Newspaper Page Text
Page 2
— Griffin Daily News Wednesday, March 23, 1977
Deaths -F unerals
Mr. Head
Mr. James Wilburn Head of
745 Bieze street died
unexpectedly Tuesday.
Mr. Head had made his home
in Griffin for 50 years where he
owned and operated Scottie’s
Package Store. He was a
veteran of World War II serving
with the U.S. Army.
He is survived by a daughter,
Mrs. Nora Jane Taylor of
Griffin; 4 sons, Gary Eugene
Head of Concord, James
Marshall Head of Augusta,
Ronald W. Head of Griffin and
William Davis Head of Dallas,
Tex.; his mother, Mrs. Jessie
Redding Head; a sister, Mrs.
Doris Bruce; 2 brothers, Travis
Head and Everett Head, all of
Dallas, Tex.; and 5
grandchildren.
The funeral will be Thursday
afternoon at 4:30 o’clock in the
chapel of Pittman Rawls
Funeral Home. The Rev. Elvyn
McDonald will officiate and
burial will be in Oak Hill
cemetery. Friends may visit the
family at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. David L. Taylor, 1213
Carver road and at Pittman
Rawls Funeral Home tonight
from 7 until 9 p.m.
Mrs. Kendrick
Mrs. Martha Warfield
Kendrick of 1317 Greenview
drive died early this morning at
the Griffin-Spalding Hospital
where she had been a patient for
two months.
Mrs. Kendrick was the
widow of Mr. C.A. Kendrick.
She was a native of Lincoln,
Ky., and had made her home
here for 35 years. She was a
member of the First Baptist
Church.
Funeral plans will be
announced by Pittman Rawls
Funeral Home.
It may be
cheaper to wash,
read late
ATLANTA (AP) — It may be
cheapest to wash clothes or read a book
late at night or early in the morning if a
plan by the Georgia Power Co. is ap
proved by the Public Service Com
mission.
Along with its |196.7-million rate hike
request the utility submitted a proposal
last week to the PSC to offer time-of
day rates in Georgia on a widespread
basis for the first time, said
spokeswoman Leslie Lamkin.
The plan would allow residential
customers to qualify for reduced rates
at certain times of the day.
The utility’s customers would have a
choice of either continuing to pay for
power at a standard around-the-clock
rate or to purchase power for an
amount that would vary depending on
the hours in which it was used.
The plan is part of a request to the
PSC for permission to raise residential
charges by almost 20 per cent.
The utility’s president, Robert
Scherer, said Sunday the rate hike
request also included a proposal to
discount electric rates for the poor.
Scherer said that if retired and poor
people are given lower rates, “some
body is going to have to make up the
difference."
The PSC yet has not ruled on the
utility’s overall proposal.
Stephanie Foster
Stephanie Foster who was
pictured in yesterday’s paper
won first place in the School
Patrol’s trip to Washington
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: The next time you :
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s around the phone, ?
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S 227-0909 :
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BEEPI BEEPI BEEPI BEEPI BEEPI BEEPI BEEPI BEEPI
Mrs. Broadhurst
Mrs. Doris Mealor
Broadhurst of 719 South HiU
street, Apartment C, died early
Tuesday night at the Griffin-
Spalding Hospital where she
had been a patient for three
days.
Mrs. Broadhurst was a native
of Rock Ferry, England and had
made her home in Griffin for
the past 7 years. She was a
member of St. George’s
Episcopal Church and a
member of the Griffin-Spalding
Hospital Auxiliary.
She is survived by her
husband, Joseph N.
Broadhurst; a daughter, Mrs.
Richard L. Chamigo, both of
Griffin; a son, Peter
Broadhurst of West Hartford,
Conn.; 9 grandchildren and 2
great-grandchildren.
The funeral will be Thursday
afternoon at 2 o’clock in St.
George’s Episcopal Church.
The Rev. Douglas Winn will
officiate and burial will be in
Oak Hill cemetery. Friends
may visit the family at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Chamigo, 202 Hillandale drive
and at Pittman Rawls Funeral
Home tonight from 7 until 9 p.m.
Mr. Williams
The funeral for Mr. Hub R.
Williams of 1468 Stella Way will
be held at 3 o’clock Thursday
afternoon in Haisten Funeral
Home chapel. The Rev. Ed
Sisson will officiate and burial
will be in Oak Hill cemetery.
Friends may visit at the home
of Mrs. Clara Baxter, 1468 Stella
Way.
Mr. Williams died
unexpectedly at his residence
Tuesday morning.
Haisten Funeral Home is in
charge of plans.
peanut sale. Her name was
listed incorrectly under the
picture.
Carter firm
moving here
location.
The vacated space in Barnesville will
be used to add additional textile
equipment to meet the fabric demand
and create new plant jobs there.
The William Carter Company is
moving into the former H. V. Kell
building on Carver road. The building
contains 156,000 square feet with some
23,000 square feet in improved office
space.
The Carter warehouse now employs
approximately 50 persons including the
company transportation fleet which
Police warn on con game
Griffin police warned
residents that con artists
pretending to represent the
Fraternal Order of Police are
working in the Griffin area
again.
