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Summer Vacation
ACROSS
1 Rent a Cape
cottage
4 See
Faithful
geyser
7 Visit
Canyon
12 Its capital is
Portland (ab.)
13 Deface
14 Eagle's nest
15 Take a trip to
Beach
17 Artless
18 Style of table
20 Steep in a
liquid
21 Large number
23 Furtive
24 Compass point
25 Stage of life
26 Calmer
29 Warble like a
Swiss
32 Use shovel
33 Pekoe, for
example
35 Loved to
excess
39 Take cruise
ship to
43 Eggs
44 Hail!
45 Bitter vetch
47 Dutch cheese
48 Jellylike
material
49 Primped
51 Unbind
53 Black
alloys (var.)
56 Deputy
57 Social insect
58 Taro root
(var.)
59 Counsels
(dial.)
60 Fix in place
61 Legal point
DOWN
1 Mature bovine
female
2 Mouths
3 Condescended
4 Leave out
5 Boat trip on
the Great
i[2 fTI hls |6 I7 Is 19 ho In
12 13 14
— _
118 ■■2 o
21 122 8823 ■^■24“ ~
25 ~ 27 28 “
29 I
J 33 36 37” 38”
39 |4O |4l ~ 4^ ~
______
48 ■J49 ST
51 52 53 54 155
56 57 58
59 60 61
| I | I I Illi | | | 28
SIDE GLANCES By Gill Fox
WHS
Mw® I
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W WW 1
4 f 1 ■ - - — *
e IWt, Nt*. IK.TM UX K <W.
“Can Jimmie come in? He’s seeking sanctuary from
a hostile parents"
GRIFFIN
DAILY NEWS
Quimby Mehon, M
Publisher Bill Knight, Executive Editor Editor ’
Full Leased Wire Service LPI, Full NEA, Address all mail (Subscription. .
Change of Address form 3579) to P. O. Box 135. E. Solomon St. Griffin Ga Published Daily Except Sunday, Second Class
Postage Paid at Griffin, Ga.—Single Copy 10c.
Answer to Previous Puzzle
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34 Maple genus
36 Small child
37 Uncle Tom's
friend
38 River barrier
39 Spotted cat
40 Exact
satisfaction for
41 Liquefied
42 Sports areas
46 French river
47 Teleost fish
49 Fondles
50 Clear profit
(var.)
52 Nature of
(suffix)
54 Poem
55 Distress call
6 Perforates
7 Group of
criminals
8 Pacific
turmeric
9 Ascended
10 Snow (Fr.)
11 Profounder
16 Arthurian
knight
19 Watched
21 Spring month
22 Past
27 Disencumber
28 Freudian
term
30 Greek letter
31 Hawaiian
garland
TIMELY
QUOTES
By United Press International
ABOARD APOLLO 11—Astro
naut Michael Collins, talking on
television about the near
flawless performance by equip
ment during the moonshot and
pointing to a parachute com
partment which holds para
chutes that will brake the
spacecraft just before splash
down today:
"These parachutes over our
heads must work perfectly, or
we'll plummet into the ocean.”
ABOARD APOLLO 11—Astro
naut Buzz Aldrin, reflecting on
the totality of the lunar landing
mission:
"We’ve come to the conclu
sion that this has been far
more than three men on a
voyage to the moon. We feel
that this stands as a symbol of
the insatiable curiosity of all
mankind to explore the un
known.”
NASHVILLE, Tenn.—A record
company executive, comment
ing on the rash of swiftly
penned songs on the moon
inspired by the Apollo 11 flight:
"When some great historical
'happens, Ifoutfewives,
truck drivers and everybody
else who thinks they are
songwriters start sending In all
this junk.”
NASHVILLE, Tenn — A verse
from a new song about the
moon:
“One-eyed monsters may
parade it, but the Russians
won’t invade it, I’m building a
honky tonk on the Moon.”
Almanac
For
Today
By United Press International
Today is Monday, July 28th,
the 209th day of 1969 with 156 to
follow.
The moon is full.
The morning stars are Venus
and Saturn.
The evening stars are Mercu
ry, Mars and Jupiter.
On this day in history:
In 1914, Austria declared war
on Serbia, marking the real
beginning of World War I.
In 1932, more than 15,000
unemnloyed war veterans
camping in Washington were
driven out of the city by federal
troops. The vets were demand
ing immediate payment of a
“war bonus.”
In 1945, the United States
Senate ratified the United
Nations charter. The vote was
89-2.
Also in 1945, an Army 825
bomber lost in the fog crashed
into the side of the Empire
State Building in New York
City, killing 13 persons.
