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ROSS LEWIS, MILWAUKEE JOURNAL
Animals and People Anawor to Previous Puzxls
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1 Pikelike fish mother
4 Female equine 39 This comes
8 Hollow horned from a pig
ruminant *41 Term in horse BEE rcin
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18 Agalloch 42 Roman emperor
14 Nimbus 43 Through Pi
15 Varnish 44 More recent
16 17 Mountain ingredient Clothes (coll.) 49 52 River English Lake pike (Sp.) stream blue n
(comb, form) 63 Tennis gadget
18 Form of 54 „ European sheep 32 Anesthetic
altazimuth river 7 Bitter vetch 33 Former Russian
19 Hen product 55 First principle 8 Phantom ruler
20 Property item 56 Swiss weight 9 Rowing paddles 35 Sleeveless
21 Pea container 57 Tear 10 Toward the garment
23 Redact 58 Back talk sheltered side 40 Mental State, as
25 Nocturnal flying (slang) 11 Sound _____ a horn of an army
mammals . 59 Hardy heroine 20 Helper 42 Requires
27 Hat failure 60 Pen for swine 22 Norwegian 43 Upright
28 Diminutive (slang) of 1 DOWN 24 capital standards for
Festival Levigate flags
Ronald 2 Breed of 25 Philippine 44 Not as much
SI Talisman equines servant 45 Range
84 Withdraw from 8 Seize a second 26 Wine vessels 46 Cravats
a federation time 28 Those who 48 Ailment*
86 Playing cards 4 Confounded make records 60 Exude
87 Very small 5 Eager 29 Poems 51 Discern
amounts 6 Shaggy, as 30 Arboreal home 53 Wager
2 3 5 6 7 9 10 11
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he elte, freth out of oollege with a B.A., an M.A n
and no J-O-B!”
GRIFFIN
DAILY NEWS
Quimby Melton, Cary Reeves, General Manager Quimby Melton, Jr.,
Publisher Bill Knight, Executive Editor Editor
Foil Leased Wire service FPL Fell NEA. Address all Mail (Subscriptions Published Daily Except Sunday,
Change of Address form 3878 to P. O. Box 135, E. Solomon St., Griffin, 0* Postage Paid at Griffin, Ga. — Single Copy «S
Quotes
By United Frees International
VOTAW, Tex.—R.S. Bill Jr.,
who pulled 3-year-old Teresa
Fregia to safety from 22 feet
down an abandoned well where
she had been trapped for nine
hours:
“It was the greatest feeling In
the world when that little girl
grabbed me. I think she said,
Daddy.’”
★
WASHINGTON-Sen. Thomas
J. Dodd, D-Conn., accused of
using $15,000 in political
contributions for personal ex
penses, testifying that almost
all of his actions were bound up
in politics:
"I’ve sent flowers to more
people’s funeral that I didn’t
know that I can shake a stick
at...If I wasn’t in politics, I
wouldn’t have done it.”
★
NEW ORLEANS—Perry R.
Russo, whose testimony con
cerning Lee Harvey Oswald and
two other men in a plot to kill
President Kennedy, paved the
way for criminal action against
one of the men:
“I’m tired and I want to get
back to work...I just had a story
to tell and I told it.”
Almanac
For
Griffin
By United Press International
Today is Monday, March 20,
the 79th day of 1967 With 286 to
The moon Is between the first
and full stage.
The morning star Is Mars.
The evening stars are Jupiter
and Venus.
Tire Danish operatic tenor
Lauritz Melchior was born on
this day in 1890.
On this day in history:
In 1852, Harriet Beecher
“Uncle Tom’s Cabin”
was printed In book form. It
eventually appeared in more
than 20 languages.
In 1942, Gen. Douglas Mac
Arthur, Commander in Chief of
Allied Forces in the Pacific,
Issued his famous “I shall
return” statement. He returned
to take the Philippines.
In 1951, Argentine dictator
Juan Peron seized control of tne
opposition newspaper “La Pren
sa.”
In 1963, a volcano on the
island of Bali began erupting.
The death toll rose to over
1,000.
Thought For Today
A thought for the day:
Scottish poet Robert Burns
once said: “God knows, I’m not
the thing I should be . . . not
even am I the thing I could be.”
