Newspaper Page Text
Griffin Daily News
H|tfW 1.11
j
■rul
iii ir
FETZERS
IF YOU HAVE A
4 TRACK OR 8-TRACK
OR CASSETTE PLAYER
WANT TO SAVE
WANT TO SAVE
WANT TO SAVE
THEN YOU NEED
g
107 N. 6TH. STREET
BIG CLEARANCE SALE
ON ALL
SUMMER CLOTHES
53., from s 2°° to 45°°
BATES DRESS SHOPPE
A & P Shopping Center
r 'FIRST OF WEEK SPECiftLS""!
i Blue Plate J
! MAYONNAISE <”29*;
I
■ Shurflne i
:DRINKS ll’can:*! 00 ;
i Bob White ' ■
: SAUSAGE u> 49*>
> ;
I Thomas I
{LANKY FRANKS 12
[ Fresh *
; COLLARDS B -35* ! .
i Ga. Red.
; SWEET POTATOES tb 10* j
| ® CLARK’S i
! Super Market
WE GIVE HOLDEN RED STAMPS
Large enough to serve you - Small enough to know you
Monday, Sept. 14,1970
8
Phyllis George of Texas, Miss America
of 1971, poses for photographers with
her early morning orange juice after a
sleepless night. She was crowned Miss
America Saturday night in Atlantic
City. (UPI)
12 face trial
in bank thefts
ATLANTA (UPI) — Twelve
men charged in connection with
the operation of a 14-state ring
alleged to have staged more
than 40 burglaries of banks and
loan offices go on trial in feder
al court today.
FBI agents said the ring dat
ed back to 1965 and was respon
sible for burglaries in Tennes
see, Kentucky, Alabama, Geor
gia, Texas, Florida, Virginia,
Ohio, North and South Carolina,
Aikansas, Mississippi, Louisi
ana and Missouri.
Assistant District Attorney Al
len Chancey Jr. said Sunday
that he was not certain of how
many men actually would go on
trial because “there are still
some motions to be disposed of
yet.”
Thirteen men originally were
scheduled to go on trial today
but U. S. District Judge Newell
Edenfield Friday accepted a
plea of guilty from Carol Wil
liam “Chuck” Robinson, 28, a
Knoxville, Tenn., welder.
Edenfield earlier had declined
to grant a separate trial for
Fred Johnson Moses Jr., 57, a
Knoxville attorney and former
University of Tennessee football
player.
Moses had been charged with
supplying the group with man
uals and safe and vault infor
mation when the alleged con
spiracy was formed.
The FBI announced it had
smashed the ring last May and
announced at the same time
that 15 persons had been in
dicted. But since that time
charges against two of them
were dismissed.
Blanket
r _ .A Gives
Toddler
s ense
Security
By WAYNE G.
BRANDSTADT, M.D.
Q—My son, 3%, has be
come very unhappy since a
baby sitter took away his
blanket. A new blanket
doesn’t seem to satisfy him.
What would you suggest?
A—Most toddlers form a
deep attachment for some
object—a doll, a woolly dog
or a blanket. It gives them a
sense of security and does no
harm. If the baby sitter, who
shouldn’t have removed the
blanket in the first place,
didn’t burn it, every effort
should be made to get it
back or one like it that is
not new.
Q —My son, 9, is hyperac
tive. The doctor is giving
him Dexedrine. How long
can he take this drug? Are
there any bad side effects?
A—ls the drug is helping
your son and the dosage is
properly controlled, he
should be able to take it for
a year or more. If, however,
he develops insomnia, nau
sea, diarrhea, profuse
sweats, headaches or any
other unusual symptoms,
you should report the fact to
your doctor at once.
Q—My son, 10, is hyperac
tive. The school hounded me
about it until our doctor pre
scribed Deaner for him. Is
this drug habit-forming?
Does it cause harmful side
effects?
A—Deanol acetamidbenzo
ate (Deaner) is one of sev
eral drugs that are helpful in
the treatment of overactive
children. It is not habit
forming. Possible side ef
fects from too large a dosage
include headache, insomnia
and an itching skin rash.
