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Variety Time Answer to Previous Puzzle
I Homemaker's ACROSS 40 41 large Prime pulpit number c A il * it
gadget 42 Paint pigment acEsa SHCGiZ uTT E
4 Wife of Zeus (var.)
• Medicinal 45 Fit of ill humor
quantity (coll.) k
12 Avenue (ab.) 4# All of a ship’s i OJHl. o
13 Verify (law) guns In one SEE
14 Hebrew 61 Creenlind volley
measure Eskimo I Kii 1
15 Light brown C r-ir-i
16 Composer of 52 Short-syllabled (Zllui
sonnets foot (pros.)
16 Chosen by 53 Genus of maples fl Foretoken commands
ballot 54 Interdict 10 Plant ovule 31 Set down as an
20 Dispatches 55 Pairs 11 Makes mistakes article (var.)
21 Pedal digit 56 Low haunts 17 Landed 33 Representative
22 Consumes 57 Skittish property 38 Perceive
24 Aquarium Osh DOWN 19 Serpent 40 Nomads
26 Operatic solo 1 Confound 23 Bridal path 41 Heavy blow*
27 Droop 2 Ellipsoidal 24 Poet 42 Mortuary roll
30 32 Visigoth Chief king 3 Permeate 25 Succulent plant 43 Animal's
item 4 Swiftness 26 Sharp and harsh stomach
84 Wheel-shaped 5 Cry of to taste 44 A man
33 Ambassador bacchanals 27 They go with 46 Arabian gulf
38 Scottish stream 6 Melt down sauer kraut 47 Western state
37 Sea flyer 7 Scottish alder 28 Singing voice 48 Large number
39 God of love 8 Loves to excess 29 Driving 50 Sorrowful
2 3 5 6 7 9 It) 11
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19 SO
21
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[32 33
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“TRIMMED OR BRAIDED?"
GRIFFIN
DAILY NEWS
Quimby Mellon Cary Reeves, General Manager Quimby Melton, Jr.
Publisher Bill Knight, Executive Editor Editor
Full Leased Wire Service UPL Full NEA. Address AU Msll (Subscription Published Daily Except Sunday, Second Class
Change of Address form 3579) to P. o. Box 185, E. Solomon SL, Griffin, Ga. Postage Paid at Griffin, Ga. — Single Copy So.
“Quote”
By United Press International
WASHINGTON —Vice Pres
ident Hubert H. Humphrey,
assessing the effect of pres
ident Johnson’s peace efforts to
end the war in Southeast Asia:
“As yet Hanoi had given no
direct Indication that it seeks
peace. It still suffers from
some euphoria of its so-called
inevitable victory.”
★
WASHINGTON -Sen. Willis
A. Robertson, D-Va., warning
that the economic pressures
caused by the Viet Nam war
may result In inflpMonary
trends:
“As the cost of inflation
passes on to the producers of
materials, the resulting price
Increases will be reflected in
every segment of our econo
my."
Almanac
For
Today
By United Press International
Today Is Tuesday, Jan. 18,
the 18th day of 1966 with 347 to
follow.
The moon is between last
quarter and new phase.
No morning star.
The evening stars are Jupi
ter, Venus, Saturn and Mars.
Those born today are under
the sign of Capricorn. Ameri
can orator Daniel Webster was
born on this day in 1782.
On this day in history:
In 1788, the first English
settlement was made in Austra
lia.
In 1919, the Versailles peace
conference was formally
opened.
In 1943, Moscow announced
that tire German siege of
Leningrad had been lifted. It
had lasted since the fall of 1941.
In 1965, movie star and
singer Jeanette MacDonald was
burled in Hollywood.
Thought For Today
A thought for the day—Daniel
Webster: “God grants liberty
only to those who live it, and
are always ready to guard and
defend it.”
