Newspaper Page Text
Griffin Daily News
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Mrs. Batey heads cleanup group.
Justice Dept. Help
Sought On Lot Here
A group of Griffin Negroes will
call on the U. S. Department of
Justice for help in their efforts
to get a lot at Memorial drive
and Fourth streets cleaned up.
The building on the land used
to be a branch library and be
fore that was a school.
Mrs. A. B. Batey, 232 East
Chappell street, is chairman of a
group known as Citizens for
Community Service. She says it
has mo e than 150 members.
Mrs. Batey said the property
is held in trust and the only two
living trust members have re
fused to talk with the citizens
committee about improving the
property. The trustees are A. C.
Touchstone and the Rev. A. M.
Reeves, she said.
Mrs. Batey who has earned her
master's degree in history from
Atlanta University Is a third gr
ade teacher in the Griffin-Spal
ding System. She did her under
graduate work at Spellman Col
lege.
She attended the seventh grade
in the old building on the lot she
hopes to get cleaned up. Her six
brothers and sisters also at
tended school in the same old
PEACHES
FOR SALE
ELBERTAS FOR
FREEZING.
s2.uO Per Bushel
Bring your container —
Pick your own.
Mrs. J. W. Graham
Rover, Ga.
Phone 227-5563
REVIVAL!
AUG. 3 - Bth
Sunny Side Baptist
Church
Rev. Willard MacAllaster, Evangelist
Doug McClung, Chorister
SERVICES BEGIN AT 8 P. M.
WELCOME!
Pastor Johnson Invites You . . .
AUGUST 3rd thru 17th
TO HEAR
Dr. Wilfred Millington
ENGLAND
!■ 1 M EUROPE’S GREATEST PROGNOSTICATORS
PflStOl Johnson He outcome
of the lost war when it was
very controversial.
SUNDAY • He foretells events now related Mg
in./IE A »,r -? an r. »« to: Russia, Chino, Viet Nam and
at 10.45 A.M. - 7:00 P.M. 3reot warfare in outer ipace ,
giving Bible reference, chapter
and verse.
NIGHTLY DR. W. MILLINGTON, Radio & TV world
at 7:30 P.M. traveler & noted Bible authority will answer ques-
Except S.ltnriiilV tions from the audience on local, national, world &
— 1 i i n. Dr. W. Millington
THIS SUNDAY „
BW 4E # Xk T HEAR & SPEAK WITH
HOMECOMING B Ta°K k
M ?”' s ‘ l "r fl I FIRST ASSEMBLY OF GOD
and local talent 1411 Atlanta Road (At Riegels Curve) Griffin, Gq.
I “WHERE THE HAPPY HUNDREDS GO”
2
Sat. and Sun., August 2-3, 1969
building.
Two court suits in Spalding Su
perior Court, the latest this mon
th, have failed to get any action,
Mrs. Beaty said. Now her group
plans to take it to the U. S. De
partment of Justice.
Afty, Howard Moore of Atlan
ta is assisting with the legal
work.
The Griffin elementary teach
er said her research shows that
the land, originally an acre, was
purchased by 12 Griffin Negroes
from a ' New York “carpetbag
ger’'’ after the Civil War.
It was to be held in trust for
educational purposes. The origi
nal sales price was either SIOO
of sllO. Records confirm at this
point.
Having failed in local efforts
to get any action on cleaning up
the property, the group of citi
zens now will turn to the Com
munity Relations Department of
the U. S. Justice Department.
The Rev. Reeves, chairman of
the property’s trustees, declined
to comment on the action. He
said he didn’t know what “they
proposed" to do nor of what
statements they might make
and was not in position at this
time to make any rebuttal.
Mr. Touchstone also declined
to - comment at this time.
The Rev. Reeves said he had
met on two separate occasions
with the citizens group and that
each time “they wanted to talk
about other things and not the
issues concerning he property.”
