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■■ I M Sa. for folt ° n d * ccurat * s * rwlt * Phone 227-3276
★ HELP WANTED ★
WANTED: Reliable company
desires settled man 25-35 years
for established territory in
Georgia. Salary plus car and
expenses. Experience in feed or
farming background necessary.
Write to P.O. Box 410, Griffin.
Manager trainee for consumer
finance company. Good starting
salary, paid life and
hospitalization insurance, paid
vacation, VA approved for on
job training. Must be at least
high school graduate or
equivalent. Contact Lee Butler
227-2155 or come by Landmark
Finance Corp. 104 N. Hill St.
Wanted: Service station
attendant, 1-75 station. Salary
open, experience preferred.
Call 957-2575.
FOUR DOLLAR'S AN HOUR
Knapp Shoe part-time salesman
earn this much and more
because commissions are
higher than ever. No
investment! FREE training
program! Interested? Write
H.E. Magner, Knapp Shoes,
Brockton, Mass. 02401.
Wanted: Framers, carpenters,
cornice men and laborers up to
$5.50 hourly. Call 946 3491 after 6
p.m.
Help Wanted: Laboratory
Technician AB or BS degree
desired but 2 or more years
college considered. Familarity
with laboratory equipment and
techniques desired. Scientific
interest essential. Contact
Agronomy Dept., Ga. Station,
Experiment, Ga. Call 227-9471.
An equal opportunity employer.
Experienced hairdresser with
some following wanted.
Straight 60 percent commission,
or will rent booth space. Ample
free parking space for
clientele's cars. Nell's Beauty
Shoppe, 211 W. Poplar St. Phone
228 8379.
Looking for change? Position
open-sales. Salary while
training, shared major medical
insurance, free life insurance,
retirement benefits, paid
vacations, previous sales
experience helpful. Write Box
93, Griffin Daily News for
interview. All letters held in
strict confidence.
WANTED: Good opportunity
for experienced hairdresser at
Styles by Sims Beauty Salon.
Call 227-3595.
Waitress wanted: apply in
person at Martha's Restaurant.
No phone calls. 508 W. Taylor
St.
"Girl Friday"
Dependable, mature and
personable "Girl Friday" for
Griffin's leading jewelers.
General office experience,
typing very necessary,
bookeeping or retail jewelery
experience helpful. Diamond
Jewelry , 106 N. Hill St. Griffin.
GRADERS, SCRAPERS,
BULLDOZERS, BACKHOES
No experience necessary. Will
train. Earn S3OO S4OO per week.
For application call 404 261 5608
or write to World Wide Systems,
3177 Peachtree Rd. N.E. Suite
201, Atlanta, Georgia 30305.
WANTED: Experienced
electrician and experienced
electricians' helpers only.
Apply in person Brown Electric
Co., 502 W. Solomon, 9-12 and 2-4
Mon. - Fri.
ROAD SERVICE
Tl NE-LP: LUBRICATION
TIRE REPAIRS
Downtown Shell
235 E. Taylor St.
SWINGER
1970 Dodge Dart, two door
hardtop. Lime green with
black interior, 340 engine,
automatic trans., power
steering.
RBM
Motors Inc.
N. Expressway
Phone 228-2771
QUALITY CONTROL TECHNICIAN
Borden Chemical has an opening at its new plant for an
individual to control the quality of its packaging film.
Duties will include: the use of physical and chemical
testing apparatus, such as: color analyzers, Ph meters,
specific gravity determination, etc., production adherence
to quality specifications, and raw material inspection.
Apply to Room 308, Commercial Bank Building, Griffin,
Ga. 30223.
MANAGER TRAINEE
A national consumer finance
company needs a 21 to 30 year
old male who wants to work.
Must be neat appearing, able to
meet the public, have a high
school education, be military
exempt and have an
automobile. If interested, call
228 1381.
WANTED: Experienced, part
time dry cleaning presser. One
hour Martinizing, 462 W.
Solomon.
★ HOUSING WANTED ★
WANTED: 2 nice unfurnished
rooms, close in. Call 227-3079
between 4:30 and 5 p.m.
★ MISCELLANEOUS ★
Call 227-5223.
Antique china, bisque and dolls
expertly repaired. 228-0968.
Will tear down old houses and
barns , for lumber. 227-1574.
Will do exterior and interior
painting , also brick and block
work and repairs of any kind.
Call 227-1574 after 5 p.m.
Will do typing, sewing, and
poodle grooming in my home.
