Griffin daily news. (Griffin, Ga.) 1924-current, July 18, 1977, Image 1
Water is key to Orchard Hill BKragf&r > wHBI W •- Jack Grubbs.. .“Upgrade standards.” Rep. Flynt won’t quit as chairman WASHINGTON (AP) - Common Cause wants Rep. John Flynt, D-Ga., to be removed as chairman of the House ethics committee, saying he is in capable of leading the panel’s in vestigation into alleged South Korean influence-buying in Congress. But Flynt declares he will not quit. “I’m 62 years old and have never run from a fight. I don’t intend to tuck my tail and run now,” he was quoted as saying. In a telegram to all Democratic House members, David Cohen, president of the selfstyled citizen’s lobby, said of Flynt: “His performance in the Korean investigation has again demonstrated he is totally incapable of carrying out this crucial responsibility. “Rep. Flynt’s removal is absolutely essential if the House of Represen tatives is to have credibility in the country.” Cohen’s remarks on Sunday followed the resignation of Philip A. Lacovara, chief counsel of the committee’s in vestigation into reports that the South Korean government sought to acquire influence in Congress through gifts of money and favors to some lawmakers. Lacovara had complained that the slow pace of the investigation had hampered his work. Capt. Bligh may lose again LONDON (AP) - Capt. William Bligh, who lost his ship in one of history’s most notorious mutinies, may now lose his final resting place to a parking lot. The commissioners who oversee the finances of the Church of England have decided that London’s Church of St. Mary’s, whose churchyard holds the grave of the hapless commander of the HMS Bounty, should be torn down and the site used for another purpose. A campaign has been mounted to save the church. The preservationists A day at The White House. See Page 3 GRIFFIN DAI LY NEWS Daily Since 1872 Water apparently will be one of the keys to future residential and industrial development of Orchard Hill and city councilman Jack Grubbs does not see any prospects of the city’s getting county water in the near future. “We are having to upgrade the system to meet federal standards,” Grubbs said. Grubbs, who is known as the city’s one-man chamber of commerce, is hoping the city will have a drug store and a doctor in the near future. He is hoping to get a doctor to locate in the city, but if that is not possible, have one in office there on a part-time basis. Orchard Hill is known for its grain elevators. They were built many years ago to serve the Swint Feed and Seed Company and were believed to have been the largest of their kind east of the Mississippi River at the time of con struction. The elevators can be seen a long way from the city. The city has a couple of industries, a lumber company and a wood treatment plant. Grubbs said there is plenty of space for industries to locate in the city, but he has not heard of any recent prospects. Orchard Hill’s government was in limbo for several years before being rejuvenated. The city has three councilmen, Grubbs, Hilton Harris and Julian Jones. Each is elected to a three year term with one being elected each year. Harris is serving as mayor this year. Each councilman serves his third year as mayor. Recently the city changed the elec tion date from December to coincide with the the general election date in November. The city has a fire truck which is parked at the home of Julian Jones to prevent vandalism, Grubbs said. The city recently purchased a building that will be renovated to serve as a fire station. When the renovation is com plete, the fire truck will be parked there. Grubbs who serves as the city’s postmaster, also is the operator of a grocery business and has developed a small shopping facility which he hopes to expand. He also owns the city water system. He said the number of boxholders at the city post office has increased in recent years and reflects a slow, but steady growth of the area. Grubbs said many of the people moving to the area are coming from Griffin, Atlanta and elsewhere. “I see new faces about town all the time,” he said. “Many people interested in the Orchard Hill area ask about the school system. We do not have one in Orchard Hill now, but I believe we will have one in the not too distant future,” he said. Grubbs said 2 subdivisions have been developed in the area. He said there are plenty of home sites in the Orchard Hill area. “I believe we are growing and I believe we will continue to grow. We are not expecting a boom. We wouldn’t be able to provide the services if we did have one (boom),” Grubbs said. claim the commissioners plan to convert the site into a parking lot for tourist buses, but a spokesman for the church commissioners said nothing has been decided yet. St. Mary’s, closed for the past five years, sits on the right bank of the Thames River just across the road from the embankment where thousands of summer tourists gaze at the Houses of Parliament across the river. Lam beth Palace, official London residence of the Archbishop of Canterbury, ad joins the church. If the site is cleared, Bligh’s bones Griffin, Ga., 30223, Monday Afternoon, July 18,1977 probably would be reburied in con secrated ground elsewhere, the com missioners say. “How they can think of pulling down such a historic church is amazing,” said Rosemary Nicholson, a London housewife who launched the fight to save St. Mary’s. “I was horrified when I first saw the church. Half the roof had fallen in and the churchyard was overgrown and full of