Newspaper Page Text
The Golden Egg
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Biblical Bit
ACROSS
1 Elder ton of
Isaac
5 Mother of Seth
8 Abel's slayer
12 Sea bird
13 Rodent
14 Italian stream
15 Worthless bits
18 Collection of
sayings
17 Slight coloring
18 Pertaining to
the nose
20 Gratify
.22 Seizure
24 Organ of
hearing
25 First book of
Pentateuch
20 Sacred aong
i 33 Malt brew
134 Clamp
36 Nickname for
Louise
137 Pitch
38 Mariner's
direction
39 Worm
40 Breathe noisily
in Bleep
43 Philistine giant
killed by David
48 Native metal
48 Slight bow
49 Moses to the
Israelites
52 Harass
56 Inactive
57 King of Judah
60 Awry
61 Intend
62 Transgression
63 Chinese Hang
64 The dill
65 Son of Gad
66 Sea flyers
DOWN
1 Short Jacket
2Wheya of milk
3 Crafts
4 Hazardous
5 Age
6 Mover's truck
7 Public
storehouse
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15 Jr| !17
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25 26 27 | | | 30 31 32
53 SBBsI I
37 i
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56 — 57~ 58 59 ""60
61 62 63
64 65 66
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SIDE GLANCES
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“It’s from sonny at college. It starts out ‘Dear Money’!”
DAILY NEWS
Full Leased Wire service DPI, Full NEA. Address *U Mail (Subscriptions
Change of Address form 3579) to P. O. Box 135, E. Solomon St., Griffin, Ga.
Answer to Previous Puzzle
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KIPWSI
8 Supplies food to :
9 Operatic solo
10 Hostelries
11 Memorandum
19 Fairy fort
21 Race course
circuit
23 Fork prong
25 Natural I
channels I
26 Ardor I
27 Roman emperor !
28 Utter musically I
30 Athena I
31 Misplaced
32 Supawn
35 Mexican laborer
41 Rat
42 Before
44 Nephew of
Abraham
45 Fancy
47 Expunge
49 Peruvian city
50 Garden of——
51 Wings
53 Culture media
54 Was observed
55 Lampreys
58 Courtesy title
59 Blackbird of
cuckoo family
Quimby Melton,
Publisher
Quote
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — Vice Pres
ident Hubert H. Humphrey
reporting that the anti-Vletnam
war demonstrators who sur
rounded him throughout hl3
recent European tour did not
express the sentiments of the
leaders of the countries:
“I think it should be
understood that the overwhelm
ing majority of national leaders
with whom I spoke understand
our presence and objectives in
Vietnam.”
NEW YORK (UPI) —Gov.
George Romney of Michigan
calling on Americans to elimin
ate racial prejudices within its
borders and in its dealings with
the rest of the world:
“Here at home, America
faces the ominous possibility of
a succession of long, hot
summers. And in our relations
with much of the world beyond
our borders. ... we face the
equally forbidding prospect of a
long, hot century.”
Almanac
For
Griffin
By United Press International
Today is Monday, April 24,
the 114th day of 1967 with 251 to
follow.
The moon is new.
The morning star Is Mars.
The evening stars are Venus,
Mars and Jupiter.
Born on this day in 1882 was
American artist Tony Sarg.
On this day in history:
In 1704, the first American
newspaper to be printed regu
larly, the Boston News-Letter
was published by John and
Duncan Campbell.
In 1877 Northern rule of the
South following the Civil War
ended when President Ruther
ford Hayes ordered federal
troops out of New Orleans.
In 1898, Spain declared war on
the United States after receiv
ing an American ultimatum to
withdraw from Cuba.
hi 1965. the ruling junta in the
Dominican Republic was over
thrown by rebels demanding the
return of President Juan Bosch.
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 Auto: One Year
$18.20 (tax included.)
GRIFFIN
Cary Reeves, General Manager
Bill Knight, Executive Editor
EDITORIAL PAGE
The Heinous Crime
Os Last Night
Armed robbers committed the most heinous crime with
in our recollection in Spalding County when they robbed
Pleasant Grove Church last night.
A full account of the armed holdup during the evening
service at the church is in this issue. The Griffin Daily
News looks forward to capture, trial and conviction of the
despicable animals who invaded and robbed a church
where people were in the very act of worshipping God.
All criminals should be captured and punished. These
MUST be—and to the fullest extent of the law.
The entire Griffin-Spalding community—in fact people
everywhere who read and hear of this atrocity—are shock
ed and dismayed that such a thing could and did happen
here in Spalding County, Georgia.
We know not what depraved creatures would commit
such dastardly acts. We do know, however, that the law
enforcement officers of the county and of the state are
working diligently to apprehend the criminals. And we
urge all people here and elsewhere not to judge this com
munity by these acts which decent people abhor, but by
the efforts to solve the crime speedily, to try the accused
fairly, and to punish the guilty severely.
— Quimby Melton, Jr.
The Creeping
Sea Os Waste
Must the affluent society also be the “effluent” society?
A few days after the typical housewife carries in two or
three shopping bags full of grocery store items, the typical
husband (or is he atypical?) carries out those same bags
filled with garbage, cartons, bottles and cans.
