Newspaper Page Text
Page 2
— Griffin Daily News Friday, November 28, 1975
Crime roundup
Burglary at bait shop
Burglars broke into Roy’s
Bait Shop, 951 Experiment
street, and stole nine hunting
knives, a .32 caliber H & R
pistol, sportsman’s flashlight,
and a 60-inch hunting bow with a
stablizer.
Their total value was more
than |3OO, police said.
A 1948 HarleyDavison motor
cycle, valued at $2,500, was
stolen from Red Kimbell’s
Service Station, 701 West Taylor
street, last night.
* •• •• «’ i- ;» mt ■ ■tsT/w
ST -
Hospital
Report
The following patients were
dismissed from the Griffin-
Spalding Wednesday and
Thursday.
Mrs. Aline Dodd and baby,
Mrs. Ezelle Morgan, Reggie
Alton Whatley, Cynthia Diane
Fuller, Vernice L. Travis, Mrs.
Ola Mae Fuller, Mrs. Diane
Biles and baby, Mrs. Inez
Stinchcomb, Jerry Raymond
Chambers, William Floyd
Smith, Mrs. Essie Mae Davis.
Mrs. Faye M. Evans, Mrs.
Marilyn Wynne, Miss Cellie
Seymour, Fred A. Oldham,
Monroe Deason, Traci Lynn
Brown, Mrs. Amelia T.
Ogletree, Mrs. Grace Smoak,
Mrs. Sue A. Makle and baby,
Mrs. Mary Ann Redding, Leo
Mallock.
Mrs. Patricia Ward, Mrs.
Angleyn Thomas, Mrs. Ida
Delores Cochran and baby,
Henry Hugh Dearing, John Lee
Whitman, Mrs. Nannie Watts,
Mrs. Malfa Sloan and baby,
Mrs. Josie Shavers and baby,
Bennon Price, Sr., Mrs. Joyce
Mullins, Mrs. Ruby Stone, Mrs.
Linda J. Folds and baby.
RANDALL & BLAKELY'S
BETTER USED CARS
AFTER-THANKSGIVING SPECIALS
I VJO MUSTANG GRANDE - 2 door, SQQQQ "
f J 302 automatic, PS, PB, radio, /fjOO
* heater, vinyl roof. WV
’79 VOLKSWAGEN - Sedan, 4 SQIQQ -
f V speed, AM-FM stereo. |QQ
H MONTE CARLO - Automatic, ’3688
I PINTO SEDAN - Automatic SI4OO
f g transmission. Nice second car. I (IKK
FORD LTD - 4 door Brougham. O HI" AI Al
f 3 Extra, Extra clean. Low miles, jp F
■ ■■■ — CHEVROLET CLASSIC - One CIAAP
I /S oWner ’ “ BeaUtlful ”’ “ Prlced
I . CHEVY NOVA - 2 door, AT, AC,
| f A vinyl roof, WSW, radio and SAAQQ
f"T heater, X-clean car. Local one /UQQ
owner, priced to sell.
I VIP n)RD MAVERICK - 4 dr. A fir ft I * I
I sh sedan, 302-VB, PS, AC, vinyl
I U roof, vinyl interior. Vi bVlflb
Lwj COUGAR X-R-7 - Loaded. AHP AI ■ I
I /fl Bcautt,u * rcd - x ' tra nice- ° ne tLIAL
I ■■■a EORD LTD - 2 door hardtop. _ _ _
I' White, white half roof, lowvPlP|Al
/ miles, X-tra nice car. One Lvlanla
owner.
I FORD GRAN TORINO SPORT <AAAA
I /fl ' L° C£, l car * Bought new at R&B ▼<< UU
f ■ - Loaded, Xtras, Xtra sharp. U UUU
■ - PINTO WAGON - Take over I
I ' f 4 payment. $150.00 cash down. A-Oft|"ft|il|
I *T T, AC, radio, heater, low miles. Fill ill
Local one owner.
I a<4 A EORD LTD - 4 door, Pillard
f < H.T. One owner, low miles. AT, S")QQQ
f U AC, radio, VR, T-Glass, Sharp & £QQQ
Pretty.
