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Variety
35 Raizes in
spirits
36 Before
37 Rip
39 For fear that
40 Hat material
41 Adult boys
42 Rah
45 Prickly plant
49 Withdrawal
51 Charged atom
52 Verbal
53 Jason's boat
(myth.)
54 Canadian
province (ab.)
55 Cushions
under
howdahs
56 Hardy heroine
57 Born
DOWN
1 Mountain
depression
2 Athena
3 Readjust
4 Italian city
5 Presently
ACROSS
1 Common level
4 Ingredient of
8 Particular
form
12 Malt brew
13 Two-toed
•loth
14 Soviet city
15 Sargasso,for
one
16 Dutch seaport
18 Young
pilchard
20 Gaseous
element (pl.) ■
21 Operated
22 Land parcels
24 Wolfhound
26 Continent
27 Through
(prefix)
30 Football
player
32 Measure of
capacity (pL)
34 Ruler of a
sort
112 |3 14 |5 16 17 I 9 110 111
13 " 14
1§ 16 17
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"We’re NOT playing cops and robbers! We’re playing
cops and rioters!’’
DAILY NEWS
Quimby Melton, Car y ReevM > General Manager Quimby Mel ton, Jr.
Publisher BiU Knight, Executive Editor Editor
Full Leased Wire Service UPI, Full NEA, Address all mall (Subscriptions Published Daily Except Sunday, Second Clam
Change oC Address form MTO) ta A O. Box IM, E. Solomon St, Griffin, Ga. Postage Paid at Griffin, Ga.—Single Copy Me
AiftwW to frerioui Puxile
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28 Angers
29 Helper (ab.)
31 Goes in
33 Stories
38 Dress
40 Perceives by
touch
41 Cretan law
giver (myth.)
42 Bird's craw
43 Olympian
goddess
44 Habitat plant
form
I 46 Swine
47 Solitary
48 Grafted (her.)
50 Was seated
6 Badgerlike
mammals
7 Baseball term
8 Folkways
9 Order (Latin)
10 College
official
11 Shade trees
17 Give as an
inalienable
possession
19 “Inferno”
author
23 Lubricator
24 Land measure
25 Sly look
26 Russian guild
27 Hinderance
‘Quotes’
By United Press International
LOS ANGELES — Message
scrawled in lipstick by Kathy
Fullmer, a go-go dancer who
called herself “Sundy” and once
identified herself as the “girl in
the polka dot dress” in the
assassination of Sen. Robert
Kennedy, on the mirror of the
motel room where she commit
ted suicide:
“Lord you gave me a
mountain. I am live to climb—
Sundy. A wooden box will do.”
LONDON—Actress Luisa Ma
troll, who had her name legally
changed to Mrs. Roger Moore
six years ago and bore
television actor Roger Moore
two children, after she finally
married him Friday:
“I suddenly realized a dream
I had had for so long was
coming true.”
MANCHESTER, England —
Dr. Basil Wolman, speaking of
a new strain of gastro-enteritis
believed to have caused the
death of 15 babies in a single
hospital this year:
“I can go no further in
identifying the organism. But it
is apparently very deadly.”
LOS ANGELES—Prosecuting
attorney Lynn Compton, derid
ing claims by lawyers for
Sirhan B. Slrhan that their
client did not “maturely and
meaningfully” deliberate the
killing of Sen. Robert F.
Kennedy:
“When you get right down to
it, does any person committing
a crime make a meaningful and
mature and a wise decision?”
Almanac
For
Today
By United Press International
Today is Monday, April 14,
the 104th day of 1969 with 261 to
follow.
The moon is approaching its
new phase.
The morning stars are Venus,
Mars and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mercu
ry and Saturn.
On this day in history:
In 1861 the flag of the
Confederacy was raised over
Fort Sumter, S.C., as Union
troops there surrendered.
In 1865 John Wilkes Booth
crept into President Abraham
Lincoln’s box at Ford Theater
in Washington, D.C., and fatally
shot the Chief Executive.
Lincoln died the following
morning.
In 1965 Frank Mitchell
became the first Negro page
boy in the House of Representa
tives.
Thought For Today
A thought for the day: Sir
Arthur Wing Pinero said, “I
believe the future is only the
past again entered through
another gate.”
GRIFFIN
- JM_
Return To
Rural America
Although migration from farms to cities
continues in Georgia, as well as some other
states, there are signs that the trend is
changing.
Industrialization in the South during the
post war years brought thousands off the
farms where they no longer could make a
living to the cities. There many of the
transplanted citizens found they were not
trained to cope with city life. Some couldn't
get jobs. They had no marketable skill.