227-1574 after 5 p.m.
Will wreck houses for lumber.
227-0205.
WANTED TO BUY: Used
furniture . Higgins Furniture
Co. Phone 227-1571.
Old Post Card views and letters
to and from Griffin. Horace
Westbrooks, 227 0281. Sunny
Side, Ga.
★ PETS & LIVESTOCK ★
FOR SALE: Pekingnese and
Chihuahua puppies. Call 227-
7165.
FOR SALE: Beagle puppies, 6
months old. 227-0306
Bassett houna, registered and
wormed. 227-1205.
AKC IRISH SETTER PUPS,
MALES, SSO, FEMALES, S4O.
227 8843.
PETS: German Shepherd
puppies, AKC, must see to
appreciate. Barnesville, 1-358-
2898.
FOR SALE: Horses. Phone 227
5850.
FOR SALE: Retriever puppies.
Phone Everett at 228-1313.
AKC registered puppies, toy
poodles, and one Dachshund.
227-8066.
Horses Boarded and trained.
Quarter horses and Appaloosas,
Halter, Western Pleasure,
Speed events. Have room for 4
horses. Oak stalls. 2 lighted
arenas. Charlie Horse Ranch,
Box 367 Senoia, Ga. 599-3547.
FOR SALE. AKC Toy Poodle
puppies, 6 weeks old, AKC Toy
Poodle, white female, 4 months
old. 2 mixed male puppies, Also
Poodle clipping. 358-1182.
Barnesville.
★ LOST & FOUNDS
LOST: Black and tan Airdale
Terrior, 3 months, flea collar,
reward. 227-1345.
Found: Male Pointer. Vicinity
County Line Rd. at Orchard
Hill. Call 227 1570 and identify.
LOST: 2 male black and tan
coon hounds. Lost on Walnut
Creek, five miles from
McDonough. Call 957-5017 if
found.
CONVENIENT
REAR DOOR
PARKING
At
PURSER
Furniture Co.
124 N. Hill St.
Legals
LEGAL 6690
STATE OF GEORGIA
COUNTY OF SPALDING
In Re Estate of Essie S.
Womack, Deceased.
All creditors of the estate of
Essie S. Womack, deceased,
late of Spalding County, are
hereby notified to render their
demands to the undersigned
according to law, and all
persons indebted to said estate
are required to make
immediate payment to us.
This 13th day of January 1972.
Commercial Bank & Trust Co.
Administrator of Estate of
Essie S. Womack, deceased.
LEGAL 6691
STATE OF GEORGIA
COUNTY OF SPALDING
In Re Estate of Norman
Williams, Deceased.
All creditors of the estate of
Norman Williams, deceased,
late of Spalding County, are
hereby notified to render their
demands to the undersigned
according to law, and all
persons indebted to said estate
are required to make
immediate payment to us.
This 13th day of January 1972.
Commercial Bank & Trust Co.,
Administrator of Estate of
Norman Williams, deceased.
LEGAL 6689
STATE HIGHWAY
DEPARTMENT OF GEORGIA
ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS
FEDERAL PROJECT EHS-I
75-2 (62) 166 8. EHS-l-475-1 (67)
8188, MONROE, LAMAR,
BUTTS 8. SPALDING
COUNTIES
Sealed proposals will be
received by the undersigned at
the General Office of the State
Highway Department of
Georgia, 2 Capital Square,
Atlanta, Georgia, 30334, until
11:00 A.M., FEBRUARY 4, 1972
and publicly opened for
furnishing all labor, material,
equipment and other things
necessary for the following
work:
Safety modifications and
installation of signs, guardrail,
pavement markers, and
drainage structures on 1-75
from a point near Riverdale
Drive in Macon northerly to the
Henry County Line and on 1-475
from 1-75 south of Macon
northerly to Bolingbroke.
COfiTRAtT
TIME
184 CALENDAR DAYS
DIVISION
OFFICE
THOMASTON
PRICE OF
PLANS
$65.00
PROPOSAL
GUARANTY
$20,000.00
Plans and specifications may be
inspected at the General Offices
in Atlanta, the Field Division
Office indicated, and at the
office of the Board of
Commissioner of Roads and
Revenue of the county(ies) in
which the work is located.
Copies of the Standard
Specifications ($4.00), the
proposal form ($5.00) and the
plans (indicated price) may be
obtained from the State
Highway Office Engineer at the
General Office in Atlanta.
