Newspaper Page Text
THURSDAY, MARCH 14, 1957
LUST FOR PLANTS
BEGINS AT LOCAL
LEVEL—CANDLER
ATLANTA (GPS)—As admin
istrative head of the Georgia De
partment of Commerce, the
state’s No. 1 agency for promot
ing industrial expansion in Geor
gia, Secretary Scott Candler
makes many speeches all over
the state. He tells his fellow
Georgians how they can, through
concerted effort, seek new indus
tries for their respective sections.
Speaking without a prepared
text, the secretary displays keen
knowledge of his subject in pre
senting facts and figures about
Georgia’s industrial picture —
past, present and future. Usually
addressing local chambers of
commerce, trade organizations
and civic clubs, he_tells his audi
ences how Georgia communities
of all sizes have obtained new
plants and how others desiring
them can go about doing the
same.
Candler tells how his depart
ment, through an effective na
tional advertising program, pro
motes the state’s advantages—its
unparalleled water supply, its
unlimited natural resources, its
salubrious climate, its vast pool
of alert labor willing to give a
full day’s work for a day’s pay,
its superb channels of transpor
tation — to industrial prospects
HAROLD'S®'?
LIMITED
QUANTITY
BOY’S
Dungarees
$1.29
Sizes 6-12 «
Limit of 2 Pr.
r SPECIAL
Boy’s Fancy
Short or Long
Sleeve
T SHIRTS
3forsl. i
98c Value
Men's
OVERALLS
K MEN'S
Handker
chiefs
. SIOO j
SHOP
IN
SUMMERVILLE
I
whose eyes are on the South. |
But in all his discussions with
local groups he emphasizes that
initial steps to obtain new indus
tries must be firmly taken at
the community level, with every
interested citizen taking an ac
tive part. Georgia’s Commerce
Department, he stresses, is ready,
willing and able to assist local
leaders in their bid for industry.
And there’s no doubt but what
this close cooperation between
the state and various towns and
cities is paying off in big divi
dends in the over-all economy of
Georgia. Latest evidence of this
is seen in the fact that 1956 was
a record-breaking year in vir
tually every phase of the state’s
economy.
In industry alone, .for exam
ple Georgia last year added more
than 300 new manufacturers,
thus maintaining her position as
the industrial leader of the
Southeast which she held for the
previous three years. Last year’s
new industries, including large,
medium and small ones, located
in 82 counties and 130 towns and
cities. They represent a total
capital investment of approxi
mately $165-million. They fur
nish employment to some 11,000
workers; have combined annual
payrolls in excess of $32-million.
In the meantime, as his de
partment continues advertising
the state's many industrial ad
vantages to the world at large.
Secretary Candler visits county
after county telling the “Georgia
Story” to interested community
groups on the home front.
3 BIG DAYS THURS., - FRI., - SAIT^
BOY'S
Shirts $ 1
Short or Long Sleeve
Just Received 1000 Pair Children's
Canvas amr*
Oxfords $ 1
Sizes Little 5 to Big 3
MEN'S SHOES
$3.98 & u p
MEN'S-BOY'S 2 PAIR
DRESS PANTS $5.00
No Alterations Values To $7.98
One Table
ODDS-ENDS
SI.OO
Pants, Shirts, Etc. - Values To $7.98
• • • • • NO EXCHANGE OR REFUNDS ON SALE ITEMS • • • • •
HAROLD'S
OUTLET STORE *
"THE HOUSE OF BARGAINS"
17 East Washington Street Summerville
sl2-Million For
State Colleges Sei
ATLANTA (GPS)—The State
University Building Autho r i t y
has approved the sale of a sl2-
million revenue certificate issue
to finance construction of 13 new
buildings at 10 state colleges.
The revenue certificates will be
issued “when the bond market
looks favorable,” according to
State Auditor B. E. Thrasher Jr.,
authority' chairman. Cost of the
10 buildings is estimated to run
about $10,749,586. The rest of the
money would be used to meet
inflated costs, he said.
