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Ballads
ACROSS
l”Ben-”
5 “Do ye
John Peel?”
8 Ladies” “-Night,
12 Swan genus
13Mountain
(comb, form)
14 In matter of
(Latin)
13 Capital of
Western Samoa
16 “Auld-
18 Eye part
20 Cajoled
21 Greek letter
23 22 Prophet Trigonometric
26 Strike
30 Arabian name
31 Etruscan name
33 Chemical suffix
34 Tranagressiont
36 Yawn
38 Abstract being
39 Keen
41 “Kiss for the
4 6 7 9 10 11
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16
21 - W~mE P
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28 29
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c WJ ta NIX, In. tm UA T* OttW 1-4
“They pick up ideas junior mighty fast these days. He says
he can’t play executive unless he has two
telephones!”
GRIFFIN
DAILY NEWS
Quimby Melton, Cary Reeves, General Manager Quimby Melton, Jr.,
Publisher Bill Knight, Executive Editor Editor
%
rat Leased Wire sendee UPI, Full NEA. Address all Mail (Subscriptions
Ghanga of Addreaa form $579 ta P. O. Box 135, E. Solomon St, Griffin, Ga.
-to Twick
enham town”
43 Feminine name
45 Craggy hill
46 Wise answer
4« 52 Play “Green the flute
the-” grow
54 (comp.wd.) Slim
55 Mirth
56 Sailor
57 Wife of Zeus
( G r eek)
.„ 58 Affirmative . „ . „_
591 igpcn
60 Kind of cheese
DOWN
WNP3YW
(ep* a beverage
occasion
co
Answor to Previous Puizle
p o M E p o K E P A
A V E S A R A AM n
T OP A u e I T
LSiib IMt E H N I
WpF T
E „ A S I 1QL
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Ik. A D O MeT cy E E Dl
E M a b BE a
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l5Mtfe> |A|M A HSHHCI § p
HlJlld SUf gg
8 Variety of
10 chalcedony Trieste
wine
measure*
it Act
17 Departs
19 Part of finger
22 Mexican shawl
23 Holder for
flowers .
24 Lamb's pen
name
25 Pony
27 Buried
„„ 28 Chinese . secret .
society
32 Mineral spring
35 Disturbance of
lake surface
37 First word of
Idaho’s motto
40 Actor's part
42 Assuage
44 Arboreal
abodes
46 Revelry
47 Govern
48 On the ocean
49 Conservative
50 Italian coin
51 Biblical name
Quotes
By United Press International
WASHINGTON —Sen. George
Murphy R-Calif., expressing his
desire to direct the Senate
Republican campaign for 1968:
“I can think of nothing that I
would rather do than expend
my best efforts to help elect
more Republicans in 1968.”
★
DETROIT -Chrysler Vice
President Harry Cheesebrough,
warning of the possible conse
quences If automobile suppliers
could not meet the demands
made necessary by proposed
federal safety standards:
“A failure in this area could
shut down our assembly lines
very quickly.”
★
NEW ' YORK —MRS. T.
Edward Hanley, wife of an art
collector whose fabulous art
items are now on display In
New York:
“With my husband, Manet Is
ftist, Cezanne is first, Renoir is
first, Toulouse Lautrec is first,
the books are first. I am
second. He simply added me to
his collection, but at least I am
among the masterpieces.”
Almanac
For
Griffin
By United Press International
Today is Wednesday, Jan. 4,
the fourth day of 1967 with 361
to follow.
The moon is between its last
quarter and the new stage.
The morning stars are Jupiter
and Mars.
The evening stars are Saturn
and Jupiter.
English mathematician and
philosopher. Sir Isaac Newton,
discoverer of the law of gravity,
was born on this day in 1642.
On this day in history:
In 1885, Dr. William Grant of
Davenport, Iowa, performed
history’s first appendectomy.
The patient made a complete
recovery.
In 1896, Utah became the 45th
state.
In 1948, Burma became an
independent country.
In 1965, poet T. S. Eliot died
at the age of 76.
GRIFFIN DAILY NEWS
Subscription Prices
Delivered by carrier: One
year $16.20, six months $8,50,
three months $4.50. o n t
month $1.55, one week 35
cents. By mail, except within
30 miles of Grtffin, 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.)
F
EDITORIALS ft#
77m Week’s Editorial
By /I Woman Especially For Women
It Is Rarely
By Chance
It is rarely by chance — companionable
That a husband and wife remain
through the years. (It takes a special effort on the part of
one of them—usually on the part of the wife.)
That some people have many friends, whOe others go
through life feeling lonely and apart. (The ones who have
friends are the ones who take the initiative in making
friends and keeping them.)
That a woman’s friends think her husband is intelligent,
generous, and easy to live with. (If that’s the picture she
paints of him, conversationally, it is the one that is ac
cepted.)
That a teen-ager has a courteous and respectful attitude
toward adults. (You can be sure that’s an attitude his
parents have been hammering into him since childhood.)
That some women seem to entertain effortlessly, while
others always appear to be harried hostesses. (The re
laxed hostess has everything so well-organized in advance
that her entertaining just looks easy.)
