Newspaper Page Text
— Griffin Daily News Thursday, April 17,1975
Page 10
B You've always P
wanted to give her ’Xjf
something very v
special so make it a ssLY’ - * \ 2L z zr'jE' 4,
very special ring .. . J j
Do it today. You /
don’t have to wait for Z /
Mother's Day. WV ’
j JV FRIEDMAN’S
n //
l\ / j ibsm
I \ // //
QMafc uUotke/t?
ON HER DAY, SUNDAY, MAY 11,1975
RINGS OF COURSE
A $42 50 includes one (I) Hone. Additional C. $67 50 includes one (1) stone Additional
stones $3 114 stones available stones $4 1-6 stones available
B $72 50 includes six (6) stones Additional D $42 50 includes one (1) stone Additional
stones $3 612 stones available stones $2 50 1-7 stones available
Diamonds and illustrations enlarged to show detail
FRIEDMAN’S 110 N - HiH SL
-ihjant, P eopk- J since ise« Phone 227-4087
BATTON & JACKSON QUICK TIRE
ANNOUNCES
PRICE ROLL BACK SALE...
ON FIBERGLASS BELTED TIRES
(■■aSßssv
WWM uhiroval IHSTRAK
w|||l TWO FIBERGLASS BELTS
gi | Ij | PLUS TWO POLYESTER CORD PIES
W|| WHITEWALLS
JBI BUY FOUR AND
UkIF SAVE MORE!
TUBELESS EACH PRICE PRICE FOR FOUR PLUS FED.
I SIZE __l EX. TAX
l=» 26“ 4-99°° zHg—
I E78x14 I 27“ I 4 104°° I JT~|
I F78x14 29 4 for ll2°° 2,50
I 078x15 I 31“ I 4-120”
34“ 4 132°° p
I J78x15 | 35“ | 4.0.136” I
I L78x15 37“ 4-144” 3.19
BATTON & JACKSON
QUICK TIRE, INC.
301 East Taylor at. sth Phone 227-2264
XZafcLzSaßr •■ f "* t . ’MWrCR.wsKJ' .vv ■
Construction moves along on the agronomy building on the Georgia Experiment Station campus in Griffin.
Mess in Atlanta
Reginald Eaves didn’t quit after all
ATLANTA (UPI) — The
expected resignation of con
troversial Atlanta Public Safety
Commissioner Reginald Eaves
did not come Wednesday after
friends and county leaders
apparently talked him out of
stepping down—at least tem
porarily.
Eaves withdrew his apparent
plans to resign an hour and a
half after newsmen had assem
bled for a 4 p.m. news
conference he called earlier in
the day.
City Councilman Carl Ware
informed reporters who packed
a Police Department office at
6:35 p.m. that “Mr. Eaves will
not be making a statement
today at the request of us, and
the people of this city who have
called us and come to us asking
us to talk to him...”
He said he, councilmen
Arthur Langford and James
Howard and Fulton County
commissioner Henry Dotson
had “asked the commissioner
not to make a final decision at
this time.”
Tyrone Brooks, national com
munications director of the
Southern Christian Leadership
Conference, said he and other
SCLC officials had talked at
length with Eaves on the
telephone in an effort to
persuade him not to resigning.
He said he believed that if
enough people expressed that
they wanted Eaves to remain in
the post, the troubled commis-
Carter proposes
code of ethics
MISENHEIMER, N. C. (UPI)
— Democratic presidential can
didate Jimmy Carter, a former
Georgia governor, has proposed
an ethics code for top govern
ment officials to assure Ameri
cans “steps will be taken to
prevent the mistakes and
abuses of the past.”
Carter’s proposal, outlined
Wednesday in a speech at a
Pfeiffer College alumni forum,
calls for sweeping changes,
including personal financial
disclosures, open meetings and
appointments on a merit basis.
He called for “complete
revelation” of business and
financial involvement of leading
government officials and said
public campaign financing
should be extended to include
members of Congress.
