PAGE FOUR
EDITORIALS
A FACT RECOGNIZED
him been noted in these coßtmns on
mo: than one occasion mice Hr Nenmn
ooj loeiion that newsmort and >latocm mi
ha ben rathe l : quiet as to t.li» role of
the Negro cot.- in returning President
Tn nan to the White House. AI > us. the
■ Ui 1 prominent- source of commeht on the
i"t*'.'i putt to come to on. notice h.a.s
• von the southern statesmen who eon
tiuta to express the opinion a (Ivan- <?d for
. seek, before the election
ce.'-tnin of tin President's legislative j>ro-
P.i and the decisions of the Democra
tic ''National Convention were both dic
tated ij> the desire to catch the Niegro
vot : m various crucial northern and hol -
der states. Keen so many of there poli
tician;; nave been slow since the ejection
to acknowledge the important of t b e
Negro vote bringing about the great vic
tory ior the President personally and for
ti;-.* Democratic party. One notable ex
ception is Governor Kerr Scott, who in
public statement credited the Negroes
of lis own state with being more loyal
i Democrats than many so-called IV-roo
*■ .. 1 oatiers in North <do miaa,
at- by an interesting coincidence, tw-»
of he best known political commentator
in ie nation at the time of Truman’s in
.u-ation both commented on the No
g s role in making that day possible
j the Missourian.
>rew Pearson, commenting on the in
oral events, wrote of how the Presi
. (b. : had wanted the “little people" wlm
h- elected him to get recognition in
tli e events, rather than have it a field
i for the “big socialites,” many if not
n t of whom had done their best be
i. November 2 to send him back to Mis
by January 21 at the latest.
eferring to the inaugural parade,
i .j, its ostentatious show of military
i ht, Pearson said:
. . Truman was sitting* on Pennsyl
v: ,ia, watching long lines of artillery
: troops, the naval cadets and armor
' (.. -vah-y which hud done nothing to
el • him and which could Have been le
va -. c-cl another day. 1 lie brass huts nad
pu their military units near the head
am'; middle of the parade .leaving the
labor unions, the war veterans, the Ne
g; i units and civilian groups who swung
the balance to elect Truman, bringing up
•the rear,”
Marquis Childs in a rather rhapsodic
article on the inauguration and what was
back of it, talked about the party for
? which Inauguration Day was a day oi
justifiable pride. He wrote:
“The new-found vigor of the party is
evidenced not only by individuals. Ne
gro leaders from various parts of the
country are here, many .of them attending
an inauguartion for the first time and pur
rlcipating in the events connected with
it. This is understandable since it any
single bloc of votes contributed to the
I) mocratic victory, it was the Negro
id c ”
(It is a little regrettable that the term
“Woe” has to be quoted, but we must
us j Mr. Child’s exact words. The word
y k oc” is being used currently in Georgia
in i feeble and hypocritical effort to jus
ti. * disfranchisement of Negroes. 1
>f course Negroes did not elect Tru
rn n, neither did labor, or the farmers,
o the housewives, or any other group
a me. The votes of all these categories
w- re needed and it is bootless to say that
- one group was the “deciding” factor
-■ ail were needed for the decision. But
we are glad to observe that there are
tii use who at imist will include the NV
THE CAROLINIAN
-.imbed by The Carolinian Publishing Co.
a nfcvt n»r«tt Rt. Raletph. N >
'■si Office at Raleigh. N. C.. under the Act
U 3 1879
P, K. JFiRVAIf. Publisher
D HALLIBURTON. Editorial*
-Subscription Rates
O Vear. $3.50; Six Months $2.00
jH-ss communications and make -ah
■ . payable <>) The Carolinian rather than to
v-, i;. l ls Thi Carolinian expressly repudiates
?• .<■->’lnlit y fur return of unsolicited pictures
r*uß.'i--u.:ript, unless stamps are seat.
groes of the United States, and especially
of those states where the Negro’s suffrage
is unhampered, as one of the groups
whose support of Truman was not only
a factor, but an important factor, in the
success of the President and his party last
N ov ember.
