Newspaper Page Text
Page 12
— Griffin Daily News Monday, August 20,1973
Public
Notices
LETTERSOF
ADMINISTRATION
LEGAL 7357
GEORGIA, SPALDING
COUNTY
To All Whom it May Concern:
NELLIE KATE TYLER
WILSON having in proper form
applied to me for Permanent
Letters of Administration on the
estate of JOHN WESLEY
TYLER, late of said County,
this is to cite all and singular the
creditors and next of kin of
JOHN WESLEY TYLER to be
and appear at my office within
the time allowed by law, and
sho cause, if any they can, why
permanent administration
should not be granted to
NELLIE KATE TYLER
WILSON on JOHN WESLEY
TYLER estate.
Witness my hand and official
signature, this 17th day of July,
1973.
George C. Imes, Ordinary
SALE
UNDER POWFR
LEGAL 7365
NOTICE OF SALE UNDER
POWER
Default having been made in
the payment of indebtedness
secured by that certain Deed to
Secure Debt executed by
William R. Lynch and Bobbie B.
Lynch, his wife, to the United
States of America, acting
through the Farmers Home
Administration, United States
Department of Agriculture,
dated July 23, 1973 1971 recorded
in the office of the Clerk of the
Superior Court of Spalding
County, Georgia, in Deed Book
296, Page 56.
The entire indebtedness
secured by the said Deed to
Secure Debt having been
declared due and payable as
therein pprovided, the
undersigned, the United States
of America, acting through its
authorized representative,
under and in compliance with
the power of sale in said Deed to
Secure Debt, will proceed to sell
at public outcry,'tor cash, to the
highest bidder in front of the
Courthouse of said County,
during the legal hours of sale,
on the 4th day of September,
1973, the following described
property conveyed by the said
Deed to Secure Debt, to wit:
All that lot, tract, or parcel of
land containing 1.0 acres,
situate, lying and being in Land
Lot 55 of the Third land District,
originally Henry, now Spalding
County, Georgia, as more
particularly shown on a plat of
survey prepared by Kenneth E.
Presley Associates, Inc., dated
March 27, 1971, and recorded in
AUGUST SPECIAL
DRAPERIES
Cleaned & Pressed &
Decorator Folded
20 % on
REEVES CLEANERS, H.
211 South 6th St.
18 KOIFI’AL fl
■ id 1
DID YOU KNOW?
THAT GRIFFIN HOSPITAL CARE HAS AN IDEAL
HOSPITALIZATION PLAN WHICH INCLUDES INTENSIVE
CARE FROM
$85.00 ••
$ 150.00
PER DAY OR MORE ACCORDING TO HOSPITAL LOCATION!
YOUR SON OR DAUGHTER, IB YtflßS OF AGE OR OLDER CAN
BE COVERED FOR ONI V ffi ffl PER MONTH. YOUR FAMILY
FOR ONLY $16.36 PER MONTH AND THE NICE PART IS THAT
WE PAY REGARDLESS OF ANY GROUP PLAN OR ANY OTHER
INSURANCE YOU MAY HAVE.
INVESTIGATE
CALL 227-2742 or
COME BY THE OFFICE
510 S. Bth Street
Griffin, Ga. 30223
Griffin Hospital
Care Association
F. L. Bartholomew, Jr., Secty.
Plat Book 8, page 431, of the
Spalding Superior Court
records, which plat is, by
reference, incorporated herein
and made a part hereof. From
said plat said property may be
more particularly described as
BEGINNING at an iron stake
on the South margin of Minter
Road, which point of beginning
is located 752.6 feet West of the
point of intersection of an
extension of the South margin
of Minter Road with the
centerline of Patterson Road,
and running thence from said
point of beginning South 1
degree 30 minutes West, 309.0
feet to an iron stake; thence
South 89 degrees 32 minutes
West, 141.0 feet to an iron stake,
thence North 1 degree 30
minutes East, 309.0 feet to an
iron stake; thence North 89
degrees 30 minutes East, 141.0
feet to the point of beginning.
Said property is bounded now or
formerly, as follows: North by
Minter Road; East by Kenneth
A. Fletcher; South by Lamar
Ramsey; and West by Larry
Pollette.
The proceeds of said sale wil
first be applied to the payment
of the indebtedness to the
United States of America, other
charges, and the expense of
sale, as provided in the Deed to
Secure Debt to the United States
of America.
