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Griffin Daily News
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I Tl’iiblishcr Quimby Melton ill of I
I the Griffin Daily News accepts I
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' qHB Bell Telephone presented ■
by Albert Harrell, manager of I
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IMPERIAL
THEATRE
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> ■ CLIP OUT AND SAVE
| (Just clip this menu and pin up in the kitchen
as "Money-saving value for this week")
iMONEY a I
iSAVERSB:
_ Good news for housewives! Battered budgets rebuilt FRIED CHICKEN
■ at Maryland Fried Chicken this week. That’s right. I —ESES3 — I
• | This week is Money-Saver Week at Maryland Fried
Chicken. Take a look at the great menu ... a dis- T p I
I ferent, delicious, hearty and tempting special every II ■
■ day . . . at welcome savings! This is the week to
S-T-R-E-T-C-H those food dollars and beat the high I
| cost of living. |
"Monday Tuesday ■
' 1 INDIVIDUAL DINNER FAMILY TV BUDGET BOX I
® 3 pieces of golden fried chicken, g pieces of golden fried chicken. I
I cole slaw, baked beans or potato /chicken onlvl
salad, french fried potatoes, hot |
* 1 biscuits - Regularly $2.50 , j,*.. I
| Regularly $1.25 qq Reduced to s 2°° |
I Reduced to «w v
J WEDNESDAY THURSDAY I
! BUCKET OF CHICKEN BARREL OF CHICKEN |
, ■ 15 pieces of golden fried chicken, 21 pieces of golden fried chicken, ■
| 1 pint of cole slaw, baked beans 1 pint of cole slaw, baked beans "
or potato salad (choice of one), or potato salad (choice of one), |
I and hot biscuits. and hot biscuits.
, | Regularly $3.95 tniß Regularly $5.65 w-cn,
| Reduced to ’3 Roduced to "f I
, | FRIDAY SLAW I
FISH DINNER POTATO SALAD ■
■ Tasty boneless filet a
■ Tartar Sauce • Cole Slaw BAKED BEANS ■
French Fried Potatoes !4 Pint 254 Pint 50c|
I Hush Puppies
■ Regularly SI.2S POTATOES ■
J W ””l
IFRIED CHICKEN
» | 814 West Taylor Street — Phone 227-8608
PHONE 227-6600 |
For Fast Pick-up Service at Our Drive-In Window ■
| Open 11-9, Sunday Thru Thnrsday-11-10 Friday & Saturday
7
Sat. and Sun., Jan. 31-Feb. 1, 1970
400 Are Arrested
In Sandersville
SANDERSVILLE, Ga. (UPI)
— Black students plan a mass
march on the Washington County
courthouse today in the after
math of wholesale arrests that
jailed nearly 400 of them for a
short time Friday.
It was the latest incident of
racial turmoil in this East-Cen
tral Georgia town where trouble
of last December in which two
persons were shot is now before
a grand jury here.
A spokesman for the Southern
Christian Leadership Confer
ence said the blacks would
extend their protest against
alleged discrimination to in
clude the dismissal of a black
policeman. The spokesman said
the officer was relieved of his
duties after arguing with a
white policeman over treatment
of some of the prisoners.
Four people were injured
when officers turned all of the
prisoners loose. Two of them
were treated at a hospital and
released. There were reports of
damage to four patrol cars.
State troopers were rushed
into Sandersville earlier in the
day to help local authorities and
Georgia Bureau of Investigation
agents.
The SCLC said black students
were marching from school to
their meeting place at the
Washington Institute when state
troopers stopped them and ar
rested 83. Another group of 100
marched on the jail to protest
and they were arrested. Within
a half-hour, about 200 more
marched to the jail and they
also were arrested.
That filled up the jail and
about 150 others were herded
onto the jail lawn with troopers
keeping watch. When more than
100 more blacks marched to the
jail from the institute, authori
ties turned everybody out.
—
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A deeply moving account of a couple's faith in each other ... a story
of the love and courage that enabled actress Patricia Neal to make an
extraordinary recovery from a series of massive strokes.