Payment of the correct amount
must accompany each order;
such payment will not be
refunded. Proposals will not be
issued after 9:00 A.M. on the
date of bid opening. Notices to
Contractors which include
items and quantities are
available upon payments of
$12.00 annually to cover
postage.
Proposals must be submitted on
the proposal form issued by the
Department. Each proposal
submitted must be
accompanied by a proposal
guaranty in the indicated
amount in the form of a
Certified Check, Cashier's
Check or Bid or Proposal Bond
on a form issued by the
Department or the Georgia
Highway Authority.
Acceptance of an offer
submitted by the bid proposals
will be given in writing within
thirty days after the opening of
the bid if any such acceptance is
going to be made. Offers of
bidders who do not hold a
current Certificate of
Qualification, H.D. Form 482,
will not be accepted unless
prequalification requirements
are specifically waived for this
work.
Work will be governed by the
applicable edition of Standard
Specifications as amended by
the contract provisions.
Contract time will be as
indicated.
Projects financed with Federal
funds will contain provisions
with regard to minimum wages,
Ready Mix Concrete
Prompt - Courteous Delivery
228-1378
Johnson’s Concrete Co.
employment of labor, methods
of construction, and subletting
or assigning the contract. On
such projects, the Department,
in accordance with the
provisions of Title VI of the Civil
Rights Act Os 1964 (78 Sta. 252)
and the Regulations of the U.S.
Department of Transportation,
issued pursuant to such act,
hereby notifies all bidders that
it will affirmatively insure that
the contract entered into
pursuant to this advertisement
will be awarded to lowest
responsible bidder without
discrimination on the grounds
of race, color, or national
origin.
Any Federally financed work
located within the five county
Atlanta, Ga., Standard
Metropolitan Statistical Area of
Fulton, DeKalb, Cobb, Clayton
and Gwinenett Counties, the
estimated cost of which exceeds
$500,000, will be subject to the
requiremtns of the Atlanta
Plan. Requirements of the
Atlanta Plan will be included in
the contract special provisions
where applicable. Copies of the
Atlanta Plan are available from
the same source as plans and
proposals.
Projects financed solely with
state or authority bond funds
will contain H.R. Resolution 34
requiring use of domestic
materials.
This advertisement is merely
an invitation for the submission
of bids which are to be
considered as offers for
performance of work by the
submitting party. The State
reserves the right to reject any
or all bids.
DIRECTOR, STATE
HIGHWAY DEPARTMENT
LEGAL 6692
Court of Ordinary, Spalding
County, Georgia
To any Creditors and All
Parties at Interest:
Regarding Estate of Mrs.
Ruby B. Eller formerly of
Spalding County, Georgia,
notice is hereby given that J. C.
Eller, an heir has filed
application with me to declare
no Administration necessary.
Said application will be heard
at my office Monday, February,
1972, and if no objection is made
an order will be passed saying
no Administration necessary.
January 12, 1972.
George C. Imes, Ordinary.
LEGAL 6693.
Citation Dismission of
Executorship
Whereas Mrs. Dorothy G.
Randall and Commercial Bank
8. Trust Co., represent to the
Court, in their petition, duly
filed and entered on record, that
they have fully administered
Charles D. Randall's estate:
This is therefore to cite all
persons concerned, kindred and
creditors, to show cause, if any
they can, why said Executors
should not be discharged from
their administration, and
receive letters of Dismission, on
the first Monday in February,
1972.
George C. Imes, Ordinary
Spalding County, Georgia.
LEGAL 6701
LEGAL NOTICE
.Notice is hereby given that
there will be introduced in the
1972 session of the General
Assembly of Georgia,
legislation to amend the
Charter of the City of Griffin
and for other purposes.
This 20th day of January, 1972.
Roy L. Inman, City Manager
LEGAL 6700
NO. 16508
SUPERIOR COURT
SPALDING COUNTY,
GEORGIA
SUIT FOR DIVORCE
FILED IN OFFICE JAN. 19,
1972
ORDER OF SERVICE BY
PUBLICATION
DATED JAN. 19, 1972
Betty June Alford Hoard
VS.
Lewis W. Hoard
To: Lewis W. Hoard:
You are hereby commanded to
be and appear at the Superior
Court of Spalding County,
Georgia within Sixty (60) days
of Jan. 19, 1972 to answer the
plaintiff's complaint in the
above stated case.
Witness the Honorable Andrew
J. Whalen, Jr., Judge of the said
Court, this the 19 day of Jan.
1972.
