Newspaper Page Text
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* REAL ESTATE *
FOR SALE BY OWNER: 42
acres in Spalding County.
Located near Orchard Hill. 4
acre lake with .new 4 room
cabin, ideal setting for country
retreat or home; $46,000; call
227-0111 or after 6 p.m. 227-0983.
FOR SALE: 2 acres, well,
septic tank, driveway and like
new, 2 bedroom trailer, no
furniture included. Cheap.
FOR SALE: 2 plus acres
wooded tract. Price $2,500. J.H.
McLaurin, Jr. Phone 227-4240.
FOR SALE: 2 acre wooded
tract. Crystal Creek
Subdivision. 599-3037.
FOR SALE: Six acres, suitable
for mobile homes, with 888 ft.
road frontage. Brown Springs
Rd. Sue Ogletree, Griffin
Realty, 227-8661 res. 228-1300.
FOR SALE: Must sell, beautiful
wooded lot, Creekwood Estates.
2.67 acres below current value.
227-
7 acres, Milner, 12x65 Mobile
home, 3 bedrooms, IVi baths,
sundeck. Central air. $12,500.
358-1731.
50 acres near Concord, 80
percent pasture, nice stream,
ideal lake site. Corner tract
with good paved road frontage.
Only SBSO per acre. Also other
tracts. Owner financed. 981-5830
after 5 p.m., 525-1916.
Beautiful 2 acre tract, S. 6th
Ext. Protective restrictions.
Lamar County. 281.43 foot road
frontage, 311.8 ft. deep. Price
$5700. 227-1201.
18 acres land with 3 acre lake.
228- . Also some lots.
WANT TO BUY
CLEANEDUSEDCARS
ANOTRUCKS
CALL HARRELL GILBERT
228-1326
CRONIC CHEVROLET
PROPANE
TANKS
325-500-1000 Gal.
For Sale Or
Lease With Gas
SPALDING
GAS CO.
415 W. Solomon Street
Phone 228-8484
McDonough 957-2501
EASY
J 1^\ DOK
FIND IT IN THE
WANTADS!
Whatever it is you're looking for, you're
likely to find it listed in today's Want
Ads.
GRIFFIN
DAILY^NEWS
FOR SALE: 41 acres, frame
house, 2 barns, 5 miles out of
Griffin, Pike County. $37,500.
361-7248, Atlanta after 5 p.m.
FOR SALE:' 17V* acres, 2
trailers, space for trailer. 228-
4182.
4 acres, commercial corner,
Hwy. 16 west, 5 miles, rental
house. Financing. 227-2948 p.m.
MISCELLANEOUS
Registration now open for baton
lessons, 17 years experience.
From 5-6 Friday through
Monday. Limited space. Ages 4-
14. $2.00 registration fee. 1324
Greenview Drive. 228-3350 , 227-
5558.
WANTED: Clean fill dirt and
old building to tear down. 227-
1563 after 4 p.m.
_ *
Dealers Auction: Wednesday 12
noon Truckloads of
merchandise. Sellers and
buyers welcome. Double B
Auction, 10545 Tara Blvd.
Bonanza Shopping Center,
Jonesboro, Ga.
WHEN YOU THINK OF
HOSPITALIZATION call
Griffin Hospital Care
Association 227-2742, 510 S. Bth
St., Griffin, Ga. and compare
your plan with ours if you want
to save money.
F.L. Bartholomew, Jr.
Secretary
Metro Auction Co. 1-75 and Ga.
20 Si 81. (Rear of Seago's Truck
Plaza) Bring anything you want
to sell and turn into cash.
Auction begins 6-8 p.m., on
miscellaneous items. Cars and
trucks, 8 p.m. til finished. Sale
days Tuesday and Saturdays.
957-9405 or 957-1601.
Metro Answering Service.
Available 24 hrs. a day. 7 days a
week. Wake up service $7
month. Full service to business
accounts. 957-9405 or 957-1601.
Food supplements, natural
organic vitamins, organic
cosmetics. Products
guaranteed. Call Ella Tuggle.
227-0475.
\g~'
RALPH GATLIN
I 110 N. Expressway
Day-227-2512
Night-227-3641
“See me fora State Farm
Homeowners Policy.”
Like a good neighbor,
State Farm is there.
Stale Farm Fire
iNsua*M<i # gnd Casualty Company
Vi i Home Office Bloomington. Illinois
The Coffee Shop has moved to
the Hotel Building 128 W.