RANDALL & BLAKELY
Ford - Lincoln - Mercury
1000 West Taylor Street Phone 227-7937
Randy Walker of 718 North
Hill street told police someone
came into his home and took
stereo equipment worth almost
S6OO. It included a tape deck,
AM-FM radio, four speakers
and a turn table.
Someone climbed through a
window into the home of Frank
Daniel, 734 South Ninth street,
and took some jewelry and
precious metals, police said.
Sheriff’s officers were in
vestigating a burglary at the
home of Keith S. Smith, 22-C
Teamon road. Entry was
made through a front door.
Several items were missing
which had not been listed this
morning, lawmen said.
Griffin police were in
vestigating a robbery by force.
Thomas Williams of 210
Chappell street complained that
as he was walking in the 200
block of Meriwether street, two
men drove up in a green
Chevrolet.
He said one of them got out of
the car and took his wallet. It
contained five dollars and his
Social Security card.
Women hurt
in accident
Dibria Evans of Route Four,
Box 731, was injured in a traffic
accident on North Hill street,
near the Sixth street in
tersection Wednesday af
ternoon.
According to Griffin police,
she was riding in a car driven
by Rosie Mae Watkins, 21, of
Tuskegee avenue. Wilbur
Franklin Gossett of Pleasant
drive was driving the other
auto.
Mrs. Evans was treated for
shoulder and chest injuries,
police said.
Unit II
announces
honor lists
HIGH HONOR ROLL
(AUA’s)
Michelle Faulkner, Barry
Harry, Cindy Maddox, Johnny
Patillo, Terry Parker, Karen
Quick.
HONOR ROLL
(A’s&B’s)
Laura Anderson, Ricky
Ammons, Shari Barkley, Susan
Baird, Charles Bartholomew,
Bonita Beavers, Barry Beeland,
Bonnie Betsill, Penny Bishop,
Shirley Blessitt, Bobby Boski,
Donna Boggs, Lisa Bowers.
Angie Bowlden, Eric Britt,
Sun Ae Byun, Deawa Bunn, Jeff
Carden, Paula Chambers,
Jeffery Cleghorn, Mitzy Cook,
Steve Colwell, Angie Couch,
Deirdre Dowis, Beth Daniel,
Tracy Ellis.
Katy Esary, Beverly Fit
zhugh, Tammy Fowler,
Jeanette Garrard, Kim
Gregory, Michael Greer, David
Hammond, Kim Hambrick,
Michael Huckaby, Marie Hurt,
Danny Kelley, Tammy Jones,
David Kimble.
Bernard King, Lisa Landers,
John D. Lerner, Denita Mad
dox, Karen Mason, Todd Mize,
Denise Murray, Tommy
Murphy, Wanda Nix, Barbara
Owens, Cynthia Passmore, Joe
Phillips, Lynn Parris.
Tracee Pharr, Warren
Perkins, Jeff Pearce, Robin
Ricketts, Andra Reid, Danny
Reid, Peggy Rodgers, Gary
Schenk, Doug Segars, Anna
Stinchcomb, Tammy Smith,
Karen Sudweeks, Doyle
Thigpen.
Joy Thaxton, Richard
Tucker, Gregory Thesing, Ann
Walker, Kelvin Walker, Julie
Ward, Enid Watkins, Janice
Watts, Dexter Whitlock, Gerald
Williams, Mary B. Wilson,
Cindy Wood, Elaine White.
’"TH DELTA OLDSMOBILE - 4 door, SICQQ I '
J fully loaded. One owner. | lIQQ ■ '
y"TA BUICK CENTURY LUXUS - 2 edMSAdk ■ ‘
I < door, PS, AT, AC, vinyl roof. S~JCOO ■ <
• V Pretty Hue - Compare our price aLUQU I
- Only H 1
J"J A MERCURY MONTEGO MX SOCOOI
f J Brougham-Automatic, PS, PB,
air, radio, heater, vinyl roof. Vw V ■
1 11 M i
Y "Tr CLUB WAGON -12 passenger. A Al ■I I
f*l Chateau Pkg. Automatic, PS, \ M I IA I I
■ Ar pb, air condition, AM-FM VI LvlfnLl
stereo tape. Captain chairs. H 1
4,000 miles. J
y"j4 CHEVROLET CONCOUR CdAQftl
f I WAGON - You look - Compare. * I ngK I
■ I Loaded. Only this weekend. " |
y"f A GRAND TORINO SPORTS - CftfiOft I
f « Automatic, PS, PB, air, vinyl ▼ /IIXXH
■ U roof, radio, nice.
OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS ■ 2 _ _
f / door hardtop, V-8, AT, PS, PB, VR L P | A I
■ " radio & heater. Cleanest in On LvlreLl
town. J
MERCURY MONTEREY - 4 CAIAA H
*7« or sedan- We sold R new> /AXXI
f J Local one owner. X-nice. Check ■MU H
it out. Only
CHEVROLET PICK UP - SOAOO
f 1 Cheyene Super. VB, automatic, /MKK I
• V PS, PB, radio, heater. fcUUU
yjA FIOO PICKUP - V-«, AT, PS, COOOO I
/□ *zboo|
DEER HUNTER'S SPECIAL - I
"LOOK”
■ wat INTERNATIONAL SCOUT - Pripn
f J Automatic transmission, 6
f £ cylinder, rear seat, Deer Is Rite
Hunter’s Special.
■ 9 '
I JP I
■ W ; > J W' W
V W /Jb.
4
- r ( ’ ’ %
‘Let’s Give Thanks’
Tracey Yawn (1) and Michael Roberts portray Pilgrims
in Thanksgiving play at Griffin Christian School. The
“Let’s Give Thanks” play was presented at the Parent-
Teacher Fellowship meeting. Mrs. Adele Brindley’s first
grade class presented the play.
Seven charged
in drug cases
Seven Griffinites have been
charged with drug violations in
three separate incidents.
Last night Spalding Sheriff’s
officers, assisted by Griffin
police, raided a house west of
Griffin on Ga. 16 and found
suspected marijuana.
Tliree men were charged with
violation of the Georgia Con
trolled Substances Act. They
were Wendell Keith Bozeman,
20, of 1542 West Poplar street,
who was charged with a felony
of possessing more than one
ounce of marijuana; and
Thomas Walter Nichols, 20, of
Route Three, Box 243, and
Charles Keith Huff, 20, of Route
One, Williamson, who both were
charged with misdemeanor
violations.
The arrests were made by
Sheriff’s investigators David
Head and Larry Campbell;
Deputies O. J. Folse and Rollin
Busbin; Agent Dean Ray of the
Griffin Police Department’s
Narcotic Division; and Police
Officers David Harper and
Mike Cobb.
Two young men were
arrested Wednesday night when
a search of an apartment at 1014
West Poplar street turned up
suspected marijuana.
According to the Griffin
Police Department, they were
Wayne Goddard, 18, of Route
Three, Box 472, and Barry
Garner, 17, of 522 Slaton street.
Two 16-year-olds were
arrested Wednesday night when
Deputy Jep Childs stopped their
auto and found suspected
marijuana in their possession.
The two, a girl and a boy,
cannot be named because of
their age.
Deputy Childs stopped their
car on County Line road, near
Quail Hollow, and discovered
suspected marijuana and a
marijuana pipe in the vehicle.
No charges were placed
against another couple, also
both 16, who were in the car.
Stork
Club
LITTLE MISS SLOAN
Mr. and Mrs. William R.
Sloan of P. 0. Box 504, Griffin,
announce the birth of a
daughter on Nov. 26 at the
Griffin-Spalding County Hospi
tal.
MASTER YEOMAN
Mr. and Mrs. John Martin
Yeoman of 541 Quilley street,
Griffin, announce the birth of a
son on Nov. 26 at the Griffin-
Spalding County Hospital.
LITTLE MISS NELSON
Mr. and Mrs. Elton Crofford
Nelson of 10-C Spalding Heights,
Griffin, announce the birth of a
daughter on Nov. 27 at the
Griffin-Spalding County Hospi
tal.
LITTLE MISS MANER
Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Maner
of 1461 Stellaway street, Griffin,
announce the birth of a
daughter on Nov. 27 at the
Griffin-Spalding County Hospi
tal.
| Deaths |
| Funerals |
Mr. Dunn
Mr. Dewey Dunn, 67, of Route
one, Hampton, County Line
road, was dead on arrival at the
Griffin-Spalding Hospital
Wednesday evening.
