Griffin daily news. (Griffin, Ga.) 1924-current, September 19, 1967, Page 4, Image 4
They Didn’t Want To Become Involved
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Masculine Bit
42 King of the
West Saxons
45 Purpose
46 Scottish
sheepfold
47 Distresses
50 Aromatic herb
54 Conjunction
55 Malayan
ungulate
59 Turf
, 60 Shoshonean
1 .Indian
61 Elude
62 Island (Fr.)
63 New Guinea
port
64 Titled
65 Oriental coin
DOWN
1 Horse color
2 Preposition
3 Period of time
4 Einstein,
scientist
5 Robert E.——
6 Actor,
Heflin
7 Suffix
8 Reticulated
» Youth's
a >pellation
ACROSS
IRob
4 Masculine
appellation
* Diminutive of
Arthur
12 Number
13 Rental contract
14 Falsehood
15 Indonesian of
Mindanao
18 Stephen Vincent
17 Kalt brew J
18 Pertaining to
Scandinavia ,
20 Fork prongs (
22 Anger
24 Pronoun
25 Turns aside
28 Maxims
32 Wine (Fr.)
33 Tiny
35 George ,
American
humorist
38 Ontario (ab.)
37 Shade tree
38 Vegetable
39 Sewing
implement
I|2 13 14 |5 16 17 18 19 IW 111
i? re~~“ 17
_ _ i9 21
hh 126 |27j “|29 130 pT'j
|SF || ■ fcT~I ]“■ BSS ~
139 pJ 4T Wp 43 44
l—L— l., ~~"J46~ “ —
47 148 |49 51 152 153
____ _ _MMM _ -
60 61 — — — — — §2
63 _____
Illi I I I I I I LL-usJ
SIDE GLANCES
sow
o IW7 t, NIA, !«. TM US M. OH. J
“Oh, nothing much. What’s new with YOU?”
GRIFFIN
DAILY NEWS
Quimby Melton, Car y Reev “« General Manager Quimby Melton, Jr.
Publisher Bai KnfeH Executive Editor Editor
Full Leased Wire Service UPL Full NEA. Address all mall (Subscriptions
Change of Address form 3579) to P. 0. Box 135, E. Solomon St., Griffin, Ga.
1 An * w * r t 0 Prsviou* Puztle
illinium
40 Boy’s nickname
41 Hearken
43 Having toothed
wheels
44 Franklin’s
nickname
47 Boy’s
appellation
48 Brazilian tapir
49 Notion (Fr.)
51 Egyptian
goddess
52 Foot part
53 Biblical garden
56 Hawaiian
' pepper
57 Pamela (ab.)
58 Food fish
10 Vex (coll.)
11 Mounds for
Jack Nicklaus
19 Masculine
courtesy title
21 One of the
Gershwins
23 Hold in regard
24 Carpenter's
implement
25 Shakespearean
stream
26 Ivy, for Instance
27 Grafted (her.)
29 Open-mouthed
stare
30 European river
31 Set firm
34 Symbol for
‘Quotes’
By United Press International
CAlßO—Egyptian President
Gamal Abdel Nasser, eulogizing
his former Vice President Abdel
Hakim Amer who reportedly
committed suicide:
"None of my brothers was as
dear to me as was Amer”
SANTA BARBARA, Calif.—
Pulitzer prize-winning editor
Harry S. Ashmore, charging
that President Johnson ap
parently squelched a Vietnam
peace proposal that Ashmore
dispatched In a letter to North
Vietnamese President Ho Chi
Minh:
"This conciliatory feeler was
effectively and brutally can
celled before there was any
chance to determine what
response Hanoi might have
made.”
Almanac
For
Today
By United Press International
Today is Tuesday, Sept. Isl,
the 262nd day of 1967 with 103 to
follow.
The moon is between Its full
phase and last quarter.
The morning stars are Venus,
Jupiter and Saturn.
The evening stars are Saturn
and Mars.
English illustrator Arthur
Rackham was born on Sept. 19,
1867.
On this day in history:
In 1777, American soldiers
won the first battle of Saratoga
In the Revolutionary War.
In 1863, Union and Confeder
ate soldiers met in the battle of
Chickamauga. The rebels won
the following day.
In 1881, President James
Garfield died in Elberon, N.J.
He had been wounded by a
disgruntled . office seeker on
July 2.
In 1960, Soviet Premier Nikita
Khrushchev received a cold
reception when he arrived In
the United States to attend the
U.N. General Assembly.
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.)
Feed My Sheep
And Lambs
Efforts afoot in Georgia to feed the hungry have caused
a great deal of comment including some opposition.
We have not heard of anyone openly saying, “Let ’em
go hungry.” Instead, opposition has been voiced in such
statements as, “They’re too lazy to work.” Or, “Anybody
who wants a job can find one.” Or, “You’d just have
niggers standing in line.”
Chronically hungry people are undernourished and do
seem to be lazy. Hunger and illness go together. A con
stantly empty stomach saps energy and depletes the spirit
as well as the body. As for anybody being able to find a
job, maybe so, but a starving person does not make a good
employe. Finally, you probably would “have niggers stand
ing in line.” There’d be some hungry White people stand
ing in line to get food, too.