The result has been a clogging of many
metropolitan areas. This brought ghetto
development, increasing welfare rolls and
a flight to the suburbs for those who could
get out.
Sen. Herman Talmadge, a farmer him
self, last night called for tax incentives to
industries locating in rural areas.
He made the suggestion in a talk to the
Association County Commissioners at Sa
vannah.
The idea is not new. It was a campaign
issue in the last presidential race.
Perhaps if enough senators start think
ing in these terms, something can be done
to relieve the headlong rush to the cities,
and stop the decay to rural and small town
America.
Keep talking, senator. The idea has
merit.
A Remodeling
Os U. S. Image
“The U. S. reputation has become tarnished during re
cent years. Public attitudes toward our country are now
reported to be at a 50-year low.
“Fewer people abroad consider the United States as
their best friend.
“Fewer people believe that our nation shares a mutual
ity of interests with them.
“And fewer have trust and confidence in the ability of
the United States to provide wise and steady leadership in
the current world upheaval.”
The words are from a recent report, “The Future of
United States Public Diplomacy,” by the Fascell Sub
committee of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, based
on hearings conducted last year.
The subcommittee found three factors chiefly respon
sible for the deterioration of America’s image abroad: The
Vietnam war, the race problem and crime and lawlessness.
The most devastating impact, however, came from the
assassinations of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy and Dr. Martin
Luther King.
The subcommittee makes three recommendations.
First, since foreign policy begins with domestic conduct
and since people abroad judge us on the basis of what we
do rather than on what we say, this country’s qualifications
for leadership have to be continually reasserted through
concrete actions and accomplishments.
Second, the United States must learn to listen, to con
duct international communications on the basis of a dia
logue with its friends and critics abroad.
Finally, the United States must learn to speak effec
tively to foreign audiences.
Chuckling
With Ye Editor
Firm belief: the opinion of a company.
• •. • •. •
“It’s a good idea to resist the things you cannot change
if you want to be thoroughly miserable.” — Decorah, la.,
Public Opinion
• • • • •
The Columbia, S. C., State notes that “every American
child enters the world owing $1,730 as his( or her) share
of the national debt.” Do you blame babies for crying ?
BERRY’S WORLD
“Maybe he figures if he
keeps predicting a Califor
nia earthquake every day,
sooner or later he’s bound to
to hit it!”
MV A
ANSWER®
Way Os Teaching
I can's understand Matthew
18:8-9, where Jesus said that if
your hand offends thee, cut it
off, or if your eye offends thee,
pluck it out. Will you please ex
plain this for me? L.W.
Our Lord had many ways of
teaching. Sometimes He spoke
in parables, sometimes He em
ployed the dialectic method, and
sometimes He would teach tru
th by mentioning the impossible.
Anyone would know, when list
ening to a statement such as the
one mentioned, that a person
with sinful tendencies would ne
ver eliminate them by cutting
off a part of the body. If sin
can be localized, then it would
be well to do it that way.
But sin is a condition of man’s
heart. Even when there is no out
ward appearance of sin, a per
son may have a very wicked he
art. His desires may be totally
evil, but lacking either courage
or opportunity he may outward
ly avoid outbroken wickedness.
The Bible says that, “A man’s
heart is deceitful above all th
ings and desperately wicked ”
(Jeremiah 17:9). That is why
God must give a new heart to
the wicked, and in so doing,
make them disposed to do good
and not evil. God said, “I will
take the stony heart out of t h e
flesh and will give them a he
art of flesh that they may walk
in my statutes.” (Ezekiel 11:19-
20).
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God so loved the world, that
he gave his only begotten Son.
(John 3:16)
PRAYER: God of Love, grant
us the power to love one another.
Help us to see the importance
and worth of each individual to
Thee. May we see and appreci
ate the work of Thy love in our
world. In Thy Son’s name we
pray. Amen.
WORLD ALMANAC
FACTS
gk
Georges August Escof
fier, “king of chefs and
chef of kings,” claimed to
have varied his regal
menus with some 10,000
recipes, including 213
soups, 189 chicken dishes
and 143 things done with
eggs, The World Almanac
says. In 1894, after hearing
Nellie Melba sing Elsa in
‘Lohengrin,” he created his
most famous taste sensa
tion, Peach Melba, a med
ley of peaches, vanilla
syrup, vanilla ice cream
and raspberry puree.
Copyright © 1969,
Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
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 48
cents. By mail, except within
30 miles of Griffin, rates are
same as by carrier. By mail
within 30 miles of Griffin:
one year SIB.OO, six months
$9.00, three months $4.50, one
month SI.BO. Delivered by
Special Ante: One Year
$21.00 (tax Included).
Monday, April 14, 1969 Griffin Daily News
I
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