Newspaper Page Text
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Money Matters
37 Disorder
39 Mimics
40 Arachnid
41 Small shield
42 Criminal
, 45 Caused a sore
1 49 Formation in |
line, as of troops
51 Constellation ,
52 Row
53 Poker stake |
54 Overturn
? 55 Marchioness,
for instance
56 Fruit
57 Abstract being
DOWN 1
1 Not as much j
2 Level
3 Respites from 2
work 2
4 Cash (slang) 2
5 Arrow poison 2
6 Speculum 2
7 Et cetera (ah.)
ACROSS
1 Bulgarian coin
4 Tenth of a
dollar (U.S.)
8 Money owed
12 Feminine name
13 Distinct part.
14 Hodgepodge
15 Dry, as wine
16 Done solely for
pay
18 Marine food fish
20 Bodies of water
21 Poetic
contraction
22 Genus us swans
24 Continent
26 Clutch
27 Diminutive of
Samuel
30 Moonstruck one
32 Stinging plant
34 Disregard
willfully
35 Weirder
36 Theological
degree (ab.) 8 Giver 28 Nautical term 50 Cartograph
1 2 3 4 15 16 17 18 19 lio 111
12 13 14
15 16 —~ — l7
18 19 l®2o
24 " ——J* y . 28 , g
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36 ’ Jg 37 38
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42 43 44 Hr~ 46 47 ™
49 50 5l
52 ” 53 54
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I I I I 111 || | 13
SIDE GLANCES
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*‘l know just what you’re going to say. You’re going to
say they don’t look bankish!”
GRIFFIN
DAILY W" NEWS
Fall Leased Wire service CPI, FuU NEA. Address all Mail (Subscriptions
Ckance Os Address fem 3S7S) to P. O. Box 134, K. Solomon St, Griffin, On.
Answer to Previous Puizl*
, . Jt|r|6|yl reifllbldlMl
IwlNl I LA T El ioTPIi n eidl
29 Seas (Fr.)
31 White
33 Vestige
38 Unruffled
40 Banker’s
concern
41 Penetrate
42 Autumn
43 Pseudonym of
Charles Lamb
44 Jenny
46 Brazilian tapir
47 Ireland
48 Dibbles
9 Enthusiastic
ardor
10 Feathered
friend
11 Playthings
17 Epic poetry
19 Musical
instrument
23 Fishing
24 Among
25 Saturates
26 Welcome
27 Make an
agreement
Quimby Melton,
Publisher
Almanac
For
Griffin
By United Press International
Today is Tuesday, July 18, the
199th day of 1967 with 166 to
follow.
The moon is between its first
quarter and full phase.
The morning star is Saturn.
The evening stars are Venus
and Mars.
Born on this day in 1921, was
the first American to orbit the
earth, John Glenn.
On this day in hisory:
In 1914, the United States
created an aviation section
within the Signal Corps—with
six planes available.
In 1938, Douglas Corrigan
arrived in Dublin after having
left New York City ostensibly
for California. He earned the
nickname “Wrong Way.”
In 1951, Jersey Joe Walcott
knocked out Ezzard Charles in
seven rounds to win the
heavyweight championship.
In 1966, astronauts John
Young and Mike Cooper set an
orbital height record by reach
ing just over 478 miles.
‘Quotes’
By United Press International
NEWARK, N.J.—Mrs. Lucille
Pugh, mother of Michael Pugh,
12, who was shot and killed in
front of his house during the
riots, commenting on his death:
“He wasn’t involved in
anything. He had just gone out
with the garbage.”
WASHINGTON—P.O. Siemil
ler, president of the Internation
al Machinists Association com
menting on the railway strike
which threatens to tie up 95 per
cent of the nation’s railway
system: ,
We’re angry. We
gave Congress a no-strike
pledge, then they take a ten-day
vacation and come back to a
three-day week.”
PLAINFIELD, N.J.—Several
armed rioters holed up in a
building in tins city’s west end
talking to Negro newsmen:
“We should have done this ten
years ago and we’d have had
whitey off our backs now."
GRIFFIN DAILY NEWS
Subscription Prices
Delivered by carriers One
year $16.20. six months $8.50
three months $4.5>.
month $1.55, one week U
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
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Special Auto: One Tear
$18.20 (tax included.)
Cary Reeves, General Manager
Bfll Knight, Executive Editor
I editorials!
City, Industries
Tackle Pollution
Announcement last week that private industries and the
City of Griffin are working together on water pollution
was good news indeed. Such cooperation is the very best
way to solve the problem.
The city has assured Dundee Mills, Jaco Mills and
Pomona Products Company that it will work with them.
Dundee and Jaco will help pay the cost of a $20,000 study
of the city’s water system and sewerage disposal p 1 a n t
requirements. Pomona Products plans to build its own
water treatment system which it expects to be completed
by August of next summer. The canning company is build
ing its own because its problems are different from those
of the textile mills.
When the Pomona Products system is in operation and
when the city and industries working together meet the
needs specified by the study, Griffin should be well on the
way to whipping pollution.
Doing this will be another example of the effectiveness
of cooperation between private enterprise and municipal
government.
