Newspaper Page Text
Page 14
Griffin Daily News Monday, April 17,1972
B
m 1
k , - >
™... 11 ii. Jlm 11. - • ~rnr ti
?T7L— P
”'- ' *“3 T~^^* WlM2^^*^BlßSoßPy?BßE^"*^ ' a 'X
■■ ***yx£
FRANKFORT, Ky.—Several hundred persons were
evacuated from along the banks of the Kentucky river
because of flooding caused when heavy rains fell during the
news
Jury selection set
in Cumming trial
CUMMING, Ga. (UPI)— The trial of the last in a
quartet of men charged with the murder of two Forsythe
County deputies was scheduled to begin in Superior Court
here today.
Three of the trials have ended in convictions with one of
the men, former Policeman Charles Bennett, sentenced to
die in the electric chair.
Jury selection was scheduled today for the trial of
Herbert Smith.
A jury Saturday convicted James Lingerfelt on two
counts of murder in the deaths of Bill Cantrell and Larry
Mulkey who were found dead in the trunk of their patrol
car on Jan. 10.
But the jury of 11 men and a woman reported to Judge
Marion T. Pope that it was deadlocked over the
sentencing. Pope accepted the report after some seven
hours of deliberations and sentenced Lingerfelt to two life
sentences, to run consecutively.
Marcus Ratledge was the first man to be tried in the
series. He was given two life sentences.
County leaders
may challenge tax
JEKYLL ISLAND, Ga. (UPI) — Georgia county
commissioners, holding their 58th annual convention at
this resort island, are expected to challenge a study of
county tax digests that shows no counties with a required
40 per cent assessment.
The study was prepared by State Auditor Ernest Davis
who said some counties have assessments as low as 18 per
cent. State law requires 40 per cent.
Some county commissioners have claimed that Davis
study was based on random samples in counties that do
not reflect true property values because of the great
market demand on such properties.
firestone £*£ I
® S IA9S
H i!* ■MJb 2 *- I
' > 'll WhittwtM M M mor. I
FIRESTONE CHAMPION
( 1 I >' J | Full 4 ply nylon cord tires built with
' ’ > ' 4 J Firestone quality features thru and thru
' {f" *'• •"•’ wi.7ww»a» iw i» Tm>‘ ■
N'A>l *** ’ ••••• ■
,/m ■••• _L' - ’ I
DOM i?.n nii I
QMEO • •»•• iiit tin
fffl ”»'* II H 21 H i
•» • Kit mi
I
,M * 22 II till I
- ’ ■ I ’/ ... n— »v
Heavy duty Rallye ✓Heavy -duty fully
TWIN molded rubber mats
g| aaq 111TQ w ' th reinforced heel pad
✓ Choice of black, blue,
red, gold or green
IB $ !99-
Limit one pair
P° r customer
Additional
t2.9t par pair
,f *• should sell out ot any item in
' this ad. well give you e '"rain-
check" for later delivery at the
advertised price.
Firestone STORE
330 East Solomon St Phone 227-4018
weekend. Not all of the vehicles were salvaged. A car parked
in a low lying area of Frankfort was left behind as the river
went 10 feet over flood stage. (UPI
Vice mayor declares
war on go-go dancers
ATLANTA (UPI)— The case of the go-go dancers in
Underground Atlanta was expected to go before the board
of aidermen today.
Atlanta Vice Mayor Maynard Jackson said he will pre
sent the matter to the board and ask that such features be
stopped.
The dancers first appeared last week at a nightclub
called “New Year’s Eve,” in a building in the
underground complex but not under control of Under
ground Atlanta, Inc., which forbids dancing girls.
Their presence threatens the Underground as a “family
entertainment area,” Jackson said, and added he has
overwhelming support of other aidermen to ban them.
But Mayor Sam Massell said he cannot understand the
concern because the Underground was not meant to be
like family amusement parks such as Six Flags Over
Georgia.
|» i
* .. _ —
B " ||
F J
*
, : _ ' W ■■ ■ - -
1B . W
r/2±M W' \
1? / a
L * #JI
B xssfslß
FRONTRUNNER FOR the Democratic nomination in
many odds-makers' books after his first-place finish in
the Wisconsin primary, Sen. George McGovern had to
come from far behind. The first announced candidate,
from South Dakota figured near the bottom of the
popularity polls during most of his year-long campaign.
I DRY CLEANING
SPECIAL
||WOODWARD CLEANERS ||
COLLEGE AT BTH STREET
GRIFFIN LAUNDRY
210 EAST SOLOMON STREET
MON. - TUES. - WED., April 17-18-19
QS*« H«
v Plain Skirts * *
MIXED OR MATCHED * p,eats Ex,ra
THIS SPECIAL
Samtone good at both
LOCATIONS
GRIFFIN CLEANERS WOODWARD CLEANERS
210 E. Solomon Street College at Bth Street
.111 Locally Owned and Operated by Bill and Susan Woodward
Political
language
book topic
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
Backstairs at the White House:
William Safire, one of Pres
ident Nixon’s speechwriters,
has revised his “non partisan”
book “The New Language of
Politics.”
The Safire opus is a
cfictionary of catchwords, slo
gans and current political
usage. Some are vintage
phrases, cliches now a part of
the language: “As Maine Goes,
So Goes the Nation.”
But others like “backlash”,
“Black power”; “game plan”;
“peacenik” and the Nixonian
“let me make one thing
perfectly clear” are relatively
new. Tie latter is lumped with
so-called “pointer phrases.”
The major coinages of the
Nixon years, he lists as: “Black
capitalian,” “bring us togeth
er,” “hack it,” and "New
Federalism” along with many
alliterative phrases coined by
Vice President Spiro T. Agnew,
including “nattering nabobs of
negativism.” His “effete snobs”
and “radiclib” also gets special
mention.