Q—My son, 2, has an awful
temper. He can be playing
quietly, then suddenly start
to kick and scream. He has a
6-months-old brother. Could
the tantrums be to get spe
cial attention or is it an in
herited trait? What can be
done for these outbursts?
A—Temper tantrums are
not inherited but are some
times imitative of a parent’s
actions. It is very likely that
this child is making a play
for more attention. At such
times, you must be loving
but firm. You must make
your child feel secure and at
the same time let him know
that you disapprove of his
behavior and that he can’t
use it to get his own way—
admittedly not an easy task.
(Newspaper enterprise Assn.)
Maddox jumps
on Republicans
ATLANTA (UPI)-Gov. Lest
er Maddox, who often has had
strong criticism for his own
Democratic party, took out af
ter President Nixon and the Re
publicans in weekend pronounce
ments.
The governor, reacting to re
ports that the Republicans in
tended to help Hal Suit win the
governor’s chair, warned Nixon
and the GOP to stay out of
Georgia politics or else endure
the Maddox wrath.
“If you do come,” Maddox
said in a telegram he sent Sun
day to Nixon, “I beg of you to
spend two days with me.”
Maddox said he wanted the
two days to tell the administra
tion how the “federal police
state” had caused Georgia to
lose “millions of dollars in in
vestments because of closed
schools.”
The governor also said he
wanted the President to hear
from disenchanted teachers and
students who were “robbed,
beaten and intimidated” and
bused in some cases 40 miles
a day to school.
Maddox won the Democratic
nomination for lieutenant gov
ernor in the primary last
Wednesday. He will face Repub
lican Frank Miller, a state sen
ator, in the general election in
November.
Maddox has virtually ignored
Miller but he lost no time in
taking after Suit who won the
Republican gubernatorial nomi
nation against two opponents in
the GOP primary Wednesday.
Suit had announced immedi
ately after winning die nomina
tion that he had been promised
“all the help I need” from the
White House and hinted that
Vice President Spiro Agnew
would come to Georgia to help
him campaign against the win
ner of the runoff between Jim
my Carter and Carl Sanders.
In addition to Nixon, Maddox
sent telegrams Sunday to Re-
c ’
Fr 1 x
Sanders slashes Carter. (UPI)
Carter, Sanders swap
campaign verbal blows
ATLANTA! UPl)—Democratic
gubernatorial candidate Carl
Sanders Sunday described Jim
my Carter as having nothing to
offer the people of Georgia but
“a grin, a handshake and a
pack of lies.”
Carter, in tum, called San
ders a “bad loser” with nothing
but “a dreamed-up personal at
tack” to hang his hopes on for
a ticket to the governor’s man
sion and made a direct pitch
for Georgia’s black vote.
Both candidates in the Sept.
23 runoff of last Wednesday’s
primary election held rallies in
Atlanta Sunday. At Sanders’
gathering in a downtown hotel,
numerous supporters in the
crowd took off their coats and
ties in a ritual of “getting down
to work” in the runoff.
In contrast, GOP guber
natorial nominee Hall Suit, his
place on the November ticket
secure, vacationed at a secret
retreat in south Georgia.
Ten Days to Change Trend
Sanders ran a slow second to
Carter in the nine-man race with
the south Georgia peanut farm
er taking 48.5 per cent of the
vote and has scarcely 10 days to
reverse the trend.
publican Govs. Ronald Reagan
of California, Linwood Holton of
Virginia, Claude Kirk of Flori
da and Louis Nunn of Kentucky.
He asked Nixon and the gov
ernors to announce if they plan
to campaign in Georgia. If they
do, he said “I will take it as
war on Lester Maddox person
ally.”
However, Maddox told a Sun
day news conference he did not
think the governors would come
to Georgia.
“They know better,” he said.
“If they do, I’ll run ads in the
newspapers in their states and
tell their people how they’re
coming here and disrupting the
affairs of our state.”
