Newspaper Page Text
Wednesday, May 10, 1967
riffin Daily News
Hospital
rhe following patients were
nitted to the Griffin-Spalding
unty Hospital Tuesday:
3illy Home, Mrs. Mary Vau
a, Greg Dial, Noah Walker,
s. Monica Stone, Alvin Hol
, Mrs. Clair Moore, Mrs. Od
a Bouchillon, Mrs. Ora Lit
, Mrs. Mattie Gunter, Mrs
th Hobbs, Mrs. Claudie Cl
c, Mrs. Era Sullivan, Mrs.
ris Payne, Mrs. Clara Up
urch, Billy Pollard, Robert
to, Wheaton McAfee, William
sey, Sophia James.
rhe following were dismissed:
Vickey Thurston, Mrs. Belle
11s, Roy Battson, Mrs. Stel-
Fisher, Mrs. Bertha Robin
a and baby, Mrs. Rosa Lee
astom, Mrs. Emmie Brown,
rs. Brenda Norton, Edgar
irleton, Mrs. Bloise Curtis and
by, Ernest Richards, Mrs.
attie Hall and baby, Frank
Jbinson, Hansell Eller.
Stork Club
LITTLE MISS DORSEY
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Dorsey
Imperial Beach, Calif., an
>unce the birth of a daughter,
i May 8. Grandparents are Mr.
id Mrs. Bill Dorsey of Sunny
.de.
]ity Prisoners
freedom Short
Tack Middlebrooks, 18, of At
nta, who escaped a city work
stall at Oak Hill cemetery
uesday afternoon was captured
p.ortly after he fled.
Police found him in a wooded
rea opposite a shopping cen
■r on Memorial drive. The you
l offered no resistance.
He was serving 30 days for
rinking under age.
MR. AUSTIN
Os Beltone Hearing Aids
will be at The Spalding Hotel,
Thursday, May 11th, 12 noon
to 2 p.m., for free hearing
tests.
fell!
H idles' Ist Quality
i or Seamless Mesh
INSIQc
airs for
n plcgt. of 3 ■ %J£palr
miti 3 pk,,.
ig LITTLE HEELS
in* sryi* mar is mailing faihion h*odlin*». A |Mi Q "O
£j«k Ovality "Qu**n Craft” dr*u tho*s. Soft, grain- A Hn. f
I od l*ath*r in Whit* ond Bon», Black * J* ■
K m Patent. Combination lait. Sin, 3-10.
Ladies' JL Toons' Goy-'n-Bouncy // /jffltk
sun n sand
s3.m s<B7 Mr/ Jm
VALUE | m'JQ&r
One of the season's "tartest styles. £.
Choose from Skipper i, Sand and /
Black. Snappy rope m. Bouncy, y' ' yd frmr
long wearing vulcanix< loles. Sixes /
Ladies' & Teens' New Spring
’T&r x our r ®B' *4.97
\ This smooth leother stack provides
all the comfort you like plus style.
Pill-o-Tred cushioned heel and arch.
Soring Ben* * : *"»s 5-10.
(L\ Med. & Wide Widths
Ladies’ Feather-light
* e, *B e ® asua l
w*OTkJ \ Oyr Rag. S3.RT
TfcL;.\V \ Genuine Queen Craft C«*
\ suals. Enjoy blissful com* #% 4%
fort in this attractive mtd- IL* BU fl I
ium wedge. Soft* \J 3%M I#
| leather - like upper
OPEN \\ with airy open back 11111
sfy^O-Vinyl covered
foam cushion heel-to-toe. Bone and Ton earn
■■■Wil I O ,lfiaL 7 bination. Sixes 5-10.
’til 9 p.m.
C -4r Plenty of Free Parking ) I [•Afl Jil 4
C 372 North Expressway
Next to rbm ■KjyyypsM
Volkswagen iAiifiis*
M Prices Good All SO Pic 'n Pay Stores! mmr
Girl Scouts
Os Troop 262
Receive Badges
A “fly-up” ceremony and a
Court of Awards were held re
cently by Girl Scout Troop 262
of Third Ward School. Brownies
of Troop 196 and Troop 155 of
Third Ward ‘‘flew up” to Girl
Scouts at this time.
The following received bad
ges: Lynn Brooks, water fun,
troop camper; Tyna Bell, col
lector, toy maker, personal
health, drawing and painting,
troop camper; Francine Brown,
collector, housekeeper, troop
camper; Sandra Cammons,
needlecraft, pen pal troop
camper, World Association pin;
Lori Cook, troop camper; Cindy
Ellington, collector, musician,
songster, water fun, needlecraft,
dabbler, troop camper.
