Griffin daily news. (Griffin, Ga.) 1924-current, February 24, 1966, Image 20

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Lane To Contest Election Of Bond By DON PHILLIPS United Press International ATLANTA (UPI)—The law maker who led the successful fight against the seating of Julian Bond to the Georgia House of Representatives plans to continue his battle by con testing the re-election of the No gi"> civil rights worker. Rep. Jones Lane of Statesboro said he would come to Atlanta to file the contest as soon as the election results are certi fied. Bond, who was denied his seat In the House because of his statements on Viet Nam and draft card burning last month, was re-elected Wednes day without opposition. He received about 700 votes In a special 136th district elec tion. Under a House resolution passed last session. Lane has 10 days after the elections are Certified to file the contest with the House clerk. A Pulton Coun- Pythagoras Chapter No. 10 — R. A. M. Jtogalsr Convo tattoo tonight All qualified Invited t* be present at ItM p. I. C. Tlnley—HP Tom Brake. See.-Trnaa CORRECTION RC OR DIET RITE COLAS BTL 5C OR 24 BOTTLE CASE $ 1.00 CLARK’S 403 East Broadway JESSE’S DELIVERY M Aak Your Doctor To Phone Us Your IWrq>tW Phone 227-3291 City Wide ON SALE THURSDAY, FRIDAY A SATURDAY Service WatyxaeH Call 227-3291 Clgency drug store or 227-3292 NEW HYPO ALLEGENIC COSMETIC LINE By Almoy Designed Especially for Those with Sensative Skin or Cosmetic Allergies. A Complete Line: Lipsticks • Eye Shadow • Creams • Lotions • Powder • Hair Sprays, etc. CEPAC0L KOLANTYL BAYER Horehound Cough Troches Flavored ASPIRIN Reg. 98c Antacid Liquid 100 Tablets 12 Ounces Reg. 89c Now 69c Now $1.29 Now 65c ARRESTIN Alka Seltzer Glycerine COUGHSYRUP Tablets (Large) Suppositories 4 ounces 24’s Reg. $1.19 Reg. 63c Children’s & Adults 89c 45c Reg. 79c n«w Now Now 55c DEODORANT SPECIALS NEW SHIPMENT OF DESERT DRI TOYS Cream with AntiPerspirant • Slinky • Rubon's i Price - Reg. $1.00 • Models • Wheel-O's NOW 50c • Puzzles • New Games HEAD & SHOULDERS Gleem Tooth Paste Lotion Large - Reg. 1.45 Family size Reg. 75c Now 60c NOW $1.19 Ex-Large Size Reg. 89c Now 73c Lotion Medium • Reg. 85c NOW 69c Secret Deodorant Jar Medium - Reg. 89c Ex-Large Roll-on Reg. 1.00 Now 83c NOW 73c Personal Cream Reg. 29c Now 25c NEW SHIPMENT RUSSELL STOVER CANDY - FREQUENT SHIPMENTS ASSURE YOU OF A DEPENDABLY FRESH DELICIOUS CANDY ty spokesman said the county court should certify the results within a couple of days. The resolution also states that a meeting of the standing House rules committee would then be called to act on the challenge. The rules committee would at that time decide whether Bond should be seat ed until the full House is able to rule next session. “I don’t know how they (the rules committee) will rule,” Lane said. “But I would think they would uphold the con test.” The special election was a hollow victory for Bond since he was elected only for this year and the General Assembly has already adjourned. He must run again in the September pri mary and the November gen eral election to be seated in the 1967 assembly session. Bond has appealed to the U. S. Supreme Court a recent federal court decision which up held the House action which barred him from his seat. "If the Supreme Court rules against me, it would be foolish for me to keep running for of fice,” Bond told newsmen. He predicted, however, that he would win his court battle against what he called a “white man’s trick.” Bond repeated his stand that he was rejected by the House f i 1 i jgjjgk m Wm m .j. ; r -m 4 A ■ 1 m mmmtk fit ■ 1 if f L; ■ ; m A Wm& 1 liiili m [ J A \ i mm f $ m m m ' i I ii Wm iU CULTURE? — This young Russian lady, member cultural of a touring proved quick, study troupe, of a local ways. She’s doing a native Malay dance learned on a Singapore visit. It may be a mark for Soviet cul* : ture, Marx. but it’s hardly out of ; because he is Negro and af filiated with the Student Non violent Coordinating Committee. He is the publicity director of SNCC. Among those who cast bal lots In the election Wednesday were Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. The Fulton County Court house, where the voting was held, is not located In the pre dominantly Negro 136th dis trict. In unopposed special elec tions the county names only one polling place. Bond received 82 per cent of the 3,000 votes cast the first time he was elected. 