Today, Tues., Wed.
mgm Imk
Presents
A MARTIN
POLL Vy W W
PRODUCTION JF 1 >
The magic garden
of Stanley sweetheart
[R> SXSSf w-wcoo.
Today, Tues., Wed.
(X)
"TEENAGE
MOTHER”
He lost little time during the
weekend, firing off a challenge
to Carter to meet him in an
“eyeball to eyeball” statewide
debate on television and radio.
He said Sunday that Carter
had welshed on a promise to
debate.
“Carter’s billboards, his cam
paign literature and Hs slick
advertising all ask the question
‘lsn’t it time somebody spoke up
for you’?” Sanders said. “I say
Jimmy Carter can’t speak up
for the people if he his hiding
from them.”
Sanders added that “Carter
told WSB Radio and WRNG Ra
dio in Atlanta and WALB - TV
in Albany that he would accept.
Claims Broken Date
“Then, as he has done so
many times in recent weeks, he
took exactly the opposite posi
tion to say he would not meet
me and the people of Georgia,”
the Augusta attorney said. “He
broke a date with two million
people who would see and hear
the program.”
Carter said Sunday he de
clined to debate Sanders be
cause he did not want to “draw
a television audience for a can
didate who is losing.”
“There are good losers and
bad losers,” Carter added. “I
got beat four years ago and I
tried to smile. Unfortunately
this time I ran against a bad
loser.”
In answer to another charge
by Sanders — that Carter had
conspired with civil rights lead
er Hosea Williams to support
Negro gubernatorial candidate
C. B. King and thereby split
the vote — Carter said he had
campaigned among black vot
ers.
“No Horse-Trade’
“But I never horse - traded
LUCKY NUMBERS
M m IUI I / ■ 103 s. loth st WED 9879 ’ 1453 - 7644
Wi ■ * i'l THURS. 1180, 1731, 7864
\\wOrirTV#my Griffin, Ga. fri. 2344, soos, 2493
\\Wjl l SAT. 0270, 8489, 2530
BEessSSirg* SUN. 8921, 2918, 2660
Hollyhock
FLOUR 5 tb,. 59*
Giant Size
TIDE 79*
Scot
TOWELS 3 Big Roll, $ 1 00
Fresh Green
CABBAGE Lb - 7*
Good
FAT BACK 10*
Irish
POTATOES 5 Lb,. 39*
• 4
A J
ft
mßk
If
•■■ft
Carter (c) and wife Rosalyn with Sen.
Hugh Carter at Sunday campaign rally
in Atlanta. Sen. Carter is cousin of
candidate. (UPI)
with their leaders,” he added.
Carter said he intends to open
state jobs and appoint Negroes
to positions in state government
“to help solve the problems of
poor people.”
“I can win without a single
Mack vote,” he said, “but I
don’t want to win it that way.
I want an expression from the
black community.”
In his statement Sunday,
Sanders charged that Carter
“tailored his position on a given
issue depending on where he
was and to whom he was talk
ing.
“But he can’t do that on state
wide radio and TV. He will have
This Week’s Saturday Matinee
“JACK THE GIANT KILLER”
IP. M. -3 P. M. — All Seats 60c
THE BIZARRE WORLD OF “MANET OF THE APES”
WAS ONLY THE BEGINNING...
Tonight
7:00 -9:00/
F
Mow Showing »OWUBUfsa.»
PARKWOOD CINEMA
Starts Thurs - "Hello Dolly"
to take only one position and he
cannot afford to let the real
Jimmy Carter stand up and be
identified.
He also charged that Carter
was “against the aged, the dis
abled and against leaving God
in the Georgia Constitution.”
“The Price,” Arthur Miller’s
successful Broadway drama of
1968, will have a video version
on NBC Feb. 3 as one of the
“Hallmark Hall of Fame’’series.
George C. Scott, Barry Sullivan,
David Bums and Colleen Dew
hurst will play the four
characters.
Jack Gaver