F.P. Lindsey
Clerk, Superior Court
LEGAL 6698
Janet Deborah Bishop Murphy
VS. Johnny Thomas Murphy
No. 16503 Superior Court
Spalding County , Georgia Suit
For Divorce Filed In Office Jan.
17, 1972 Order Os Service By
Publication Dated Jan. 17, 1972.
TO: Johnny Thomas Murphy:
You are hereby commanded
to be and appear at the Superior
Court of Spalding County,
Georgia within Sixty (60) days
of Jan. 17, 1972 to answer the
plaintiff's complaint in the
above stated case.
Witness the Honorable
Andrew J. Whalen, Jr., Judge of
the said Court, this the 17 day of
Jan., 1972.
(s) F.P. Lindsey
Clerk, Superior Court
n i STATI IAtM
Ralph Gatlin
102 Vo N. Expwy.
Phone 227-2512 IZZIZL
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Cable Cars
are an outmoded means of transportation, a fact
generally recognized except by San Francisco's
passionate protectors of the unique trolleys. Cars
not only continue to rattle over the city's hills and
make the end-of-the-run turns with passenger
power, but are still being built, below right, in a
corner of the cluttered repair shop . . . exact
replicas fashioned with care, ingenuity and love
from century-old plans.
POW wives on ‘roller coaster of hope’
< Peace negotiations on
Vietnam may go on in
public or in secret, pro
posals may be advanced
and rejected, but for rela
tives of war prisoners
little changes. Tom Tiede,
who has w rit ten fre
quently on their individ
ual tragedies, reports
they are still lonely, still
waiting.)
By TOM TIEDE
NEW YORK—(NEA) —lt
has begun as another sedul
ous year for Mrs. Evelyn
Grubb. She’s the wife of an
Air Force officer shot down
and missing in North Viet
nam. She’s also the national
coordinator for the National
League of Families of Pris
oners of War and Missing in
Action. As such, she travels
the nation to speak in behalf
of the wives and children
and other relatives of 1,600
POWs-MIAs.
She tells of her own hus
band, Maj. Wilmer Grubb,
missing now since 1966. She
LEGAL 6696
GEORGIA
SPALDING COUNTY
On application of Lloyd
Parker, 431 E. Broadway,
Griffin, Georgia, Articles of
Incorporation have been
granted to NORTH STAR
INVESTMENT CORP, by the
Honorable Andrew J. Whalen,
Jr., Judge of the Spalding
Superior Court, in accordance
with the applicable provisions
of the Georgia Business
Corporation Code. The
registered ooffice of the
Corporation is located at 431
East Broadway, Griffin,
Georgia, and its registered
agent is Lloyd Parker at the
same address. The purpose of
this Corporation is to
merchandise, sell, offer for
sale, and distribute at wholesale
and retail, foods and foodstuffs
of all kinds and descriptions,
whether in bulk, package,
bottle, can, etc., including
beverages of all kinds and for
all purposes, to generally deal
in groceries and grocery
product suitable for public
consumption, and to have all the
rights incident to a business
corporation as set out in
applicable laws of Georgia. The
minimum capital with which
the Corporation shall begin
business is not less than $500.00.
BECK, GODDARD, OWEN,
SQUIRES 8> MURRAY
Attorneys frFOR North Star
Investment Corp.
By (s) Stephen O. Squires
P.O. Box 116
Griffin, Georgia 30223
LEGAL 6697
LEGAL NOTICE
GEORGIA
SPALDING COUNTY
Notice is hereby given that E.
D. Wilson, High Falls Road,
Griffin, Georgia, 30223, is the
sole owner and proprietor of
that certain business now being
carried on by him on the North
Expressway, Griffin, Georgia,
under the name of WEST
GRIFFIN LUMBER AND
BUILDING SUPPLY CO., and
the general nature of said
business is the operation of a
retail and wholesale building
supply business, which is the
same business as was
heretofore operated by West
Griffin Lumber Company, Inc.,
the said West Griffin Lumber
Comapny, Inc., having sold all
of its right, title and interest in
and to said business to the said
E. Wilson.
This the 18 day of January,
1972.
(s) E. D. Wilson
Beck, Goddard, Owen, Squires
& Murray
Page 9
tells of her four children and
her hopes for their futures
(“no wars”). She tells of all
the misery and suffering and
confusion and terrible human
waste.
Audiences listen intently.
Reporters take notes.
“How do you feel, Mrs.
Grubb, being away from your
husband so long?”