No doubt about it, it’s the very best way.
Go Home,
Stokely!
Official Boston has made it known it wants no part of
Stokely Carmichael. Acting Mayor Barry T. Hynes said
the “black power” advocate’s presence there “creates a
situation of unnecessary risk to the persons and property
of all citizens.”
And so it goes. In city after city, wherever Carmichael
shows, he is getting the official cold shoulder. It seems that
almost invariably violence erupts, either while he is in town
; or shortly thereafter. Can this be coincidental?
His presence was felt in the recent riots in Atlanta, his
base of operations. He was quoted by newsmen as using
the word “revolution” in his talks there.
Free speech is one thing, and running around over the
country, stirring up citizens is another.
FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover has said that Carmichael
is known to have associated himself with leftists. Mr.
Hoover’s accusations, it would seem, are sufficient for the
FBI to clamp down on this rabble-rouser. The government
got Al Capone for income tax evasion when unable to pin
criminal charges aganist him. If the administration really
wanted to stop Carmichael, it could find sufficient grounds.
It is past time for the President to lay the law down to
those responsible for rioting and burning in the nation’s
cities.
Another Vote
On Daylight Time?
MARIETTA DAILY JOURNAL
Georgia may not have seen the last of legislative fights
over daylight saving time.
The issue, heatedly debated in the General Assembly
this year, now is said by legislators to be headed for a re
turn to the agenda in 1968. Sen. Bobby Rowan of Enigma,
one of the leading foes of the switch to daylight time this
year, has revealed that he may introduce legislation in Jan
uary to return the state to Eastern Standard Time. And
even one of the legislative proponents of daylight time,
Sen. William Searcey of Savannah, says he is having second
thoughts about the switch.
It will be well, we think, for the legislature to recon
sider the time matter after Georgians have had a summer
to try the change to daylight time. By the end of the year,
the representatives and senators will have had time to
gauge their constituents’ reaction to the experiment. If
they come back to Atlanta convinced that most Georgians
would prefer to go back to Eastern Standard, they can
exempt the state from the Uniform Time Act for 1968.
Last winter the legislators were arguing in abstract terms
about something that Georgians hadn’t tried. With the
benefit of public reaction from a year’s experience, the
General Assembly members should be able to make a
more representative decision on how to set our clocks in
1968.
Chuckling
With Ye Editor ...
The live oak is Georgia’s state tree, and the way we’re
hustling these days it would be appropriate to call its
people live wires.
• • • •. •
“A court rules there must be chicken in what is offered
the public as chicken soup. It is wondered how it would
rule on cottage cheese.” — Gordon, Neb. Journal
••• • •
What is “Griffarea” ? See Thursday’s lead editorial and
you’ll find out.
Quimby Melton, Jr.,
Editor
Published Dally Except Sunday, Second dam
restate Fold st Griffin, Go. — Single Cow *
Mfr I
BERRY'S WORLD
“I’ll go along with Doctor
Spock, when he goes along
with me!”
MY A
ANSWER IS
Lot Os Rules
I go to a university where they
have a lot of rules. True, in this
Christian setting, I am learning
some things that I could never
learn in any other school, but
don’t the heads of a school like
this know that students of col
lege age are intelligent and ma
ture enough to make their own
decisions? B.A.
In every situation in life one
must decide whether the advan
tages outweigh the disadvantag
es. Where a great many students
attend an institution of learn
ing, it is sometimes expedient
(if not imperative) to have
certain basic rules. Since the
principle reason for going to a
college is learning, the rules that
are made (which may to you
seem petty) certainly don’t ham
per the learning experience. In
a small Southern college recent
ly, a group of students awaken
ed the president at 1:00 a.m.,
shouting “We want beer!” The
college had a rule against alco
holic beverages, which was their
perogative, since it is a Chris
tian institution. In the next cha
pel service the president told
the students that the rule would
not be changed, but that the stu
dents who disliked it should
transfer to the many other sc
hools which had no such rules.
I think he was right.
Any organization without rul
es can be bedlam. I would say
there are two things you can do
if you find the rules distasteful:
transcend them, and concentrate
on getting an education, or trans
fer.
pßflyftt &
tOR TODAY FROM
Cbe Upper
Fight the good fight of faith,
lay hold on eternal life. (I Timo
thy 6:12)
PRAYER: God of grace and
God of glory, we read in Thy
Word, “The wages of sin is dea
th; but the gift of God is eter
nal life through Jesus Christ our
Lord.” Grant us faith, wisdom
and courage to accept Thy
marvelous gift, for the sake of
our Savior, Jesus Christ, in
whose name we pray. Amen.
Thought For Today
A thought for the day—
French satirist Francois Rabe
lais once said: “So much is a
man worth as he esteems
himself.”
WORLD ALMANAC
FACTS
New types of glass can
be made as strong as steel
or as soft as cotton, says
The World Almanac. Din
ner plates are now being
made of glass so strong
that if they were droppea
from a nine-story building
they would not break.
Copyright © 1967,
Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
Tuesday, July 18, 1967 Griffin Daily New*
fen W :
* ®“ Aliu ft/ifljL.
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