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you happen to be a bachelor?”
GRIFFIN
DAILY NEWS
Quimby Melton Cary Reeves, General Manager Quimby Melton, Jr.
Publisher Bill Knight, Executive Editor Editor
F«n Leased Wire Service UPL Full NBA. Address All MaB (Subscription Published Daily Except Sunday, Second Clan
Change of Address form 3579) to P. O. Box 135, E. Solomon St., Griffin, Ga. Vootago Paid at Griffin, Ga. Single Copy So.
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27 Sea eagle
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47 Native of
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48 Eyes (Scot.)
51 Stranger (combi
form)
“Quote”
By United Press International
WASHINGTON _ President
Johnson, indicating that he will
ask Congress for additional
taxes if prosecution of the war
in Southeast Asia demands it:
“It the necessities of Viet
Nam require it, I will not
hesitate to return to the
Congress for additional appro
priations and additional rev
enues."
★
TOKYO —The Communist
New China News Agency,
charging the U.S. with opening
additional fronts of aggression
in Southeast Asia:
"The U.S. is stepping up its
military moves against Laos
and Cambodia and its war
preparations in Thailand in
active preparation for spread
ing its war in Viet Nam to the
whole of Indochina.”
Almanac
For
Today
Today 1* Friday, Jan. 14, the
14th day of 1966 with 351 to
follow.
The moon is approaching the
new stage.
No morning stars.
The evening stars are Venus,
Mars, Jupiter and Saturn.
Philippine statesman Carlos
Romulo was bom on this day in
1899.
On this day in history:
In 1914, Henry Ford began
making automobiles by the
assembly line method.
In 1943, President Roosevelt
and British Prime Minister
Winston Churchill began a 10
day meeting in Morocco to plan
allied offensives aimed as the
“unconditional surrender" of
the Axis powers.
In 1959, the firing squads of
Cuban Premier Castro executed
220 persons in two weeks.
In 1964, more than 140
persons died before a driving
snowstorm finally ended in the
East.
Thought For Today
A thought for the day—
Winston Churchill; "The only
guide to a man is his
conscience ... the only shield
to his memory is the rectitude
and sincerity of hts actions."
GRIFFIN DAILY NEWS
Subscription Prices
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Delivered by carrier: One
year $13.91, six months $7.31,
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 30 miles of Griffin:
One year $19.82, six months
$6.08, three months $3.09. one
month $1.13 (tax Included.)
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EDITORIAL C/T
i
* 4- THIS WEEK’S SPORTS EDITORIAL 4- *
Board Hopes To
Re-Light Gym II
The Griffin High Field House will be lighted properly
before next basketball season.
That's the latest word from the Griffin-Spalding Board
of Education.
The board voted last year to re-light the gym “if
money is available.”
The monty wasn’t available. The board again has taken
up the matter and proposes to do the job before next
season.
When Griffin played its first game three lights over
the court were out. Even with all the lights burning, the
gym has only about 50 percent of proper lighting.
Board members, several of whom are avid basketball
fans, realize the gym is poorly lighted and are trying to
do something about it.
Re-lighting isn’t just a matter of screwing in a few
bulbs or repairing frayed wiring.
A complete re-wiring, re-arranging of fixtures and in
side painting are needed to do the lighting job right.
This will take several thousand dollars and the Board
of Education hopes to come up with the money before
next season.
Threats To Dams
Against Inflation
It’s beginning to get monotonous.
In recent months first the aluminum industry raised the
ugly specter of a price increase, which was quickly banish
ed by the white knights of the ever-alert administration.
Then copper did the same, and government pressure was
again brought to bear.
Now it is the steel industry which has entered the
fray.
It would seem to a weary public that, in these days of
the “new economics,” when Uncle Sam is recognized as
both a partner and shareholder as well as referee in the
economic life of the country, these unilateral advances,
massive retaliations and embarrassing retreats could be
avoided by a little on-going consultation and co-opera
tion between industry and government.
The past history of Steel is certainly not such as to
inspire confidence in the justness of this latest increase.
It has marked up prices when protits were low and mark
ed them up when profits were high. Its short-sighted be
havior after World War II contributed no little to the in
flation that hit hard against those whose meager savings
were in prewar dollars.
Steel profits reportedly increased 26 per cent during
the first nine months of 1965 and are up 91 per cent
since 1961. Production was a record 130 million tons,
topping 194’s 127 million tons, which was itself a re
cord. The outlook is for another very healthy year.
Steel knows how to make steel. It, along with certain
other industries, could take lessons in how to win friends
and influence presidents.
♦ Guest Editorial ♦
Nation’s Biggest
Boom On Way?
