Newspaper Page Text
Thursday, April 27, 1967 Griffin Daily News
HISTORIC VISIT
PARIS (UPI) —The Archbish
op of Canterbury, Dr. Michael
Ramsey, returned to London
Monday, ending an historic
four-day visit to France to
promote church ecumenical
movements. Ramsey’s visit to
the French capital was the first
made by an Anglican primate
since 1520.
PAINTING STOLEN
BRUSSELS (UPI) —A “price
less” painting, “Young Girl
With Ribbon,” by the 18th
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PROPERTY OF DR. W. B. CHILDS
5 VALUABLE PROPERTIES!
BARNESVILLE, GEORGIA
45 MILES from ATLANTA - 25 FROM MACON
1. 310 ACRES OPEN AND WOODED on
Johnstonville Rd., known as (he “OI d
Famlrough Place”. Just up the road from
Dr. Childs’ estate, only 1.5 miles from new
1-75. Over 3-10 mile of road frontage. Part
ly timbered. Ideal development land. Good
hunting, too.
2. STORE PROPERTY -1 ACRE -
2.5 ACRE TR ACT
Corner Johnstonville Rd. These two pro
perties will be offered suixNvided and as
a whole. The new 1-75 expressway will en
hance this property.
3. 5-ROOM HOUSE — 1.5 ACRES
Across from store property, a modem
well-built home on level lot. One story,
full basement, 5 rooms and bath. Two
fireplaces. Electric oil heat and excellent
deep well with pump. Offered subdivided
and as a whole.
4. 80 ACRES - 7-ROOM HOUSE
Off Johnstonville Rd. on Old Jackson-
Indian Springs Rd. known as the “James
11. Mott Place”, it has 5 rooms and bath
on ground floor, 2 rooms and 1 bath on
second. 4 fireplaces. Fine play room in
basement. Deep well pump. Acreage will
be offered subdivided and as a whole.
5. 38 ACRES TIMBERLAND
Property of Mr. J. W. Butler which ad
joins the 80-acre tract above. All but 12
acres in heavy timber ready for the saw.
Plenty of springs and bold streams. Ideal
for home sites after clearing profitable
trees.
ALSO
2 FINE WALKING HORSE STALLIONS
30 HP JOHNSON ELECTRIC STARTING
OUTBOARD MOTOR LIKE NEW.
century French master Jean-
Baptiste Greuze was stolen
from a private collection in
suburban Woluwe over the
weekend, police said Monday.
HIP DEEP
NEVADA CITY, Calif. (UPI)
—This Gold Rush town is
beginning to look a little like it
did in the days of the 49ers.
Forest rangers discovered a
group of bearded, tattered men
and their women living a
rugged life in an old mine—not
leftovers from the old days, but
hippies from San Francisco.
NEAR NEW 1-75 INTERCHANGE!
LOCATION: From Barnesville take U.S. 11 South about •! mile. Turn left on
Johnstonville Road (Sims St.) and go about 5.8 miles to sale at Johnstonville.
Follow auction signs to various properties. All properties within a short distance
of new 1-75 Interchange.
Comfortable homes, excellent timberlaud, fine pastures, rich hunting, country
store property all located in an area that is bound to appreciate with the com
pletion of the new 1-75 Interchange at Johnstonville Road. All these properties
will be within “a stone's throw” of an expressway that can put you in Atlanta
within a half hour . . . Macon in only 15 minutes! Home owners could commute
easily to these two cities—which suggests that far-seeing developers and In
vestors should consider these offerings. All buildings are in excellent condition,
ready to be lived in. and there's a big phis value in marketable timber ready
to be cashed in! INVEST IN THIS FINE PROPERTY NOW AND “WATCH
JOHNSTONVILLE GROW.”
TERMS TO BE ANNOUNCED AT SALE
Write or call for brochure and further information
List Your
Property with Us —■ Reg. U. S. Trademark
n1 / ifi I INi M 1 Ml
531 Broad St. Rome,Ga. Phone 234-1656
LICENSED • BONDED • INSURED
2
Griffin High
Junior-Senior
Is Friday Night
BY JAN HAMMOCK
Tomorrow night Griffin High’s
biggest social event of the year,
the Junior-Senior, will take
place.