Solomon Street, across from the
Old Post Office. We ask ail our
customers and friends to come
and eat with us. We are still
serving the same fine food.
Phone 228-6965 or 227-3615 for
carry out service.
New Goßese Grapefruit Diet
Pill. Eat satisfying meals and
lose weight. Hobbs Pharmacy.
Garden plowing. 228-8811.
Want to cut grass. 228-2490 after
5 p.m.
Gardens prepared. 228-3194.
Private guitar lessons. Contact
Eddie. 227-0832.
Garden plowing. 227-2409.
F* BUSINESS A
OPPORTUNITIES
YOUR OWN BUSINESS
Have Fun! Make Money)
Supply name brand clothing to
company established accounts.
Full or part time. Consumer
acceptance makes high
earnings possible! Minimum
investment requirement
$3,900.00. Company offers
complete inventory buy back.
Write today. Fashion World,
Inc., 1399 S. 700 E„ Salt Lake
City, Utah 84105 or call collect
Mr. Kelly (801) 486-5949.
Excellent investment for future
income. Ten lease deals on
Commercial and Residential
locations with all joined
together by lot lines. Value of
investment will increase.
Approximately $40,000 down
and balance over 4 or 5 years at
attractive interest rate. Reply
Box J In care of Griffin News.
FOR SALE: Small mobile home
park 25 percent down. Write
Box 18 in care of Griffin News.
Coffee Shop, 215 South 6th
Street. Fully equipped. Shown
by appointment. Call 946-3379 or
228-6965 8 a.m.-3 p.m.
HELP WANTED
RN needed for ear piercing
clinics. $6 per hour. Average 11
hours per week. Department
store setting. Send name and
address and phone number to
Box 704 in care of Griffin News.
WANTED: Director of nurses
for Sylvan Grove Hospital. 1050
McDonough Road, Jackson, Ga.
30233. For information contact
James C. Shaw, administrator.
Phone 404-775-7861 or 775-7862.
KEYPUNCH OPERATORS
Work hours 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
Minimum l.year on Alpha and
Numeric experience on
keypunch or key to disc
equipment. Interested persons
should come by our
employment office at NCR
Corp. Peachtree City, Ga.
WEDNESDAY ONLY 8 a.m. to
4:40 p.m., or call for
appointment, 404-487-8281 ext.
347 or 355. An equal opportunity
employer.
WANTED: Experienced
foreign car mechanic. Apply in
person to Mrs. Diane Skates, or
Mrs. J. Pitts. Toyota of Griffin,
1301 West Taylor Street.
Long John Silvers Sea Food
Shoppes is now taking
applications for full and part
time positions. As Fry Cooks,
and Cashiers. Apply in person
only. Mon. and Tues. April 12
and 13. 10 a.m. til 5 p.m. at 105
N. Expressway. See Manager
Danny Rippstein. No phone
calls please.
HELP WANTED: Sheetmetal,
Ist class sheet • metal
mechanics. Advanced
Fabricators, 775-7623, 185 N.
Oak Street. Jackson, Ga.
WANTED SALESMAN:
Insurance agents for old
established route. 227-7872.
Auditioning drummer for band.
If interested call 228-9198.
k ★ WANTED A
JTO BUY » \
We buy used lurnnure. Griffin
Furniture Exchange. 204
Meriwether Street. 227-8663.
We Buy Used Furniture
Vaughn's Furniture
227-8911
WANTED TO BUY: Used
•Furniture. Higgins Furniture,
227-
Highest prices paid for used
furniture and appliances. 227-
3536 before 6 p.m.
k ★ COMMERCIAL A
J RENTING ★
Office space for rent. Utilities
included. Call 227-2947.
FOR RENT: Building, Approx.
2,000 sq. ft. Can be used for
shop, warehouse, garage, etc.
See Arthur Forrer, 116 West
College St. No Phone Calls.
k ★ HOMES
W FOR SALE * %
FOR SALE: 3 bedroom, 2 bath
brick veneer home. Central
heat and air. 227-9106.
LOW TWENTIES
Terrific buy for your family. 2
bedrooms, plus den with cozy
fireplace. Brick home in
Beaverbrook School district.
Only 2V* miles to 4-lane at
Northgate Shopping Center.
Good investment for
comfortable living now with
great potential resale when
family outgrows. Target Realty
228- (after 6 p.m., June
Weeks 228-2966).
FOR SALE: Ready to move in.
Nothing down. New 3 bedroom,
1 bath home, carpet in living
room, built-in kitchen on 1 acre
lot, on Palm Street. Monthly
payments $164. Call Jim Grant,
Franklin Homes, Northgate
Shopping Center. 228-7101.