This the 25th day of July, 1973.
UNITED STATES OF
AMERICA
(
By: (s) J. N. McDuffie
State Director (Georgia)
Farmers Home Administration
United States Department of
Agriculture
AMEND
CHARTER
LEGAL 7414
NOTICE
Please take notice that
pursuant to The Municipal
Home Rule Act of 1965 (Georgia
Code Sections 69 1015 through
69 1020) the Board of
Commissioners of the City of
Griffin will consider at the
regular City Commission
meetings of September 11 and
Steptmber 25, 1973, a proposed
ordinance to amend the
Municipal Charter of the City of
Griffin, as follows:
To amend Section 2.2,
Qualification and Election of
Commissioner Generally, so as
to eliminate the requirement
that a candidate for City
Commissioner shall have been
on the tax digest of the said city
as an owner of real property for
the next preceding taxable year
and the current taxable year
and a freeholder at the time of
his election; to repeal
conflicting laws, charter and
ordinance provisions; and for
other purposes.
A copy of the proposed
amendment is on file in the
office of the Clerk of the Board
of Commissioners of the City of
Griffin (City Manager) at City
Hall and in the office of the
Clerk of the Superior Court of
Spalding County, Georgia, at
the Courthouse and may be
examined and inspected by the
public at either place. The City
Manager shall furnish anyone,
upon written request, a copy of
the proposed amendment.
Ordered published by
resolution regularly adopted
this 14th day of August, 1973, by
the Board of Commissioners of
the City of Griffin.
By: (S) Louis W. Goldstein,
Mayor
Attest: (S) Roy L. Inman, Clerk
(S)Robert H. Smalley, Jr., City
Attorney
Military On Parade
KT I I
.Ja,
JERRY W. DENTON
Staff Sergeant Jerry W.
Denton (r) son of Oliver D.
Denton and hsuband of Mrs.
Rebecca Denton, both of
Griffin, recently received a V
Corps certificate for completing
500 miles of running in Ger
many. Sgt. Denton began
training in June 1972 by running
a mile a day for one month. He
increased his endurance and
consistently ran three miles a
day until he finished the 500
miles in March. Presenting the
award and congratulating him
is Brigadier General Richard J.
Eaton, V. Corps Chief of Staff.
Sgt. Denton is regularly
assigned as an aircraft main
tenance supervisor in the 62nd
Aviation Company, V. Corps in
Hanau.
JOHN M. CARDEN
First Lieutenant John M.
Carden, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Roy Carden of Grifin, com
pleted a supply management
officer course at the Army
Quarter master school, Fort
Lee, Va.
ROBERT H. CLARK
Robert H. Clark, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Warren C. Clark of
Griffin, was promoted to Army
Colonel in Alexandria, Va.,
where he is serving with the
U.S. Army Military Personnel
Center. Col. Clark is Chief In
fantry Section, Colonels
Division, Officer Personnel
Directorate at the Center. His
wife, Nancy, is with him in
Alexandria, Va., where they
made their home.
DAVID C. CORBETT
Marine Major David C.
Corbett, husband of the former
Miss J. Leslie Brown of Griffin,
graduated from the Naval War
College at Newport, R.I.
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ALTON H. COLEMAN
Army Lieutenant Colonel
Alton H. Coleman, son of Mrs.
Lois J. Coleman of Jackson,
was graduated from the U.S.
Army War College at Carlisle
Barracks, Pa.
DENNIS R. REID
Navy Ensign Dennis R. Reid,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert R.
Reid of Stockbridge was
designated a Naval Aviator and
received his “Wings of Gold”
during ceremonies at Naval Air
Station at Corpus Christi, Tex.
He completed more than a year
of intensive ground and in flight
training and will now be
assigned to specialized ad
vanced training.
STEVEN D. CARR
Marine Pvt. Steve D. Carr,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Carr
of Griffin, graduated from basic
training at the Marine Corps
Recruit Depot at Parris Island,
S.C.
RICHARD H. GREENE
Marine Cpl. Richard H.
Greene, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Bernard J. Greene of Hampton,
has reported for duty at the
Marine Corps Air Station at
Kaneohe Bay, Hawaii.
Os God and man
Church thrives under persecution
By LOUIS CASSELS
United Press International
Jesus foretold it. St. Paul and
other early Christians ex
perienced it. It has occurred
countless times in the 2,000-
year history of the Church. Yet
each time it seems a sort of
miracle.
