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Philosophers
ACROSS
1 Greek
6 philosopher
Scottish
10 Circlets philosopher
12 On the left
(naut.)
14 Eled ra’s
brother
15 Person beyond
16 help (coll.)
Men
17 Uke a dog
18 Japanese
outcasti
19 Distant
20 Bashful
21 Coterie
22 Passage in
the brain
14 Handles
25 clumsily French
philosopher (1596-1650)
28 18th century
French
31 philosopher Associate
2 3 4 5 7 8 9
To 11 13
20
E a 2TB5
32 33 5T1
“" 44 46
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SIDE GLANCES
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M 8hh! The place may be bugged!"
GRIFFIN
DAILY /Y.'- NEWS
Quimby Melton Cary Reeves, General Manager Q u i m by Melton, Jr.
Publisher Bill Knight, Executive Editor Editor
Full Leased Wire Service UPL Full NEA. Address All Mafl (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 Sc.
Answer to Previous Puzzle
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34 Knowledge
35 Fuddled (Scot.)
37 Sheep bleat
38 Jujube
39 German
40 philosopher Prosser
42 French painter
43 Location*
44 Opening
48 Celerity of
motion
47 Feminine
«!«.»
DOWN
1 Church
2 dignitary Mislays
3 Emmets
a a C ,^i S »°
8 aw. Wartime group
<ab)
0 Abraham’*
concubine
(Bib.)
7 Preposition
8 Mother of St.
. „ ..
„s«
11 Spoke
13 pompously Three-spot
cards
17 Teamster
19 Zeal
22 Frozen dessert
23 Greater in
stature
Greek letter
Coy
Native
phosphate of
3iCr th,r
Mennonite
32 Cowboy’s item
33 Founder of
Taoism
36 Diminutive
suffixes
38 Assail
39 Indo-lranian
non-Moslem
(var.)
41 Seines
42Venus de —
44 Palm leaf
45 Revolver (slang)
46 Quote”
By United Press International
LONDON —Robin Douglas
Home, praising the decision of
Prince Phillip to have an
American public relations firm
handle publicity for his forth
coming tour to the U.S.:
“(This is) the best thing that
has happened to royalty since
the invention of the camera.’’
★
SAIGON —Secretary of State
Dean Rusk in reaffirming the
U.S. commitment in South Viet
Nam:
“We are in a common effort
here to assure the safety, and
the freedom and prosperity of
South Viet Nam. We are
determined to do everything
within our power to assure that
result.”
Almanac
For
Today
By United Press International
Today Is Wednesday. Jan. 19,
the 19th day of 1966 with 346 to
follow.
The moon Is between las*
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 Poet Edgar Allan Poe was
born on this day In 1809.
On this day in history:
In 1807, Robert E. Lee was
born in Stratford, Va. His
birthday is a legal holiday in
some southern states.
In 1881, Georgia seceded
from the Union.
In 1938, units of General
Franco’s Nationalist air force
bombed Barcelona and Valen
cia in Spain killing 700 civilians
and wounding hundreds more.
In 1955. the first presidential
news conference to be covered
by moving picture and televi
sion cameras was held by
Dwight D. Eisenhower.
Thought For Today
A thought for the day—
British author Oscar Wilde:
“As long as war is regarded as
wicked, It will always have its
fascination. When it is looked
upon as vulgar, it will cease to
be popular.”
GRIFFIN DAILY NEWS
Subscription Prices
Delivered by Special Auto
One Year $15.60
Delivered by carrier: One
year $13.91, six months $7.21,
three months $3.87, a n e
month $1.34. one w eew 30
cents. By mail, except within
30 miles of Griffin, rates are
same as by carrier. By mall
within 30 miles of Griffin:
One year $10.82, six months
$6.08, three months $3.09. one
month $1.13 (tax included.)
New Home For
State Patrol
Any doubt as to the location of Post Number One of
the State Patrol in Griffin was removed today,
It will be located in a new home in Griffin on the
North Expressway next to the Peace Officers Annuity
building.
The Spalding County Board of Commissioners an
nounced that all preliminary work on calling for bids for
the new hom * h * d *->
They said that a call for bids would be issued soon.
The new home is well overdue. The present one no
longer is adequate to serve a booming area such as the
one * n Spalding County and the other four counties in
this area served by the Griffin Post.
The sooner the home is built, the better.
For the past few months, rumors had floated about
that the Griffin Post might be moved to another county.
At one point local government officials said they were
waiting on the state for the next step. At the same time,
*tate officials said they were waiting on the local govern
“** bodies to move.
All this has been cleared up.
Spalding County Commissioners in their statement
today emphasized that there never had been any lack
of agreement locally or on the state level in their com
bined effort to secure the new barracks.
We’re glad that any misunderstanding that might have
existed about the new home has been cleared up.
It’s good that the Griffin Post will get its new home
now.
Big Tomorrow;
What Of Today?
Man is apparently on the threshold of a fantastic and
thrilling invasion of what has up to now been regarded as
nature’s domain.
