Newspaper Page Text
6A
—FORSYTH COUNTY NEWS—SUNDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1985
Business
i.i Bwf rrHki. r I * ; K
j 11 •■
■»R5><S
Going up
Workers have been scaling new heights getting the stores at
Merchant’s Square shopping center ready to open. Greg McArtle
stretches to tape the muiti-coiored front of Ingles grocery store. He
and Ron DuMars, employees of Collins Signs of Dothan, Ala., were
hanging the store’s sign last week.
Forsyth CountvNews
WHEN A HEARING 7
AID WILL HELP /
CALL FOR
FREE TEST
IN YOUR HOME OR OUR OFFICE
GAINESVILLE,
GEORGIA
542 S. Enota Dr., N.E.
Phone
THE
BROWN
Chiropractic Clinic
Hwy. 9 South—Va mile from Tri-County Plaza
1. Headaches, Nervousness, Dizziness, and Tension.
2. Neck Pains, Torticollis, Bursitis, and arm pains.
3. Muscular aches of upper back, shoulders,& arms.
4. Chest pain, functional Heart distress, difficult
breathing, and asthma.
5. Stomach and liver disorders.
6. Shingles, and disturbances of the upper bowels.
7. Kidney disorders, skin disturbances, and mid back
ache.
8. Slipped disc, lumbago, and low-back pains.
9. Sciatica, constipation, menstrual problems, and
saco-iliac pains.
10. Bladder disturbances, leg cramps, and colon
disorders.
—COMING—
Saturday, November 2nd., 1985
BENEFIT DANCE
For South Forsyth Jr. High School
7:30-10:30 p.m. at South Forsyth Jr. High
Refreshments
And Food
Will Be
I
ijgßw*• j \x v
n
jjgpr
H mm’- i
iv ' • «iaas& «|
Staff Photos Laura McCullough
SOMETHING
FOR
EVERYONE!
LIVE
BAND!
Served
Sponsored by TLC Foster Homes For Animals
Classes set for home businesses
Four courses on running a home
business will be offered at Gainesville
Junior College starting Oct. 15 and
ending Oct. 24.
The series is jointly sponsored by
GJC and the University of Georgia
Small Business Development Center,
in partnership with the Small Busi
ness Administration.
“An Overview of Making Money at
Home” will be offered Oct. 15 from
BPW Saturday seminar scheduled
Do you own your own business? Or
maybe you’re thinking about starting
your own business? Or are you just
interested in knowing more about the
business world?
The Business and Professional
Women’s organization of Cumming
/Forsyth County is sponsoring an
exciting morning of seminars and
workshops just for these people.
“BPW: Helping Women get into
Business” will be held on Saturday,
Oct. 12, at the Forsyth County Court
GJC offers management sessions
Workshops geared towards lead
ership development, women man
agers, better writing skills and
interviewing skills are being offered
through the Office of Continuing Edu
cation at Gainesville Junior College
and the Northeast Georgia Small
Business Development Center this
month.
“Better Writing Skills for Man
agers” will be offered Wednesday,
Oct. 16, from 6 until 9 p.m.
This workshop is geared toward
persons in decision-making positions
who want to get better results and
spend less time in the decision-mak
ing process. When written commu
nications are involved, ineffective
communications are costly.
On Tuesday, Oct. 15, from 6 until 9
p.m., a workshop on Leadership De
s 3°° Admission
for Non-TLC Member
s 2°° Admission
for TLC Members
XS
9:30 until 11:30 a.m. Emphasis will be
given to identifying personal goals for
owning a home business, understand
ing personal qualifications for owning
a home business, and formulating
deals for a profitable home business.
“Planning a Home Business” will
be offered Oct. 17 from 9:30 until
11:30 a.m. The course will be a study
of space requirements and legal and
financial requirements for owning a
house from 9 a.m. until 2 p.m.
On the agenda is Paul Kraeger, a
trainer with IBM, who will speak
about business opportunities in the
Forsyth County community.
Kraeger will emphasize how to
determine if there is a market place
for a particular product or service
and the success or failure rate it
would have in the area.
