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I Property Transfers |
The following property trans
fers have been recorded during
the past week in the office of
Superior Court Clerk John Lind
sey II at the Spalding County
Courthouse:
Thomas W. Hammond to Mrs.
D. M. Baird, house and lot 1336
Drewry avenue; Slade Realty
Inc., Ben R. Cain and Marshall
Pate to Harold D. and Joan H.
King, 3.73 acres Buddy Fuller
subdivision; Slade Realty Inc.,
Ben R. Cain, and Marshall Pate
to Jeanette A. King, 3.72 acres
Buddy Fuller subdivision; T. E.
Vickery to J. H. McLaurin Jr.,
house and lot Alabama and
Realty streets; David 0. Miley
to Louis W. and Louis F. Gold
stein, lot Kathy lane; Gus H.
Hyde to Louis W. Goldstein, lot
Banks road; John Albert and
Mamie Opal Wood to Johnnie
Mack and Betty Ann Lester,
house and lot Harlow avenue;
Well-Known
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231 East Solomon Street Gnf,in ’ Georgia
Phone 228-1326
W. N. Manderson to Kenneth F.
and Patricia B. Wood, 9. ;7 acres
Third District; Ex-Cel Builders
of Griffin to Charles O. and
Kristen L. Tredennick, house
and lot Kennedy drive; John H.
Nichols to William T. and
Wanda S. Thielemann, house
and lot McKinley drive; C. A.
and Sara B. Moore to Beecher
and Pauline Williamson, five
acres Second District; Mrs.
Ruth M. Norton estate to F.
Edwin Hallman Jr., house and
lot 675 McLaurin avenue;
Marvin E. Johnson to Jimmy
W. Spradley, house and lot
Mclntosh road.
Otis D. Blake and Andrew E.
Blake to Barnie R. and Bessie
M. Lowery, house and lot Blake
subdivision; Luther Ronald
Williams to George D. and
Patricia A. Chapman, house
and lot 401 Maddox road; Louis
W. and Louis F. Goldstein to
David L. and Sandra M. Gilmer,
lot Kathy lane; Alfred Eady to
William E. and Jan F. Brown,
house and lot Glenn Acres
subdivision; Barbara Brown
-I .A-
. ** I s'
Tit
SILOS BULGING with sacks of wheat is the impression given by these new
apartment buildings in Paris. Architect Gerard Grandval is the producer.
Each porch is shared by two apartments.
ANGELS used to dance
on the head of a pin for
medieval theologians
but an electronic age
has to settle for some
thing more functional,
such as a solid state in
frared lamp balanced on
the business end of a
match. Only 1/ 20th
inch in diameter, the
G.E. minilight is used in
computers, high-speed
counting devices and
photo-sensing devices
which read price tags at
checkout counters.
Tomlin to Ted H. Meeks and
Richard Merritt, lot Deerwood
circle; Ted H. Meeks and
Richard Merritt to Jackie
Perkins, lot Deerwood circle;
Slade Realty Inc., Ben R. Cain
and Marshall Pape to Mr. and
Mrs. Walter Hester, lot Buddy
Fuller subdivision; Jimmy F.
Trenton to Jimmy T. Cochran,
8.55 acres Third District; Mary
Alyce Skubi to Thomas J. and
Elizabeth A. Casto, house and
9.4 acres Jenkinsburg road.
Questions and answers on Phase IV
By United Press International
Questions and answers con
cerning President Nixon’s
Phase IV economic controls:
Q. What is Phase IV?
A. It’s a complex set of wage
and price controls imposed on
most of the economy in the
next two months. The object, as
in Phases I, II and 111, is to
slow down the rate of inflation.
Q. What happened to the
price freeze?
A. Prices are still frozen until
Aug. 12 except in the food and
health industries.
Q. Does that mean grocery
prices are free to rise again?
A. Yes, many food prices will
go up, some of them sharply.
Beef prices will remain under
ceiling rules until Sept. 12. But
grocers and food wholesalers
may raise prices only to reflect
increased cost of raw agricul
tural products since June 8.
Stork Club
MASTER GARLAND
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Garland
of Morrow road, Forest Park,
announce the birth of a son on
July 18 at the Griffin-Spalding
County Hospital.
MASTER ALLEN
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Allen of
Dobbins circle, Griffin, an
nounce the birth of a son on July
18 at the Griffin-Spalding
County Hospital.
