THE CAR'OLINA Tir.’ES
PASSAGE OP CtVti RIGHTS VttL IS BEHf AID to SUCH EDUCATION
"Killers of the Dream"
'I'liP nrrest of /i 34-vPn-t)kl while l>y
Dnrli.ini ijolke tHi( week'ip cdniM i iinii will-,
II charge o( mp^’madc by if 50-year ..I'l wliilc
iinan has pral>al>l^ nIrfaW'''tunned nfiw iah
il meojJjers of t)uc County Citizen^
( iinncil. It was only a few hours hefurt' I'.at
Ihe IKTCC had announced a $250 rewiuil Im
the arrest and conviction cif any pcrs'.';
chai’fj.'U witk a white woman. 'A’ii
the tri Tinury of tbie [Xt'C ri|Hr.to '>e a!-
■i!y in nn exh«i«tcd o(iri(iiti®n ^''H-e tne hi:;
lie;' Ihe orpanization made of the fir-t v---'.
if Mdnnia's Governor \S'a!>nee I" I iuiiinm,
its officials are now faced v'*'- iln- u' 'tioii
if pnltin(» up or shuttiii},' i;i. ■, .e ri:'-
•II-' il man b> conv|cte ‘
'I he rape incideuf comes i.ii the het ■! 'he
reeeiu jolt the IXX'C ;»ot wlun
K rcroniinendpd inte};ration of its i.i;f a;; !
faci'itic'. In its protest to the V\altv tn; -
the DCrC called atlention tn the, f i :
irii|iJied thaX kiicii intrt;vation cuuM i;ut'4
tlial nhile ani \ei;ro patients w ,iild eoiiv!',-
■ in the same scnii-private lir pul'Ljc w ard'.
lie waited on bv Xegra fUiTsrs *nd cvea ha
'xainined hy a XcRro ^h^'Mcian- The la*t
item a|>peared to he th^ ptOit o^iiKtiiinahle
to the iKX'C whose $i$ li^ibahiy
siiipid enough to try to nukr tti^iselvct be-
ijevc that tlie anatohiy of a white person,
tnau or woman, fspeciaHy that"'of a white
v\(iniati. !- different fftnj th»| of a XeRro
man or woinan. ^
1 !ie t\. 0 j'cidents t ",f rf iuft t^o
in -ihow what a loswf h«tt^« rte 1'CCC is
wa jn*:^. They foretell the day and Uie hour
when siich |>eop1f as those who constitute the
ofniials a”d menihers of the DCCC will only
l e consid '•efl "Killers of the D/^ani,” the same
as the Ku Klux K.laifJ^the White Citiienu
t 'liincil and other such organizations. More
': IV-' miAe the rrspertahlf white fe«|)le of the
'■ III'' ;in- titrninn their hacks on such orvani-
/ iliir , V ! icii should encourage ht>th Xejrro
1. I ml their followers to conti.iiie to keep
t’ r f.iii’.i ill \nirrica. the cause and in them-
The Ail important QuestiGii Now Facing Negroes
I'll denionstrate or not to demonstrate is
not the ;ill iijipeVtant (juestron. now faring' t'lc
eivri^i'roui 2 national staudpoiiit. \Vh;it is
nec(s-,ary in (lie city ur section o) the omii-
try iii.iy or may not he JKlvisahle for llie
other. \Vp a~e*willing to have tl’e final
decision of whether to denKin^trntc fr not t 1
demonstrate to local Xe)iVo Ifaders. provide I
they .are cl the pro{{iTfisiv« .ty^>e and l' ;' c
provc«l their worth in their coiliiminity or cii\.
W'e think, however, there is one riverall
prrilileni that must he fac"d hy XefTroes Xortl’.
South. F.d.st and West of this nation ami th.at
the i)robleni of ^.vousing all of tlioni to the
point of exercisinji tjieir right to. vote. It is
-:id commentary tftat in Xew .^'ork's Har
lem. where hiembers of the race are not faced
wilh the niajiy eprohlem.s aijainijl voting as
^o?r—irr tlTC drcp Sotrthr“that
Cold of Negt:o«s lags to the ])oint where it
can 1)f terme! di»(;raceful.