Kathy Fetzer, cook; Kathy
Gatlin, pen pal, troop camper;
Cerie Godfrey, drawing and
painting, housekeeper, my home,
home, health and safety, per
sonal health, troop camper,
backyard fun, observer; Step
hanie Kelly, toymaker. World
Association pin, troop camper;
Marsha Smallwood, cyclist;
Patti Brooks, backyard fun,
troop camper; Kay Watkins,
home, health and safety, pen
pal, pets, toymaker, camera,
needlecraft, skater, drawing and
painting, troop camper.
Jean Dickinson, cook, dabbler,
observer, skater, home, health
and safety, backyard fun, cy
clist; Nancy Gary, cyclist; Cher
ry Gregory, health aid, cyclist;
Jan Jones, water fun, health
aid, magic carpet, cyclist; Jill
Jones, toy maker, gypsy, house
keeper, rambler, cyclist; Vickie
Stephens, toymaker, gypsy, cy
clist; Sherri Thacker, health
aid, cyclist; Susan Mitchell,
drawing and painting, dabbler.
Rhonda Watkins, health aid,
home, health and safety, pets,
cook, gypsy, cyclist; Kim Hunt,
pet, observer; Denise Tyler,
toymaker; Debbie Braddock,
toymaker, troop camper.
Sign of the Arrow Tyna
Bell, Cindy Ellington, Cerie God
frey, Kay Watkins, Patti Brooks,
Vickie Stephens.
Sign of the Star — Jan Jones,
Cherry Gregory, Sherri Tha
cker, Jean Dickinson, Rhonda
Watkins and Jill Jones.
Debbie Braddoek — Scribe.
7
' ' y
V'- . . ...
EAGER HANDS reach up from Vietnamese children in a
village near An Ton, South Vietnam, as Marine Lance
Corpora] William E. McGill digs into his bag of candy
for a minor scale pacification program of his own.
m!, j i 6 ;
L •
STAKED-OUT for fishing are these natives along the
southern coast of Ceylon, making their living on the
coastal waters. The poles give them a stable resting place
from which to fish in the shallows, and the catch is
deposited in the woven bags they carry at their waists.
Sen. Ted Kennedy
Opposed To U.S.
Policy In Vietnam
CHAPEL HILL, N. C. (UPI)
— Ben. Edward Kennedy, D-
Mass., Tuesday night told an
overflow audience of 2,000 per
sons, who twice gave him a
standing ovation, that he disa
grees with American policy in
Vietnam.
“My position Is not the posi
tion of our government,” Ken
nedy told the crowd, largely
University of North Carolina
students.
e said that he believes per
sons who question the Vietnam
war do not lack patriotism.
Speaking on “Asia after Viet
nam,” Kennedy said the United
States should follow a policy of
military restraint in Asia once
the war Is settled.
The younger brother of the
late President John F. Kennedy
emphasized, however, that he
was “not advocating disengage
ment.”
He said the United States
About Town
ROTARY CLUB
All Griffin High student Rot
arians for the year will present
the program at the regular
meeting of the Griffin Rotary
Club on Thursday, at noon, at
the Elks Club.
LIONS CLUB
The regular meeting of the
Griffin Lions Club will be held
Thursday night at the Moose
Lodge, beginning at 7:30 p.m.
James Harrison, first runner
up in the humorous speech div
ision of the Toastmasters Club,
will be the guest speaker.
CAPITAL QUIZ
WASHINGTON (UPI) —Betty
Furness found her first appea
rance before a congressional
committee just like taking an
examination In school: “They
never ask you the questions you
are most prepared to answer.”
Miss Furness, who left the
ranks of television saleswomen
to become President Johnson’s
adviser on consumer problems,
Friday recounted how she felt
the previous day when she met
with a Senate consumer sub
committee.
“I had a fund of information
about that bill which they never
asked me,” she told a luncheon.
"I guess If I were In school I
might rate a C-plus for my
performance ”
should honor Its commitments,
“but be very careful about new
ones.
“Unless we develop new
Asian policies, different from
what we have had so far, we
could find ourselves fighting a
gain and again,” he said.
Five Suspects
Turned Over To
Spalding Lawmen
EL PASO, Tex. (UPl)—Geor
gia authorities filled a station
wagon with prisoners today and
headed back to Georgia to
press charges of armed robbery
and the rape of two Negro choir
girls.
