Newspaper Page Text
Page 7
— Griffin Daily News Saturday, July 16,1977
Orioles boss says
timing just right
By 808 GREENE
AP Sports Writer
The Baltimore Orioles moved
into first place in the American
League East Division at an ap
propriate time.
“Being in first place on July
15 is nice because it’s my wife’s
birthday,” Baltimore Manager
Earl Weaver said after his
Orioles defeated the Milwaukee
Brewers 4-2 Friday night. The
Baltimore victory coupled with
Boston 9-7 defeat by the Chicago
White Sox boosted the Orioles
into first place by one-half
game.
Still, Weaver realizes the sea
son is only half over.
“There are a heck of a lot of
1 games to go,” the Orioles man
ager said. “We’ve got to win a
lot of games because New York
and Boston have good clubs.
“Things like injuries and sore
arms are going to be a heck of a
deciding factor. But I think
we’re going to play as good, if
not better, the second half. Our
young guys, like Eddie Murray,
have more experience, we’ve
got five starters now and Jim
Correction Os Statement
Published July 15
Consolidated Report of Condition of
"COMMERCIAL BANK & TRUST COMPANY”
of Griffin in the State of Georgia and Domestic Sub
sidiaries at the close of business on June 30,1977.
ASSETS
Cash and due from banks $7,087,000
U.S. Treasury securities 9,979,000
Obligations of States and political subdivisions.. 16,778,000
Corporate stock 9,000
a. Loans, Total (excluding
unearned income) 53,425,000
b. Reserve for
possible loan losses 1,005,000.
c. Loans, Net 52,420,000
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
other assets representing bank premises 1,782,000
Real estate owned other than bank premises 811,000
Customers’ liability to this bank on
acceptances outstanding 319,000
Other assets 1,175,000
TOTAL ASSETS $90,360,000
LIABILITIES
Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships,
and corporations .$19,171,000
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
partnerships, and corporations 48,344,000
Deposits of United States Government 180,000
Deposits of States and political subdivisions 7,108,000
Deposits of commercial banks 3,287,000
Certified and officers’ checks 843,000
TOTAL DEPOSITS $78,933,000
a. Total demand deposits 23,119,000
b. Total time and savings deposits 55,814,000
Federal funds purchased and securities
sold under agreements to repurchase 600,000
Mortgage indebtedness 47,000
Other liabilities 1,945,000
TOTAL LIABILITIES (excluding
subordinated notes and debentures) $81,525,000
Subordinated notes and debentures 1,000,000
EQUITY CAPITAL
Common stock
a. No shares authorized ... .400,000
b. No shares outstanding .. . 200,000
(Par value) 2,000,000
Surplus 4,000,000
Undivided profits (Net of
Treasury Stock (632,000) 1,835,000
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL 7,835,000
TOTAL LIABILITIES AND EQUITY
CAPITAL $90,360,000
MEMORANDA
Average of 30 calendar days ending with call date:
a. Cash and due from banks 6,346,000
b. Federal funds sold and securities
purchased under agreements to resell 527,000
c. Total loans 53,227,000
d. Time deposits of SIOO,OOO or more 17,413,000
e. Total deposits 78,608,000
f. Federal funds purchased and securities
sold under agreements to repurchase 332,000
Time deposits of SIOO,OOO or more
a. Time certificates of deposit in
denominations of SIOO,OOO or more 16,157,000
b. Other time deposits in amounts of SIOO,OOO
or more 682,000
I, C. B. Wynne, Vice President & Secretary, of the above
named bank, do solemnly swear that this report of con
dition is true and correct, to the best of my knowledge and
belief.
Correct—Attest: (s) C. B. Wynne
T. T. Blakely
Frank Jolly Directors.
J. C. Owen, Jr.
State of Georgia, County of Spalding, ss:
Sworn to and subscribed before me this 11th day of July,
1977, and I hereby certify that I am not an officer or
director of this bank.
My commission expires November 3rd, 1979.
(s)Elaine C. Greene,
{ ’ Notary Public.
Palmer had some awfully tough
breaks the first half."
The New York Yankees stum
bled in the race, losing to Kan
sas City 7-4. In other AL games
Friday, Texas swept a double
header from Cleveland, 8-3 and
8-1, Toronto outlasted Detroit 8-
6 in 13 innings, Seattle defeated
California 6-2 and Oakland
downed Minnesota 8-7 in 11 in
nings.
Andres Mora batted in two
runs and scored another to pace
Baltimore to its 13th victory in
the Orioles’ last 15 games. Mike
Flanagan gave up 11 hits but
went to distance for the fifth
straight time to pick up the
victory.
Royals 7, Yankees 4
A club-record three doubles
by A1 Cowens and Frank
White’s three-run homer pow
ered Kansas City over New
York.