We again urge a concertcd repster and
\ '•(' cainjiaign for Negroes in every section
. ■ ilu' lountr.y. We call uj>on oor leaders in
.■ I fields of endeavor to push such a campaign ^
i;ntil every Xegro man and woman who cai>^ tel: IKII U AJ.4 lJNolC#ni
i;i’'ilify hccomes registered and votes. We call
i’"'':i t!u> young |)eopIe in our schools and col-
l'r(s. many of whom are yet too young to
\ :e, to use the same time, talent and energy
thr^j^'fyiihited in the recent demonstrations
and the March On W'ashington to arouse N*'.
trr.'Ps in registering aitd voting.
We are of the opinion that Mejfro ministers
\'*»’)uld truly be preaching the gospel if they
woii'd take time out during their Sunday
morning service to urge their members ti
do jlieir Christian duty by rtgistering and
tlv n voting in all election*. This it the kind
of gospel that in the end will improve the
relijnmts, economic, edueaitoaal at«t~soc>a>
lil'i' of Xegroes to tl|e (KMiit where th«- will
he more profitable to themselves and the race
in general.
im
BUCK Atm pjMUtf
* him."
KEV. HAROLD ROLANI)
No Man Can Escape Certainly
Of God's Divine Judgement
"ThlnkMt, 0 man, that Himi
cscap* tHe •!
Oo^»"
Rrn. 1:3.
of jtistlce. Then what kind of
i^ca.'d are you makinc? Will
your record be acceptable before
God Almighty? This shotild caU
Mut I ,.i? blindnen *iid Jollv tor som« seriau* though on the
ea« —Hirtaf jyjgiy imman beigfe. Tjierc
m*nt. Man. hovcvtr. mw dUa- •'ould be a critical rethinklo;.'
Slaves to Denominationalism
“Far br oM Spirit art we all Baptized into
one body, wfcathar wa h« or Gentile*,
whetb*^ wi ht UltJ «t frM.** I Cor. 1?;19
Kefu al of the North CfrrAlina .‘st.'^te Baptist
Tonven ifjn to permit iion-Bjiptist and non-
N'orth 'arolinians to have jjiqjnberjhiTi on tin-
trti5tpf h^arii of Wake Foeest Cofletr;. follow-
the us al trend of that deijuini»aiii n !" this
state, loth white-an4 Xegro, The sad !xrt
out 11. such action however is th.tt it eV-
vates, ,nd idolizes deuominationaliim above
f'lt-ist^nily which decJajes ^or a truth that
“(ioil is no respecter of -petrson."
'I'hc action of the Xi>rth Carolina .'sta'
ll.iptisl Convention is als6 in Veei inV wit’i
soiithen thinking that is usually houi,l to cu--
toiii or traditiop. uhethcr it he good -‘r hm!
/.s a restilt. we ol>!>ervc a large seyrien^ ( f
whites of the South still Ixiwing at tut a!; ir
of racial discrimination and tearing tl.eir U r.T
aliout tlie chaa^K that are uijw hiiig pi •
in spTte of their efforts to halt the onward
rnaTch of truth. The action of the Wake
Forest trustees ako prove?*rotichtsiveIy, that
it is hardly pptfiblc t^ narrow in thought
ami action io one diftction without be(ng
the same in another.
It ap|H-ars to us that roofe important than
denominationalii>ro is the growth jind develop-
■-lijent of Wake I'ore.st College. It should not
be of importance whether the guidance toward
its success is the thoi^^ht of a Baptist or not.
The
■eeaus
ri" in
SCHOOL ON CHRISTMAS
I’uritans wHiWin't celebrate Christmas
• they held that no feast of hnman
should fHitrank the Sabbath, the Catho
lic Digest claims. In fact, December 25 was a
cuini’ion workday in Boston until 1856'; as
iate as 1870 classes were held on Christmas
Day in Boston's piil>lic schools.
base bis mind of this illusion.
Every human beftaf should re
member that God’s }ud4Mtet Is
cirtain. Let us then rweaibu:
that ao one will «scapa tha hi
«v'tebi)itv of God's juttesi srt.
The Bible clearly remiml.'* u.i
that there is soing t« be a.Duy
a( Judxneat. Yes, we'ill'^ar'
held Mcoufitihl* hafora 0«d
ni«hty for our nMtives, dc*tH
and word*. Tha lUMa ptahllf
tells aa that we w . . “All muai
appear before the judgment se t*
of Christ." Not a sincla
will be excused.
