Newspaper Page Text
Milestone Car “Sealed in Cellophane"
An “orchid” among motor cars is this milestone model,
the 19.000,000 th Chevrolet built in the 35 years of the
(Irvinon's history. Production of this car early in December
h.ghhßhts the endeavor of automotive manufacturers of
America to supply a car-hungry nation within the limits
AUmmUt fWsasi■ fmnriM *■ AlUnlm CftaHWM I'aiMiHfi Ntrfrlk, OrUnA*
WBllllTlBiroriillf IH—
I-11 ill l —i-Wf F TIMM
\ ' As a business succ**ds and grows, It requires a
,X> n i \\ more complex system of management and,
;v' ‘if / j \ often, more widespread ownership.
I /v \ I Allls-Chalmers has grown and progressed for
■:i ,s>j JJ years. Just who Is Mr. A-CT Because the,
answer to’a question like that Is complex. It is
y \ tAS •■•Y f° r people to pick up mistaken Impressions J
*7a jr for the sake of the record, let’s take Mr, A-C,'
.apart and see who he really Is.
WHO IS CAPITAL?, * /WHO IS LAIOR? K Ak
Capital doesn’t w.ar a silk hat at -The man who works in the shop /v /A
Allis Chalmers. ‘ “Capital’;, consists
of 23,100 stockholders who own an j\\ “ Actually He may be a part of M
average of less than 110 shares each. /\ \ I 'Management by reason of some (r»
Mr. Capital might be a grocer, a / \\l suggestion he has made to improve a process
farmer, a widow, a school teacher, jj \AI or a product., _. ,
or YOU. He might be a company “ ► * Actually he may be apart of Capital through
employee in the office or shop or an ownership of company stock.
officer of the company. T he !* ct tha , t he works hjs hands
, .makes him no less a part of Alhs-Chalmers
No one,nd,v,dual or fam.ly owns more than than the man or woman who works at a
*/i of I percent of the total stock of Allis- desk. The terms “Capital,” “Management,”
Chaimers. and “Labor” are indefinite and overlapping.
This is on example of democratic ownership Many a man who works in the shop is actu
rfshncJfv* in the history of large corporations. 3lly 3 p3rt ° f 311 three ° UpS ’
_™ iTX Introducing Mr. A-"
tfl WHO IS MANAGEMENT? Who then is Mr. A-C? He is a
Management is Inc guiding hand /OT\\ combination of 23,100 stockholders.
Vv (or head) hired by the owners to H\ Qy 25,000 employees, and more than
make an organization tick and \ j 10*000 suppliers,
elide? Jit V V He symbolizes a company in
Who is Mr. Management at Allis-Chal- W! I f\\ which no individual or family owns
me.tr ? Not just the officers and division heads i 1 U ' /j of 1 P erceM of <° tal
the company. Management is theblock man*. .7\, ‘ His'is a company which eontrib
ager in tlie terruory, the foreman in thf shop. »,> utes something to better living in
Management is every employee from errand nearly every home in America
boy to president who contributes by word and * n supplying machines to grow and process
deed to the progress of the company food ’ S enerate electricity, pump water, build
Mr. Management doesn’t wear a high wing r ° ads ’ pr ° duCe buildin g materials ’
collar at Allis-Chalmers. Neither does he . “ lt . e f 0?“ b ? dy ’ M J‘ , A ' C! 14 takes the right
• , , . . . . hand, left hand, head, heart and pocketbook
have any monopoly on h.s job. . , 0 achieve such results. No one part of him
can do the job alone.
: SALES AND SERVICE
UNION MOTOR COMPANY
CHAS. P. GRAY, Dealer
Phone 136 Perry, Ga .
, imposed upon the industry by current business condi
■ tions. Top-ranking executives of Chevrolet who “deliv
• ered” this welcome souvenir “wrapped in cellophane”
r are Nicholas Dreystadt (left), general manager, and
i T. H. Keating, general sales manager.
Take A Look Behind
When you pull away from the
urb, it is not enough simply to
shove your hand out and give it the
gun.
Look behind you and wait for a
good opportunity to enter the mov
ing traffic. The Georgia Highway
Safety Committee issues a warning
that if you don’t, you’ll lose an
j argument, because if you pull away
j from the curb without looking the
J consequent accident will be your
I fault.
' Don’t rely solely on your rear vis-
I ion mirror. There is often a blind
(area which the mirror does not
j pick up. Twist your neck—it’s good
| for you, and a safe habit to get into.
FARM EVENTS
IN JANUARY
January 9-10; Georgia Winter
Grazing Tour, beginning at College
of Agric., Athens, and visiting Mon
ticello, Macon, Forsyth, LaGrange.
January 9-10: Dairy Short Course,
College of Agriculture, Athens.
January 14: Fat Hog Show and
Sale, Moultrie Livestock Co. Audi
torium, Moultrie.
January 15-17: Annual Conven
tion, Assoc, of Southern Agri.
Workers, Biloxi, Miss.
January 22: Second Annual Meet
ing, Board of Directors, Georgia
Crop Improvement Assoc., Athens.
Feburary 8-9: Savannah Camellia
Show, Hotel DeSoto, Savannah.
February 15-16: Augusta’s Mid-
Winter Camellia Show, Augusta.
March 31-April. 1: Fat Cattle
Show (4-H Clubs of 5 Counties),
Arlington.
April 21: Annual Spring Sale,
Georgia Guernsey Breeders Assoc.,
Georgia State Fair Grounds, Macon.
April 24-25: 11th Annual Fat
Cattle Show and Sale, Macon.
Date Center
The Coachella valley near Palm
Springs, Calif., produces nine-tenths
of all domestic-grown dates.