ANOTHER PROP KICKED
OUT FROM UNDER
It looks as if Herman Talmadge and
h.s jegDlutive henchmen in Georgia maj
have to dig up anotlier method to dis
franchise the S') per cent of the Negro
vo’.eis.of Georgia whom they had planned
and were readj to disqualify by -ome
such device as the infamous Boswell
\rnendnient of Alabama. We confess m
uncharit.: -ie .ai-aunnit as we thought
of the co!.-st(-rnuiion that jnur-t have been
aroused in lie* i airnadge camp by the
decision of a three-judge !•’» dora! court
itho other day that the Boswell Amend •
incut wu;--. unconstitutional. The decision,
rendered by Alabama judges, was an
sml very effective '-low against
unfair s.ufl rag*- limitations and it. is o!
great significance that, like tin; recem
decisions in South Carolina, it was made
by southem judge.".
As has been said over and ov e i m
tlie.se i i.iu’iiii th< denial of the. ballot
to qualified Negroes oil grounds lli a t
would not disqualify whiles is definitely
mi its way clean out of the I nited States.
’The precedent, established by the l nited
Slates Supreme Court, in the Texas pri
mary case and subsequently has fixed the
principle that the Fifteenth Amendment
is to be observed in spirit as well as in
the letter of the law. Lower federal
courts have been constrained to accept
the principle, and Judge Waites Waring,
not only in his decisions, but also in the
language of hi- opinions did a great deal
to crystallize tins new attitude and point
of view.
The South is becoming reconciled to
the idea that there is no just or defen
sible basis for barring qualified Negroes
from the ballot, and to the companion
r- inoiple that whatever qualifications are
established for the .suffrage should be
applied equally to all.
The spuriously pious arguments of the
T • Imadge group that Negroes she-a id be
k- y.it from voting because they vote in a
bloc A no more than away of saying
that Negroes won’! vote for persons who
arc- pledged to c*c everything they can
in office to keep Negroes from the right
to exercise the suffrage.
THE CREECH CASE
The CAROLINIAN does not believe in
capital punishment. It holds that the
.savage and depraved deeds of no indi
vidual should be answered with a eor
*jespondingly savage act by the State in
behalf of the society at large.
There may be some persons whose de
tractive proclivities are of such a na
ture that they are a menace to society
as long as they are alive. It may be that
such people should be killed; but at the
very* least we might go about it in a bet
ter way than the way of “capital punish
ment” as we now carry it out, with uli
its trappings and pious and refined cru
elties and its baneful effects on ail.
But as long as capital punishment is
mandatory for first degree murder, it is
well that those who are rich and of high
status and can hire the best legal talent,
and have large numbers of influential
friends should not have an advantage
over the poor and uninfluential and those
represented by court-appointed counsel,
m escaping the “extreme penalty.”
So in the case of the late James 15.
*•( eech the CAROLINIAN feels that the.
■o: .gmal trial judge and jury, the State
Supreme Court and Governor Scott are
ail to be com mended. None of them arc*
■responsible, for the principle of capital
punishment, or for the laws which are
now on the statute books ot North Caro
lina as to the death penalty. Their job
was to see that fair and impartial justice
was carried out in this case, without fear
a.;d without favor. The result of their
action was to strengthen the none too
strong faith of the people in the impar
tiality of the law.
TIIE CAROLINIAN
¥ •'> wv '■ '■„ ' *
* / VYTATiWS PLAUH OF \ . A
f UWTE SUPREMACY ML'" • ) V \ TV
'• BS cAP/tieo ON* . ' jr a\v
jr " I \ # G
f/ £ TBf /&*$
.
Tin: OFFICE IS NOW THE VICTLM OF TEACHING
| feci nd
Tliciigliits j !
BY C O HALLIBURTON
if
It a Negro ‘‘leader’' want;- i-.i
make the frctu page of the
scut Corn lie vrspapers, it is n a.-
juece;.*ary that he hack up the
wife of his besom witn "\e
meat cleaver, er get hhnsel-!
charged wrb committing tape.