trash. Tramps and alcoholics were sleeping there and empty milk bottles littered the porch — all next door to the archbishop’s palace,” she said. HKvfi. WBf »y SgWL wIV - I B* KF \ fl u ** I ’■r.j < ■ ’■"'EE.E \ sr't-■ ■ MB I■■ f L,a I I ebS \ KBI ■ \ J ■k I B 111 I ■ V K I \ ■b B 111 4 - IB t 11 I 1 | Inri I di Bj. wJwMBmB /Lliß Kiwanis Club to honor 2 men The Griffin Kiwanis Club will honor an Eagle Scout and a Pike County deputy this week for getting a man out of a burning house. Eagle Scout William T. Scott IV and Deputy Donald Buffing ton will receive certificates. They rescued Gary Cleveland on the night of June 11 from a house fire at 515 South Hill street. The Country Parson by Frank Clark “The best part about owing money is that you can be sure there’s always somebody eager to hear from you.” Grain elevators well known landmark at Orchard Hill. Divers going after Civil War ‘capsule’ HATTERAS, N.C. (AP) - The ironclad Monitor, whose sea victory over its Confederate counterpart Merrimack foreshadowed modern battleships and submarines, is now one of the Civil War’s “most valuable time capsules” as it lies 220 feet deep in the Atlantic Ocean. Men soon will set foot on the Monitor’s decks for the first time in more than 114 years, hoping eventually to restore the vessel to how it appeared when commissioned in 1862. Navigational equipment and buoys were to be set today in the Atlantic, 16 miles east of Cape Hatteras. “It’s a tremendously exciting project, even though we’re a long way from bringing the ship up,” says John Newton, director of the Monitor Research and Recovery Foundation in Beaufort, N.C. The current expedition, scheduled to last three weeks, is to determine exactly what it will take to surface the ship that Newton believes can be re stored. The Monitor helped revolutionize naval warfare with its ironclad body and revolving gun turret. It was lost in a storm Dec. 31, 1862, less than a year People ••• and things Housewife who’s been purchasing gas from self service station driving car with oil at dangerously low level and 2 almost flat tires. Woman driving to downtown store where she can save 40 cents on a pur chase, returning to auto to find 50-cent parking ticket on windshield. Secretary gladly working late because she hated to go home to house without airconditioning. Vol. 105 No. 168 after it was commissioned. Besides being the model from which dozens of 19th century fighting ships were copied, the Monitor is best remembered for its battle with the confederate ironclad Virginia, which had been constructed from the remains of the scuttled union frigate Merrimack. The union navy always thought of it as the Merrimack. The Monitor outgunned the Merrimack in their battle of March 9, 1862, one day after the confederate vessel had sunk one union ship and badly damaged another. The Merrimack managed to slip away from the Monitor, but it no longer was battle worthy. Next time he goes fishing, he’ll wear iron shoes, iron buttons AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) - The next time Johnny Jackson goes fishing, he says he’ll wear “iron shoes with iron bottoms.” He wasn’t wearing shoes when he stepped on a rusty nail while on a fishing trip last March. That led to a three-month life-and-death struggle with tetanus. The 14-year-old boy was lucky—he won. More than half the victims of tetanus die, many of them within the first few weeks. The Homerville, Ga., youth never had been immunized against tetanus, although his family thought he had. Doctors say the disease can be prevented by immunization. But it hasn’t disappeared, despite the low number of cases. Only 289 cases were reported in the United States in 1974, and of those, 179 died. Jackson was given a tetanus toxoid shot when he stepped on the nail, but the next day his foot began to swell and his legs stiffened. A few days later he Boy wins tetanus fight Weather FORECAST FOR GRIFFIN AREA — Continued warm and humid through Tuesday with chance of afternoon or evening thundershowers. Low tonight near 70, high Tuesday low 90s. LOCAL WEATHER — Low this morning at the Spalding Forestry unit 66, high Sunday 94. The crew of the Merrimack beached and burned the vessel at Hampton Roads, Va., on May 11, 1862. The fire ignited some gunpowder and the Merri mack was blown to bits, pieces of which were saved as Civil War souvenirs. Siamese twins to be buried TOCCOA, Ga. (AP) — Siamese twin brothers, joined at the chest when they were born in Albany Wednesday, died Sunday in Henrietta Egleston Hospital in Atlanta. The bodies were taken to a funeral home in Toccoa, near their mother’s home town. had trouble chewing. At the height of the disease, he was wracked by spasms and convulsions. “He was so sensitive that he’d have a convulsion if someone touched him or if he heard a loud noise,” said Dr. John Greene, one of the pediatricians who took care of him at Talmadge Memorial Hospital in Augusta. His body finally became so rigid that the doctors gave him curare, a drug best known for its use by South American Indians in poison darts. It totally paralyzed him, allowing his stiff muscles to relax but requiring a respirator to help him breath. The paralysis lasted six weeks. “He was a very sick boy. If you make it past the first few weeks, if you don’t die from the spasms you may die from a lung infection,” Dr. Greene said. Today, Jackson is learning to feed himself again and to do things on his own. And he’s receiving a series of tetanus shots to make sure he doesn’t get the disease again.