MASTER PATTERSON
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Pat
terson of 321 Wisso road,
Griffin, announce the birth of a
son on July 19 at the Griffin-
Spalding County Hospital.
MASTER HENDERSON, JR.
Mr. and Mrs. Jere Dean
Henderson announce the birth
of a son, Jere Dean Henderson,
Jr., on July 17, at Clayton
General Hospital. Maternal
grandmother is Mrs. M. M.
Wrzos of Salinas, Calif., and
paternal grandmother is Mrs.
Charles W. Henderson of
Griffin. The baby’s great
grandmother is Mrs. J. F.
Miller of Cleveland.
Q. Will nonfood prices also
start going up immediately?
A. No. Industrial, wholesale,
retail and service prices in
most cases will remain frozen
until Aug. 12.
Q. What happens after Aug.
12?
A. The price freeze is lifted
on the rest of the economy on a
sector-by-sector basis. Each
sector or industry will be
governed by a special set of
rules dictating how much prices
can go up. The administration
has put forward a set of
preliminary regulations in each
case and will allow the public
to comment on them until July
31. Then the rules will be
revised, if necessary, and will
take effect Aug. 12.
Q. How about wages?
A. The familiar 5.5 per cent
standard for annual wage
increases, plus 0.7 per cent for
fringe benefits, still applies. It
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\ ...GROWING WITH GRIFFIN &
Two boys
arrested
Two boys, 13 and 15-years-old,
were arrested yesterday for
stealing food carts from
Kroger’s and Colonial Stores.
Police said they received a
report that the boys were seen
pushing the carts down Meri
wether street.
Capt. H. L. Blackmon in
vestigated and charged the boys
with theft by taking.
Vandals
sought
Sheriff’s officers were looking
for vandals who threw rocks
and broke out a car windshield
yesterday.
Alonza Banks Nelms, Jr., of
Route Three, Lakeside drive,
the car owner, reported that
someone threw the rocks from a
bank in front of the Southside
Baptist Church.
was mandatory during Phase II
(November 1971-January 1973),
voluntary in Phase 111 (Janu
ary-May 1973) and now it’s
mandatory again.
Q. Do the rules cover
everybody?
A. The Economic Stabiliza
tion Law itself requires that
workers earning $3.50 an hour
or less be exempt.
Q. What about my apartment
rent?
A. Rents are exempt, just as
they were during Phase HI.
Q. Is the government going to
ration gasoline?
A. Despite repeated rumors,
administration officials insist
there is no plan to impose a
World War II style gas
rationing system. However, the
proposed Phase IV rules
contain an elaborate control
system that would place ceiling
prices on the petroleum indus
try. In addition, beginning Aug.
— Griffin Daily News Thursday, July 19,1973
Page 3
I i 111 . J||
FOSTER FATHER BASIL, a 4-year-old baboon, cud
dles a 5-week-old samoyed puppy at Ashton’s Circus
in Sydney, Australia. Basil and his friend Jenny have
been foster parents to a litter of six samoyeds. Their
mother was killed in an accident.
12, you should see a sign listing
ceiling price and octane rating
on every pump at retail
gasoline stations.
Q. Do the Phase IV rules
cover everything?
A. The new regulations
continue to exempt raw agricul
ture products. They will also
exempt on Aug. 12 lumber and
plywood, long-term coal produc
tion contracts, public utility
rates and all businesses with 60
or fewer employes.
Q. How long is all this going
to last?
A. The President didn’t say
and urged citizens to have
“patience” while the controls
do their work. But a top-level
committee of labor and busi
ness leaders has urged Nixon to
scrap the whole system by the
end of the year and Nixon
indicated he is leaning that
way, provided there is progress
against inflation.
Public
Notices
LEAVE TO SELL
LEGAL 7350
STATE OF GEORGIA,
COUNTY OF SPALDING
IN THE COURT OF
ORDINARY OF SAID STATE
AND COUNTY:
TO ALL WHOM IT MAY
CONCERN:
James Claud Moss, as
administrator of the estate of
Luther H. Moss, deceased,
having applied to me by petition
for leave to sell the real estate
of said deceased, this is to notify
the next of kin and creditors of
said deceased that said petition
will be passed upon at the
August Term, 1973, of th court
of ordinary of said county and
that unless cause is then shown
to the contrary, said leave will
be granted.
This July 6, 1973.
George C. Imes, Ordinary
Beck, Goddard, Owen & Murray
Griffin, Georgia