Newspaper Page Text
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Traffic Snarl
ACROSS
1 "Ran out of
M
4 ■•Traffic —-
elsewhere”
7 "Too many
• drivers”
11 Fashionable
13 Os the Pope
15 Sue aomebody
for (pl.)
16 Cordage fiber
17 Arrow’s
companion
18 Statute (ab.)
20 Mountain near
ancient Troy
31 "Court desires
to know” tab.)
22 Kind of tide
23 Roy's nickname
24 Persian poet
26 Charges in
court
28 Malay skirt
30 Elderly
31 "Raven” author
32 Calls to
readiness
36 Unwritten
40 Grimace
41 Born
42 Lords (ab)
43 Perch
44 Choler
45 Sturdy trees 1
47 Obtain
48 Pertaining to a
conic section
50 Pharmaceutical 1
extract
53 Feminine name
54 Large lizard
55 Heathen image
58 Obedient (ab)
57 Compass point
DOWN
1 Jacob's son
(Bib.)
2 Southern state
3 Russian tea urn
4 Gear tooth
5 Poems
■ 6 Irritate
7 Child's missile
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•*oh, ALL RIGHT! You can ba the whole fare and I'll be
the half!"
GRIFFIN
DAILY NEWS
Quimby Melton, Car * General Manager Quimby Melton, Jr.,
Publisher Knight, Executive Editor Editor
Fall Leased Wire service UPI, Full NEA. Address sU Man (Subscription Published Daily Except Sunday, Second Omb
Chaage of Address fern W to P. 0. Box 138, E. Solomon St, Griffin, Ga. Postage Paid at Griffin, Ga. — Single OtfK d>
A
Answer to Previous Puzxle
lAlsI | Idlel—_._
34 Payment for
teaching
35 Coterie
36 Join
37 Orange oil
38 Gazed closely
39 Alaskan native
46 Social climber
47 Gypsy horse
49 Muscle (comb,
form)
51 Powerful
explosive
52 Town (Cornish
prefix)
8 Slack
9 Choosing
10 Pond made
famous by
Thoreau
12 Craw
14 Conducts
IB At large
21 Lettuce type
25 Stout cord
26 Things to be
done
27 Same (Latin)
29 Widespread
33 Optimistic
Quotes
By Unitied Press International
YELLOWKNIFE, N.W.T.—PI
lot Ronald Sheardown, describ
ing the aplomb of Canadian
pilot Robert Gauchiei at the
moment of his rescue from a
two-month ordeal in the Cana
dian arctic:
‘‘He had a blue suitcase in
one hand, was dressed neatly,
and looked very calm. He
looked like a man at a bus
stop.’’
WASHINGTON — Harvard
economist John Kenneth Gal
braith, newly elected president
of the Americans for Democra
tic Action, on the strategy for
peace in Vietnam:
"So let us give a bombing
suspension a really serious try...
we are adequately aware in this
organization (the ADA) that it
takes two to negotiate. But this
door has been opened, -let us
try it.”
Almanac
For
Griffin
By United Press International
Today is Tuesday, April 4, the
94th day of 1967 with 271 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.
Dorothea Lynde Dix, Ameri
can pioneer of prison reform,
was born on this day in 1802.
On this day in history:
In 1818, Congress ordered the
U.S. flag redesigned, by reduc
ing the number of stripes from
20 to the original 13.
In 1841, President William
Henry Harrison died in the
White House, one month after
he was inaugurated. On the
same day John Tyler became
the first Vice President to take
office because of a President’s
death.
In 1917, the Senate approved a
resolution of war against
Germany.
In 1963. President Kennedy’s
commission on narcotics urged
a "massive attack” on big time
importers of illegal drugs.
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 35
cents. By mail, except within
30 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 u to: Ono Tear
$18.20 (tax included.)
A Matter Os Attitude
Car Parking
In Griffin, Atlanta
When you can’t find a place to park in front of the store
you want to visit in Griffin, does it irritate you?
Several times in the past the Griffin Daily News has
commented on the fact that lots of Griffin people think it
is just wonderful to find an expensive parking garage near
a store in Atlanta, but if we can’t get one smack dab in
front of the store in Griffin we feel put-out. We don’t
know why this is, but it is a fact of modern times. Now
comes Highway User magazine to confirm our long-held
suspicion.
The magazine reports a study made by Allan Goodwin,
an associate professor at Orange County Community Col
lege in Middletown, N. Y. He analyzed the parking prob
lems common to cities of 50,000 or less population, which
would include Griffin which has 32,458. He found that the
difference is largely one of attitude. Residents of cities like
Griffin depend on their cars more than those who live in
larger cities like Atlanta, he said.
“The large city resident is usually grateful for any
parking space,’’ Mr. Goodwin says, “while the small city
resident demands that he be able to park near his distina
tion.”
