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Frank Gunnels
Gunnels
running
for board
Frank Gunnels issued this
statement in connection with his
candidacy for a seat on the
Spalding County Commission:
There are many questions
asked about how our county
government is being run and
how our tax money is being
spent. There are many more
questions that will be asked,
and they also will need to be
answered. I pledge to you that if
I am elected I will seek the
answers and bring the county
government back to the people
where it rightfully belongs. I
also pledge to you that when a
department budget is presented
for approval it will be studied
very carefully; and if there is
any unnecessary money being
appropriated, it will be
eliminated. I will work with the
two commissioners and most of
all, I will work with the people
of Spalding County to make this
County one of the finest in the
State.
I ask for your support and
vote on November 8.
The war was over and
the world was tailing in love again
Alovr Uorv is Skr- , vrig It s beautiful .hili’ it Iml,
LIZA ROBERT
MINNELLI DENIRO
NEW YORK NEW YORK
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PARKWOOD CINEMA I
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PARKWOOD CINEMA II
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CUFF ROffiRTSM ERNEST BON6NINE HENRY SUVA
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WE HAVE INSTALLED
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2 Convenient
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2 Convenient Locations
fried
OF GRIFFIN
131 East Solomon St 1477 West Mclntosh Road
Phone 227-3678 Phone 228-2432
Owned and Operated By
Mr. & Mrs. Ralph Freeman ForOver 14 Years
Griffin and Spalding BPW to begin
national observance next week
Next week is National
Business Women’s Week and
the Griffin and Spalding County
Business and Professional
Women’s Clubs will begin the
week’s observance as special
guests of the Second Baptist
Church Sunday.
Attendance at the church for
the regular Sunday morning
worship services com
memorates the 50th year that
the week has been observed.
The week was set aside in 1927
to make note of the ac
complishments of all working
women and to publicize the goals
and achievements of the
National Federations.
National Business Women’s
Week will focus national at
tention on the importance of
working women and on business
and professional women. Each
club since 1927 has been par
ticipating in a uniform schedule
of events.
Other activities included for
the week’s observance include a
banquet at the Griffin Country
Club at 7 p.m. Tuesday. The
Rev. Bruce Morgan, pastor of
the First Baptist Church, will be
Henry Walker elected
director of foundation
Henry Walker, general
manager, Dundee Mills, was
one of 5 textile executives
elected as directors of The
Textile Education Foundation,
Inc., at the organization’s 34th
annual meeting in Atlanta
today.
Charles M. Jorgeson, general
manager, BFGoodrich Textile
Products, Thomaston, was
elected president, succeeding
W. Douglas Ellis, Jr., vice
president of Southertn Mills in
Atlanta.
William J. Shortt, director,
government and trade
relations-southeast, Johnson &
Johnson, was named vice
president; Cyrus M Neuner,
plant manager, General Tire &
Rubber Company, Aldora Mills
Division, Barnesville, was
elected treasurer; Frank L.
Carter and Jesse W. Curlee,
both of Atlanta, were reelected
executive vice president and
secretary, respectively.
Others named to the board of
directors were: Thomas M.
Brumbeloe, president and
treasurer, Canton Textile Mills,
Inc., Canton; William J.
Martin, director of develop
ment, decorative fabrics,
Milliken & Company,
LaGrange; Richard Moses,
plant superintendent, Pine Tree
Plant, Burlington Industires,
Dahlonega, and the new
treasurer, Cyrus M. Neuner.
The meeting of the Foun
dation, attended by more than
200 textile executives, wives
and guests, was held at the
School of Textile Engineering,
on the Georgia Tech campus.
Organized in 1943 to help
the speaker.
On Saturday there will be a
special breakfast at the Holiday
Inn beginning at 7:30 a.m. Judy
Hamby, national representative
of the American Cancer Society
will be the speaker.
National Business Women’s
Week is traditionally
proclaimed annually by the
President of the United States.
President Carter in making
this year’s proclamation
thanked the concerted efforts of
many groups like the
Federation for helping to im
prove the status of women in the
business and professional
fields.
“Women now comprise about
40 percent of our total work
force, and the degree of par
ticipation in almost every phase
of comemrce, industry and
government is steadily im
proving,” the president said in
his proclamation.