L«t us Uve, than, u If there
is soiBf to be a day o( accciwt
ing. Yes, all muct gtff :iB
fccount before GkI for alt tha
deeds done in tha baidy. 1‘haa
we ou£ht to Uve so that ara ■tay
be accepted before tha ri(hte«as
judge of all tlie earth. You af
• held accoiintabla before a G«m1
of our thought and conduct. You
must pre(>are to face God’s judg
»ent. There is no escape for
ypu. This is one appointment
you must meet. Thus, the cr’ti-
cal question for each human be
lag should be:' "How lyill I Ap-
pi.' Before Go^- *0 Judfiu-
You arc writing jraur' record
aaw for tbt JudgeineBt. E«ca
day wt write aad make up this
racerd. Vou ara wriiij^g yoiir
record daily for tha araat day
of JudceoMit. What did you
frite yesterday? What did /ou
writ* last week? WiMt did ou
-rrit* last «ealh? WUl tke i'«
ear| ya^j ara writ/Mg, ia yniii
dail^ daads uUjjpt4», stand up
leffra a Gad at rifhtoausaess?
th«a haw careful we ought lo
ba about what w« write tram day
ta day.
Bvary human being wiil be
go. umler the au,pia's
itu.nal, developed som^*.-
tag(HjiMns over cove'7 ^
(irvv .'southern editor^ ; ,
SOUTHERN DAILY EDITORS
REAI^LY PONT WANT
TRUTH ON CIVIL RIGHTS
,\ riecent meeting of daily in‘u.-|iapn' editors
and publishers.in Chicago, under the au>pici's
of I'nited Press International, !
interestilig regional antagc
age of the civil rights storvv
were es|)CCially belligerent in charging that the
press generally has iiiisrei>orted and -in .rcj'ro--
sented the story. •
'ii.p eiiitor ',f Oiaiit-stun {S.C.'t F.venin.j
I’ost, published in a city that ha.i an especially
disgraceful 'record, put the bias charge most
lielligorently. "Th^_ South has iievi r held .1
nioinjpoly oji this prohleiri thiuigh countless
readers of non-.Southern ncwsptipers'have Imiv;
heen led to believe that violence cannot he
racial unless it carries a Soi^thern date-line
'I'his illustrates what is so baffling iihout
the entire conflict. Here is an editor whos.-
jol) it is to read. .*\nd obviously he doesn’t
1'.. 'T.OW vhat northern new ■•(mpers
CliCaj^aClau0
Puhliahad a?ary Batarday at Dnrham, N. C.
hy United Publlahers, Inc.
L. I. AUSTIN, PublUher
Talaphoiw 683-2813 «|d 68I-8A2
Second Claaa Pottage Paid at Durham, N. C.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
$4.00 per year (pltu 12c tax in N. C.) anywhere li)
the U. S., asd Canada and to serviceaaen Oversetis;
Six months, 92Jk> (plut Sc lales tax in N. C,).
Torelgn, |7JM> per year. Single copy IBc.’
Prlwlpb OtUM located at 438 C. Pettigrfw Si
I'lid news magazines itr rej»orting and say
ing. Here is a man whose job it is to know
wiiat's going on, and obvioti«Iy he doesn’t,
lie doesn't know the differetice between the
prol)lem in the Xorth, where the powers of
gov^rnmdnt are organizc4 t* aupfiort »nd pro
tect the rights of mjrtoritiaa, and the South
the }>owcrs of goveranicflt are organ-
leny and frustrate rfjrhts and wreilc
\i.jlence rfx>n those who ataad up in defense
"■ JJ'-' '’' h»*ic rights.
If the I outh wants the civil hght* story to
he re|Hirtcd in a way that Makcf theai look a
little better, l*t’i hear & few wutherij c;litors
outside of Atlanta and GreedviiU, Vliss., s[>eak
1)1 against the jailings, the dyii;iaiitings, the
liatings, the |>oiice dogs |n^ firehoses. Tact's
hear .a few of them demand the release of
the political civil rights prii«M^ stM in jail
all over the South.
We have not been aw»re th^t the civil
rights story ^ the N'orth ha« beaa “swci)t
under the rug.” Nor |re 'Vf awfre o| any
.smugness or satisfaction Northerners
with the progress we «fc nHHtinf;. On tlie
contrary. But in the Nifttll wa arc able to
re|)ort geniiinf efforts at meeting thj problem,
and conscientious government to sup
port the rights of roinQritii|. TMf North ha«
no Paubuset or Bar««tta «r 1^|il»ae« sittiof
in Governors’ chain and preaching 4cfiftace
of orderly goiremralMt. * • ■ ' .
