Newspaper Page Text
Thursday, May 12, 1966 Griffin Daily News
Service Pins Presented At Griff in-Spalding Hospital
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Jack Moore, administrator, Mrs. Nathaniel Bailey,
Mrs. T. E. Henderson and Mrs. O. R. Butler.
Service pins representing 318 years of service were
presented this week at the Griffin-Spalding County
Hospital. Twenty year pins were presented to Mrs.
Frances Callaway, Mrs. Frances Norton, Mrs. Annie
Maude Buchanan. Fifteen year pins were presented to
Mrs. Mable Penley, Mrs. Wanda Ross, Mrs. Edith Brit-
WE WERE LUCKY TO GET
12 MORE SETS-SAVE NOW!
TELEPHONE ORDERS INVITE D - IMMEDIATE DELIVERY!
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CARLOAD PURCHASE • • • Wide selection • • •
Famous Simmons quality • • • While they last
SPECIAL SALE
Yes, we bought a careload of comfort.... the best there is, $3995
Simmons comfort. Here’s a wonderful assortment of
mattresses in discontinued covers at sure-to-please low,
low prices. Choose from stripes, prints or geometric pat
terns. Choose from tufted or tuftless, twin or full size.
But choose now because these will go fast, and quantities Mattress or
are definitely limited. Shop today, save today. matching boxspring I
TRMS - - $500 dw,, $500 Month On Set
e SEE THE GIANT WINDOW DISPLAY e
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Tju_n_n.i ijurui-
206 - 208 South Hill Street Phone 227-9436
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Mrs. Ethel Kendrick, Mrs. Nell Pullin, Jimmy Cald
well, Mrs. Betty Parham and Mrs. Vertie Pullin.
ton, Mrs. Mary Henzel, Otis Dukes, Mrs. Fannie Mae
Maddox, Billy Mathis, Mrs. Sara Alexander, Miss Ruth
Mullins, Mrs. Ethel Kendrick, Jimmy Caldwell and
Mrs. Vertie Pullin. Ten year pins went to Mrs. Willie
B. Barrow, Miss Joyce, Chapman, Mrs. Annie Dora
Ellis, Mrs. Annie Lois Odom, Mrs. Nell Pullin and Mrs.
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Mrs. Annie Maude Buchanan, Billy Mathis and Mrs.
Fannie Mae Maddox.
Betty Parham. Mrs. Nathaniel BaOey of the Red Cross
Gray Ladies was presented a 15 year bar. Mrs. T. E.
Henderson, Mrs. O. R. Butler, Mrs. Gordon Statham,
Bounty
Hunters Wave
The Checks
By LEROY POPE
U n ited Press International
NEW YORK (UPI) The
bounty hunter, that feared and
despised saddle tramp of the
Old West, is back in action.
The modern bounty hunter
stalks his victims with the
same dedication and persever
ance as the ferocious and re
lentless chaps who rounded up
fugitives from justice tor re
ward money in the 1880s—but
he doesn’t want to drag them
to the gallows or the chain
gang.
The bounty hunter today
works for a big corporation. He
probably travels in an air-con
ditioned car and his job is to
wave bounty checks under the
noses of happily employed engi
neers, scientists and marketing
men and seduce them into
changing jobs.
New Era Product
The bounty hunter is the
product of the new era of “full
employment” in which the un
employed are very largely the
unemployable and the only way
companies with rapidly expand
ing businesses can get com
petent workers and executives
and skilled professionals is to
steal them.
Bounty hunters are being em
ployed by even the largest and
most reputable companies.
The bounty hunter, who is
really a regular employee of
the company with other duties,
gets $50 to $100 for every new
worker he brings in who sticks
to his new job. The new work
ers get all sorts of bounty
help in relocating, a gift of a
refrigerator or an air condi
tioner, a promise of eight hours
regular overtime every week.
Even Down Payments
There have even been stories
of companies offering to defray
the down payment on a car so
the worker could drive to work.
But the biggest bounties be
ing offered to younger male
workers are a draft exempt
status based on the nature of
the job — “This produces an
astounding number of in
quiries,” one bounty hunter
said.
Another proffered inducement
is just the opposite. Say some
bounty hunters — “We tell peo
ple our company has almost
no defense business so they
won’t be displaced if the war in
Viet Nam ends.”
What has caused all this fren
zied recruiting?
It’s a genuine and growing
shortage of workers of all
kinds. Some specific examples
—Chicago employment offices
reported 65,000 jobs going beg
ging in the area in April. U.S,
Steel was having trouble put
ting on 1,000 people at its Gary
Ind., mill. Boeing Co. will need
15,000 in the Seattle area this
year. Lockheed wanted 5,000 in
Southern California as of mid
April. 8
You could go on and on nam
ing companies that need hun
dreds or thousands of workers.
Newspaper help wanted ads are
r unn ing in volume at a 25-year
high yet the employment agen
cies say many of the people
they're looking for never look
at want ads, so they’re taming
to display ads and to radio
spots. Since these may not
reach the worker himself, the
copy writer sometimes pitches
his appeal to friend wife in the
hope that she’ll take the bait
and suggest to her man that he
investigate the career opportu
nity.
Some of the sneakier bounty
hunters even sink so low as to
call on the wives of prospective
targets.
EXPENSIVE GARBAGE
MEXICO CITY (UPI) —
Yolanda Valdes thought her
new maid was a jewel, but it
turned out she was a jewel
thief.
Mrs. Valdes was delighted
when the maid carried out the
garbage Wednesday without
waiting to he told—until she
found out that $1,600 worth of
jewelry and cash which had
been in her bedroom also was
missing. The maid has not bees
seen since.
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Mrs. Mable Penley, Mrs. Frances Callaway, Mrs.
Willie B. Barrow, Mrs. Frances Norton and Mrs.
Wanda Ross.
Mrs. Florence Smith and Mrs. Bruce McDaniel were
presented 100 hour pins.
(Griffin Daily News Staff Photos.)
Oct
into the
swing
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