Such spectacular and risky
ftetd.-. mav be the on-iy way to
persona! publicity fi,;- lessor and
■x *t- ; kr-oivii .New mv do not
eisve to- go to sud, kmgtiis. They
‘, .411 i Ol '■« i ITT 3 iC. ■).ul i*.." .■■ at. • I
i;-., o - n', . ( ito Man. Hoih-s
did iitif'i-'e the Kiv.-am.-. C-ub ».u
AJv.ny, Cle.-rgia n;r lone, age
Dr. J! ok x f; rmer pr.-sident ci
Albany St i‘e College- is now re.
tii. <{ ansi tie. it'scr-i in :<-iativ '
obsru: itw Put be hamkt it * -yfV
ten tin t; -■ nuns; for aUrai-lms
attention to himself.
I presume that every remie;
.1 ii'ilee di.l jMVg-'il to sprat.
prou mpe of my race
e- ti-e Not tnern w- • and oth.m
organizaih-ns. ' He i-ondenmed
tin- ( to. site N.VAv H and, Nm
p vo ki Furef .and said that
.Geogia Negr-ieo are bmnt
taught, presumably by such
'“outsid." influences, to "hat.-
tile- etc Wo -
Win’ll a Negro A invited I -
spaa! to a Georgia Ki ,0.[,0'.
olu'i, have oln-odv an m b '
of a. iv’pe. and you know iu.u
ab-..t t '.bat 1 1 • t- - : -*" •
Only the neat kind of man n
-likely to be invite.-..!. T;m -mother
in question m.ny by furth--,- and
m : - definitely t> ped by the fact
C-w - jf ij'Jlv ;i) :} I ocniy sup •
.porlc-i thi: ieftk. (>• ■I: • ‘
.ffir lld- hip -Ol *h(' i3i ’
tinTf* !icf( re ’hi> untimuiy
when that worthv vva:; run:un:.
Open Letter To The Editor
3201 Ea.-t Alabama Sln-c
lb lusioii 4 Ic
Ffcbrti . % 'v 11, ’943
I Editor
1 found your last week's "bantu-.-
on the evacuation of N-. froo tr> m
"Dixie." very interesting. About
fourteen or lif toon yeaiv ago. while;
covering Capitol if til. at niy itomr
iWa.-.ii iipton), 1 got wind of a book,
White America,' which had been
produced :d private expense, and
.van. about to bi distributed, free,
“I'. all ineni.iC;':' of Congress, arid
certain &tale’’legislatures.” hy some
national “benefactor" should it
be ii-iai-o ' in Virginia. The
book had th. . ante benign intent
to deport Negroes. Only, trio
paid proponent ol 1 the idea nrg >1
dip . rt. dion of Al,l. Ncpf from
America, to Africa, of course.
The well-heeled champion of
•‘White America’ war evidently
serious or he would » t have spent
ills money for so futile a ;' r ’ i .re.
So i thought that it void be jr.wr
csting to poll i.. an ai i.cnti
ment on the subject before the <!•--
luge of books arnived Uy lac:
taken over seriously or a imply
overlooked in the mass ol mail. I
was particularly inter, •.-ted in
Southern opinion. T polled 7G mem
bers of Cenrit ss a- i recall m
90 per coni Southern. Cries oi
anguish were going up, and in
rtuohat the suggestion of losing
Nrgr© labor in the South, even be
fore “White America' arrived
“freely” it. the Congressional mail:;,
from a New York publishing rouse.
