Newspaper Page Text
Page 10
Griffin Daily News Friday, August 17,1973
4-H’er s make
plans for fair
By Susan Epling
The Spalding County Fair will
open Monday, Oct. 8. Now is the
time for 4-H exhibitors to be
getting their exhibits ready.
There are several rules
governing entries:
1. All entries shall be made
with the county extension office,
Fifth street and Slaton, from
Monday through Thursday
“week proceeding the fair,”
between the hours of 9 a.m. and
4:30 p.m. The office is closed
from 12:00 till 1:00 p.m.
2. Entries will close at 4:30
p.m. on Thursday before the
fair.
3. There are special rules
governing food entries.
4. All entries will be judged by
the Danish system.
A. Blue ribbon group - $3.
B. Red ribbon group - $2.
C. White ribbon group - sl.
5. No exhibitor shall make
more than one entry in any one
lot number in each class.
6. Exhibits will be properly
displayed, judged and cared
for; further than this,
responsibility ceases.
7. No exhibits will be classed
and judged unless properly
labeled according to the
following requirements: name,
grade and school.
8. All exhibits must have been
Willow Wind Club
to open Saturday
The Willow Wind Country
Club near Williamson, Ga. will
have its official opening Satur
day.
The club has an 18-hole golf
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Hospital Report
Dismissed yesterday from the
Griffin-Spalding County
Hospital were:
Mrs. Inez Ball, Joann
Deßerry, Mrs. Vivian Harris,
Thomas Morgan, Mrs. Shirley
W. Tarleton, Robert Carter,
Jessie Crocker, Richard L.
Cook, George Queen, Mrs.
Lessie Reed, Gregory
Wellmaker, Mrs. Amy
Buchanan, Mrs. Tommie
Lindler, Mrs. Odessa James
and baby, Mrs. Sarah Fears,
Mrs. Smith and baby,
Anthony Wiston, Mrs. Lillian
Barineau, Mrs. Thelma
Bridges, Seborn D. Baugh,
Leonard Carter, David Lee
Smith, Kenneth Perkins, Corbit
Kennedy, Mrs. Cheryl Wise,
Harold Collier, Valice Williams,
Raymond Brooks.
NO MORE BABIES
The sterilizer's up for grabs.
Sweet Porta-Crib good by.
My 4th and youngest son is growing
older.
I'm done with dawn awakenings,
With pablum in my eye.
With small, moist bundles burping
on my shoulder.
No playpens in the living room
Will mangle my decor.
My stairs will not be blocked with
safety fences.
No rattles, puddles, bibs, stuffed
bears
Will disarray my floor,
No eau de diaper pail assail my
senses.
And no more babies will disrupt
The tenor of my day,
Nor croup and teething interrupt my
sleeping.
I swear to you I wouldn't have it
Any other way.
It's positively stupid to be weeping.
By: Judith Viorst
Dedicated To All Os My
Boys. Danny Gilreath Who Is
14 Today, Mark Gilreath,
Tim Shepherd, And Ricky
Shepherd, Whom I Love
Very Much. All Os You Are
Growing Up So Fast.
Phyliss Shepherd
LAY-A-WAY TIME"]
I COATS«PANT-SUITS»DRESSES
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made within this 4-H Club year.
9. Prizes and premium checks
will be given to the exhibitor
when he calls for and claims his
exhibits. Time and places to call
for exhibits:
A. Sunday, after the fair
closes - 4-H Club Booth - 2:30
p.m. - 3:30 p.m.
B. Week after fair, County
Extension Office.
We will not be responsible for
your items after this time.
There are special rules
governing food entries:
1. All entries shall be at the
fairgrounds, Monday, opening
day from 9:00 a.m. -11:00 a.m.
Any entry received after this
hour will not be eligible to
compete for prizes.
2. Food exhibits may be called
for between the hours of 3:00
p.m. till the fair closes on
Monday night, due to their
perishability. Exhibits not
removed by the closing time on
Monday will be disposed.
3. Premium checks will be
given to the exhibitor during the
scheduled hours listed under
General Rules Governing 4-H
Club Entries.
4. All entries will be judged
according to all other standards
set forth in the General Rules
Governing 4-H Club Entries.
course and a lake for fishing.
The development takes in the
lake previously known as Lewis
Lake.
Bill Booth, manager, said the
club plans to construct tennis
courts.
The initial stage of the de
velopment includes 915 acres
and eventually will cover a
spread of 1,470 acres.
The fishing and golfing parts
of the operation will be open
Saturday.
Walton D. Hewett of Atlanta
is the developer.
Wife
meant,
business
A Griffin man found out his
wife meant business when she
asked him to give her his pistol,
that she was going to shoot him.
According to a warrant taken
against Mrs. Velma Hollyfield
Bivins, 44, of 411 North Fourth
street, charging her with
aggravated battery, Willie
Clarence Bivins thought his
wife was kidding when she
asked for the gun, that he had
just gotten from his car, and
told him she was going to shoot
him. He gave her the .38 caliber
weapon and she shot him in the
leg.
