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Plant Life
38 Regular (ab.)
41 Employer
42Net(anat)
44 On the left
side (naut)
46 Contraction
48 Light blow
49 Growth of
trees
51 Dress
53 Man’s
nickname
54 Egyptian sun
god
56 Overact (coll.)'
57 Number
59 Shaded walk :
60 Obnoxious
plant
61 Dirk
DOWN 4
1 Esteemed ;
2 Light cotton
fabric ’
3 Fixed course
4 Biennial ;
plants ;
5 Unruly crowd
6 Egglike J
ACROSS
1 Seed plant
sßryophytiO
plant
fiSiouan Indian
(var.)
10 City in'Spain
13 Related on
mother’s side
14 Soul (Egypt)
15 Food for
infants
16 Heavenly
bodies
18 Being more
recent
21 Swias canton
22 Dry, like wine
24 Petrarch's
beloved
25 Dispatch
27 Narcotic
(coll.)
29 Month
30 English'river
31 Color
33 Narrow
(comb, form)
35 Roman god
dess of harvest
i |3 |+ |5 |6 |7 |s |
9 io 1] 12“
13 14
16 ” 17 IHIB p) 20
21 jgp2
K 28
' B s '
' |33 |34 - |BP b 36 |37 |
38 39 |40 ’■■p H 42 4F
*♦ 45 Br
♦9 ' 52
53 ■■s4“ 55 "“56
57 58 59 r“*
Hill H IJ
Almanac For Today
By United Fress International
Today is Friday, June 13, the
164th day ot 1969 with 201 to
follow.
Hie moon Is approaching its
new phase.
The morning stars are
Mercury, Venus and Saturn. (
The evening stars are Mars
and Jupiter.
On this day In history: ;
In 1877 the Russo-Turkish i
GRIFFIN
DAILY
Quimby Melton, Car * Reeve *> General Manager Quimby Melton, Jr.
Publisher BiU Kni « ht ’ Executive Editor Editor
Full Leased Wire Service UPL Full NEA, Address all mail (Subscriptions Published Dally Except Sunday, Second Class
Change of Address form 3579) to P. O. Box 135, E. Solomon St, Griffin, Ga. Postage Paid at Griffin, Ga.—Single Copy 10c.
Answer to Previous Puzzle
7 Yes (Sp.)
8 Seven i
(comb, form)
11 Fact
12 Musical drama
13 French coins .
17 Cyperaceous
plants i
19 On the <
sheltered side
20 Beam of light ’
23 Brass-wind 1
instrument <
26 Chemical !
suffix !
28 City in Illinois
32 Correlative of !
neither !
34 Words of
mild rebuke
36 Leafstalk
(bot)
37 Frighten
l suddenly
38 British air
Sroup (ab.)
yric poem
40 Goat antelope
of Himalayas
43 Fencing sword
45 Renovate
47 Flower parts
50 Woody plant
52 Government
employe (coll.)
55 Also
58 Odin’s brother
(myth.)
War began.
In 1935 Jim Braddock deci
sioned Max Baer to win the
Heavyweight Boxing Champion
ship of the world.
In 1944 Germany began using
its “Buzz Bomb” secret weapon
on England during World War
11.
In 1967 Ohio National Guards
men were called out to quell a
racial uprising in Cincinnati.
‘Quotes’
By United Press International
PARIS—An American official
at the Paris peace talks giving
his impressions of the new
delegation of the Viet Cong's
National Liberation Front:
"Whatever they choose to call
themselves, they are still the
same group, and continue to
receive their direction and
major support from North
Vietnam.”
WASHINGTON—Sen. Wallace
R. Bennett, R-Utah, calling for
the planting of an American
flag on the moon by the crew of
Apollo 11 to signify the
unification of all groups of
Americans:
“I know of no greater way to
cement this unity then for the
President to present to the
Apollo 11 crew two flags that
have flown both over Indepen
dence Hall—ln recognition of
our early struggle for freedom
—and over the Capitol—
symbolizing the strength Os our
representative system of
government.”
NEW YORK—Evangelist Bil
ly Graham after strolling
through Times Square to
publicize his current New York
crusade:
“Anyone walking down Times
Square can see why Nev.’ York
is in need of a great moral and
spiritual awakening.”