The department had several
complaints Tuesday from
merchants who had received
calls from someone saying he
represented the FOP and
asking that they make a
DISCOUNT CENTER
134 SOUTH HILL ST.
SALE STARTS THURSDAY, MARCH 24, 1977
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
A 2.69 Value
CEPACOL
Jp MOUTHWASH
QQC
32 oz. Qw
1.65 Value
FDS
H feminine
' Ly DEODORANT SPRAY
79 c
1.58 Value
- r —-=> EXCEDRIN
Excedrin
■ 1 Cah) ANAIGcSK TABIfTS
92 c
14.98 Value
HANKSCRAFT
VAPORIZER
sfi99
Capacity U
1.59 Value 133 Value
Wo ?n?p ߥ D - COH MALLORY A LYSOL
A, HAD ’ sYM W DEODORIZING
ISWiS 9 KILLER FOR FT? BATTERIES m CLEANER
rlw MTS & mice <to /« bLtAntK
s 39c .X $1« ‘ 59c 4? g 3 c
was recently relocated from
Barnesville.
Roberts said the warehouse will
house some 1 million yards of cloth and
some 500,006 dozen garments.
The Carter Company has 11 plants in
the nation. There are five Georgia
Iqcations, Barnesville, Griffin, Forsyth,
Sandersville, and Thomaston. The
company has two in Mississippi, one in
Massachusetts, and three in Texas.
Company sales have grown from
$56,565,000 in 1971 to $96,971,000 in 1976
or a 71 percent increase.
contribution to the organization.
In return, an ad would be
placed in the Peace Officers
Magazine, the caller promised.
Police Capt. Jimmy Sutton
reminded citizens there is not
an FOP chapter in Griffin and
the organization has no
connection with the magazine.
The same scheme has been
tried here in the past, he said.
LONG CREDIT LINE
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
Changing the name of Bank-
Americard to Visa amounts to a
1,800-mile trail of bank cards
bearing the new mark, accord
ing to company officials.
That’s the distance covered
by new cards laid end to end
that member banks will issue to
33.6 million American car
dholders, who will simply make
the switch to Visa cards as
cards are renewed.
90c Value
Bdentyne
GUM
6 PACK
- 46 c
J T| 3.25 Value
••/ REVLON J .....;
' •Mi’fi ‘MILK PLUS 6’
PLUS 6-
IS3 I SHAMPOO AND *4 KO
ZZj CONDITIONER *| °
1.95 Value
Hfasteeth
DENTURE ADHESIVE
POWDER
3(4 Oz. QQC
_ 1.75 Value
A PEPTO-BISMOL
FOR UPSET STOMACH
FOUUPSE-T STOMACH
•»O£ snON
m 89 C
W FAULTLESS
folding
DOUCHE SYRINGE
JS* $199
Model 129
Miss Lillian toss
instead of Jimmy?
ATLANTA (AP) — If President
Carter doesn’t want to throw out the
first ball at the Atlanta Braves’ home
opener, he may have a relief pitcher —
his mother.
Bob Hope, public relations director
for the National League club, said
Tuesday he called Carter’s mother,
Lillian Carter, to ask if she would throw
the first ball April 15 if the President
was unable to attend.
“I’m going to be there anyway and I
really would like to throw out the first
ball,” said Mrs. Carter, better known
as Miss Lillian.
But, she said, she also would like for
Sheriff gets answer
—l9 years later
It took almost 19 years, but the
Spalding Sheriff’s Department finally
got a reply to a letter written July 26,
1958.
Spalding Sheriff Dwayne Gilbert said
his office received a letter Friday from
the Clark County Sheriff’s Department
returning a warrant which had been
sent there in 1958.
The warrant had been sent for Clark
County lawmen to arrest a suspect
thought to be there.
her son to perform the traditional toss
when the Braves meet the Houston As
tros.
“Yessiree, I’d like to throw out that
ball. But it would be just as great a
thrill for me to have Jimmy do it,” she
said.
Hope said Miss Lillian promised she
would try to persuade the President to
throw out the first ball and then spend
the weekend in his home town of Plains,
Ga.
“I’m going to be at other games
during the season, I can do it anytime,”
she said.
BUY RITE
f DISCOUNT PHARMACY
NOW OPEN FOR DUSINESS
QUALITY DRUGS AT
DISCOUNT PRICES
REGISTERED PHARMACIST ON
„ DUH AT ALL TIMES
1.99 Value
£1 miss breck
IASTHG HOU
fl QR C
17 8 Oz. VW
< > 1.49 Value
M NOXZEMA
MEDICATED
SHAVING CREAM
** cioua »«*”*
z 83 c
2.89 Value
ARRID
EXTRA DRY ANTI
SPIRANT deodorant
$137
—d 1.49 Value
JERGENS
pMH BATH BEADS
•» 66 c
x ■■ I ' 1 ■
Nineteen years later a letter came
from the Clark office stating: “We are
returning the above subject’s warrant.
Please be advised we are unable to
locate the above subject in Clark
County. If you can furnish us with
another address, please return the
warrant.”
The letter was signed by the warrant
officer of the Clark County Sheriff’s
Department.