Newspaper Page Text
"What Are We Supposed To Do Now—Talk?"
j'jfc W < '
T ; isWrw‘'- v/
MrT \ \ r= — —
K ' TO *.'WA'
IwA ■ AvJ til H
: ' \ Hl ML Met
• - >
( ?> /M®/
& \ v\r < t —\ * ■• E<?.wfefcO
a W K>- x .J * wl A ** ’ •■ ' <*.».
’ *
jJH n l W\ I■/ »k
’QI X a v
iIS sMI Im
! gBitWwWwBMI wSfc V/” 7 H HL A/ sa\
' ! WkWwl
■'
’|*i»l ’{tW”* ,;^P BS ® •
Canine Life
48 Unexpected
stratagem
52 spaniel .
54 Short legged
hound
56 Landed
property
57 Turns inside out
58 Situated .
59 Most rational
DOWN
1 Profit
2 Sea flyer
3 I-ease
4 Extinct birds
5 Altitude (ab ) !
fi Requirements
7 your dog ’■
at a kennel
8 Native metal t
» Title of courtesy :
(pl.)
10 Labor taxingly I
11 Genus of 1
true olive:
12 Arboreal home :
19 Three toed sloth i
21 Changes
22 Puffs up
ACROSS
1 shepherd ,
dog
7 terrier
13 Interstice
14 Bird
15 Inborn
16 High homes
17 Seines
16 Persian gateway
20 Lath
21 Stage whisper
23 Make
resistance
27 Climbing plant
(var.)
32 Turns aside
34 Separated
35 World
(baseball)
36 Stow in a
ship's hold
37 Penetrate
38 City in
Germany
38 Roasting rods
43 Exclamation
47 Babylonian
sky god
1 |2 |3 1+ 15 16 18 19 hO 111 |l2
_
-
17 “y|q~ 19
23 124 feb p ■BMK’F 28 29""ST"
32
Hpi
I I,J
_ L_J
58 |s9|
11111111 I I I I 301
SIDE GLANCES
;F?®W
||tM
»>miwwu.kWHUiM», 1 7"*
'Look, Agnes, 1 go on the 8:30 inter-city. JIMMY goes
on the school bus!”
DAILY NEWS
Full Leased Wire service UPf, Full NEA. Address all Mail (Subscription
Change es Address tan U7B to P. 0. Box IJS, E. Solomon St, Griffin, Ga,
Anawer to Previous Putzlo
.j I AlElLi lelvlel |T|Q|o|yl
Iqlq
Li IF-! CIAI *t* I I C)Ta i F-gJ
■AL. IA E [ |AI M|A| |U|R|STa|
Iwterßlgl IpTulpl It|a|elll
42 Hollow
cylinders
43 High cards
44 Misplace
45 Transactions
46 Threehanded
card game
48 French city
49 Hideous
monster
50 Last month
(pl. ab 1
i 51 Nuisance
53 Summer (Fr.)
55 Feminine
appellation
23 Demolish
24 Smooth
25 Masculine
nickname
26 Iroquoian
Indian
28 Angers
r 29 Philippine
sweetsop
30 Eirn
31 River in
Scotland
33 Steamship tab.)
134 Postscript (ab.)
40 Peeled
41 Prepoaition
Quimby Melton,
Publisher
Quotes
By United Press International
KENNER, La. —School Supt.
Jerome Kalk, who was in
charge of the high school class,
nine of whose members were
killed in their motel rooms
when a Delta Air Lines DCB jet
crashed:
“I wish for once they had
been bad kids and broken
curfew. If they had, I might have
been taking nine live kids back
home with me today instead of
nine bodies.”
MONTGOMERY, Ala. —Gov.
Lurleen B. Wallace, in a speech
denouncing a federal court
school integration ruling and
calling for full police power:
“They have made their
decree, now let them enforce
it.’’
NEW YORK —Printers Union
President Bertram A. Powers,
threatening the third major
newspaper strike in six years if
contract negotiations are not
more fruitful:
“They (management) do not
seem to have learned the
lessons of 1962 and 1965.”
Almanac
For
Griffin
By United Press International
Today is Monday, April 3, the
93rd day of 1967 with 272 to
follow’.
The moon is between its last
quarter and new phase.
The morning star is Mars.
The evening stars are Venus,
Mars and Jupiter.
American astronaut Virgil
Grisson was born on this day
in 1926.
On this day in history:
In 1860, the Pony Express
postal service began.
In 1865, the Union Army
occupied Richmond, Va., the
capital of the Confederacy.
In 1882, famed outlaw Jesse
James was fatally shot while
hanging a picture in his home
at St. Joseph Mo.
In 1926, the U. S. government
ordered New Orleans to inte
grate the first grades of its
public schools.