Cne of the n<'’ii- : .>outliemoi >.ho
commented tnvlly w..u. to i . ■ late
Sghutcr Borah of Idaho, v.’ho hand
ed vis volume own to me. Os the
Southtrners who disclaimed any
i\’t, iriore need suid e-or
iw.iung Dr H-kmy and his ilk
We <ir» not pre-pc-.-e to attack
him in this column. He ha;
sm a;en j ; iumsc-It, and to an
gives iurn would do a waste oi
time, at kam m ta .n- i-oi-iursns
What v.v rfo want t > talk about
jy i-agc rn- s- <>f ti, „ southeir
press and Glen of tin- pre; s ir,
ot;e , .ooWon- of i s- country
to feature snail distorted and
No! long .o-.j Negro- editoi
and ;:,ia:k.- h. of an rbseure aivi
unsavory little ne-wspaper so,
which ig- claim td a huge circu
lotion, ke.-owd that of any o':
th.; - :o. SiS : ! o;! NiOyo .V. S.' i a
made i as: • si* nag a- thma.iK'h
ou* thg South so two editorial.;
o! th ..am-:;- s.tkpi as th,
spea-i h v.-it-h width Di H *ll. ■
l'r:vx.s cd tin- Albany K : woman.-
Tim .-go- Dav; Lee, ws . evoe
it i,, ;,r,d I. uerwiaoHy. Lsv
in:i r t ■ - ;i -,e* ii k; tit v. spapt;
racial rnatt si; the Soutit
j.-acii toe news e-siunins of go
.■a uthe, - they roc-fivt i
1, r;k pages :f mai'.v journai-:
lit nne of Mr. Lee 5 pieci s i--
went, fa', thev than Dr. Holley
j ~M bid fo
app) ■ bat ion by charging that
Uie ei'-i! right:', pr 'gram is as
dPlu-iuig the ro.a s.a s if tlr v F, ■
bs.o ih;u men !>i,*. Dr. ilouiy
and Mr, Lot; ;«n- in .in> son.-;--
representative <jd th, thinking;
of the ere at inajority oi then
black ft-yicw i-ifissns. We sup
pare it is a human trait !u iov"
to hear from yes-men, but it
Se,tvc rv edlßiai a mb.
affinity for the "crazy idea.' Nor lit
Ci.Kilinuh Bob Reynolds, was one.
Bailey vr;.;: nauliir. The deeper
South they <•■ . ■ from, the 1<
!i vy liked si.
y oitk one ■' m- f. a legislator! down
; y. -o i, Texas, sue recently come
nn in the- local dailies with a sum*
". a" proposition to beat the domes
tic iaboi market. This profound
social thinker would make a deal
v. Hh (b,;- Chinese government to
import a certain number of Chinese
fey <knmsiie and unskilled labor,
with the stipulation th.;' the inv
ved ones would be returned with
thanks at the end <>f an agreed per
iod, and replaced vih greenhorns
(before they had, been here long
enough to become Americanized in
their thinking and get intprcliuiblc
ideas which would do.sivoy then
usefulness a-: menials.) Interesting,
, ) n’t it '
Os course, the saving grace oi
these attention-getters, or save-us
from-democrticy proposals. is that
mankind is perversely and con
sistently non-conformist And post
World War i! mankind is in no
na-otl for pushing around, regard
' le: r, rs race, nal mality or preview
conit ion of politics'
Constance E H. lieniel
WE ARE KISINO
li> William Henry Hmf for AM.*
i By watching trends both day and
; night,
1 say again, likt Major Wright,
! To • Tell them v,i are rising”
. l .hear my race here and abroad.
. rvbuh crimsuil br r.v bcvallft 1 oi
i fraud,
• Say. • fell them we ar<. rising,"
• Though competition's keen and rife
■ Ju every worthy walk of life
v 1 find that we are rising.
HERE AND
THERE
USY VM»j
i Vs ,si V A -s s ijo'.vj: i 1 ; bran(‘(i
!j on a,. v-.sy W..;, . t - v. .1! be
<j •' >rl <: CliO. Hi.Jh:;) ■ii; t b i I't‘i.i lev,
V. ( i INii'gris liiail Ult.Y utiles itliUS.
Vi '••■! Ncssm . y r.- ,a enipk ,\i
a; i cgio;' tMlico level SV, a- ot
!" tin si. ; n-.i in centra! office. Pas*
K sage of civ ! rights laws through
congress will lake tremendous pres-
V sure. Chances are getting .slimmer
every day Reason: agitation cool
ivi; off. iMaybe we don’t really
want i i la ,ive uk i Ye ■ junior,
we are going to yet just what we
avc willing to fight for •• no more,
me)'- Will .away- be tuose wn >
; would give u-j over. less.
LI
IntornafiOiiil dav at Wiiben'orce
Star, coil, or, Feb. if: loony, ns
v an au-'pieioi;: occasion. Annual
I aver: whl draw heavily this near.
*' -V-; pragri.ni is an excellent one.
if Washington is still talking about
dean impression Negro guests made
at the Inn tig; 11 . ! Ball < first time
N gi’oos ever attended- Verily
■ vr a the ladies tjf auti fully hired
and the mon wore in chivalrous
lot tie. Aiiair w i!! i long reniem
. i■ O . -- r !