The dance, sponsored by jun
iors and given in honor of the
seniors, will be held in the
school gym from 8:30 to mid
night. The theme is “The Wiz
ard of Oz.” Music will be fur
ished by the “Rhodes Scholars.”
Eight members of the Student
Council represented Griffin High
at the State Student Council
convention last week-end at Rock
Eagle. While at the convention,
they attended discussion groups,
took part in a program clinic,
and had the opportunity of lis
tening to noted speakers such as
Senator Herman Talmadge.
Those attending from Griffin
High were Carolee Allen, Car
roll Ann Betzold, Bea Finleyson,
Steve Goodroe, Reggie Griffin,
Debbie Harp, Carl Presley, and
Richard Turner.
In baseball on Saturday the
Fairmont High
Prom To Be Held
In Gym Friday
By BOBBIE DELANEY
And JULIETTE GATES
This is one of the busiest
weeks of the school year.
The biggest event is the Jun
ior-Senior Prom which will be
held Friday night in the gym
natorium at 8:30.
The juniors are decorating the
gymnatorium. President of the
junior class is Thomas Byrd and
the junior class advisors chair
man is Mr. Grady Parks.
Three students attended the
technorama sponsored by the
Division of Technical Sciences
Friday at Savannah State Col
lege. John Ridgeway entered a
project in the area of woodwork.
Others attending were Ulysses
Sims and Ferrie Williams. They
were accompanied by Mr. Jam
es Lawson, Industrial Arts in
structor.
Toll Rises
CHICAGO (UPI)—A 14-year-old
boy died Tuesday, raising the
death toll from last Friday’s
tornadoes in northern Illinois to
54.
Today, residents of Belvidere
and Oak Lawn, the two
communities hardest hit by the
tornadoes, attended funerals
scheduled for most of the dead,
who totaled 21 at Belvidere and
31 at Oak Lawn.
Griffin High team scored anoth
er victory, this time against
Russell High. Led by the superb
pitching of Grady Pierce, the
Eagles won 16-0. In Tuesday’s
game the Eagles unfortunately
took one of the few defeats of
the season so far. They were de
feated by Jonesboro 1-0.
On Monday night, the Athletic
Banquet was held in the Griffin
High cafeteria. All athletes and
cheerleaders were honored gue
sts. Max Dowis, new football
coach, was the speaker.
Friday, 10 members of the
Griffin High VICA Club will at
tend the State VICA Convention
in Atlanta. Tim Conkle is a can
didate for state vice president
and Bonnie Ingram is seeking
election as state secretary. Tho
se who will attend from Griffin
are Ray Brown, Richard Burn
ett, Tim Conkle, Tony Dix, Ric
ky Evans, TOnmy Greer, Patsy
Harris, Vance Hooper, Bonnie
Ingram, and Roy Smith.
The girls and boys track teams
received two third place troph
ies at the Regional Track Meet
held in Macon last Saturday.
Shirley Sims participated in
three events, the broad jump,
the high jump, and the hurdles.
She received first place in each
event. Blondine Woodard won
first place in the baseball throw,
(186 ft.), and Shirley Bruce won
third place. Gwendolyn Boynton
won third place in the discus,
place in the 220 yard dash with
a pulled muscle.
The girl’s track team will tra
vel to Fort Valley Friday to
participate in the State Track
Meet. The boys will travel to
Fort Valley' on Saturday to take
part in this activity also.
The Fairmont High Baseball
B Team defeated Park Junior
High of Atlanta Monday. This
was the Bears 11th win. The
Bears played Henry County Tr
aining School of McDonough
here Wednesday. The game star
ted at 4 p.m.
The Dramatics Club, under the
direction of Mr. Felton Stringer,
presented its play, “Special Gu
est", at Booker High School in
Barnesville in an assembly pro
gram Tuesday.
The Home Economics Depart
ment headed by Mrs. McPhail,
presented its annual Spring Fas
hion Review Wednesday.
