Newspaper Page Text
Griffin Daily News
big 10 DAY
SAULS July Sale!
One Group Ladies
IF LADIES' Ski rts °nd Blouses
DRESSES 20% off
Av*,Misses - Half Sizes - Jr. ■■■■■■■■ ~
Rettt3o 0 ° Swim Suits
W® S C 0 0 Misses & Jr
WIW Now* O ] / xx
JHM Now /3 off
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Other
T illn Ladies Ladies' I
Dresses PANT 4>W
t/' l/ 2 .... SUITS |h
Our Entire m/*' O| W,
. stock On Sale t£|g 11
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ft 20%o» 2 2 /o f
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■ Girl's Boys'
Dresses Pants
2 to 12 Straight Leg
Permanent Press
' Now price Now 1/2 price
/ 2 to 20
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Boy's Men's Men's Men's & Boys'
Shirts Pants Shirts Walk
Si«s 2 to 12 28 to 40 No. S h Or tS
A / Permanent Press nOQ W ' **
NOW \Z■l' , / A. AA f Reg. to 6.00 3” Permanent Press Now
NOW /q Q no/ off "* 088
01 ZIJ /ft Rent. JOO 099 Solids $5 to $6 M
off Ai\z /W Reg. to 3.09 2 Stripes S3to M 288
SAUL'S JULY SHOE SALE!
Ladies' Shoes o™Table
1M916.99 12 88 Ladies Shoes Sandals
13.99 . 14.99 1 088 O 88 ReMOl2 ” ""
■ V 9.99 - 10.99 6 8 8
1199 • 1299 8 88 088 7 - 99 & " 4 88
999 - 10” - 6.99 388
7.99 -899 4 88 . 3.99-4.99 2 88
Men's Shoes Children's Shoes
Ret *■ Reg. to 10.99
18.99 - 19.99 ] 4°°
W’9 17.99 ]2°° NOW A 85
14.99 ■ 15.99 1 QOO “fr
10
Wednesday/ July 14,1971
FAIR— FAiR
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SA T-:: • ‘ ' V■ •/ 70
FORECAST FOR GRIFFIN —' __ *
AREA - Variable cloudiness \
tonight and tomorrow with \ •MIAMI
chance of afternoon or early X' / Xj
evening showers. —f
Ga. saves money
with 2 new plans
ATLANTA — Two new
Revenue Department programs
will be saving the state at least
$30,000 each per annun,
Revenue Commissioner John
Blackmon told the Governor’s
Reorganization and Manage
ment Improvement Study.
A salary incentive program
for part-time employees who
process state income tax
returns saved $30,000 this tax
season, and a new wine report
ing system begun this month is
expected to also save $30,000
during the next fiscal year.
Also, a reduction in wine tax
discounts by the Revenue
Department will put an addi
tional $60,000 a year into the
State Treasury.
These programs followed a
self-study by the Revenue
Department “to save operating
costs and, at the same time,
offer better service to the
public.”
Governor Jimmy Carter
termed these innovations
“significant” and said, “it’s
men like John Blackmon who
are helping reorganization in its
work. Because of these re
organizational efforts, the state
is already saving money and
improving its services to our
citizens. In light of this pro
gress, I am optimistic about
what results can be achieved by
restructuring our governmental
structure itself.”
Under the incentive program,
the salary of the part-time
employee was based on the
number of returns he processed
an hour. “This competition for
the top pay kept our returns
moving much faster so that
most taxpayers got their re
funds back sooner this year, and
we were able to let our tem
porary employees off the pay
roll over a month earlier.”
In past years the department
has hired an allotted number of
Carey Jones, Jr.
Bank
names
Jones
C. A. Knowles, president of
the First National Bank of
Griffin, announced today the
election of A. Carey Jones, Jr.
as trust officer. Mr. Jones will
be head of the bank’s trust
department.
Mr. Jones, a native of
Atlanta, attended the local
public schools there and later
went to North Georgia College.
