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14 Dyestuff (vtr.)
15 lliuiider, Western cattle
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18 Raid notices in
SO newspapers Reverential
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18 Lamprey
M fisherman
container Vegetable
16 Pertaining to a
tiasue (mat.)
98 Miss Traubel
87 Skillful
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"H#r» comes Madge! She always livens th.'.’gs up with
a confidential rumor!”
GRIFFIN
□Ail v < ■ LY er NEWS
Quimby Mellon, Cary Reeves, General Manager Quimby Mellon, Jr.,
Publisher Bill Knight, Executive Editor Editor
leased wire Service Wl, Full NBA. Address all Man (Subscriptions Published Dally Except Sunday, Clam
Cteasa at Address farm 8878 la F. O. Box 135, E. Solomon St, Griffin, G* Footage Paid at Griffin, Oa. i
—
contrivers (obs.)
satisfaction
ft
2Sg522fe -island Comedian,
Eddie
DOWN
1 Scourge
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to
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concise
coos Martin
Johnson
©
Answer to Previou s Puzzle '
1 Ihieiriai IpIbia'
o R Ol_ £. a E N
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EEC N
B anSssB
SXADi i.ihI I
p e r T D O DO
11 Afresh
12 Withered
19 English stream
21 Puns up
22 Speechless
23 Greeter
24 Races
25 Measure of
26 length
French artist
27 29 Land Spanish ownerahli
30 Transaction pot
31 Makes mistakei
37 Doctor of
Theology (ab.)
Mows Carney (Bib.)
and
Linkletter
-Carroll
(Fr.)
room
Quotes
By United Press International
BERKELEY, Calif. —Former
Gov. Edmund G. Brown,
commenting on . the, ouster of
Dr. Clark Kerr from his post as
president of the University of
California:
“A tragedy.....the
reactionaries or the State of
California are really taking
over. It’s too bad.”
k
LONDON —A letter by a
group of distinguished British
authors condemning certain
criticism of u.s. policy in
“Much of it represents the
Impact of suspect Information
upon uncritical minds. And
much of it, coming from
conformist protesters, accords
better with emotional habit than
with any real concern for either
truth or humanity.”
Almanac
For
Griffin
By United Press International
Today is Monday, Jan. 23, the
23rd day of 1967 with 342 to
follow.
The moon is approaching the
full stage.
Tire evening stars are Venus,
S pallet'
A meric an John Han
cock was born on this day in
1737 .
On this day in history:
In 1937, 17 Russian Commu
nlsts confessed they had con
spired with Leon- Trotsky to
undermine the regime of Joel
Stalin.
In 1941, the “Lone Eagle”
Charles Oindbergh, testified
before the House Foreign
Affairs Committee In oposition
to the proposed Lend Lease Bill
of World war II.
In 1948, Gen, Dwight Hsen
hower claimed he would not
accept the nomination for
president from either party. In
1952 he ran and won on the
Republican ticket.
In 1965, former British Prime
Mlnister Winston Churchill died.
Though. For Today
A thought for the day—The
late U.S. Ambassador to the
Untted Nations, Adlai Steven
son, said: “Let’s talk sense to
the American people, let s tell
them the truth, that there are
no gains without pains.”
GRIFFIN DAILY NEWS
Subscription Prices
Delivered by carrier: One
year $16.20, six months $8.58,
three months $4.50. one
month $1.55, one week 38
cents. By mail, except within
30 miles of Griffin, rates are
same as by carrier. By mail
within 30 miles of GrUfin:
One year $13.10, six months
$7.35, three months $3.85, one
month $1.35, Delivered by
Special Auto: One Tear
$18.20 (tax included.)
EDITORIAL PAGE
They Didn’t
Look Other Way
Aut. Chief Bobby Joe Conner paid a compliment to the
citizens of Griffin for their support of law enforcement
officers.
He commented: “We are proud that the citizens of Grif•
fin do not turn their heads on law enforcement officers as
they do in many other cities.”
The assistant chief spoke after five local citizens and an
out-of-state man had helped a police officer chase down
* sus P ect ,n a service station robbery here.
Thanks to the citizens help, the suspect was apprehend
ed shortly after the crime.
Recent stories from many major cities, many of them
in the north, have told of citizens’ looking the other way
while their fellow citizens were terrorized by criminals.
Such stories almost have become commonplace and hard
ly make the national news wires anymore.
“We don’t want to get involved,” usually is the answer
given _ by citizens who look the other way.
Whether they wanted to be involved or not was beside
the point. They were. All of us are involved when it comes
to law enforcement, be we citizen or officer.
No law enforcement system can work without a broad
base of support from the citizens it serves. Police officers
would stand almost powerless without the backing of the
citizens.
What happened in Griffin is a good indication that law
enforcement here has citizen supoprt.
Let’s keep it that way.
