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Mrs. Jan Wilder, Mrs. Betty Kurtz and Frank Jolly discuss plans for the Griffin Art Association’s
art show next Saturday at the Commercial Bank & Trust Company. Griffin area artists will be
invited to exhibit In the event of rain, the show will be held on the following Saturday.
Burglary here
Griffin Police today in
vestigated a burglary at the
Community Center in City Park
last night.
Some S2O was taken from
vending machines.
WE OFFER YOU THE
CASH
YOU NEED
SIO.OO
TO
2500.00
For any worthwhile
purposes.
GRIFFIN FINANCE
&
THRIFT CO.
11l S. Hill St.
Phone 227-2501
G. R. Robinson, Mgr.
Notice!
Monday and Tuesday,
June 14 and 15 Only
Buy One Chicken Dinner
at regular low price of
only 125 Q e f second
dinner at V 2 P r l e ® 63*
Remember Our Regular Tues. Special Reg. 1.25 Fish
Dinner
just 89 c
ft “The Difference
m is Delicious”
fi] Maryland
fried Chicken
HHB 814 w. Taylor Phone 227-6600
HONG KONG "" Jt
In Town from June iz thru
15 Sat. an Tues. 9:30 ™9 P |»
Ladies' and Gentlemen's Made to P'S AVE 30 PER CENTTO4O PER CENT—
Measure Hand Tailored Suits, Topcoats. BEFORE NOW
Sport Jackets and Shirts. Select from silk WOOL SUITS us oo 55.00 /MwEwSUgy
over 3.000 Finest Fabrics We copy any WOOL SHARKSKIN SUITS M.OO $3.00
style Also on Display: Beaded Sweat CASHMERE WOOL SP. COATS 55.00 31.00
ers. Knit Suits & Evening Bags All at CASHMERE TOP COATS 70.00
HONG KONG PRICES! SHIRTS (MONOGRAMMED) ’*• 0.50 VgSjjg
PRICES DO NOT INCLUDE CUSTOMS DUTY OR POSTAGE - Best Offer of the Year - Men's Free Matching Cuff Link
Set on each suit, and Free Matching beaded Bag on each Ladies'Suit.
Oriental Shops Inc.J™ 1 ”,
P.O. Box 13164 MR . b. Raj (U519&41)
St. Pete, Fla. for Appt. Tel. (404) 227-1516 Griffin ’ Ga -
Mrs. Reeves heads
Aidmore Auxiliary
The annual convention of the
tribo ....... r„v.,n
The annual convention of the
Georgia Elks was held at Jekyll
Island with 35 members of the
Elks Lodge No. 1207, and the
Griffin Elks Auxiliary attended.
Mrs. B. J. (Jean) Reeves, was
installed as state president of
the Aidmore Auxiliary for 1971 -
1972. Mrs. Reeves has served
Griffin Elks Auxiliary as
president, Aidmore chairman,
first vice president, program
chairman, trust fund banquet
chairman, membership
chairman and clothing chair
man.
On the state level, she has
served as lapsation chairman,
auditor, merit awards com
mittee, vice president N.E.
District, Aidmore chairman,
committee of bylaws revision
and president elect.
Mrs. John E. (Phyllis) Scott
was installed as president of the
Past Presidents Association for
. ■■ ■ ’fA •
Mrs. Jean Reeves
1971 - 1972. Its main project is a
nursing scholarship, known as
the “Teresa Koch Scholarship”
in memory of the daughter of
Mr. Al Koch, director of Aid
more Hospital in Atlanta.
Legals
LEGAL 6443
Sheriff’s Sale
GEORGIA, SPALDING
COUNTY
Will be sold before the Court
House door, the usual place of
holding COURT, in and for the
said County, on the 6th day of
July 1971 and from day to day
until said goods are disposed of,
the following described
property , to wit:
1961 Chevrolet Tudor, Motor
Number 446208, by virtue of a
order issued from the Judge of
State Court, of Spalding County,
(s) Dwayne Gilbert, Sheriff.
LEGAL 6438
On application of Albert
Frank Flournoy, Jr., Route 4,
Box 112, Griffin, Georgia,
articles of incorporation have
been granted to Griffin Steel
Erectors, Incorporated, by the
Honorable Andrew J. Whalen,
Jr., Judge of the Superior Court’
of Spalding County. In
accordance with the applicable
provisions of the Georgia
Business Corporatio Code. The
registered office of the
corporation is located at Route
Deaths-Funerals |
Mr. Moore
Mr. Wade Hampton Moore of
214 North 13th street died this
morning at his residence. He
was born in Spalding County
and lived here all his life.