MILWAUKEE, Wis. — State
Sen. Gordon Roseleip respond,
ing to a colleague’s statement
that the University of Wisconsin
is in danger of becoming a
“cow college”:
“What’s wrong with that? I
think the cow is one of the
finest, cleanest animals in the
state—an animal like that
produces good, white, clean
milk. I'm tired of hearing a lot
of that bull.”
PBflyER
V«R T«»AY Wt!
Cbe lipper Rooftum
O Lord, In the morning thou
dost hear my voice. (Psalm 5:3,
RSV)
PRAYER: Eternal God, who
hast set us to live amid the mar
vels of this great universe, we
bless Thee that it is possible for
us to commune with Thee throu
gh prayer. We thank Thee for
the assurance that Thou are
more willing to hear us than we
are to make known our need.
Teach us to pray. Amen.
•fc -frTHIS WEIK’S SPORTS EDITORIAL-fr ★
McCalmon Met
Recreation Needs
Grady McCalmon, director of the Griffin
Recreation Department since 1964, resign
ed this week to accept a similar position in
Rome, Ga.
McCalmon is one of the finest recreation
leaders ever to serve in Griffin.
He organized many new programs and
improved others while heading up the de
partment.
Griffin's youth football, softball, base
ball, and arts and crafts programs plus
many other activities for boys and girls are
among the best in Georgia.
McCalmon always looked for new ways
to improve the Griffin Recreation Depart
ment. When a need arose, he saw that it
was met.
Just recently he formed a new baseball
league for boys in the 13, 14 and 15-year
old age group.
He insisted on participation. He felt that
every boy and girl on a team should play
in every game.
McCalmon didn't like to see players ride
the bench while others played every min
ute of every game.
The Griffin Recreation Department is
reaching more people now than ever be
fore.
Larry Neill, who has been named acting
recreation director, has served the depart
ment several years. He knows recreation.
The department should continue to r u n
smoothly under his leadership.
Is Christianity
Boring In 1969?
CHRISTIAN INDEX
Anybody who says being a Christian in 1969 is a bor
ing, unexciting adventure must not be able to read or
watch TV. Never in human history has there been a day
which cried more urgently for Christian leadership. Look
at the lead stories from a three-day reading of the news
paper: e
—President Richard Nixon opens a major national war
on crime, saying he will spend s6l-million. Hia main
target will be illegal gambling operations.
—College officials announce that secular universities
are now seeking more and more campus chaplains; and
they want men who will involve themselves in the deep
issues dividing campuses everywhere.
—Baptist college leaders in Atlanta and Arkansas
announce new financial crises in the never-ending struggle
to keep Baptist schools alive.
A Baptist minister in North Carolina calls on the state
legislature to abolish all religious qualifications for holding
office, saying they are “clearly unconstitutional.”
—President Nixon urges young people to turn to reli
gion in today’s “crisis of the spirit.”
—A Church of Christ congregation in New York City
sold its historic building in a declining area. The congrega
tion will share a building with a nearby Catholic church
and channel most of its income to physical needs of many
low-income families in the community.
—From around the world come daily reports of vio
lence and hatred and threats of war; from Vietnam issue
hourly dispatches of death, injury and destruction with no
end in sight.
The list is endless. The forces are strong. The needs are
great. The enemy is mighty. What is the Christian to think,
or say, or do?
The Christian is to be; to know and nurture deep in his
soul the character and compassion that can only come
through continuing commitment to the Christ of Calvary.
The Christian is to know; to study, to read, to meditate,
to understand the magnitude and meaning of the forces
swirling in eternal conflict for the minds and souls of men.
The Christian is to pray; to pray as never before for
Divine guidance and power to direct and enrich every
good and noble person or agency seeking to alleviate
human misery, spiritual and physical.
The Christian is to go; to step out of himself and his
personal desires and involve himself with others facing
the issues in his town and his world which no one but him
self can best meet. And only you know what those issues
are for you.
BERRY’S WORLD
“Yes, sir! We KNOW this is
private San Celmente beach
— we’re your Secret Service
men!”
MY A
ANSWER K
*r
Son In Trouble
My son was a brilliant profes
sional man but an unfortunate
marriage which ended in divor
ce and drinking has led to disas
ter. How can I help him? F.S.
You should have started be
fore he was bom. It may be al
most too late from the human
point of view to salvage him now
—yet there Is hope! It Is never
too late for God’s mercy and
grace. Therefore you must love
him and pray for him. The Sc
ripture promises that "the ef
fectual, fervent prayer of a righ
teous man availeth much.” I
have seen many evidences dur
ing my ministry that God espec
ially answers the prayers of
burdened mothers. Perhaps you
will not live to see the answer
to your prayer — but God will
answer!