Computerized
Beauty Queen
The beauty queen at Worchester College in England will
be chosen by a computer. Yes, by a computer!
This is because some of the 70 contestants are too shy
to appear before human judges in swimsuits and others
suspect human judges might be biased.
Conceding that a computer is unbiased all right, and
that science is wonderful, a lot of nonscientists are nonethe
less going to snort that this is a heck of a way to run a
beauty contest,
Wouldn’t it be funny if the computer were to choose
another computer as beauty queen — without even bother
ing with beauty or vital statistics?
♦ Guest Editorial ♦
Charlotte
Out-Bigs Atlanta
BIRMINGHAM NEWS
Birmingham is pleased as can be at news of plans for a
new 20-story office building on the near Southside, not far
from the site of an under-construction, 14-story bank
building near the Medical Center.
Bu *. w « h » v « » lon * “> «** «P with some of
Still c "f,T brand j’ new, practically, ...... is the 33-story First „ Nation- .
R I Bank Building in Mobile—which gave the Port City
claim to the state’s tallest building, a title long held by
Birmingham’s 27-story City Federal (nee Comer) Build
ing.
Tall buildings have been sprouting up all around the
? have outh completed ’ in f ? c *“7 Ne . w ° r . ,ca the ” s * works Memphis and other addition* cities £ j
^ *kylmes. or nave in important
*° e * r f
Claim to the tallest of all, however, has belonged —
not surprisingly—to the “mostest” Southern city of the
past decade, Atlanta, whose 41-story, 544-foot-tall First
National Bank Budding was supposed to tower over any
thuig anywhere / else in Dixie.
n Bu . * from , * 1 . most . Ple , will conclude ...
w 1 * P eo is an unex
p * cted quarter comes a new champion: Charlotte, N. C.,
w “* have a 41-story structure of its own, one which will
climb 26 feet higher than Atlanta’s.
On a clear day, its planners say, from the observation £
60 A
taUe ^ you could almost see the green (from envy
.
,ns lf ad do *J ars ‘ or * change) glow from Atlanta.
°_ r other Southern cities—-including Birmingham—the
Charlotte message is one being heard more and more hr
quently: Get a move on, or get left behind.
•«*
We never saw a bored person who wasn't, in turn, bor
ing.
• • • • •
‘Many a man who marries . a wisp of a girl is astonished
at the will of the wisp.” — Irish Digest
_ Truth . . in packaging .••••• would ruin the foundation
industry. garment
Chuckling
With Ye Editor
KN
Monday, January 23, 1967 Griffin DaOy News
,■•1
•I
“Let’s not refer to my aides leaving the White House as
‘leaving the ship’l”
MY ^
ANSWER! <
* 1
"t&jthaiaw
Second Death
us, whom Jesus raised from the
dead, had to die again. Did he
have a glorified body, or did he
have to die again Just like any
one else? D.J.
There is every reason to be
lieve that Jesus restored Laza
rus to his original, natural state,
and that he had to experience
death Just like anyone else. If
he had been given a glorified
body like our Lord had after his
resurrection, he could have gone
through closed doors, and would
not have been limited to space
as are normal people. But we
read nowhere In the New Testa
ment that Lazarus possessed this
power. It Is assumed, therefore,
that Lazarus passed through the
experience of a second death,
which makes him a little unique,
and one of three such people
whose lives Jesus touched. They
were: The widow’s son, Luke 7:
11; Jalrus’ daughter, Matt. 9:
18, and of course, Lazarus, John
11:44.
Even though these were restor
ed to life, we must assume that
they eventually died after living
out their life span. The Bible
says, “It Is appointed unto man
... to die, and after death the
Judgment.’’ It would have been
interesting, indeed, to have fol
lowed these three people whom
Jesus raised from the dead, and
recorded their statements about
what they experienced when
dead.
*llui PftfltfER
* 0 * today hom ,
£}){ tlPPCf ROOUte
Let your light so shine before
men, that they may see your
S 00d works, and glorify your Fa
ther which is in heaven. (Matt
h h . v t.,., 16)
PRAYER: O God, our Fath
er, whose loving-kindness has
lighted the pathway of all belie
vers - help us t0 d0 good ln our
SXSS
influence help towards a better
world. Help us to live In the spi
rit of Christ, in whose name we
P™y. Amen.
-
WORLD ALMANAC
FACTS
The Antonio Stradivari
method of making fine vio
lins remains something of
a secret, Almanac. according to The
World The per>
fection of these famed in
struments was probably
due in part to the superb
quality used in of wood construction. and varnish So
perfect 16th were the violins of
the and 17th century
with their smooth texture,
soft orange to red color and
excellent tonal quality, that
modem makers have not
been able to equal them, in
the opinion of most ex
perts.
Newspaper Copyright Enterprise © 1887, Assn.
4
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