GRIFFIN DAILY NEWS
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three months $3.87, one
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One year $10.82, six months
$6.08, three months $3.09, one
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EDITORIALS
“
I
Viet Decision
Key To Others
Only the coming weeks will tell whether President
Johnson has effectively forestalled the gathering opposi
tion in Congress to any expansion, or even a continuation
on the present level, of spending on domestic programs
in the face of military demands in Viet Nam.
This nation is strong enough and rich enough, he made
clear, to meet its obligations both at home and abroad—
with but a moderate reinstatement of certain taxes and
a modest budget deficit.
If things don’t get worse in Viet Nam, that is, which
many will counter is more a probabality than a possibility.
But if it comes to a choice between guns and butter,
the President told the congressmen forcibly, the sacrifice
ought not to be asked of those who have difficulty in win*
ning their daily bread, let alone something to spread it
with.
His projected deficit of $1.8 billion, when compared
with those the nation is used to, deserves the adjective
“only.” But a projection is not a fact, and budget esti
mates at the beginning of a year have seldom borne much
similarity to the final report.
Aside from the issues of getting and spending, the
President has outlined a whole new set of specifications
pertaining to the building of the Great Society.
For those who wondered what the over-worked 89th
Congress would find to occupy itself with in its second
session, there are his proposals for a new cabinet-level
Department of Transportation, a Highway Safety Act
and a constitutional amendment extending the terms of
representatives to four years.
This last is assured of quick passage in one of the two
chambers and extended debate in the other.
The noble-sounding International Education Act and
International Health Act, which the President did not de
tail, also promise to provide much meat for legislative
cooking.
The President proposes and Congress disposes. In the
past two years, with a top-heavy Democratic majority,
the one has followed the other with unaccustomed alacrity.
Whether this process is repeated in 1966, however,
may depend not so much on the will of President or Cong
ress in Washington but what certain other men do in
Hanoi, Peking and Moscow.
For 1966 looms as the year of decision in Viet Nam,
and it is that decision that will govern all others.
Here, Atchoo,
Is Cold News
So you have the sniffles?
It would be nice to console you with the cheerful an
nouncement that science has at last found a way to whip
the common cold.
But the dismal truth is that it hasn’t.
So unless some genius comes up right away with a mir
acle cure, Americans can glumly figure on achooing their
way through almost one billion colds this year.
That averages about five colds for every man, woman
and child in the United States. And it’s what makes the
common cold so common.
Science has effected many marvels. It has put men
into orbit. It has enabled them to walk in space and even
to rendezvous a few feet from each other 100 miles off
the earth at 17,000 miles an hour.
It has put big dents in the tolls of tuberculosis, polio
and pneumonia.
But it hasn’t been able to crack the common cold.
Furthermore, scientists are frank to admit that chemical
cures have not been developed for any of the 150 var
ieties of colds.
So snifflers will continue to pay out more than $5
billion a year in lost wages, lost production and medical
expenses—including $100 million for cold remedies.
A drug firm has just completed a survey which indi
cates that every employed person loses about four days
a year from colds, and that nearly every child is out of
school six days a year from respiratory diseases.
Discouraged? Don’t give up. For science is giving the
problem the old college try, and what science goes after
it usually gets.
Meanwhile, though, the common cold remains some
thing to sneeze at. Gesundheit!
I
/ /
.•
f-:
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a
• IKS fcj NU, lie
“Call the Ski Patrol, then bring me my ‘apres ski’
outfit!”
MY
answer!! by
Falling In Love
. I was a Christian when I
married my husband, but he
wasn't. 1 don’t think God would
have let me fall in love with
him if He hadn’t wanted me to
marry him.
L. L.
Falling in love is sometimes a
biological matter. Boy meets girl
animal magnetism goes to work,
they are attracted to each other,
and they get married. Not all
marriages are the result of care
ful prayer and seeking the will
of God. If more mere, there
would be more successful mar
riages.
