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38 Entire
40 Conclusion
41 Coloring
matter
42 Constellation
43 Accept as
heir
46 Shouted
49 Spring, for
instance
50 Obstinate
(Scot.)
51 Doctrine
52 Military
assistants
DOWN
1 Persian
red deer
2 Biblical
mountain
3 Fondler
4 Land parcel
5 Guido's
high note
6 Crimson
7 Egg
(comb, form)
ACROSS
1 sugar
6 Jolly
11 Small space
13 Honor
14 Climbing
palm
15 Embellishes
16 School
subject
17 Jewel
IB Encountered
20 New Guinea
port
21 African
worm
22 Go by
23 Surgical saw
26 Secret jargon
27 Operated
28 Make lace
29 Too
30 Swiss canton
31 Clamping
gadget.
33 Scout groups
36 Smooth
37 Noah's boat
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“There’s something I must tell you, Shielah. At heart
I'm clean-cut!”
GRIFFIN
DAILY NEWS
Full Leased Wire Service DPI, Fall NEA, Address all mail (Subscriptions
Chance of Address form M 79) to P. O. Box 135, E. Solomon St., Griffin, Ga.
Answer to Privisui Puirle
fowls
31 Purchaser
32 Ocean
33 Attempt
34 Satiated
35 Coat part
36 Smallest
amount
37 Arabian gulf
39 Mineral
deposits
44 Peer Gynt’s
mother
45 Child
47 Greek letter
48 Hawaiian
’ garland
8 Berliner,
for instance
9 Masculine
appellation
10 Pauses
]2 New ——
13 Chibchan
Indian
18 Eternity
22 Spanish
courtyard
24 Expunge
25 Window
glass
26 Village in
Michigan
28 Thanksgiving
Quimby Melton,
Publisher
‘Quotes’
By United Press International
WASHINGTON-One hundred
thirty-four Republican party
members of the House, in a
letter calling for action on
congressional and election re
form, to House Speaker John W.
McCormack:
“Dlsrepsect for cherished
institutions is mounting. If the
House of Representatives re
veals itself publicly as Incapable
of change and reform, are we
not contributing to a situation
we all deplore?”
UNITED NATIONS—George
Ball, U.S. ambassador to the
United Nations, commenting on
Secretary General Thant's sug
gestion that the General Assem
bly vote on whether the
bombing of North Vietnam
should be stopped:
“We don’t regard discussion
of Vietnam at the Secretary
General's news conference as in
any way helpful in furthering
the serious and sensitive
negotiations now in progress in
Paris.”
Almanac
For
Today
By United Press International
Today is Wednesday, Sept. 25,
the 269th day of 1968 with 97 to
follow.
The moon is between its new
phase and first quarter.
Tre morning star is Mars.
The evening stars are Saturn
and Venus.
On this day in history:
In 1513, Spanish explorer
Balboa crossed the Isthmus of
Panama and became the first
known European to see the
Pacific Ocean.
In 1789, the first Congress of
the United States adopted 12
amendments to the Constitution
—lO of which were ratified and
became known as the Bill of
Rights.
In 1926, the Ford Motor Co.
put its workers on an eight-hour
day—five-day week schedule.
In 1959, the prime minister of
Ceylon was shot by assassins
and died the following day.
GRIFFIN DAILY NEWS
Subscription Prices
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year *19.00, six months SIO.OO,
three months $5.00. One
month $1.75, one week 40
cents. By mall, except within
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ssme as by carrier. By mail
within 30 miles of Griffin:
one year $16.00, six months
$9.00, three months $4.50, one
month $1.60. Delivered by
Special Auto: One Year
$21.00 (tax included)
Cary Reeves, General Manager
Bill Knight, Executive Editor
•
This Week's Editorial
Especially For Women
How To Look
Your Very Best
What should you do if your husband despises that ador
able dress the salesgirl said was “really you”?
Take it back.
That’s the advice of Bill Thomas, a man who has dress
ed some of the world’s most glamorous women in his role
as a top Hollywood costume designer.
“Always rely on your husband,” Thomas says. “Most
men have intuitive good taste and husbands, especially,
don’t mind voicing an opinion. They have a sure eye for
what makes a woman most attractive and they aren’t in
fluenced by what happens to be fashionable at the time,
if it isn’t becoming to the particular woman.”
“I think too many women let their clothes wear them.
You shouldn’t notice a woman’s dress before you notice
her face. Women seem to forget that fashions are intended
to make them more attractive. The greatest compliment
a woman can receive is ‘how nice you look’ not, ‘what a
pretty dress.’ ”
Thomas says one of the worst mistakes a woman can
make is to take a friend shopping with her. Even your best
friend can’t help being influenced by what would become
her, rather than what is right for you.
As he sees it, the well-dressed woman follows only the
fashion trends which suit her. “She should know her own
type, and then temper it as styles change. It’s not impos
sible to find what is right for you, even if it isn’t the latest
thing. It just takes longer.”