PETITION FOR CHARTER
GEORGIA HOUSTON COUNTY
TO THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
SAID COUNTY:
The petition of F. L. Wilkinson,
E. F, Schnurbusch, and B. G. Kit
chens respectfully shows:
1
Petitioners desire to be incorpo
rated under the name and style of
DUTCH’S GROCERY, INC.
2
The principal business to be con
ducted by said corporation is that
of buying and selling food products,
produce, fruits, canned goods, toi
let articles, household furniture
and fixtures, chinaware, and crock
ery at both retail and wholesale,
and the doing of all things inciden
tal to and in furtherance of said
purposes.
3
The maximum number of shares
of stock which may be issued b y
said corporation shall be three hun
dred (300) shares with a par value
of one hundred dollars (100) per
share.
4
The amount of capital with which*
the corporation will begin business
shall be ten thousand dollars ($lO,
000).
5
The term for which said corpora
tion shall have existence shall be
thirty-five (35) years.
6
The principal office of the corpo
ration shall be in Warner Robins,
but petitioners desire the privilege
iof establishing branch offices and
places of business elsewhere.
7
The name and post office address
of each applicant for charter is:
F. L. Wilkinson—Warner Robins,
Georgia
E. F. Schnurbusch—Warner Ro
bins, Georgia
B. G. Kitchens—Dry Branch,
Georgia
8
The stockholders desire the right
to reduce the capital stock at any
time by a majority vote to an
amount not less than five thousand
dollars ($5,000) and the further
right to operate without a board of
directors and also all rights, privi
leges, and immunities now grant
ed or hereafter granted under the
laws of Georgia to similar corpo
rations.
WHEREFORE, petitioners pray
that they may be incorporated un
der the name and style of DUTCH’S
GROCERY, INC.
Martin Martin&Snow
Attorneys for Petitioners
GEORGIA, HOUSTON COUNTY
The foregoing petition of F. L.
Wilkinson, E. F. Schnurbusch, and
B. G. Kitchens, praying to be incor
porated under the name and style
of DUTCH’S GROCERY, INC., hav
ing been presented to me and it ap
pearing that said application is le
gitimately within the purview and
intention of the laws of this state;
and it further appearing that the
Secretary of State has issued a
certificate that DUTCH’S GROC
ERY, INC., is not the name of any
other existing corporation now re
gistered in his office, as required
by law; upon consideration it is
ordered and adjudged that said ap
plication be granted and that the
applicants be incorporated under
the name and style aforesaid with
all of the privileges prayed for in
said application.
This 30th day of December, 1946.
A. M. ANDERSON
J. S. C. M. C.
HOME JOURNAL. Perry, Ga.. Jan. 9, 1947
Order Baby Chicks
Now, Agent Advises
January isn’t too early to start
making plans for this fall’s laying
flock, County Agent W. T. Middle
brooks declared this week, advising
Houston County poultry keepers to
make their plans for their poultry
projects and to place their orders
for baby chicks now.
“For most efficient egg product
ion the laying flocks should be re
placed completely with pullets each
fall,’’ Mr. Middlebrooks pointed out.
“The number of chicks to order will
depend on the number of pullets
wanted for next fall’s laying flock
and the brooding equipment avail
able.”
The county agent recommended
ordering two and one-half to three
chicks for each pullet wanted next
fall. For each 100 good pullets de
sired in the fall laying flock, be
tween 250 and 300 chicks should be
ordered.
“It pays to buy good chicks from
a hatcheryman or breeder who does
a thorough job of selecting and
pullorum testing his hatching egg
flocks,” Mr. Middlebrooks emphai
zed. “Buying from a nearby hatch
ery or breeder is advised to avoid
long-distance shipping of day-old
chicks. There may be a scarcity of
good chicks next spring so orders
should be placed early to insure de
livery of the breed of chicks wanted
at the desired time.”
FARM LEASES
The length of the farm lease has
an important influence on the wel
fare of the tenant farmer, the land
lord and the land itself, specialists
of the State Extension Service point
out. All will benefit if the agree
ment is made with a view toward
giving advantages to both parties
by continuing the lease for a num
ber of years.
PECANS
I am still in the Pecan Market*
Will buy any amount, any vari
ety, if good. Market a little low
er, but not bad.
THE SAME JONES
1-4 Mile South, Perry, Ga., Hwy. 41
General and Specialized
WELDING and REPAIRING
All Makes Tractors, Internal Combustion
Engines and Farm Machinery
J. C. HELLER & SONS
Butane Gas Systems
IMMEDIATE INSTALLATION
Coroaire Circulator
- HEATERS -
COMPLETE HEATING PLANS
FOR FIVE ROOM HOME
COLORIC RANGES
WELBILT RANGES
Central Gas Co.
Phone 5100 Fort Valley, Ga.
Red Tape Eliminated
In VA Hospital
The red tape of getting a patient
in and out of a Veterans Admini
stration hospital will soon be a
thing of the past.
A new adminstrative procedure
which relieves doctors and nurses
of virtually all “paper work’’ and
reduces to an absolute minimum
the filling out of “forms in quin
tuplicate” is already in operation
at Lawson VA hospital in Atlanta.
Similiar systems will be set up
within the next few weeks at all 16
VA hospitals in the southeast.
YES...
%Lour77r
hole 31
I l V/
you can outfit the whole family
at a minimum of cost. Your cloth
es will look like new after they’ve
been cleaned by us. Let us restore
crisp lines, renew fabric texture,
brighten and freshen colors for a
fraction of what new clothes
would cost. Bring your old cloth
es in today—we’ll make them
like new.
PERRY
Dry Cleaners
Phone 8 Perry, Ga.
Warner Robins, Ga.
Phone 1423