We suspect that vriut rfally ||Ies o«t South
ern editor fpcjid* lAput t)ie «l!^rence in the
coverage qT the at^ry North aa'd Sputh is the .
difference in the ih lllC objactive §tiry
in the North and ip tlM
Know
-Minne^lil Bfnkgtmg
A HIPSTCR'S FABLES — Na. 2
In the year 1M3 there was »
Citizen who had come to the
land three hundred and fiftj
years ago. He had arrived chap
eroned by seme fierce, strange
men who liad visited his nntiv,
country and taken him captive.
Ilis captors threw him into
stinking ship bolds, sbackeled
him in chaias and brought *iiip
ta this land to to be placej ar
auctioo. The Citizen, who wds
dark-complec'.ed, was sold to
other men and women who wert
fair in color. The Citizen »..»
naked when ht was sold. Jit
purpose of his pakadaess «af
obvious. This display of U'
strong muscle* and saund body
brought (uper^r wtces. Att-t
he had been sold to a master, tha
Cftiaea WM aUowed to put m
worh dotbes but he atUI tel’
naked. For ha saw all tha trin-
lag garmeats of fraadon aii4 >p
l^rtunity which w?ra wotn ii>
bis white aastars.
For yetirs the Cttim plawtd
and toiled aad Med Inn th
lashee rV1iips and watha^ *Hh
his heart ho’aad aad ja4—*l
Then one day, sonsa ta^tr
lifihtiag hroiw ««i araaag ih«
whitea, eitlaaa* ot hath Maril-
aad Sautfe of Um land; tal*
the (i^tiag was dvar, a tak aua
arith a fauot laca wsota a mMi
which said that tha CXtMta
ahouid heacaforHi aad foeeie#
More, be eatttlad (0 waar
fine elotiMt of fraadoai.
The heart, af gM CUiaea.^ra#
gladdeaed ^he great newr
J‘T«f)d threughout the land. Hast-
n uid with a sai^g burstinr
frtaa hi* juiys, Ise furepared t.
K( aa tha tiaary j»f fraedaai
r a tm saasaaa, aa Ult ;«ann
imd gaad ta have cavered up kiK
i^ked#esa. liaay eX tka whitr
(ttizaas caafratulatad kiai upan
|tow haadsoait lie ibakMl. Itut
tha wiads of igneraace—kis u vn
|tid th«t of mat/ 0f the whit
citlifas — wera still hswUi'”
Ibaut tha land aa^ tli* winter.
ol lack of appartusity aaU ex
ploltatioa ehiUcd Va haaes. Th'
Clttsen desparately w-attd ic
aoau pMierhy and ta say’
1 h(v« haaa iv«a b»v
Jut I am stlfl aakad.'
But wii^a citltaaa aad *tm* ai
flia aupa^ hbek {^itahk «ho
had gaaa ta ac^aal ilr '•ha had r
yranlBeat whlta .jdtiaea (a^^.
IfoDior, kept telliai blBi ha war
Ifpt hakad. So tha paof dtlte
(tied ta caaviaea. yaisclf tlui‘
ha tias wanp »«d eail-.fartpbU la
hit M
Om d«f, hi 4 houri rootu
aawa flM aW t»hir C|U>eni
«Nt* aMtkar ^UA, aui*d
h»f» rntmd t* MNJ'tdict tu
Ifkptt »Htta|i hir tM KMt. t«tl
Mm M MUftlP daad for
yaara. ThM
Mtll that, althaach Ot* Ciil«« n
aililtl wm tha garmtmh ol fraa-
tfliiii; ba aua aoft hava Hia aadu
tMN d( wlnaat «a hia whlta
/
M at his
brothar. «4aa ■
}l.
judged by what he is wriLinf! in
the book of his lif£. Somi. have
wrMten some ugly papcs and
chapters in the book of theii
lives. As you write, keep in
mind tlnrt you are tL^ judged
by ‘Atiat you arc writing. Then
let us write thincis that will be
acceptable in the sight of God
Over television and radio we
have all been listening to the
sordid chapters written over the
past thirty years in the life ot
s ’haraeter of the underword.
fcyeryday is a day of JndR*
menl lor somebody. God’s letn
bution comes to us in this Ufa,
her* and now. Our ugly evi!
deeds catch up with us, Som*
bnHy had to pay off this day
This day was a day of aecountinp
for .someone. Thus, the certainty
of God's judgnient should bad
us to strive more diligently to
make our lives more acceptable
to God. God’s reward of the eood
and the evil is verv sure.
Every soul must meet the final
payday—the fday of judement set
by a rir’hteous God. Thus each
soul will decide is destiny and
judgment.
they must not be the same. Th».
