Newspaper Page Text
"No Thanks, I'll Just Breathe!”
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ACROSS
1 Actor, Robert
7 "Doubting"
18Ki notion
14 Warren ’■■■■■
II Disembarked
16 Dinner course
17 Bitter vetch
18 Grain bristle
20 Shooter marble
21 Dlrksen, for
Instance
25 “Prince of.
Darkness"
(Bib.)
28 Obliterate*
32 African
33 Strike antelope (slang)
35 34 Verb Unaspirated form
36 Renters
40 mammal'. Aquatic
41 Three-legged stand*
43 Wager at
roulette
43-Duryea 47 Louse
SO Tempt egg
53 Dispassionate
56 One who lends
57 Absconded
58 59 Domesticates Tap
DOWN
1 Ceramic piece
2 Jewish month
3 Longings
4 (slang) Stripling
5 Native (suffix)
6 Fortification
7 Thirty (FrJ
8 Fowl
9 Choose
-Sahl
Range Seethe
Soft mast
Moat sensible
Conclusion
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“I’d do that for you, ma'am, but I’m an
under-achiever!"
GRIFFIN
TDj f kl t LY NEWS
Quimby Melton Cary Reeves, General Manager Quimby Melton, Jr.
Publisher BUI Knight, Executive Editor Editor
ran Leaned Wire Service UPL roll NBA. Address AO Mall (Subscription Published Dally Except Sunday, Second Class
Change of Address form 8579) to P. O. Box 135, B. Solomon SL, Griffin, Ga. Postage Paid at Griffin, Ga. — Single Copy 5a.
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Quote
By United Press International
WASHINGTON —Leonard H.
Marks, head of the U.8.
Information Agency, comment
ing on world opinion regarding
resumption of U.S. bombing
against North Viet Nam:
“World opinion has univer
sally—with the execptlon of the
Communist states—welcomed
the peace offensive and recog
nized the President’s good faith
in trying to bring about an end
to hostilities."
A
MIAMI (UPI) —Candace
Mossier, when investigating
officers asked who had a
motive for murdering her
millionaire husband, Jacques
Mossier, outlining his back
ground:
“My husband was a business
man, a vicious business man,
and in the business world you
do make enemies.”
43 Telephone
inventor
44 Wild ox of
Celebes
45 Wound with a
47 dagger Back of neck
48 Brain passage
49 Mack and
W illiam s
51 Feminine suffix
52 Celebrated (ab.)
54 Ouldo’s note
55 Nickname for
Dominic
Almanac
For
Today
By United Press International
Today is Thursday, Feb. 3,
the 34th day of 1C66 with 331 to
follow.
The moon is between its first
quarter and full phase.
The morning star Is Venus.
The evening stars are Mars,
Jupiter and Saturn.
In 1913, the income tax, or
16th Amendment to the Consti
tution, became law with ratifi
cation by the 36th state,
Wyoming.
In 1917, the Uhlted States
broke diplomatic relations with
Germany following that na
tion’s announcement of unre
stricted submarine warfare.
In 1924, Woodrow Wilson, the
28th President, died at hts
home in Washington.
In 1963, the American tanker
“Marine Sulphur Queen” disap
peared with 39 men aboard
while carrying molten sulphur
from Beaumont, Tex., to
Norfolk, Va
GRIFFIN DAILY NEWS
Subscription Prices
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same as by carrier. By mail
within 30 mile* of GrUfin-.
One year $10.82, six months
$8.08, three months $8.89. one
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This Week 9 » Editorial
By A Woman Especially For Women
Praise Prevents
Marriage Trouble
Memo to new husbands:
Psychologists with an educational testing service have
discovered that the best cure for classroom dunces is
praise, and that many a potential dropout becomes a good
student after massive doses of recognition.
This isn’t to imply that your bride is a dunce or even a
potential marriage dropout. It’s just to remind you that
she is inexperienced in her new job of homemaldng
and that if you want her to become a competent and con
tented housewife, praise is your best bet.
Praise works every bit as well in the home as it does
in the classroom. Most wives, however young and in
experienced, know that and use praise on their husbands
for aU it is worth. But many a young husband, and many
an older one, for that matter is downright stingy with
praise.
The husband who praises his wife's first attempts at
cooking will most likely end up married to a good cook,
for his wife will figure that being a good cook Is worth
while.
The husband who notices and comments on how attrac
tive the house or apartment looks when his wife has ex
erted special efforts to make it look its shinning best is
likely to have a well-run home. His wife wont’ early get
the idea that its little use working hard on the house if
her husband never notices the difference.
The husband who assures his wife that the party she
worked so hard on was a success, and that everyone
had a good time, wOl find that he is married to a willing
hostess, instead of a reluctant one.
