Newspaper Page Text
"You Have a Visitor from Moscow,
Mr. Chairman!"
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ACROSS
1 Little
•cboolhouio.
3 Now end—
12 Anger
U"—the
dishee"
14 Flower
15 Dance step
18 Primary—
,18 Cinderella’*
toiaUbUihed
amount*
2! “In a—"
22 Mimicked
24 Persian
tentmaker
26 Bewildered
27Idollzer(coll.)
30 Goes again*
82 “At authority tho
——
twelve”
84 Recumbent
2 3 5 6 7 9 10 IT
17
21 23
|27 28 29
31 [32 33
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42 43 44 47 48
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•Tell me one single thing I did wrong except fail to read
the washing instructions!”
GRIFFIN
DAILY NEWS
Quimby Melton, Cary Reeves, General Manager Quimby Melton, Jr.,
Publisher Bill Knight, Executive Editor Editor
UFL Full NBA. Address all Mail (Subscriptions Fa bits bed Daily Except Sunday,
Change et Address form U79 to P. O. Box 135, E. Solomon St., Griffin, Ga. Postage Paid at Griffin, Ga. —
35 Husband of
__ m
42 Beauty parlor
45 Willowere
49 Convey
52 51“-hearty" Kxude
53 Continent
54 Narrow inlet
85 Funeral
56 “Let’s mike a
——”
S7Cridtg WN
1 Tears
2 3 Epochal Beneficially
4 Brushed, us
floor
5 Heap
6 Musics!
7 Detective
(slang)
Anewer to Previoue Puzzle
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8 Trinity of
9 -— an owl
10 Domestic slave
11 Promontory
17 Picnics, for
instance
19 Tomato —-
23 Mexican coins
24 Verbal
25 26 Tremulous Flat-topped
27 Forcknowen
28 Related by
blood
29 Arboreal home
(Fr.)
amount
"-lively!”
Wading “-for bird
tho
last show”
Quotes
By United Press International
WASHINGTON President
Johnson, describing his pro
posed 6 per cent surcharge to
help finance the Vietnam War.
“No one wants a tax bill
unless It Is in the national
Interest. We think It Is.”
★
IjONDON _Reliable diploma
tic sources saying Soviet arms
are being stopped by the
Chinese en route to North
Vietnam:
“Practically nothing goes
through."
★
NEW YORK Milllonalre
Huntington Hartford, protesting
against the destruction of the
old Metropolitan Opera build
ing:
“This Is going to give
America a black eye for years
to come.”
Almanac
For
Griffin
By United Press International
Today is Friday, Jan. 20, the
20th day of 1967 with 345 to
follow.
The moon is approaching the
full stage.
The morning stars are Mars
and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Venus,
Saturn and Jupiter.
American figure skater Carol
Heiss was born on this day In
1940.
On this day In history:
In 1801, President John
Adams appointed John Marshall
of Virginia Chief Justice of the
TJ.S. Supreme Court.
In 1892, students at the
Springfield, Mass., YMCA
played the first official basket
ball game. The game was
Invented by Dr. James Nals
mlth to provide Indoor exercise.
In 1936, Britain’s King George
V died.
In 1965, Lyndon Baines
Johnson was inaugurated for his
first elected term as President
of the United States.
Thought For Today
A thought for the day—
American educator Nicholas
Murray Butler said, “An expert
Is one who knows more and
more about less and less.”
GRIFFIN DAILY NEWS
Subscription Prices
Delivered by carrier: One
year 516.20, six months 58,50.
three months 54.50. one
month 51.55, 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 513.10, six months
57.35, three months 53.85, one
month 31.35, Delivered by
Special A a t o: One Tear
51620 (tax included.)
m
EDITORIALS P 1
i
£ -A- THIS WEEK’S SPORTS EDITORIM. 4r it
Two Athletes
«
Leave Mark
The sports world was sadden this week by the death of
two of its great figures — Barney Ross and Goose Tatum.
They were champion performers in their chosen fields.
Ross was one of the world’s greatest boxers.
Tatum was an excellent basketball player. However, he
didn’t gain all his fame from scoring points. Most of it
came through antics that made people laugh. He was a
star attraction with the Harlem Globetrotters.
Ross fought his way out of the slums of Chicago. He
became the world champion in three divisions in the hey
day of boxing.
He was a war hero, winning the Silver Star for bravery.
Suffering from malaria and shrapnal injuries, Ross
became a dope addict. He had enough fight left to beat
the habit and become a speaker on how to conquer nar
cotic addiction.
He lost his last fight, a bout with throat cancer.
Tatum, who was called the Clown Prince of basketball
always left people laughing no matter where the Globe
trotters played.
His court antics were seen by millions around the world.
The sports world will miss Ross and Tatum. But it will
never forget them.
— Roger Dtx
Litterbugs
co ?** U * S ‘ *«P«ye™ «n estimated $500 million an
nually just to remove litter from highways, city streets,
parks, beaches, and other public areas, according to T. G.
Williams, head, Extension landscape department at the
University of Georgia. We don’t know how much it costs
in Griffin and Spalding County, but it is a good bit and
all of it never is really removed.
4 Guest Editorial ♦
Georgia
The Beautiful
RURAL GEORGIA
Georgia was at one time a one crop state insofar as
agriculture was concerned. It was “King Cotton” and now
we have seen the production of cotton drop to an all-time
low. As a matter of fact the lowest yield on record.
Georgia is now a diversified State and is doing well in
com, soy beans, peanuts, dairying, commercial eggs,
poultry and the like. We have made tremendous strides
in recent years in all these undertakings.
We cannot rest on our laurels. We must develop our
fullest potential along all lines.
