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Singers and Songs
ACROSS
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19 Racer
31 In the year of
(Latin)
!3 Depot (ab.)
24 Stripling
?7 Minister to
29 Llfetlmea
32 Nullifies
34 Grumble
36 Arid region
37Thinge done to be
38 ^Negrlto^^ Philippine
4 5 6 1 e To ii
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25 26 P ■ST™
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‘‘It’* been taken care of!”
GRIFFIN
DAILY NEWS
Quimby Melton Cary Reeves, General Manager Quimby Melton, Jr.
Publisher Bill Knight, Executive Editor Editor
Vail Leased Wire Service UPL Full NEA. Address All M.n (Subscription Published Daily Except Sunday, Second Class
Change of Address form 3579) to P. O. Box 135, E. Solomon St., Griffin, Ga, Postage Paid at Griffin, Ga. — Single Copy 5c
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BO Prevarication
57 Anatomical
network
88 Feminine
89 appellation Finale
80 The dill
•1 Surgeonflah
DOWN
1 Rounders
2 3 Auditory Afro Asian finch
4 Musical drama
5 Rodent
6 Preyer
7 ••-- the
Answer to Previous Rustle
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A R I B L A X
5 I D U E
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6 Si l IP
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Haver iNtelElb II
music”
8 Anglo-Saxon
theowi
9 Dressing a
wound
10 Trieste wins
measures
11 Tavern drink
18 Core
20 Storehouse
22 Arboreal homes
24Tyndareus’ 25Toward wife
the
sheltered side
26 Contorted
28 Stage play
“Quote”
By United Press International
WASHINGTON —AFL-CIO
President George Meany, com
menting on the arrest of Union
chief Mike Quill during the New
York transit strike:
“I have a feeling the Transit
Workers' Union feel# it’s some
advantage to have Mike in
Jail.”
•w
WASHINGTON Rep.
Charlse Weltner, D-Ga., assess
ing the violence committed by
the White Knights, a Mississip
pi Ku Klux Klan group:
"They’re the meanest bunch
yet and they make the least
effort to hide their readiness to
do violence.”
Almanac
For
Today
By United Press International
Today Is Thursday, Jan. 13,
the 13th day of 1966 with 382 to
follow.
The moon is in its last
quarter.
No morning star.
The evening stars are Venus,
Mars, Jupiter and Saturn.
American author Horatio
Alger was born on this day in
1834.
On this day in history:
In 1733, James Oglethorpe
and some 130 British colonists
arrived at Charleston, S.C.,
with a charter to form a
settlement which is now
Georgia.
In 1864, American songwriter
Stephen Foster died in New
York City.
In 1877, a literary critic for
the New York Times said Mark
Twain’s “Tom Sawyer” was
something "unnecessarily sinis
ter.”
In 1963, President Sylvanus
Olympio of the west African
nation of Togo was assassinat
ed.
Thought For Today
A thought for the day—Mark
Twain said: “Work consists of
whatever a body is obliged to
do . . . play consists of
whatever a body is not obliged
to do.”
Within (comb,
form)
Chslr
College Female officials
adviser
Embellished
Dtsdem
Ant
Siam (cards)
Ireland
48 Red deer fobs.)
50 Opera by Verd
American
educator
Protuberance
55 Wager
GRIFFIN DAILY NEWS
Subscription Prices
Delivered by Special Auto
One Year $15.60
Delivered by carrier: One
year $13J)1, six months $7.21,
three months $3.87, one
month $1.34, one week 30
cents. By mail, except within
30 miles of Griffin, rates are
same as by carrier. By mail
within SO miles of Griffin:
One year $10.82, six months
$6.0$, three months $3.09. one
month $ 1 . 1 $ (tax Included.)
EDITORIALS K
I
This Week*s Editorial
By A Woman Especially For Women
Extremes II In
Fashion Shocking
American women go to extremes in fashion. They’re
either overdressed in furs, hair styles and make-up or
sloppy in slacks, blouses and hair curlers.