Both trustees pointed out that
two Spalding Superior Count
suits had resulted in rulings in
favor of the trusteeship as it is
now constituted.
The two trustees said that
brick from construction of the
new Mt. Zion Baptist Church ac-
Hospital
The following were admitted
to the Griffin-Spalding County
Hospital yesterday:
Thomas Martin, Mrs. Jean El
lerbee, Mrs. Dorothy Goodman,
Mrs. Marie Winterbottom, Char
lie R. Lindler, Sam Tingle, Mrs.
Clasteen English, Alton Barfield,
Thomas Flynn, Miss Cathy El
aine Jones, Miss Mary Jane
Huddleston, Mrs. Marie Collier,
James Redding, Mrs. Missouria
Shirley.
The following were dismissed:
Wandell Coates, Mrs. Gerald
ine Burns, Mrs. Annie Mae Mor
gan and baby, Robert Thomas,
David Martin, Terry Turner,
Mrs. Sylvia Curry and baby,
Mrs. Sadie Dooley, Mrs. Emily
Colquitt and baby, Mrs. Shirley
Ruth Jackson and baby, Larry
Chapman, Mrs. Dannie Harris,
Mrs. Mary Dupree, George Dal
las, Idus Martin, Beverly Taylor,
Harvey Scott, Harry Connell,
John Barnwell, Mrs. Elaine
New, Dorothy Eubanks.
Mr. DeLay Dies
At Cartersville
CARTERSVILLE, Ga. — Lu
ther Floyd DeLay, 62, formerly
of Griffin, died yesterday at his
home in Cartersville. Death ap
parently was from a heart at
tack.
Funeral services will be held
Sunday at 3 o’clock at the Dry
Pond Methodist Church near Jef
ferson, Ga. Burial will be in the
church cemetery.
Survivors include his wife; two
daughters, Mrs. Billy E. Crowley
of Griffin and Miss Athella De-
Lay of Cartersville; two broth
ers, W. T. DeLay of Calhoun
and Roy F. DeLay of Morrisville,
Penn.; three sisters, Mrs. Wil
lie Mathis of Pendergrass, Ga.,
Mrs. Bruce Langford of Jeffer
son, Ga., and Mrs. Manuel Mor
ris of Gillsville, Ga.
The body will iwaain at Owen
Funeral Home to D«t*S»WuHe
until noon Sunday when it will be
carried to the church to lie in
state from 1:30 till the funeral.
Class Os ’59
Anniversary
The Griffin High Class of 1959
will have its 10th anniversary
celebration in two parts today.
A picnic was to begin at 1 p.
m. today at the city park.
A banquet is scheduled to
night at 7 o’clock at the Elks
Club.
ross the street from the lot wou
ld be removed by the contractor
when the building is completed.
They gave permission for the
builders to put the brick there
during construction with the un
derstanding that the lot jvould be
cleaned up when the church is
completed.
Legals
LEGAL 3021
Barbara Ann Washington
Cbamblev vs.
Walter Gaines Chambley, Jr.
No. lollu .superior court,
Spalding County, Georgia,
Suit For Divorce,
Filed in Office July 28, 1969,
Order Os Service by Publication
Dated July 28, 1969.
To: Walter Gaines Chambley,
Jr.:
You are hereby commanded to
be and appear at the Superior
Court of Spalding County, Geor
gia within Sixty (60) days of
July 28, 1969, to answer the
plaintiff's complaint in the
above stated case.
Witness the Honorable An
drew J. Whalen, Jr., Judge of
the said Court, this the 29th day
of July, 1969.
F. P. Lindsey, Clerk
Superior Court.
LEGAL 3009
NOTICE OF SALE UNDER
POWER IN SECURITY DEED
GEORGIA, Spalding County.