Hip. hooray for Or. Chari. '
>F. i.il'.a Jii - F;sa } I'f‘xyi tor ills iil
-j tiny that, that St LoUl V,:, I
, ho:;.. him With Ule white fu.fr;:
' who were gioi.nded on that right
’ (Go&d stuff. Charlie.)
Seems a.- >{ 'a t: National Negro
j t. >, i., c :r.; .a v vs :.il ~; lung 'i.e'
! . .duct' Aina to \V sh. ms, ton Ilouse
. will be sold a:t tor this one, ehuin;
Mrs. Daws- and crew will toy :i
... down.
Don't let a it w didoes cut by
. me pastors, who should never
have', been trucked anyway, cause
you to ’auk ‘.ipi.u !hi Negro church
with contempt Anyone who say;
tru.-i. our i hurt he: by a.id large are
, n-.t worthy r.-f their .• sistencc is
ns wren a .. the 1048 election polls.
Die . uc. we i-.,p thinking actim*
.; Ncci'.ai cad, ;.,cd b(;‘h.' uc’~
it.f like we v. eii ju t America ns.
, and Knew it, the sooner ibis “race
, question’’ will peer cut. (But where
’Stll die ;i l utio; ;S get tilt ,;'
J•■i ' y . P 8 Dri . :
Fi\ will act you ten that the
m■ t .:nci.ai ji: Muirs on Axis Sal
es - t is. >.. 1! e • the tenner X. zi
di utiiocau i the work. That ... ill
WHAT SOME
OTHER EDITORS
HAVE TO SAT
" I
—-, , i
l
I Reprini from:
The Ice County Messenger
Bishopville, S C.
January 13, 194 S
HAVE PRIVATE UTILITIES
FAILED?
We are pure that a great many
s people are asking these days
r. whether privately operated utili
ties have Tailed to provide elect
e rit and power service that they
, ; hould •’have' provided. This is
.rough). ab<>ul, of course, by the
fact that the Rural Electrification
•f Administration, in. Washington.
. has approved u loan of over seven
t and a half million dollars for the
. contraction of 834 miles of el- c
• trie transmission line:'., many of
it which will be exactly parallel to
- linos now in existence and carry
s mg power to cities and rural
areas.
Wo do not know everything
that the.-,, is to know about the
Catolino P or and Light and
(tii. companies not operated hy
doles from the federal end ataie
! treasuries ’but vve believe, on a
whole, that they have done an ex
i client job supplying current to
towns, cities, communities, rural
areas and. manufacturing enter
" prises. They have redd huge tax
lev ion 3‘b rye distinct asset sso
every pai c'.f the state m which
thc-v c-pFiaio. We bote to see those
companies be rut forced to the
wail, and it will come to that, iat
WEEK ENDJNCJ SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 19JD
THE ROAD TO HEALTH
ARTHRITIS
Young Bob Fuller seemed really
frightened when I arrived at hi;
homo not long ago. When he phoned
me lie said ho hud had a pain :n
lil:' light leg during the day .ml
it had stiffened painfully us he v/.is
on his way home from work and
he hod fallen on the .drool
A neighbor had driven him home
and, once in the house, ho noted
his right knee was swollen at:.! mil
at shape and he felt “.sick all ever."
1 tried u, avoid hurting Bob a?
I carefully examined the offend
ing it; and . ..i." Every .ndication
pointed to arthritis in an early, in
flammatory stage, and later tests
confirmed my suspicions. Bob was
plainly astonished when ! told- him
'But doctor, only old people pet
irthriii:’. I’m no. 30 yet!"
"That’s one of the great evils oi
arthritis. Bob." i answered "It can
attack people at any age. but h fro- 1
ciucntly :trike, young adul!:;. And
if it is allowed to progress, un
checked and untreated, ii can make
its victim a cripple for life."