That is how one foreign visitor, with a trained eye for
fashion, Viviane Greymour, fashion editor of the French
newspaper “Le Figaro,” saw the American woman when
she recently toured the major American cities.
Though it isn’t a very flattering picture, who can deny
it’s a true one?
We American women go all out when we dress for a
special place or a special occasion. Nothing is too much
trouble then—elaborate hairdos, careful and time-con
suming make-up, clothes that have taken hours or even
days of shopping to select. At such times we are crushed
if the slightest thing spoils the vision of perfection we
are trying to achieve.
But the rest of the time it’s a different story. If we are
making a quick run to a shopping center, or to school to
pick up Junior, or to the dentist’s office, we often don’t
bother about how we look.
Anything will do most of the time. Whatever we have
on around home — shorts, slacks, old tennis shoes, hair
curlers, anything at all—is good enough to leave home in
during the daytime if we are just out to do a few errands,
not heading for a party or a meeting.
The fact that we will probably see more people, and be
seen by more, as we rush around doing errands than we
ever see at the parties we dress so carefully for, doesn’t
enter our curler-covered heads.
Until, of course, someone such as the fashion editor
from France speaks out in shocked surprise at how we
go from one extreme to the other, from looking as metic
ulously turned out as department store mannequins to
looking as if we had never owned a mirror. — R. M.
New World For
Some Adults
Some adult* in Griffin and surrounding areas have dis
covered a new world, thanks to the adult classes being
taught here. They have learned to read.
Some of the adults who had been denied the oportunity
of learning to read and write even their own names have
now mastered the basic literacy skills.
Administrators and teachers in the school say that it
is almost impossible to describe the satisfaction some of
the people have gained from learning this basic need.
Now they are moving ahead to other areas in hopes of
getting a fundamental education that will carry them
through this complex world of automation and space ex
ploration.
The adult educational program is answering a real need
in the community.
It is developing and improving our most important
resource: the human personality.
The Griffin program has made such outstanding prog
ress that it will serve at a pilot school in one area of adult
education.
Teachers and administrators are to be commended for
their success in this undertaking and the students deserve
extra special recognition for putting out the extra effort
to pull themselves up by their own bootstraps, even in
the later stages of life.
♦ Guest Editorial ♦
Peach Flakes To
Help Industry
THOMASTON TIMES
They’re still working on the peach.
Now peach flakes are being added to the peach puree
base for drinks as new ways to market peaches.
New products will be described at a conference on
peach processing and utilization to be held at the Georgia
Experiment Station in Griffin later this month.
Conferees will hear about a new promising experiment
in the production of peach flakes by the drum-drying of
peach puree. This will provide an improved dried fruit
in peaches.
The U. S. Departments of Agriculture and Commerce
continue to work to find ways to better market peaches
which, tree-ripened and at the peak of flavor, are too
ripe to withstand handling and shipping for the fresh
market.
In looking over some old issues of The Thomaston
Times we came across a startling comparison for Upson
county in 1930 — one million peach trees and $50,000
weekly industrial payroll. The situation has reversed and
we hope that while the industrial trend continues upward
there will be more promise for a comeback for the peach
industry in Upson county.
Peach flakes and puree may just be part of the answer.
u II
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CjjiMb- © 1966 ky NEA, Inc.
\
“Things COULD be worge. You could be mayor of
New York!”
MY
ANSWER
Despondent
. I lost my husband about sis
months ago, and I have been
trying to throw it eff, but I be
come more despondent every
day. It has even begun to affect
my disposition. I don’t want to
see anyone, or he around any
one. Can you make a suggestion
to help me? E.S.
»
When during World War L
Sir Harry Lauder, the great
Scottish comedian, heard that
hts son had been killed in Fran
ce, he said; “In a time like this
there are only three courses
open to a man. He may give
way to despair, sour upon the
world, and become a grouch.
He may endeavor to drown his
sorrow in drink or by a life of
waywardness and wickedness,
or he may turn to God.”
