Newspaper Page Text
— Griffin Daily News Saturday, January 12,1974
Page 6
Griffin And Spalding County
M STORK CL UB
The Following Births Have Been Reported
K\' v At The Griffin-Spalding County Hospital
I
I iX Leroy Parks, Jr. Nov. 11 Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Parks, Sr.
/ I \ Bobby Lee Holmes Nov. 20 Mr. and Mrs. Roy Holmes
\ John Lewis Bass Dec. 1 Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Lewis Bass
James Everette Rainey Dec. 1 Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy Ray Rainey
t z .Roderick Orlando West Dec.l Mr. and Mrs. Bobby West
Sherwin Danielle Thurman Dec. 2 Mr. and Mrs. John Wesley Thurman
Toni Lynn Huddleston Dec. 3 Mr. and Mrs. David Anthony Huddleston
MF/h/Au7 Christie Dawn Shackelford Dec. 4 Mr. and Mrs. Howell Benson Shackelford, Jr.
1 I Princess Rena Evans Dec. 4 Mr. and Mrs. Johnny Lee Evans
d /Qj '•ik Terita Natonshia Reid Dec. 5 Mr. and Mrs. Isiah Reid
Sylvia Melanie Payne Dec. 5 Mr. and Mrs. Richard Varner Payne
Sarah Denise Allen Dec. 6 Mr. and Mrs. WiUlam Frank Allen
Michael Jeremy Batchelor Dec. 8 Mr. and Mrs. David Anthony Batchelor
ifr Christopher Jason Ward Dec. 9 Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Quinton Ward
J La Tanya Anita Pittman Dec. 9 Mr. and Mrs. Eddie L. Pittman
Glenn Richard Farr Dec. 9 Mr. and Mrs. Richard Lee Farr
Austln Dan Din £ ler 10 Mr - and Mrs ' Rickey Don Din K ler
\ Chad Mitchell Hendrix Dec. 10 Mr. and Mrs. Hubert H. Hendrix, Jr.
Christopher Edwin Hendrix Dec. 10 Mr. and Mrs. Hubert H. Hendrix, Jr.
W Delmonica Cassander Elliott Dec. 11 Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Ralph Elliott
/■ John Christopher Yawn Dec. 12 Mr. and Mrs. John G. Yawn
> Joseph Henry Anderson Dec. 13 Mr. and Mrs. James H. Anderson
B IB Kimberly Dawn Blankenship Dec. 13 Mr. and Mrs. Billy Blankenship
V Jason Anthony Ross Dec. 13 Mr. and Mrs. Daniel L. Ross
WW Samanthia Anne Sealev Dec. 14 Mr. and Mrs. Rickey E. Sealey
!■ Robin Michelle Green Dec. 14 Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Green
Jana Lynelle Leslie Dec. 15 Mr. and Mrs. Arthur E. Leslie
Kathy Jo Mangham Dec. 16 Mr. and Mrs. Joseph L. Mangham
William Edwin Morgan II Dec. 16 Mr. and Mrs. WiUlam E. Morgan
i Philip Kyle Johnson Dec. 16 Mr. and Mrs. Douglas P. Johnson
<9?* I MmlhH Constance Leigh HoUand Dec. 16 Mr. and Mrs. Jefferson H. HoUand
Charlene Goodman Dec. 17 Mr. and Mrs. Layton Goodman
Jason Anthony Jones Dec. 17 Mr. and Mrs. Steven A. Jones
Eric Torrey Mayes Dec. 17 Mr. and Mrs. Charlie W. Mayes
Kristoffor Thor Brannon Dec. 17 Mr. and Mrs. Terry Lee Brannon
] ■ WiUie George Harris, Jr. Dec. 18 Mr. and Mrs. Willie G. Harris, Sr.
-»■ iif— 'iC Gregory Basie Patterson Dec. 18 Mr. and Mrs. "nieodore Patterson
Ow. Iri r < Sara Kathryn Esco Dec-18 Mr- and Mrs> James R - Eseo
II I L 1 Johnathan Lee Horne Dec. 19 Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin C. Horne
€ Toby Tremayne Copeland Dec. 21 Mr. and Mrs. Harold K. Copeland
RII 111 111 % Gary ConceUe Clemons Dec. 21 Mr. and Mrs. Willie L. Clemons
* W UwlilllL VI IU I 1 Erika Nance Tippins Dec. 21 Mr - Mrs ‘ John G - Ti PP tas
n Limo „ ... o J Dexter Trent SherreU Dec.2l Mr. and Mrs. Wayne R. SherreU
South Hill Street — Griffin, Georgia f Amanda Lorrineßurke Dec. 22 Mr. and Mrs. Eddie L. Burke
11 J -I r.rf.r'e infonVe IMair If Amber Chanel Rehm Dec. 22 Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Rehm
Headquarters for Carters Infant S Wear n Timothy Darren Deason Dec. 22 Mr. and Mrs. Walter M. Deason
J Tiffany Jeane WUson Dec. 22 Mr. and Mrs. James P. Wilson, Jr.
