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i “Ethel’s going to like it here. The old neighborhood was
about gossiped out!”
GRIFFIN
DAILY NEWS
Quimby Melton Cary Reeves, General Manage, Qui^y Mellon, Jft
Publisher B01 Knight, Executive Editor Editor
VM Leased Win Sendee UPL Fun NBA. Address All MaB (Subscription Published Dally Except Sunday.
Change of Address form 3579) te P. O. Box 135, E. Solomon St, Griffin, Ga, Postage Paid at Griffin, Ga. — Single Copy 86.
“Quote”
By United Press International
SAIGON —A U.S. military
spokesman commenting on the
bitter fighting at the A Shau
outpost before the camp ' 11
under an onslaught of North
Vietnamese regulars:
“They stacked the Commu
nist bodies like cordwood on the
wire perimeter.”
VC
AMSTERDAM —Prince Claus
von Amsberg In a television
statement appealing to the
Dutch people to give him and
Crown Princess Beatrix a
chance:
“The Dutch people were
given unspeakably much sorrow
and great injustice during the
last war but nobody can undo
the past.”
Almanac
For
Griffin
By United Press International
Today is Tuesday, March 15,
the 74th day of 1966 with 291 to
follow.
The moon is between its last
quarter and new phase.
The morning star is Venus.
The evening star is Jupiter.
Seventh United States Pres
ident. Andrew Jackson, was
bom on this day in 1767.
On this day in history:
In 1820, Maine was admitted
as the 23rd state to the union.
In 1892, New York became
the first state to authorize
voting machines.
In 1919, 1,000 veterans of the
American expeditionary force
in World War I met in Paris to
form the American Legion.
In 1962, a landslide In Peru
killed 41 persons.
Thought For Today
A thought for the day—
Thomas Jefferson: “Delay is
preferable to errors.”
GRIFFIN DAILY NEWS
Subscription Prices
Delivered by Special Auto
One Year $15.60
Delivered by carrier: One
year |13.9l. six months 17.21,
three months 33.87, one
month $1.34, one week 30
cents. By mall, except within
30 miles Ot Griffin, rates are
same as by carrier. By mall
within 36 miles of Griffin:
One year $10.82, six months
16.68, three months $3.09. one
month $1.13 (tax Included.)
EDITORIALS w.
1
While The Committe Is Studying
The Courthouse And City Hall
Let’s Turn Now
To Other Problems
The Mayor has had his say. He wants to tear City
Hall and the Courthouse down and replace them with a
modem government building.
The County Commissioners have responded with a
statement that in their opinion the courthouse and jail
are adequate for present needs. They’d like to have a
modem government building, too, but some other things
should come first.
in the meantime, the City and County have appointed
a committee to study the situation and make recommend
ations.
The Griffin Daily News would like to step in and sug
gest that while the committee is at work, it would be a
good time to push the matter onto the back burner of
the political stove and let it simmer awhile. There are
plenty of other things to think about at home as well
as abroad.
Try these on for site!
• Potholes plague our streets and roads, both city
and county. It likely is nobody’s “fault.” The heavy
freeze is the villain, but they’re there.
• “Litterbugging” has reached astronomical propor
tions in parts of the county. Some people dump all man
ner of garbage onto roadsides and private property.
There’s still too much “litterbugging” inside the city, too.
• Some people still dump dogs, cats, puppies and
kittens in the country to wander about and starve, or
to be picked up and “adopted” or put out of their misery
by rural residents.
• Slum housing plagues Griffin just as it does all
parts of the nation. We have lived with it so long that
many tend to overlook it.
• Schools are crowded and will become more so.
• Race relations are better in Griffin than most places
but could stand some improving.
• Traffic on Friday afternoons On Taylor and other
streets is terrible.
• How long has it been since a new industry of sub
stantial size came to Griffin?
We are optimists—admittedly and incurably so. We
like Griffin and Spalding County better than any other
lems place in the world. Their assets far outweigh their prob
and liabilities. But for those who need something to
fret about while the committee is studying whether or not
to tear down the Courthouse and City Hall, the above
will do for a starter.