It averages out, according to one estimate, to about
eight pounds of waste a day for each citizen. Multiply this
by some 196 million Americans and you have the stagger
ing total of over 780,000 tons of the stuff that must some
how be disposed of every day.
Add to this the fact that the volume of waste is growing
more rapidly than the population while the available space
for its disposal (whether in the air, the water or the
ground) is declining.
“The consequence,” noted the official journal of the
U. S. Public Health Service some time ago, “is that the
garbage can, refuse pile and junk heap have moved out
of the individual back yard, garage or attic into the public
arena.”
Communities may spend as little as $2.50 a ton for re
fuse and garbage disposal to as much as $lB a ton. Those
which are running out of landfill areas are having problems
with incinerators as well, both because of the growing use
of non-burnable items and growing public awareness of the
threat of air pollution.
What is needed is a new concept: Not disposal but sal
vage, not just use but re-use. Attractive, completely con
tained reclamation plants can be built with present tech
nology. Some are already in operation in a few cities. In
side them, all kinds of refuse is not only handled econo
mically and inoffensively but processed into marketable
forms, such as soil conditioners.
Waste reclamation is a concept and a practice which
must eventually be adopted by more and more communi
ties and must eventually embrace the whole spectrum of
the affluent society’s effluence—from the individual house
hold garbage can on up to the largest industry.
♦ Guest Editorial ♦
A Word In Behalf
Os The Teens
GORDON (NEB.) JOURNAL
Sure there are bad kids just as there are bad parents,
but we think you can’t make a blanket statement. This
generation of teenagers and college students has its quota
of nuts, beatniks, protesters and slobs just as has every
generation before it, only the nomenclature is different.
The vast’ma jority of the age group are decent youngsters
— modern, yes of course, whose distinctive styles, tastes
in music and ideas of dancing differ from anything ever
seen before, but that’s only the hallmark of the era.
These exterior things, too, shall pass—and it is very
probable, with their knowledge far surpassing any pre
ceding generation, they’ll cope with the affairs of this old
universe more intelligently and more effectively than have
their antecedents.
Chuckling KN
With Ye Editor V
The best way to solve a mutual problem is to stop cussin’
and start discussing.
••• • •
“It’s the high cost of leisure, and not the high cost of
living, that bothers most of us.” — Imperial Magazine
••• • •
With all he’s had to worry about and all the nests he’s
had to feather, the BALD eagle is most appropriate as our
national emblem.
Quimby Melton, Jr.,
Editor
Published Daily Except Sunday, Second Claes
Postage Paid at Griffin, Ga. — Single Copy 6c
BERRY’S WOULD
“Surveyors says —
‘WHEW! — it’s LIEDER
KRANZ!’ ”
NW A
ANSWER
by
Good Works
I am a little confused. Our
minister says that ‘‘good works”
have nothing to do with our sal
vation, and yet I read in the Bi
ble where Jesus said, “Let
your light so shine before men
that they may see your good
works and glorify your father
which is in heaven.” How can
this be explained? H.C.
Your minister probably meant
that we are not saved by "good
works”. He certainly didn’t
mean to imply that “good
works” are unacceptable to God.
We should distinguish here bet
ween piety and good works. Pie
ty, which means the pursuit of
the devotional life, is toward
God and not men. We don’t pray,
for example to be seen of men,
we pray to communicate with
God. Pious deeds such as pray
ing, reading the Bible, and “giv
ing up” certain things, are not
the “good works” Jesus spoke
of in the above verse. These are
all "toward God”, and not as a
testimony to men. The good
works Jesus spoke of are deeds
of Christian love toward others,
and the showing forth of a Christ
like attitude in our dealings with
our fellow men. Many people
are pious toward God, but lack
ing In kindness, understanding,
charity, etc. Good works are our
testimony to the world, and in
the sight of God are just as im
portant as our devotional life.
In fact, in a very real sense, you
can’t have one without the
other, and both are clearly tau
ght throughout the Scriptures.
PRfiyER
»O» TODAY norf
Cbe Upper Roomed
“I say to you. Love your ene
mies and pray for those who per
secute you.” (Matthew 5:44,
RSV)
PRAYER: O Christ, who didst
pray for Thine enemies as
as they were nailing Thee to the
cross, grant us a greater mea
sure of Thy spirit. Help us so to
love our fellowmen that we.
too, may return good for evil. In
Thy name we ask. Amen.
Thought For Today
A thought for the day —
British preacher John Tillotson
once said: “They who are in
highest pieces, and have the
most power, have the least
liberty, because they are the
most observed.”
WORLD ALMANAC
FACTS
Otf ~Jhsfe.
■ s w
From a childhood of pov
erty and harsh physical
labor, Horace Mann (1796-
1859) rose to become one
of America’s greatest edu
cational reformers. In 1837,
he became the first secre
tary of Massachusetts’ state
board of education, a posi
tion he held until 1948.
During these years the state
made many reforms, estab
lished better teaching
methods and built more
than 50 new high schools,
says The World Almanac.
Many of Mann’s reforms
were later adopted by other
states.
Copyright © 19ST,
Wg— Nl II Butsrpriac Am. _
Monday, April 24, 1967 Griffin Daily News
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