Mr. Moore was a member of
the Fire Baptisted Holiness
Church and a disabled veteran
of Wald War Two.
He is survived by his mother,
Mrs. Mattie Moore Floyd of
Griffin; four sisters, Mrs. Mary
MaCrary of Statesville, N.C.,
Mrs. Perry Peacock of East
Point, Ga., Mrs. Ernest Smith
of Riverdale, Ga., Mrs. Bessie
Williams of Griffin; two
brothers, George Moore and
Walter Moore of Griffin, several
nieces and nephews.
Funeral services for Mr.
Moore will be conducted Sunday
afternoon at 3 o’dock at Mc-
Donald Chapel. The Rev. Ed
ward Banks and the Rev.
Richard Lee will officiate.
Burial will be in Oak Hill
cemetery with full military
honors.
His body will remain at
McDonald Chapel.
Mrs. Anderson
Funeral services for Mrs.
Mary Ison Anderson of Tampa,
Fla., formerly of Griffin, will be
held Sunday at 12:30 p.m. from
New Hope Baptist Church on
Boyd’s Row.
The Rev. C. S. Surry will
officiate. Burial will be in Rest
Haven cemetery.
Survivors include her
husband, Jesse Anderson of
Tampa, Fla.; a daughter, Sybil
Jo-Bon Ison; parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Charlie Wyatt of Griffin;
grandparents, Mrs. Ludie
Wyatt of Griffin and Wallace
Parks of Tampa; seven sisters,
Mrs. Betty Richardson of
Freehold, N.J., Mrs. Barbara
Holmes of Tampa, Mrs.
Jeanette Jester of Griffin, Mrs.
Vera Rome of Atlanta, Mrs.
Jacqueline Copeland of Griffin,
Mrs. Glenda Wyatt and Mrs.
Boneita L. Wyatt, both of
Griffin; two brothers, Glenn
Wyatt and Charlie L. Wyatt, Jr.,
both of Griffin; two nieces, five
nephews and uncles and aunts.
AH relatives and friends are
asked to assemble at United
Funeral Home no later than
1:30 p.m. Sunday.
United Funeral Home is in
charge of arrangements.
Mr. Favors
Mr. Leon Favors of Pomona
died at his home yesterday
morning.
Survivors include a daughter,
Mrs. Leona 0. Venson of Boyce,
La.
Funeral [dans will be an
nounced by McDowell United
Funeral Home.
Mrs. Dorsey
Mrs. Mary Ann Dorsey for
merly of Hampton, Ga., died at
her home yesterday at 113
Chestnut Avenue, SE, Atlanta.
Funeral arrangements will be
announced by United Funeral
Heme.
Mr. Hall
Funeral services for Mr. Fred
Douglas (Sonny) Hall, of
Concord, Ga., will be held
Sunday at 2 pm. from the
Fuller Chapel United Methodist
Church at Zebulon.
Burial will be in the church
cemetery.
Among his survivors are his
father, Douglas Hall; step
mother, Mrs. Alice Ruth Hall,
both of Concord; two daughters,
Charlotte Renee Hall and April
Denise Hall, both of Concord;
two sisters, Sandra Hall and
Peggy Hall of Concord; a
4, Box 112, Griffin, Georgia and
its registered agent at such
address is Albert Frank
Flournoy, Jr. The purpose of the
corporation is general
commercial building
contracting, primarily in steel
or metal components. To
undertake and perform any and
all business endeavors
authorized and permitted under
the general laws of the State of
Georgia pertaining to
corporations, and which would
result in pecuniary gain to the
stockholders of the corporation.
The minimum capital with
which the corporation shall
commence business is One
Thousand ($1,000.06) Dollars.
CARLISLE & JOHNSON
(s) John R. Carlisle
Attorney for Petitioner
Address:
127 Vi East Solomon Street
Griffin, Georgia 30223
stepsister, Myrtice Ackey of
Atlanta; an uncle, J. C. Hall of
Concord; two aunts, Mrs.
Lucille Pope and Mrs. Henry
Milner of Griffin; a great aunt,
Mrs. Sara J. Warner of Zebulon,
several nieces and nephews.