>oocooococx>ooooooooccccocoooc®oooooooooccoo©ooo» f Jamie Rebecca Howell Dec. 22 Mr. and Mrs. James 0. Howell
' > Tamika Latoy Collier Dec. 22 Mr. and Mrs. WiUie R. CoUier
J Douglas Hugh Holcomb Dec. 22 Mr. and Mrs. Otis V. Holcomb
L> TL 1 1 OpalOrlean Bowman Dec. 22 Mr. and Mrs. ArUse R. Bowman
XXI 1 1 Rhonda Lee Watts Dec. 23 Mr. and Mrs. Leonard K. Watts
a -w-w T'X‘WWT'7’ ATW 8.1 \ < Warren Edwards Dec. 23 Mr. and Mrs. Donald Clouse Edwards
H X1 IJ Vy Fl X*J f Mary Jennifer Rooks Dec. 23 Mr. and Mrs. PhiUip C. Rooks
w \ ! 1 Dawn Elizabeth Hunnicutt Dec- 23 Mr. and Mrs. James T. Hunnicutt
MAYTAG WASHERS ft |\ < ( Ronita Lasondra Taylor Dec. 23 Mr. and Mrs. Roland Taylor
"Uth ’ R tHI L 'Jl*' ■ if Ray O’Neal Jones Dec. 25 Mr. and Mrs. Richard 0. Jones, Jr.
r J Betty Diane Bowman Dec. 25 Mr. and Mrs. Leon Bowman
In Clean Clothes Care ''■Aj I Kevin Lamar Penn Dec. 25 Mr. and Mrs. Manager Penn, Jr.
oooooooooocoooooooooooooooocoo«*ooo»»©ooooooo©00 I J Marilyn Maria Ussery Dec. 25 Mr. and Mrs. Peter A. Ussery
Baby Beds, Play Pens, Eveiything in the way of { ££
Baby Furniture. j < Senya Markia Stinson Dec. 27 Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Stinson
lUIPLJAIC C Harry Crawford King, HI Dec. 27 Mr. and Mrs. Harry C. King, Jr.
UUUUt-H I UnULu :[J Richard Lee Fisher Dec. 27 Mr. and Mrs. Joseph R. Fisher
1 u riIDMITIIOC nnilDMlV J Franklin Bain Gregory Dec.2B Mr. and Mrs. John D. Gregory
FuRNITURt LuMrANY f Clinton Joseph Mclntyre, Jr. Dec.2B Mr. and Mrs. Clinton J. Mclntyre, Sr.
nnr ono o u. uh cu < Charles Farris Strickland Dec.2B Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Strickland
206-208 South Hill St. A JudyLwMcCunJ Dee.a Mr. and Mrs. R. C. McCurry
A Kristie Marie Franklin Dec. 29 Mr. and Mrs. Edwin E. Franklin
OOOOOOOCXXXKKXXXMXXXrhOOOQOOOOOOOQOOOQOGOGOOOOOO ,/ Tommy Edward Carroll. Jr. Dec. 29 Mr. and Mrs. Tommy E. CarroU, Sr.
i / Chasidee Dawn Dix Dec. 29 Mr. and Mrs. Don Dix
'J MehaUa CsUia Lemons Dec. 30 Mr. and Mrs. Michael Lemons
I X KeUy Lynn Ratliff Dec. 30 Mr. and Mrs. Donald E. Ratliff
J JJjGjLI A Robert James Boan Dec. 31 Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Boan, Jr.
Ti O f Jason Lewis Horton Jan.l Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Eddie Horton
-ULmLi J JcJ □ i 0 Nikki Lee WUkerson Jan. 2 Mr. and Mrs. Emmerson WUkerson
'll QuetellaChequitaThrash Jan. 3 Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Thrash
THE CHURCH THAT CARES ABOUT YOU |{ Matthew Ray Worley Jan. 4 Mr. and Mrs. James E. Worley
1 9 Pamela Denise Lummas Jan. 4 an( j mi. s . jimmy L. Lummas
< 1 David Lewis Sanvidge Jan. 4 Mr. and Mrs. Victor C. Sanvidge
coooooooceoooooooooooooocooooaooooooooooooooooocf
Eric Wayne Huggins Jan. 4 Mr. and Mrs. Wayne F. Huggins
filßb Cjh
Pet leopard mauls
young woman’s throat
CLEARWATER, Fla. (UPI)
— A pet leopard mauled a
young woman’s throat Friday
in a savage attack on a quiet
suburban street, six weeks
after its owner promised
neighbors he would get rid of
the animal.