God’s arms are strong enough
for all the distressed people in
the world to lean upon. Peter,
who knew quite a lot of adver
sity, but had found the answer
to suffering, said, “Casting all
your care upon Him, for He
careth for you.”
Loneliness is a painful thing,
and I can well understand the
keen loss you feel for your hus
band. But you will only com
pound your loneliness and angu
ish if you withdraw from God,
and those who love you. Instead
of being introspective, make an
effort to find someone near you
who is suffering from loneliness
or bereavement. —and try to
cheer them up by pointing them
to Him who has promised to
share our burdens. It is always
more healing to help others,
than to look at the magnitude of
our own problems. That is why
the Bible says; “Bear ye one an
other’s burdens.” This will not
only be a blessing to others,
but it has curative powers for
own hurts.
*.pnmj£R ■rot Ok Upper v op at Room© rtoaH 1
Quicken me, O Lord, accord
ing unto thy word. (Psalm 119:
107)
PRAYER: O God, who hast gi
ven us the Bible as a place to
meet Thee, grant that, through
the inspiration of the Holy Spir
it, we may be grasped by its
message. Sharpen our minds,
cleanse our hearts, and bless the
word of our hands. In the name
of Jesus Christ, the Word made
flesh. Amen.
Try
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Fresco is a method of
paintihg on freshly applied,
wet-lime-plaster made walls with
colors by grinding dry
powder The pigments in pure and
water. colors dry
set with the plaster and
become the wall. a permanent part the
of important Among of
most series
frescoes ed by Michelangelo were those paint- the
on
ceiling of the Sistine Chap
el in the Vatican. It too*
four and a half years to
complete.
Thursday, Jan. 13, 1966
Television
Thursday Night
2 5 11
:00 Newsroom Movie Marshall
:15 99 Dillon
-.30 Huntley » Sugarfoot
•45 Brinkley 99 99
:00 Wells Panorama 99
tl5 Fargo News „
:30 Daniel Munsters Batman
45 Boone H II
:
9 a 5 Gilligan’s Gidget
r.«n in o Laredo 5 Island My Three Double 99
Y. in H Sons Life
:00 9$ Movie Bewitched
:15 99 »» 99
:30 Mona 99 Peyton
; 45 McCluskey 99 Place
:00 Roan 99 Long Hot
:15 Martin 99 Summer
’30 s 99 99
:45 s 99 99
:00 Newsroom Panorama Night Watch
:15 99 99 99
30 Johnny Movie Movie
AS Carson 99 99
ro t 99 99
t 99 99
t 99 99
t 99 99
\ Friday Morning
rOO Daily Word
>15 Eternal L’gt Semester
.30 99 99
.45 Town, C*ntry This Town
6 womo Today New*
- 99 99
w 99 Cartoon
& 99 Clubhouse
tnotno 99 Captain Cartoon
99 Kangaroo Carnival
99 99 :
99 99 *
K)0 Today in McCoys Movie
•15 Georgia »» 99
:30 PDQ — Andy :
:45 Game 99 :
KK) Eye Guess — Dick 99
:15 99 Van Dyke 99
30 Concentration Mike Selected
:45 99 Douglas Short S’Jects
K)0 Morning 99 Supermarket
:15 Star 99 Sweep
30 Paradise 99 Dating
:45 Bay Weather Game
Friday Afternoon
News Love Of Donna
Movie Life Reed
99 Search Father
99 Guiding L’gt Knows Best
1 99 Bachelor Ben
99 Father Casey
»» As The 99
99 World Turns 99
MM) Bay* Of Password — Nurses
:15 Our Lives Game 99
30 Doctors House Time for U 8
:45 99 Party 99
KK) Another To Tell General
:15 World The Truth Hospital
:30 You Don't Edge Of Young
:45 Say! Night Married*
4 :00 Match Secret Never Too
:15 Game Storm Young
30 Popeye Lloyd Where The
•45 Club Thaxton Action
KK) 99 Leave It
:15 99 To Beaver
30 Cartoon Movie 99
:45 Cutups 99 News
Griffin Daily New
4