Newspaper Page Text
Page 12
— Griffin Daily News Saturday, July 21,1973
★REAL ESTATE ★
Locust Grove
New homes, 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, built-in kitchen with
dishwasher. Carpet, double
carport, fireplace, deck, central
air. $31,900.
Clark Realty
957 51560 r 478 8487
BY OWNER: Birdie
Community, 5 acres. New barn,
permanent pasture, fenced, 280'
road frontage, 100 yards off
paved road. Beautiful home
site, 3 miles off 41 Highway.
$18,500 Phone 227-6210 or 227-
5985.
Excellent investment or
beautiful homesite. By owner,
32 acres of prime land located in
the Birdie Community, 10 miles
northwest of Griffin, 30 minutes
from Atlanta. Property has
over 2000 ft. of double paved
road frontage, drilled well,
excellent permanent pasture
and small lake. Will consider
sub-dividing. Make reasonable
offer. Atlanta phone 875 3805.
USE I HIS SPACE
TO YOUR ADVANTAGE
CALL 227 3276
TO PLACE YOUR AD.
WANTED TO BUY: Small or
large tracts of land in the
country. 227 8575.
FOR SALE: Wooded lots on 92
Highway and in Dorren Estates.
Lots are restricted. Call 227-
6518.
FOR SALE: Lots or small
acreage, 4 miles east of Griffin;
off McDonough Rd. 227 8575.
Beautiful wooded lots on
Pinebrook Drive, off Carver Rd.
With Extra lot. Call 227 4196.
I BURGLAR ALARMS
Griffin
Electronics
217 W. Taylor St. |
Senate votes to limit
authority on wars
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
Senate has voted to limit to 30
“A BIT OF WOODLAND”
You are cordially invited to a very special showing by
Searcy-Murray Realty, Inc. to see two of Griffin's prettiest
4 bedroom homes. They are located on Kennedy Drive (off
U.S. Hwy. 19-41 South).
OPEN HOUSE
SATURDAY AND SUNDAY 2 TO 6 P.M.
*
KMk;- •?*. '"1
ML '
■BF*' oS
Get A Jump Ahead Os The Market
Come Out Today!
Office: 408 South Hill Phone 227-4115
NOTICE TO REA CUSTOMERS
IN THE GRIFFIN AREA
YOUR ELECTRIC POWER WILL BE OFF FROM 6:00 A.M.
TO 6:00 A.M. ON SUNDAY, JULY 22, IF YOU LIVE IN OR
NEAR THE FOLLOWING AREAS:
1. EAST MCINTOSH ROAD
2. TEAMON ROAD
3. 155 HIGHWAY FROM DUTCHMAN ROAD TO TOWALIGA RIVER
4. JORDAN HILL ROAD
5. WEST VINEYARD ROAD
6. 16 HIGHWAY EAST OF GRIFFIN TO 155 HIGHWAY JUNCTION
7. 16 HIGHWAY WEST OF BRIGHTMOOR REST HOME
WE REGRET ANY INCONVENIENCE THIS OUTAGE MAY CAUSE, BUT IT IS
NECESSARY IN ORDER FOR THE GEORGIA POWER COMPANY AND THE CO-OP TO
MAKE CHANGES IN A SUBSTATION TO IMPROVE YOUR SERVICE.
J
«—• ▼ ■ I S'
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t( u ~ 1
PRINCESS ANNE’S future husband sits atop his tank at
Hohne, West Germany, and fields questions from newsmen.
The happy British lieutenant is Mark Phillips.
Slight omission
BERLIN (UPI) — Painters
and other workmen sent to a
housing project in the East
German city of Frankfurt-on-
Oder reported today they could
not get above the ground floor
of homes because stairs were
lacking.
The city construction office
days the President’s authority
to wage foreign wars without
forgot to include stairs in the
blueprints, the East German
Communist party newspaper
Neues Deutschland reported
Friday.
“The painters and other
workmen,” it said, “are being
kept waiting because they are
not trained as high jumpers.”
congressional consent.
Meanwhile, the Senate Armed
Services Committee probed
further into the Nixon adminis
tration’s concealment of bomb
ing raids in Cambodia in 1969
and 19*70 from the American
public and from most members
of Congress.