“I think he was waiting for
it,” losing pitcher Ron Guidry
said of the pitch White slammed
over the left field wall to spark a
five-run inning. “I think he was
guessing.”
White agreed. “I was guess
ing an inside fastball and that’s
exactly where he threw it.”
White’s homer ran his RBI
total in the past three games to
eight.
White Sox 9, Red Sox 7
Lamar Johnson came off the
bench with the bases loaded in
the fourth inning and slammed
a triple to cap a six-run rally
and lead Chicago over Boston.
Johnson later singled in a run
as 41,597 watched the game, the
White Sox’ largest crowd of the
season.
Down 7-0, the Red Sox came
back with Carl Yastrzemski’s
18th home run of the season the
big blow.
Mariners 6, Angels 2
Lee Stanton came back to
haunt his former teammates,
driving in four runs with a pair
of home runs to give Seattle a
victory over California. Stan
ton, who had only two home
runs and 25 runs batted in while
hitting .190 for the Angels last
season, has blasted 13 homers
with 45 RBI and a .276 average
for Seattle this year.
Rangers 8-8, Indians 3-1
Texas swept a doubleheader
from Cleveland as Juan Ben-
Taygan withstands
heat at Callaway
PINE MOUNTAIN, Ga. (AP)
— Ferdi Taygan of Framing
ham, Mass., withstood 98-de
gree temperatures Friday and
advanced to today’s semifinal
round of the Callaway Gardens
Open tennis championship after
N 0.3 seed Mike Fishbach de
faulted.
Fishbach, of Great Neck,
N.Y., took the first set from
Taygan, 6-4, but tired in the heat
Match
NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) -
Sweden’s Bjorn Borg, winner of
the Wimbledon singles title the
past two years, and Australia’s
John Newcombe will be squar
ing off here July 26 in a chal
lenge match.
A spokesman for Saab-Scania
of America Inc. said Friday the
European automobile company
would sponsor the match at the
International Tennis Hall of
Fame in Newport Casino.
Jonas C. Kjellberg of Saab
tied the tennis match to the
America’s Cup yacht races
which include two entries from
Australia, Gretel II and Aus
tralia, and one from Sweden,
Sverige.
CATFISH
CABIN
Highway 16 East
Jackson Road
Griffin, Ga.
228-7620
All You Can Eat
Friday Night
FRIEP SHRIMP
(Reg. $4.95)
$3»5
Saturday Night
BOILED SHRIMP
Reg. $5.95
$395
Monday Night
FROG LEGS
(Reg. 2 Prs. $4.25)
$395
Wednesday Night
FLOUNDER
Reg. $3.50
$ 2 95
Sunday
Sunday Luncheon
(l-plate servings)
$ 2 50
(Drinks Extra)
Hours: Mon.-Sat. 5-10 P.M.
Sunday 12 Noon • 10 P.M.
iquez and Jim Sundberg batted
in two runs each in the opener
and Toby Harrah smashed a
pair of two-run home runs in the
nightcap.
A’s 8, Twins 7, 11 innings
A single by designated hitter
Matt Alexander through Min
nesota’s five-infielder defense
lifted Oakland to an 11-inning
victory over Minnesota.
Mitchell Page led off the in
ning with a walk, stole second
and went to third on a throwing
error by catcher Butch Wyne
gar. One out later, after Twins
Manager Gene Mauch brought
in left fielder Lyman Bostock as
an extra infielder, Alexander
bounced his single through the
tight defense to end the game.
BlueJaysß,Tigers6,l3inniiigs
A two-out, two-run homer by
Bob Bailor gave Toronto a 13-
inning victory over Detroit. It
was the Blue Jays’ first extra
inning victory at Exhibition
Stadium.
Bailor also had a two-run
single in the fifth inning as re
liever Pete Vuckovich, 5-7,
picked up the victory after en
tering the game in the seventh
inning. Milt May homered for
the Tigers.
and dropped the second set 2-6
before defaulting.
In other quarter-final games,
top seed Pat DuPre of San
Diego, Calif., defeated Chris
Dunk of Santa Anna, Calif., 6-2,
6-3; Roger Guedes of Bauru,
Brazil, beat John Antonis of
Nassau 2-6,7-6,6-3; and Re jean
Geno of Quebec rallied to oust
Charles Strole of El Cajon, Ca
lif., 0-6, 6-3, 6-0.
