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ACROSS
1-Majesty,
Queen
^
Lauderdale, Florida
8 Corn-
12 George-,
humorist
13 Martian
(comb, form)
14 Husband of
(Norse Frigg
15 Encountered myth.)
18 Bevel
17 Song for one
18 Make a mistake
19 To the
bitter-
20 Grows weary
21 Qualified
23 Send forth
25 South American
rodent
27 Eve was
Adam’s--
28 Seaport (ab.)
31 Knight
(German)
34 Squatter
36 City on the
Black Sea
37 Gaseous
hydrocarbon
38 Deranged
39 Courtesy title
4t Poker stake
42 Great
(canine)
43 Put to
44 Get started
without-
47 Trfm dead
branches from
a tree
49 Exist
53 •?? Operatic ® „ ur P^? .
54 singer
-, white
and blue
55 Fork prong
58 Asservate
58 ?7 Father „„ Winter (coll.) vehicle ,, ,
.
59 Crooktd
60 Foreign agent
nnwiu no win
1 Harness part
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 9 TO 11
17
18 T9 r 20
2T~ 22 K •4
25 26 •W ■34 35 28 29 30
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44 45 47 48 49 50 51
53
26
SIDE GLANCES
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“I *ay that If ha really cared he’d try to fit in!"
€ GRIFFIN
*5 DAILY it NEWS
Quimby Melton, Cary Reeves, General Manager Quimby Melton, Jr.,
Publisher Bill Knight, Executive Editor Editor
rail Leases Wire eerstoe CM, Fall NEA. Address all Mail (BubscriptUee
Cheats «f Address fans Mil te r. O. Bos ltl, E. It., Griff la, Oa.
Answer to Previous Puzzle
CESE 3 R E A \C_ H
ZEESS N L tt p. I p s A W i_ E N
A N H AD O W
s Sait, i E R T N A RBBO A]F X CIAIN i D E
EpP a|a Imw R I iSuS
5 i A G
EL meerI 5 y A] T iMTiTfr 1 £
2 Itiver in
Europe
3 Recanted
4 Diamond
surface
5 Algerian seaport
6 “-unto
Caesar ...”
7 Small child
8 Set firmly
9 Smell
10 African stream
ll Son of Seth
(Bib.)
20 Chinese
dependency
22 Touches lightly
24 Coal-
25 Senior --
28 Verdian opera
28 Emblems
29 Confined
30 Woody plant
32 Attempt
33 Precipitation
35 Food fish
40 Live anew
42 Challenged
43 Separated
44 Periods
45 Wicked
46 Unaspirated
48 Baking chamber
50 Harvest
51 Whirlpool
53 Flatfish
Quotes
By United States International
PENZANCE, England —Navy
Minister Michael Foley com
menting on the giant oil slick
from a sinking tanker which is
ruining the southern resort
coast beaches and killing
millions of birds, seals, and
fish:
“This is a problem no country
in the world has had to face
before. The tanker is a menace
and a threat to Britain.”
★
DENVER —Air Force Capt.
Dale E. Noyd, 34, asking a
federal court to reclassify him
as a conscientious objector to
the war in Vietnam:
“Tlie war in Vietnam is
unjust and immoral, and if
ordered to do so I shall refuse
to fight in that war.”
3
PHUOC THUAN, Vietnam —
Marine Col. William Corson of
Washington, D.C., viewing the
bodies of 14 buddies, killed in an
unprecedented ambush by a
large force of Viet Cong:
“They’ve learned that Ma
rines will stand and die—and
that more Marines will come
and stand in their place.”
Almanac
! For
Griffin
By United Press International
Today is Wednesday, March
29, the 88th day of 1967 with 277
to follow.
The moon is between its full
and last stages.
The morning star is Mars.
The evening stars are Venus
and Jupiter.
John Tyler, the 10th President
of the United States was born
on this day in 1790.
On this day in history:
In-1812, the first wedding took
place in the White House. Mrs.
Lucy Payne Washington became
the bride of Justice Thomas
Dodd of the Supreme Court.
In 1847, Gen. Winfield Scott
captured Vera Cruz. Mexican
troops marched from the city to
be disarmed and released on
parole.
In 1945, soldiers of the United
States’ First Army, marching 55
miles, all but cut off the Ruhr
Basin from the rest of Ger
many.
In 1966, the Soviet Congress
opened in Moscow by criticizing
Red China thus widening the
rift between the two Communist
powers.
Thought For Today
A thought for the day—British
novelist Joseph Conrad once
said: “You shall judge a man
by his foes as well as by his
friends.”
This Week’s Editorial
By A Woman Especially For Women
Domestic ‘Don’ts’
For A Wife
For a wife who wants her husband to find her easy to
live with, the 10 most important “don’ts” are:
Don’t pry. Give the man a little privacy or he is bound
to feel fenced in.
Don’t nag. If he doesn’t do what you want him to the
first time you ask him—give up. You’ll never win any
thing wife. by nagging except having him regard you as a nag
ging
Don’t sulk. An angry wife who speaks her piece and
gets it over with isn’t nearly so irritating to a man as one
who goes around with hurt feelings, refusing to speak up
or cheer up.
Don’t be bossy. A bossy wife never has a happy hus
band.
Don’t hold grudges. Piling old grievances on top of new
ones makes too big a pile for a husband to contend with.
