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F Wr*-' Giiawe 500 LTD 4-Door Hardwp
Prand-new series, Ford’s Galaxie 500 LTD is top-of-the-line elegance personified! compare;
favorably with the most expensive cars on the road, yet carries a typically low Ford price tag!
Features a 100% new body, the strongest, quietest
Ford ever built! Standard equipment includes
200-hp Challenger Y-8, Cruise-O-Matic drive,
cut-pile carpeting, rear seat center arm rest, clock
s. — much more! Now 44 new Fords in five car lines
to choose from!
' ’65...best year yet to go see your Ford Dealer!
SOSEBEE-THURMOND FORD, CO.
Cleveland, Ga. *
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In Georgia eee
after bowling, beer is a natural
After you’ve bowled i
a or two, or when you’re winding op .
the evening at the nrigi cental it's good telefax
xoeDds _ _
and compare scores. What better way to add to die
iport and the sociableness than with a refreshing glac, of beer?
Bowever ytxa take your fun-skiing, skating, or at your ease iatfau
gtma room-beer aiways makes a wdcome addition to the party.
"kcror fa mSkr glass of beer is also a pleasurable reminder that
vafiveinalandaf personal freedom—and that oar right to enjoy
beer and ale, if we so desire, is jost ooe,bat an important ooc, cf ■
aoaepeaonal freedoms.
In Georgia... beer wfthfim, _.
goes with rcfantion
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TOE CLEVELAND (GA.)
Nr#K Musasg: imported-look Fas: back 2+2
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. NEW YORK AT CHRISTMAS .
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There’s nothing so gala as
Christmas in New York. The
whole vast city puts on garlands
of dazzling lights — and stages
;an unparalleled holiday show for
^he The visitor. world’s most • oeautiful
p ■Christmas
tree is at Rockefeller
Canter. Towering over 60 feat,
it requires 5,000 lights and 5,000
red, green, blue and gold span¬
gles to adorn it. According to
the New York Convention and
Visitors Bureau, trimming this
tree takes 20 electricians ten
days! •
¥ Fir trais ablaze with lights
itretch down the center of famed
Paris Avenue in a single line for
three miles. A lighted cross in
the windows of the New York
Central Tower graces the city
from above. At John F. Kennedy
Airport, another entry point for
visitors, a giant 65-foot star
shines down on the Fountain of
Liberty.
Spectacular view-, of New
York's seasonal gliuer car. be
teen in a night-time v;_it to li'.i
world-famed Observatory of the
Empire State Building. At;
Times Square on New Year’s,
Eve, all eyes are focused on tha
glowing white ball, atop the Al¬
lied Chemical Tower, which is
lowered to signal the start of the
New Year.
Visitors at Christmas, as at
other times of the the year, en¬
joy a ferry boat ride to the
Statue of Liberty and a trip to
the UN. If you haven’t been to
New York for some time, you'll,
see that many new skyscrapers
have filled in the famous skyline.
Special Christmas »
programs,
enliven the season at Radio Citjr
Music Hall, Lincoln Metropolitan! Center, City;
Center and the
Opera. Many churches have spe¬
cial programs of sacred music,
Carols are everywhere, Indoors
and outdoors.
New York welcomes you. If
you write to The New York Con¬
vention and Visitors Bureau, 90
East 42r.d Street, they will send
free folders to heip you plan a
gala Yule.
HOW TO WHCOMFJHRISTMASIH THE DOOR
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Take a walk out your front
door and see what your guests
wiU sos. Do you like it? Will your
J^liftbs time left before through
visitors begin to come
that doorway, you can perform a
few simple tricks that will wel¬
come them, and Christmas, in
the door with a flourish.
1 Consider how the doorway, for
ins Uadi, would look after a
‘.quick ro-paintipg job. After the
tpaint dries, you can frame the
door with evergreens. For large
wreaths, consider the grace of
white pine, or a blackish fir that
-doesn't shod. For flat wreaths,
j English fry is perfect. what color If you're paint
undecided as to
! j will net try flamer touch your house of history best, why this
a
| year? A door that wears the new
[ j Colonial touch, offered by Pitts
burgh Paints, recalls the gaiety
' of Christmases celebrated two
l hundred years ago, and more.
( dow? Do you Try have placing a picture a candie, win¬ a
* wreath or a spray of evergreens
in it — remembering that too
* much of of these can spoil
any
the effect. The children might
like to try a stained e’ iass eucct
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P0U6BTS f PANKS6IVW6 , \
Heap high the board witK V
plenteous cheer. )/# % i !
And gather to the feast. m
And toast the sturdy Pilgrim band, it
Whose, courage never ceased. /
Give praise to that All-Gradous One,
By Whom their steps were led,
And thanks unto the harvest's lord, \
Who sends our dally bread . . .
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let us give thanks, too, for our freedom.
Our right to worship in the church of
our choice ... to express our thoughts
. . . and to do for ourselves * ta'/ needs *
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to be done . . .
It wqs^n this American tradition that GZ m
our electric service system was found¬
ed. The many benefits of coopera¬ .s A
tive Rural Electrification give us all
much to be thankful for . . .
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Habersham Electric
Membership Corp.
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i COMMUNITY OWNED • COMMUNITY BUILT
0Nt|(* • COMMUNITY BUILDER J
■with vegetable colorings, artift
dal snow, even will phosphorescent glow in the
materials that
dark! j
Naturally, welcoming with guests,
In the door comes easier $ j
•welcome mat. It hejgs make thenv
feel invited, and servej also t0<
keep dripping snow and. mud;t
from boots off your 2#*' just-polished,
floor. ■'!
A branch or two, of; evergreenj
on the hall table make* the foysfi
scene the boughs more cozy with - r enamels try spraying; that'
dry in minutes; Pittsbu/fhj
Paints’ pale gold, silver and eop-!
per enamels are especially
,feetive here. In addition, that*
are hues the of white, traditional red and Christmas^ green, -^j
A hint to complete the welcome*
you extend: extend the hallway' the!
into die living room through glM*j
use of a gleaming plats
mirror. Bunches of holly tied,
with bright red ribbon, an4 and! (
boughs sprayed with white
silver, make the mirror a har«J
monious center of attention; it
reflects the room’s beauty into;
the hall, and makes the housa
seem like one colorful Christmai (
welcome.