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“By far the most Impressive General structure De we saw in
France was Gaulle!”
GRIFFIN
DAILY NEWS
Quimby Melton, Cary Reeves, General Manag« Quimby Melton, Jr.,
Publisher Bill Knight, Executive Editor Editor
Ml Leased Wire Servlee UFL Full NEA. Address an Man (Subscriptions PebUshed Daily Exeept Sunday,
Omm* sf Addrses term $679 to F. O. Box 135, E. Solomon St., Griffia, Qa. Postage raid at Griffin, Gn. —
37 One who goes by
2®
ssBr
WKtndofen
58 Sorrowful
57 Operatic solo
88 Fork prang
59 Art (Latin)
60 Lengthy
61 Kinds
DOWN
1 Dibbles
2 Enthusiastic
ardor
3 Rational
4 Bury
5 6 Musical Presser syllable
7 Tropical plant
8 Egyptian king of
Answer to Previous Punle
mm Ella P jm s N
IS c T M 3S2 B1EE
v S EES
ES oil
I- i! a
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1st dynasty
9 Free from
defect
10 Miss Baxter
11 Melodic Require
16
20 Transaction!
22 Diagonally (dial)
24 Poems
25 Starlike Unaspirated bodies
20 Flavor
30 31 Arrow Sea bird poison
33 Marconl’e Annoyed
35
40 Get Invention (pi.)
43 Punitive
45 Civilian dress
46 Miss Lancheatei
47 Erect
48 Pianist,
Peter
50 Smudge
51Honky-——
62 piano (ab.)
Saintes
55 Slight flap
Quotes
By United Press International
CAPE KENNEDY—A techni
cian in the Saturn Blockhouse
watching a ground test of the
Apollo spacecraft when a
blazing explosion rocked the
space capsule killing astronauts
Gus Grissom, Edward White,
and Roger Chaffee:
“Suddenly there was a flash
and that was it.”
★
WASHINGTON President
Johnson expressing the nation’s
sorrow at the loss of the three
American space pioneers:
“Three valiant young men*
have given their lives in the
nation’s service. We mourn this
great loss and our hearts go out
to their families."
Almanac
For
Griffin
Today is Monday, Jan. 30, the
30th day of 1967 with 335 to
follow.
The moon is approaching its
last quarter.
The morning stars are Mars
and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Venus,
Saturn and Jupiter.
The 32nd president of the
United States, Franklin Delano
Roosevelt, was born on this day
in 1882.
On this day in history:
In 1948, Indian nationalist
leader Mohandas Gandhi was
assassinated by an extremist in
New Delhi.
In 1959, a Danish ship was
lost off Greenland with 95
persons aboard.
In 1962, Cuba was ousted
from the Organization of
American States by a vote of
14-1 with six nations abstaining.
In 1965, British statesman Sir
Winston Churchill, who died on
Jan. 24, was buried in
Westminster Abbey.
Thought For Today
A thought for the day—
President Franklin Roosevelt
said: “The only limit to our
realization of tomorrow will be
our doubts of today. Let us
move forward with strong and
active faith.”
griffin daily news
Subscription Prices
Delivered by carrier: One
year $16.20, six months $$•$$,
three months $4.50. one
month $1.55, one week 3S
cents. By mail, except within
SO 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.)
IJlMNfi
Gov. Maddox’s
Sense Of Humor
For awhile people who didn’t know him laughed AT
Lester Maddox. Now they’re laughing WITH him. One of
his biggest personal assets is a keen sense of humor which
includes the seldom-found-in-a-Govemor ability to laugh
at himself.
When folks laugh together, they get along better toget
her. And the Governor has them chuckling right and left
these days.
Just after he took office, he told a banquet he was glad
to see that chicken was the main dish. “It’s the new state
bird of Georgia,” he said. And they roared.
Then at the Dairy Association’s banquet he milked a
cow. (Remember now, he was city-raised.) He said he
missed the container because the cow put its “paw” in his
face. Well, as country-raised folks know, cows don’t have
paws. They have feet. The rural audience roared. Then he
said the lady seated next to him remarked that she hadn’t
won a door prize. “I never won anything hut a turkey
once,” he said she told him. Then he looked wistful and
remarked, “She shouldn’t feel like the Lone Ranger. The
only thing I ever won was the Governorship, and I had to
do that different from anybody else.”
Another time he told an audience, “I hope they’ll for
give me for complaining about the money spent on the
new Governor’s Mansion. I moved into the OLD one last
night.” Much laughter followed.
We’re glad Georgia’s Governor has a sense of humor.
People who laugh together can work well together. Gover
nor Maddox has got people doing both. It’s quite an
achievement.
The U.S. Budget
Incomprehensible
For anyone but a statistician or an economist, making
sense of the national budget seems a hopeless task.