NOTHING DOWN
New 3 bedroom homes on acre
lots.
LEON BATES REALTY
227-2187 228-1702
FARM HOME HOUSING.
No down payment - no closing
cost. 12 different plans to choOse
from. 16 approved lots, homes
priced from $16,000 to $25,000.
Mortgage payments from $124
to $195 per month.
Spalding Real Estate
and Construction Co.
515 E. Taylor St.
227-2283 or 227-2773
We offer
more than a
job in the
Air Force.
We offer the right Job for
you. After extensive
testing, we’ll guarantee
free training in your career
field if you qualify, and
give you full credit for your
experience at your
discharge. You’ll like the
great pay and the complete
Federal benefits, too
CALL: JONESBORO,
47M618
Air Force.. A
Great Way of Life
Nice 2 bedroom home,
completely paneled, large lot,
city gas and water. Vi mile
north from Expressway.
$10,900. 228-0303.
FOR SALE: House and rot
uptown. 227-0136.
BY OWNER: Country home, 10
miles south of Griffin. 4
bedrooms, 2 baths, living room, :
dining room, 3 plus acres. Barn,
gazebo, organic vegetable
garden, rock garden, clay tiled
patio. Pond site. Owner
transferred. Reduced to $46,900.
358-0288.
FOR SALE: House by owner,
remodeled, central heat, built
in kitchen, large rooms, double
carport, small equity and
assume IV* percent VA loan.
228-3585 after 5.
LARGE lot, wooded on 2 sides,
fenced backyard, larae aarden
spot, small greenhouse. 3
bedroom brick, IVa baths,
screened deck, near Spalding
Square. $31,000. 228-3617.
FOR SALE: Nice 2 and 3
bedroom houses. Pay small
closing cost and move in. See
Arthur Forrer, 116 W. College
St. No phone calls.
FOR SALE: Lovely brick home
on beautiful wooded lot in nice
neighborhood. Large private
backyard. LR-DR combination,
3 bedrooms, 2 baths, large den,
kitchen with breakfast area.
Laundry room, central heat and
air, Orrs School district. Only
$38,600. For appointment call
228-2456.
FOR SALE: House, West
Vineyard Rd. 2 bedrooms,
SII,OOO. 228-0361.
FOR SALE BY OWNER: 3
bedroom, IVi bath brick home
with built-in kitchen including
dishwasher. Carpeted
throughout. Central heat and
air. House situated on corner
lot. Bricked mailbox, yard
landscaped with azaleas. Split
rail fence. See 1703 Hallmark
Drive or call after 5 p.m. 228-
3843.
Great buy: 2 bedroom frame
house, located on Rehobeth
Road. $13,900. 228-2179 or 227-
9633.
Buy from the builder, 3
bedrooms, 2V* baths, rustic
ranch. Stone fireplace, 2100 sq.
ft. of living space. Call to see
228-2369 or 478-7614.
4 bedroom, IV* bath, built-in
kitchen with double oven, large
screened in front porch, fenced
yard. Located 331 N. 9th
Street. $15,500
Lovely 3 bedroom home on acre
lot, included huge den with
fireplace, built-in kitchen,
dining room, living room, only 3
years old. $43,500
Wes Treadway Realty
228-2816- 227-7193
HOUSES FOR SALE: From
$26,500 to $31,000. Also lots for
sale. Phone 227-5324.
► ★PLANTS
FOR SALE ★
Hastings' garden seed,
complete line.
Burgess Nursery
1440 North Expressway
Griffin, Ga.
This week only all tomatoes,
pepper and egg plants 15c each,
$1.50 per dozen. Zinnia plants,
25c per dozen. Marigold plants,
50c dozen in*2" pots. Double
pink begonias in 3" pots, 69c.
Irene's Nursery
Corner Wright and Experiment
St. Below 2nd. Baptist Church.
k MOTORCYCLES A
W FOR SALE M
Cycle insurance. Low rates.
Easy pay plan. Professional
Service Agency. 102 N.
Expressway, 227-1131.
360 Yamaha motorcycle, 1400
actual miles, 3 motorcycle
trailer, all for $775. Call 227-8982
days or 227-7837 nights and
weekends.
FOR SALE: 1974 Hodaka TOO.
Immaculate condition. $350. or
make offer. 599-6395.
FOR SALE: 1974 Honda XL 125,
1900 miles, excellent condition.
