Newspaper Page Text
, Griffin Daily News
Thursday, Oct. 31, 1968
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Hospital
The following were admitted to
the Griffin-Spalding County Hos
pital Wednesday:
John Selfridge, Mrs. Sallie
Wright, Mrs. Lena Littlejohn, the
’Rev. Homer Fowler, T. L. Lasi
ter, Mrs. Evelyn Chambers, Gr
egg Brown, Mrs. Sara McGee,
.Sidney Clark, Mrs. Dorothy Nel
son, Mrs. Sara Moore, Timothy
Lester, Mrs. Linda Howard.
The following were dismissed:
Mrs. Rebecca Denton, Mrs.
Ann Bolton, Mrs. Shirley Bost
wick and baby, Mrs. Patricia Car
lyle, Mrs. Linad Fogarty, Wil
bur Watts, James Thomas, Mrs.
Massandra Gregory, Victor Kea
•dle, Mrs. Minnie Eppinger, Mrs.
Betty Nash, Mrs. Jo Ann Tur
rell. Mrs. Gladys Thompson,
Mrs. Barbara Hale -and baby,
'Mrs. Mamie Mitchell, Mrs. Eli
zabeth Worsham, Mrs. Sandra
Chapman, Mrs. Ann Studdard,
•John R. Lindsey 111, John W.
Mints,
Ki WHY
t v ° TE
HTjI REPUBLICAN?
Two party government has helped
make our America the greatest country
in the world.
We can look anywhere in the world and
see the failures of one party rule.
Let's move Griffin and Spalding County
forward by voting Republican.
VOTE
(V) LEONARD F. ERWIN, REPUBLICAN
District 32 House of Representatives
(Paid Political Advertisement)
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GRIFFIN. GEORGIA
5
Mr. Barfield
Dies Today
Mr. A. T. Barfield, 74, of Rou
te one, Griffin, died at the Grif
fin-Spalding County Hospital
early this morning following an
extended illness.
He was a lifelong resident of
Spalding County, son of the late
J. J. Barfield and the late Sara
Reeves Barfield. He operated a
lunchroom at Riegels’ Curve se
veral years ago.
Mr. Barfield is survived by two
sisters, Mrs. F. J. Norton of At
lanta and Mrs. Jeff Hand of Gr
iffin: several nieces and nep
hews.
Funeral services will be con
ducted Friday afternoon at 3:30
o’clock from Haisten’s Funeral
Home chapel. The Rev. C. B.
Bullard will officiate and burial
will be in Oak Hil cemetery. Mr.
Barfield’s body will remain at
Haisten Funeral Home.
Gas Heater Explosion
Causes Fire Damage
At 3:45 p.m. Wednesday after
noon the Dundee Volunteer Fire
Stations answered a call to t h e
home of Emma Goen on Searcy
avenue extension.
The fire was confined to one
bedroom of the house and dam
age was to contents of the
room. Firemen reported cause of
the fire was a gas heater explos
ion.
Halloween Special
Preston Bunn of 919 Maple dr
ive today Invited "trick-or-trea
ters” to see his special Hallo
ween display at his home toni
ght.
It features the comic charac
ters in "Peanuts” and their wait
for “The Great Pumpkin” to vi
sit on Halloween.
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(Griffin Daily News Staff Photo)
Homecoming Court
Two of these students will be crowned king and queen at Griffin High's homecom
ing game Friday night at Memorial Stadium. Members of the homecoming court are
(front to back) Carroll Ann Betzold and Chris Thomas, Hettie Blackmon and
Danny Goodman, Darlene Pruett and Johnny Davis, Jan Malsbary and Mike
Thompson, Deborah Cook and Robert Anderson, Pam Patrick and Steve Shockley,
Polly Dempsey and Coleman Jackson, Pam Sawyer and Steve Pierce, Ann Sullins
and Chip Purdue, Maria Powell and Lat ham Hill, Ellen Sams and Rusty Ogletree.
The king and queen will be crowned during the halftime activities.
G-Tech Instructor
Attends PN Course
Mrs. Thelma G. Leaders of Gr
iffin, practical nursing instruc
tor at Griffin Tech, is attending
a five-day course at the Univer
sity of North Carolina School of
Nursing.
The course is entitled “Profes
sional Improvement for Faculty
in Practical Nursing Program”-
toplc: Divising Purposeful Clini
cal Learning Experiences. The
visiting professor is Neva Steve
son of Cincinnati, Ohio, consul
tant in practical-nursing educa
tional and a former director of
the National League for Nursing,
Department of Practical Nursing
Programs.