Don’t be discontented with what your husband can pro
vide. A man needs to feel he is a good provider, even
though he isn’t the best.
Don’t be a poor sport. A woman who gets upset at
every little thing that goes wrong is never a good com
panion.
Don’t be disloyal. Unless your husband feels that you
are on his side, he is going to feel very much alone.
Don’t be critical. A wife who is always trying to im
prove her husband by pointing out his faults and mis
takes and shortcomings isn’t likely to change anything but
the way he feels about her.
Don’t take life too seriously. A woman who can laugh
at herself and see the funny side of human nature and
make light of small mishaps and setbacks is the easiest
kind of woman for a man to live with.
— R. M.
Income Tax
Miracle
Americans may not be aware of it, but each spring they
participate in a major historical miracle: Each April they
voluntarily surrender to faceless bureaucrats in Washing
ton a substantial portion of their annual incomes.
To be sure, most of them during the intervening year
make involuntary contributions by way of payroll deduc
tions. But even here, the withholding tax is a voluntary act
since it was voted by elected legislators.
“The power to tax is the power to destroy” is a well
known aphorism, and throughout human history it has
been true. In every age, taxation has been a weapon of op
pression and a source of corruption. How is it that Ameri
cans have devised a system of taxation which its adminis
trator hails as the most efficient and widely supported the
world has ever known?
According to Sheldon S. Cohen, commissioner of Inter
nal Revenue, the fundamental honesty of the American
taxpayer is the key. Last year the government indicted
fewer than 2,000 out of the 102 million taxpayers for
fraud. It took in $100 billion voluntarily, as opposed to $3
billion through direct enforcement efforts.
Another reason, says Cohen, is the confidence of the
people in the system. They believe that the tax laws are
reasonably fair and are being administered honestly and
even-handedly.
“We tend to take this compliance for granted,” he says,
“but it is really quite remarkable. Very few countries, in
cluding those in the Western family of nations, can success
fully administer a mass income tax.”
Actually, it is only since the beginning of World War II
that it has become a mass tax. In its first year, 1913, the
income tax affected a mere one per cent of the population.
No one likes to pay taxes; no one ever will. But we Am
ericans have come closer to liking it than any other people
on earth. Perhaps it is because what we really like is the
kind of country our money buys.
Here’s
Why
ARKANSAS DEMOCRAT
If government at all levels seems to lack a certain
needed quality, it must be kept in mind that only 48 per
cent of the estimated 116 million Americans eligible to
vote last November exercised this right so inherent to the
country’s system of government.
9"
Many a man who thinks he is stringing a girl along
up tying the knot.
• • • • •
“This is the age when, if you miss a day’s work,
Government loses almost as much as you do.” — Junction
City (Kans.) Republic
• • • • •
One way to reduce the number of candidates for Gover
nor of Georgia: require that the Chief Executive walk
and from his office and mansion as the Governor of New
Mexico is doing.
ft r e a ’cr
CD
l:C2>
Wednesday, Mar. 29, 1967 Griffin Daily New*
BERRY’S WORLD flk
i
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b
I t
A
“The question is, why can’t ft
we live in PEACE — like
Avis and Hertz?!”
W --C
A
© 1967 if NEA, Jac
MY
ANSWER b r !3
'
fiMjikcJumi
Miserable
I would like to accept Christ
but I find it bard to admit that
I’m a "miserable” sinner. The
fact is: I’m not any more mis
erable than the average person.
K.D.
I don’t read any place in the
Bible where one must say he "is
a miserable sinner”. As a mat
ter of fact some people are very
comfortable in their sins. Our
reluctance to confess that we are
sinners stems from the common
definition of the word “sinner”.
We usually associate sin with
sex offenses, drunkenness and
dishonesty. This definition, whi
ch deals only with the sins of the
flesh is far too narrow. Every
one away from God is not a sex
deviate, an inebriate or disho
nest. The word “sin” literally
means, “Missing the mark”, or
coming short. When we use the
word sinner in the Biblical sen
se we refer to those who have
failed to measure up to God’s
standard for them. He wants
to be free from guilt, free from
pride, free from harboring an
unforgiving spirit toward others.
It is only by his grace and love
that we are able to experience
such freedom.
You don’t have to admit you
are a miserable sinner — just
a plain sinner who has “miss
ed the mark”, and stands in
need of the love, mercy and for
giveness of God. The Bible
says: “If we confess our sins he
is faithful and just to forgive us
our sins, and to cleanse us from
all unrighteousness.”
FOR TODAY FROM
Che Upper Roortu
He is not here: for he is risen.
(Matthew 28:6)
PRAYER: Dear God, my days
have been filled with joy becau
se I know that death has been
conquered. Help me to make my
life worthwhile to be lived for
ever. In the name of the living
Redeemer. Amen.
WORLD ALMANAC
FACTS
/
>l,i \ y
(ill! ii
Hie record for the long
est continuous service in
the House of Representa
tives is almost 49 years,
says The World Almanac.
The record was compiled
by Sam Rayburn (D-Tex.)
who took his House seat
March 4, 1913, and still
held it when he died Nov.
16, 1961. For 17 of those
years, he served as speaker
of the House—twice as long
as any other speaker.
Copyright © 1967,
Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
GRIFFIN DAILY NEWS
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4
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