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17 Devotee
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23 Egyptian
26 Capital of
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31 Baton Its capital Rouge is
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“Very swank apartments over here. You couldn’t live I
eyeball-to-eyeball with nicer people!”
GRIFFIN
DAILY NEWS
Quimby Melton Cary Reeves, General Manager Quimby Melton, Jr.
Publisher BID Knight, Executive Edf'ir Editor
VWD teased Wire Service UPL Full NBA. Address AD Mail (Subscription Published Daily Except Sunday, Second
Chaage of Address form 3579) to P. O. Box. 1», E. Solomon St., Griffin, Ga. Postage Paid at Griffin, Ga. — Single Copy la,
42 Calumniate
44 Coarse
diamonds
47 48 Vegetable Moslem judge
52 Excite to action
64 Moslem Saharan
nomad
56 Gun-cleaning
rod
57 Arct i c Mt ive
58 Slumber
Sponger catcher
DOWN
1 Capital of Peru
2 Man from
Arabia
3 Com bread
4 Fishermen
5 Zuider ——
6 Impel Odors
7
8 Dramatic part
10 9 Angered Rational
12 Fall in drops
Answer to Prsvious Puzzle
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27 Disease (suffix)
28 Not any
29 Departs'
35 Made an
opening
37 Cake baked in
ashes
39 Essence
40 American
43 general Price
44 Barriers
45 Verbal
48 Italy Capital of
49 Seed (hot.) covering
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51 Russian name
53 Dip into liquid
55
a Quote”
By United Press International
SANTA MONICA, Calif.
(UPI) —Lee Marvin, after
winning the best actor award
for his role as a drunken
gunfighter in “Cat Ballou."
“There are too many people
to thank for my career. I think
half the award belongs to a
horse.*’
★
WASHINGTON (UPI) —Sen.
Frank Church, D-Idaho, com
mented on U.S. relations with
Communist China:
“We have had a situation In
which there was a very frozen
attitude on China . . . (but) now
the first steps are being taken
by the State Department.”
Almanac
For
Griffin
By United Press International
Today is Wednesday, April 20
the 110th day of 1966 with 255 to
follow.
The moon Is In its new phase.
The morning star is Venus.
The evening star is Jupiter.
Roman Emperor and philoso
pher Marcus Auerelius was
born on this day in 121 A.D.
On this day in history:
In 1861, Col. Robert E. Lee
resigned his commission in the
U.S. Army with the intention of
offering his services to the
Confederate forces.
In 1889 Adolf Hitler was born
in Austria.
In 1903, Andrew Carnegie
donated $1,500,000 for the
construction of the Hague
Peace Palace in The Nether
lands.
In 1959, Cuban Premier Fidel
Castro was given a red carpet
welcome in New York City.
Thought for Today
A thought for the day—
Roman orator Cicero said: "He
removes the greatest ornament
of friendship who takes away
from it respect.”
GRIFFIN DAILY NEWS
Subscription Prices
Delivered by carrier: One
year $16.20, six months $8.50,
three months $4.50, one
month $1.55, one week 35
cents. By mail, except within
30 miles of Griffin, rates are
same as by carrier. By mail
within 30 miles of Griffin:
One year $13.10, six months
$7.35, three months $3.85, one
month $1.35, Delivered by
Special A n t o: One Year
$18.20 (tax included.)
This Week’s Editorial
By A Woman Especially For Women
Some II Points
To Remember II II
There are a few things most women need to guard
against as they grow older:
One. The tendency to do more than their share of the
talking and less than their share of the listening.
Two. The tendency to shake their heads and cluck over
the goings-on of the younger generation.
Three. The temptation to dwell, conversationally, on
every bit of sad news they get hold of instead of looking
for bright or happy things to talk about.
Four. The belief that because they have lived a long
time they know best about everything and don’t need to
consider anyone else’s point of view.
Five. The mistaken notion that when others ask: “How
are you?” they really want to hear a detailed account of
aches and pains.
Six. The refusal to try new ways of doing things to
make day-to-day living easier.
Seven. A lack of sympathy and understanding for
friends of their own age.
Eight. The loss of laughter, esepcially the ability to
laugh at themselves.
Nine. The temptation to think and talk mainly of the
past, instead of the present and future.
Ten. The tendency to count their miseries instead of
their blessings.
Eleven. The belief that they have reached an age
where they don’t have to be tactful but can speak their
minds on all occasions.
Twelve. The inability to see that all ages have their
oroblems and that the problems of the young are every
bit as real and bewildering as the problems of those
facing old age. — R. M.
