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"On the positive side, then, I suppose we could say
you're in favor of anti-poverty?”
GRIFFIN
DAILY W" NEWS
Quimby Melton, Car * Reevw » General Manager Quimby Melton, Jr.
Publisher Ba * Knight, Executive Editor Editor
Fell Leased Wire Service DPI, Full NEA. Address all mail (Subscriptions Published Daily Except Sunday. Second Cisse
Chance of Address form U1I) to P. Q. Box 136, E. Solomon SU Griffin, Gm Postage Paid at Griffin, Ga. — Single Copy IQo
Answer to Previous bizile
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‘Quotes’
By United Press International
WASHINGTON (UPD—Rabbi
Richard G. Hirsch, director of
the Social Action Center of
Reform Judaism, on a mass
antiwar protest scheduled in the
nation’s capital this weekend:
“This demonstration was or
ganized and is being run
entirely by the radical left.”
WASHINGTON — Vice Pres
ident Hubert H. Humphrey,
expanding on the Johnson
administration’s new theme that
the security of America is at
stake in Vietnam:
“I think the destiny of
America may well be decided in
Asia.”
OAKLAND, Calif.—A speaker
at an antiwar rally on the
Berkeley campus of the Univer
sity of California promising
more demonstrations at the
Army induction center:
“We’ll go back and take
possession of the area and we’ll
do so without violence until they
shut the .... thing down!”
Almanac
For
Today
Bv United Press International
Today Is Friday, Oct. 20, the
293rd day of 1967 with 72 to
follow.
The moon is between its full
phase and last quarter.
The morning stars are Venus
and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Saturn
and Mars.
On this day in history:
In 1873, P.T. Barnum opened
the Hippodrome in New York
City to house his “Greatest
Show on Earth.”
In 1918, the Germans accept
ed President Woodrow Wilson’s
terms to end World War I.
In 1944. American troops
landed on the eastern coast of
Leyte Gulf in the Philippines.
Gen. Douglas MacArthur, who
had been forced to leave the
island 2>4 years earlier, issued
a statement that began, "I have
returned.”
In 1964, Herbert Hoover died
at the age of 90.
GRIFFIN DAILY NEWS
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three months $5.00. One
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£ -frIHIS WEEK’S SPORTS EDITORIAL-fc ★
Hunters Asked
To Be Careful
The State Game and Fish Commission has sounded the
alarm for hunters to be extremely careful in Georgia’s
fields and woods this fall and winter.
Squirrel season opened last weekend and already two
teenage boys are dead because of hunting accidents.
A 15-year-old Augusta boy was killed on opening day.
An 18-year-old Brunswick boy was killed on the second
day.
Those accidents prompted George T. Bagby, Director
of the State Game and Fish Commission, to issue an im
mediate warning to all hunters to be careful with firearms.
Georgia’s hunting accident record is reasonably good
considering the number of people who participate in the
sport.
Only five fatal accidents occurred last year among
250,000 hunters.
Director Bagby hopes to keep hunting as safe as possible
but realizes that only the hunters can do it.
That was the reason for the early safety appeal to the
hunters.
Most of the 1967-68 hunting season lies ahead. Quail,
rabbit and deer (gun) draw the most participants and
they haven’t opened yet.
This would be a good time for hunters to check their
weapons to be sure they are in safe operating condition
and to take other preventive measures to insure that every
hunt is a safe one.
— Roger Dix
Nine Steps
To Bondage
A researcher whose identity has somehow become ob
scured in the passing of time came to the conclusion that
nine steps occur in the collapse of a free society. They are:
1. From chains of slavery people rise to spiritual faith.
2. From spiritual faith they generate courage.
3. From courage they forge liberty.
4. From liberty comes abundance.
5. From abundance arises selfishness.
6. From selflishness, then, to complacency.
7. From complacency to apathy.
8. From apathy people degenerate to dependency.
9. And from dependency back again to bondage.
It would be interesting, and vastly helpful in the light of
current trends, for each of us to estimate which of those
nine steps America may now be taking.
It would be even more helpful if, each in our own way,
we would try to help adjust the nation’s stride in a direction
that assures a free society in perpetuity.
♦ Guest Editorial ♦
A Woman Always
Gets Her Way
POLITICS ON PARADE, by Sid Williams
The governor’s loss is our gain. Lester is doing pretty
well in his battles against liquor and gambling in Georgia,
but he’s about lost his war on mini-skirts. They’re all over
Capitol Hill, and we males are not sorry. But, the Gover
nor shouldn’t be surprised; he’s been married long enough
to know that a woman always gets her way in the matter of
dress.
Chuckling
With Ye Editor
7 CoJM
The only trouble with easy jobs is somebody else always
gets them.
“A lot of unfinished work around the house and yard
that was put off until autumn now can be put off until
spring.” — Grit
• • • • •
Beware a person with an axe to grind, lest he knife you
in the back.
BERBrS mu
“When I was a kid we had
fun getting all dressed up
for Halloween—nowadays,
kids wear costumes all year
’round I”
MY A
answer Hl
Scandalmongers
I have a friend whom they
say is a lesbian, and she lives
with a girl friend. They both
go to church and seem sincere.
Can a lesbian be a Christian?
W. K.
Your question reveals a com
mon quirk of human nature:
to accept rumor as fact. Many
women live together who are
not lesbians. What is wrong
with two bachelor women liv
ing together—or two bachelor
men, for that matter? Only
scandalmongers would Jump to
questionable conclusions under
such circumstances. Statistics
show that only about three of
every one hundred people have
such tendencies, and not all
these practice homosexuality.
So, calm your fears, and stop
the "whispering”, if you have
done any of it, and let these
women live in peace.
Some of the finest Christians
I have ever known have been
unmarried. Including the apos
tle Paul. Just because a person
doesn’t marry, doesn’t neces
sarily mean that they are mal
adjusted, sexually. Some, like
Paul, don’t marry because they
wish to devote their total time
to Christian service. Others
don’t marry for economic rea
sons. Some have had a love af
fair in the long ago, and prefer
to live on the pleasant memo
ries of the past. Perhaps oth
ers just like to live alone, have
a physical handicap, or have
seen too much tension among
some married people. Many
other reasons could be given,
all of which are personal, and
no one else's business. Let
these women worship the Lord
in peace.
PRflytß Bi
vet VOOAV HOM
Che lipper Room<> w
I came not to judge the world,
but to save the world. (John 12:
47)
PRAYER: O my Savior, I am
thankful for the sacrifice You
offered on the cross at Calvary.
Help me to serve Your people
according to God’s holy will and
to His honor and glory. In Your
name I pray. Amen.
Thought For Today
A thought for the day—Mark
Twain said: “Grief can take
care of itself, but to get the full
value of joy you must have
somebody to divide it with.”
0
• ••
WORLD ALMANAC
FACTS
ESSI
There were 1,534 motor
cycle fatalities in 1965, one
third more than in 1964 and
more than double the toll
of 1960, reports The World
Almanac. If this trend con
tinues, deaths resulting
from motorcycling would
reach 5,000 a year by 1970.
There were 1.4 million
motorcycles in 1965. If the
current rate of increase
continues, five million would
be in use by 1970.
Copyright © 1S«?,
Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
Friday, October 20, 1967 Griffin Daily News
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