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:• ¥ QUALITY
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specifications to assure you a clean burning
DEPENDABILITY
Over 125,000 customers know DOXOL propane service in
means on-time deliveries . . . everywhere ... any
weather.
SERVICE
DOXOL brand stands for factory trained service tech¬
nicians and expert service for gas appliances and
equipment.
GAS APPLIANCES
| 1 The guarantees, DOXOL trademark competitive means prices, national budget brands, terms factory for
. . .
commercial, agricultural and industrial installations
m of any kind or size.
EASY PAY PLAN
i Purchasing under the DOXOL trademark lets you “Pay
As You Use” and enjoy modern gas appliances when
you need them.
/tfefergas
The most economical and convenient way to use
Propane Gas. You never run out of ga$ . . . pay only
for gas you use, not the gas in your tank . . . you
always know the amount of your monthly bills , . .
and you never need to watch your tank levell
DISTRIBUTED NATIONAL UTILITIES
EXCLUSIVELY BY OF CLEVELAND
Ouality Propane „ Hwy. 115 West at City Limits Union 5-3711
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YOU JUST DON’T GET DOXOL BRAND QUALITY AND
.... NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
GEORGIA STATE HIGHWAY
AUTHORITY PROJECT NO. RA-
3-17 (5) COUNTIES OF WHITE
AND HABERSHAM
Sealed . proposals will be received
by the Georgia State Highway Aut No.
hority at its General Office Georgia, at
2 Capitol Square, Atlanta,
until 11 A. Hi., Eastern Standard
Time, August 9, 1962, for furnishing
all labor, material, equipment, and
other things necessary for construe
tion of 11.64 miles of resurfacing on
the Helen-Clarkesville Road, be¬
ginning at State extending Route 75 southeast southeast
of Helen and
to State Route 115 west of Clarkes
ville, including 0.33 mile connector
to State Route 115.
Plans and Specificationsn are on
file a the office of the undersigned
at Atlanta, and at the office of the
State Highway Department, No. 2
Capitol Square, Atlanta, Georgia,
and at the office of the Division En¬
gineer of the State Highway Depart¬
ment at Gainesville, Georgia, where
they may be inspected free of char¬
ge. the plans be ob¬
Copies of may
tained upon payment in advance of
the sum of $5.00. Copies of the Stan¬
dard Specifications may be obtained
upon payment in advance of the
sum of $3.00, which sums will not
be refunded. of
The Standard Specifications of
the State Highway Department the
Georgia have been adopted Authority by
Georgia State Highway construction
and will govern any
unde r these APPROXIMATE proposals. QUANTIT¬ ,
THE
IES ARE AS FOLLOWS;
1160 Cu. Yds. Unclassified Excava¬
tion Treatment
980 Cu. Yd. Subgrade
Material Graded Aggregate
1150 Cu. Yds.
Base - Cement Stabilized
440 Bbls. Portland Cement
1100 Gals. Cutback Asphalt Prime
13000 Gals. Emulsified Asphalt Tack
Coat, AE-O Cement
129600 Sq. Yds. Asphalt Size
Surface Treatment, Stone
M-6, Type IV B „
1 500 Tons Asphalt Concrete ,
“E» Concrete “E
10700 Tons Asphalt Asphaltis Material
195800 Gals. begin within ten
Said work shall ot
(10) days after formal execution
contract and shall be
within 60 working days. When
tract has been executed,
notice shall be given the
at which time, and not before, work
may be started. executed pursuant
Contract binding the Ge0 J gl
this Notice is on
State Highway Authorty as
Said contract will not create
lity expressed or implied, f
the undersigned Chairman °
Georgia State Highway nst
as employee an individual, of the nor Georgia a gf^
Highway Authority m his or
individual capacity nor Department against
State Jlighway o
^
Georgia, nor against any officer or
employee of the State Highway De¬
partment in his or her individual
capacity. submitted
Proposals must be on
regular forms which will be supp
lied by the undersigned and must
be accompanied by a certified check,
cashier’s check, negotiable United
states Bonds or other acceptable
security in the amount of $4500.00
and must be plainly marked “Pro
posal for Road Construction,”
County and Number, and show the
time of opening as advertised,
Check of the low bidder will be
cashed and all checks will be re¬
turned as soon as the contract is
awarded, unless it is deemed ad¬
visable by the Authority to hold one
or more checks. If an unusual cond¬
ition arises, the Authority reserves
the right to cash all checks. Bidders
Bond will not be accepted. made
A charge of $5.00 will be
for each proposal issued.
Such a bond will be required of
the successful bidder as required by
law for contractors contracting with
the State Highway Department of
Georgia. be awarded to
Contracts will not
contractors who have not been pla¬
ced on the list of qualified award. contrac¬ No
tors prior to the date of
proposals will be issued to any bid¬
der later than 9 A. M. Eastern
Standard Time of the date of open¬
ing bids.
All bids must show totals for
each item and total of amount of
bid. Right is reserved to delay the
award of the contract for a period
of not to exceed thirty (30) days
from the date of opening bids, during
which period bids shall remain open
and not subject to withdrawal.
