Newspaper Page Text
Happy Birthday!
Thomas and Tonya Goolsby
Thomas and Tonya Goolsby
celebrated their fifth birthday
with a party at their home. They
are the son and daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Tommy G. Goolsby.
Cake, ice cream and punch
were served. Party favors were
given to the guests.
Attending were: Deida
Cartin, Tracy and Jeffery Polk,
BBeeeoaGcooone
w
Low Factory Direct Prices
1. Steel bar — joist carports.
2. Mobile home covers.
3. Steel bar — joist patio covers.
4. Aluminum awnings.
5. Aluminum siding.
6. Storm windows & storm doors —
natural or baked on finish —
custom built.
PRICES HOW REDUCEDIH
ill
f v i seas 7
ALUMINUM SIDING
★ 30 years written guarantee
FREE ESTIMATES—
NO MONEY DOWN
Low Monthly Payments
Contact
Bill Bradley
College Hill Standard Co.
400 S. Hill St Griffin, Go.
227-1012
SPRING Sewing?
Charter Teahouse ® ttr
Prints & stripes. 50 percent | 'l\ S: I>U|> i i Charter Sampan
polyester, 50 percent cotton B;;|r |j M .„ , . M
Crease resistant, delicate 11 K 1I 50 P er ® ent 50
florals & multi-color ft i J AAS percent cotton Crease
stripes. AU coordinating 11 resistant in spring’s newest
with Sampan.
HsmThrnd. Msrest Broo.
FrtKh Ribbon X_ jW s a>w Puff
65 percent Polyester, 35 s' •
Percent cotton. A beautiful . v A fashion-look in
fabric for spring weddings. < \ ' -.s coordinating seer-
Great for the peasant look. 3-/ sucker.
4J98 y 4. ' w
Irish Treat y.
Polyester linen. Chatter IN percent fortrel polyester
y t . . knit 62-64” wide. A smart
Yd COUlHry fair fashion-look in spring color
** * combination.
Stripes 4g 98 u
CLOTH CORNER
122 S. 13th Street
Free Parking- BAC-MC-CAS
Tatum Bunn, Robbie Maddox,
Jeremy Kennedy, Lisa Clines,
Laura Powell, Don, Chris and
Danny Goolsby.
Assisting with the party
were: Mrs. Denise Cartin, Mrs.
Shirley Polk, Mrs. Vicky Bunn,
Mrs. Jeanetta Goolsby, Mrs.
Peggy Clines and Mrs. Joyce
Goolsby (mother).
aSßßWßeaeaoße
M © sM
Follow that buyer!
By Abigail Van Buren
© 1977 by Chicago Tribune-N.Y News Synd. Inc.
DEAR ABBY: Is it possible to find out a person’s name
and address if you have his automobile license number? Or
will you have to answer a lot of questions first?
You see, I was kind of wandering around a shopping
center during my lunch break, when a beautiful older man
caught my eye. He went into a jewelry store and I followed
him. I was drawn to him like a magnet. He was shopping
for an anniversary gift for his wife, and I offered to help
him select something. We kidded around and he said he
had a daughter in college about my age.
Abby, you’re going to think I’m crazy, but I have never
met a man who attracted me the way this one did. I can’t
get him out of my mind. I don’t even know his name, but I
walked him to his car and took down his license number.
I’ve just got to see him again! I’m 22 and believe me, this
was love at first sight. I even dream about him.
Can you help me?
IN A DAZE IN MINNEAPOLIS
DEAR IN: It’s possible to find out a person's name if you
have his license number in Minnesota, but you will have to
answer a lot of questions first, so I don't recommend
trying. The magnetism you experienced is “physical
attraction,” and it happens every day. For your sake (and
his) forget him, dear.
DEAR ABBY: The letter from the woman who had
cancer and some of her friends avoided contact with her
because they thought she was “contaminated and
contagious” was sad indeed. May I add a little to what I
have learned since working with The American Diabetes
Association?
This malfunction (it is not really a disease) is also badly
misunderstood. One woman called our office to ask where
she should go for a V.D. test! Asked if she associated
diabetes with venereal disease, she replied, "Why, yes, of
course.”
