Newspaper Page Text
Hr —
Shiarf House Zfews
Truett Cathy, publisher
Jack Troy, editor
Official organ of the brand new
Dwarf House
Greater Atlanta and Clayton County’s finest
drive-in restaurant
- Dedicated to Fine Food For the entire Family -
Radio Station WEAD
presents 3-Day
Remote Program
A three-day remote broad
cast by radio station WEAD,
Hilton Inn — with the tower in
the Clayton County portion of
College Park — Is in the ex
pert hands of General Manager
Frank Lokey...Thursday, June
28, Friday and Saturday.
Mr. Lokey, who is an expert
in karati — he can break bricks
with his bare hands — handles
a microphone with velvet glo
ves. That is to say, he is tops
in his field.
Mr. Lokey is a perfectionist.
He worries about every little
detail being exactly right, and
in this respect he is no dif
ferent than Dwarf House Own
er Truett Cathy and general
contractor Fred Durden.
For three days Mr. Lokey
will interview people, play mu
sic, and generally spread the
word of the fabulous Dwarf
rite 'PnAud
4* ■
Hew "Dwm^
And we wish to take this opportunity to
congratulate Truett Cathy on the old
American spirit of pioneering in.present
ing something new in drive-in restau
rants. All the best to Mr. Cathy in his
new enterprise.
Pinkie (Red) Phillips
I i»i
Forest Hark Body Shop
Guaranteed Paint and Body Work
Wrecks rebuilt FREE Estimates
95 Courtney Drive Forest Park, Ga.
Phone Bus; 366-2333 Home; 366-5093 i
i
House through the zone in
Greater Atlanta. He will be
heard on beaches, in business
es, at lakes, on car radios,
and in the home.
WEAD is Greater Atlanta's
fastest rising station. Much of
this is due to the enterprise of
General Manager Lokey and the
fine assistance he gets from
great engineers like Sturgis
Bates, Ben Williams and Tom
Burnett.
The fine station, located just
a mashie shot from the Atlanta
Airport, handles remote pro
grams from new and old de
velopments in the general area
every week, and is now booked
months ahead of the week-ends.
Several shows have originated
from Lake Spivey. One show, in
particular, that's coming up is
the Lake Spivey MASTERS
Horse Show on the Spivey Ath-
tHe dwarf house news
I
’ _ .’J
' "a
DOING THE DWARF House Song on Radio Station WEAD are
the Cathy children, Don, Dan and Cathy, with Mrs. Cathy look
ing on in approval. Dressed like nymphs in colorful costumes,
the young Cathys will sing at the Grand Opening Thursday,
June 28; Friday, and Saturday.
letic Field Saturday, July 7.
This will be an all-day broad
cast, from 11 a.m. until 6:30
p.m. and a great Horse Show
it will be.
At the present time the big
pitch is for the Dwarf House,
and Mr. Lokey handles this in
his expert and inimitable man
ner. He Is one of radio’s har
dest working executives. Tune
in WEAD.
A Life-Saver!
Look at the contents of
your wallet. Think you have
everything you need? The
odds are that—like eight out
of 10 of your neighbors—you
aren't carrying the one most
vital piece of information
about yourself: your blood
type. Should a sudden emeiv
gency arise, it could save yotj,
and your family, untold grief.
A card in your wallet, iden
tifying blood type and po4 '
sible RH factor, is peace-of
mipd insurance.
Good Dinina
"TRAVELING THROUGH
GEORGIA”
City of Seven Hills
It is said that the founders
of Rome, in northwest Geor
gia, were so inspired when
they came upon the juncture o
three rivers, nestled amid se
ven hills that they decided to
build a town there. Each of
them placed a name in a hat
and "Rome" was the name
drawn. It had been selected
because Italy’s famous capital
also was built amid seven
hills.
And to view the city today
from atop the famous Myrtle
Hill, it is not hard to see why
the founders were inspired.
Rome is a beautiful city, rich
in history.
The old town clock on the
skyline, atop Neely Hill, pro
vides a focal point, and now that
the city has become one of
Georgia’s progressive indus
trial centers there is a happy
blending of the old and the new.
Rome boasts some fine resi
dential sections of new modern
structures or stately old man
sions, which have withstood the
tides of time. The sluggish
Oostanoola and the muddy red
Etowah join in Rome to form
the Coosa River, which leads
to a recreational area in the
making near Leesburg. The
construction of a dam on the
Coosa will provide Rome with
a backyard playground, second
to none in the state.
Leach Impressed
Over
New Drive-In
It s going to be a great pleasure to take a
coffee break at the all-new Dwarf House,
seated in the patio and fanned by the
cooling breeze. Why didn’t somebody think
of something like this before in the res
taurant business? We like it, and we think
Mr. Truett Cathy deserves a world of credit
for his courage, initiative and enterprise
in providing such an exotic place to eat
in Forest Park. Much success!
Leach’s Shoe Repair
Main Street Forest Park
TRY THE
DWARF HOUSE
Best of Luck,
Truett Cathy!
* ♦ ♦
Yancey
Brothers
Service
Station
1050 Main St.,
Forest Park
Appreciates
the Hard
Work and
Enterprise
that have
made
possible
the
Dwarf House,
brilliant
new asset
in the
Business Life
of
Forest Park
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