Stork Club
LITTLE MISS POPE
Mr. and Mrs. George Pope of
1113 Cherokee avenue, Griffin,
announce the birth of a daughter
on Oct. 30 at the Griffin-Spald
ing County Hospital.
MASTER LOVETT
Mr. nd Mrs. Charles Lovett,
Jr. of 714 East Broad street,
Griffin, announce the birth of a
son on Oct. 30 at the Griffin-Sp
alding County Hospital.
LITTLE MISS NELSON
Mr. and Mrs. James Marvin
Nelson of Route Three, Griffin,
announce the birth of a daughter
on Oct. 31 at the Griffin-Spalding
County Hospital.
MASTER HUNNICUTT
Mr. and Mrs. Herman L. Hun
nicutt of 1414 Posey street, Grif
fin, announce the birth of a son
on Oct. 29 at the Griffin-Spalding
County Hospital.
LITTLE MISS MOORE
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Moore
of 1150 Everee road, Griffin, an
nounce the birth of a daughter on
Oct. 29 at the Griffin-Spalding
County Hospital.
MASTER HALE
Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Hale
of 68 Terracedale Court, Griffin,
announce the birth of a son on
Oct. 28 at the Griffin-Spalding
County Hospital.
MASTER IVEY
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ivey of
604 First street, Moultrie, an
nounce the birth of a son on Oct.
29 in Moultrie. Mrs. Ivey is the
former Mary Catherine Boyd of
Griffin.
MASTER HIGGINS
Airman and Mrs. Steve Hig
gins of Witchia Falls, Tex., an
nounce the birth of a son, Step
hen Scott, on Thursday, Oct. 31.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Ralph Miller of Eliza
bethtown, Pa., and paternal gr
andparents, Mr. and Mrs. D. E.
Higgins of Griffin.
Brownies Have
Investiture
At East Griffin
The Investiture ceremony for
Brownie Troop 231 was held re
cently at East Griffin School.
Those receiving pins were
Sherry Moore, Susan Sowell, Re
ne Widner, Rhonda Huff, Julie
Anthony, Beth Dixon, Linda
York, Mindy Walter, Susan Cr
owder and Trudy Mathews.
Other Brownies taking part in
the ceremony were Monica Da
vidson, Lynn Eller, Robin Pur
ser, Deborah Blankenship, Tam
my Smith, Sandra Callff, Judy
Statham, Susan Dutton and Te
resa Lester.
After the ceremony refresh
ments were served in the cafe
teria by the Brownie leaders,
Mrs. Ralph Eller and Mrs. Olan
Purser.
Parents attending were Mrs.
JoAnne Sowell, Mr. and Mrs. E.
H. Walter, Mrs, Frankie York,
Mrs. Owen Crowder, Mrs. John
ny Lester and Mrs. J. R. Lind
sey,
Griffinites At
Merge Convention
Miss Mary Ellen Preston and
Mrs. Betty Meaders of Griffin
are attending the merging gen
eral convention of the Women’s
Missionary Society of the Wes
leyan Church in Louisville, Ky.
Miss Preston is the elected de
legate from Georgia and M rs.
Meaders is WMS president of the
Georgia District.
The merger will bring together
the WMS organizations of the
Church of America and the Pil
grim Holiness Church. The Wes
leyan Church is active on 30
mission fields abroad and the
WMS is vital to its support.
WHY NOT WHISKY? "
SAG PAULO, Brazil (UPD—
The Butantan, which houses one
of the largest snake farms in
the world, is supplying snake
bite serum for US. troops in
Viet Nam. The snakes are
’‘milked” every day and their
venom processed.
’69 Chevelle SS 396 Sport Coupe
gL KL •"
If the’69 Chevelle can’t do it,
don’t try it.
There are mid-size cars that over
whelm you with words, then under
whelm you in performance.
Not Chevelle.
It handles precisely. Grips the
road forcefully. Moves with author
ity.
In Chevelle’s SS 396 form, you
seem to move from here
to there, like that. One ’69
reason is the newly available cham
bered pipe dual exhaust system. This
// ’s Package Deal
For Soviet Worker
Woman’s View
By GAY PAULEY
UPI Women’s Editor
KIEV, USSR (UPl)—lt’s a
package deal for the factory
worker in the Soviet Union.
To go with salary, he or she
can depend on the state-owned
industry to provide recreation, a
place for vacation, food, health
care, vocational training, day
care and education of the
children, and cultural activities.
You name it, and factories
like the huge textile one here in
the USSR’s third largest city
provide it. Except for coffee
breaks.
Light Industries
“We need the production,” is
one explanation given for this
almost total care of the worker.
