Newspaper Page Text
Stationary Target
■
k < *
m V ,v »
tv'v
la»ks&iv-%
m /
TTl '$? ¥\
A
0
r/'^v “(■r
‘
_±2r-~-.>. Wwm mm
.
Tie-Ups
ACROSS
4 4 Zeus Zeus and and- !!?5i
S^ots
88Kff HOni.dp.mW
u
mn high degree
18 Dutch coin
19 English cloth
merchant
21 Utilize
22Tibetan 23 gazelle
Terminus
26Position
28 Card pack
29look
80 Single
82 Meager
34 37 Petty prince
88Title Nigerian Negro
of
39 Mineral rocks
41 Musical
45 composer Australian
ostrich
2 3 y 5 6 7 9 10 n
■ 19 [22 20 1 ? 7
i
mm 28 29
36 [37
m W 42 43 44
4! m p
52 53 55
SIDE GLANCES
I tV
9
«? %
:
m* « 4 <£> ./fa m
*
:
y'i ?i\ \
i
.*** & y
|r2.j J :
(b rn) t, xtA. he. +M. I* Vi on j
**| don’t know what you sea in me, Miss Dunbar. I’m
just a plain, old run-of-the-mill millionaire!"
GRIFFIN
DAILY NEWS
Quimby Melton, Cary Reeves, General Manager Quimby Melton, Jr.,
Publisher Bill Knight, Executive Editor Editor
Fall Leased Wire sendee CM, Foil NEA. Address all Mall (Subscripttons Published Daily Except Sunday, Second Clan
Change of Address form 357» to P. O. Box 135, E. Solomon St., Griffin, Go. Footage Paid at Griffin, Go. — Single Copy Ce
46 Of physicians
47 Your Turning (poet.) point
48
Si At the apex
.
—
56 ^ s n ’ d
58 el th* the
i?d 1
52 kqt 1 v ...
61 feminine name
DOWN
1 Highway , la
»«*"* <* "e’
2 Like an aria
‘music)
3 Picture shows ,
4 Pronoun
5 Dutch cheese
6 Renonuce
7—~ and the
lion
Answer to Previous Punic
R j= a S p o ilEIPtm
a E w E. EOT E HWgli iiwrziH
Tr tI RJAITIEISI
u bTaMf
Q olMlA RIB A sTTiRlOlKTEl I ai n
A L p] £15 H S1L4IZ1B4
L
CIO n e E
m LONBT A £R£.
AN 5 E O a T £ AI;
rammi A S.JLA a 1 A
Qnras D E A L. S
8 Cover with
» asphalt Peak in the
Himalayas
io Swiss river
11 Tricky
16And (Latin)
20 241 Hardened
oi n
25 Lair
27 Craggy hill
28 Dejected
31 Mother-in-law
of Ruth (Bib.)
33 Knave in
rribbage
34 Mariner's
direction
35 Goal
36 Dray driver
40--princeps (first edition)
42 District in
Greece
43 Selected
44 Punctuation
mark
49 Loase
50 Red carnelian
51 Paid notice
52 Trim branches
53 Monkey (comb,
55 New
form)
MY
ANSWER
?
Only Seventeen
I would like to follow Christ,
but I’m only seventeen, and I
would like to have some fun be
fore I settle down. A.H.
Where did you get the Idea that
being a Christian keeps one from
having fun? I’m afraid you
have seen too many Imitations
of Christianity, and too little of
the real thing. The happiest peo
ple I know In the world are fol
lowers of Jesus Christ. In fact,
I really don’t know any genu
inely happy people who are not
Christians.
If you could hear the hilarious
laughter when Christians get to
gether, and see the real Joy on
their faces, you would never say,
“I want to have some fun before
I settle down and be a Chris
tian”, again. Probably you have
listened to too many ‘‘don’t?”
and negatives by older Chris
tians. They Just neglected to tell
you that, although there are some
“don’ts", and restrictions, God
never asks us to give up anything
that Is good for us. Like any
loving Father, He wants Hi s
children to enjoy the finest and
best. But remember this: you
can’t beat God in the game of
giveaway. If we give up some
thing for Him, He gives back to
us a hundredfold. It really then
isn’t a sacrifice, but a wonder
ful game in which God takes de
light in matching our consecra
tion with blessings beyond mea
sure. “He that loseth his life
for my sake”, said Jesus, “shall
find it.”
*• PRfWEB
FOR TODAT FROM
Che Upper Room«
Do you not know that your
body is a temple of the Holy Spi
rit within you, which you have
from God? (I Corinthoans 6:19,
RSV)
PRAYER: Divine heavenly
Father, suffuse our personal liv
es with such a spirit of holy,
healthy Christlikeness as to
make our churches centers of
real Christian joy and power.
For Jesus’ sake. Amen.
GRIFFIN DAILY NEWS
Subscription Price*
Delivered by carrier: One
year 416.20, six months $0.50.
three months 04.50. 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.S5, one
month $1.35, Delivered by
Special A n t o: One Year
$18.20 (tax included.)
