Griffin daily news. (Griffin, Ga.) 1924-current, March 31, 1977, Image 1
_, ■*■.* - - \lt *-*« 'Tjt {fry* Wtf* '^-'■; J -W’ ■s&& WW: -£jW l <. *--, **-• ' “->_--,>■** -.-:• .. David Huey of Griffin fishes in the spillway at the city water reservoir. Heavy rains here Wednesday raised the level at the reservoir and the spillway. Huey said he thought the high water made the spillway fishing better, especially for crappie. Busbee vetoes oil, loan bills ATLANTA (AP) — Declaring it not in the best interest of Georgians, Gov. George Busbee vetoed a bill today that would have made it more difficult to penalize small loan companies for overcharging their customers. Busbee also vetoed a bill that would have prohibited oil companies to have some hours of operation requirements in lease contracts signed by service sta tion operators. The small loan company measure would have amended current law to require that borrowers prove they had been cheated intentionally before they could require loan companies to cancel repayment of their loan. The present law says that if the loan company makes an error it must forfeit both the interest and principal of the loan. The law affects only those companies operating under the industrial loan act —a law passed decades ago and de signed to provide money for persons considered credit risks. The firms could charge the highest legal interest rates. “I have decided that it would be in the best interest of Georgians, who find it necessary from time to time to borrow from small loan companies, to veto this bill as being so vague as to give a dangerous degree of latitude to the lender,” Busbee said in a news con ference. He said the ‘‘honest majority of small lenders do not need this legislation because they are not violating the in dustrial loan act.” He said the measure would have placed an “almost impossible burden of proof ... on the borrower, who is the victim of a violation. “The borrower ... would have to prove that the lender actually intended to steal. The question which arises is: How can the borrower possibly prove that the lender actually knew that he was breaking the law?” The other vetoed bill amended the The Country Parson by Frank Clark wif? BL H “A fellow isn’t free if he’s a slave to his habits.” GRIFFIN Daily Since 1872 state’s gasoline marketing practices act to prohibit oil companies from requiring in their lease contracts that service stations must operate 24 hours a day or seven days a week. Busbee said the measure did not serve the public convenience and did not encourage free enterprise. On another matter, Busbee said he learned last week that Georgia was not among the finalists under consideration for the site of the nation’s first solar energy research institute —a facility the state was avidly seeking. Federal officials decided to locate the center on a Colorado mountaintop. Busbee suggested last week that the state’s failure to gain the project was due to reverse discrimination by the Carter administration which feared po litical repurcussions should the center be placed in the President’s home state. Bingo The legalization of bingo in Georgia has affected many people in one way or the other. People in Griffin and the area have been caught up in this new era of legal bingo. Some folks have taken a stand against the “amoral wagering” while others have found themselves being drawn into an ever-growing group of “circuit riders” which makes its weekly rounds from one game to the next. Then there is the occasional player who must satisfy his curiosity about the magic of the small numbered cards. Whether an avid player or a curious first timer, once inside the doors, everyone becomes a part of the atmosphere of excitement. The newcomers are easy to pick out. They’re the ones with one to three cards in front of them. The real bingo nuts are the ones with up to 16 or 20 cards precisely placed before them. As the caller begins the first game, a hush sweeps the room. That’s when all, new and veteran players become one in a mass of intense searching and concentration. As each number is called, tension builds. Then that critical point comes when players, who need just one more number, glance around and discover that their neighbors are in the same fix. Bingo! The tension is gone with the single word. The relaxed conversation of Griffin, Ga., 30223, Thursday Afternoon, March 31,1977 Many make circuit now that it’s legal Coffee prices percolating higher, higher CINCINNATI (AP) - Folger Coffee Co. has increased its wholesale coffee price by 25 cents to $4.43 for a pound of ground coffee, but consumers may not feel the effect immediately. Folger, the nation’s second largest roaster, blamed the increase Wed nesday on the continuing rise in the price of green coffee beans, now more than $3 a pound, about $2 higher than a year ago. The increase was Folger’s fourth this year, for a total hike of $1.35 a pound. The price hike may not be felt im mediately, however. It can take as long as several months, depending on the individual grocer’s pricing policy and inventory level, before wholesale price increases cause retail prices to rise. Many grocers choose to sell coffee as a “loss leader” priced at or below cost to attract customers into the store. released pressure fills the room along with exclamations of frustration. After the winner collects