Mr. Dunn was a native of
Fayette County, son of the late
Lee A. Dunn and the late Cora
Bell Huckaby Dunn. He was a
retired employe of Southern
States Equipment Co., in
Hampton and was a member of
the Sunny Side Baptist Church.
He is survived by his wife,
Mrs. Lucille Floyd Dunn; five
daughters, Mrs. Kelly Akin of
Jonesboro, Mrs. Kenneth
Greer, Mrs. Tony Coppolino,
both of Hampton, Mrs. Joel
Carter of Griffin and Mrs. Hal
Ellerbee of Cuthbert; three
brothers, Claude Dunn, Math
Dunn and Troy Dunn, all of
Griffin; two half-sisters, Mrs.
Floyd Mayfield and Miss Doris
Dunn, both of Fairburn; and
seven grandchildren.
The funeral was conducted
this afternoon at 3 o’clock from
the Sunny Side Baptist Church.
The Rev. George Duncan and
the Rev. Argin Floyd officiated
and burial was in the church
cemetery. Haisten Funeral
Home was in charge of plans.
Mr. Brooks
Mr. Charlie A. Erodes, 76, of
210 Spalding street died Wed
nesday evening at the Griffin-
Spalding Hospital where he was
admitted Sunday. He had been
ill for several months.
Mr. Brooks was a retired
overseer for Dundee Mills. He
was the son of the late W. A.
Brooks and the late Hulda Cobb
Brooks. He came to Griffin in
1920. Mr. Brooks was a member
of the East Griffin Baptist
Church.
Survivors include his wife,
Mrs. Margaret Hunter Brooks;
a son, Charles H. Brooks of
Griffin; three grandsons,
Charles R. Brooks of Honolulu,
Hawaii, Richard H. Brooks of
Griffin and Steven G. Brooks,
West Point Military Academy,
New York; great-grandson,
Bryan Brooks of Griffin; three
sisters, Mrs. Preston Bunn,
Mrs. Ossie B. Wheeler and Mrs.
Dorothy Fields, all of Griffin;
three brothers, Vester Brooks,
Lester Brooks and J. C. Brooks,
all of Griffin.
The funeral was conducted
this afternoon at 3 o’clock in the
East Griffin Baptist Church.
The Rev. Walter Logan of
ficiated and burial was in Oak
Hill cemetery. Haisten Funeral
Home was in charge of plans.
Griffin
artist
sets show
Mrs. Judy Bronkhorst, Griffin
artist, will hold an art show in
McDonough this weekend.
The event began this after
noon at 2 p.m. and will continue
Saturday and Sunday from 2-10
p.m. at the Hampton House
Restaurant off Ga. 20 and 1-75,
near the Hampton exit.
Included in Mrs. Bronkhorst’s
drawings, will be a pen and ink
sketch of McDonough and
Stockbridge depots.
Mrs. Bronkhorst said she
particularly enjoys painting an
sketching old bams, depots,
grist mills and buildings
featuring rustic wood textures.
Her favorite mediums are
acrylics and pen and ink done
with a tiny crow quill pen point.
She is a member of the Griffin
Art Association and the South
Western Artist Lodge of East
Point. She has studied under Ed
Harrigan, famous New England
landscape and seascape artist.
She attended New England
School of Art in Boston, Mass.,
where she majored in ad
vertising design and fashion
illustration.
Mrs. Bronkhorst moved to
Georgia three years ago with
her husband and three sons.
Ex-Griffinite
hurt in fall
Mrs. L. E. Potts who was the
former Mrs. Kirby Daniel, Sr.,
of Griffin is in Mid-Georgia
Hospital in Macon being treated
for a broken hip she suffered in
a fall
Mrs. Potts operated Kirby’s
Restaurant many years in
Griffin.
Soybean growers
hurt by palm oil
By BERNARD BRENNER
UPI Farm Editor
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
Agriculture Department offi
cials may soon seek to convince
the administration it should try
to protect American soybean
growers against steadily in
creasing competition from low
cost palm oil, government
sources say.
“We’re not yet doing any
thing active,” Assistant
Agriculture Secretary Richard
E. Bell said in an interview.
But Bell added that if studies
currently under way demon
strate that recent expansion of
palm oil production in a
number of Asian and African
countries has been underwritten
by concessional financing from
agencies like the World Bank,
“we may be making some
proposals.”