Under persecution, instead of
collapsing, the Church thrives.
This phenomenon is now
occurring once again under the
Communist regime of Fidel
Castro in Cuba.
Persecution of Christians
seems to be something all new
Communist dictatorships feel
they must try. Older Commu
nist governments, such as that
of the Soviet Union, have
learned halfheartedly, at most.
Mission Boards Banned
But Castro’s Cuba is a
relative newcomer to the roster
of red nations, and it still is
putting some muscle into
harassment of Christians.
According to the Rev. Bibiano
Molina, who has retired in Fort
Worth, Tex. after spending 50
years as a Baptist pastor in
Cuba, Castro’s antichurch ac
tivity is producing the same
result as every other persecu
tion of Christians since the time
DAVID A. HARDEN
Midshipman David A. Har
den, son of Mr. and Mrs. John I.
Harden, Jr., of Griffin, attended
a three-week aviation in
doctrination session at Naval
Air Station, Corpus Christi, Tex.
He is attending Georgia Tech
under the Naval Reserve Of
ficers Training Corps program.
SHARON L. HARVEY
Navy Hospitalman Ap
prentice Sharon L. Harvey,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas E. Harvey of Stock
bridge, has completed the
Hospital Corps School at Great
JOHN M. NASH
Cadet John M. Nash, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence M.
Nash of Fayetteville, received
practical work in military
leadership at the Army Reserve
Officers’ Training Corps Ad
vanced summer camp at Fort
Bragg, N.C. Cadet Nash is a
student at North Georgia
College and is one of some 7,200
students who attended Army
ROTC training at five in
stallations in the U.S.
of the Roman emperor Nero.
Castro first tried to cripple
Cuban churches which had
depended on support from
abroad by refusing to permit
mission boards in the United
States or other countries to
send any money or manpower
into Cuba.
“When this happened, Chris
tian ministers and lay people of
Cuba reacted by supporting
themselves,” Molina said in a
recent report to the Southern
Baptist Home Mission Board.
No Open Preaching
The government continues to
make life difficult for Cuban
churches, according to the
Baptist pastor.
“The government blocks off
both ends of the street
whenever a church holds a
service,” he said. “The streets
are used for baseball, soccer
and track, and the games are
conducted while church is in
session. But this does not keep
young people from coming to
church. Cuban churches are
filled with young people each
Sunday.”
In an effort to avoid the overt
appearance of persecution,
which is out of favor with more
advanced Communist countries,
the Castro government uses
indirect harassments such as a
law stipulating that preaching
is allowed only inside a church,
never outside in the open.
Services are normally al-
»•
WHY SELECT YOUR
I FALL DRESSES AND
PANT-SUITS NOW?
• Style
• Sizes
$ • Selection
Charge Account
£ U 9 s. Hiii Or Use Your Bank Cards
lowed only at the customary
hours on Sundays. A special
permit must be sought to
conduct a revival meeting with
week night services.
Future Seems Assured
Despite these and other forms
of “strong government opposi
tion,” Molina said, “the church
is still very much alive in
Cuba.”
“It is a miracle,” he said.
“Church members are stronger
than ever in their faith.
Churches once dependent on
mission boards are now self
supporting.”
Best of all, the future seems
assured, because young people,
told they should not go to
church, are responding as any
parent might have told Castro
they would. They go to church
—voluntarily, openly, stubborn
ly.
That the church thrives under
persecution should come as no
surprise to any reader of the
New Testament. In one of his
last talks with his disciples,
Jesus warned them:
“You will be arrested and
persecuted and put in prison.”
But they should not be
dismayed when that happens,
he said, for “this is your best
chance to preach the gospel.”
St. Paul urged Christians of
Nero’s Rome to “look forward”
to persecutions.
“We can rejoice when we run
into problems and trials,” said
the great apostle, who final!
lost his own life in one i
Rome’s persecutions.
“Trials and troubles are goo
for us because they help us i
learn patience,” Paul san
“And patience strengthens ou
character. It teaches us to tru;
God more firmly each time w
suffer, until finally our cons
dence in Him is complete.”
‘Penny Black’
The British “Penny Black,
the world's first adhesive po
tage stamp, issued in 1840.
neither the most expensiv
nor the rarest stamp sougl
by collectors today. A numbt
of the 64 million ‘ Penn
Blacks” that were prints
survive in stamp albums.
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