Griffin daily news. (Griffin, Ga.) 1924-current, June 29, 1966, Page 16, Image 16

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Griffin Daily News C \SOLINE STEEP SALISBURY, Rhodesia (UPI) —The government Tuesday offered Rhodesian motorists all the gasoline they wanted if they were prepared to pay $1.19 a gallon. Gasoline has been rationed just add DIXIE and enjoy t f" ■> i\\\ V .» sugar h ' m Uf|M...an "1™ the exciting World of Fantasy trip to OPEN ALL DAY •*» Nj t*‘ j^bisncylatid, JULY 4th / /7\ t ^ 1 “ % K Q, DETAILS AND ENTRY BLANKS IN EVERY WTO »•••«• *Sunday BIRD (CHICKEN PACKAGE Dinner DOGS FRANKS) Flavor" OF . . . * i I $ » m PICK UP A PACKAGE SSI TODAY! I S! t*- PACKAGE infer AMO ounki OK LANKY BOH also TON PRANK! W WlINCBfc tvtev (f homasj '•0-, FRESH WHOLE / ; 49c It -f. 12 PKG. OZ. FRYERS r vi^, m 7 - INGS cook-out For the height pleasure—and of Holiday % tops /Or picnic •> in SAV- and 4 Too — shop for these delicious 29c outdoor foods from ARCHER’S. f We’ve a sumptuous spread of all your flavor favorites for the long weekend i — all quick and easy to fix to give you more time for fun—and all LOW PRICED to let you lower the cost of Fresh Pork living it up. SPARE LB. FRESH OR CURED RIBS J PICNICS 39c V C N LB. m * s. 0 KAHN SLICED % TENDER ROUND OR RIB 4 STEAKS “69c l LB. / - % s % , ^ WHOLE OR SHANK HALF \ \ ' \ f i SMOKED HAMS 49c m 10 to 20 Lb.,. LB. D Avg. wgt. ' L''. *»«». •Y” * % Top Notch Silver King Rath’s Vanilla CVII FLOUR Pure Wafers 1V 2 LB. BAG 10 LBS. Lard CO T S' v \ Braswell’s Luzianne Sunshine Orange Drink 32 OZ. CM V* LB. Pork Beans fir No-1 Cans FROZEN FOODS Gorton’s Fish Cakes * «• 31c FRESH PRODUCE SHOP Taste ’O Sea Fresh Fancy THRIFTY FOOD Seafood Platter 59c BANANAS »10c p0R PEPPER e ground STORE Cauliflower Shurfine J •» 49c Fresh Green 122 SPALDING STREET CABBAGE HIGH FALLS ROAD Shurfine Chopped LB. k 1 OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK FOR Spinach 2 31c YOUR CONVENIENCE. w «. cans Fancy OKRA LB. 29c 1 0Z. CAN 10c ARCHERS Prices Effectiv* Thru July 2nd Baby Yellow SQUASH LB. Nabisco Stack Pack /I AFFILIATED BAG OF PLUMS WITH Ritz 33c FOOD STORE EACH PRODUCT PURCHASE. MWSTORESV PKG. 1003 W. TAYLOR ST. \ 16 Wednesday, June 29, 1966 because of the oil embargo imposed by Britain when Rhodesia seceded from the commonwealth last Nov. 11. Motorists have been allowed three gallons per week under previous laws. Zoo Elephant Mauls Little Girl To Death By FT ---YAN United Press International MADISON, Wis. (UFD — Nickels and dimes of little children brought Winkie to the Vilas Park Zoo and in the 16 years she lived there, the Indian elephant had delighted thousands of tots, about the iron-barred cage that abuut the iron-narreo cage that housed the 7,500 pound creature and extending tiny hanc’ t, holding peanuts and popcorn. A chicken wire fence was sup posed to protect the children. Tuesday was a typical summer day at the zoo. Hundreds of children scam pered about the animal exhibits and Winkie had her usual, enthralled audience of tiny ones. Three-year-old Ruth Ellen Freedman, the daughter of Prof, and Mrs. Ral;' Freed man of Princeton, N.J., was one of them. But she carried her enthusiasm to step too close and was fatally mauled by the huge animal. Moved *r Ruth Ellen wanted M get close enough to Winkle to feed her the popcorn clenched in her tiny fist. Witnesses said the girl climbed under the outer chick en-wire restraining fence and stepped within ran;e of Win kle’s trunk. The trunk snaked out, and wrapped around Ruth Ellen’s leg. The girl was lifted into the air and dashed to the ground. Witnesses said the elephant then trampled me little body. Ruth Ellen’s mother, the girl’s 9-;, r-cld brother, and two other women and their six children -/atched in horror. Their helpless screams brought the animal’s trainer, Mel Bollig. He entered the cage and brought out the girl’s body out. Bollig said as he walked toward Winkie, the elephant trumpeted three times and stepped back “acting like she h:.d done something wrong.” No Decision Made Zoo Director Alvie Nelson s: '1 later he did not know wh..t would be done with the eler’ ant which, he said, h d been purchased by “the nickels and dimes of little children. “There’s been ’0 decision. There’s nothing you can Mothers will just nave to their kids. “If people go to the races, they don’t let their kids run out on the