■
EDITORIALS
Highways Worse,
Not Better
Last week Interstate 475 bypassing Macon opened to
traffic.
This relieves congestion in Macon, but it plays havoc
some other places. Forsyth is particularly hard put. The
interstate stops there, so traffic pours in from north and
south. The flow from Forsyth to Griffin is particularly
serious. The Macon News commented in an editorial the
other day, “One road we want to be sure to avoid in the
future until such time as 1-75 is completed on to Atlanta
is that perilous stretch of U. S. 41 between Forsyth and
Griffin.”
Highway 41, Griffin to Forsyth, is the worst stretch on
a major route in Georgia. True, it has been improved and
much work is under way to remedy the situation. The
Griffin bypass is under construction from Bamesville to
south of Griffin. But when this part is completed, the con
necting link from Highway 19 to Georgia Experiment
Station must be built. Until it is, the flow through city
streets of Griffin will continue.
1-75 through Henry County and a small portion of
Spalding is under construction also. Eventually it will help
solve the problem of “Killer Strip” Highway 41.
We look forward with pleasure to the completion of
these projects and the relieving of the thorny traffic
problem in Griffin, Spalding, Lamar and other nearby
counties. Also completion of work under way on the ex
pressway from Griffn to Atlanta will help a great deal.
In the meantime, we have unpleasant proof of the saying
that “things get worse before they get better.”
Something
To Remember
Here is something to remember during the congressional
elections of 1968. Out of his 44 years in the legislative
halls, Rep. Emmanuel Celler, D-N.Y., has gleaned this list
of qualifications for a successful congressman:
“One must have the friendliness of a child, the enthus
iasm of a teenager, the assurance of a college boy, the
diplomacy of a wayward husband, the curiosity of a cat
and the good humor of an idiot.”
Come to think of it, they are attributes that might be
helpful in any field—even that of a school board member.
♦ Guest Editorial ♦
Inroads
On Textiles
AUGUSTA CHRONICLE
About 9,000 apparel manufacturing workers in t h e
Congressional District of Georgia—and many thou
sands of those in other areas of both Georgia and South
Carolina—have a personal stake in current proposals to
some orderly import quota agreement covering ap
textiles.
Apparel imports over the past five years have increased
63 per cent. This situation was pointed out last week in
Washington to about 100 congressmen who constitute an
unofficial “House textile committee” because of their in*
terest in this industry. The speaker was Edward G. John
son, president of the Thomson Company, which has plants
in Thomson, Millen, Harlem and Martinez. Imports of
women’s slacks alone have increased to 35 per cent of the
domestic production, he said in his capacity as spokesman
for the American Apparel Manufacturers Association.
Support for the association’s position was expressed by
District Rep. Robert Stephens, Jr., who said apparel
of the district comprise one-seventh of all such
in Georgia. They are employed in 40 plants in this
The apparel industry is Georgia’s second largest employ
of manufacturing labor in addition to being the largest
for the state’s biggest employer-—the textile in
dustry. Forty per cent of Georgia’s manufacturing employ
is in these two industries. The situation in South Caro*
is similar.
With this direct interest in the preservation of a fair
amount of balance in United States apparel competition,
Georgia and South Carolina members of the Congress
be busying themselves to find a workable solution
what could become an acute problem.
m Chuckling
t With Ye Editor
• ••
It’s a mistake to try to excuse your mistakes by saying
you learn from them—and just as bad a mistake not to
learn from them.
• • • • •
“The only exercise some people get is jumping to con
clusions, running down their associates, sidestepping re
sponsibility and pushing their luck.” — Ties Magazine
• • • • •
A haircut would help some of those shaggy haired boy*.
An allowance cut might help too.
Bonrs WORLD
‘
-
V
in-*
: T*’
t m» L *
“You know all the answers ■
— YOU tell ME what Jim K \
Garrison’s up to in New a
Orleans 1”
s Hr f
m t
© 1967 by NEA, fee.
MY A
ANSWER b IT
/
Sin Of Sadness
What is the eighth cardinal sin?
R.K.