METROPOLITAN HERALD, ATLANTA
A well known, widely respected Washington Letter to
which thousands subscribe has sent out its first communi
cation of the year.
Its first paragraph reads i
“The next few years will see the biggest boom this
country has ever known.”
Whether or not this prediction comes true, it makes
cheerful reading and such an opening paragraph is much
better than would be one reading, “pull in your horns—
things are heading for the rocks.”
BERRY'S i
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“Okay then, if Johnson REALLY wants peace, how come
he talks about it so OPENLY?”
MY
ANSWER! bp *r
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■
Temptation
. I am tortured by evil thoughts
and have sought to be free of
them. If the Holy Spirit lives in
ones heart and the person ia
born again, should that person
be tempted by evil thoughts?
Bow can I be completely free
from temptation?
H.H.B.
Temptation is something no
person has ever escaped. It la
even written of our Lord who
was sinless; "He was in all
points tempted like as we are,
yet without sin." Heb. 4:15.
You say you are tortured oy
evil thoughts — so was the Sav
ior. "He was. . . tempted like as
we are.” You are assailed by
Satanic suggestion. So was the
Savior. Satan at the great temp
tation in the wilderness, tried
every trick to tempt Him, and
thereis no doubt that his wiles
were appealing, and yet the Bi
ble says, “He was without sin.”
To be Christ-like In this world
is not to be free from tempta
tion. It is to be tempted In every
way, and yet through Christ,
rise victoriously over it. To be
Christ-like is to be “tempted in
every point, yet without sin.”
Evil thoughts come to the
best of men, but the Christian
leans hard on the Scriptures
which say; "There hath no
temptation taken you but such
as is common to man: but God
is faithful, who will not suffer
you to be tempted above that
which you are able; but will
with the temptation also make
a way of escape, that ye may
be able to bear it.” I Cor. 10:13.
Temptation is Satan knocking
at the door, but we don’t need
to invite him in.
Ever learning, and never able
to come to the knowledge of the
truth. (II Timothy 3:1)
PRAYER: O God, may our
learning of history and our ex
perience bring us to a fuller
knowledge of Thy Son, the way,
the truth, the life. Grant us an
outpouring of Thy spirit that we
may not hate, but love and pur
sue the path of peace. In H i s
name we ask. Amen.
\TA 'A
40
Until the advent of Chris
tianity in the 7th century
all beards; Anglo-Saxons members of wore the
clergy were then ordered
by law to shave. mustaches English
princes William wore I, in the 11th un
til compelled
century, them to
cut them off according to
Norman fashion. The Cru
sades probably accounted
for the return of beards.
This lasted until the 15th
century clean-shaven. when Henry Thereafter was
beards were rare, except in'
older men, until the 16th
century.
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Friday, January 14,
Television
Friday Night
2 5 11
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:15 *» 99 Dillon
:30 Huntley M Cheyenne
:45 Brinkley H M
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00(8 H M M West News Wild, Wild FIIntotoBM t >»
: tf Tammy
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: Hogan's Addama
: Heroes Family
KM) Sammy Gomer Pyle, Honey
si 5 Davis U8MC West
:30 : Smothers Farmer’s
:45 : Brothers Daughter
:00 Man From Trials Of Jimmy
-15 U.N.C.L.E. O’Brien Dean
:30 M : t
:45 H t x
:00 Newsroom Panorama Night Watch
:15 *» *9 H
:30 Johnny Movie Movie
:45 Carson 99 90
:00 90 90 :
:15 90 90 :
:30 » :
:45 90 90 :
Saturday Morning
:00
:15
:30 Across The
:45 Fence
:00 Movie 4-H Hour
:15 99 t*
:30 99 Jungle
:45 99 ?im
;00 99 Captain Adventures
:15 00 Kangaroo In Living
:30 M Comedy 99
AS 99 Hour 99
:00 Jeteons Comedy Cartoon
:15 99 Hour Carnival
•30 Atom Ant ** 99
:45 99 99 99
•00 Secret Mighty Porky Pig
-15 Squirrel Mouse 99
•30 Underdog Linus Beatles
:45 »» tl ••
:00 T °P Ca * Tom and Casper
sl5 » Jerry 99
:30 Fury Quick Draw Magilla
:45 99 McGraw Gorilla
Saturday Afternoon
:00 First Look Sky King Bugs Bunny
:15 >9 99 99
:30 Theatre I Lassie Milton The
:45 99 Monster
1 :00 99 My Friend Hoppity
99 Flicka Hooper
:30 AFL AII- News American
:45 Star Game 99 Bandstand
K)0 S Ensign s
:15 2 O’Toole i
:30 t Zane Gray Love and
:45 t M
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