President Nixon’s late May
summit trip to Moscow remind
ed broadcaster Chet Huntley at
a luncheon gathering for
diplomats this week that
foreign travel by presidents
used to be frowned upon in the
nation’s early history.
President McKinley refused
to set foot on the international
bridge at El Paso to meet with
the Mexican president.
President Theodore Roosevelt
was the first president to travel
outside the country while in
office when he went to
Panama.
President Wilson caused an
uproar among his lawmaker
opponents when he decided to
attend the Peace Conference at
Versailles after World War I.
Presidents Harding and Coo
lidge both went abroad. But
President Hoover was a stay-at
home. During the war years,
President Roosevelt traveled to
Casablanca, Teheran and Yalta
for summit meetings with
/I
h ,iFor Beautiful Skin I
jfe n
/\ i ; r 4L
\ \ "A \ w
A %A I <1 \ I \ \ wt\ I _
O \ pw I
.„ , cv. For Excitement
To Balance Oily Skin For A Wholesome Skin
CLEANSING OIL, to zip off oil and All made with oure milk nature’s best ESTEE is the first and only
dirf 16 oz. 6.00 A 01306 w " n pure rn,,K - natures oest superfragrance — even a drop lingers I
soother on f Or hours. And it’s so adaptable, it I
CREAMY MILK CLEANSER, for the CREME WASH a becomes every woman’s own private
effect of soap and water cleansing. splash on cleanser 3*oz <OO 6 ""ronment.
BOZ. 6.00 ESTEE SUPER COLOGNE
activf SKIN LOTION a real whiz NEW PURE MILK FRESHENER, a 2 oz. 10.00 I
AC7 Y E LOT ON ' 8 an , ano brightening toner. 6oz. 4.00
with oily skins. 8 oz. 6.00 ESTEE PERFUMED BODY POWDER
oaz-l, „„ r _ t . »♦ NEW ICED MILK MASK, a peel-off 9 oz. 8.50 I
CREME PACK ’ t 0 P urpe p °7 .nn mask 2oz. 600
impurities. 2OZ. 6.00 NEW ESTEE SUPER PERFUME
NON-O.LY UNDER-MAKEUP RSE SPR AY '-fillab.e) 3 OZ. 12.50
CREME, to moisturize lightly’under LOT ON a r.ch
makeup 2 oz. 8.50
For Thirsty Skin
eyyr a u uk ai th mon” oott YOUTH-DEW is Estee Lauder s
FOR A HEALTH-FOOD DIET personal fragrance masterpiece.
WHIPPED CLEANSING CREME, to YOUTH-DEW BATH OIL Vi OZ. 5.00
gentle away dirt and makeup. 1 oz - 800 I
3U oz. 5.00
ESTODERME, enriched with fresh DUSTING POWDER 9 oz. 6.50
DRY DRY SKIN ASTRINGENT, for whole egg, is good for deep-down EAU de PARFUM SPRAY 2 oz. 6.00
the tenderest toning moisturizing. Use ESTODERME BODYSATINEE 4 oz. 5.00
Boz. 6.00 CREME at night. 8 oz. 8.00
DRY DRY SKIN CREME, revives skin 1 oz - BOUTIQUE EAU de PARFUM SPRAY
like rain in the desert 2oz. 8.50 2oz - 7 -®° 2 * oz ‘
SOLID PERFUME IN ROPE
ENRICHED UNDER MAKEUP ESTODERME EMULSION under COMPACT 8.50
CREME, gives a velvety cushion to makeup for 24-hour care. COLOGNE ... A -r
makeup 2oz. 8.50 2 oz - 750 LIGHT COLOGNE WATER with
atomizer 6oz. 8.50
NIGHT TABLE CREME, it works NEW CREME DE SACHET 6 OZ. 7.50
while you sleep 2oz. 10.00
L————^—i
30.48 _30.24 30.24 30.00 30.00
1 /, 77/ wtk Wffi?UW o i
Jv r x Mx
' I l/P — Lnewyorkß
I \ 1
s.h (
30 24 \./X 3000 1
I /«// Va’laht*
, FAI " * •iS/' 1 -J
.DALLAS LCC/ST" \
LOWEST TEMPERATURES KZA. >• \\
r T? rx 29.77. X (neworleans V } miami
VA 3000
40 t—"LEGEND rB
RAIN IZxvxIsNOW I
60 Flow I
UPI WE ATHER FOTOC AST © <■
FORECAST FOR GRIFFIN AREA—Clear and cool with diminishing winds tonight Tomorrowß
fair and mild.
Allied leaders.
President Truman went to
Potsdam. But it was President
Eisenhower who topped them
all with 16 trips abroad during
his eight years in the White
House. President Kennedy went
to Europe and his successor,
Lyndon B. Johnson was a globe
trotter in pursuit of peace.
Nixon is expected to match
Eisenhower’s travel record this
year —and do even better if he
is re-elected in November. The
President also has several
“firsts” in the travel field,
including his journey to China
in February and other trips
behind the iron curtain, to
Rumania and Yugoslavia.
LB J NO. 36
Lyndon Baines Johnson was
inaugurated as the 36th
President of the United States
on Jan. 20, 1963.
MAINTENANCE MECHANIC I
Man needed for staff of large state institution. 3 years of ■
varied maintenance experience required. Particularly sci
plumbing. Must have ability to supervise several helpers. ■
Age 21-55, high school education preferred. No prison I
record. Many fringe benefits including paid annual and I
sick leave and retirement program. Work clothes and I
meals furnished.
Contact Mr. R. F. Starr,
Georgia Diagnostic & Classification Center,
at the junction of 1-75 and Ga. Hwy. 36. Approximately 35 I
miles north of Macon.