EDITORIALS
I
Editorial Roundup
It Is Time
To Take Stock
As majority leader in the Senate, Mike Mansfield has a
Z 'mo±V £ s.
90th Congress devote much of its tin^to
examination of government programs will happen.
there is a strong likelihood that this
Mansfield has not always been in tune with the Presi
dent, and he could be wrong in supposing that Mr. John
son will have fewer demands for new legislation in the
coming session. But he is surely in tune with many voters.
Here are some interesting editorial comments on the
Mansfield proposal:
DAILY NEWS, Chicago — “Mansfield and other mem
bers of the new Congress are reflecting a sense of uneasi
ness in the land when they say it is time to stop, look and
listen. Even if there were no war in Vietnam, it would be
a time for consolidation following a period of innovation,
a time to check on how well the new programs are work
ing out, and to re-evaluate old ones with an eye to over
lapping and continuing need. The old program of fa™ 1
subsidies, which Mansfield singled out along with the draft,
taxes and foreign aid, has long needed drastic overhaul.
The sort of thorough look Mansfield calls for would doubt
less turn up programs that have outlived their need and
continue only because nobody has got around to turning
off.”
TIMES DISPATCH, Richmond, Va. — “All these
-
programs should, of course, have been thoroughly studied
and overhauled before they were launched. But a tardy ex
amination and revision of them is better than none at all.
And while Congress is at it, it should also take more than
a cursory peek at some of the notoriously inefficient and
wasteful programs that have been on the books for a
number of years.”
COURANT, Hartfrd, Conn. — “The 89th Congress
might well have been called the great leap forward toward
the Great Society. It is m6re than likely that the 90th
Congress will be the Congress of Reevaluation.”
M —
WORLD JOURNAL TRIBUNE — “Sen. Mansfield’s
suggestion that Congress lay greater emphasis on study
ing old legislation than passing new is a good one.”
STATES - ITEM, New Orleans, La. — “We agree that
the 90th Congress has a unique opportunity to stand back
and reflect on existing laws and programs with an eye to
ward improving them in the light of experience to. make
sure they correspond to the needs of a changing nation.
HERALD, Miami, Fla. — “Before more good money
chases after had it is proper that Congress set about Mike
Mansfield’s proposed major reexamination.”
OREGONIAN, Portland, Ore. — “Party politics aside,
this is no time for the President to pull a lot of new pro
grams out of the hat, and no time for Congress to embroil
itself in more welfare state plans before putting the ones
now on the statute books in working order.”
EAGLE, Wichita, Kan. “There is a time for creating
new programs, and there is a time for evaluating the pro
grams we have. Definitely, 1967 is a time for evaluating.”
FREE PRESS, Detroit, Mich. —- “Instead of the Demo
crats having a two-thirds majority in the House, thev have
a majority in name only. A Republican-Southern Demo
crat coalition can stop almost anything, and the same is
true in the Senate. Mr. Johnson got what he wanted when
the getting was good and the dice were loaded his way.
Now the dice are loaded against him and in favor of Sen.
Mansfield. We’ll bet with loaded dice every time.”
TIMES - UNION, Albany, N. Y. — “There are hund
reds of federal bureaus and offices dealing with thou
sands of state and local governments. More than 170 fed
eral programs are enmeshed in more than 400 separate
appropriations. Fifty state governments, with thousands
of independent departments and agencies, administer
more than 75 percent of all federal grant-in-aid funds, in
addition to their own programs. Definitely, the time for
reevaluation has come. The session of Congress would be
well advised to devote a great amount of its time to the
correction of flaws in the federal structure. More effic
iency, giving the taxpayers more for his money, is certain
ly needed, or the machine of government will run away
with all of us.”
TIMES. Roanoke, Va. — “The need for reexamination
hasn’t suddenly arisen. But it is more urgent today because
the Vietnam war, which is the prior concern of the nation,
is taking more and more of our resources. There is more
than a little irony in the awareness of some of our political
leaders that we have gone too far and too fast on the
domestic front. The country would have more confidence
in Congress if it exhibited independence and asserted it
self in the manner Senator Mansfield proposes.”
MORNING NEWS, Dallas, Tex.—“Senator Mansfield’s
call for a return to reasonableness and responsibility could
not have come at a more appropriate time.”
'
A
a
41
i tmHf
© 1967 by NEA, Inc.
“Don’t give me any lip, daddy-I’m TIME mag’s ‘Man
of the Year’!”
Religion Today
Prayer For
Christian
By LOUIS CASSELS
United Press International
The ecumenical movement,
seeking to build bridges of
brotherhood between Prote
stants and Catholics, is a year
round affair. However, it
reaches a peak of activity
during the period Jan. 18-25,
observed throughout the world
as “a week of prayer for
Christian Unity.”
With Unity Week now at
hand, it seems an appropriate
time to take stock of progress.
The past year witnessed a
continued warm-up in Catholic
Protestant relations. Things
happened that would have been
Inconceivable just a few years
ago.
For example:
The Anglican Archbishop of
Canterbury visited the Vatican
as the honored guest of Pope
Paul VI. As a result of their
talks, Anglican and Catholic
delegations met last week in
Gazzada, Italy, to begin a
discussion of the issues that
divide the two churches, includ
ing the subject of mixed
marriages.