From where we sit, it seems to boil down pretty much
to this: Some little children are hungry, and whether or not
his parents are shiftless, lazy, immoral or as we used to say
in Georgia, “just no account,” not one child caused his
own hunger.
Jesus Christ said, “Feed my sheep” and Feed my
lambs.” Whose sheep and Whose lambs are hungry chil
dren?
Man
At His Worst
It is obvious from investigations into the city riots that
no one is going to plead guilty to anything wrong — either
the rioters or the riot quellers.
Everyone is, however, willing to admit it was the other
guy’s fault.
But there does seem to be general agreement by the
general public on one thing—that the whole mess is human
nature at its worst.
And it is America’s hard luck that the tragic situation has
so far been handled with so much political pussy-footing
and finger-pointing and so little genuine courage and sin
cere action.
♦ Guest Editorial*
Hard Line
On Juvenile Cases
WAYCROSS JOURNAL - HERALD
There is by no means a meeting of the minds on the
question of how to handle juvenile cases.
Under present Georgia law, persons under 17 are dealt
with informally, protected in many respects. Georgia con
siders the state to be in the role somewhat of substitute
parents.
For example, the names of persons under 17 cannot be
published without the permission of juvenile authorities or
a superior court judge, except on second conviction for a
felony.
Juvenile court proceedings are not open to the public as
part of this sheltering process.
But the U. S. Supreme Court in a recent decision has de
creed that juveniles must have the same constitutional pro
tection as adults.
The decision, based on abuses of present procedures,
presumably means that Georgia’s informal system will no
longer prevail.
Many jurists, the FBI and other law enforcement agen
cies have from time to time urged that the spotlight be fo
cused on juvenile offenders. It is argued that the very pro
tection they are given serves to encourage crime.
The other side of the coin, of course, is the argument
that youthful offenders who have strayed from the narrow
path should be given a second chance to steer a straight
course.
A Georgia legislative committee studying ways of revis
ing the state juvenile laws received a strong view from an
Atlanta woman recently. She read into the record the fol
lowing statement of a Montana juvenile judge:
“If a youth is old enough to topple a tombstone, wreck
a church, or schoolhouse, hold up a service station, snatch
a woman’s purse or beat up an old man, he is old enough
to have a public trial with his parents in the front row and
full news coverage.”
That’s laying it on the line.
The legislators are likely to move circumspectly in this
matter but the alarming increase in serious crimes commit
ted by juveniles has led to a hardening of the public’s atti
tude.
Chuckling
With Ye Editor
7 C ojtffi
Occasionally even wise men act the fool, and foolish
ones seem wise.
••• • •
“During courting, a fellow will often let his girl have her
own way. Unfortunately, after marriage it often becomes a
fixed habit.” — St. Thomas, Ont., Times - Journal
••• • •
A good way to get your nose poked is to go around pok
ing it into other people’s business.
Published Daily Except Sunday, Second Class
Postage Paid at Griffin, Ga. — Single Copy 6o
BERRY'S WORLD
“Hey, Colonel, I see you
voted for the civilian ticket,
too!”
MY a
ANSWER tH
Behind Times
When I listen to you I have the
feeling that you are Just a little
behind the times. Isn’t your
evangelical Gospel just a little
out of date? Does it really speak
to the problems of these times?
F.T.O.
When the human race can era
dicate the problem of evil;
When men can triumph, in
their own strength over the frus
trations and temptations of ,
life;
When men can eliminate hat
red, injustice and prejudice;
When men begin to use their
gifts and resources creatively
Instead of destructively;
When peace and love reign
throughout the world, and ar
maments are melted down and
made into instruments of peace;
When men stop cheating, lying
and stealing;
When divorce is unknown;
When children respect parents,
and when parents love their chll- (
dren;
When alcoholism is unknown,
when LSD has gone out of fas- |
hion, and when narcotic addle- .
tion has been eliminated from
the world;
When our penitentiaries are
emptied and turned Into charlt- ,
able institutions;
When bigotry, intolerance, and
misunderstanding are no more;
When man shall have achiev- ,
ed a state of perfection he had
before the fall in Eden, then the
Gospel will no longer be need
ed.
h
roa TODAY TSOM VC'J
Che lipper Roomed
Then came the officers to the
chief priests and Pharisees; and
they said unto them, Why have
ye not brought him? The officers
answered, Never man spake like ,
this man. (John 7:45-46)
PRAYER: O God, who sent
Thy Son among us to speak and
act with authority and appeal to
us by love, help us to draw near
to Him in faith. Forgive us for
rejecting Him. Lead us to sub
mission to His will and the gui
dance of His spirit. We ask in
His name. Amen.
Thought For Today
A though for the day—
President Garfield said: "This
nation is too great to look for
mere revenge. But for the
security of the future I would
do everything.”
WORLD ALMANAC
facts
The desolate Sinai Penin
sula, says The World Al
manac, has an area almost
as great as West Virginia,
but supports only about
50,000 people. In this re
gion, the Biblical Jews
roamed after fleeing Egypt
between 1450 and 1350 B.C.
Tradition identifies the
8,000-foot Mount Sinai as
the place where Moses re
ceived the Ten Command
ments.
Copyright © 1967,
Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
Tuesday, Sept. 19, 1967 Griffin Daily News
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