“The government is putting
stress on light Industries. There
are 75 hosiery factories alone
under construction in the Soviet
Union.”
The one our U.S. group of
women on a tour of Eastern
'Europe visited Is one of the
largest textile plants In the
Ukraine, employing 3,000 per
sons, mostly women.
It produces hosiery at the
rate of three million pairs per
year, undergarments at the rate
of seven million pieces annually,
and ships yard goods to other
factories for another 17 million
garments. Most of the produc
tion, which Includes men’s,
women’s and children’s wear, Is
in nylon and other synthetics,
with some cotton used.
The 30-year-old factory, now
being expanded, is named for a
woman—Rosa Luxembourg, a
Header In the Communist
movement and killed by an
extreme rightwing gang In
4 Held
Continued from page one
on windows, doors and columns.
The teacher and students who
were working on the float stop
ped and washed the obscenities
from the walls, doors, windows
and columns before the paint
dried. Chief Blackwell said it
would have been impossible to
have removed all the obscenities
before morning if the paint had
dried.
Spray cans of paint were used
in painting the obscenities.
“Due to the alterness of the
teacher and students, we were
able to make the arrests as qui
ckly as we did," Chief Blackwell
said.
He estimated that damage to
the buildings would be several
thousand dollars.
Chief Blackwell Identified the
four suspects as: James Clifford
Copeland, 17, of 749 Springer dr
ive; Joseph Kincaid Thomas,
Jr., 17, of 646 Brook circle; Ja
mes T. Wofford, 17, of 327 North
17th street, and Danny Wesley
Statham, 17, of 1321 Winona dr
ive. Only Statham is a student
at Griffin High School.
Copeland and Wofford were
charged with drinking under age
in addition to the charges of mal
icious mischief, breaking and
entering, destroying public pro
perty and painting obscene signs.
They are being held in city jail,
Chief Blackwell said.
low restriction system helps develop
more usable power and eliminates
regular type mufflers.
Couple that with other standard
SS items like the exclusive Turbo-
Jet 396 VB, fat F7O x 14 tires on new
sport wheels with wider 7-inch rims,
and power disc brakes.
Now you have the concentrated
Chevrolet that some of our engineers
say is the nearly perfect machine.
If you're in the mood for SS’ing
Berlin Just after World War I.
Profits to State
A plant executive explained
the average earnings in the
factory are 100 rubles per
month, or approximately SIOO
U.S. dollars. All profits go to
the state or back to the factory
in three ways—incentive pay
above and beyond the average
salary, to underwrite cultural
activities, home construction for
workers, the kindergarten, and
to pay for plant reconstruction
and replacement of equipment.
A worker pays from one-half
to one per cent of his wages to
the trade unions. He or she
works 41 hours a week—with
Saturdays and Sundays off. And
one Is not likely to get fired.
We were told that If a worker
does not show up, the foreman
may reprimand. If the remis-
SPORTSMEN --
OUTDOORS MEN
Complete Selection
of new
■I BOOTS
F° r hunting and other out
door activities —
Non-lnsulated Boots
Insulated Boots $1099
FOR DEER HUNTERS...
Bullseye Bill Water Repellent, Fluorescent and
Light Weight.
RED HUNTING VESTS Each $159
SUB - ZERO MASTER A AAA
UNDERWEAR Pair SR99
2-PIECE THERMAL W
Gun Cleaning Ammunition
Kits Practically all calibres
for Shotguns & Rifles for Deer Hunters.
WE HAVE HUNTING AND FISHING LICENSES.
BUCKLES
HARDWARE COMPANY
409 West Solomon Street Phone 227-5503
— FREE PAVED PARKING —
FLOCK SUFFERS
CHESBY, England (UPI)—
When the minister tends his
flock at the church on Sundays,
local farmers say their cattle
suffer.
The electricity board of this
small village in England’s
midlands promised Wednesday
to look into the situation.
Farmers complain that when
the village church organ is
played and the lights and
heating are turned on, so much
electricity is used that there is
not enough current left to run
their milking machines.
sion occurs several times, the
foreman may talk to manage
ment and only if cause for
dismissal comes over loud and
clear will the worker be
dismissed.
The factory provides a dining
room where an employe can
lunch on a three course meal
for 30 to 40 kopeks, or 30 to 40
U.S. cents. There is no provision
for a coffee break, but workers
on a night shift get free milk
and meals.
there’s more good news: The Che
velle SS 396 package is available on
four models in 1969—convertible,
two sport coupes, and a pillared
coupe.
See your Chevrolet dealer. Try a
Chevelle. Tackle a hill or take on
some curves.
You’ll be an instant /TrMrn
believer.
Putting you first, keeps us first.