Right is reserved to reject any and
all bids and to waive all formalities.
Upon compliance with the re¬
quirements of the standard specifi¬
cations, ninety (90) percent of the
amount of work done in any calen¬
dar month will be paid for by the
25th day of the succeeding month,
and the remainder within thirty j
(30) days after final estimate is ap¬
proved by the Engineer. July, 1962.
This the 20 day of
GEORGIA STATE HIGHWAY
AUTHORITY CHAIRMAN
JIM L. GILLIS, SR., MEMBER
WILLIS N. HARDEN, MEMBER
CLARKE W. DUNCAN,
RE-ELECT *
. ZACK D. CRAVEY
FOR COMPTROLLER GENERAL
The National Fire Protection Association, of Booton,
Han., la a non-profit orfanirotion Hd la oonaiSoroS tho
Ure prevention "bible” by ita world-wide ■mbtnhlp.
Beeently Ita General Manager, Percy Bngbeo, wrote Sack
. Cravey: We have been very mnch Interested hi yoor
SCHOOL SAFETY PROGRAM ever since yon Initiated It
i certain it hat played an IMPORT ANT
1 hi 1950 and are
ROLE in TEACHING our YOUTH the principle# of LIFE
, GOOD WORK!"
i pafoty from FIRE. KEEP UP THE
Georgia voter* will aee that ZACK does JUST THAT. Zook Cravey
*
(Paid Political Advertisement)
■ ttnji MW• ■‘L.
r s \
.o4s-e3£EK2»
where
I stand
OH HIGHWAYS: I am deter¬
mined to reorganize the
State Highway depart¬
ment and take it out of
politics. We will build roads
with efficiency, for less
money and with no political
pressures. My administra¬
tion will provide for State
maintenance of rural roads
and will speed up comple¬
tion of our Interstate
Highways.
SANDERS
for GOVERNOR
V. J
(Paid Political Advertisement)
TO SELL
<5£ O 1 ’EM, TELL
’EM
With An Ad
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Stamey Chevrolet Co. (
Cleveland,
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ii . FOR GEORGIA'S PROSPERITY
;.; : 7 7: ■ 7 ; AND VITALITY
IS ; S7
•- W
> '' 8 Prescription
we | “A
7.; for
ii:
m I
Progress 99
.
. Cast your vote where It counts, tor Dr. Winston E. Burdine,
physician, lawyer, businessman and civic worker. His
II Prescription for Progress” means better educational
systems, higher teacher pay, and more junior colleges,
Improvement of our prison system with rehabilitation as
our goal, and improved care of our mentally ill. It’ll be a
better Georgia with Dr. Burdine as Lt. Governor working
on his “Prescription for Progress” for Georgia.
VOTE FOR jp
Dr. Winston E. Burdine
FOR LT. GOVERNOR
(Paid Political Advertisement)
S -
HOKE O’KELLEY i h7 ; 1
Candidate lor Governor
.7
7;:
BNTtU INK OF > ;
Promise—A Brand New Dag in mfi
Georgia Politic*
Hoko O’Kelley
(Paid Political Advertisement)
Speaking of
PUBLIC SAFETY
Public officials have found that j
public driving education hazards has regarding night :
paid big divi- ;
dends. According to the National '■
Street and Traffic Safety Lighting { j
Bureau, these are the rules that j
have helped reduce night driving
accidents where street lighting is
bad:
1. Slow down. Don’t regulate I
your speed by posted limits alone, j
Remember, speed must be gov- ;
erned is by conditions, and darkness
a condition that calls for cau¬
tion.
2. Have your car checked fre¬
quently. In darkness, immediate
response of the vehicle is a must.
Double-check all lights.
3. Be alert. Keept a constant
watch for pedestrians and for ve¬
hicles with dim lights or no lights
at all.
4. Don’t wear tinted glasses at
night. The advantage they offer in
by reducing disadvantage glare is more than offset
the in reduced
vision.
6. Use headlights properly. Use
upper beam only on rural high¬
ways when no approaching car is
within 1,000 feet. Use lower beam
when oncoming cars approach,
when you are overtaking another
car, and when driving in cities and
residential areas.
6. Dim your lights, even though
an his. oncoming Trying driver fails to dim
him is risking to get even by blinding
your neck. Maintain
control of your car by looking at
the right shoulder of the highway.
7. Be sure your lights are on
before you pull onto a thorough¬
fare at night.
8. Never stop on the travelled
portion of a roadway at night. If
you must stop, pull completely off
the roadway, leaving parking and !
dome lights on. Carry flares for j
use in emergencies.
1
Early Shoes
the Enterprising Idea shoemakrs first got
of making ready-to-wear
shoes during the American Revolu¬
tion. Rights and lefts were identical,
and there were only two widths:
slim and broad! Shoes were put up
in grocery and tobacco stores, the
forerunners of today’s specialty shoe
stores that sell shoes in many styles
and with pliant leather soles that
conform to hundreds of fitting com¬
binations. .
— u