The incident happened
Tuesday at their residence.
Griffin Police officers arrested
Mrs. Bivins last night on a
warrant taken by Mary Lizzie
Troutman of 420 North Second
street. She was released from
the county jail under SI,OOO
bond.
Deep Sea Fish
Bassogigas, a s'/z-inch fish,
is the first fish ever caught
nearly five miles below sea
level, where the pressure is
800 times greater than on the
surface.
METHODIST HOUR
11:00 A.M. SATURDAY
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Volunteers from southern forestery organizations gathered at the Atlanta airport here,
before flown to the northwest to fight raging forest fires. A member of the contingent from
Florida, H. C. Peeples waits amid scattered baggage and impatient rangers. (UPI)
| Orphans
I Family sticks together
FREMONT, Calif. (UPI) — Jesse
DeAnda is proving that his family is
close—even in times of the worst of
troubles.
Seven children were orphaned last
month when their parents, Robert
Montalbo, 43, and his estranged wife,
Joan, 39, died in a murder-suicide in a
mobile home parking lot.
DeAnda, a self-employed insurance
broker, is their cousin.
He also has a wife, four daughters and
two foster children. Despite a crowded
home, he took in six of the Montalbo
children.
The seventh is 20 years of age and is
living elsewhere in search of a job so he
can help support his brothers and sisters.
DeAnda is applying for a loan to add four
bedrooms to his five-bedroom home.
The dead parents left no will, which is
causing financial headaches for DeAnda
and the Montalbo children.
Stork Club
LITTLE MISS STANLEY
Mr. and Mrs. George M.
Stanley of Thomaston highway,
Barnesville, announce the birth
of a daughter on Aug. 16 at the
Griffin-Spalding County Hospi
tal.
MASTER PEEPLES
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard
Peeples of 225 Sharron drive,
Fayetteville, announce the birth
of a son on Aug. 16 at Clayton
General Hospital in Jonesboro.
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Burel Forrester of Griffin and
Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Peeples of
Woolsey.
LITTLE MISS BUCHANAN
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
Buckanan of 228 Morrow road,
Forest Park, announce the birth
of a daughter on Aug. 17 at the
Griffin-Spalding County Hospi
tal.
A mortgage company has initiated
foreclosure action on the Montalbo estate
because of delinquent payments. The
Internal Revenue Service has placed a tax
lien on the estate. And there isn’t enough
money to buy school clothes for the
Montalbo children.
DeAnda has obtained the services of an
attorney who is trying to salvage money
for the orphans. The lawyer is trying to
obtain Social Security benefits for them.
DeAnda will go into Superior Court on
Aug. 29 in an effort to become the guardian
of the orphans.
The Montalbo children are Susan, 16,
Sandra, 14, David, 13, Danny, 10, Yvonne, 8
and Nancy 6. Robert Montalbo, 20, is living
in the family home while looking for work.
DeAnda said the whole situation has
become “a challenge” for him and he is
determined to keep the family together.
“We are a close family,” he said.
43 cases pending
on horse protection
ATLANTA (UPI) - Some 43
cases involving alleged viola
tions of the Horse Protection
Act in five southeastern states
are now pending in federal
courts.
Dr. M. J. Tillery, southeast
ern regional director with the
U. S. Department of Agricul
ture’s Animal and Plant Health
Inspection Service, said the
cases involved alleged viola
tions of the Act’s Antisoring
Provision.
“Soring” refers to the prac
tice where a horse’s feet are in
tentionally inflicted with pain to
make them perform with a high
stepping, exaggerated gait dur
ing competition.
Congress passed the Horse
Protection Act in 1970, directing
the USDA to report back in 30
months on progress in enforc
ing the law.
The USDA gave a report to
Congress July 7, showing that
inspections into 129 suspected
violations of the law had led
MARY & RALPH’S
BEAUTY SALON
Invites The
“Back To School Girl”
To Come In And Get A
Comb Press Relaxor, At A
Special Price. Aug. 14-
Aug. 25th.
For Appointment
Call
228-1984
to 65 cases being submitted for
prosecution,
Tillery said the 43 cases sub
mitted to federal courts in the
southeast included additional
cases since the June 7 report
had been released.
The southeastern states and
the number of cases filed in
each as of Aug. 15 were: Ala
bama, 8; Kentucky 1; Missis
sissippil 1; South Carolina, 1;
and Tennessee, 32.
In addition, 44 cases have been
submitted to U. S. Attorneys in
the southeast but have not yet
been filed in federal court.
Big-Hearted Birds
Relative to body weight,
hummingbirds may have the
biggest hearts of all birds. A
study of 68 varieties of birds
in the United States and Pana
ma turned up none with
hearts larger in proportion to
body size.
Igriffin FINANCE I
I & THRIFT CO. !
11l South Hill St
OFFER YOU THE !
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YOU NEED
i upio^soo 00 I
For any worthwhile
? purposes. ?
| Open All Day Saturday
Phone 227-2561 ’
G.R. Robinson, Mgr. |
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| Deaths-Funerals |
Mr. Kinard
Funeral services for Mr. W.