The woman does a good
job of it. She is poised, mod
est, courageous. And yet as
she wanders about for her
c au s e—Virginia one week,
New York the next —she
seems uneasy. Her answers
to questions are mechanical.
Her sad statistics seem to
come out byway of cue.
Clearly, she doesn’t seem to
be absolutely convinced that
all that she is doing is doing
any good at all.
Mrs. Grubb’s activism is
hesitant. Dedicated, but hesi
tant. And small wonder. She
has been part of the POW
MIA movement for five
years. She has besieged the
Congress. She has written to
world leaders. She has even
petitioned the United Nations
in an attempt to guarantee
decent treatment of war cap
tives.
Yet for all of it, the POW
MIA question is no less
severe today than when she
started.
Even such periodic head
line events as President
Nixon’s disclosure of the U.S.
withdrawal-prisoner release
package offer end up for the
wives as another dip on what
Mrs. Sybil Stockdale, another
league activist, describes as
their “roller coaster of
hope.”
Oh, there has been some
small progress for the acti
vist relatives. Some recogni
tion that they have terrible
problems; some concessions,
even, from Hanoi (North
Vietnam released a “final
and complete” POW list of
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PLANE WITH DRAG may turn out to be a leap forward in development of advanced
short takeoff and landing (STOL) craft. Above, researchers John P. Campbell and
Gerald G. Kayten examine a model before windtunnel tests of externally blown flap
concept. Below, the model in “flight.”
— Griffin Daily News Sat. and Sun., Jan. 29-30, 1972
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339 men in 1970). But as for
guaranteeing humane treat
ment for their men, as for
insisting the enemy follow
the Geneva Convention on
war prisoners (regular pris
oner lists, regular mail, regu
lar Red Cross inspection of
camps)—as for this, the
wives and parents and chil
dren and sisters and brothers
have failed absolutely.
So it is that Evelyn Grubb
and many of the other 2,700
members of her league are,
after all these years, still
what they were originally—
desperately uncertain.
“I’m frustrated more than
I can say,” Mrs. Grubb ad
mits. “I’ve done everything
I know how. But I’m still
without my husband. I’m
still in limbo.”
As it happens, Mrs. Grubb
is in a special limbo. When
her husband was shot down,
Hanoi released propaganda
pictures of the pilot, seem
ingly in good health. How
ever, says the wife, “His
name was not included
among the 339 Hanoi re
leased in 1970. So I don’t
know. If I believe the Hanoi
list, my husband must have
died after he was captured.
Some of the propaganda
photos showed him with bay
onets pointed at him. Well,
maybe they put one of the
bayonets down his throat.”
But if Mrs. Grubb’s case
is ugly, it is not unique. Most
of the POW-MIA relatives
have some special frustra
tion. Kathy Plowman was
married two weeks before
her husband went to war,
and was five months preg
nant when he was shot down.
Shirley Odell writes letters
to President Nixon advising
him that while he watches
sports on television, her hus
band watches a bare light
bulb in some dirty dungeon.
One wife on the West Coast
put a POW-MIA collection
can on the bar of a military
officer’s club and collected
a grand total of $1.50 in two
weeks.
And if the families don’t
have peculiar frustrations,
they have obvious ones. Sex
and marriage, for instance,
for the wives. Some wives
have begun to date. Some
few are living with other
men. A couple have even
gotten divorces.
“The public acts as if this
is terrible,” says one activist
wife, “and maybe it is. But
remember, some of the girls
have had husbands missing
for five and six years. Some
had shaky marriages to start
with. Others have given
them up for dead. Most wom
en are very loyal, of course.
But some just can’t take it
any more.”
Indeed, some of the women
can’t “take it” any more.
The crank calls in the middle
of the night. The political
bickering in many nations
over the lives of their hus
bands and sons. “I’m so sick
of it,” says one California
wife. “I read in a magazine
the other day where you can
buy a bracelet now with the
name of a POW-MIA on it.
If you send 50 cents extra
you can get the deluxe brace
let, made of copper, which
will cure rheumatism. My
God! I don’t even want to
talk about it.”
Still, this year, again, Eve
lyn Grubb and thousands of
other POW-MAI relatives
will be busy. March 26 is the
eighth anniversary of the
first man captured in Viet
nam. Eight years. Ninety-six
months. “We’re planning
everything from a candle
light vigil to an International
Day of Prayer,” says Mrs.
Grubb, who knows full well
that if candlelight and prayer
worked, her husband would
be home now.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)