The suspects are Robert Lind
sey Smith, 20; Winfred Johnny
Parham, 19; Jackie Wayne
Martin, 17, William Lamar
Clontz, 18, and Joseph Floyd,
Anthony, 18, all of Griffin, Ga.
The chief of police at Griffin,
Leo Blackwell, Sheriff Dwayne
Gilbert of Spalding County, Ga.,
and William Darsey of the Geor
gia Bureau of Investigation
guarded the prisoners on the
long drive back to Georgia.
They expected to arrive in
Georgia late Thursday.
The suspects are accused o!
going into the Pleasant Grove
Methodist Church near Griffin
April 23, robbing the collection
plate and congregation and
raping two girls.
The five men and two others
were stopped at a Texas road
block April 26 near Salt F.’at,
They were taken to El Paso
and waived extradition. The oth
er two men were held in El Paso
on charges of taking a stolen
car from Oklahoma to Texas.
Jritfin Hospital Care
Association, Inc.
(Sponsored and approved bj
the Grtffin-Spalding Count)
Hospital.)
Paid claims in the amount o'
$11,765.67 during the month of
March.
F. L. BARTHOLOMEW, JR
Secretary
Father Govern
Honored; Moved
From Griffin
Father Raymond Govern, pas
tor of Sacred Heart Catholic
Church for the past six years,
was honored with a candlelight
banquet in the cafetorium of Sa
cred Heart School.
Father Govern has been as
signed temporarily to the St.
Gerard church at Oglethorpe,
Ga.
He has been succeeded by the
Rev. James R. O’Malley.
The banquet for Father Gov
ern was sponsored by the Altar
Society and Sacred Heart Par
ent Teacher Guild.
Following the banquet tribute
was given to him by Father Ja
mes Anderson, Father J. Edwin
Tackney and Sister Mary Rob
ert, Sacred Heart principal.
Joe Mansour, master of cere
monies, presented a letter to Fa
ther Govern indicating a me
morial fund in honor of his par
ents had been established.
Several pupils of Sacred Heart
presented a “This Is Your Life”
program.
Father Tackney who recently
celebrated his 25th year of pr
iesthood and who will be leav
ing Sacred Heart, too, soon, al
so was honored.
Mrs Floyd Cole, Mrs. J. D.
Goodwin and Mrs. Sara Fran
ces Williams and Mrs. Jane
Rissman were in charge of ar
rangements.
More than 120 people attended.
Griffinite’s
Brother Dies
Mr. Nathan Abernathy of Ros
well, who made his home in Gr
iffin several years ago, died ear*
ly today at an Atlanta Hospital.
Mr. Abernathy was the bro
ther of Mrs. R. E. Rider of Gr
iffin. Other Griffin survivors in
clude a sister-in-law, Mrs. Jeff
Hood, and two nieces, Mrs. Wi
ley Stewart and Mrs. Lee Greer.
Funeral arrangements will
be announced.
Try the light touch
in cooking with
a clean, blue flame
' /
■ ,v Jk St?
Living is easier with natural gas Whether it’s a delicate sauce or deep-fried
shrimp, cooking is so much easier—and
more fun—with the help of the clean, blue flame
on a modern gas range. The flame turns on
and off instantly to save you time and help
prevent boil-overs. Unlike heating coils,
it fits itself to any pot or pan. Lets you see the
heat and adjust it as high or low as
you want. Gives you smokeless, closed-door
broiling, too. For a quick snack or a family
dinner—cooking is easier with natural gas.
§ ATLANTA OAS LIGHT COMPANY
925 West Taylor Street — Griffin, Ga.
Phone 227-2221
m ■****» 4‘ ,> * .> s> v 1
i- ..- j- —. ■•' X : I
p ■ -x, |
UNLOADING SHORTCUT is a novel truck-trailer development that allows easier access
to cargo. The aluminum enclosure can be raised and held at any height up to five feet
by three hydraulic jacks that draw power from the tractor pulling the trailer.
' > /M ,. . igg
* ***** $:
» < • <4 ■■
■ i
SOVIET LUXUR\ LINER, the “Alexander Pushkin,” noses into Bremerhaven Ger*
many, as a wharf official looks on. The Baltic Steamship Company’s vessel has started
a regular service between Leningrad, U.S.S.R.; Bremerhaven, and Montreal, Canada.
••••• • ••> y