Cold Statistics
On Auto Deaths
After four years of what could not have been the most
pleasant job anyone ever had—on-the-spot studies of auto
death two scientists have issued what has been called
“the most intensive first-hand study of traffic deaths
since the car was bom.”
Dr. Donald F. Heulke, an anatomist, and Dr. Paul W.
Gikas, a pathologist, both of the University of Michigan,
reconstructed each of the 139 fatal accidents that took
place in the Ann Arbor area over a four-year period. The
project was commissioned by the U. S. Public Health
Service.
Its chief findings need little elaboration:
• Forty per cent (71) of the 177 persons who died
in the accidents would have lived if they had been wear
ing a simple lap belt. (Of these, 38 were killed by being
thrown from the car: 33 by “secondary collision” with
some part of the interior of the car.)
• Twenty per cent more (35) would have been saved
by shoulder harness and belt. (Of these, 32 were killed
in the “secondary collision.”)
• Thirty-seven per cent (66) would have died re
gardless of belts, in most cases because the passenger
compartment was greatly collapsed.
Dr. Huelke answers with cold statistics the occasional
story of someone who survived an accident which would
have killed him if he had been belted in: “We have had
only one case of a survivor who owes his life to not
wearing a seat belt. We have had at least 71 who owe
their deaths to not wearing one. Anybody who doesn’t
wear a seat belt is stupid.”
Another statistic speaks eloquently to those who stake
their lives on their own skill and caution—their ability
to avoid “the other guy”: Of the 93 victims in multiple
car accidents, 33 — more than a third — perished in the
car judged not to be at fault.
One Statue Won’t
Repay Uncle Sam
FLORIDA TIMES UNION
The French decision to erect n monument honoring
Major Thomas D. Howie, the legendary World War U
“major of St. Lo,” and Charles de Gaulle’s decision to
bolt NATO and boot all American troops out of France
seem somehow to be contradictory activities.
Major Howie and thousands of other Americans died
recovering freedom for France. The French were overrun
by the Germans because of Gallic pride, obstinancy and
a dependency on out-moded military concepts which
were undermined by treason and treachery. It was the
second time in history that Americans were called upon
to save the French.
ags Chuckling jpJ V
With Ye Editor
Some people get ahead by know-how, others by know
who.
• • • • •
“Spring is here and it’s also that time of year when
women pay clothes attention to each other.” — Guest.
• • • • •
No wonder the school teachers are frustrated. They
want more money, but they get more pupils.
Wednesday, April 20,1966 Griffin Daily
BERRY'S WORLD
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'a 1966 Sr NO. Ik.
“We keep coming back to the same problem—there’*
nothing sexy about safety!”
MY
ANSWER HVV
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Adorning
Will you please explain the
scripture I Peter 3:3?
T.A.
The verse you refer to is:
“Whose adorning let It not be
that outward adorning of plait
ing the hair, and of wearing gold
or of putting on of apparel; but
let it be the hidden man of the
heart, in that which Is not cor
ruptible, even the ornament of
a meek and q_iet spirit, which
is in the sight of God of great
price.”
This actually includes the
fourth verse which makes clear
verse three.
Apparently the women of those
days, like some of our women
today, thought that “outward
adorning” was what made them
attractive and beautiful. The
apostle Peter here is urging
them to not be content with
mere outward adorning, but to
seek the adornment of a ‘meek
and quiet spirit’, which ‘is in the
sight of God of great price.’
Some people Interpret this to
mean that women are not to
wear any ‘outward adorning’ at
all. But this is pushing the point
too far. If we were to take the
verse literally, as some do we
would have to assume that the
‘putting on of outward apparel’
was wrong also, which of course
we do not and cannot do.
The point here is this: spiri
tual adornment, the inner gra
ces, are more adorning than
those outward adornments whi
ch many rely too much upon.
Don’t stop here, the apostle says,
but seek “the ornament of a
meek and quiet spirit.”
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rot today Roofflt
Che Upper
Seeing then that we have a
great high priest, that is pass
ed into the heavens, Jesus the
Son of God, let us hold fast our
profession. (Hebrews 4:14)
PRAYER: God, our heavenly
Father, we thank Thee that Thy
love is extended to all Thy chil
dren through Jesus Christ our
Savior. Help us to accept Thy
love, receive Thy salvation, and
hold fast our faith through pro
feesing and living it. For Jes
us sake. Amen.
V
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m
Only about one-third of
the world’s population has
an adequate food supply.
In underdeveloped such areas
the deficiencies, protein as
undernutrition,
malnutrition, anemia and
beriberi, are predominant, in which
But in regions abundant
food economic supplies are levels high,
and
overnutrition, such as
obesity, is the problem.
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