In doubles play, Greg Haider
of Toronto and Guillermo Oro
pez of Montclair, N.J., defeated
Speedy Gilstrap of Columbus,
Ga., and Larry Schnell of At
lanta 3-6, 7-6, 6-4; Taygan and
Jai DiLouie of Dallas, Tex.,
downed Atlanta’s John Corse
and Bill Rogers 5-7, 6-1, 6-2;
Guedes and Bruce Foxworth of
St. Louis, Mo., defeated George
Glowa of Chicago and Pete
Lawler of New Haven, Conn., 6-
1,6-1; and DuPre and Fishbach
beat Dunk and Chris Mayotte of
Springfield, Mass., 6-3, 4-6, 6-1.
Finals in the tournament, a
stop on the $215,000 Challengers
Circuit, are to be held Sunday.
Sports roundup
Golf
SUTTON, Mass. — Jack Nicklaus shot a 67 to share the
lead with Ray Folyd and Rod Curl in the second round of
the $250,000 Pleasant Valley Golf Classic.
Floyd shot a 68 while Rod Curl fired a 66 as all three
were tied at 135—seven-underpar.
One shot in back of the leaders were rookie Morris
Hatalsky and John Lister.
DUBLIN, Ohio — JoAnne Camer, using a unique put
ting warmup, rode 10 one-putt greens to her best round of
the year, a six-under-par 66, and grabbed the first-round
lead in the SBO,OOO Ladies Professional Golf Association
tournament.
Amy Alcott, 1975 LPGA rookie-of-the-year, birdied
three of the last four holes and took second place with a 67.
Betty Burfsindt and Dot Germain matched 68s to share
third.
MILWAUKEE - Jerry Vidovic of Blue Island, HI., and
Jeff Kern of Tucson, Ariz., 20-year-old collegians
majoring in business, survived near 90-degree heat and
won two matches apiece, gaining the 36-hole final of the U.
S. Public Links Golf Tournament.
Diving
BOLZANO, Italy — American men and women divers
dominated the first day of events in international diving
competition with the United States women taking the first
three spots in the springboard.
Kent Vosler of Eaton, Ohio won the men’s platform
event with 530.16 points, compared to 526.25 for runner-up
Nikolay Michailin of the Soviet Union and 525.84 for third
place finisher Carlos Giron of Mexico.
In the women’s springboard, Cynthia Mclngvale of
Dallas won with 427.74 points, followed by Melissa Briley
of San Antonio, Tex., 408.78, and Christine Look of Fort
Worth, Tex., 408.27.
Tennis
KITZBUEHEL, Austria — Top-seeded Guillermo Vilas
of Argentina beat sixth-seeded Buster Mottram of Britain
6-4, 6-1 to reach the semifinals of the $75,000 Head Cup
Tennis Tournament.
Vilas will face Zeljko Franulovic of Yugoslavia in the
semifinals.
CINCINNATI — Wimbledon sensation John McEnroe
upset fifth-seeded Phil Dent and advanced to the quarter
finals of the SIOO,OOO Western Tennis Championships.
★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★
SPORTS
★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★
HLr *
Ifyf & .
"4- **v
jUs? * *'
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SUTTON, Mass.—Jack Nicldaus putts on the 14th green of
the Pleasant Valley Country Club course in Sutton during
the second round of the Pleasant Valley Classic golf
tourney. The ball dropped for a birdie, one of the three
deuces that Nicklaus made on par-3 holes in the round.
Nicklaus, Ray Floyd and Rod Curl ended the day in a three
way tie for first place. (AP)
Challengers put
heat on Nicklaus
By 808 GREEN
AP Golf Writer
SUTTON, Mass. (AP) — Rod
Curl had just finished his round,
with a seven-under-par total,
and watched in glee as a bogey
went up opposite Jack Nicklaus’
name.
That change lifted the 5-foot-5
Curl into a He for the lead with
Nicklaus ana Ray Floyd in Fri
day’s second round of the $250,-
000 Pleasant Valley Golf Clas
sic.
“That’s good,” he said, and
grinned. “Jack needs some
competition. Maybe I’ll put
some heat on him.”
He laughed.
“There’s no way you can put
heat on that guy,” Curl contin
ued. “I’m playing good right
now, feel good about my swing.
I have confidence in it, know
I’m going to hit it good.
“Jack’s like that all the time,
every tournament.”
Even tournaments he doesn’t
want to play, on courses he
doesn’t like.
Nicklaus, playing just a week
after his classic duel with Tom
Watson in the British Open, re
vived his interest with a four
under-par 67, tying with Curl
and Floyd at 135, on the 7,191-
yard Pleasant Valley Country
Club course.
“I never like to play the week
after a major championship,”
Nicklaus said. “You try to build
yourself to peak for the majors,
and then there’s a letdown. It’s
natural and normal. I don’t like
to play when I’m in a let-down. I
only want to play when I’m
building to a peak.
“It’s only fair to the sponsors
and to the fans than pay to coxe
out, for me to feel I can give my
best.