Union Society Funeral Home
of Concord is in charge of plans.
Mr. Weaver
Funeral services for Mr. John
Henry Weaver, 83, of Route
One, Warm Springs, Ga., will be
held Sunday at 2 pm. from the
Pilgrim Rest Baptist Church at
Warm Springs.
Burial will be in the church
cemetery.
Union Society Funeral Home
of Concord, Ga. is in charge of
arrangements.
Griffin
enters
stay-see
Griffin has entered the 1971
Stay & See Georgia Program,
sponsored statewide by the
Travel Council of the Georgia
Chamber of Commerce. The
announcement was made by Lin
H. Thompson, Trust Officer,
Commercial Bank & Trust
Company, Griffin and Sixth
District Stay & See Georgia
Chairman.
The Griffin Junior Woman’s
Club with Mrs. Kay Hentz of
Griffin serving as chairman will
sponsor the program.
Hampton firm
adds plant
in Texas
Southern States, Inc.,
manufacturer of electrical
transmission and distribution
products, has established its
first satellite facility in Plano,
Texas.
The announcement was made
by D. R. Samson, president of
the Hampton, Georgia-based
subsidiary of Gul ton Industries,
who added that the new plant
will significantly expand the
company’s production
capacities and help meet in
creased volume demands from
the electric utilities industry.
Initially, the new facility will
manufacture group-operated
switches and power fuses, later
expanding to production of the
company’s full product line.
Flynt backs
‘pullout’
The Macon Telegraph
newspaper in its lead story
today said Rep. John J. Flynt,
Jr., of Griffin had decided to
vote for a pullout of American
troops from Vietnam by the end
of this year.
The story out of the
newspaper’s Washington
bureau said a personal plea
from President Nixon to Flynt
had failed to change the
congressman’s mind on his
stand.
Griffinites
attend meet
Several Griffin-Spalding
teachers are attending the state
meeting of Alpha Delta Kappa
this weekend in Atlanta. This is
the international honorary
sorority for women educators.
Among those attending are:
Mrs. Sue Collins, Mrs. Sue
Harper, Mrs. Lynell Harden,
Mrs. Vilet Brown, Mrs. Grace
Smoak, Mrs. Janice Skelton,
Mrs. Ivee Adams, Miss Alma
Hamil and Miss Frances Nutt.
FIRST CONGREGATIONAL
METHODIST CHURCH
Pastor - Rev. Amos King
Sunday School ■ 10:00 A.M.
Morning Worship • 11:00 A.M.
C.M.Y.S. ■ 6:30 P.M.
Evening Worship - 7:30 P.M
Tuesday Even Prayer
Service - 7:30 P.M.
COME AND WORSHIP WITH US.
coofS
f MILWAUKEE»
I jYORK
V \ / DEMVER* /\ A
H I I / WMSRS CHY •-.-Xi k/
GO _I /i/ I—J
FT.WORTH \ A.
FORECAST FOR GRIFFIN L/
AREA—MiId tonight. Fair to MIAMI
partly cloudy and warm Sun- \ f Jr/ Xi/
day. '
World Briefs
By United Press International
HUGHES’DECISION
WASHINGTON (UPI) -lowa
Sen. Harold Hughes still is
considering making the race for
the Democratic presidential
nomination and will make a
final decision in October.
An aide to Hughes Friday
denied a published report the
former lowa governor was
concerned about a faltering
campaign. The aide said
Hughes admits he is a long shot
for the nomination but cited a
rise in public “recognition
factor” for Hughes from 11 per
cent in January to 48 per cent
at the present.
SURVIVORS’ BENEFITS
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Con
gress has been asked by the
administration to pass legisla
tion that would pay survivors of
any state or local police officer
killed in the line of duty $50,000.
Attorney General John N.
Mitchell sent a covering letter
with the request, saying recent
slayings of officers in New
York City and Washington
demonstrated “the risk of
lethal violence faced daily by
peace officers in city after city
across the country."
RUINS DETERIORATE
ATHENS (UPl)—Air pollu
tion has caused the Parthenon
and other ruins representing
the splendor of Ancient Greece
to deteriorate more in the last
50 years than they did in the
first 2,000 years of their
existence, Greece’s top archeo
logical authority said Friday.