Country Isn’t
Going To Dogs
WAYCROSS JOURNAL- HERALD
Sometimes we get the impression that our country is
going to the dogs with a headlong rush and that there is
little or nothing we can do about it.
Surprisingly perhaps, a recently published report based
on an interpretation and analysis of the 1960 census
shows that we are not as bad off in the U. S. as we had
been led to believe.
For example:
—The divorce rate is lower than it was 10 years ago.
Ninety per cent of all divorced people who re-marry stay
married the second time.
—Things are getting better for school teachers. From
1950 to 1960 salaries increased 45 per cent and the up
grading of salaries is continuing. Although qualified
teachers are still hard to find in some areas, the general
teacher shortage is diminishing.
—Georgia remains among the leaders In school drop
outs but there has been a percentage decrease even in
this category in the state and elsewhere over the nation.
—The traffic death rate per 100,000 population is de
creasing but the situation is still bad enough.
—Reports from all parts of the nation are that we are
gradually winning the war against substandard housing.
The typical American family today has housing that is
much improved over that of the 1950 period.
—More marriages are now blessed with children.
—Negroes in the past decade have enjoyed about the
same economic progress as others. An American Negro
stands a greater chance of getting some college training
than a White youth in England.
—There is still poverty by American standards in this
country but what we call “poverty” would be considered
mild affluence in some part* of the world.
cy O « With Ye Editor *■* i:G>
A person who doesn’t know which way to turn is apt
to spend his life on the expressway.
• * • • •
“The Braves’ players still don’t know where home
plate is.” — Tops.
• • • • •
You’re an oldtimer if you remember when young men
looked for jobs instead of “accepting a position.”
BERRY’S WORLD
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• 1964 bf NEA, Ik Offfynf
“Haven’t you gotten the word? • • • with ‘the new economics*
there can’t be any more depressions!”
AIY
ANSWER. ^ I
■r
Family Worship
. Our pastor advocates family
worship. Isn’t the church the
place for worship? As a parent,
I have no theological training,
and I don’t know how to go ab
out leading in family worship.
Do you think It Is necessary?
K.M.
No less a man than J. Edgar
Hoover has said: “If there is to
be peace and happiness In our
homes, then we as a nation
must return to God, and to t h e
practice of daily family altars.”
You speak of the church, but
did you know that in New Testa
ment times, practically all wor
ship was conducted in homes
and in a family atmosphere?
One does not need theological
training to read the Scriptures,
and lead in a simple, sincere
prayer with your family.
Family devotions strengthen
the faith of the household, and
convey to the children the fact
that Ood and Christ are real.
Family worship helps to unify
the family, to fortify against mis
understanding, bickering, and
frustration.
It makes Christ relevant to
everyday life — not just a brief
hour of mechanical worship on
Sunday morning.
We practice family worship in
our home, I highly recommend
It — I consider it more Impor
tant than eating and sleeping
for our household.
The sacrifice acceptable to
God is a broken spirit; a broken
and contrite heart, O God, t h OU
will not despise. (Psalm 31:17,
RSV)
PRAYER: O God, our Father,
take the bits and pieces of our
lives and use them as Thou wilt.
Fit them into Thy design. Touch
our Imperfections with Thy per
fection, so that we may render
our best to Thee. In the name of
Christ, who takes away our sin.
Amen.
S* y
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®
The outstanding Ameri
can sire of thoroughbred
race horses during the 20th
century has been Bull Lea.
This stallion sired more
than 816 starters, who earn
ed more than 110,500,000,
an average of over 113,000
per runner per year. The
greatest thoroughbred aire
ever recorded was the un
beaten St. Simon, whose
offspring Britain from raced 1889 in to Great 1912.
Their earning power was
almost five times the aver
age expectancy,
C Encyclopaedia Sritannlaa
Tuesday, March 15, 1966 Griffin Daily
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