By reason of a default in the
payment of the monthly install
ments due under the terms of
the note, there will be sold by
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Georgia’s STAR Student
PARIS AND ROME — Georgia’s Star Student,
Dawson Alexander of Atlanta, is in the midst of his
Chamber of Commerce sponsored 16-day whirlwind
tour of Europe. Dawson won the trip after he was
selected as the State’s top student, based on grades
and extracurricular activities, of 1969. Part of his
trip is shown here. Rome: Dawson stops in St. Peter’s
Square for a look in top photo, the Basilica behind
the undersigned in front of the
court house door, in Spalding
County, Georgia, on the first
Tuesday in August. 1969, during
the legal hours of sale, to the
highest bidder, ror cash, the
following described property to
wn.
All that tract or parcel of
land lying and being in The
Arfica District of original Henry
County, Georgia and now Spald
ing County, Georgia.
Starting Two hundred thirty
feet (230) East of the North
West corner of the Fifty Three
(53) acre tract deeded to Dora
Allen on the Bth day of Decem
ber, 1945, thence; running East
along Teamon Road a distance
of One Hundred feet (100) to a
stake, thence running South a
distance of Two Hundred feet
(200) to a stake; and the prop
erty of the Wilberns thence
running North a distance of Two
Hundred feet (200) to Teamon
Road and point of beginning.
Said property will be sold as
the property of J. C. Cain, un
der and by virtue of the power
and authority contained in a
certatin Deed to Secure Debt
from J. C. Cain to Builtwell
Homes, Inc., dated October, 10,
1962, and recorded in Deed Book
211, Page 217, Spalding County
Records and transferred to IDS
Credit Corporation on April 26,
1969, recorded in Deed Book 267,
Page 711 County Records.
Said property will be sold
subject to all unpaid taxes and
or special assessments against
the property and-or restrictions
of record, if any.
This 3rd day of July, 1969.
IDS CREDIT CORPORATION,
As Attomey-in-Fact for
J. C. Cain.
LEGAL 3022
LEGAL NOTICE
Pursuant to the pertinent laws
of Georgia, notice is hereby
given that ARTEMUS HOOD
and DR. CHARLES C. REI,E-
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Kentucky fried £kick«H
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READY WHEN YOU ARE"
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UFI WEATHER FOTOCAST® \ JMIAMI
FORECAST FOR GRIFFIN AREA — Partly cloudy with chance of thunder
showers tonight and tomorrow.
FORD, whose resident address
es are Griffin, Spalding Coun
ty, Georgia, are the sole own
ers and partners of the certain
business to be carried on by
them in Griffin, Georgia, under
the trade name and style of
“H. & R. STANDARD OIL
SERVICE STATION", and that
FIRST METHODIST CHURCH
South 6th Street Extension
Dr. Harry Lee Smith, Pastor
Rev. Charles W. Barnes,
Associate Pastor
11 A. M.
Sermon by Dr. Smith
"Seeing God In The Normal"
7:30 P. M.
Sermon By Rev. Charles Barnes
"The Spirit of the Ages"
(UPI Telephotos)
him; then it was the famed Trevi fountain, tossing
coins with escort Penn Worden (CL). Paris: Daw
son is stopped by a young Japanese tourist on Con
corde Square and poses for a photo (CR). Back in
Rome (BL) he is about to get a drink from a fountain
near the Trinita di Minti Church. At bottom right, he
waves for the ccmera outside Paris’ Madeleine
Church.
the nature of said business to
be conducted is a service sta
tion; and the verified staet
ment of trade name registration
has been filed with the Clerk
of the Superior Court of Spald
ing County, Georgia, all as re
quired by law.
This the 25th day of July,
1969.
BECK, GODDARD,
OWEN & SMALLEY
By: Samuel A. Murray
ADDRESS:
P. O. Box 116
Griffin, Georgia 30223
- REVIVAL -
AUGUST 3 -10
(Excluding Saturday Night)
Faith Temple Assembly Os God
North 9th Street
Evangelist - Larry Shelton
Services 7:30 Each Night
Everyone Welcome
Pastor, Clarence W. Jackson
Three Injured
In Wrecks Here
Three people were injured In
traffic accidents yesterday in *
the city of Griffin, according to
police.
