Newspaper Page Text
Page 2
— Griffin Daily News Monday, September 4,1972
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Sharon McLarety
Mississippi girl Miss Teen
ATLANTA (UPI)— A shapely
Mississippi lass, Sharon
ty, reigns today as the new
YOUR OWN HOME.
or at least have a toehold on it,
some good Homeowners Insurance
would be real comforting.
Federated
INSURANCE
p BUSINESS
Mjk HOME '
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life
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Phone
227-2021
C. RAY BARRON
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<——'l \ / / What a buy, and what a slip! You’ll
/ Jli / / l° ve wear i n S this Van Raalte slip
/ / that’s made of non-cling luxurious
E /sy X/ nylon taffeknit. Perfect under your
ft * • k finest outer-wear, and you can save
/f by shopping now. Splurge a little and
I < V - *\ buy several.
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I fit. %. &. 1
I £ i \ Sizes 32 To 42. Short, Average, Tall.
I \ X \ 111 Wh ' te 311(1 nUde
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1 Lingerie ■ Street Floor
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Swiik’R&leitU
“First In Fashion”
Miss National Teen-ager.
The brunette high school se
nior, who displays measure
ments of 36-25-36 on a five-foot
eight-inch frame, won the crown
Saturday night.
First runnerup in the contest
between girls from all 50 states
and the District of Colum
bia was Peggy Harrell of More
head, Ky., and Kay Dekalb of
Carter smarting
from pay setback
ATLANTA (UPI)—Gov. Jim
my Carter says the federal Pay
Board is placing the burden of
its attack on inflation on “state
government and the people who
can least afford it.”
Carter, still smarting from
the pay board refusing to give
Georgia teachers and law en
forcement officers all of a state
authorized pay increase, is
scheduled to chair a panel on
Hartsell, Ala., was 2nd run
nerup.
“I*m so excited I can’t be
lieve it,” said Miss McLarty.
“This is my first national con
test.”
Sharon is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. I. W. McLarty. Her
father is an agriculture exten
sion specialist for Mississippi
State University.
state-federal relations at this
week ’sSou them Governor’s Con
ference at Hilton Head Island,
S. C.
“It seems a little unfair to
me for state governments and
state employes to bear the brunt
when everyone knows that the
federal government was respon
sible for inflation anyway,” he
said Saturday just before leav
ing for the governor’s confer
ence.
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September 24 has been designated as “Faith Os Our Father’s Day” in Pike
County and will bring to a close the Pike County Sesquicentennial
celebration. History indicates that Fincher Church may have been
organized in the same year as the county, 1822, and this memorable occasion
will be observed at Fincher with an old-fashioned Home-coming. A basket
DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB
Frequent Side Effect
Weakness from
‘water pills’
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
Dear Dr. Lamb — Would
you kindly tell me why, when
I take the so-called water
pills once a day for two days,
I have a feeling of weakness
that really puts me out of
commission? Incidental
ly, I’ll be 90 next month.
Dear Reader —By water
pills, I presume you mean a
pill that will cause the kid
neys to form more urine.
Pills of this type are some
times used to enable women
to lose water if they retain
fluid just before their men
strual periods, and they’re
also used in the treatment of
high blood pressure or the
accumulation of water in the
body from a number of dis
eases, including heart trou
ble.
Most of the water pills
work by causing the kidneys
to discard sodium, common
ly found in table salt and
other foods. Sodium is a nat
ural and necessary element
in tne normal body. We have
enough sodium chloride
(table salt) in our bodies to
make the blood and other
free fluids about as salty as
ordinary sea water. As long
as sodium salt is retained by
the body, the body will also
retain water. If the sodium
is eliminated by the kidneys,
a certain amount of water
will go with it. Thus the way
to get rid of excess water in
many instances is to get rid
of excess salt.
So far, so good, but the
problem is that many of the
water pills also cause people
to lose other salt, including
potassium salt. Potassium is
commonly found in fruits
and fruit juices. Loss of too
many of these minerals will
cause fatigue and other prob
lems. Too great a loss of or
dinary sodium salt will also
cause fatigue. Many people
do feel “washed out” after
they’ve passed a lot of water
from taking a “water pill”
that also eliminates a cer
tain amount of the body’s
salt.
DRY CLEANING
SPECIAL
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COLLEGE AT BTH STREET
GRIFFIN LAUNDRY
210 EAST SOLOMON STREET
TUES.-WED.-THURS SEPT. 5-6-7
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♦•Meats Extra
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Samtone GOOD * T both
LOCATIONS
GRIFFIN CLEANERS WOODWARD CLEANERS
210 E. Solomon Street College at Sth Street
Locally Owned and Operated by Bill and Susan Woodward
dinner will be served. All former pastors, members, friends and relatives
are invited to share in this celebration of the 150th anniversary of Fincher
United Methodist Church, Meansville, Ga. The Rev. C. Hoke Sewell, former
District Superintendent, will bring the morning message. Former pastors
are invited to participate in an afternoon session of sharing and reminiscing.
Mrs. Irving arrested
as she got off plane
ZURICH (UPl)—Swiss police
arrested Edith Irving, wife of
jailed author Clifford Irving, as
soon as she stepped off a
jetliner from New York today
and whisked her off to
headquarters for questioning.
“1 hope I shall have a fair
trial,” Mrs. Irving said to
newsnen before being driven
off in a police limousine with
her Swiss lawyer, Dr. Peter
Widmer.
Mrs. Irving, 36, is charged in
Switzerland with fraud and
forgery for her part in her
husband’s Howard Hughes au
tobiography hoax.
A German-born Swiss citizen,
Mrs. Irving was accompanied
to Switzerland by her two
children, Nedsky, 4, and Bar
naby, 2, and a family friend,
Kay Peters. The two children
were taken to headquarters by
police and social welfare
workers in a separate au
tomobile.
Mrs. Irving is accused by the
Swiss of depositing $650,000
meant for billionaire Howard
Hughes in a Zurich bank and
forging and using false identity
documents. She admitted ear
lier in a U.S. court that she
used a forged passport with the
name Helga R. Hughes to cash
the checks.
Most of the money has been
returned to the publishers.
Mrs. Irving, who flew econo
my class on a direct jet flight
from New York, looked drawn
and tired on arrival. She has
already served a two-month jail
sentence in New York for her
part in the fraud and agreed to
Ira Slade Clothing Co.
127 North Hill Street
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ami
return voluntarily to Switzer
land after extradition proceed
ings were initiated.