That an older woman has a pretty face. (It may be
chance in a girl or young woman, but by the time a woman
is past middle-age her face reflects the kind of person she
is. If she is a kind and gentle person her face will have a
soft, appealing look.)
That a full-time homemaker has something to talk about
besides her home, husband, children and local gossip. (If
she can talk intelligently on a variety of subjects it means
she hasn’t let herself become completely bogged down by
homemaking, but has managed to keep well-informed
about world affairs and interested in art, music and litera
ture.)
— R. M.
The Draft Versus
An Army Of Pros
At first blush, the idea seems eminently logical: in to
day’s push-button, nuclear-missile, electronic age, the
modem army should be composed of highly skilled, highly
paid professionals. The unpopular and unequal draft
should be done away with entirely, except in time of total
mobilization.
Push-button warfare, however, remains strictly in the
realm of the theoretical. It is to be hoped that it stays
there. All the wars and military actions this nation has been
involved in since the advent of the atomic bomb have been
the traditional kind. They have been fought by men who
carried rifles, crawled through mud, dug foxholes, took
prisoners.
No machines have yet been built which can do these
things. Furthermore, it is difficult to conceive of any
great number of men volunteering for such service, no
matter how attractive the pay.
Lt. Gen. Louis B. Hershey, director of Selective Ser
vice, sees not only difficulty but danger as well in the idea
of a volunteer army. He wants no part of mercenaries.
“When the country gets to the point where the average
citizen doesn’t want to defend himself, then I don’t think
it makes much difference if anyone else does. We’re
goners.’’
The general may exaggerate, hut he has a point. The
average American citizen is as ready to defend his country
as he ever was, but in this day defense cannot wait until
the enemy is at the gates. A large, well-prepared army of
rifle-carrying soldiers, backed by a civilian reserve of ser
vice veterans, is essential to national security and will be
essential as far as we can see into the future.
The unpopularity of the Vietnam war, its seeming re
moteness from the area of national defense and the con
sequent distaste with the draft that sends men to fight in
it, should not he allowed to obscure that fact.
There may be room for improvement in the Selective
Service system, but until such time as the world is safe
from wars and rumors of wars, the draft seems here to
stay.
oj a « With riinekliml Ye Editor 9 0
• e*
With nil those bowl games, the pigskin certainly hogged
TV.
• • • • •
“Then there was the oil tycoon who sent his engineers
a greeting card: ‘Get well soon.’ ” — Irish Digest
• • • • •
One of the reasons that experience is the best teacher
is because it often teaches you to avoid a similar exper
ience.
Published Dally Exeept Sunday,
Postage Paid at Griffin. Ga. — Single Copy «a
Wednesday, Jan. 4, 1967
li
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© 1967 by NEA, Inc.
“It happens every time he dates something 1966!”
MY
ANSWER, b I r
Far Out Minister
I have listened to your broad
cast, and I believe in what you
preach. But we attend a
church which has a “far out”
minister. He never mentions
the new birth, and does not be
lieve in the virgin birth of Christ.
What should we do? D.L.
You can do one of two things:
If you feel that the Lord has
called you to minister to the
hungry, needy people in the
church you attend, and you are
able to do so without being ost
racized by the leadership, this
may be a missionary opportun
tty.
But if you feel that such a wit
ness is impossible, there are
doubtless other churches in your
community where you will re
ceive more palatable spiritual
food, and you could transfer to
one of these. It Is better to be
long to a church in which the
Gospel is preached and the Bi
ble believed In. But, one must
also consider the opportunity to
help others, and if you feel that
you are strong enough in the
faith to withstand the obvious
unbelief in your present situa
tion, and to apply a positive,
healing service where you are,
perhaps this would be God’s will
for you. It depends largely upon
whether or not you are mature
enough to stand up for the Gos
pel in your present situation. If
you are not, then you should Join
the church that will help you
grow into maturity.
*•PRflyEB
FOX TODAY FXOM
Cbe Upper Room®
It is the God who said, “Let
light shine out of darkness,” who
has shone in our hearts. (II Cor
inthians 4:6, RSV)
PRAYER: Eternal God, stand
ing at the portals of this new
year, we give Thee thanks that
the future is in Thy hands; that
at no time and in no place can
we drift beyond Thy love and
care. Grant us grace to walk with
Thee. For Jesus’ sake. Amen.
Thought For Today
A thought for the day —poet
Carl Sandburg said: “Some
times an expert is only a
. . . fool a long way from home.”
WORLD ALMANAC
FACTS
I
Z l f
.TV
y rn
V.
m
The Mayflower Compact
of 1620 is regarded be- by
many historians as the
ginning of democracy in
America. It was signed by
41 adult Pilgrims aboard
the Mayflower as that, ship
lay alongside the present
site of Provincetown, Mass.,
says The World Almanac.
Although not intended as a
constitution, the compact
was concluded to prevent
disorder and to establish a
local government based on
mutual consent
Newspaper Copyright Enterprise 9 1966, Asms
Griffin Daily News
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4