Another woman, whose husband is diabetic, had refused
to share a bed with him for years. (She feared contagion.)
Since 1900, diabetes has risen from 13th to third place as
a killer (heart is first, cancer second) and is the leading
cause of new cases of blindness and amputations of
extremities.
Abby, please urge your readers to learn more about
diabetes in order to better understand the people who
suffer from it.
CONCERNED
DEAR CONCERNED: I will. For more information
write to The American Diabetes Association, 1 West 48th
Street, New York, New York 10020. They will direct you
to the affiliate nearest you where free brochures are
available.
DEAR ABBY: My husband’s ex-wife and children live in
another city. When he visits them, he sleeps at his
ex-wife’s house, in a separate bedroom. His ex is
unmarried, and although he insists that their relationship
is now platonic, I feel insecure and uncomfortable.
When I met my husband he was already divorced and
insisted he wanted nothing more to do with his ex-wife.
Now when he visits her he goes on picnics with her and the
children, and takes them to dinner, just like old times.
I know my husband loves me, but this situation bugs me.
He has asked me to accompany him on those trips and try
to be friends with his ex-wife. I refuse to go. Am I being
unreasonable?
CONFUSED
DEAR CONFUSED: Yes. Perhaps if you went, you’d no
longer feel insecure and uncomfortable. It’s worth a try.
Everyone has a problem. What's yours? For a personal
reply, write to ABBY: Box No. 69700, L.A., Calif. 90069.
Enclose stamped, self-addressed envelope, please.
Air wedding
MASON CITY, lowa (AP) -
The wedding of Dawn Friedley
and Bert Roberts Jr. will be
held Saturday or Sunday —
weather permitting.
They plan to become man and
wife while floating a mile above
Mason City in a hot air balloon.
“It will be only the fourth
time since 1800 that this has
happened,” said Dave Friedley,
the bride’s father and a balloon
enthusiast.
The wedding will be a formal
affair, complete with tuxedos, a
ringbearer, confetti and tape
recorded music and will be fol
lowed by an impromptu cham
pagne reception in a farm field
wherever the craft comes down.
In case of rain or high winds,
the wedding will be held at the
Friedley home in Mason City.
Enough reading
WEST ORANGE, N.J. (AP)
— The mayor of this Essex
County community says he likes
to read, but enough is enough.
Mayor William F. Cuozzi has
been receiving hundreds of dol
lars worth of magazine sub
scriptions, vocational school
courses and book club member
ships in his name but without
his permission.
He said he doesn’t know who
is behind the campaign, but he
has alerted postal authorities
and sent a form letter to each of
the vendors sending the un
solicited material to his office.
“There are so many of them I
can’t send them back, so I have
written a letter to each seller
telling them to come and pick
up the product,” he said.
Former Griffinite
Sen. Tate vies for GAE position
There is no question that the
main issue in last week’s
Georgia Education Association
(GAE) convention was his
appointment as executive
secretary, according to Dr.
Horace Tate, the association’s
associate executive secretary.
The former principal of
Fairmont High School in Griffin
said the yet unsettled matter
was “paramount in the minds of
the delegates in attendance.”
Tate serves as associate
executive secretary of the 34,000
member teacher association.
He assumed the position
following the merging of the
Georgia Teachers and
Education Association and the
Georgia Education Association.
He was executive secretary of
the GTE&A from 1961 until the
time of the merger, May 9,1970.
Under the provisions of the
merger, Dr. Carl Hodges would
become executive secretary of
the new organization and Dr.
Tate would assume the
associate position.
“Since there were two people
involved, it is a valid
assumption that if one dropped
out the one left would assume
the position,” Tate said.
Hodges resigned the position
in January effective July 1.
Tate says some of the board
members oppose his
appointment.
He, however, feels he will get
the appointment.
“There are enough good
thinking people on the board to
see that justice is done,” he
said.
In his speech to the
convention’s general assembly,
Tate alluded to his assuming the
position. He said it appeared
that 90 percent of the teachers
and school administrators in
attendance felt he should have
the position.
In the speech, Tate pointed
out that his job as state senator
Did you know your
Master Charge card
can save you money?
Save money on big purchases.
