Newspaper Page Text
"Woodsman, Spare that Tree!"
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Ties and Links
ACROSS
1 Cord or rope
5 Lariat
10 corpus
12 Appearance
14 Imagine
15 Pronoun
16 Constellation
17 Through
18 Period of time
20 Insane
21 Disregard
24 Strip of cloth
for binding
25 Apprehension
27 Adhesive
29 Lover of
solitude (coll.)
31 Repeat
35 Storms against
37 Ancient Asian
language
38 Pointed
roasting rod
39 Armored
vehicle
40 Lasso, for one
43 Slide fastener
46 Eucharistic
■s' ' 1A I-
wine vessel
47 Vehicle
48 Frozen
substance
51 Concealed
52 Babylonian god
54 More illustrious
56 Line of twisted
fiber
58 Guzzles
59 Signification
60 Plunder
DOWN
1 Bail water from
a boat
2 Spaniards and
Portuguese
3 Educational
group tab ).
4 Consumed
5 and order
6 Peer Gynt s
mother
7 Spain (ab).
8 City in Alabama
9 Body of water
10 Rosebush
pseudocarp
11 Serum I comb.
J 23 4 I 567 BPT
10 11 I 12 13
i ' imp 6
rr —
25 |26 MSP 28 j
35 _____«...
SP 41 42 M 43 44 45 N
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56 57 158 — — — — — —
—p9~ * ' '■gfaU " p"
SIDE GLANCES
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“But, Frank, couldn’t you and Mr. Cooper talk shop
acme other time?”
GRIFFIN
DAILY #NEWS
Quimby Meltun, Car J Reeve »> General Manager Quimby Melton, Jr.,
Publisher Bai Knight, Executive Editor Editor
Fan Leased Wire service CPI, FuU NEA. Address all Mail (Subscriptions Pablished Daily Except Sunday, Second Claw
Change at Address form 3570) to P. O. Box 135, E. Solomon St., Griffin, G*. Postage Paid at Griffin, Ga. — Single Copy Sc
"| Answer to Previous Puzzle
1 Bfe a? l ife si
5 r ‘ P ISjBBA rp I £sl'S 1
34 Wapiti
36 Feminine
nickname
40 College cheers
41 leaves out
42 Army priest
i coll.)
44 Cook's utensils
45 Lurk
49 Prehistoric
chisel
50 Bitter vetch
52 Abstract being
53 Grow old
55 Life (comb,
form)
57 Preposition
form)
1 13 Australian
astronomer,
Charles
19 Showing skill
22 Lubricant
23 Devour
24 Scold
25 Southern state
lab )
26 Goddess of
dawn
a 25 Favorite
animal
30 Tear apart
32 City in Texas
33 Light metal
‘Quotes’
By United Press International
HONG KONG—Wen Wei Po, a
Communist newspaper in Hong
Kong, threatening more vi
olence by Communist goon
squads:
“Our heroic anti-persecution
fighters will eat you up piece by
piece.”
WASHINGTON — The White
House, telling why it has issued
another appeal to Communist
North Vietnam and the Viet
Cong for an exchange of sick
and wounded war prisoners:
“We are gravely concerned
that some of these prisoners
may not be treated humanely.”
KINSHASA, The Congo—Con
go President Joseph D. Mobutu,
commenting on the escape of
the mercenaries who rebeled
against his government:
“If the mercenaries had not
had their hostages, the Congo
lese army would have razed the
entire town and not a single one
would be left today.”
WASHINGTON-Sen. Richard
B. Russell, D-Ga., chairman of
the Senate Armed Services
Committee protesting the trans
fer of 150 men to the Congo to
provide “logistic support” in the
nation’s efforts to quell a
rebellion:
“Vietnam started out with a
not much larger force than that
. . . we should have enough
common sense to keep our
people out of situations like
this.”
Almanac
For
Griffin
By United Press International
Today is Wednesday, July 19,
the 200th day of 1967 with 165 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 1896 was
British author A.J. Cronin.
On this day in history:
In 1870, the Franco-Prussian
war began.
In 1914, the Allies faced a
serious crisis when figures
showed German U-boats were
sinking 1.6 million tons ol
shipping a month.
In 1941, Premier Joseph Stalin
took over the post of defense
commissr in Russia.
In 1965, former Korean
President Syngman Rhee died
in Honolulu.
EDITORIALS |Sj
This Week’s Editorial
Especially For Women
Everything Is
Oddly Normal
Do you ever have the feeling that this kooky old world
is getting kookier?
Do you find it’s more and more unnatural to do any
thing naturally? That if you are inclined to let nature take
its course, you are not only regarded as an oddball, but it
may be illegal? .
We take pills to keep us awake and to put us to sleep,
to slow us down and to speed us up. ,
We buy things we don’t need with money we don t have
to impress people we don’t like. And when we can t meet
the payments, we merely arrange for one friendly, gigantic,
impossible loan to get rid of the friendly, little impossible
loans.
Banks which used to lecture us sternly on the folly of not
living within our income now plead with us to live it up on
borrowed money.
We take vacation trips to rest up from our labors and
come back home so pooped we have to rest up doing what
had made us so tired we had to have a vacation.