his bounty, the scene begins again and repeats itself. But the newness of it all never dies. “I love to push the cards,” one veteran player said. “I play 12 cards at once and I win just about every time I go.” She recently won S4OO playing regular bingo. The really avid players will always be found with plans for every Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday. It’s bingo at the Griffin Moose Club on Wednesday, at the Elks Club on Thursday, at the VFW Club on Friday and back at the Moose Club on Saturday. The Moose Club in Barnesville also attracts many from the Griffin area. Mike Gaddy of West Poplar street plays with nine to 16 cards before him. “It’s not easy to play so many cards at one time,” he said. “You have to hustle.” Gaddy recently won S9B at the Moose Club in Barnesville. He makes the rounds regularly. Mrs. Ruby Penn of Hammond drive, said, “It gives me something to do. I’m a widow and I can play and enjoy the company of my friends and get home before dark.” Mrs. Penn’s high winning was at the (Continued on page 22.) State Moose meet opens here Friday Hundreds of visitors began arriving this afternoon for the three-day Georgia Moose Association’s mid-year conference in Griffin. Motels have been booked here for weeks in preparation for the meeting. Some guests had to take accommodations in Hampton, Atlanta and other cities in the area. The conference will get under way tonight with a special class enrollment in honor of Phillip R. Mores, general governor. The session will begin at 7:30. The Women of the Moose will inaugurate its 3-day conference Friday afternoon with a full schedule of events, starting at 3 o’clock. Deputy Supreme Grand Regent Mae McKenzie will preside. Grand Chancellor Kay Cancie Bingo action (1-r) game near end, Mrs. Becky Hill with winning card at Moose Club; Doug Whitaker calls game at Elks as Ed Crawford assists; bottom, Mr. and Mrs. William Patrick at Moose Club. >7 .':7 K. * — “ ...O' O s O' , 4 1 IWri Al flu. 1 „.Jfl Vol. 105 No. 76 Damage light in wind, rain A rain and wind storm swept through the Bucksnort road area near the Spalding-Butts County line early Wednesday afternoon, uprooting trees and extensively damaging wooded areas. Apparently no one was injured. A carport at the J.D. Huggins home on High Falls road was lifted up and carried over the house and landed in the front yard. The storm left a wide path of large uprooted trees at the Abner Caldwell farm. “It was awful...more than my ears could stand,” said Mrs. Huggins. Even though the damage to their home would amount to several thousand dollars, Mrs. Huggins said she and her husband were lucky because a car and truck parked next to the carport were not touched. Neither was an electric power line above the carport roof, she said. The carport measured about 15 x 28 feet and was scattered over her front yard this morning, she added. She said a large tree, about 100 years old, fell on top of a car at a neighboring house occupied by a Clements family. of Moosehart will hold a questions and answers’ period. Mrs. Eleanor Kapiloff, Graduate Junior Regent of Griffin will give the address of welcome. Saturday will be a busy day for the women as they are scheduled to meet at 10 a.m. and 1:30 and conclude by attending the annual Deputy Supreme Governor’s Ball with the men at 8 o’clock. James Chappell of Griffin is the Deputy Supreme Governor. Sunday, the women will convene at V.F.W. Club for their final meeting at 10 a.m.. Senior Regent Frances Gaddy of Griffin will give the combined conference and Friendship report. Motels in the city have been sold out and many have been forced to accept reservations in Hampton and Atlanta. J zMI Weather FORECAST: Fair tonight with a low in upper 40s. Increasing cloudiness Friday with a chance of showers by afternoon. “I thought I was gone. My house just cracked. It didn’t last long, but I expected to go away with the house any second,” said Mrs. Sally Manley who lives on a dirt road off Bucksnort road. She said her road was blocked by fallen trees which had to be cleared before the school bus could pass. “Terrible”, was Mrs. Abner Caldwell’s comment. The storm left a path of downed trees through their cattle farm. Her husband was out surveying the damage this morning and hopefully no cattle were harmed, she said. Huge trees on both sides of the road were uprooted, she said. Also a bam roof was blown off on a Butts County farm. Mrs. Ted Meza of Mez-Art Studios said there was no damage at the studio. She was going to inspect the land this morning, she said. Most Georgians can look forward to a letup in the persistent rains that drenched the state for two days, the National Weather Service says. The weather service forecast partly cloudy skies with thundershowers ending today throughout the state. All severe weather watches and warnings had expired by late Wed nesday evening. Early Wednesday, a severe weather system bringing thunderstorms caused a flash flood warning for most of north Georgia and a tornado watch for 23 west Georgia counties. People ...and things Housekeeping staff member at Griffin-Spalding Hospital mopping front steps of building in rain. Nervous father-to-be waiting at admissions office filling out forms while nurses attend to wife on third floor. Friends visiting with each other in tag line at courthouse. 'f llv