Two Fayette County girls were
injured in a traffic accident on •
the North Expressway. Both
were admitted to the Griffin-Sp
alding County Hospital for treat
ment. •
They were identified as Cathy
Elaine Jones of Route Three,
Fayetteville, and Mary Jane
Huddleston of Peachtree City. •
They were passengers in the
same automobile.
A report on the accident had
not been completed this morn- t
ing.
Charles R. White of Jackson
ville, Fla., was injured in an
accident at North Hill street and
Ncrthside drive. He was a pas- *
senger in one of three cars in
volved.
Drivers of the cars were list
ed as Stanley W. Hammond of •
503 East Mclntosh road, Robert
L. Edgar of 1532 North Hill st
reet and Arthur Lee Green of
619 Pool road. Damage was es- ♦
timated at $4,000.
About Town .
Revival services will begin
Monday night at 8 p.m. at t h e
County Line Christian Church,
near Brooks. The revival will •
continue through the week. The
Rev. Paul Gibson of Atlanta will
be the guest minister.
CIRCLE MEETINGS e
Circles of the First Christian
Church will meet for the month
of August at the following plac
es: Morning Circle-home of Mrs.
Alex Jones, at 10:30 a.m. Mon- •
day; Esther Snipes-home of Mrs.
Robert Ritchey, at 3:30 p.m.
Monday afternoon; Jenny Flem
ing-home of Mrs. Estelle Cross- •
field, at 3:30 p.m. Monday after
noon, and the Guild-Thursday
night at 8 p.m., with Mrs. J. L,
Hardwick and Mrs. H. V. Har- s
ness as hostesses, at the church.
Hammond Organ
Studios Introduces «
New Organ
Playing Method
A revolutionary new way for
non-musically-oriented people to
learn to play the organ has been
unveiled by Hammond Organ
Studios as part of a new promo
tion sponsored nationally by *
Hammond Organ Company.
The new method, called “In
stant play”, is designed so that
even people who have never ,
played any musical instrument, 1
will be able to play “When The
Saints Go Marching In” in 101
minutes or less.
By she end of only 10 days - *
the new player will be able to
play 10 tunes by using the new
Hammond “Instant Play” tech
nique. *
The key to the new Hammond
“Instant Play” way Is the sub
stitution of numbers for the key
board notes. The numbers fol
low the lettered notes so that *
the new player does not have
to re-learn anything later.
’To help the beginner master
the organ Hammond Organ •
Studios, located at 120 West
Taylor St., is also introducing a
simplified organ called the
“Cadette” at a new low price.
The new organ has all the com
ponents of more deluxe models
but has the lowest retail price
ever for a Hammond Organ.
Free lessons are given with the »
purchase of a Hammond Organ.
Using the “Instant Play”
method and the “Cadette” the
beginner simply sits down at the ,
organ and in minutes is playing
familiar tunes. There is no re
quirement of previous musical
knowledge or instrument tech
nique, but simply the basic hu- *
man desire to be able to play
recognizable tunes.
Talley Montgomery, manager
of Hammond Organ Studios said »
that the musical instrument in
dustry has been searching for
this type of method for many'
years, and Hammond now has it.
“We believe that this new ’
flnstant Play’ way will be a
great benefit to those people
who have always been able to
hum a tune but felt that it was »
too difficult and too costly to
learn to play the organ. Neither
of these ideas was ever true,
but now that this new method
and organ are available at our
store, we can demonstrate in
minutes how a person can im
mediately become involved with
producing good and enjoyable •
music,” Mr. Montgomery said.
Hammond Organ Studios is
open daily from 10 a.m. to 6
priii. including Wednesday, (adv)