The World Council of
Churches entered into a working
agreement with the Vatican to
coordinate relief programs for
famine victims in India and
Africa.
Protestant and Catholic scho
lars agreed to work together on
a common Bible.
In Boston, a Catholic cardinal
greeted 800 delegates to the
General Assembly of the United
Presbyterian Church as "dearly
beloved fellow Christians," and
received a thunderous ovation.
In Dallas, the pastor of the
First Baptist Church said that
“in big cities, Catholics do far
and away the most effective
job” of evangelism.
In Mequon, Wis., a struggling
young Lutheran congregation
lost its lease on a club building
it had been using as a
temporary place of worship.
Nuns at a nearby Catholic
convent immediately offered
space —free of charge. The
offer was gratefully accepted.
In Philadelphia, when fire
razed St. Agatha’s Catholic
Church, Mass was held at
neighboring Lutheran and Epis
copal churches.
In Kansas City, Catholics,
Episcopalians, Congregationa
lists and Presbyterians went
into partnership to build a
$400,000 church to be used by all
four bodies. Each will conduct
its own sacraments, but there
will be some Joint preaching
and prayer services.
In New York, the National
Council of Churches appointed a
Quotes
By United Press International
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. —De
fense lawyer F. Lee Bailey
criticizing a state law that led a
jury to reject a plea of Insanity
for Albert H. DeSalvo, self
professed Boston strangler, and
sentenced him to life in prison:
"Massachusetts has just
burned another witch.”
★
SAN QUENTIN, Calif. —
Associate warden James Park
after guards used a wall of
gunfire and tear gas to prevent
a massive racial riot among
3,000 white and Negro priso
ners:
”We’ll give them a chance to
cool off. It’s no easier to solve a
racial problem inside a prison
than outside.”
Sat. and Sun, Jan. 21-22, 1947 Griffin Daily News
Jesuit Priest, Fr. David J.
Bowman, to Its executive staff.
In Buffalo, Catholic nuns and
Protestant Sunday school teach
ers worked side by side at a
vacation Bible school for slum
children.
In Lafayette, La., a Catholic
bishop served a3 chairman of a
building fund drive for the
Salvation Army.
In Washington, D.C., a
Methodist bishop and 14 of his
district superintendents attend
ed a Catholic retreat.
In St. Louis, Catholic officials
accepted membership on a
committee planning observance
of the 450th anniversary of the
Reformation.
In more than 1,000 U.S.
communities from coast to
coast, small groups of Prote
stant and Catholic laymen met
weekly for "living room dia
logues” becoming better ac
quainted with each other’s
beliefs. To encourage such
grass-roots ecumenicity, the
National Council of Churches
and the Paulist Press jointly
distributed more than 150,000
copies of a book that tells how
to set up a living room dialogue.
The list could go on, but
that’s a fair sample of the
year’s ecumenical activity.
As Pope Paul VI emphasized
this week, it is just a beginning
on the long, long road to
Christian reunion.
'But when you recall the
mutual suspicion and hostility
which characterized Protestant
Catholic relations as recently as
the 1950’s, you can see why the
Rev. Dr. Robert McAfee Brown,
professor of religion at Stanford
University, recently described
the ecumenical movement as
"ore of the most powerful
manifestations of the Holy
Spirit in the world today.”
Thought For Today
A thought for the day—
Former U.S. President Harry
Truman said, “The responsibili
ty of the great states is to serve
and not dominate the world.”
You Bet Your Life
I0|
^ <3-
“Th l»«oi BHwL Uh haw« Iwndt foffhgr.*
■M.
Tht Trartlart Softly Smrrkm
Carelessness and inattention account for a large
percentage of highway accidents.
4
WORLD ALMANAC
FACTS
•: •’*
a
K Wj .'i B
An ancient civilization
once thrived some 6,000
years ago in an area that is
now a desert between India
and Pakistan, says The
World Almanac. Usually
known as the Indus Valley
Civilization, the excavated
cities Harappa of Mohenjo-Daro show that these and
urban centers supported a
population thousands. numbering The cities in
the
also show evidence of a
complex form of govern
ment, elaborate irrigation
and drainage systems, well
laid-out streets and houses
of several stories.
Newspaper CopyrfsM © 19CT, ARM,
Enterprise
Almanac
For
Griffin
By United Press International
Today Is Saturday, Jan. 21,
the 21st day of 1967 with 344 to
follow.
The moon is approaching the
full stage.
The morning stars are Mars
and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Venus,
Saturn and Jupiter.
French fashion designer
Christian Dior was born on this
day in 1905.
On this day in history:
In 1861, Jefferson Davis
resigned from the U.S. Senate,
12 days before Mississippi
seceded from the Union.
In 1918, the Soviet Council
ruled all debts incurred by the
former Russian czarist govern
ment null and void.
In 1954, the first atomic
powered submarine, Nautilus,
was launched at Groton, Conn.
In 1965, Indonesia formally
resigned from the United
Nations.