Rupp mini bike. Shell camper
cover for pick up. 946-4390.
1975 Suzuki 250 GT, very low
mileage. Dressed out. 228-5152.
1972 350 Kawasaki, $400.00. 228-
3313 after 5 p.m.
1973 Honda 450, excellent
condition. 228-2251 after 5.
FOR SALE: 1975 Honda trail 90.
Like new. $350. 228-3432.
FOR SALE: 1974 Hodaka. 106cc'
on combat frame. Excellent
condition. Priced to sell. Call
Ron Smith. 228-8755.
FOR SALE: '74 750 Honda and
'74 TM 250 Suzuki. Call 227-4998
or after 5, 228-2993.
Page 15
How well is
Gov. Brown doing?
By JOHN PINKERMAN
Editor,
Copley News Service
March Fong Eu, the dy
namic and ambitious lady
who runs the California sec
retary of state’s office, said
the other day that Gov. Ed
mund G. Brown Jr. wants to
be president of the United
States.
Brown hasn’t denied this
flat out and the only time I
ever talked with him, when
he was campaigning for sec
retary of state in 1970, he re
sponded to a question on his
ambitions by saying, “Well, I
certainly don’t want to make
a career of being secretary of
state.”
From all appearances nei
ther does he want to make a
career of being governor of
California, and this raises
some new questions and some
observations, new or old.
Just how well is he doing as
governor of the largest state?
Well remembered is his de
nunciation of high living for
the governor. He wouldn’t
live in the executive mansion
— ever. He preferred a
bachelor pad in an apartment
house near the state Capitol.
He denounced state college
and university presidents as
living high on the hog, draw
ing too much pay and costing
the state too much in leases of
luxurious homes.
He denounced city Bremen
for going on strike. On the
other hand, he has stood fully
in favor of public employe
unions — with the right to
strike. His words were some
thing like, “You can’t keep a
man on the job at the threat of
a gun.”
Most of these steps, and
FOR SALE: '73 Honda 750 cc,
many extras. New paint. 228-
8874.
F* LOST A
& FOUNDS m
FOUND: Bird Dog, McDonalds,
Wednesday, April 7. Identify
and pay for ad, and vet visit.
227-8839.
LOST: Tri Color Collie, 8 weeks,
old wearing red collar. $lO
reward. Call 227-2850 or 228-
3796.
FOUND: Parakeet. Identify
and pay for ad. 228-2882.
LOST OR STOLEN: Reddish'
brown Doberman Pinscher.
Reward offered. 228-6516 , or
228-1028.
•
LOST: Ladies white white gold
watch, vicinity New 10th and N.
Hill St. Reward. Call 227-8425.
k ★ FARM A
f IMPLEMENTS ★
WANTED: Double section, 3 pt.
hitch smoothing harrow for 8N
Ford tractor. Phone 227-4747
after 6 p.m.
Public
Notices
NO ADMINISTRATION
LEGAL 8462
Courj of Ordinary, Spalding
County, Georgia
To any Creditors and All
Parties at Interest:
Regarding Estate of Joe W.
Sorrow, deceased, formerly of
the County of Spalding State of
Georgia, notice is hereby given
that Louise Doresa Jones
Sorrow an heir at law of the said
deceased has filed application
with me to declare no
Administration necessary.
Said application will be heard
at my office Monday, May 3,
1976, at 10:00 o'clock A.M., and
if no objection is made an order
will be passed saying no
Administration Is necessary.
March 26, 1976.
George C. Imes, Judge Probate
Court
1
Beck, Goddard, Owen 8, Murrey
Attorneys at Law •
Griffin Daily News Monday, April 12,1976
others, have brought the
young governor praise.
People have tended to un
derstand his private life-style
as a mystic. They have liked
his high-sounding phrases on
austerity, although some
gagged a bit when he talked
about a 10 per cent pay cut for
Transportation Department
workers and said that work
ing people soon might have to
share their jobs with the un
employed.
However, he did something
not so long ago that was rath
er disheartening, even for a
man bent on austerity. It had
to do with disappointing bit
terly and unnecessarily an 11-
year-old Rome, N.Y., girl en
gaged in a worthy patriotic
project.
The girl, Linda Ann Jack
son, wrote to all 50 governors,
asking each for an autograph
and a memento of the state as
part of her Bicentennial proj
ect in conjunction with the
Rome Historical Society.
Forty-nine governors sent
Linda Ann an autograph;
many sent the memento. One
did not send either — Ed
mund G. Brown Jr. He did
have an aide send her a letter
saying the state "doesn’t
have the money to do this.”