Prof. Spyros Marinatos, in
spector general of antiquities
and president of the Greek
Academy of Sciences and
Letters, said both the Parthen
on and the monuments on the
Acropolis were threatened pri
marily by carbon dioxide and
sulphuric acid in the atmos
phere.
SHARPSENTENCE
ISLE OF GUERNSEY, En-
Mrs. Leaders on
charter list
Mrs. Thelma Leaders,
director of the Practical Nur
sing Institute at Griffin
Vocational and Technical
Nursing, became a charter
member of the Georgia
Alumnae chapter of Pi Lambda
Theta, national honor and
professional association for
women in education, on the
occasion of its installation as
the 102nd chapter of the
association and the first
alumnae chapter in the South.
Mrs. Leaders became a
member of Pi Lambda Theta
while she was a student at the
University of Michigan.
Class visits
The Primary Department of
Union Baptist Bible School
visited Coates Pet Shop and
small animal zoo yesterday.
They were carried on a tour of
the zoo and given a lecture on
first aid in the event of a snake
bite.
The 13 children were ac
companied by three adults.
Griffin Daily News
gland (UPl)—Magistrate Guy
Blampied sentenced an 18-year
old youth to eight strokes of a
birch branch Friday on convic
tion of traffic violations,
disorderly behavior and resist
ing arrest.
Judge Blampied suggested a
stretch the young man had
already served in reform school
seemed to have done no good.
“A short, sharp sentence ...
might do the trick,” he said.
Clubs get
booze okay
DECATUR, Ga. (UPI) -Club
operators in liquor-dry DeKalb
County have been given the
green light to sell liquor until a
confusing legal hassle can be
thrashed out in court.
Superior Court Judge Hubert
Morgan issued a verbal order
Friday that prohibits law en
forcement officials from closing
private clubs selling liquor.
Morgan said he would put his
order in writing and it would be
in effect until a hearing can be
held — probably in July — to
clarify the rights of the private
club owners and operators.
The club owners have been is
sued liquor licenses pending the
outcome of the hearing.
At issue is a statute requiring
a petition signed by 35 per cent
of the county’s registered voters
in order to hold a county - wide
referendum to decide on legal
ization of liquor sales.
The plaintiffs, operators of a
DeKalb County dub, contend
the law is unconstitutional be
cause the great expense of
gathering names for the petition
is a denial of equal protection
under the law.
Morgan’s order was issued as
County Sheriff Lamar Martin
was telling a grand jury in the
courthouse why the 35 clubs
were still in business.
Bible School
at Damascus
Vacation Bible School will be
held at Damascus Christian
Church June 14-18, 7 p.m. to 9
p.m. each night.
There will be classes from
kindergarten through Im
mediates.
Mrs. Lester Crawley and Mrs.
Marjorie Crawley are directors.
$224,228.76
Paid In Claims Since Jan. 70
Don’t Trust Your Luck
One Sickness
or
Accident
May Cost $5,000.00 Or More
JOIN
Griffin Hospital Care’s
$ 25 00 Per Day Plan
which pays up to
( 100°° Per Day Toward
Intensive Care
Single Person $6.10 per month
Family of 2 or more ’15 86 .
Call 227-2742 or Come By Office Upstairs Over McLellan's
107 North Hill Street.
F. L. Bartholomew, Jr., Secty.
Sat. and Sun., June 12-13,1971
7
V
Archie Malcom, 15, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Ray Malcom, will
receive his Eagle Scout Badge
during ceremonies Sunday
night at the First United
Methodist Church. Archie is a
member of Troop Two, spon
sored by First Baptist Church.
His scoutmaster is Stephen
Squires.
ROTC
I
honor unit
The Griffin High ROTC unit
for the fifth consecutive year
has been named an honor unit.
This was announced by Maj.
Gen. B. F. Evans, deputy
commanding general, Third
Army, Ft. McPherson, Atlanta.
The rating was based on the
spring federal inspection.
PANASONIC
RF-7180 “The Eightone”
kC/DC CAR/BOAT FM/AM Stereo
■Radio with 8-Track Stereo Cartridge
•’layer. AFC on FM. Two 6J" PM
llynamic speakers. Lighted channel
■idicator. Complete with 8 Panasonic
tO" batteries. Usf $ ,„ „
Sale ’149“
Jim & Joe’s Photo
212S.11thSt. Phone 227-2349