Coni Harvey, owner of “Can-Am
Marketing” will talk on how to sell a
velopment will be held. There is a
close relationship between leaders’
styles and their effectiveness in deal
ing with employees.
But other variables in the situation
also affect leadership efforts: the
attitudes, personality, experiences,
skills, and power of the leaders; the
nature of the group being led; and the
particular circumstances.
Dr. Foster Watkins, president of
GJC, will reflect on these variables as
they relate to leadership devel
opment.
The Role of the Woman Manager
will be held Wednesday, Oct. 16, from
1 until 4 p.m. As more and more
women enter the business world and
move into supervisory and manage
ment positions, the abilities to plan,
delegate, motivate and organize be
• Will everybody in town getting
7 W Maximum Interest Checking
please raise their hands.
That’s right. Only Home Federal has Max* M the 7%% Maximum Interest Checking account.
When you keep a minimum balance of SI,OOO or more, Max pays you a full 7'/ 2 % interest on your
balance. (If your balance goes below the minimum, you’ll still earn a good rate of interest.)
You won’t find another account in town like Max.
There are no maintenance or check charges. And there is never a use charge for our
Homeßanker automatic teller machines.
And, if you like, we’ll set up Max to work with our
Money Market Investment Account. That way you can take
unused funds in your Max account and put them where they’ll
earn an even higher interest rate.
Max. 7 1 /2% Maximum Interest Checking only at
Home Federal.
If we’ve got your interest, raise your hand.
Gainesville (Sycamore Street, Sherwood Plaza. College Square and Brown’s Bridge Road), Clarkesville, Blue
Ridge and Cumming. Phone 535-9600 (Gainesville); 632-2025(81ue Ridge); 754-2180 (Clarkesville); 887-6134 (Cumming)
Rates subject to change. Interest rates and account charges differ for lower minimum deposit levels. Member FSLIC.
home business.
“Organizing a Home Business” will
be offered Oct. 22 from 9:30 until
11:30 a.m. This session is designed to
help in understanding record keeping
for a home business and the pricing
products and servic
“Getting It All Together” will be
offered Oct. 24 from 9:30 until 11:30
a.m. After attending this session cli
ents will be able to identify their
product or service. Ms. Harvey will
stress how to set up a business plan,
how to understand a customer, along
with promoting and advertising a
product.
The legal aspects of operating a
business will be addressed by Ann
Patterson, an attorney in Fort Ogle
thorpe, while Henry Pair of the Small
Business Administration will discuss
the financial side of starting and
maintaining a business.
“Images by Parker III” and An
come critical. This seminar is de
signed to teach women how to
objectively manage others for
greater productivity.
Instructor for this course is Judy
Suiter, president of Competitive
Edge, Inc., a firm specializing in
travel consulting and human re
source development training. She
holds a bachelor of science degree in
industrial and personal psychology.
Designed to aid interviewers in
selecting “information gathering”
questions, “Interviewing Skills for
Personnel Managers” will be offered
Friday, Oct. 18, from 9 a.m. until
noon.
The atmosphere of the interview
will also be discussed.
For more information and registra
tion, call Freida Hill at 535-6318.
B
Kim JH B
m |H9f bb*»bH/
inlfl mi
Jg||g|BwfW
b i 1
llfF ’ jL j|P
proposed trade area. This session is
also designed to clients become
knowledgeable of resources available
for home business information.
The fee for taking all four of the
courses is $75. For those persons who
wish to register for individual ses
sions, the fee is S2O per session.
Call Freida Hill at 535-6318 for more
information or registration.
gela Thomas of Thomas and Asso
ciates will end the program with
“Inside and Out: Creating the Very
Best You.”
The registration fee for all
workshops, including luncheon, is sl7
payable to Cumming/Forsyth County
BPW, P.O. Box 2092, Cumming, Ga.
30130 and must be received by Oct. 10.
For more information about BPW or
the workshops, call 889-0445 or 887-
6992.
I ijL I
Cline promoted
Sheryl Cline, formerly Opera
tions Manager at Bank South,
N.A./Cumming, has been pro
moted to Banking Officer. Mrs.
Cline began working parttime
for Fulton National Bank, now
Bank South, in 1964,
imiijEz
IIIHKAI
/jl/Alt