“Through executive order, by
law and by public commitment,
our people must be assured
that positive steps will be taken
to prevent the mistakes and
abuses of the past,” Carter
said.
Carter, who has campaigned
steadily since the first of the
year, also proposed that fines
for illegal campaign contribu
tions be stiffened.
“They should be at least
equal to the amount of the
illegal donation,” he said.
“During the 47 years of the
Campaign Practices Act, it was
never once enforced against an
incumbent member of Con
gress.”
Carter said he would disclose
his personal finances next
month, would do so annually if
elected president and would
“insist” that the same require
ment apply to the vice
president and those named to
top policy-making jobs.
Carter called for a “sun
shine,” or open meeting law,
similar to one passed in his
home state, for meetings of
congressional committees and
federal agencies.
He said the attorney general
should be removed from
politics and be given the
sioner probably would.
“I think right now he just
feels like a lot of people want
him out,” Brooks said. He said
the local SCLC chapter planned
a rally and news conference to
reaffirm their confidence in
Eaves.
The Atlanta Constitution quot
ed a source as saying Mayor
Maynard Jackson had been
advised to fire Eaves and
appoint police Maj. Joe Adams
as acting commissioner until
the City Council could approve
a permanent replacement.
The mayor refused to answer
questions about the Eaves
confusion, and would only
lambast City Council Chairman _
Wyche Fowler as “irresponsi
ble” for calling for Eaves’
resignation earlier in the day.
Fowler had urged Eaves to
resign, saying he felt Eaves
had “abused the confidence” of
Jackson, who had appointed the
public safety commissioner.
Jackson called Fowler’s ac
tion “the most irresponsible act
I have ever seen in this city in
independence and authority
granted the special prosecutor
in the Watergate investigations.
- / / 01
FRESH SEAFOOD BUFFET
11 j » 11 y \
Sm Sdlopi, (won wufful $
Ski*f CwU 5 J k
SfauMb fa Gwld Cauewle mm am
Oi/it™ 5:3Q jo 9 : 30
Ouitui Jiwldi emille poisson
2. j U I AT THE ORGAN
JSattftd J Oik & fIMfOOffOU PLAYING YOUR SELECTIONS
Jud Jotaiou all this
Goda Jud U Molta AND MORE JUST > v
Suu, Gual Solod vjjy j
Julu Sum, JK\ -ICr
ZJ /,.//*» vJ'TSxJwI Children Under I! fj/'ji
MtM OOMM
ikoAlu'i Jtonu Tttod,
UM, Cdowlu
r~~n Swx
of McDonough
’CSH ONL y
& 155
‘ PHONE 957
CHARLES BURNETT
Jidoana, *
my life.”
Eaves, 40, was named to the
newly created post in August,
1974, by Jackson, a college
friend after Jackson had
interviewed several other can
didates for the post.
Eaves’ eight months tenure
has been marked by controver
sy and he has been criticized
for helping his nephew get a
federal emergency manpower
job as a yardman and for
hiring a man with a jail record
as his personal secretary.
During that time, the Atlanta
Police Department has been
suspended from the National
Law Enforcement Intelligence
Revival Services
Faith Baptist Church
East Mclntosh Road
APRIL 13-18-7:30 P.M.
Rev. T. L. Moody, Pastor, Houston Heights
Baptist Church, Macon, Ga., Evangelist
And
Saturday Night April 19th, Faith Baptist Choir Will
Again Present “ALLELUIA”
7:30 P.M.
Network and the Georgia State
Intelligence Network. The most
recent suspension from the
state network occurred after it
was disclosed that his personal
secretary, Daniel Odom, had a
jail record for possession of
dangerous drugs, carrying an
altered draft card and using
other false identification cards.
Prior to his appointment,
Eaves served as executive
assistant to Jackson, the city’s
first black mayor. Eaves, a
native of Jacksonville, Fla.,
previously served as commis
sioner of penal institutions
under Boston Mayor Kevin
White.