Next to one's relationship to
God, marriage is the most Im
portant and meaningful relation
ship of life. Because many young
people marry for emotional rea
sons only, and fail too often to
seek the counsel of those who
love them, and more important,
the counsel of God, the divorce
problem has become one of the
greatest problems we face to
day.
I seriously doubt if you sought
the will of God when you mar
ried his boy. And since you did
not, would not be unfair to
blame God for the problems you
have encountered?
But, although It Is too late to
do anything about your marri
age, the whole picture can be
improved if you fully commit
your life to Christ, and so live
before your husband, that he
will see that Christ's way is best.
Accept his as a challenge. You
were determined to get married,
now be just as determined to
make your marriage work, and
to let your home be transfor
med into a Christian home.
«• the FOB pflflyfR Upper TODAY Room FtOSS £
The life which I now live in the
flesh I live by the faith of the
Son of God, who loved me, and
gave himself for me. (Galatians
2 : 20 )
PRAYER: Awaken Ug to our
troubled world, O Lord. Help us
to meet each challenge with per
sonal strength and the group
strength of Thy church. In our
Redeemer’s name we ask. Amen.
IP ...
■i
Faro is one of the oldest
card games in the world
and during considered the 19th century
was the “nation
al American card game.”
It was supposedly named
from the picture of a
pharaoh on French playing
cards imported into Great
Britain. Faro was men
tioned in English law as
early as 1739. It was com
monly, especially played in gaming
rooms, in west
ern United States, until
about 1915.
• Entytlapasdis Iritsnnici
Tuesday, January 18 , 1966
Television
Tuesday Night
2 5 11
:0O Newsroom Movie Marshall
:15 M 99 Dillon
:30 News Bronco
:45 H — n
:00 Mister ranorama »
:15 Roberts News It
:30 My Mother, Outer Combat!
•45 The Car Limits 9*
:00 Please Don’t H PP
:15 Eat Daisies n m
:30 Dr. Red McHale’s
:45 Kildare Skelton Nail
:00 Movie : F Troop
:15 “The Tin *
:30 Star” Petticoat Peyton
45 pp Junction Place
sOO M CBS News Fugitive
15 m Special M
30 m ot PP
45 PP m
•00 Newsroom Panorama Night Watch
:15 PP H »9
:30 Johnny Movie Movie
•45 Carson "Women ef “Tank
:00 n Pitcarln Battalion”
:15 p» Island” a
:30 *# *» m
:45 N *• m
Wednesday Morning
:00 Dally Word
worn Britannic* Farm Town Show and Sunrise Semester Catalyst
7« 00 Today News
M News
■ f :30 M PP Cartoon
:45
00 Today la Captain Cartoon
si 5 Georgia Kangaroo Carnival
:30 M t PP
:4S PP t PP
:00 Today In McCoys Movie
sl 5 Georgia H "Secret
:30 M)Q “ Andy State”
•45 Game Griffith PP
10 DO Eye Guess Dick PP
:; pp Van Dyke »•
30 Concentration Mike Selected
PP Douglas Short S’Jecis
00 Morning 99 Supermarket
15 Star M 8weep
30 Paradise PP Dating
45 B *y Weather Game
Wednesday Afternoon
:00 News Love Donna
:15 Movie Of Life Reed
:30 “Monsieur Search Father
:45 Beaucaire” Guiding L’gt Knowa Best
l PP Bachelor Ben
pp Father Casey
pp As The H
pp World Turns pp
IS9 :00 Day® Of Password Nurses
|5 Our Lives PP •P
:
:30 Doctors House Party Time for US
:45 PP »» News
•00 Another To Tell General
•15 WorW The Truth Hospital
•30 You Don’t Edge of Young
:45 Say Night Marrieda
:00 Match Secret Never Too
•15 Game Storm Young
:30 Popeye Lloyd Where The
•45 Club Thaxtoa Action It
&S58 s Leave It
» s To Beaver
Uncle Movie News Watch
Waldo “Niagara” News
Griffin P*ifr New *
4