The Senate vote Friday to
limit the President’s war
powers was 71 to 18. The
measure would allow the Chief
Executive to dispatch troops
overseas only for 30 days in an
emergency. Then he would have
to obtain congressional
approval to continue a war.
The Senate measure and one
passed Wednesday by the
House, setting a 12&-day limit,
now go to a House-Senate
conference to iron out the
differences.
But the resulting bill faces
presidential veto, and there is
little prospect that war critics in
the House can muster the two
thirds majority needed to
override a veto.
An Eastern liberal, Sen.
Jacob K. Javits, R-N.Y., and a
Southern conservative, Sen.
John C. Stennis, D-Miss., joined
in writing the Senate bill. They
said the nation must never
again, as in Vietnam, slip into a
major foreign war without
express consent of the elected
representatives of the people.
Opponents of the bill charged
that it unconstitutionally
crimps the President’s ability to
meet global responsibilities.
Thomas Jefferson had problem
similar to President Nixon’s
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
President Thomas Jefferson in
1807 had a problem similar to
President Nixon’s. Another
branch of government wanted
him to turn over documents.
Chief Justice John Marshall,
who was then presiding at the
treason trial of Aaron Burr in
Richmond, Va. subpoenaed
Jefferson himself but added
that the production of certain
documents would satisfy the
court’s needs.
Jefferson supplied the
material and the matter ended.
But meantime, Marshall had
established the principle that a
president may be subpoenaed.
Though the parallel is not
exact, the incident has been
WE ARE NOW PAYING
THE NEW HIGHER RATES
ON ALL SAVINGS
5 % REGULAR PASSBOOK SAVINGS ACCOUNTS
| 514 % INVESTORS PASSBOOK SAVINGS
5/4% 90 DAY TO 1 YEAR SAVINGS CERTIFICATES "
g % 1 YEAR TO 2h YEARS SAVINGS CERTIFICATES *
|| 6!4 % V/2 YEARS AND OVER SAVINGS CERTIFICATES *
7 111111 1/0/ 4 YEARS AND OVER SAVINGS CERTIFICATES*
/2 /O (SIOOO.OO Minimum Deposit)
* New Certificates Redeemed Prior To Maturity Date Will Have Interest Reduced To
Regular Passbook Rate Plus A Penalty Os 3 Months Interest.
main
office \ BANK? branch
Commercial Bank s Trust Company
Griffin, Georgia
CHARTERED 1889 MEMBER FDIC
cited as a precedent for the
Senate Watergate committee’s
request for White House tape
recordings of conversations
between President Nixon and
his associates on the Watergate
affair. The main difference is
that Jefferson’s case involved a
request by the judicial branch
of government, not the legisla
tive branch.
But Watergate committee
chairman Sam J. Ervin, D-
N.C., has cited the Jefferson
case as a precedent in his favor.
If Nixon, as his aides indicate he
will, refuses to turn over the
tapes, Ervin’s committee will
consider issuing a subpoena.
Cox Wants Tapes
Also, Special Prosecutor Ar-
chibald Cox has indicated he
wants the tapes for his grand
jury investigation, which would
be a closer parallel.
Jefferson, incidentally, did
not accept the idea that he could
be subpoenaed —although he
did not completely reject it. He
said presidents have more
important commitments than
ordinary Americans and should
not be compelled to submit to
every prosecutor’s whim.
The Supreme Court had
occasion to recall the Aaron
Burr case only a year ago when
it ruled that newsmen have no
constitutional right to withhold
the identity of their news
sources from a grand jury.
Business & pleasure
DALLAS (UPI) - A bandit
who pulled a gun on grocery
clerk Monita Roy asked for her
A & U MOBILE HOMES
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Here Today & Here To Stay
Prices Start Under
$3,900 For 50 Ft.
5% Down On Most Units
Will Trade For Anything Os Value
7677 Tara Blvd.
Jonesboro, Ga. 30236
Telephone 471*6838
money—then for her name,
address and a date.
Miss Roy, 25, told police
Friday she “humbly declined.”
She said she didn’t get her $45
back, however.