We swing these vacations financially by driving a mort
gaged car on credit card gas over bond-financed highways,
sleeping in pay-later motels and wearing charge account
clothes. And we are shocked by how much we have spent
in cash on picture post cards and stamps.
There is a false rumor of possible peace in Vietnam, and
the stock market shudders and dips. Housewives picket
supermarkets to protest rising food prices when super
markets sell food for less than other stores. And the
nation’s economy is embarrassed by too much prosperity.
They are achieving push-button control of the human
mind by sticking wires into people’s heads so that if a per
son feels a fit of temper coming on, for example, he can
punch a button on a little box he carries and remain sunny
side up.
Thousands of people including children, are going into
mental orbit by taking hallucinatory drugs. And at least
one college professor recommends such excursions —
known to the trade as “psychedelic field trips”—because
he believes they permit a “better understanding of mytho
logy and culture.”
Take these items one by one and you can shrug them
off or perhaps accept them. But lump them together and
you have to wonder what’s going on and where it will end.
Georgia:
Nuclear Leader
MOULTRIE OBSERVER
Georgia is again appearing on the scene as a national
and Southeastern leader in economic development. The
announcement that Georgia Power Company will build the
first nuclear-fueled electric generating plant in the Southern
Company system assures Georgia of standing “out front”
in the movement to prepare for future business and indust
rial expansion.
According to Georgia Power officials, the nuclear plant’s
generating unit will have a capacity of 500,000 to 800,000
kilowatts. The largest single unit until now operating on
the company’s system is 319,000 kilowatts, which means
that the company is going into the manufacture of electri
city by nuclear power in a big way.
No state can develop further or faster than its capability
for providing sources of power for turning the wheels of
industry and business. We are in an electronic and com
puter age where machinery and equipment powered by
electricity are a vital part of the operations. Automation is
the key to the future and areas which cannot meet the de
mands for electricity will be left behind.
The nuclear generating plant is to cost more than SIOO
million. Reportedly it is the largest investment ever made
at one time in Georgia for an industrial plant. Therefore,
it represents Southern and Georgia Power Company’s tre
mendous faith in the future development of Georgia.
Not only is this a welcome announcement of faith in
Georgia and the role of nuclear energy, but it should be a
challenge to all Georgians and the communities in which
they live. If the principals in the field of electric energy are
willing to invest SIOO million in a nuclear plant, Georgians
can respond by throwing all of the energies into a develop
ment program which would justify such faith.
Let’s press toward making Georgia the No. 1 state in
the nation.
Chuckling
With Ye Editor
7 rojffi
There are two ways for a young man to learn that some
times he must do what he is told. One is to serve in t h e
Army. The other is to get married.
• • • • •
“Automobiles are going to cost more, but not enough to
improve the traffic situation.” — Wilton, Ont., Canadian
• • • • •
Whoever first said, “A penny for your thoughts” certain
ly coined a phrase.
BERRTS WORLD
“Look at these OUTFITS! VA ’ M IJ' flg I
If beings from another i J B
planet came here — you KB yffpt
wouldn’t know which ones I I ~ ~ ~ H
they were!” W.II I Irn ■■ Wf H
Wt'WvJ-J-
© 1967 by NEA, he. 0
MY |
answer!
*
Giving Up
I have tried to live the Chris
tian life, and have held strong
convictions against certain th
ings, but by so doing I have in
curred the disfavor of a lot of
people. Sometimes I feel like
giving up. G.U.
Since you are human with hu
man limitations, you feel “like
giving up”, but of course you
cannot, and will not. Christ’s re
ward is to the faithful, “Thou
hast been faithful in a few th
ings, I will make thee ruler over
many.” Just make sure that
your convictions are not all ne
gative, but that they are balan
ced out with positive convictions.
I note that you used the term,
“Against certain things”. It is
sometimes more important what
we are FOR, than what we are
against.
When Lincoln was one day se
verely criticized, he said: “I do
the best I know how; the very
best I can; and I mean to keep
doing so until the end. If the
end brings me out all right,
what is said against me won’t
amount to anything. If the end
brings me out wrong, ten angels
swearing I was right would
make no difference.”
Remember, virtue has its own
reward. If you could be turned
by the opinion of compromising
people, you wouldn’t have had
your convictions in the first
place. Popularity and convic
tions don’t always go together,
as you have found out.
FOR TODAY FROM
Che Upper Room«> w
“Come, O blessed of my Fa
ther, inherit the kingdom pre
pared for you from the founda
tion of the world.” (Matthew 25:
34. RSV)
PRAYER: Grant, O God,
that the life we live day by day
may help us to prepare for life
eternal. May each experience
fit us to share in the life that is
to be. In the Savior’s name.
Amen.
Thought For Today
A thought for the day—British
poet Sir Philip Sidney once
said: "They are never alone
that are accompanied with
noble thoughts.”
WORLD ALMANAC
FACTS
The United States Pacific
Trust Territory comprises
about 2,100 islands scat
tered over an expanse of
ocean as big as the con
tiguous United States, says
The World Almanac. The
population — 93,000 per
sons—lives on only 96 of
the islands.
Copyright © 1967,
Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
GRIFFIN DAILY NEWS
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Wednesday, July 19, 1967 Griffin Daily Newt ■
f* -I
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