13 Dateline Georgia Braswell Executive Editor ATHENS, Ga. (UPI) — Earl B. Braswell, publisher and gen eral manager of the Athens Banner Herald for 44 years, Is the new executive editor of the Athens Dally News. The appointment, effective immediately, was announced by Claude B. Williams Jr., presi dent and general manager, and Glenn Vaughn, publisher and editor of the Daily News. Braswell has been publisher emeritus of the Banner-Herald since last September when the newspaper was purchased by Huiet Accuses Caldwell ATLANTA (UPI) — Highway Department Personnel Director Sam Caldwell was accused Wednesday of illegally using state money to campaign for elective office throughout the state. The charge was made by state Labor Commissioner Ben T. Huiet, who said Caldwell should either stop running for office illegally or quit his Job. Caldwell, who has often been mentioned as a possible candi date for Huiet’s Job, emphati cally denied the charge. Under state law, an appoint- Legality Of Bills Suit Hied MARIETTA, Ga. (UPI) — A Marietta lawyer said Wednes day he planned to file a court suit against the legality of all bills passed by the General As sembly after midnight last Fri day. Christopher Landise said he had no quarrel with the bills themselves but only with the fact they were passed after midnight. Clocks In both the House and Senate were stopped at 11:31 p.m. on that final day of the 1966 session and legisla- Rites For Sister Walsh ATLANTA (UPI) — Funeral services will be held Friday for Sister Mary Ignatius Walsh, neice of the late U. S. Sen. Patrick Walsh of Georgia. Sister Mary Ignatius, 96, died Wednesday. Before joining the Georgia Sisters of Mercy in Ex-Cop Granted New Trial ATLANTA (UPI) — A new trial has been granted for for mer Atlanta policeman Harold S. Wayne Jr., who was convict ed of involuntary manslaughter in the shooting of racketeer James R. Crawford. The Georgia Court of Appeals reversed the conviction Wednes day on the ground that Cobb County Superior Court Judge Conley Ingram erred In his charge to the Jury. Wayne had been sentenced to serve five years for the April Peanut Hrm May Be Sold COLUMBUS, Ga. (UPI)—Gen eral Mills of Grand Rapids, Mich., is negotiating to buy the Tom Huston Peanut Co. of Co lumbus, the two firms an nounced Wednesday. Officials of the two firms said they hope to be able to arrive at terms that can be recom mended to the boards of direo* tors on Feb. 28. J-BAR J RANCH HOUSE 101 North 16th Street Phone 227-9800 7 DAY A WEEK SPECIAL! YOUR CHOICE • One Meat • 2 Vegetables • Tea or Coffee $100 • One Meat • 3 Vegetables • Tea or Coffee • Desert CM SPECIAL EVERY WEDNESDAY NIGHT CAT FISH OR CHITTERLINGS Rooms and Board Available. GERALD L. EVANS Owner - Operator Southeastern Newspapers Corp. He had operated the since 1921. Braswell began his newspaper career in 1913 as a reporter for the Augusta Chronicle. He came city editor three years later and a year later named managing editor of Augusta Herald, owned Bowdre Phinizy When Phinizy purchased Banner-Herald, Braswell named its publisher and eral manager. ed official such as Caldwell Is barred from political activities. “I am not a candidate for anything. I have not accepted one penny in campaign contri butions," Caldwell said. "I’ve received some encouragement, but I won’t decide anything un til sometime this spring or sum mer. If I should decide to run, I will leave my present office." Huiet quoted Highway Direc tor Jim Gillis as saying that on “numerous occasions” he had told Caldwell either to re sign or to stop politicking Gillis would not comment on the report tlve activity continued on near ly three hours after the re quired midnight adjournment. “I’m just an average citizen, but I feel I have to plug in the gaps left by the politicians," Landise said. “The question is, when does this erosion stop?” Landise said his biggest prob lem will be to determine which bills actually passed after mid night. He said he would bring the suit in state court just as soon as Gov. Carl Sanders signs the bills Into law. Savannah In 1900 she was so ciety editor of the Augusta Chronicle. She was a native of Charleston, S. C. Archbishop Paul J. Hallinan and Msgr. Joseph Moylan will officiate at the services. killing and was also under a federal indictment charging him with operating a lottery with Crawford. The former po liceman admitted shooting Crawford but claimed it was in self defense. Wayne has been Imprisoned at the Public Work Camp in Paulding County since August. His attorney, William Hall, said he hoped to have Wayne re leased on an appeal bond by this afternoon. They said Tom Huston’s stock appears to be worth $90 million. The company started here 40 years ago and now has 1,644,800 shares of stock currently out standing that is being traded at $53 a share. Mask Held At Center ATLANTA (UPI)—About 255 worshippers crowded Into a shopping center auditorium Wednesday for the South’s first “take It to the people” Catho lic Church Lenten mass. "I think it’s going to be well received,” said Archbishop Paul J. Hallinan of the Atlanta Dio cese, who conducted the mass along with Father Noel Burten shaw, acting chancellor of the diocese. The mass was the first in the present 404ay Lenten season and will be conducted five days a week until the Wednesday be fore Easter in the auditorium of the Lenox Square shopping center. Hallinan said that to his knowledge bringing Catholic Church services to the people has not been attempted in this country before except in Boston. He said he believed the Atlan ta service was the first of its kind in the South. Burtenshaw, who the sermon to the worshippers, mostly women, said that despite recent changes in church tion and customs, Lent has changed or become easier observe. He said the vance of Lent has become more difficult because the church no longer telts its members what to do and leaves the responsi bility up to the individuals. Mossier Trial Becomes Battle Of The Convicts By H. D. QT7IGG United Press International MIAMI (UPI) —The Mossier murder Jury comes back today for more of the battle of the convicts. The defense is produc ing an array of Jailbirds to discredit the testimony of the previous array of jailbirds produced by the prosectuion. The all-male Jury is being asked to assess one wild story against another wild story—and some of the story tellers on both sides are the basest sort of criminals. On tap today is one Wally Mendez to say that what one Billy Frank Mulvey told him In the Harris County (Houston, Tex.) Jail does not Jibe at all with what Mulvey said as a prosecution witness. Mulvey has become the most maligned character in the entire case as far as his personal integrity is concerned. A parade of witnesses has said they wouldn’t believe him under oath. Melvin Lane Powers, 29, and his aunt, Candy Mossier, 46, are 1964, charged slaying with here the June 3o[ of Candy’s multimillionaire husband, Jacques Mossier, 69. The state produced Mulvey and four other men with records to testify one or the other of the defendants tried to hire them to kill the financier. Mulvey, a 21-time convict. narcotics addict and informer, had told the Jury Candy had given him a $7,000 down payment in 1962 to have her husband killed and that two years later he, .Mulvey, was in Jail with Powers and the latter confessed stabbing Mossier to death. The defense retaliated Wed BUNDY ON TOUR WASHINGTON (UPI) _ William P. Bundy, assistant secretary of state for Far Eastern affairs, leaves today for a trip to six Asian nations and a regular conference with U.S. officials in the area. Bundy’s first step was to be Tokyo Tuesday night. From Japan he goes to Manila Baguio, in the Philippines, where he will attend a conference of all U.S. chiefs of mission in the Far East Feb. 28-Marcb 2; Saigon; Bangkok; Kuala Lumpur, and Taipei. He is due back in Washington March 13. “Wouldn't You Like 25.1% Profit On Your Savings ?” BUY COMMERCIAL BANK SAVINGS BONDS Series D - Discount Bonds Series K - Growth Bonds Purchase S Year Purchase 5 Year Price Maturity Price Maturity $ 19.99 $ 25.00 $ 100.00 $ 125.01 39.98 50.00 500.00 625.05 79.95 100.00 1,000.00 1,250.10 399.76 500.00 5,000.00 6,250.50 799.52 1,000.00 10,000.00 12,501.00 • Redeemable any time after 90 days with full interest accrued. • Maturing in 5 years to 25.1% profit • • • That’s 5.02% a year. • Full F. D. I. C. Insurance Protection. • Available at both Main Office and McIntosh Road Branch. MAIN MclNTOSH ROAD OFFICE BRANCH Commercial Bank & Trust Company Moving Toward a Century of Service Chartered 1889 Member F. D. I. C. nesday by bringing into Judge George E. Schulz’ circuit courtroom Virgil Nelson Hal ford, 29, a slow-drawling fieldwork tanned inmate of Texas’ maximum security pri son, where he is serving time for raping a minor. Halford described himself as % '' y ■ -\ T J i . mm , -x:;: J ' ’ J • v - :!3ii *3 \ : ___ Corfam adds Its beauty to tbe Naturalize** Wallc with tbls -wonderfully care-free, open pump Naturalizer interprets a beautiful shape In Corfam*, the wonderful shoe material that never needs cleaning. II wipes dean with a damp doth for easy cate beauty that wilt last a tong time. $1599 As S«n In VOGUE I V • > \ \ r I/'.*' r.. ? \ mm tth. I N A 11 1 : vV::: 7 ; etflSi m ' 1 ■ — _J TH AXTON’S BUSTER BROWN SHOE STORE 123 SOUTH HILL STREET *CMmi fc MMk MfSrtMd tattmat hr Ik turn moHrfoL a ‘real close’ prison friend of Mulvey. He said Billy Frank had told him in the Harris County jail In early 1965 that he didn't know anything about the Mossier case but that he was going to testify “to whatever the people wanted him to testify to.”