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Hospital
The following were admitted to
the Griffin-Spalding County Hos
pital yesterday:
Mrs. Annie Mae Morgan, Mrs.
Emily Colquitt, Mrs. Faye Smi
th, Aubrey Fordham; Delia Lynn
Mangham, Ivie Van Beeck, Mrs.
Lanelie Reeves, Janice Carney,
Harry Connell, John Barnwell,
Bert Sansom, Linwood Gatlin,
Dee Eubanks, Beverly Taylor,
Wandell Coates, Mrs. Grace
Jackson, Mrs. Frances Collins,
Terry Turner.
The following were dismissed:
Roy Bell, Mrs. Rosalyn Tingle,
Jimmy Fields, Mrs. Susie Kate
Gray, Mrs. Anna Williams, Mrs.
Marjorie Dix, Mrs. Pearl Tyus,
fhmuel /Faiipier, Mrs. K:(,ie
Morris, Benjamin Sims. Mrs.
Mae Ogletree, Mrs. Alice Mc-
Lean, Jack R. Scott, Mrs. Eliza
beth Worsham.
Liberty Hill
School To
Have Reunion
The annual Liberty Hill School
reunion will be held Sunday,
Aug. 3. at the Liberty Hill com
munity clubhouse.
Dinner will be served at 1’ p.
m. A memorial service will
be held at 2 p.m. for Mr. Auburn
Bloodworth, Mrs. Maybelle
Kierbow Clark and Mrs. Lena
Cauthen Littlejohn.
Former students, friends and
relatives of former students are
invited to attend. For addition
al information contact Julian
Weldon of Milner and Riley
Sanders of Milner.
Brooks Church
Homecoming,
Revival Set
Members of the County Line
Christian Church near Brooks,
plan to hold their annual home
coming on Sunday, Aug. 3, and
to begin revival services.
All former members, relativ
es and friends are Invited to at
tend. A basket lunch will be ser
ved at noon.
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The Sunday morning service
will be at 11 a.m. and the after
noon get-together will be at 2
p.m.
Revival services will begin
Monday night at 8 p.m. and will
continue through the week. The
Rev. Paul Gibson of Atlanta is
the guest minister.
Recreatfon-T ravel
Joggers Can Graduate
To Joy of Group Hiking
By JIM CROSSLEY
A bundled sleeping bag
over one shoulder ... a blan
ket roll holding everything
else over the other ... a
guitar . . .
Young people thus ac
coutered sometimes are
sighted in our cities and they
are reminders that the light
ly laden wanderer still has a
way to escape, however
briefly, the clutches of pos
sessions and responsibilities.
This little metropolitan
vignette should have special
relationship to those fortu
nate people who have been
able to take up jogging for
their health.
Jogging is a great body
builder. A conscientious, ex
perienced jogger is ready to
graduate to one of the elite
recreational activities, hik
ing.
There’s much to recom
mend this age-old activity,
undergoing a revival, inci
dentally. It is inexpensive,
Last Times Today
(M)
ACADEMY
AWARD A
WINNERI
CLIFF C
ROBERTSON
BEST ACTOR
OF THE YEAR
w-y
Last Times Today
(M)
Double Feature
"OBLONG
BOX"
"HOT MILLIONS"
ASC Election
Is Scheduled
ASC Committee elections for
1970 will be held Sept. 5-17 by
mail.
Spaldjpg County is divided in
to three communities for election
purposes. They are:
Communety I or A which is
made up of Cabin and Africa.
Community II or B which is
made up of Akins, Griffin, Orrs,
and Experiment Districts.
Community 111 or C which is
made un of Line Creek, Mt. Zion
and Union Districts.
A slate of nominees will be se
lected by the present commit
tees. Other persons may be add
ed to the slate by petition, if they
are eligible and willing to serve
if elected. To nominate by peti
tion six eligible voters, in that
community must sign for him.
Each petition must be limited to
one nominee, and filed at t h e
ASCS Office, 850 Everee road by
Aug. 14. An eligible ASC voter
may sign as many petitions as
he desires.
Mr. Gaulding
Os Macon Dies
MACON — Mr. John Ray
Gaulding, 65, of 879 Inverness
avenue, Macon, died at his re
sidence Tuesday night.
Mr. Gaulding was a retired
Gulf Life Insurance Co., agent.
He is survived by his wife, the
former Vera Barker; two sons,
James R. Gaulding of Macon
and Charles B. Gaulding of At
lanta; a sister, Mrs. Velda Horn
of Atlanta and three grandchil
dren.
Funeral services will be con
ducted Thursday afternoon at 2
o'clock from the chapel of Hart’s
Mortuary of Macon. The Rev.
Laurence Houston will officiate.
Burial services will be held at
4:30 o’clock in Griffin at Oak
Hill cemetery.
About Town
ROTARY CLUB
George B. Smith, Atlanta
attorney, will be guest speaker
at the regular meeting of the
Griffin Rotary Club on Thurs
day, at noon, at the Elks Club.
YOUTH REVIVAL
The Rev. Jerry Drace of Br
ownsville, Tenn., will conduct a
youth revival, beginning Friday
night at the Hollonville Baptist
Church. Services will continue
through Sunday night and will
begin at 8 p.m.
healthy and stimulating. It is
a perfect mixer for other
outdoor hobbies such as bio
logy, bird-watching or rock
hunting.
Hikers are out to enjoy
themselves rather than keep
fit because they were fit to
begin with.
“Hiking just doesn’t ap
peal to fat people,” says
Ruby Smith in an interview.
She should know because she
is president of the Genesee
Valley Hiking Club in Roch
ester, N.Y. It was founded
in 1925 and celebrated its
I,oooth hike in 1952.
Hiking is a group sport
and not a lonely one like
jogging.
“We talk all the time,”
says Miss Smith. “Club
members are so interesting
and there’s always some
thing along the way to talk
about.”
For the novice wishing to
risk a blister trying the
sport, most difficult hurdle
is finding a place to hike
(unless he happens to live
near the 13-state, 2,000-mile
Appalachian Trail in the
East or the 3,300-mile Pacific
Crest Trail).
By comparison, outfitting
with proper equipment is
easy.
Even the most strenuous
sub-species of hiking called
“backpacking” requires little
in equipment beyond a will
ingness to be spartan in
sacrificing weight in the kit.
Only such ingenuity as cut
ting the handle of a tooth
brush down to a stub—or
using a thin slab of plastic
foam under the sleeping bag
instead of a heavier inflata
ble mattress is necessary.
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Griffin Daily News
13
Wednesday, July 30, 1969