Bob exclaimed tit..* he hoped he ;
wasn't mg to be made a cripple ■
ro younc'
"You don I. have be afraid of ;
H’-'it. Bi t You "iii he un. ..ale ; ... ,
,'ilr to - , s ijii . > , !;s, 1 t 1 e
overt reason to hope that wit it
hood care and treatment, vve can
'■.and of; any penimnerf damage ’
from this attack of arthritis."
Bob Fuller had what is known a- ;
acuit • arthritis, \*. it on f: often a
Ign ed infi'etion elsewhere it; the ;
hotly. This B rm of disease attacks
uddeuiy, with .slabbing pain and ;
■‘■el’u.t; ~1 joints affected. The
ulh • . t ■ out ntiv also has. fevin
iceompanied h\ nausea. With y:o
--i treatmen; .dvi-n in time m:r
ir,au*''!it. ci'ip'phip..; may bo avoided.
The t vpe o* !iealn:ent, hmvf'vf.
will fii.-ppi'd upon ’.hr- fxiurer- of in- ■
hiiinn. ;!
IN THIS OUR DAY
A Thought For Today and
Tomorrow
By C. A. CHICK
Human beings are prone, for
the mast part it seems, to fix.
I heir eyca on the gloomy things
of life Tnoy seldom let the light
rays that penetrate the clouds
of disaiyrointment and despair
'banish clouds from view. Mrs.
'Charles Cowan says in her book,
•'Stream' in the Desert.'' that
)ji'.. v pl(,' should yet into the ho bit
of looking for tim silver lining
• f tht ,d.and when tht v
u.ovy- found it, continue to look
at it, rather than at the gieat
darkness on tiie oilier siu
If mankind every'.vhere ■ ni.
•realized that strife, disappoint
meat,and disco.urageirunife rr ed
not he yielded to.no matter ivnv
igi'eat they may .be, th? compli
cation that accompany human
r\ .dene, would be- Ic-scned. A
burdened rout is helpless, and
tPu V. I'.oif- 'World : e.. to is l
.si ’ugghiig beneath a burden.
Tin-: burdiN. might du.- pri
mardy to |i!v> aititude p, ..i.-v
take toward one- another. Th v *
who practir" bigotry, intoler
■once, indiffe-enee. and ail of the
c'olalecl misgivings cannot expect
to gt f must out ol life. Imv
,'C at titu'j;- d. : o
arid n)lowing other:; to sham i:t
the shaping of peheie-s that el
feet the well being of mankind,
before a wo,ld of real peace' can
be enjoyed.
N:. dies, to say mere advance
ment.- in .'■•eienc,'. and in invtn
lion aiv insufficient to bridge
the chasm -between man and
true happiness A? it is now, all
t tne accomplishment; that
have been made only make
iih mbei'r 1 tbs- human fainil
unea. v and si-, pt. 'al < t ; ne -.u
other. There is a lack of under -
standing w hich is serving to hin
der human, progress tremendous
' Without a doubt, th,- area in
vvlucu t. e.e- *r.U':t ml 0ag.;.,,
ahead : n the part oi conscieii
-1). iw 1.-adM - is that of b> It*-: uiß
ar on, by politically inspired,
operated and financed organiza
tions yiH'li ns Santco i oupt -',
Clark Hill and others. There is a
place for compsnics financed
from the public treasury only if
private industry cannot and wrl
net render the services required.
THEY’LL, HEVEI PIE
- •
* BORN IN THE U 5 1809 '.* . .'V
Tw:s charmi.no- wipe c c iKSW r ...«.. w mmm
LIBERIA'S FIRST PRESIDENT, oßir / Wig,-
JOSEPH ROBERTS, WAS AN WB f <s, « .. !■
AftuE ASSISTANT TO HER fIV k'fltLlfl VB
FAMOUS HUSBAND- if ,V 4-.. '% W 1
MRS. ROBERTS WAS J. 1$ "2 , . <Ts|
TWICE PRESENTED TO H. f/WTK "M % iSm
QUEEN VICTORIA IN LONDON' ‘W VV /OM
OX THE 2sß VISIT SHE TOOK »■ 1.. > -g"/ W*:* ’JH
WITH HER A HUMBLE AFRICAN ißßbe-JgMbw*
| WOMAN WHOSE SUPERB »*,£j2£
NEEDLE CRAFT WAS, UNTIL W\ a ,
THEN UNKNOWN- VICTORIA > . .. VW; .
