.
the most recent of
these common di¬
seases research to give way
to is con-,
jnnctivitis, painful inflamms- the
tion of the mem¬
brane lining the
posit «il on
even hard-to
reach parts.
If pov. use •
costly vase as a
table decor a
tion, fill it with
sand. This unit
make the vase
more stable and