Witnesses said the cat,
weighing between 60 and 100
pounds, lunged at Leeda
BrowneU, 25, of Largo, after
she opened a garage door to
give it food. A neighbor lulled
the animal with a blast from a
12-gauge shotgun.
“The cat was chewing on her
throat, I had to shoot it,” said
Ralph McDaniel, who lives next
door. He told police he heard a
scream, looked outside and
ihen grabbed his shotgun.
McDaniel feUed the cat with
a single shot to the head at a
range of 10 feet.
“When he shot it, the cat
didn’t move. It stayed on top
with its fangs in the girl’s
neck,” said SaUy Stevens,
another neighbor.
Mrs. Gloria Webster, a nurse,
Crime lab
checking
drug deaths
ATLANTA (UPI) — The state
crime lab wUI know next week
whether a strong new drug
caused the deaths of six young
people from the Atlanta metro
politan area.
The six victims all died of
“drug related causes” in the
past ten days, Fulton County
Medical Examiner Dr. Robert
Stivers said Friday. A similar
rash of deaths six months ago
was caused by a powerful new
drug on the market, he said.
He said the crime lab is in
vestigating the deaths and will
have a report ready next week.
“We don’t know if they are re
lated, but we certainly have
something worth looking into.”
The Atlanta metropolitan area
usually re cords around two drug
related deaths a month. When
six are recorded in only ten
days, “you know something is
wrong,” he said.
Stivers said an amphetamine
derivitive ten times more pow
erful than the pills usually sold
came onto the drug market six
months ago, causing a series of
drug overdose deaths.
He said other persons who
took the same drugs lived, indi
cating the victims were not poi
soned by a bad drug.
“Friends who were there were
so high at the time, they flushed
the evidence down the toilet, but
at least we know there are
some people alive who took the
stuff,” he uaid.
Stivers said none of the young
people present at the time of
death has provided any informa
tion. “A lot of them don’t even
know what they’re dealing
with,” he said.
DRY CLEANING
SPECIALS!
I' WOODWARD CLEANERS
COLLEGE AT BTH STREET
GRIFFIN LAUNDRY
210 EAST SOLOMON STREET
MONDAY, TUESDAY& WEDNESDAY
JANUARY 14 • 15 - 16
Men’s or Ladies
"J 2-PC. SUITS $ JHJ
£ PLAIN DRESSES
MIXED OR MATCHED
~ THIS SPECIAL
I Sanrtone good at both
locations
GRIFFIN CLEANERS WOODWARD CLEANERS
210 E. Solomon Street College at Bth Street
ALL GARMENTS MOTH-PROOFED
Locally Owned and Operated by Bill and Susan Woodward
revived the young woman with
artificial respiration before
police arrived at the scene. She
was listed in serious condition
following emergency surgery on
her throat.
“When I first saw them, I
thought they were playing,”
said Mrs. Webster.
“It’s like a mightmare come
true,” said state Rep. S. Curtis
Kiser, R-Dunedin, who lives
three blocks away from the
leopard owner’s house on
Indian Bluffs Island, 10 miles
north of Clearwater.
Kiser said the owner, James
Raphael, had promised about
six weeks earlier to return the
cat to the man he bought it
from in Tampa, after the eight
month-old leopard began to
arouse neighbors’ fears. Rapha
el was not home when the
accident happened.
“We’ve been worried ever
since the cat chased a small
dog down the street. There’s a
lot of young kids in the
neighborhood and I told him
you never know what can
happen,” Kiser said.
Kiser said Mrs. Brownell was
supposed to feed the animal
two raw chickens a day while
the owner was out of town.
“There was a partially
che wed-up chicken on the
garage when I got there,” he
said.
Teachers
can support
candidates
ATLANTA (UPI) — Teachers
can support political candidates
and take part in political cam
paigns under a new code of
ethics, the Georgia Association
of Educators (GAE) said Fri
day.
GAE Executive Secretary
Carl V. Hodges said the only
limitation on teachers is that
they cannot take part in
political activities on school
time.
The code was adopted by the
State Education Board Thurs -
day. Hans Schadt, executive
director of the commission that
will supervise the new code,
said it was not intended to de
prive teachers of their political
rights.
“The code simply states that
Georgia educators must not in
terfere with a colleague’s exer
cise of political and citizenship
rights and responsibilities,” he
said.
Hodges called on the state’s
55,000 teachers to be politically
active. He said an increasing
number of educators were “ex
amining political issues and
supporting the causes and can
didates they believe will con -
tribute to a better community.”
Dampness Supply
All the water in the
world’s oceans, ice fields,
lakes, rivers, soils, rocks and
atmosphere comes to 326
million cubic miles.