Largest projects in the group
are a chemistry building ($2,358,-
773), animal science building
($1,316,312) and a fine arts an
nex ($500,000) at the University
of Georgia, and a classroom
building ($2,404,320) at Georgia
Tech.
FAMILY GROWS
Mobile, Ala.—Mrs. C. A. Black
well and her daughter, Mrs. J. T.
Duon Jr., entered Mobile Infirm
ary the other day. Mrs. Black
well, 37, gave birth to a daugh
ter, twelve hours after Mrs. Dunn
had given birth to a son. That
means C. A. Blackwell became a
father and grandfather the same
day; Mrs. Blackwell became a
a mother and grandmother; and
that Mrs. Dunn became a mother
and sister; and that baby
Frankie Lavell Blackwell became
a daughter and an aunt.
Ladies', Children's Pr.
Anklets 15«
THE SUMMERVILLE NEWS
OAK HILL NEWS
Those visiting in the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Gardner
and David Sunday were Mrs.
Cassie Morrow, daughter and
niece, and Mrs. Joyce Gardner
and children, of Piedmont, Ala.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Housch and
Charles visited Mr. and Mrs.
Walter Gardner and David Sun
day afternoon.
Mrs. N. E. Yarbrough and fam
ily visited Mr. and Mrs. Crladston
Dempsey Saturday night.
Mrs. Ahugh Mosley and boys
visited Mrs. N. E. Yarbrough
Tuesday.
Mrs. Charlie Morrison visited
Mrs. G. W. Brooks and Mrs.
Ozema Dempsey Wednesday.
Mrs. N. E. Yarbrough, Lillian
and Drucilla visited Mrs. R. C.
Fulton Thursday night.
Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Harrison
visited Mr. and Mrs. John Ray
at Chapel Hill Thursday.
Mrs. Walter Gardner, Mr. and
Mrs. J. L. Massey and Barbara
visited Mrs. E. L. Harrison Sun-
I day.
Mrs. J. E. Hawkins and Mrs.
Hazel Kerce visited Mr. and Mrs.
Felt Dempsey Monday.
David Gardner visited Mr. and
Mrs. Tom Brooks Sunday.
Mrs. R. L. Smith visited Mrs. E.
L. Harrison and Mrs. Leonard
Smith Saturday.
Mr. Felt Dempsey is ill at his
home. Those visiting him last
week included Mr. and Mrs.
Charlie Morrison, Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Moseley, Robert Mitchell,
Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Vernon, Roy
Dempsey, Carlton Tucker, Mr.
MEN'S SHIRTS
2 for $2.50
Short Sleeve
LADIES' ALL SIZES'
PRESSES 2 for $5
Men's Blue Denim
Jackets
$1.98
and Mrs. Chip Gaskin, Mr. and
Mrs. Tom Willingham, Mrs. T.
N. Willingham, Roy Dempsey
and Mrs. Fred Mitchell.
Mr. and Mrs. Cicero Paden, of
Wyoming, Del.; Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Tucker and Mrs. Davis,
of Attalla, Ala., and Mrs. Fronie
Mitchell were dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Mitchell Sun
day. Robert Mitchell visited in
the afternoon.
Carlton Tucker visited Mr. and
Mrs. Fred Mitchell Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Boatman
and Melba, of Chattanooga, were
•guests Sunday of Mr. and Mrs.
Doyle Yarbrough and family.
Mr. and Mrs. John Fulton vis
ited Mr. and Mrs. L. B. Cook
Thursday night.
Mrs. Vera Tucker was a guest
Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Felt
Dempsey.
Mr. and Mrs. H. A. McClain, of
Rome, visited Mr. and Mrs. John
Fulton and family Monday till
Wednesday.
Linda Hawkins and Elenor
Kerce visited Mr.s Charlie
Echols Sunday.
Mrs. J. E. Hawkins and Mrs.