GRIFFIN DAILY NEWS
Subscription Prices
Delivered by carrier: One
year $16.20, six months $8.50,
three months $4.50, one
month $1.55, one week 15
cents. By mail, except within
30 miles ot 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 Auto: One Year
$18.20 (tax included.)
GRIFFIN
Cary Reeves, General Manager
Bill Knight, Executive Editor
Spalding’s Plan
Draws Comment
Doyle Jones, Jr., in Jackson Progress-Argus
The dumping of trash, garbage, and refuse of all kinds
along roads and highways is a problem and unsightly prob
lem. The Butts County Commissioners, beset with this
health and beauty hazard, are advertising that perpetrators
will be fully punished under the law.
Our neighbors to the west, Spalding County, are to begin
a program of trash and garbage collection that could prove
effective with the cooperation of its citizens. The Spalding
commissioners, realizing the gravity of the situation, have
set up trash collection sites in each militia district with the
refuse to be collected at stated intervals and hauled to
either the city or county dump.
According to a story in The Griffin Daily News the
commissioners will cause to have erected a wire compound
of some 50 or more square feet whereby residents of that
district may bring and dispose of their trash and garbage.
These will be picked up by the county. These compounds
would also include several metal drums for the refuse to
be placed in.
In a county as small as Butts this could be a practical
solution. We do not offer it as such, but feel the plan has
merit. The effectiveness, of course, would depend on the
cooperation of the people in a given area. If this program
proves successful in Spalding, it undoubtedly will be tried
in other counties.
71 Percent
Americans whose incomes are in the form of wages and
salaries pushed their share of the total national income to
71 per cent in 1966, reports the Family Economics Bureau
of an insurance company.
In actual dollars, workers collected a massive $433
billion. This was up $40.5 billion from 1965 and account
ed for four-fifths of the total increase in the country’s
$6lO-billion national income in 1966.
Such a huge share of the economic pie would have been
unthinkable at the turn of the century, when “compensa
tion of employes” represented only 51 per cent of the
nation’s total income of a mere $17.5 billion.
Sharing the remainder of the national income in 1966
were businessmen, farmers, professional people, rental
property owners and those who lent their savings— the
“capitalists,” large and small. Their share was 49 per cent
in 1900 but only 29 per cent in 1966.
Together with employes,” these are the economic
groups which produce the nation’s supply of new goods
and services each year. This mammoth output for which
Americans earned $6lO billion in 1966 sold for a final
price of $740 billion in the market place.
It is a “fair prospect,” says the bureau’s analysts, that
“employes’ ” cut of the pie will increase again in 1967. A
question: How much higher can it—or should it—go?
This 29 per cent residue of national income after wages
and salaries may be near the minimum necessary to pro
vide rewards that will stimulate businesses, farmers and
others to maintain a high growth rate for the economy and,
consequently, a high employment rate for labor.
Reapportionment
WAYCROSS JOURNAL - HERALD
Georgia has acted with greater dispatch in reapportion
ing its legislative seats than most states but, as the saying
goes, the game isn’t over yet.
Acting under a federal court mandate to finish the job
of reshuffling membership in the House and Senate on a
population basis, the recent General Assembly has come
up with a plan which will be presented to the judicial
panel.
House membership has been reduced, under the new re
apportionment proposal, from 205 to 195. The Senate, in
a move to give additional voice to the Atlanta urban area,
increased its seats by two.
In at least one decision the courts have indicated that
legislative districts should be divided with a 15 per cent
variance of the normal population.
If this variance rule still holds, many Georgia legislators
believe the new plan will win approval. However some
legal observers say a recent Supreme Court ruling in a
Texas case appears to narrow the leeway for dividing
districts.
Some members of the legislature have expressed the
belief that even if the three-judge federal panel does not
approve the plan, it may give the General Assembly a
grace period until the next census is taken in 1970.
Reapportionment is a bitter pill for any legislative body.
Lawmakers are often called up on to legislate themselves
out of office and give their constituents* power to some
other part of the state.
Shifting population of our day has forced some drastic
changes in the make-up of the Georgia legislature. But to
their credit the members of the General Assembly have
faced up to the court-ordered task and have done a pretty
good job.
It would please us to see the new reapportionment plan
win approval in the courts.
ag* Chuckling
With Ye Editor S;
We’d like to see a moratorium declared on open mouths
and closed minds.
• • • • •
“Beauty contests didn’t begin in Hollywood, but when
the second woman appeared on earth.” — Dodge City
(Kans.) Globe
••• • •
One reason suburbs are bedrooms for cities is that they
have living room.
Quimby Melton, Jr.,
Editor
Published Daily Except Sunday, Second Oaan
Poetage Paid at Griffin, Ga. —* Single Oepy <■
BERRY’S WORLD
“Is that plain, old ‘bad
taste’, or genuine ‘Mod’?”
MY
ANSWER 13
What Is Faith?