There are many mothers in
dulging every whim of their chil
dren now but 20 years from now
they will be singing your mourn
ful song. Some mothers want
their children to have everyth
ing their hearts desire. It Is un
fair to trust children out into the
world thinking that the world Is
“their oyster, ” and that they
should grasp for everything they
want regardless of anyone else.
Many times divorce, alcoholism,
et cetera, are a result of failure
to train a child in the way he
should go.
It will take a great deal of
doing to undo all of that, but the
things that are Impossible with
man are possible with God.
Thought For Today
A thought for the day:
William Butler Yeats born on
this day in 1865 said, “The
years like great black oxen
tread the world, and God, the
herdsman, goads them on
behind."
WORLD ALMANAC
FACTS
The Conestoga wagon
caused Americans to break
the English custom of driv
ing on the left, The World
Almanac says. The wagon
was pulled by four or six
horses, the driver usually
riding the left wheel horse.
To get a clearer view of
the road ahead, the driver
kept his wagon to the right.
Drivers of other vehicles
followed suit because the
ruts cut by the freight wag
ons were easy to follow. In
1813, New Jersey ordered
all vehicles to keep to the
right
Copyright © 1959,
Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
GRIFFIN DAILY NEWS
Subscription Prices
Delivered by carrier: One
year 324, six months sl3,
three months $6.50, one
month $2.20, one week 50
cents. By mail except within
30 miles of Griffin, rates are
same as by carrier. By mail
within 30 miles of Griffin:
one year S2O, six months
sll, three months $6, one
month $2. Delivered by
Special Auto: One Tear
$27. AD prices include sales
tax.
Friday, June 13, 1969 Griffin Daily News
•»
m im h NU, te.
Television
Friday Night
2 5 11 •
——— - I
6:00 Newsroom Panorama Hasel
:15 ” News “
:30 ’ Walter What’s My
:45 ” Cronkite Line? ’
7-00 News I Love News
:15 " Lucy "
:30 B1 < I Spy Movie: ;
:45 Bands * “The 39
8:00 Baseballs * Steps”
:15 Braves vs. • ”
•30 Pirates Gomer Pyle, **
.•45 * USMC -
9:00 * Movie: •
:15 " "The House • ’
:30 " Ot Seven Let’s Make
:45 “ Hawks’’ A Deal
W:00 ■ »• Dick Cavett •
:15 ’ »» "
:30 * " U. S. Open
:45 * * Highlights
U:00 Newsroom Panorama lews
:15 ’
:30 Johnny Movie: Atlanta Now
:45 Carson "Kismet" ■ .
19« : ■ ■
■ J :30 M * Joey Bishop ,
Jb6m :45 Movie * -
Saturday Morning
S i— ————
;30 " Sacred Heart •
:45 * Living Word
7 : 00 Green Dragon R.FJ). 5 Adventures in
;15 Theater • Living .
:30 " <-H Hour Tubby and
:45 " ” Lester
8:00 Popeye Go-Go "
•15 Club Gophers ”
:30 ” Mr. Pix
:45
Super S " Casper
:15
:30 Cool McCool Wacky Races Gulliver
:45 ”
W:00 Fllntstonm Archie Spider-Man
:15 ”
:30 Banana Batman Fantastic
:45 Splits Superman Voyage
U:00 • * Journey to the
:15 * ** Cent, of Earth
:30 Untamed Herculoida Fantastic Four
:45 World • •
Saturday Afternoon
:00 Storybook Shaxxan George of the
I > :15 Squares " Jungle
J :30 Movie: Jonny American
JLbH ;45 “Tarzan and Quest Bandstand
1:00 Tl, e Huntress Moby Dick— *
:15 " Mighty Migh. •
:30 ” Uo*>e Ranger Happening
:45
2:00 Baseball: Bugs Bunny — Porter
:15 Orioles vs. Road Runner Wagoner .
:30 White Sox " Wilburn Bros.
3:00 ** Dobie Gillis Joe Pyne
:15 *
:30 " Gidget *
:45
4:00 * Seaspray •
.15 -
:30 " Tightrope 1969 Open
:45
5:00 Steve Allen Hawaii Le Mans
;15 * Flve-O Grand Prix
:3° * " *
:45 • * •
4