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Caesar’s wife is back in town
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Ca
esar’s wife is back in town.
In the post Watergate era,
the fabled Roman lady who had
to be “above suspicion” is
Public
Notices
SALE
UNDER POWER
LEGAL 7907
NOTICE OF SALE UNDER
POWER IN DEBT TO SECURE
DEBT
GEORGIA, SPALDING
COUNTY
JESSIE JAMES STARKS
having heretofore executed and
delivered to Scott Hudgens
Realty and Mortgage Co., Inc. a
certain Deed to Secure Debt
dated January 12, 1973 and
recorded in Deed Book 329,
Page 48 in the Office of the
Clerk of the Superior Court of
Spalding County, Georgia which
conveys the following described
property:
ALL THAT TRACT OR parcel
of land lying and being in the
City of Griffin, Spalding County,
Georgia, being more
particularly described as
follows:
BEGINNING at an iron stake
located at the intersection of the
west margin of Morris Street
with the North margin of
Johnson Street and thence,
running North 1 degree 00
minutes west along the west
margin of Morris Street a
distance of 80 feet to an iron
stake; thence south 89 degrees
30 minutes west a distance of
.200.3 feet to an iron stake;
thence South 1 degree 00
minutes east a distance of 80.0
feet to an iron stake located on
the north margin of Johnson
Street; thence North 89 degrees
30 minutes east a distance of
200.0 feet to an iron stake and
the point of beginning. Located
on the above described property
is a dwelling known as 403
Morris Street according to the
present plan of house
numbering now used in the City
of Griffin. Thi
and having breached the
covenants in said Deed to
Secure Debt, Scott Hudgens
Realty 8. Mortgage Co., Inc. has
declared all sums secured by
said Deed to Secure Debt
immediately due and payable
and will sell said above
described property in front of
the Courthouse door in Spalding
County, Georgia on the first
Tuesday in September 1974,
during the legal hours of sale Io
the highest bidder for casn, an
as provided in said Deed to
Secure Debt and the power of
sale contained therein.
This property will be sold
subject to a first loan originally
in favor of Huntington Federal
Savings 8. Loan Association,
dated May 30, 1972, and
recorded in Deed Book 309, page
210, Spalding County, Georgia
Record. It will also be sold
subject to a second loan in favor
of Scott Hudgens Realty 8.
Mortgage Co., Inc. dated
October 11, 1972 and recorded in
Deed Book 319, page 244,
Spalding County, Georgia
Records.
Said property will be sold as
the property of Jessie J. Starks
subject to any unpaid taxes and
special assessments existing
> against the property and the
proceeds of the sale shall be
applied as provided for in said
Deed to Secure Debt.
, SCOTT HUDGENS REALTY 8<
MORTGAGE CO. INC. AS
ATTORNEY IN FACT FOR
JESSIE J STARKS
, LEWIS N. JONES
ATTORNEY AT LAW
1400 First National Bank Tower
Atlanta, Georgia 30303
INTENT TO DISSOLVE
LEGAL 7906
IN THE MATTER OF THINGS
BY TY-BAC, INC.
NOTICE
A Statement of Intent to
Dissolve Things By Ty-Bac,
Inc., a Georgia Corporation
with the registered office at 107
. West Taylor Street, Griffin,
Georgia has been delivered to
the Secretary of State by said
Corporation and filed by him on
the 7th day of August, 1974 in
. accordance with the applicable
provisions of the Georgia
Business Corporation Code.
(s) Larry H. Evans, Attorney
, for Things By Ty-Bac, Inc.
ADDRESS:
107 West Taylor Street
, Suite 207
Griffin, Georgia
Telephone: 228-5530
. DEBTORS-CREDITORS
LEGAL 7908
NOTICE TO DEBTORS AND
CREDITORS
GEORGIA, SPALDING
COUNTY.
All creditors of the Estate of
Henry Cecil Bozeman, 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 payment to the
. undersigned Executrix.
This August 9, 1974.
Willie Bell Mullis Bozeman,
Executrix of said Estate
‘ Beck, Goddard, Owen & Murray
Attorneys, Griffin, Georgia
being courted by bureaucrts.
President Ford, asked wheth
er he planned to set up a code
of ethics for his new adminis
tration, set simple standard:
“The code of ethics that will
be followed will be the example
that I set.”
But most cases involving the
ethics of a bureaucrat are not
that simple.
For example, take the case of
Civil Aeronatuics Board (CAB)
chairman Robert D. Timm,
Prices Effective Sunday, September Bth
A Thru Tuesday, September 10th
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whose job it is to regulate
airline fares and route awards.
Timm accepted a two-day
expense paid golfing vacation
in Bermuda in June from
Harry J. Gray, the chairman of
United Aircraft Corp., a major
supplier of engines to U.S.
airlines.
Gray also invited along the
chief executives of Pan Ameri
can, Trans World, Braniff and
Western Airlines.
When the trip became known,
Timm argued that he had done
nothing wrong.
He reasoned that CAB mem
bers are often in the presence
of officials from the industries
they regulate. Simply because
he played golf with the
executives is no reason to
assume that he would show
partiality to their firms, Timm
said.
But Rep. Harley O. Staggers,
D-W.Va., chairman of the
House Interstate and Foreign
Commerce Committee, criti
cized Timm pointing out that
United Aircraft was a party to
a case pending before the
board.
The Aviation Consumers Ac
tion Project (ACAP), a consum
er group, and Overseas
National Airways, a supplemen
tal airline, also argued that
Timm had compromised him-
Commentary
self and should not take part in
any case involving the airlines,
or the engine maker.
Timm claimed that, at least
Page 7
in the case of United Aircraft,
he was not even aware that the
engine-manufacturer was in- ,
volved in any of his pending
cases.
But Timm also had some
second thoughts. He sent United
Aircraft a check to cover his
expenses for the Bermuda trip ,
and to “erase any cloud” over ,
the weekend. ;
And, he disqualified himself i
from the CAB case involving
United Aircraft, but he said he ;
would not step down from any j
cases involving Pan American, ]
Braniff, Trans World and (
Western. i
— Griffin Daily News Saturday, September 7,1974
A happy compromise? No.
The ACAP wants the board to
discipline its chairman. But
Timm’s supporters claim he is
being persecuted.
There is no evidence of any
wrong-doing, they say. Nor is it
wrong for a regulator to
understand the industries he
regulates, and that means
staying in contact with the top
officials of industry.
To Timm’s critics, the way to
stay in contact with the
industry is through formal
hearings where business is
conducted on the record, and
not on the golf green.
UNTAPPED FUEL
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa.
(UPI) — Dr. John D. Ridge,
head of the mineral economics
department at Penn State
University, says there are vast
untapped mineral and fuel
resources beneath the continen
tal United States.
Ridge proposes that regularly
spaced exploratory holes be
drilled across the nation to find
the oil, coal, gas and other
fuels. He estimates the cost at
$3 billion, but he says that
would be repaid many times
over in the fuel found.