He received his 8.8.A. degree
in finance from Georgia State
University in 1965 and his
M.BA. degree in management
from die same institution in
1967. He was employed with
Courts & Co., Investment
Bankers, from 1961 to 1964. He
joined lhe Trust Company of
Georgia in 1965 and has been
with their trust department
since then. His trust experience
includes personal trust ad
ministration and related invest
ment and custodial services,
trust operations, investment
analysis, fiduciary and personal
income, estate and gift taxa
tion, and real estate manage
ment.
He is married to the former
Jeanette Swint of Atlanta and
they have four children, Julia
Jeanette, Dana Carey, David
Dodd and Jenny Elizabeth.
part-time workers, each at the
same salary, to open and sort
returns.
The savings in the wine
reporting system will come
from the elimination of wine tax
stamps which were costing the
state $30,000 to manufacture
each year. The wine stamps
w&e traditionally bought by the
wholesaler as advance tax pay
ment and any wine bottles in his
stock were required to bear
them.
The wine reporting system
was passed by the 1971 Georgia
General Assembly with the
endorsement of the Revenue
Department.
Instead of buying tax stamps,
the wine sholesaler will file
inventory reports and pay tax
only on the wine he has already
sold each month.
The reporting system will
save time for the winery, which
had to affix the stamps, and free
the wholesaler from having to
pay his wine tax revenue in ad
vance.
The tax discount allowed each
wine wholesaler has been
reduced from 3 percent to 1%
percent on the tax due. The wine
tax discount is allowed each
wholesaler to defray his tax
bookkeeping expenses. The
reduction in the discount should
bring in an additional $60,000 a
year according to the Revenue
Department Alcohol and
Tobacco Tax Unit.
Storewide Summer
CLEARANCE
Men’s, Women’s and Children’s Shoes . . .
SAVE u,> TO 60%
CLEARANCE — Special Group
Women's and Teens’ Italian Sandals
Vaiues 000
to $5.00 x,
★ Ist Quality PANTY HOSE sQcpr,
CLEARANCE —Special Group
BOYS’ and GIRLS; SANDALS ,
Values $ "I 91
to $4.00 EJffly
————— l
★ Remember ... All $2.97 Shoes —2 Pairs $5
Bold, Brawny Italian ;
Sandals for Men and Big £ 66
Boys ... Our Regular $5.97 “w
Dark Brown. Sim s=sE. (
e Plenty of Free Parking
372 North FfflHL
Expressway ■ <0 I
NextToRBM K
Volkswagen
Prices Good All 121 Stores!
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Hospital Reporf t
The following persons have
been admitted to the Griffin-
Spalding County Hospital: •
Ronnie James Wells, Micheal
Stoghill, Mrs. Melanie Gaines,
Mrs. Opel James, Mrs. Patricia
Head, Mrs. Martha Craytorf,
Cynthia Parks, Robert Nichols,
Cathy Lawrence, Tony Jones,
Mrs. Joan Pursley, Mrs. Josie
Lee Gardner, Mrs. Eunice'
Barnes, Worth Dunn, John
Hixson, Mrs. Dianne Thomp
son, Preston Benton, Mri.{
Annie Johnston, Danny Cum
mings, Janie Goolsby, George
Graham, Mrs. Margie Ruth
Fowler, Willie Davis Marshall, i
Mrs. Gertrude Durham.
The following were dismiss- ,
ed:
Chester Biles, Gerald John- -
son, Mrs. Brenda Joan Presley
and baby, Johnnie Mae Black,
Paul Marion Reems, Mrs. Zola
Lee Goolsby, Jerry Wade
Janney, Mrs. Elizabeth Dun
bar, Walter H. Sealey, Mrs.
Sandra Jean Upchurch an&
baby, Walter Reed, Mrs. Mary
King, T. Ernest White, Dewey
J. Green. t
About Town
ROTARY CLUB •
Congressman John J. “Jack”
Flynt of Griffin will speak to the
Griffin Rotary Club on Thurs
day, at noon, at the Elks Club
Flynt is a member of the Ap
propriations Subcommittee
which funds the State Depart
ment.