Listing some of the ac
complishments of the Griffin
Chapter of the BPWC, members
noted that the club with others
in the state was responsible for
women having the priviledge of
meet industry’s demand for
textile engineers, the Foun
dation has contributed more
than two million dollars to
Georgia Tech to provide many
programs of assistance to the
Textile School. Included have
been funds for student
scholarships, predoctoral
fellowships, machinery and
laboratory equipment, salary
and travel supplement,
promotion of textile career
opportunities, publications to be
used by the students, and
promotion of vocational
education.
New books
♦
The following new books have
been added to the collection of
the Flint River Regional
Library:
ADVENTURE & TRAVEL:
“Buttercups and Daisy” by
Elizabeth Cragoe—the author
and her husband make their
dream of escaping to the
country come true; “Treasure”
by Robert Daley—recounts the
11-year search of gold-obsessed
Mel Fisher for the sunken
Spanish galleon Atocha and its
cargo of gold and sliver.
HANDICRAFTS: “Tan Your
Hide!: Home tanning leathers
and furs” by Phyllis Hobson
just what you need to tan your
own leather and fur, and all the
steps involved in doing it right;
“Creative Ropecraft” by Stuart
E. Grainger—presents first all
the standard practical knots
and splices in easy-to-follow
drawings and then proceeds to
give step-by-step instructions in
the variations of decorative
ropecraft.
FICTION: “Maria” by
Eugenia Price—a stirring
historical novel, set in St.
Augustine, Fla., of a
remarkable woman, unique for
her time in having a profession;
“Monsieur Monde Vanishes” by
Georges Simenon—Monsieur
Monde decides to separate
himself from the burdens of life
and leaves behind his two
disastrous marriages, his
blatantly homosexual son, and
the boredom of his business for
a sojourn in Nice with a
desperate young woman;
“Circles: a Washington story”
by Abigail McCarty—the
fantasy of a television special
about a Midwestern liberal who
might just as well be running
for the presidency becomes a
reality when the non-candidate
decides to enter the political
race; “Life and Mary Ann” by
Catherine Cookson—l7-year-old
Mary Ann Shaughnessy deals
with life as it is when her
childhood sweetheart, Corny
Boyle, deserts her to go to
America and Mr. Lord’s
grandson, at Lord’s prompting,
ft rjl
Rev. Bruce M. Morgan
voting in the state of Georgia.
The Griffin club was among
the first to give a SSOO con
tribution to the Griffin-Spalding
County Hospital when it was
built.
The club was the first civic
group to make a donation of SSOO
to start the training school for
practical nurses.
For many years the club
sponsored the “Welcome
Traveler” program which
helped to sell the community to
tourists from different
segments of the country.
The club gives a SSOO
scholarship each year to some
young woman in the com
munity, and donated SBSO to the
Griffin High Band Boosters
Club; SSOO to the new library
committee; donated SBSO to the
“Downtown Beautification” of
the City of Griffin.
Talkathons and a pancake
sale helped to raise matching
funds for the Griffin Golden Age
Club. The BPW purchased the
van used to transport the
Golden Agers.
pleads his own cause; “War
Games” by Anthony Price—a
young revolutionary finds gold
hidden during the storming of
Stnadingham Castle in the 17th
century, his cousin suddenly
dies, and Intelligence Chief
David Audley is called in to
investigate.
Bank profits
up 18 percent
ATLANTA (AP) - Third
quarter profits for First Nation
al Holding Corp, jumped 18 per
cent above 1976 levels, the At
lanta-based bank holding com
pany reported .
Net income totaled $3,028,000,
or 75 cents a share, in the quar
ter ended Sept. 30, compared
with earnings of $2,568,000 or 63
cents a share for the same
quarter in 1976, the company
said.
Net income for the first three
quarters of 1977 was $8,633,000
or $2.13 a share, up 13 percent
from the $7,645,000 or SI.BB a
share posted for the same peri
od last year, according to the
company, whose largest bank is
the First National Bank of At
lanta.
It’s Alive
[PG) COLOR
Showtimes:
Weekdays 7:23 & 9:00 P.M.
5un.5:46; 7:23; 9:00P.M.
imperial theatre 227 4214
h—B—WBBM
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Page 5
—Griffin Daily News Saturday, October 15, 1977
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