Actually, a letter with the
autograph would have cost
exactly as much as the aide’s
negative response. And, this
was particularly unworthy in
the face of the thousands of
letters Brown’s administra
tion has been sending to de
ceased persons informing
them they were no longer
eligible for Medi-Cal benefits.
Linda Ann came out OK
eventually. Los Angeles
Times men took a collection
and sent her a bevy of
mementos. And, a Sacramen
to woman sent her a Brown
autograph — scribbled by
Seoul hustles
around the clock
By JIM BISHOP
Copley News Service
SEOUL, South Korea —
For 3,000 years Korea has
been known as the “land of
the morning calm.” Today
the calm morning hours in
Seoul, the capital of South
Korea, are very limited.
The social life in Seoul is
still on the upbeat at mid
night. After 12 o’clock, the
basement and rooftop dis
cotheques turn up the volume
and speed up the rhythm.
Slightly subdued rock ‘n’
roll is still the prime Seoul
music. Lyrics come out in
U.S.-accented Korean and
Korean-accented American.
Girl singers wear sequined,
skintight slacks. Others wear
the beautiful, billowing Ko
rean dress, high-waisted and
long-flowing.
Up in the green hills above
Seoul the roulette wheels
whir and the dice dance to ex
cited exhortations in Korean,
American, German, Dutch,
Japanese and a hundred
other languages ranging
from African to Indonesian.
The voices around the fringe
of the gaming table are get
ting more and more of an
Arabic accent as trade and
commerce build between
South Korea and the Middle
East.
By the morning hours the
kaesang parties have long
since ended in a thousand
restaurants in Seoul. But the
melody and sometimes the
acquaintances made at the
Korean-style dinners linger
on into the formerly calm ’
morning hours.
Kaesang is the Korean
equivalent of the Japanese
geisha.
But the overly ritualistic
ceremonial dining, the white
painted faces of the girls and
the overpoliteness and hand
over-lipsticked-mouth gig.
gles of the Japanese girls
him on the track of an enve
lope at a cocktail party.
The Linda Ann affair is
more a demonstration of a
moody man’s remoteness
from reality than criticism of
his efficiency as a governor.
However, there are other
things to recall.
One is that midnight of
about 14 months ago when
Brown grabbed television to
announce how he had settled
all problems between Cesar
Chavez and the grape and
other fruit growers. This was
his finest hour.,
The result has been some
thing different. The farm la
bor bill is a complete mess as
of now. “Strikes against
growers to resume, Chavez
says,” is the headline. Plus
another — “Chavez plans
boycott against big growers.”
And, another little one, the
kind that does you more harm
than a phony Brown-Chavez
“peace” boast. This headline
reads, “CHP (California
Highway Patrol) provides
chauffeur for governor’s poet
appointee.”
The governor’s office, after
prodding, paid the $172.81
CHP service bill, but it all
makes one wonder about his
“austerity.”
Now, Brown has told Mrs.
Eu, “Doesn’t every governor
want to run for president?”
But since then he has said not
to put his name on the pri
mary ballot right now — “I’ll
let you know later.”
Everyone wants the gover
nor of California to do a good
job. But, nobody should be
misled by the strange ways
he behaves in the name of
economy. And, he should
show a little more substance
in the management of the
state’s affairs before he sets
out to fulfill March Fong Eu’s
word that he is a suitable
presidential candidate.
have been eliminated in Ko
rea.
The girls at the better res
taurants in Seoul are uni
versally ahgelic in their lime
green, silver or muted gray,
floor-length traditional,
dresses. An hour after dinner
ends they may be twisting to
the latest rock beat in Ko
rean-made high-style
sweater and slacks, but at a
kaesang dinner their dress
and decorum are from the
days of 500 years ago.
And what good old days
they must have been!
Any foreigner, once he gets
his legs adjusted to'sitting on
floor mats, can relax and en
joy life at its male chauvinis
tic best.
Select tidbits of food skim t
from the endless dishes on the
low table and are popped into
his mouth from silver chop
sticks wielded by deft and
delicate hands.
The happy diner’s cup may
not runneth over, but it’s al
ways filled. So is the omni
present full glass of Haig and
Haig or Red Label, which two
or three times a night must be
downed in one giant gulp to
demonstrate U.S.-ROK
solidarity.
By the time the major ho
tels and the Walker Hills
casinos have settled down to
sleep, the morning calm is
disturbed again, this time
permanently, by the start of
Seoul’s business day.
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