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The Griffin Old Car Club will host its fifth annual
old car meet at City Park Sunday beginning at 10
a. m. Antique cars from throughout the state are ex-
Social Security
Medicare Bills
Must Be Itemized
Itemized, receipted bills should
be included with claims filed for
jgimbursement by Medicare. Not
including these bills causes de
lay in payment of these claims.
Q. I only have a receipt from
my doctor where I paid him.
Will this be enough information
for filing a claim for Medicare?
A. M.. Griffin.
A. No. So that the insurance
company will know the type ser
vice rendered and the date, an
itemized statement must be in
cluded with your claim and re
ceipt
Q. Will Medicare pay for a
hospital bed to use at home? J.
W„ Griffin.
A. Medicare will pay for the
rental of a hospital bed but not
for the purchase of a hospital
bed. The rental is paid under
Part “B” of Medicare. A state
ment from your physician say
ing that the bed is necessary al-
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SUSPECT WAILS —A Communist suspect with an identifica
tion tag on her wrist weeps and wails as a U.S. Marine car
ries her belongings in Quang Tri, South Vietnam, 21 miles
south of tlie Demilitarized Zone. (Radiophoto)
THOMPSON'S
PAINT STORE
448 W. Solomon Street
(Foodtown Shopping Center.
NOW OPEN
DEALER IN
BENJAMIN MOORE PAINTS
Antique Car Meeting
so will be needed when you file
the claim.
Q. I have a drug bill of $75.
How do I file a claim for this
under Medicare? D. C., Griffin?
A. Medicare does not cover
prescription drugs. Therefore,
you could not file a claim for
this.
Q How old does a widow have
to be before she can receive
monthly benefits? P.W., Griffin.
A. A widow can receive mon
thly benefits on her deceased
husband’s account as early as
age 60. There is a slight reduc
tion, however, but she receives
the benefits over a longer per
iod of time.
If you have a question about
Social Security, send it to the
Social Security Office, 435 West
Solomon street, Griffin, Ga. 302-
23. All inquiries must be signed
and should include your address.
pected for the meeting. George C. Imes shows a 1918
T-Model Ford Speedster he will have at this year’s
show. Ray Howard is chairman of the meet.
Kelsey Junior High
Students Place In
Fine Arts Festival
By CAROLYN MILLER
Many students at Kelsey par
ticipated in the Regional Fine
Arts Festival in Jackson.
The following received recog
nition in outdoor activities: Sy
lvester Burks, first place in the
50 yard dash; Patricia Jordon,
first place, 40 yard dash. Sylves
ter Burks, Jack Watkins, Robert
Harps and Charles Yarbrough,
first place in the 220 yard re
lay; Patricia Jordon, Nellie Hill,
Delores Henley and Deborah
Mathis, second place in the 200
yard relay and Nellie Hill, se
cond place in the softball throw.
The chorus, under the direc
tion of Mrs. A. Walker and Mr.
C. Little, received a rating of
NO BRITISH
LONDON (UPI) —A British
World War II hero Monday
deplored the absence of British
representatives from last
week’s unveiling of a memorial
to the 4 million people of 23
nationalities murdered at Aus
chwitz. Air Force Group Capt.
Leonard Cheshire, who won the
Victoria Cross and other
decorations, said British non
participation was “an occasion
of the utmost regret.”
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ED'S TRACING POST
132 West Broad Street — Phone 227-1459
Griffin, Ga
(Griffin Daily News Staff Photo)
superior.
The dramatics club presented
“Bobby Sox”, a one-act comedy,
which received second place.
Cynthia Matthews, who played
the part of "Bobby Sox”, was
given an award for the best ac
tress. The dramatics club is sp
onsored by Miss J. Walker.
The dance group, which is su
pervised by Miss B. Brown, re
ceived a rating of good for its
creative dance performed to
the tune of “Watermelon Man”.
The Physical Education De
partment presented its third an
nual physical education program
on Wednesday night in the gym
nasium. The activities included
relays, square and folk dances,
Swedish gymnastics, precision
exercises to music and stunts
and tumbling. Miss Brenda Br
own and Mr. Jimmy Hodges are
the physical education in
structors.
"jsT FAMILY
PROTECTOR
insuiahci
J Ralph la Gatlin
p 64116 FtNM 2X7-2512
State Farm Life Insurance Company