tra.k,” he said In explaining there were no plans to make changes in the restraining fence. “People are sending their pre-school children to zoos in taxicabs nowadays. Times have changed since you and I were kids and our mother held our hands." Nelson said the elephant could not rear' its trunk over the heavy bars but that the r.aces between the bars—about one foot — were large enough to pull a small girl through. KENNEDY COUSIN DIES NIMES, France (UPI) —Mrs. Paulette Bouquet, 46, a distant cousin of Mrs. John F. Kennedy, was killed Tuesday in an automobile accident in southern France. Mrs. Souquet, who lived at nearby Pont Saint Esprit, traveled to Paris in 1961 when President and Mrs. Kennedy visited France. CR Movement >> Is Split Into Bitter Factions V By AL KUETTNER United Press International ATLANTA (DPI) —The rights movement was split bitter factions today on its rent battleground of Smoldering disagreements ideology flared into an breach on finances during marathon meeting that the end of the Memphis Jackson “freedom march” Sun day. Dr. Martin Luther Southern Christian Conference said Tuesday would have to foot almost the entire $25,000 to $30,000 bill for the 260-mile march that three weeks. The Rev. Andrew Young, tive director of SCLC, said in Atlanta that the Sudent Non violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) and the Congress of Racial Equality had agreed to “pay a share” of the expenses, but SCLC “ended up having to pay practically all of them.” Short of Money Young said SNCC and CORE apparently were unable to pay their share “because of a short age of funds.” In line with an SCLC policy to Soft-pedal any fighting within the civil rights ranks, Young de clined to discuss details of the secret meeting of “freedom march” leaders in Jackson that lasted most of Monday. But a source close to the lead ers said there was angry de bate, not only over finances, but over strategy for other civil rights campaigns in Mi. 'ppi. There was constant bickering over the route of the march after James H. Meredith, the originator, was wounded by birdshot and had to leave, and over whether to abandon King’s nonviolence philosophy in favor of a more militant posture. King and SNCC leader Stokely Carmichael appeared at times to be debating the issue in speeches at various rallies along the march route. Carmichael would call for “black power” and King would come behind him and admonish Negroes that vio lence would be a tragic mis take. NAACP Ruled Out The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and the National Urban League took only small parts in the march, and march leaders banned the NAACP from par ticipating in the final rally. Roy Wilkins, executive di rectors of the NAACP, said the move was a “petty act” and vowed his group would continue to fight for civil rights in Mis sissippi on its own hook "with out fanfare and without marches or shoving matches with of ficials and police.” Meredith also expressed disen chantment with the march, and Young admitted that “we ran '* into all kinds of problems. “We felt we were doing all the work and paying all the bills, but somebody else was get ting all the credit while handing us all the blame for things that went wrong,” he said. As a result of the disagree ments, Young said, “we have decided to conduct our own cam paign in Mississippi and let the others run theirs.” Young said SCLC would con centrate in the area of Yazoo City, Grenada, DeSoto and Tate counties, CORE would be cent ered in the Canton area and SNCC would operate in the Delta. C~ T KBRATES BIRTHDAY THE HAGUE (UPI) —Prince Bernhard of The Netherlands, husband of Queen Luliana, today observed his 55th birth day with only private celebra tions planned by the royal family. The occasion was marked officially by flying the national colors from government build ings. Prince Bernhard was born in Jena, now East Germany, as Prince Bernhard Zur Lippe Biesterfeld. METEORITE FOUND ANGOULEME, France (UPI) —A meteorite weighing 250 pounds fell in a field near this town in western France Tues day, authorities i ■ ... 'jm v.-.-sskSP.-: 'J * ■ Si??: m : I i C i m & m lid I 1 II i cn •r-s ir~~ » . m m DOG TAG—There’s no mis taking dogs the breed of the in this Yankee Ken nels’ station wagon from East Poland, Maine. Their state allows six letters on auto license plates and these six are very appro priate.