I hear preachers talk about
faith, but I have never had one
tell me exactly what it is. Could
you define it? I.J.
The dictionary says, “Faith Is
unquestioning belief in God",
and that's not a bad definition.
Another definition is: "Complete
confidence, trust, allegiance.”
Faith Is something we all poss
ess. In fact, life Is a series of as
sumptions. It takes faith to get
on an airplane, particularly af
ter we read of a tragic air cr
ash. It takes faith to eat in a
restaurant, when the last one
we ate in gave us food poison
ing. It takes faith to pull out in
a freeway, especially when we
read that nearly 50,000 people
are killed on our highways each
year. It even takes faith to get
married. How many young men
are sure they are marrying the
woman of their dreams? And
some of them turn out tragical
ly, but people go right on mar
rying, because they have faith.
Life would go completely stag
nant without this quality of fai
th.
But, notice that faith is not
something abstract. The Bible
says that faith and action go to
gether. “Faith without works is
dead.” You may learn golf from
a book, but there comes a time
when you must put theory in
practice, and hit the ball. Many
people have a vague sort of re
ligious faith, but it is worthless
unless it expresses itself in con
crete action. Faith leads to
Christian experience: they both
go together.
ApttflUEft
FOR TODAY FROM \VjJ
Che Upper RoonuW
Herein is my Father glorified,
that ye bear much fruit; so shall
ye be my disciples. (John 15:8)
PRAYER: Dear Father, we
would remember that all we
have is a gift from Thee to be
used for the extension of Thy
kingdom. Help us to bear fruit
for Thee, in Jesus' name. Amen.
Thought For Today
A thought for the day—British
writer, William McFee once
said: "If fate means you to
lose, give him a good fight
anyhow.”
WORLD ALMANAC
FACTS
w jIKB
If you’re thinking of
mailing a live, day-old
duck, chick or turkey to a
friend, it’s O.K. with the
Post Office Department. If
you no longer like your
friend, you might prefer to
send him a live bloodworm,
earthworm, mealworm,
■frog, toad, salamander,
leech or snail, says The
World Almanac. The Post
Office will accept these
creatures as well. But there
are a few mailing instruc
tions —over IVt pages of
them—defining the time
of shipping, kinds of
crates, types of animals
and other formalities that
must be fulfilled in order
to ship live animals.
Copyright © 1967,
Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
Monday, April 3, 1967 Griffin Daily New*
*
© 1W by NEA, l»c.V
Television
Monday Night
2 5 11
6:00 New* Movie: My Favorite
:15 • “ Martian
:30 • New* Merv
:45 • • Griffin
7:00 Movie: Newa •
:15 "SandoKan " •
:30 Fights Baek” Gilligan** Iron
:45 • Island Horse
:00 • Mr. Terrific *
:15
:30 “ Lucille Rat Patrol
:45 * Ball
9:00 Center Andy Felony
: 15 Stage Griffith Squad
:30 * Frank Peyton
:45 * Sinatra Place
W:00 Run For * Big
;15 Your Life " Valley
;30 ” I’ve Got -
;45 * A Secret *
U:00 Newsroom News Newswatch
:1S
:30 Johnny Movie: Cheyenne
:45 Carson “Cash On *
:00 * Delivery” •
12 a : • ;
Tuesday Morning
Joo
•IS Sunrise
:30 Encyclopedia Semester
:45 Town, C’nty New*
7:00 Today Weather
:’ls " New »
:30 " Mr - pl *
:45 *
8,00 * Captain Cartoon
•15 ■ Kangaroo Carnival
ho - - •
:45
9:00 Today In Don •
:15 Georgia Barber ”
:30 Gloria Andy Virginia
:45 ” GriffiUi Graham
U:00 Snap Dick Dateline
:15 Judgment Van Dyke Atlanta
:30 Coneen- Beverly Dateline
:45 tration Hillbillies Hollywood
U:00 Truth or Supermarket
-15 Boone Consequence* Sweep
:30 Hollywood Secret One In A
:45 Squares Storm Million
Tuesday Afternoon
:00 News Love Os Everybody**
I U ;15 " Life Talking
J :30 Movie: Search Donna
■■■■l :45 “Chicago Guiding L'gt Reed
1:00 Confidential” Matches and Fugitive
:15 • Mates ”
:30 ” As The ■
:45 ” World Turns *
2:00 Days of Password Newlywed
:15 Our Lives ** Game
:30 Doctor* House Dream Giri
; 45 " Party *
3:00 Another To Tell General
:15 World The Truth Hospital
:30 You Don’t Edge of Dark
:45 Say! Night Shadows
4:00 Match Mike Dating
:15 Game Douglas Game
□o Fopeye • Barn
•45 Club * Dance
5:00 • Movie: New*
•15 * “Ma and Pa *
□0 Mister Kettle at New*
•45 Ed Home *
4