Newspaper Page Text
"Then in '72 We'll Put It Back Together!"
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Personalities
California |
41 Legal point
42 The briny
44 Hawaiian
bird
46 Porter
49 Strong wind*!
. 53 Grain
bristle
54 Deficient in
beauty
56 Lower limb
57 Restrain
58 Cry of
bacchanals
59 Worm
60 Bargain
event
61 Pause
DOWN
1 Annoys by
faultfinding
2 Musical
instrument
3 Winglike
4 Norwegian
girl’s name
5 Mohammed’s
son-in-law
6 Miss Shore
and others
ACROSS
1 Biblical boat
builder
5 First man
9 Mr. Franklin
12 Competent
13 Italian resort 1
14 Miss Gardner
15 Football field
markings
(2 words)
17 Reverend
fab.)
18 Worsted
fabric
19 Herb genus
21 Oriental
nurse
23 "Uncle ’’
24 Wrong
(prefix)
27 Constellation
29 Matter
32 G.
Robinson
34 Chin beard
36 Pass away
silently
37 Blood vessel
38 Canvas
shelter
38 City in
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Git* ... - T-JI ■*■
“Good news, Miss Darby! We kids have decided to
organize & teacher strike!”
GRIFFIN
DAILY NEWS
Quimby Melton, Cary Raav *» General Manager Quimby Melton, Jr.
Publisher Bin Kni * ht > Executive Editor Editor
Fall Leased Wire Service UPI, Foil NEA, Address all mail (Subscription! Published Daily Except Sunday. Second Class
Ohaac* of Address form 3579) to P. O. Box 135, E. Solomon St., Griffin, Ga. Poster* Paid at Griffin, Ga.-Single Copy 10c
Arnver to Proiout fuiil*
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protuberant#
31 Lock
openers
33 Likelier
35 William.
Prince of
40 Make
enduring
43 Faultily
45 Avid
46 Miss Evans
4” Is indebted
for
48 Brazilian
tapir
50 Bathe
51 Son of Seth
1 (Bib.)
52 Let it stand
55 Lixivium
7 Arabian
gulf :
8 Hebrew
prophet
9 Certain
measuring
instrument
10 Level
11 Church
section
16 Monkeylike ■
mammals
20 French
revolutionist
22 Eve
24 Encounter
25 Inactive
i 26 Farwell
performances
28 Gaping
30 Bird bill
Almanac
For
Today
By United Press International
Today is Monday, Nov. 4, the
309th day of 1968 with 57 to
follow.
The moon is full.
The morning stars are
Mercury, Mars and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Venus
and Saturn.
On this day in history:
In 1842 Abraham Lincoln was
married to Mary Todd in
Springfield, 111.
In 1931 the League of Nations
cited Japan for willful aggres
sion in Manchuria.
In 1952 Dwight D. Eisenhower
was elected President.
‘Quotes’
By I’nited Press International
WASHINGTON—Secretary of
State Dean Rusk, urging
government and world leaders
to help follow up peace moves
in the Vietnam War brought
about by America’s halt in
bombing of North Vietnam:
"Now I am also saying to all
of those who have said, *Oh,
things would be wonderful if
you stop the bombing,’ we are
saying to them, all right, get
busy; get busy.”
AUSTIN, Tex —Luci Johnson
Nugent, telling reporters about
her plans to fly to Honolulu next
weekend to visit with her
husband, Airman 1 C. Patrick J.
Nugent, who will journey there
from Vietnam for a week’s
vacation:
“I don’t care if 900 of you-all
come along. I don't care if it
snows in Hawaii.”
SAlGON—Marine Capt. Wil
liam Gray, Oklahoma City,
Okla., being a bit wary of the
bombing halt:
"I am for a bombing halt as
long as the Reds honor their part
of it. But nobody in my
company is taking off their flak
jackets.”
GRIFFIN DAILY NEWS
Subscription Prices
Delivered by carrier: One
year $19.00, six months SIO.OO
three months $5.00. One
month $1.75. one week 411
cents. By mail, except within
30 miles of Griffin, rates are
same 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
I $21.00 (tax included)
Don’t
Forget
It is customary upon election eve to remind everyone,
“Don’t forget to vote.” So here is our reminder: Please
don't.
Also:
• In addition to the national, state and local election,
don't forget to vote for a city commissioner if you live in
Griffin and are eligible.
• And on the big state - local * national ballot, don’t
forget to vote for a presidential candidate. You have to
check a separate place to do that and you have to turn
the ballot around to do it. Checking a straight state-local
ticket doesn’t cast a vote for president.
• Also don’t forget to vote on the statewide and local
constitutional amendments. The local one allows Spalding
County to spend money for fire protection but doesn’t re
quire that it do so. It is No. 116 and will be the last one on
the big ballot. There are 23 statewide amendments on top
of it. The Griffin Daily News published an analysis of all
of them last week.
• Nor should you forget that if you wish, to do so, you
can split your ballot between political parties. The mere
fact that you voted in either the Democratic or the Repub
lican primary does not require that you vote a party ticket
in this, the general election.