Edmond Kerce visited Mr. and
Mrs. J. E. Hawkins, Jr., and fam
ily in Chattanooga Sunday.
Mrs. R. C. Fulton visited Mrs.
N. E. Yarbrough Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Morrison
visited Mr. and Mrs. Charlie
Morrison Saturday.
Mrs. N. E. Yarbrough and fam
ily visited Mr. and Mr.s. Ahugh
Mosley and boys Friday night.
Lillian and Drucilla Yarbrough
। visited Linda Hawkins Saturday.
T Mrs. R. C. Fulton, Gregg and
ONE TABLE LADIES'
SHOES *l.ooi
Values To $6.98
■■■■■■r'nii«nnßnenran»««n««oinnnMne««nnnnßßnnnn«nnßnßM««nan^^
Wool - Cotton
RUGS
SI.OO
$5.00 Value
Robert visited Mr. and Mrs.
James A. Wofford in Trion Sun
day.
Mr. and Mrs. John Fulton vis
ited Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Hiss in
Soddy, Tenn. Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Archie Baggett
visited Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Reynolds Sunday, also visited
Mrs. Baggett’s mother, Mrs. Lon
Teague, at Battey State.
Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Jones and
family were dinner guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Grady Winters Sun
day.
Mrs. J. H. Brown, Brenda and
Barbara visited Mrs. H. C. Jones
Saturday night.
Mrs. Grady Winters and Carol
Ann were guests Monday of Mr.
and Mrs. C. B. Baggett.
Those visiting Mr. and Mr.s.
Felt Dempsey Sunday were Mr.;
and Mr.s. John Rosser, James, i
Martha, Trent, Steve and Stan, ।
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Brooks and 1
Pearl, Mr. and Mrs. Milt Jones,
J. H. Ward and Nora, Mr. and,
Mrs. Bob Bullard, Mr. and Mrs*
Lesly Tucker, Denny and Ralph, ■
Mrs. Venice Jones, Max, Bobbie |
and Rickie, Mrs. H. C. Jones, J.
C. Jones, Grady Winters and
Ronnie.
Mrs. H. C. Jones and Mrs.
Venice Jones visited Mrs. Pluma
Gardner in Chattooga Hospital
Sunday.
G. I. LOANS
Applications for G. I. loans
dropped 12 per cent in Decem
ber and were about 27 per cent
below December, 1955, the Vet
erans Administration has re
ported. Requests for home ap-
Children's Nylon
DRESSES $1.98
Sizes 1 ~6X i
Cotton Sheet
Blankets sl.oo'
Limit 2
praisals, a “barometer for meas
uring future loan activity,” also
dipper during December. The
agency received 19,029 appraisal
requests, compared with 21,941 in
November and 24,892 a year
earlier. The decreases are at-
Ladies' Nylon
HOSE I
2 pr. SI.OO
Ist Quality j
Brand new j J // /
home^^
l ...horse and buggy wiring!
The dream home... at last! It represents
. months of planning and building... but the
planners didn’t look ahead. They failed to
* include sufficient wiring and circuits to take
> care of future needs.
When you buy, build or remodel, make ।
sure your home won’t be electrically out-of
date in a few years. Plan for the many
appliances you’ll be adding as time goes by.
Specify full Housepower — get 100-amp
service, at least.
GEORGIA?
tributed, almost entirely, to the
“tightening in the supply of
mortgage funds and the in
creased interest rate on VA loans
from 41/2 to 5 per cent.
Ford and Chrysler car output
is ahead of 1956.
V'—" 'f
* ■' ■
Children's
g PANTIES
91 1 pr. SI.OO
/
/ LADIES’
PANTIES '
l 5 pr. sl. >
a
Ladies’ Cotton \
> SLIPS
1 ««c
J i >) i
Iz f j
/ LADIES’ V
/ SKIRTS '
I $1.98 i
|X AND UP
y LADIES’
/ BLOUSES
USE
OUR
LAY
AWAY
. SI.OO
DEPOSIT
11