He is boldly experimenting with birth control, weather
and climate control, space and underwater control, con
trol of the sex and even the characteristics of the unborn
c hild, free choice by women of the sires of their babies—
even though the selected sire may have long been dead—
and at least partial dominion over death by holding the
departed in deepfreeze until such time as we may learn
how to restore them to life.
Such are the marvels of science as research zips along
in high gear and physicists burn the midnight oil in cease
less zeal.
The big challenge, it would seem, is for man to match
this genius by exerting equal imagination, energy and
skill in another field—the immediate improvement of
human behavior.
Along with future control of space, sex and sunshine,
surely we also need more successful regulation of such
current problems as the zooming crime wave, juvenile
delinquency, poverty, hunger, illiteracy and ignorance, the
traffic toll, mounting disdain for law and order, open
rebellion against constituted authority, social inequalities,
international distrust and hatred, and turbulence, violence
and social unrest in general.
These are, perhaps, less glamorous objectives than the
conquest of nature’s laws. But even partial success would
justify vastly increased effort to attain them.
The promise of a longer and more exciting life in the
fabulous future would be even more alluring if there were
greater assurance it could be lived without bloodshed,
bombs and the threat of mass destruction.
♦ Guest Editorial ♦
Let’s Have Truth
About Baker Case
COURIER- JOURNAL, Louisville, Ky.
The indictment in Washington on Wednesday of Ro
bert G. Baker, on nine specific charges, is the healthiest
development since the Baker scandal broke in late 1963.
Baker was formerly secretary to the Senate majority
and many of the rumors against him involved prominent
Democrats. A long and inconclusive inquiry by the Senate
Rules Committee produced abundant evidence that
Baker had profited from his Senate connections but it
carefully skirted the involvement of any but minor politi
cal figures.
Its concluding report said that Baker had been guilty
of improper and unethical conduct. The Senators then
appointed an ethics committee for themselves which
possesses little but the power to chide. A minority re
port by Republican members of the committee accused
the majority of doing everything possible to keep the
... hearings from ... involving prominent . _ Democrats,
At the same time the committee was holding its hear-
1 ings, a federal grand jury was plowing the same ground
rather more effectively. The result of its efforts are em
bodied in specific charges of tax evasion, conspiracy, and
the felonious theft of funds entrusted to Baker for sup
Dosed lobbying activities.
The Deoartment of Justice has acted quietly and effec
tively, and Baker’s trial may settle decisively the recurrent
rumors that involve names of many prominent Washing
tonians. The indictments indicate that no soft-Dedaling
has been or will be asked for, and that the truth has a
good chance of being heard.
Whatever the truth is, it cannot be worse or more com
nromising to the Democratic Party than the rumors have
been. Whatever the involvements and wherever the
blame falls, let us now know all about Bobby Baker, his
friends, those whom he aided and those who aided him.
BERM’S WOULD
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“One of these days, ‘him’ will have to give Him’s
daughters away!”
MY
ANSWER, y
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Can’t Forget
I can forgive, but I can’t for
get. Though I hold no malice to
ward others, I still remember
what occurred. Is it wrong to
remember?
H.K.
The Bible plainly teaches for
giveness, but I find no com
mand that we are to forget. The
mind retains all sorts of things
—and It is impossible to erase
certain things rrom the memory.
God forgives and forgets. The
Bible says, “I will forgive their
iniquity, and I will remember
their sin no more.” This is one
of God’s capabilities — to erase
sin from His memory — but
man does not possess this abil
ity. We are simply told to for
give. “Be ye kind one to anoth
er, tenderhearted, forgiving one
another, even as God for Christ’s
sake has forgiven you.” CEph.
4:32)
When the memory brings the
deed to your mind, Just make
sure that unkind feelings *re not
dredged up. If this occurs, you
have no really forgiven.
Forgiveness has strange pow
ers. When Maskepetoon, a chief
of the Cree Indians was con
verted to Christianity, soon after
his father was killed by a mem
ber of the Blackfeet tribe, Maa
kepetoon demanded that the
murderer be brought before him.
“You have killed my father,”
he said: "now you must be my
father. You shall ride my best
horse, and wear my best cloth
es.”
The murderer exclaimed,
“My son, you have killed me.”
What the man meant was: you
have killed the enemy, the mur
derer within me — and made
me forever your friend.
»•« PRfWER I
JCDe Upper Hta i
Room*
If any man will come after me,
let him deny himelf, and take up
his cross daily, and follow ma
(Luke 9:23)
PRAYER; Dear God, help us
to be brave as the struggle for
righteousness challanges us.
Move us to take up our cross
and cheerfully bear the trials,
that may go with it. Bless us as
we enter the fellowship of the
comrades of the cross. In Jesus'
name. Amen.
P
esc *
B
once Cripple the Creek, richest Colo gold-pro- n was
ducing district in the world.
Gold was discovered in
Poverty Gulch in died 1891 by
a Another cowboy vein, who discovered poor.
shortly afterwards, $20 brought million.
its discoverer
Between 1900 and 1910 the
average $15 annual million. gold output Gold
was
production clined to about today $2 baa million de
annually .
i
Wednesday, Jan. 19, 1966 Griffin Daily Ntwi
Television
Wednesday Night
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