Citizen could not understand i'ow
olothes could be as fine as ot!’er
clothes and not the same. But
knowing he was ignorant, he
shrugged his freezing shoulders
and moved otr through the win
try blasts, hoping he would some
day acqt'.lre the "'^dom to be
warm. '
Years rolled by and none di(
ferent wise men came into pow
er. It was evident that Wiey
agreed that the Ci»*-’en’s clothes
were not at all aoequate. For
they wrote a third paper saying
that the Citizen must hare th*
rUfht to share the same flui*
clothes Ids wh'te brother wore.
Now the Citizen felt that ho
had been acceptad into the hu
man race.. But, in- the Southen
most part of the land, anerv
citizens rebelled against the nine
old men. Although, once in »
while, someone would toss tlie
Cftizen ah old sock or a second
hand scarf, his neighbor* eon
tinued to refute him the rlRlit
to share their clothes. In the
Northern part of the land, tha
Citizen was not refused alotnes,
only the right to wear them. Aitd
stni, many peopla kapt eaafrat
ulating t^ Dtiien on tha fact
that ha had received hi* dua.
On* day, a new and youthful
Head Citlien stormed thraa4>-
out tjM laad, promlaing that
he were mada the Raaa, he whhld
see ta it that tha dUatn gat
hia dalhaa. Tha Haad CitiaM,
■aemlMir, waatadl to k«aiM>l|{lt
promlaa hut ttara wfn mm*.Ju
fiitaal Bapuhtieaa Raad Cttitaiw
and AaiiftaBt Dawacntt Ha^
Cltixana—«b# f«il0w* wb» M4t
tha wlaa .wba gat faMa iMk
uproir aho«tf tha whaU atl«atlap
that II bagaa t« look vary
aa il tha Cttlies wouM raautfn
■aketf irtl tha reat o( Ml ^an.
pudag tlM aaaiaiar wi Mli,
iinething happened to the Citl
.r«an to maht hh» jhaHwa ha was
Thara
Amerlff . _ . , . , ,
le^i^nhii^ mmI ttht- iA '
haU of a dvU
who. In rafaat iNNin hiirt
very litta ImH
Ona of iluiii hi A4a« 1
PwwaU «fe« mm alMa | IMPP
of mii^ tor haamte a hfa 4d(|
hittii« and Muri^iii ahjlMM
ship of the Haitro ctm- W
'other la MiipgMl K, «l|»a| (i
teliiiwm and iftictilatwW '
respect daaply.
To ay fomr#, la reoMl
it ha* aaHMd t», me that iliiaf
two very vocal gentlemen hȴ*
been accomplish^ mola mi
leaderihif than leadership in lb
statemast* they iuve been nik
ing and tha poaHions they ha?'
been tahMg: posUion* and atata
menti which uau^l'y gain lanu
ticral headUnaa.
We were shochad and astouna
ed, the other day, to read ra
ports ot a douhile-barreUed W
tack theie tvo fentleman hiv
made against on# of the vqrid’*
most diiUseuifhad and h«M>r
able cttiieiu, Dr. Ralph Buncjfe
Dr Bu^be. u averyone knalir*
is the UndenwcWary of H>»
Ui i d Natioaa, a poajl he Ha'
held and aututed witta graa*
aad lnt«w>rity.
fk: a iii^'ht ON official
Dr. Buncbe, techaically, it sup
posed to remain aloof from th
internal, racial problems of th'
United States. This is diplomatic
practice honored for many yeay-
In spite of thia. Dr. Bunch
has—on 3 number nf occaaiO}i‘
—taken it upon himself to le'
the world know just how he feel'
about racial prejudice in th'
United States. Some year* ago
when offered a hUh Goverameni
poaition, Dr. Bunche command
ed the headlines by rejecting th/ '
job on th* grounds that he did
lfi5T 'Jrtih tD ratsr Irtf children
under the jimcrcw condttionr
which then existed in Washinf-
ton. It would Have been easy foi
Dr. Bunche and his family to f!.>
to Washington and be accepted
many places from which Negroe>
of lesser stature would be tqn>
ed away. But Dr. Bunche obvion^
ly felt that thl* would he iVa
than honorable. With the forth
right stand he took |n this situ
ation, he revealed that it Is la
finitely more important to him
that his people be given justic
'than to take advantage'of hi»
unusual status in order to r**T
ize personal benefits and racos
nition.
Congressman Powell, ignoring
this, is credited with the stata
meat that “we have not heard
from Ralph Bunche siace w*
helped tight to get his son inte
the Forest Hills Tennis Club.”