W ' "7“ cB
temriO'arily shot! of l ash |'
Save money (and fuss)
MF’ W with a cash advance. You can get from SSO up to the
credit virtually
■F Mi
Or. .A Payback the advance over, say two months.
jR Y'-' /vJH it'll often be cheaper than a bank loan
■ /■, , z' f 1 jfoltrM r- Available at over 20000 Master
--t Hi™ ff' BBH Charge banks
V\ Save money on postage.
CvYYu-o i .■[» isgnodfoi *2l
• ’ - • k - Ik/ places you can pav many montivy
11 '■ And one ■•tarn;,
The savings add up over a year. \ — I
Save money on money. Convenient, too 1 /sfLr —"
Don’t carry big cash amounts. ' W
« Cash lost or stolen is lost or stolen With the —
Master Charge card, just notify your bank I iffll IK Cf*OK I fIJI KCTA*
immediately and have nothing to lose. It's W3C Jf vUI ■ ICWICI wl IAI
that simple, particularly since Master Charge iajioalw
is your personal account at more than one tdl U WIjCIY dllU IL vdll
and three-quarter million places around the LI *
world, you don't need to cairy large sums help you save money.
Save money on clothes. I VT? T
Buy out of season.
Buy a winter coat in August Buy kids clothes at |
the end of the season That's when retailers are f
prone to give you big savings, as much as 50 .OMR’ !
percent off And of course with the Master
Charge" card you can buy when the savings
are hot even if your cash position is cold
ff/ieffinA of(frifin
CORNER WEST TAYLOR AND 11TH ST. — PHONE 227-1313
• Deposits Insured By F.D.I.C.
from the 38th Senatorial
District and the executive
secretary position would
compliment each other.
The Georgia Legislature is in
session for 40 days and some
had questioned his maintaining
the two positions.
Tate said he assured them
that there would be no conflict
concerning the two jobs because
he has spent 90 percent of
his time on Capitol Hill during
the General Assembly any way
since 1961.
He said that time was spent
lobbying for programs designed
to enhance the educatipnal
welfare of children and
teachers in the state.
He said he doesn’t necessarily
have to spend 90 percent of his
time now on Capitol Hill
because he now has the vote.
“To have an executive
secretary of a 34,000 member
organization in the senate
pleading for and supporting
educational programs is one of
the most potent positions to be
in,” Tate added.
Tate feels most legislators
believe in education anyway.
“If they know I’m
representing teachers they will
be more prone to listen and to
follow through with the vote,”
Senator Tate continued.
He further analogized his
belief concerning non-conflict of
interest for the two jobs.
“There is no more conflict of
interest in being executive
secretary and senator than
there is in being a daddy and a
husband,” he said.
Concerning payment for the
senatorial job, Tate says he
gives the GAE the $343.59 a
month he gets from the state for
the two months spent in the
Georgia General Assembly.
“I want to be sure there is no
question as to whether money
figures in relation to the two
jobs,” he commented.
Page 5
— Griffin Daily News Friday, April 1,1977
He said he spends at least as
much as his state salary going
to numerous banquets and for
senatorial paper work.
There is no secretarial help
provided to state senators.
Dr. Tate served as principal
of Fairmont High School in
Griffin from 1951-57. He was
also a chemistry teacher and
coached girls basketball.
After leaving Griffin he
earned his doctorate degree and
taught at Fort Valley State
College and Atlanta University.
Since then he has conducted
seminars and summer courses
at Tuskegee Institute, the
University of Nebraska and the
University of Kentucky.
► a unisex boutique for those who dress a cut above ./i
> <■ ■■ i ——' ' m J
I J® NORTHGATE CENTER
MEN’S
CASUAL
i! Western, Prints & Solids
;J Reg. sl6 to S2O
:: tyOO
;; 5,m,1,xl
<»
Northgate Center
BEEP! BEEP! BEEP! BEEP!
? Beep! Beep!!
j “Terry, 5
~ are you available for »
S an appointment at
j 1:30 W j
S Could This Be You? 3
_ 9
Si Beepers Available
“} Mobile Telephone & -
Pager, Inc. w
S; 850EvereeRd.
S 227-0909 L *
BEEP! BEEP! BEEP! BEEP!