Even the professionals can become confused in trying to
keep the cash budget separate from the administrative bud
get, both of which are distinct from something called the
national income accounts budget—and all of which are so
qualified by a long list of ifs and huts involving the whims
of the economy and the will of Congress that a miscalcula
tion here or misplaced optimism there can make a differ
ence on the order of billions of dollars between what is
bookkeeping projected for a particular fiscal year and what the final
entry shows.
To the average person, anything that is expressed in
terms of billions or tens of billions of dollars is about as
removed from his everyday experience as the mathemati
cians* square root of minus one.
It is a little difficult to believe that the vast bulk all
these billions—$135 billion, to be exact, which the Presi
dent is asking for the 1968 fiscal year beginning July 1—
is merely the sum of the tens and hundreds and thousands
of dollars kicked in by the ordinary taxpayer.
One item in the budget looms out startlingly. For the
war in Vietnam, a war never officially declared, the Presi
dent is asking $22.4 billion.
This translates into $700 for each of the 32 million men,
women and children in both North and South Vietnam.
It comes on top of the nearly $25 billion-—or nearly $800
per Vietnamese—that will have been spent from the be
ginning of American aid until the end of fiscal 1967.
Yet even this sum earmarked for Vietnam represents
less than a third of the total— $73.1 billion—asked for
national defense.
By contrast, the President’s request for $11 billion for
Great Society programs (over and above $14.6 billion
in Social Security and Medicare payments) breaks down
to about $355 for each of the 31 million Americans said to
he living in poverty.
So vast is the American economy, however, that com
pared to it even the imagination-staggering federal budget
begins to appear manageable. The Gross National Product
for 1965— the total worth of goods and services pro
duced by the nation that year—was more than $681 bil
lion. It is currently edging up towards three-quarters of
a trillion dollars.
hend We. just speak how of guns and butter. how But much few butter, of us compre
talking many guns, or we are
about.
m With ar a Ye « r Editor s d£> GDI
If you’re looking for someone to pull strings for you,
get a person who knows the ropes.
• • • • •
“Something has gone out of marriage when he starts
wondering what happened to the girl he married and she
starts wondering what happened to the man she didn’t.”
— Birmingham (Mich.) Eccentric
• • • • •
We hope the President’s “record-breaking” budget
doesn’t break the taxpayers’ backs.
Monday, January 30, 1967 Griffin Daily Newa
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L it'
I (p) 1967 by NtA, he. (Mm/
“NO MORE ALLOWANCE! Now’s as good a time as any
to learn how to spend more than you make.”
MY
ANSWER
Attending Church
A friend of mine refuses to at
tend church and yet he Insists
he is a Christian. Is this possi
bie? G.K.
My answer will have to be in
two parts. First, neither your
friend nor anyone else is a Chris
tian because he attends church.
Church attendance does not
make Christians. This is a point
that confuses many people, and
there are multitudes who rely
their church affiliation to
them in the Kingdom some
yet they do not realize
that “the organized church" has
no authhority to grant to people
an entrance Into heaven or to
save them from hell. It Is only
the Individual’s faith in J e s u s
Christ that will make the differ
ence. Yes, your friend might be
a Christian even though he is
affiliated with any church.
But the second part of my an
swer to this question would be
that even if your friend is a
Christian, there is one area of
his life in which he is not living
fully the Christian life. Though a
Christian may exist in isolation
in separation from the chur
ch, he cannot serve effectively,
nor will he bear a witness to the
community. Then from perfect
ly selfish reasons he is depriv
ing himself of the wonderful fel
lowship provided in the church
of Jesus Christ. He is an unligh
tened Christian, and he is also a
very disobedient Christian. But
worst of all, he is a self-righte
ous Christian because he thinks
he is better than all of the peo
ple who attend churches and
that no church is good enough
for him.
PRflUER raosf
FOI TODAY
Che Upper Room a
“A new commandment I give
to you, that you love one anoth
er; even as I have loved you,
that you also love one anoth
er.” (John 13:34, RSV)
PRAYER: We thank Thee, O
Lord, that In Christ our eyes
have been opened to new life,
the life of selfgiving and sharing.
May we walk in the light of Thy
love and goodness. In Christ’s
name. Amen.
WORLD ALMANAC
FACTS
4 &
VI v rj
D \v
In most countries where
poisonous problem, snake bites are
a antivenins are
produced for neutralizing
the toxic effects of the
bite. The method of pre
paring involves an injecting antivenin
a par
ticular venom into a horse.
After a period of time, the
horse becomes immune to
the poison, say s The World
Almanac. A bl< ood serum is
then made and used for
inoculation. However, no
one serum has yet been de
against veloped all that is effective
venoms.
Newspaper Copyright © 19*7,
Enterprise Aaaa.
4
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