As late as John Damascene the
compilation included the sin of
sadness. In fact, the early chur
ch fathers paid special attention
to the sin of sadness. They be
lieved that men were made to
be Joyful, and that sin and se
paration from God were the cau
se of sadness. I believe that they
had something. These days,
when a person gets distressed,
we call it "depression”, and
say that it is caused by condi
tions beyond his control. It is
outside pressures, circumstan
ces, or environment they say.
Yet, I know people who have
more trouble than the average,
live in unfavorable circumstan
ces, and yet they are not de
pressed or sad. They have learn
ed the New Testament recipe
for happiness: "All things work
together for good to them that
love God.”
Our modern cure for depress
ion is the psychiatrist’s couch,
but in at least some instances,
it should be “the mourner’s ben
ch.” When we transgress God’s
law, we become guilt-ridden and
sad. The lilt goes out of life.
Many of us need to say with
David, who sinned and lost his
Joy: "Restore thou the Joy of
my salvation.”
*• PRflyfr
von tooav rtoar
, Che Upper Room«
Verily I say unto thee, To day
shalt thou be with me in para
dise. (Luke 23:43)
PRAYER: O Lord, help us to
face this day with confidence.
May we rely upon Thee in faith,
confident Thou canst turn any
defeat into victory. In the life
to come may We know the Joy
of richer fellowship with Thee.
In Thy spirit we ask. Amen.
WORLD ALMANAC
it
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ju N
r
? o B
Polluted rivers and
streams have become a
major problem and for the
United States, one that
will eventually cost dollars the
country billions of
to solve. Almost one-fourth
of the nation's muncipali
ties empty untreated wastes
into the nearest stream,
says The World Almanac.
In addition, another 31
per treatment cent give only primary
to wastes before
disposing of them.
Newspaper Copyright © 1967,
Enterprise Assn.
GRIFFIN DAILY NEWS
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three months $4.50, one
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one year $13.10, six months
$1.35, three months $3.85, cne
month $1.35, Delivered by
Special Auto: One Year
$18.20 (tax included.)
Monday, March 20, 1967
Television
Monday Night
2 5 11
:00 New* Movie: My Favorite
:15 Martian
:30 m News Merv
:45 » m Griffin
:00 Movie: Newi t
:15 "Black * a
:30 Gold” Gllllgan’e Iron
:45 m Island Horae
:00 m Mr. TerrlBe c
:15 m i
:30 m Lucille Rat Patrol
:45 m Ball H
:00 Pe^y Andy Legislative
•15 Como Griffith Roundup
:30 w Family Peyton
:45 k Affair Place
:00 Run For To Tell The Big
:15 Your Life Truth Valley
:30 * a* •
:45 a n a
:00 Newsroom Newt Newswatch
:15 H H H
:30 Johnny Movie: Cheyenne
:45 Carton w 81i|htly a
:00 m Honorable* m
:15 m
:30 m n m
:45 * H »
Tuesday Morning
n
Sunrise
Encyclopedia Semester
Town, C’nty News
7 :00 Today Weather
,,s m Newe
I :30 Mr. Plz
:45 n n
a Captain Cartoon
• Kangaroo Carnival
a »
a ■ m
H o |||. •s- Don
(5 4) Barber ■
O M Andy Gale
Griffith Storm
:00 Reach For Dick Virginia
:15 The Stars Van Dyke Graham
:30 Concen- Beverly Dateline
:45 tration Hillbillies Atlanta
:00 Pa* Truth or Supermarket
•J 5 Boone Consequences Sweep
:30 Hollywood Secret Dating
:45 Squares Storm Game
Tuesday Afternoon
:00 News Love Of Everybody’s
:15 N Life Talking
:30 Movie: Search Donna
:45 "Seventeen” Guiding L’gt Reed
aisi * o s a World Mates Matches As The Turns and Ben Casey ■ »
Days of Password Newlywed
:15 Onr Lina * Gems
:30 Doctors House Dream Girl
:45 » Party *
:00 Another To Tell General
:15 World The Truth Hospital
:30 You Don’t Edge of Nurses
:45 Say! Night »
4 •00 Match Mike Dark
:15 Game Douglas Shadows
:30 Popeye Where Hie
:45 Club » Action Is
• Movie: News
* “The
Burglar” News
m *
Griffin Dally New*
4