It is interesting to know that such an attitude is nation
wide and not confined to Griffin where it does prevail.
Also it is interesting to note that while it usually is difficult
to find an empty space in Griffin exactly where you want
it, there nearly always is one not far away. This is in con
trast with Atlanta. It is one of many reasons why we
think it better for people in Griffin to shop at home instead
of the big city. Objectionable though parking meters and
overtime tickets are here at home, at least they are less
so than those in the city. And they do feed back into the
local municipal government.
Not Poor
In Logic
A U. S. Senate subcommittee is investigating the govern
ment’s war on poverty, including a proposal that everyone
be guaranteed an income, regardless.
The subcommittee decided to call in representatives of
the poor and hear what they thought about this proposal.
A disabled Kentucky miner had this to say:
“A lot of people, if they know they are going to get a
certain amount of money, they are not going to work.”
It will be interesting to see if proponents of the guar
anteed income can come up with a rebuttal anywhere near
as brief, succinct and persuasive. Not to say sensible.
Tax Structures
Need Overhaul
SAVANNAH EVENING PRESS
The proposal for a Georgia House committee to make
a thorough study of the state and county tax structures
leading to a revamp of the system is commendable. A
revision is long overdue....
The county tax structure today is centered too heavily
around the property owner and wealth cannot be judged
solely by ownership of property in these times. The small
homeowner who has a heavy mortgage certainly cannot
count much wealth....
But a study of the need to revamp the tax structure
must not be one just for the sake of an analysis. The study’s
results should not gather dust on a shelf. The study should
be thoroughly and accurately carried out and the General
Assembly should be prepared to seriously discuss the re
commendations.
Healthy
Newspapers
HONOLULU STAR - BULLETIN
Criticize us. Challenge us. Goad us to do better. Help
us shape the changes that must be made to serve even
better a growing and changing community. But don’t sus
pect that a community in this busy, bustling age could
possibility get by as well as it should without the glue of
the daily printed word to help hold its parts together and
keep them in touch with each other, and the world.
Chuckling pN
With Ye Editor r -.
Once the nation was divided between North and South.
Now it is split between re-runs and westerns.
••• • •
“One of the fellows at the restaurant observes that “40
is a good age; women are still interested in you, but the
army isn’t.” —Guest
• • • • •
Easter bills all paid? It’s less than nine months ’til
Christmas!
BEMIS VOM
“Next year I’m going to
the most ‘in’ place of all for
spring vacation—NOßODY
goes there any mo re—
—
ANSWER ra
Traffic Deaths
I am tremendously concerned
about the slaughter on our high
ways. In fact, I have written to
every Governor in the United
States asking them to join me
in a nation-wide drive to C u t
Traffic Deaths in Half in 1967.
If you have ideas on how this
campaign could be implemen
ted, I would like to hear them.
H.C.
The terrible toll of human life
on our highways has long been
a concern of mine too. In fact,
I have preached several times
on my radio program on t h e
problem. I am convinced that
death on our highways is a spir
itual problem. The restlessness,
the tenseness and the “hurry"
phobia of our times contribu
tes greatly to our shameful sta
tistics. If the Golden Rule were
applied to driving, your goal of
cutting traffic deaths in half
could be realized. If we would
"drive unto others, as we want
others to drive unto us”, our
highways would be much safer.
The modern car is a lethal wea
pon, and it has been placed in
the hands of thousands of irres
ponsible people. Any privilege
carries with its responsibility,
and irresponsibility in driving a
car can endanger the lives of
many people, and is tantamount
with murder.
Thousands more are killed in
cars every year than are killed
in the war in Vietnam, and a
life is no less valuable when it
is taken by accident on our
highway, than when defending
the innocent in a war.
TO* TODAY TtOH
Cbe Upper Hoorn
They took knowledge of them,
that they had been with Jesus.
(Acts 4:13)
PRAYER: O Lord, help us to
live today in such close fellow
ship with Christ that we may be
channels of blessing. Help us so
to live that people will know that
we have been with Jesus. In His
name. Amen.
Thought For Today
A thought for the day —
German author Thomas Mann
once wrote: "Opinions cannot
survive if one has no chance to
fight for them.”
WORLD ALMANAC
FACTS
Black calcite, a common
mineral that in the past
had always been considered
worthless, may be a
significant new source of
silver, says The World
Almanac. Rich quantities
of silver, invisible to the
naked eye, have recently
been found in the mineral.
Laboratory tests of black
calcite taken from Utah,
Nevada. Arizona and New
Mexico have been found to
contain up to 1,500 ounces
of silver per ton. Interest
ingly. western silver min
ers of the 1800 s often used
black calcite as a guide to
silver ore.
Copyright © 1967,
Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
Tuesday, April 4, 1967 Griffin Daily New*
1 ni
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