Bell did not specify the kind
of action Agriculture officials
may try to win administration
clearance for. Earlier, howe
ver, he had suggested publicly
that the government might try
to negotiate with major palm oil
exporting countries for volun
tary limits on their sales to the
United States.
Other government sources
said an unpublished memoran
dum prepared in the Agricul
ture Department’s Foreign
Agricultural Service argues
that most of the explosive boom
in production of palm oil —
which can replace soybean oil
in many food uses — has been
financed by international agen
cies including the World Bank
and the U.S. foreign aid
program.
The memorandum said the
aid was intended to help meet
domestic food needs and bolster
domestic economies in produc
ing countries but “inevitably”
leads to expanded exports. It
added that “it does not seem
desirable or feasible to allow
such financing and assistance
to disrupt the fats and oils
economy of the United States.”
World production of palm oil,
which had been expanding
slowly for many years, began
booming after 1967 and has
been rising since then at a rate
of about 11 per cent a year.
Agriculture Department experts
predict growth through 1980 will
continue at about 9 per cent
annually.
With world supplies of other
food oils like soybean oil
pinched from 1973 through last
spring, an Agriculture report
Hearings
on grant
planned
Public hearings are
scheduled Dec. 2 and 9 at the
Spalding Courthouse to review
an application for federal
money. It will be made under
the Housing and Urban
Development program.
The money would be for a
building in the sheltered
workshop complex for mentally
retarded citizens on Hamilton
boulevard.
The grant request will be in
the neighborhood of a half
million dollars.
Spalding County Commiss
ioners agreed to make applica
tion for the funds at the request
of the local mental health
organization.
Details of the proposal will be
explained at the hearings.
They will begin at 7 p.m.
Frigidaire Microwave Oven:
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IHH fun way
Il ' Fr.g.datre Microwave
Oven up ,0
■ V* le,s time ,han
methods.
‘ 4 - Cooks cool, because
micro waves heat only
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See Today- ’»
and buy on EASY TERMS
CAIN'S
116 W. Solomon St. -
Phone 227-5515
recently noted that palm oil has
been making heavy inroads into
American markets as well as
those in developing countries.
American imports of palm oil,
most of which goes into
shortening, have soared from
141 million pounds in 1970 to an
estimated 750 million pounds or
more this year.
Agriculture experts say the
growing supplies of compara
tively cheap palm oil during
1973 and 1974 allowed the
restricted supply of high-priced
soybean and cottonseed oil to
be concentrated in foods like
margarine and salad and
cooking oils while the imports
went largely into shortening.
With soybean supplies up this
year and prices for that crop
declining from the peaks of
1974, however, many producers
now see the big palm oil
imports as a competitive
threat.
The world’s biggest palm oil
exporter is Malaysia which
expects to be producing about
2.4 million tons a year by 1980,
nearly as much as total world
production in 1974, an Agricul
ture report said.
Public
Notice
LE6AL NOTICE
LEGAL 8316
Notice is hereby given that the
Board of Commissioners of
Spalding County intends to
apply for a grant from the
United States Department of
Housing and Urban
Development under the
Community Development Block
Grant Program, non
metropolitan discretionary
balance. Eligible uses of such
funds: 1. acquisition of real
property; 2. acquisition of
construction, reconstruction or
installation of certain public
works facilities and site
improvements; 3. code
enforcement; clearance,
demolition, removal and
rehabilitation of building and
improvements; 5. special
projects directed toward the
removal of material and
architectual barriers which
restrict the mobility ano
accessibility of elderly anc
handicapped persons; 6
disposition of real property
acquired with such funds; 7.
provision of certain public
services under certain
conditions; 8. matching other
Federal Program funds; 9
relocation payments under
certain conditions; 10. certain
planning and certain
administrative costs.
The Board of Commissioners
invites all interested citizens of
Spalding County to attend
public hearing to be held in the
Courtroom at the Spalding
County Courthouse at 7:00 P.M.,
on December 2 and 9,
respectively.
Thepurposeof these hearings is
to provide information to the
public, answer questions and to
receive comments and
suggestions.
: DEER HEADS
| MOUNTED
: BELVIN’S
: TAXIDERMY
| 227-2992
J DUNLAP SUBDIVISION
t Just off Williamson Rd.