A thought for the day:
American writer Bret Harte
said, “Never a tear bedims the
eye that time and patience will
not dry; never a lip is curved
in pain that can't be kissed into
smiles again.”
mu
point;
Claims court
vote is tomorrow
Spalding County voters will decide in an
election tomorrow whether or not to es
tablish a Small Claims Court.
Upon the recommendation of several
Grand Juries, the Legislature authorized
one if the majority of those voting want it.
The Legislature made two changes in the
bill submitted to it by the Grand Juries.
First, it required approval in an election
(the bill submitted by the Grand Jury
would have established one without an
election); second, it changed the require
ment that the judge be an attorney.
It seems proper to us that voters have an
opportunity to decide whether or not they
want the court. They, do have that oppor
tunity in the election tomorrow, and we
hope that as many as possible will take ad
vantage of it and vote their preference at
the polls.
The big bills
bow out
Very few of us, unfortunately, are in a position to feel
a personal sense of loss in the passing of some not-so
familiar faces from the financial scene.
They are the visages adorning SSOO, SI,OOO, $5,000 and
SIO,OOO bills, denominations which the Treasury is with
drawing from circulation due, in away, to lack of interest.
(Whose face is on what? Answers below.)
Offhand, it may seem odd that in a period of striding
inflation when large bills are beginning to rate as little
more than pocket money, the largest are no longer in
demand. Their decline and fall, however, is in away the
story in brief of a revolution in the American economy.
Not so many decades back in a much-less-affluent soci
ety, when money meant cash in the hand—or mattress—
to most hard-working and frugal citizens, the big bills
served a useful purpose in settling one-shot large accounts,
such as house purchases. But with prosperity came in
creasing acceptance of checking accounts, once regarded
by many as something akin to a Wall Street plot. Useful
ness declined, a process accelerated in recent years by
the credit card explosion.
In short, our steady progress toward a virtually cash
less society has done in the big bills. Demand no longer
justifies cost of printing. The time may be not far distant,
we are often told, when the only cash we will need will
be the small change actually in our pockets. The bulk of
our income and outgo will be handled not even by check
but by computerized entries in numbered accounts.
The biggest bill of all, however, is likely to be around for
some time yet, although only bankers in the privacy of
their vaults are privileged to fondle it. It is the SIOO,OOO gold
certificate, held by Federal Reserve banks as collateral
fox- notes. Only 12 exist.
Oh, yes, who is on what: SSOO, William McKinley; SI,OOO,
Grover Cleveland; SIO,OOO, Salmon P. Chase (Lincoln’s
secretary of the Treasury and later chief justice), and, for
the SIOO,OOO question, Woodrow Wilson.
Chuckling fbS
With Ye Editor Sy
,5, com * • aid *}*« *«y movies are ratine thenuelvei,
pretty toon there will be aome recommended for nobody.
A» a P< MUcr *PL we add that already there are a food
many that nobody ought to see.
‘lnflation is that quality that makes balloons larger—
and candy bars smaller. o —San Francisco Chronicle
Net income • profits made on tennis rackets.
BERRTS WORLD
| U jfl ""
© 1H» by NEA, he.
"Sorry, mom, I forgot the decontamination period!"
MY
ANSWER ,JI
b •'■AV
I am a happily married man
with three wonderful children.
But, we have little of this world’s
roods. My neighbor, however,
who has been married three ti
mes, and is quite a ladles man,
js quite rich, and has prosper
ed. Why is it that people like
this are blessed more than peo
ple like us? L.Y.
I am sorry to hear you ask
such a question. In my book,
you are much more successful
than your neighbor.
One of the richest men in the
world, (married five times) re
cently said: “I would give all
the millions I have if I could
find a woman who really loves
me.” You see, you have some
thing that money cannot buy:
a good wife, and three wonder
ful children.
The most successful man who
ever lived was the Lord Jesus
Christ, and He had no property
to call His own. “The birds of |
the air have nests, and the fox
es have holes; but the Son of
man hath not where to lay his |
head.” But He left a legacy that
enrithes people’s lives down
to this very day.
Your neighbor has achieved
what he wanted, and he has a
limited reward.
THOUGHTS'
MONDAY '
May he grant you your
heart’s desire, and fulfil all
your plans!—Psalms 20:4.
♦ ♦ ♦
There’s only one success—
to be able to spend your life
in your own way.—Christo
pher Morley, American
writer.
WORLD ALMANAC -
FACTS
ngy® i
The French government i
offered a 12,000-franc prize
for away to preserve food
for its army. In 1810,
Nicolas Appert won with _
his invention of canning,
the greatest advance in
food preservation since -
3000 8.C., when the Egyp- <
tians invented sourdough
bread, The World Almanac
says. By trial and error ■
Appert found that heating -
food in airtight containers
retarded or eliminated
spoilage.
Copyright 0 1969.
Newspaper Enterprise Assn. __
GRIFFIN DAILY NEWS
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