Tomorrow you can, if you like, vote a straight party
ticket then vote for an individual in another party by
checking the appropriate spaces. In that event, your vote
will count for all the candidates listed under the party
name except the ones for whose opponent you vote by
checking his name.
• Don’t forget that voting in this election requires the
positive action of checking a box on the ballot. Do not
cross out or strike through a name as was done in many
past primary elections. This time you check the name you
DO want; you do NOT strike out the name you do not
want.
• Finally, once the elections are over, don’t forget
that to be really effective the nation and the community
must unite behind the winners and help them lead America,
Georgia, Spalding County and Griffin on to better things.
P. S. In case anybody thinks we forgot to endorse a
presidential candidate, we didn’t forget. It is the first time
in well over 40 years that the Griffin Daily News has not
endorsed one. We did NOT on purpose.
That’s The Way
The Ball Bounces
Rep. James Smith (R.-Okla.) tells this one: In 1920
a telephone call from New York to San Francisco cost
S2O, but S2O would mail 1,037 letters. In 1968 the phone I
call from New York to San Francisco cost $2.85 and the
same amount will mail only 47 letters.
The post office, government operated, has raised rates;
the telephone system, privately operated, has lowered
them.
So much for today’s comment on private enterprise.
Tail Wagged
The Dog
TAMPA, FLA., TRIBUNE
It seemed from the news reports that the American
campus scene last term consisted entirely of demonstra
tions. The National Student Association decided to check
the number by counting both demonstrations and demon
strators between last January 1 and June 15. The results:
There were 221 major demonstrations at 101 colleges
and universities, involving 38,911 student participants.
Demonstrating professors were counted in 18 cases.
Columbia University wasn’t tallied because the study
group found it “too difficult to categorize.”
Race conflicts got the blame for 97 incidents and student
craving for power for 50. But the most amazing statistic
culled out of the study is that all the commotion was
caused by only 2.6 per cent of the students enrolled in the
schools studied.
The same day that this report was published, Dr. An
drew W. Cordier, acting president at the “too difficult”
Columbia, answered the question of meeting with rebel
leaders there with the observation that “they don’t talk
to anyone.” But every trio of such rebels managed to dis
rupt the college careers of 97 less demonstrative students.
Truly a case of the tail wagging the dog.
diuckliiig
With Ye Editor
7 CoJM
Now that the race for the White House is about over,
maybe we can get on with the race to the moon.
••• • •
“Wives shopping keep husbands hopping.” — Tops
••• • •
If YOUR vote doesn’t decide elections, then whose
does?
BERRY’S WORLD
“It’s a best seller called *The
Money Game.’ Why?”
MY
ANSWER®!
Ww
Times Os Doubt
At times I believe strongly and
then there are times when I am
filled with doubt. What can I do
to keep my faith constant? K.J.
The Bible teaches that It is not
great faith that saves us, but
faith, even though it be as a
■"mustard seed”, directed to
Christ. It is not the size of our
faith that saves us, but the size
of our God. The Bible says, “He
is able to save them to the utter
most that come to God by him.”
Heb. 7:25.
Though faith is a requirement
of salvation, nowhere in the Bi
ble is it indicated that our faith
is more important than the ob
ject of our faith, which is Christ.
Peter’s faith wavered many
times: on the Sea of Galilee,
when he sank beneath the wa
ves; when he denied Christ at
the camp fire during the cruci
fixion; and on other occasions.
But it was to this weak, waver
ing man, Peter, that Christ said:
“Thou art Peter, and upon this
rock I will build my church.”
Christ’s church is not built upon
great stalwarts, but upon redee
med, faltering sinners. Although
Peter’s faith was weak, the ob
ject of his faith, Christ Jesus,
was strong.
If I were you I would be more
concerned with the object of my
faith, than I am with the mea
sure of faith. A little faith in a
big God is sufficient to see you
through.
|ta
FO« TODAY (ROM
Cbe Upper Roonufo
The Lord shall preserve thy
going out and thy coming in
from this time forth, and even
for evermore. (Psalm 121:8)
PRAYER: Help us, dear Lord,
to live this day blessed with the
assurance that Thou art present
with us. We thank Thee for the
comforting presence and help
of the Holy Spirit in our lives. In
Christ's holy name we pray.
Amen.
Thought For Today
A thought for the day:
Sophocles said, "Though a man
may be wise, It is no shame for
him to live and learn.”
0
WORLD ALMANAC
FACTS
gSKK*' 4,
Adam’s apple is the popu
lar name given to the lump
in the front of the throat,
more prominent in men
than in women, caused by
the thyroid cartilage of the
larnyx or voice box. The
term is believed to have
arisen, The World Almanac
says, from the belief that a
piece of the forbidden apple
which caused Adam’s fall
stuck in his throat when he
tried to swallow it.
Copyright © 1968,
Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
Monday, Nov. 4, 1968 Griffin Daily News
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