“Now that I’ve made a few
birdies, I’ll be okay. It will be no
problem keeping my interest
up.”
Floyd shot a second-round 68
in the hot, humid, hazy weather
and Curl, still recovering from
wrist surgery, had a 66.
New Zealand’s John Lister
and rookies Morris Hatalsky
and Don Pooley were one shot
back at 136. Pooley birdied his
last hole for a 67, Lister also had
a 67, and Hatalsky, using a
putter he found at a friend’s
home during the U.S. Open,
needed only 22 strokes on the
huge greens for a 65, the best
round of the day.
South African Gary Player
and George Cadle, each with a
67, were at 137. Tom Weiskopf
and Watson, winner of both the
British Open and the Masters,
each had 71-139. U.S. Open
champion Hubert Green failed
to qualify for the final two
rounds at 74—146.
Your MI -*
coodj^;
NeigHßor
DICK HYATT
523 East Taylor St.
Phone 227-2188
See him lor ail your family
insurance needs.
UroM
Good Hoighbor, A3L
Ami Form &&
b Thorn
State FarmlfflWrance Companies
Horn* Offices: Bloomington. Illinois ,
Here is the weekly rundown on fishing conditions
around the state as prepared by the Georgia Game and
Fish Commission of the state Department of Natural
Resources and The Associated Press.
NORTH GEORGIA
ALLATOONA: Normal, clear. Excellent for bream and
catfish; good for crapple at night and early in morning;
good for bass at night using plastic worms; good for white
bass.
BLUE RIDGE: Normal, clear. Good for bass and pike.
CARTERS: Normal, clear. Fair for bream; slow for
others.
CHATUGE: Down, clear. Good for catfish and bream;
fair for crappie at night; catching a few white bass; slow
for smallmouth bdss and largemouth bass.
HARTWELL: Normal, clear. Catching a few crappie
and catfish.
LANIER: Normal, clear. Good for crappie; good for
black bass at night.
MIDDLE GEORGIA
BARTLETTS FERRY: Normal, clear. Fair for bass;
poor for others.
GOAT ROCK: Normal, clear. Excellent for bream; fair
for bass and catfish; poor for others.
CLARK HILL: Down, clear. Fair to good for crappie at
20 ft.; slow for bass; good for bream and catfish; white
bass and hybrid bass schooling under bridges at night.
HIGH FALLS: Normal, clear. Poor for all species.
JACKSON: Above normal, clear. Slow for crappie;
good for bream and catfish; fair for bass late afternoon
and early in morning.
OLIVER: Normal, clear. Fair for bream, catfish and
bass; poor for others.
SINCLAIR: Normal, clear. Good for crappie at night
using minnows; good for bass using plastic worms;
catching a few striped bass.
TOBESOFKEE: Normal, clear. Good for bass late
afternoon and early in morning using ring worms; slow
for others.
WEST POINT: Low, clear. Fair for crappie; poor for
others.
BASEBALL STANDINGS^
By The Associated Press
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East
..W...L...Pct....G8
Chicago 52 34 .605 —
Phila 51 37 .580 2
Pitts 49 40 .551 4%
St. Louis 47 43 .522 7
Montreal 40 47 .460 12 Vz
N Yor
k 35 53 .398 18
West
Los Ang 57 33 .633 —
Cinci 48 39 .552 7V4
S Fran 42 50 .457 16
Houston 41 50 .451 16V4
S Diego 40 53 .430 18^
Atlanta 33 56 .371 23%
Picnic With
COLONEL SANDERS’ RECIPE
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Keep Mom & Pop out of the kitchen....lt’s too hot!
With Your
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a BUCKET mmjm
KENTUCKY FRIED uFT
CHICKEN
get a
FREE FRISBEE
BUCKET [BARREL
15 pieces of 18 pieces of
KFC with the KFC with the
Trimmings Trimmings
Feeds 5-6 Feeds 7-8
$0" SJQ49
MONTH OF JULY SPECIALS
(As long as supply lasts)
Kentucky
Fried Chicken.
OF GRIFFIN
131 East Solomon St 1477 West Mclntosh Road
Phone 227-3678 Phone 228-2432
Fishing
report
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East
..W L. Pet. GB
Balt 52 38 .578 —
Boston 50 37 .575 %
N York 50 40 .556 2
Cleve 40 46 .465 10
Milwkee 40 48 .455 11
Detroit 39 49 .443 12
Toronto 33 56 .371 18%
West
Chicago 53 35 .602 —
K.C. 49 38 .563 3%
Minn 48 41 .539 5%
Texas 45 43 .511 8
Calif 41 45 .477 11
Oakland 38 49 .437 14%
Seattle 40 53 .430 15%