Garland Kinard of Decatur will
be conducted Saturday morning
at 11:30 o’clock in the chapel of
Spring Hill Patterson Funeral
Home in Atlanta. Dr. William
E. Cropper will officiate and
burial will be in the White
Chapel Memorial Garden.
Mr. Kinard died Thursday.
Survivors include his wife;
two sons, Dr. Garland E.
Kinard of Chattanooga, Tenn.,
and James W. Kinard of
Carrollton; three sisters, Mrs.
Herbert W. Smith of Green
sboro, Miss Agnes Kinard and
Miss Claire Kinard, both of
Decatur; a brother, Dr. Conrad
L. Kinard of Denton, Tex., and
six grandchildren.
Mrs. Jordan
Funeral services for Mrs.
Vara Jordan of Griffin will be
conducted Saturday afternoon
at 1 o’clock in the chapel of
Millers Funeral Home. Burial
will be in Union cemetery.
Mrs. Jordan was a lifelong
resident of Griffin.
She is survived by a grand
daughter, Mrs. Rosa Kate
Mangham of Griffin.
Friends may visit the family
at the residence of Mrs.
Mangham. Millers Funeral
Home is in charge of
arrangements.
Public
Notices
SHERIFF’S
SALE
LEGAL 7390
Sheriff's Sale
GEORGIA, SPALDING
COUNTY
Will be sold before the Court
House door, the usual place of
holding COURT, in and for the
said County, on the 4th day of
September 1973.
and from day to day until said
goods are disposed of, the
following described property,
to-wit:
All that tract of land situate,
lying and being in Land Lot 255
of the Third Land District of
originally Henry, now Spalding
County, Georgia, and being
more particularly shown and
designated on the plat of survey
entitled "Property of W. T.
Latta Estate", dated March 26,
1968 as made by Kenneth E.
Presley, Registered Land
Surveyor, Griffin, Georgia, a
copy of which said plat is
recorded in Plat Book 7, Page
449, of the Superior Court
records of Spalding County,
Georgia, and said plat, by
reference is incorporated
herein and made a party of this
description; and by making
reference to said plat of survey,
said property may be more
particularly described by metes
and bounds as follows:
Beginning at the Southeast
corner of said Land Lot 255, and
thence running from said point
North, along the Easterly
boundary line of said Land Lot
255, a Distance of 50 feet; thence
running in a Westerly direction,
paralled to and 40 feet North of
the centerline of road Project
No. Pr 6393, a distance of 1390
feet to lands now and formerly
Owned by Mrs. E. T. Spruce,
thence running South a distance
of 40 feet to the centerline of
said road project and to the
Southerly boundary line of said
Land Lot 255; thence running in
an Easterly direction, along the
Southerly boundary line of said
Lot 255, a distance of 1390 feet,
more or less, to the aforesaid
point of beginning.
Levied on as the property of
Mary Elizabeth Roseanne
Latta, Estate by virtue of a Tax
fi. fa. in favor of Spalding
County vs. The Estate of Mary
Elizabeth Roseanna Latta
issued from the Court, of
Spalding County.
Property pointed out by Ruby
C. Hill, Tax Commissioner,
Spalding County, Ga.
(s) Dwayne Gilbert
Sheriff
DEBTORS
AND CREDITORS
LEGAL 7400
NOTICE TO DEBTORS AND
CREDITORS
STATE OF GEORGIA
COUNTY OF SPALDING
All creditors of the Estate of
GEORGE W. LEWIS, deceased,
late of said County, are hereby
notified to render in their
claims or demands to the
undersigned Executrix
according to law, and all
persons indebted to said estate
are required to make
immediate paymen to the
undersigned Executrix.
This the 6th day of August,
1973.
(s) Edith Moore Lewis,
Executrix of the Last Will and
Testament of George W. Lewis
TOM E. LEWIS
Attorney at Law
Mr. Neil
Mr. Ben Emmett Neil of
Concord died Thursday
following an illness of several
months.
Mr. Neil was a lifelong
resident of Pike County and was
a retired farmer. He was a
member of the Bush Chapel
Methodist Church.
Survivors include three
daughters, Mrs. Beatrice
Chatman, Mrs. Annie Pearl
Davis, both of Concord and Mrs.
Mattie Lou Collier of Zebulon;
six sons, Virlin Neil, Troutman
Neil, Costello Neil, Roger Neil,
all of Concord, James Otis Neil
of Homestead, Fla., and Will
Neil of Goulds, Fla.; two
sisters, Mrs. Ada Milner of
Concord and Mrs. Lucy Neil of
Atlanta; 32 grandchildren and
38 great-grandchildren; and
several nieces and nephews.
Funeral plans will be an
nounced by Union Society
Funeral Home of Concord.
Brick tossed
Jerry Messer of West
Tinsley street told police that he
was driving south on South
Eighth street yesterday after
noon when soiheone threw a
brick at his car and broke out
the rear window.
The incident happened
around 4:15 p.m.
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