ENTERTAINED THEM BOTH - .•
AND ACCEPTED ~«E .. •/L IF * ....
■:| NEEDLEWORK AS A „S v „ ®'
<Ol FT TO THE POVAL ART #% ‘ Jgfe£ . v
TTh
Chronie nrlhrltls develops rnora
slowly, first with stiffness in one
jcint, then stiffness in other joints
which may remain for an indefinite
period of time The chronie. form
of at thrill:, i more difficult to treat
limn the acute form, and it. is th; *
type that can easily lead lo crip
pling and nvalidism when it i.
neglected.
When Bob asked me if the:,-
were any >vny (( preventing a, ib -
riti.-. r liud to tell him that since*
arthritis may be caused by any
me Os a numbei of things, there
no specific preventive for it.
People who observe good health
rules and escape other serious ill -
'K.ves seem less likely to get arth
tilis than those who neglect their
health.
After my examination of Bob. 1
located the source > t infection. I
ordered completed bed rest lor
Ikm for a few weeks. Then, when
tin: infection had cleared up. I
' bowed Bob’s mother how to help
tne patient ma-mre and exercis.-
his atfeud knee to eliminate
stiffness. Sometimes, splint.::, hoi
w.'ter Mh.; and other treatment*
:a o also given ; fleeted job'.:,; e
prevent thorn front becoming stiff
nod to keep them in condition.
Bob Fuller was. wise to call n,c
as promptly a hi did Postponing
diacrioris and treatment Dor his
a;d knee" might have meant ser
ious end permanent e:ippling. Some
people treat stiffened joint., vv.th
'borne remedies" and make the
situation worse The doctor is the
determine whether or not a
perron has arthritis, and to pre
:<.;<• he fit! proper treatment for St.
This aide : c- -sponsored b the
National .Medical association and
M.o National Tuberculosis assoeia
and released through the As
-1 •id **d No, i"■ press in the inter
mi' 1-oMe, health d the people
iiun;an reiatiun.N N-o amisurd o£
o". ::r< in i : her a:a a ■ v. jji be
of j'-d :■ igniifoanci., until the
relationship that exist,; among
human beings ;r. improved.
Without radical changes all
other .forces will be converged
to actually .‘•-weep man out oi
exist:-nee This unpleasantness
d old id hav, ;,a ciite: th.
minds of : people. rather, eon.
stradivf. ecuises to pefsite in
an < Hurt to make a contribution
to o society ha: the wellar ■
, f all men a hi art, should be
the :': i Cd :,ii ; . ij.p,. .
Tia .human race umst take
cognizant 1 • f itm If and, if ne
rea-ary, rnakt 1 ,;, aliout. face t;r
!:.('• n.atti ; of "uilTKin dal. SI
•hip. This important raov. wilt
he the differmue hetivcon ti,
dark fide of the cloud and ,t.
iii > r 11;i fHR
SENTE St E SERMONS
lay Bev Frank C. Lowry for ANP
-1 J’uu d»,rit want to reap vvhat
you sow then don’t sell Christ
i heap as you go.
'Christ is not mound to defend
Ilim ( it or make any demands, so
He is at the mercy of .'vur hand:
You can fly around and show
Him. off, but this .lust tends t‘
t heapen His enemies scoff
Evi "v turn* you make bciiev
you are on Christ’s side, you only
n.ctku it uciSHU* for othßr 'folkto
Making excuse:- doesn’t, help
Him either, .i f is action tha*
<• tints or you continue to .sell
11 ni i heaper.
Many wan lived in His day
made a lot oi pretentions noise,
hut He could trust only those of
.-■launch purpose and. spiritual
pi >i -e.
The band-wagon pretenders to.
oav land close by on dress ,po
rad,. but when Christ’s Kingdom
must he defended, their interest
begins to fade.
M.n following far behind
Christ are stii! alter the lump and
the heap, and when it is not forth,
coming they quickly sell Him
cheap.
We sell Him cheap when there
is. something wrong we want to
do. and let Him hang upon the
t rests until we are thru.
We sell Him cheap when we
take part in shady deals in which
we think we can personally reap.