Newspaper Page Text
Page 14
— Griffin Daily News Wednesday, October 4,1972
3 Days Thurs -> Fri »
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Harvest Os Values
Men’s Dept.—Street Floor
A
SPORT COATS W
You've been promising yourself a new Sport Coat, and here’s your
chance. A real Harvest Sale Value. Z \
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Double Knit, all wool and dacron-wool blend in solid blazers - plaids I i V i
and stripes. A great selection. Sizes 38 to 46. Reg. - Longs & Shorts. &I
Regular 50.00 to 80.00
$9 499 SC 999
Sale OTP to 04
slacks IHB
An outstanding selection of 100 percent Polyester Knit and all wool I
worsted. Styles include belt loop and Continental flares or straight leg t JjS ' '* ffw
models ■ Solid colors and fancy patterns. Sizes 30 to 42. Waist. *WT, \ / J
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Regular 15.00 To 20.00 ® W ■KT nr I
$1099 0 SOEOO F’l YlVk
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Clubs of Griffin And Spalding County A
HARVEST MARKET m
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At Die Main Office of Commercial
Bank And Trust Co. TIES-TIES-TIES
11:00 A.M. to 7:30 P.M. This Friday and Saturday
— ——————J AhJ More Ties!
-|» jj- 1 -p| • A pleasing array of colorful stripes &
Manhattan Pajamas
At A Saving
Long sleeve - long leg - Dacron-cotton easy care. Solid and fancy - All ffjKl(l <
in sizes Ato D. Regular 7.00. >VV V WVU
5.499 3 4450| «• 1- *>o
a SPECIAL PURCHASE
600 Fine Quality Manhattan
Dress Shirts
Fashion colors - - - Solids and Stripes - - • All have the new longer
collars for that fashion right look. Sizes 14% to 17%. Regular 6.50 to
W.
Regular 6.50 To 9.00
„4” 3 14“
W.
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UPI Wi ATHLR fOTOCAST © §
Senate turns down
guaranteed income
By MIKE FEINSILBER
WASHINGTON (UPI)-A di
vided Senate has turned down a
liberal-backed solution to the
nation’s welfare problem which
would have guaranteed every
family—employed or idle—a
basic minimum income.
Defeated by a 52-34 vote
Tuesday on a plan to make the
payment $2,600 a year for a
family of four, the liberals are
expected to try again today
with s2,4oo—the figure Pres
ident Nixon proposed and the
House accepted 15 months ago.
Sen. Russell B. Long, D-La.,
leader of the opposition, says
the very idea of an income
guarantee makes him “tremble
in fear for the fate of the
Republic.”
He champions a tough “must
work" proposition which also
appears to lack majority
support in the Senate. He vows
to filibuster until New Year’s
Eve if the liberals do prevail.
Division of Opinion
The sharp division of opinion
makes it likely that the Senate
will shove all proposals aside
Dogs chew
man to pieces
WACO, Tex. (UPI)-Lloyd
Lester, 50, described as a
recluse, tended 25 dogs at his
ramshackle farm house near
Waco.
“Old man Lester let those
dogs run free, and they were
pretty mean dogs. They’ve
attacked cattle and hogs out
here before, but never hu
mans,” said Troy Johnson,
Lester’s closest neighbor.
Tuesday, Johnson and a
friend happened by Lester’s
place and found the man’s body
in his back yard, chewed to
pieces by the dogs.
Justice of the Peace Joe
Johnson said Lester, who had
no friends, had been dead for a
week. He ordered an autopsy.
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MISS AMERICA, Terry Anne Meeuwsen, finds that bowling over the pins is harder
than bowling over the judges at Atlantic City.
and vote to test them out side
by side in various parts of the
nation for two years.
HEW Secretary Elliot L.
Richardson calls that proposal
“the worst outcome of all.” He
says it will delay nationwide
welfare reform for five years
because of the time required to
set up, run, and evaluate the
tests and pass new legislation
based on their outcome.
One hand in his pocket, the
other slicing the air, Long
shouted in Tuesday’s debate
that “any one of these
guaranteed income-for-not
working programs could de
stroy the country.”
He called them “loaf-fare”
instead of welfare.
Sen. Abraham Ribicoff, D-
Conn., author of the defeated
plan, called Long’s alternative
approach “slave-fare.” It would
require welfare mothers whose
children are in school to take
$2,400-a-year jobs.
Minimum Would Be Raised
Long said soon after any
$2,400 or $2,600-a-year plan
were enacted welfare recipients
would pressure politicians to
raise the minimum again and
again.
His opponents contended that
creating a labor pool of one
million welfare mothers and
ordering them to work would
depress wages everywhere.
They said factories would
relocate to where such cheap,
government-subsidized labor is
available, throwing those now
employed out of work.
But Long contended the
guaranteed minimum approach
only aggravates the welfare
problem. The system makes it
more costly for someone to
take a job than to avoid work
and collect welfare, he said.
The Senate fight over welfare
reform has blocked approval of
the entire $14.5 billion bill
which carries many politically
attractive liberalizations of the
Social Security and Medicare
programs along with more
generous welfare payments to
aged, disabled and blind adults.
Gallup
charges
distortion
WASHINGTON (UPI)-Poll
ster George Gallup believes a
distorted picture given by
American press services has
contributed to driving U.S.
prestige to a low point in the
world.
“Our prestige is at a low
point around the world,” Gallup
told the Senate Foreign Rela
tions Committee Tuesday. “It
is not only opposition to
Vietnam but also the violence
and crime and racism which is
given great emphasis in the
news reports.”
Many people abroad think
these problems actually are
worse than they are, Gallup
said, because “the American
press services, in concentrating
so heavily on our problems,
may have given a distorted
picture.”
Gallup, testifying at hearings
on confirmation of his appoint
ment to the U.S. Advisory
Commission on Information,
said he was in favor of freedom
of information and “the philoso
phy that everything should be
revealed with no secrets.”
He made the st; sment when
asked by Committee Chairman
J. William Fulbright, D-Ark., if
he approved of the policy of the
U.S. Information Agency in
keeping secret the results of
polls which it commissions
abroad. Gallup said his own
polls of attitudes on Vietnam
“show that the people of other
nations are overwhelmingly
opposed to our involvement
there.”
Fulbright disagreed with
Gallup about the press. He said
that in some cases it might
even be that the U.S. press
downplays some news stories
which deserve more attention.
He said he was both concerned
and sad at the apparent apathy
concerning scandals and
favoritism in high places.
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