The young husband who brags that his bride is a good
manager isn’t likely to end up with an extravagant wife.
The husband who never neglects a chance to tell his
wife how pretty she looks will probably not be thinking
in a few years how the girl he married has let herself go.
We hear a lot today about frustrated housewives in
their split-level prisons. But you can bet your bottom
dollar that the housewife who gets plenty of praise and
recognition from her husband for the job she is doing
won’t be frustrated and her home wOl be her castle —
not a prison. — R. M.
Where Were
The Pickets?
Any time during the past month would have been an
ideal time for a demonstration by the Viet Nam war
protesters—a demonstration not against the United States
but against the Hanoi regime.
It was that long and more since this country first
halted bombing raids over North Viet Nam. For four days
during the Vietnamese new year’s celebrations our troops
maintained a strictly defensive posture, although the Viet
Cong’s unilateral cease-fire did not include Americans.
In the meantime, presidential peace emissaries con
tinued to scurry between Washington and a dozen world
capitals seeking the diplomatic formula that could lead
to an armistice.
Why did we not see a march on Washington, or at
least a few pickets outside the White House, to dramatize
support for these efforts of the government? Why no
mass meetings putting a bit of pressure on the North
Vietnamese who, as they themselves said, have been
heartened by the activities of peace-loving American stu
dents?
Why indeed?
The silence of the past weeks has done more than the
noisiest demonstration to expose the double standard of
the Vietniks and to prove the shallowness, naivete and
essential futility of their cause.
This is not to charge them with the blame for the fail
ure of the peace offensive. They are not that important,
and in any event a demonstration in support of the
government at this stage would probably have counted
for little in the international balance.
It would, however, have been a welcome gesture of
moderation and conciliation at home and have gone far
toward reversing the trend that seems to be driving
Americans into two extreme camps.
New Interstate
Elates Middle Ga.
MACON TELEGRAPH
Middle Georgians* ears perked up when Sen. Richard
B. Russell spoke so optimistically of the prospects for an
inter-state highway linking Ft. Gordon, Robins Air Force
Base and Ft. Benning.
As he threw his full weight behind the project, which
could be completed ahead of the 1972 deadline for the
whole interstate network, Sen. Russell declared: “I have
every reason to expect success.’’
Realization of this cross-state superhighway with Robins
as the center point would add immensely to the usefulness
of Interstate 75 and Interstate 16, already designed to
tie the Macon area with the rest of the nation. The possi
bilities of industrial, commercial and tourist development
are enhanced greatly by this new link.
This section of the state is grateful for Sen. Russell’s
interest and efforts.
Feb. 3, 1966 Griffin Dally News
BERBLS WORLD
M
• IWI It MU ha
“These prices are almost as high as the skirts 1**
MY ^
ANSWER!
‘Square*
Are yon a ‘‘square” if yon
don’t do what your classmates
do, and listen to unfit talk?
M.J.S.
If you are called a “square**,
you are in pretty good com
pany.
The founders of our nation
would have been called squares
by the beatniks and the hipsters.
These were men of principle
who stood four-square, and un
compromisingly for what they
believed.
Nathan Hale, who said: *‘I re
gret that I have only one life to
give for my country", would
have been a square, in the minds
of the beat generation.
Patrick Henry, who said.
“Give me liberty or give me
death”, would have been called
a square. The crowd that Is tear
ing up draft cards would have
called him a square.
The disciples of Chlrst who
“loved not their lives unto the
death” would have been called
squares. The bang-haired boys
would have laughed at them for
dying for what they believed in.
In North Carolina recently a
boy was run over and killed by
a fast moving train all because
one of his friends called him
“chicken.” It is not what peo
ple call you, but what you are
that counts. I’d rather be a sq
uare any day than to be a circu
lar blur of nothingness, with no
purpose, no patriotism, and no
faith.
«• vnmn 1
jSl tliwr Room.
Although he was a Son, he le
arned obedience through what
be suffered. — (Hebres 5:8, RSV
PRAYER : Teach us to be
grateful, O Lord, for life, heal
th, and the higher happiness.
Grant strength sufficient for
every circumstance, in Joy or
pain. In Christ's name. Amen.
Thought For Today
A thought for the day—U.S.
Journalist Horace Greeley:
“The illusion that times that
were are better than those that
are has probably pervaded all
ages.”
G
Soluble coffee wu first
Introduced in the early 19th
century, but it did not be
come a commercial American prod
uct until an
chemist invented a "re
fined soluble coffee" in
1906. It went on the market
in the United States in
1909. Its use by the armed
forces in World War II in
field rations gave it between greater
popularity. Today one4hird of
one-fourth and
all coffee is of prepared the soluble in type. U.S.
homes
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