The beautification of our State could aid tremendously
in our quest for more tourism. It is fitting indeed that Jan
uary should be declared “Georgia Beautiful Month.” Dur
ing this month in which we make our various plantings we
can begin the new year on the right foot, and aid the entire
State in its effort to make the State more beautiful.
Look what a tremendous thing it would be if every
member of a rural electric cooperative determined that
they would make their premises more beautiful and in addi
tion would plant ten dogwoods and ten redbuds. That
would mean a total of more than 7,000,000 plantings.
Keep this up for several years and we would be the talk of
the nation.
Our State abounds in natural beauty and we often take
it for granted.
Every community should have a Garden Club and Gar
den Club should feel responsible for contacting the ones in
authority in their cities as well as the counties, to see that
they take advantage of the offerings of our State Nurseries
as well as the commercial nurseries of the State.
We could change our tune from “America, the Beauti
ful ’ which we dearily like, to “Georgia, the Beautiful from
the Mountains to the Sea.”
With Ch "« Ye klin Editor « ^ ^
Ask a sharp question and you may get a blunt answer.
• • • • •
“A study indicates that men and women are about
equal in hearing ability. The girls are ahead, though, in
not listening.” — Birmingham (Mich.) Eccentric
• • • • •
Yellow journalism makes reputable editors see red.
* B
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hr,
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9 I
“Ah, Mr. Baker-Til bet you want to get away from it
all like Adam Clayton Powell I”
MY
ANSWERS
Pay The Price
I know ** »- my duty to worsb
God, but I guess I’m afraid to
pay the price of being a Chris
tian. T.Y.
But, as the television show
says, “The price is right.” Ac
tually, the price has already been
paid. The Bible says, “He was
rich, yet he became poor that
we through his poverty might
be made rich.” Yet, realistical
ly, there is a price to be paid
for being a follower of Jesus
Christ. Peter, James and John
left their nets to follow Him.
Zacheus paid off his old debts
when Jesus came to “abide at
house.” But, the thing to re
member is: the price we pray is
arbitrary, it is a “love gift”
Him who has redeemed us.
We are not saved because we
old wrongs right; we make
old wrongs right because He has
saved us. We are not saved be
cause we “forsake our nets”,
and leave the old life. We lea
ve the old life because He has
saved us. All of our love, wor
ship and sacrifice is not to find
salvation — but because He has
given us salvation.
If we had to “pay” for our sal
atlon, indeed, the price would
be more than we could pay. But
the Gospel says that we are not
saved by what we do, but by
what God has done. “For as
much as ye know ye were not re
deemed with corruptible things,
as silver and gold ... but with
the precious blood of Christ.”
(I Peter 1:18, 19).
*•vnmtn
»ot today from
Che Upper Rooitte
As you have many members
In one physical body and those
members differ in their func
tions, so we, though many in
number, compose one body in
Christ and are all members of
one another. (Romans 12:4-5, Ph
illips)
PRAYER: O God, from whom
alone the fullness of life proceds,
grant that Thy church may not
glory in wealth or numbers. May
it glory rather because Christ is
in its midst to offer through its
ministries compassion and the
peace that passes understand
ing; to Thine honor and glory.
Amen.
WORLD ALMANAC
FACTS
n
m • % a ' !*
• T •
They are found In all
countries, come in all sizes,
and can be filled with just
about ancient anything edible. called The
Romans
them OFFULA, the modern
world calls them sand
wiches. World Almanac, According to word The
the
“sandwich” comes from the
British lord, John Montagu,
4th Earl of Sandwich. He is
credited with having popu
larized the practice of slip
ping tween a two piece of meat be
slices of bread.
^Newspaper Copyright © 1967,
Enterprise Aa* 1 *.
Friday, January 20, 1967 Griffin Dally News
Television
Friday Night
2 S 111
S§s§ Neva N( m as Movie: Hews m «* Griffin Woody Mere Woodpecker
:00 Wells Panorama a
sl5 Pk» Hews s
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:15 m * Tunnel
:30 Man From Hogans t
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:0G t Movie l Range
:15 t “The Delicate n
:30 TAR. Cat Delinquent - Phyllis
i45 m M Dlller
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:15 <
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:30 Tonight Movie: Movie:
:45 M “Strangers “The Soldiers
Siowg a When We Of Pancho
a Meet” Vina*
a m s
a P s
Saturday Morning
£§58 Across Fence Tbs
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:15 A-Ge-Os m
:30 t Mr. Magoe
:45 a p
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:15 t m In Living
:30 Super «* 9
■45 Heroes a 9
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:15 m Heroes Carnival
•30 Atom Ant Underdog Porky Pig
:45 M H
:00 Fllntstones Frankenstein King
:15 ft Jr. Kong
:30 Spaeo Space Beaties
:45 Kldetteo Ghost
K)0 Secret Superman Casper
:15 Squirrel p •»
:30 Jetsons Lone MU ton the
:45 •» Ranger Monster
Saturday Afternoon
IS) *00 Cool McCool . Road Buggs
:15 n Runner Bunny
:30 Sound Of Beagle* Magilla
,•45 Youth M Gorilla
Tom and Hippety
:15 Secrets Jerry Hooper
•30 Adventure Stingray American
:45 M W Bandstand
fclisg n a a limits Capture Outer St Tomorrow Stars s t of
KM) World of a Gadabout
•15 Golf * Gaddis
:30 Littles* Pro Bowlers
:45 m Hobo Tour
fcSS! S3 • stats i “The Barbarian Movie: and the s t s a
i»&8 Geisha” Wilburn
» Brothers
Race To Porter
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