The Griffin Daily News presents a special 12-chapter con
densation of this fascinating book by Barry Farrell, published by
Random House. Monday, February 2.
Agnew Calls
Off TV Wat;
Hits Newspaper
ESSEX, Md. (UPl)—Vice
President Spiro T. Agnew has
declared an armistice in his
war on television newscasters—
but apparently the truce does
not include newspapers.
Agnew told a Republican
gathering Friday night in this
Baltimore suburb that his
critical comments on television
news broadcasts had achieved
“some modicum of success.”
“I acted only in the best
interests of what I thought
should be said at that
moment,” Agnew told 1,200
persons at the SIOO a plate
testimonial.
“Gentlemen,” he announced,
“I’m calling off the war.”
But Agnew, former Maryland
governor, then delivered a
scathing attack on two Balti
more newspapers currently on
strike.
The vice president said he
was glad to be back in
Maryland in “that wonderful
time of year—when the Sunpa
pers are on strike.” He then
said Baltimore’s sanitation
problems may have grown
since the strike because “you
know how they get rid of the
garbage—they print it.”
“Os course, I’m really just
kidding,” he continued. “I have
no quarrel with the Sunpapers.
Their editorial policy is their
own business and besides it’s so
much easier to read editorials
when they’re disguised as news
on the front page,” he said.
Kirk Threatens
Suspensions
ATLANTA (U)'l) —It was
“freedom of choice” day in
Mississippi today. And in
Florida, Gov. Claude Kirk
threatened to suspend school
officials if they complied with
federaldesegregation orders.
Mississippi Gov. John Bell
Williams said he issued the
“freedom of choice” proclama
tion in the hope of adding “to
the growing opposition to these
court decisions.” He said the
“vast majority” of Mississippi
citizens have been denied
freedom of choice in the
selection of schools for their
children.
Kirk issued an executive
order warning school officials
in Volusia and Manatee coun
ties they could be suspended if
they meet the U.S. Supreme
Court’s Feb. 1 desegregation
guideline.
Specifically, Kirk’s order
forbade the officials to change
or alter the school calendar,
incur any expenses over and
above the amounts currently
available, or take any action
which would result in massive
re-assignment of pupils, busing,
’ or the closing of schools.
Kirk long had threatened to
issue such an order.
Volusia County School Super
intendent Raymond G. Dunne
and School Board Chairman J.
Boyd Deloach declined com
ment on the order until they
see it.
“All officials affected by this
executive order are hereby
directed to comply with this
order, and the failure to
perform in accordance there
with shall be deemed grounds
sufficient under the constitution
and laws of this state to subject
V AIDS
friends who would coll
to poy their respects.
Haisten
Funeral Home
Griffin Phene 227-3231
. ■ ■
MAGNETIC
SIGNS
For Can & Trucks
IMPERIAL
PRINTING CO.
701 E. Mclntosh Rd.
Phone 227-9562
such officials to executive
action,” the order said.
Volusia has made plans to
close its schools for two days
next week to implement student
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Hev Kids! ! ! Color Sam and his animal pals — the best job wins
a $25,000 Savings Bond and the next 50 best entries will free tickets
to see Sam at Parkwood Cinema in Griffin when MY SIDE OF
THE MOUNTAIN plays beginning Thursday, February sth. In MY
SIDE OF THE MOUNTAIN, based on Jean George’s award
winning novel, Sam a 12 year old boy leaves his comfortable city
home to live alone for a time in the wilderness, “to live deliber
ately, to front only the essential facts of life, and see If I could
not learn what it had to teach” in the words of Henry David
Thoreau, whom the boy greatly admires. This contest is limited to
children through 4th grade in school. Mail or bring entries to
Parkwood Cinema, North Expressway, Griffin, Georgia before Sat
urday, February 7th. (Adv.)
transfers directed by the court.
Manatee County, not involved
directly in the high court order,
was not immediately affected
because it was ordered to
implement total student and
teacher integration by April 6.
Kirk has maintained that
forced busing is “patently
immoral” and contrary to the
U.S. Constitution and 1964 Civil
Rights Act. He also said the
hasty transfers are “education
ally unsound.”