Thomas also counsels women never to throw anything
out unless it is worn to shreds. “Fashions go in cycles and
you never know what you may be able to use again,” he
said.
The designer, a sharply-dressed Lothario type with dark
hair and mustache, has been translating his version of what
makes a woman lovely onto the screen for more than two
decades. He has been nominated for an Academy Award
for costume design eight times and won the Oscar in 1961
for “Spartacus.”
Thomas is convinced “the correct accessories will make
an inexpensive dress look great and the wrong accessories
will make the most expensive dress look terrible.”
“When I’m shopping for accessories for a film, and I
don’t find what I had in mind in a dozen stores, I go to
two dozen,” he said. “You don’t have to spend a lot of
money on accessories, but you have to spend as much time
picking them out as you do selecting the dress.”
* Guest Editorial *
Only Death
Is Level
MOULTRIE OBSERVER
Everything is being reduced to statistical form for
computerization.
Recent statistics have revealed that marriage looks bull
ish, babies bearish, and the divorce rate soaring.
An Institute of Life Insurance analysis notes that births
are on the decline in the United States, while they have re
mained at high levels in Asia, Africa and Latin America.
The actual reduction in the U. S. is 28 per cent since 1957
—perhaps the result of the pill, emphasis on birth control
by medical, health and economic leaders, added education
for young people, and a reluctance to begin rearing a new
family under a series of national and international crises.
This situation, however, has not put the damper on
marriage. Nearly two million marriages are expected to
occur this year, the largest number since the rush to the
altar following World War 11.
Meanwhile, the divorce rate has become more prevalent
— surprising in the light of the already-high percentage.
Insurance statisticians report that last year 534,000 marri
ages ended in annulment or the divorce courts — equalled
only by the more than half-million divorces of 1946 when
the nation began settling back to normal from a worldwide
war.
The death rate, in contrast to the other population
factors, has been fluctuating between 1.7 and 1.9 million
a year throughout the 19605. It reflects slower growth of
the total population than forecast after the 1960 Federal
Census, and it proves that only death is certain.
m Chuckling Pi
&sL With Ye Editor -
Always saying what you please seldom pleases anyone
except yourself.
••• • •
“We have plenty of luxuries today; it’s the essentials
we can’t afford.” —— Tops
••• • •
The less a person has to do, the more time he seems to
need to do it.
Quimby Melton, Jr.
Editor
Published Daily Except Sunday, Second Class
Postage Paid at Griffin, Ga.-Slngle Copy 10c
BERRY’S WORLD
“W e 11, one thing’s for
SURE — we’ve got the
‘druggist vote’ locked up!”
MY
ANSWERS
Gun Law
What do you think of the con
troversial gun law? Do you re
ally believe that laws, in them,
selves, can stop the killing in
our society? Y.R.
The recent Investigations have
revealed some startling statis
tics, In the year 1966 firearms
were used in more than 109,000
crimes of violence — 6,552 kill
ings, 43,500 aggravated assaults
and 59,680 robberies. As U. S.
News and World Report recent
ly said, ‘"The United States is
fast becoming an armed camp.”
A spokesman from Massachu
setts said. “Enough guns have
been sold in our state to equip
15 infantry divisions.” In Michi
gan there were reports that an
"arms race” was in progress
between the blacks and the whi
tes.
All this is alarming and it ex
ists because of fear. We must
assume, however, that most cit
izens do not buy guns to kill, but
to defend themselves.
Back to your question about
the gun law stopping killings in
the U. S. In the final analysis a
gun cannot harm anyone unless
there is a human being to pull
the trigger. Ten million guns
would be harmless unless some
human became stimulated by
hate, greed or prejudice. So, the
gun controversy becomes a spir
itual problem. While strict gun
laws might have some effect in
showing the world that we are
concerned about the problem of
violence — violence is really a
thing of the human heart and
conscience. If men harbor the
desire to kill and maim, they
will find away, guns or no guns.
Ba
»O« TODAY HOM VT-JS
Cbe Upper
My brethren, count it all joy
when ye fall into divers tempta
tions. ( James 1:2)
PRAYER: Lord, forgive us for
allowing problems to overwhelm
us. May they rather give streng
th to our Christian living and
help us grow in the grace which
is in Christ Jesus, our Lord.
Amen.
Thought For Today
A thought for the day—British
playwright Bernard Shaw once
said: “The worst sin towards
our fellow’ creatures is not to
hate them, but to be indifferent
—that’s the essence of inhuma
nity.”
WORLD ALMANAC
FACTS
-Z'/Y
Capt. Charles S. Boy
cott’s name is remembered
not for anything he did but
for what the Irish people
did to him, the World Al
manac says. As an English
rent collector in Ireland in
1880, Boycott evicted ten
ants. In reply, farmers and
servants would not work
for him, tradesmen would
not sell to him, neighbors
ostracized him. As we
would say today, he was
“boycotted.”
Copyright© 1968,
| Newsnancr Enterprlie Assn.,
Wednesday, Sept. 25, 1968 Griffin Daily News
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