It has been a long time sincc
didd’i ^f§ Imt W
lintn (|» PS
an N )>- -
Ail dr %
M A4a«r’l. w« li% |iag»
that had I>r.
stoipr vbdt
#*» rsJairtgil ^ 51a , ^
ha amid ttfitp h%««t*d (neuter
«hla pwMHre M|| InQMI^
. wh^es aitdi Wlfe^ .adpl&jilit-
l*td tbt {l**h, Ijr.. Bstpdl0 ^Idat
«anl tbfV, He ruit^ thrdf
the s^otU^t vljini tb« be|hn’«*
intolerance nfljl»h wojiljj '
Netvo recognition—ewo tM)M
be happen* to be one of tn*’
world’s most important men.
Dr. Bunphe did not all()r hh
UN statu* to hoM bias thn
making po’sreffvl statalMn^
ahhut Blmifnuhain. We heart’
nathing froM Adaai Poatell aMt:
th« Blrtqingham crisis wa* over
Dr. Bunm^'Meaded tne. Ainara
af Medgar Ev^ In la^kaon, Ifhi
il*Bi|)pl aad deiKtwaeed t)w eiM
Moodel vurder.
Majcbiv ft..J9 aal
funeral. Ma6«l»v ia very |>iH
tanit on Harlem ttnet eofi^
where militancy is not danf^
tn* ^ ^
t have h*!^ manjr.^er80Ral coa
veraalop* with OtrBunchle 0d
recBlved mpch .yjfoaWe adale
from him which I couM
from no oneel*e! Certtrfnly ao*
from a Con|ns«inMi «ha,
of the tiqu, Wma to ha tapra
aentiiig Porto Rlcf ra^iir ttlr
hJs dJjOTct—oy ftqm a leal^
who flB« hhBMalf left hy th*
wayild* in tha Neara’i oiward
mjir^ iowu^ freedoS!. lijnifry
bi^uiia h« talha t|* |ai^|Ma|lr
of th* segregationistsil l*a|
uagy which the Negni peaid'^
aepig.
I think th* Negro i^t«a
b* greatly advancad if Br. 1^
ell and Malcolm X had oaa twey-
ttath of tha JaMvity aad l(i*i
e^*hlp which typUa*
Bunche, a M^t Anaericaa
raaard speilb lar itself W
makes a mockery of ttajtMt *n(
unfounded criticiwn. . /It
BISHOP ISAAC LANK
Born in 1S34, on an isolate *
plantation in Tennessee. .Isaac
Lane koent an ohscur* slavf
childhood without Ine bci)efit a
parental care, "rhe use of bodkr
or pencil* Wa* foiWAan, M
Bonehow h* managed to lamp t*
raad and writa. While (till
slave, he conducted prayer meaf,
ing* on the plantation wid
times suffered violence friMt
whites hostile tp Ne|ro prean
erf. After the Civil T/ftr, ^dy
ha wa* aboirt thirty, he jjio^ilM
through the. isiblc and tuch- oth
er literature as he could firi .Ht
hands on.
When he was tjventy-two, the
Southern Methodist C h u r c l>
granted h i m permlsaion M
preach as a lay exhorter. Uder
during the War, he appjled to :
quarterly conference and
finally licensed ** 1. Mediodi*
minister. ■ ‘
For several yaar*, LaAa irat r
“circuit rider” traealUak trom
town to town to preteb. H# at
tackad alavary m4 iiriMI
to heUavc l«
and to dafaad thalr right* |i
human behigi 1^ fait (iuil
Ban shottld ba aO*al*ad hr
other. Tbit m«aapga vat aU
Mora pewacful I0 It
ope who had bfaa far
mr* a alara- La^t t
'^ leouat -of hi* tM hm
and U atrongil
■lory *d alhara
mo Imtmr Igaamt HM
body aMtf Wi aMlMI Ul#
to thfik wmmt*
«olt. All
ilaveif
mtHintaUa - , .
Aftar th» (iMl War. If II#
tivued hi th« ‘ ^ ‘
1di
thai thaie dlaUMat
tbe^ n«w toI
a|ficted th« frofsk c«^, pthg i
11 thravgliafM
Iw ipid liii mIni| Mil
a ariag Hi 4
Itam'WihMiiij
we dn4f f«
begia to aritg |ii
havtiM ta
atothaa.
or die,
longar.”
hair and pompe
t*
M
MTpa^pih
if
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