4
THE CAROLINIAN
RALEIGH, N. C., SATURDAY. NOVEMBER U, IM4
Editorial Viewpoint
Jesus persuaded most of his oonverM through
the personal Interview, rather than bi| revival
meetings Os course, John the Baptist won his
crowds of converts at open-air meetings. Think of
the meeting of Jesus and the women at Jacob's
Well. He got her attention by speaking of
Water of life. With sure instinct he followed up
Who Is The Most Thankful Family?
It is traditions! to observe Thanksgiving
Day in the sirit of the Fath
ers, who had had a rather "rough" time of it
during their first year in the new world. They
fellowshipped with the Indians who brought
moat of the food which consisted of wild tur
key, squash, and other wild animals.
We are afraid that far too many of us have
strayed far from the original spirit of the ob
servance. Some take this time to go hunting
and fishing, to make trips to football classics,
to cat sumptious meals and “stuff’ themselves
so full that they must take something to re
lieve them of acidity and painful stomachs.
But then, on the other hand, other people
and families are genuinely thankful for God’s
blessings. Many families have special reasons
for which they are thankful. The pastor of the
Pine Crest Baptist Church in Florida, for exx
ample, has one of those special reasons to be
thankful The minister says:
"Thanksgiving Day this year has come to us
with a deeper meaning. For the second time in
his life, Grant, our little son, has been brought
back from the brink of death. When Grant was
only six months old, he was stricken with ft
brasarcoma, a malicious form.of cancer. This
dreadful disease sweeps swiftly through the
body, especially in the case of a child. Doctors
said an immediate amputation was necessary.
Even then, they said, they had little hope for
him. They are amazed that he is alive today.
“My wife and I, however, accept his recov
ery as an answer to our prayers and give God
thanks.
"Then came another terrible testing time for
Where Is Our Students Integrity?
It has caused us some disappointment and
alarm to hear that the Federal government is
having difficulty In getting repayment of loans
to college student*.. Federal education author
ities were alerted recently by government au
ditors that a collection problem is rising in the
fast-growing college student loan program.
The program, begun in 1959, is just coming
to grips with the payback problem as students
Complete their studies and the year of grace
-allowed before loan payments start.
The comptroller general’s office, in a re,>ort
to Congress on the loan program, said the Of
fice of Education has been slow to install good
collection procedure*.
Naturally the colleges and universities them
selves have become disturbed and concerned
about the problem and completed recently a
study of how the program ia operating in 446
college*. The result* of the studies which
covered all cost aspects of the program includ
ing repayment, will be published early next
year.
For an example of how the collection pro
gram haa suddenly burst on the universities, in
November 1962 only 9.394 loans were due ond
not collected, while six months later the num
ber had jumped to 22.007. This fact is calam
atous when we consider that the number of
students participating haa risen from 24.831 in
1959 to 217.000 in 1963 with the average loan
being $478 a year per student.
Morality Os Law Enforcement Officials
You have read in the newspapers an account
of the Mecklenburg grand jury indicting Police
Chief John 8. Hord and seven other Charlotte
policemen on 37 counts last week, climaxing
a five-mooth investigation of the city’s police
department. Most of the charges involved wil
ful neglect of duty.
There were 14 charge* against the chief of
police, six against his chiri of detectives, and
six against a former detective of the depart
ment
Police Chief Hord, who has held this iob
since May 1961, was charged on two accounts
of falling to keep proper supervision of his de
partment of about 350 men. and in two cases
with failing to arrest two women whom the
gnund jury believed operated houses of prosti
tution. Captain W. A. McCall, chief of the de
tectives, was charged with failure to arrest a
woman who was suspected of murdering her
child in an Icebox In April 1963. He was also
charged with failure to discharge his duties
properly in • gasoline theft esse last January.
It was this caw that aet off the probe of the
departmant
Abusing Federal Exemption Rights
The past election brought into bring a num
ber of hats group*, political propagandist*,
right-and-left wing group*, and other organi
zation* of this type; Not knowing altogether
the purpose* and goal* of these organizations
except lor statements on paper, the Federal
government granted many such organizations
tax exemptions.
Since many of tbeae organizations have en
gaged In full-range political activities forbid
den to tax-exempt groups, we think that this
privilege should be revoked.
A recent report from Washington informs us
that the Internal Revenue Service is moving to
tTifE ItEORO PRESS- holism* that America can hesf had tha v«W
away from rmeiml and national antagonist* whan it accords to every mar
ragmrtOm «f racs, ootor or oread, Ms human and bgal right a Hating no man
haring no man—tha Nagro Pram atriraa to help arary man on tha firm ba~
t Hat that aD man are hurt aa long as anyona is haU back.
1 1 1 : '
WORDS OF WORSHIP
i his initial advantage. Ha began to talk to her In
I terms of her own life, her ambitions, her hopes,
i knowing so well that each of us Is interested
(first of all) In himself. When the diseiplas came
up a few minutes later, they found an unbeliev
able sight— a Samaritan listening with rapt at
tention to the teaching of a Jew.
us. Last April Grant become violently ill with
spinal meningitis. Hit life hung in the balance.
We prayed to God once more and our little
boy was spared.
“Today, except for his stiff way of walking
due to his woden leg, Grant is like any other
little boy—mischievous and affectionate.”
Often it takes a great tragedy like this case
to awaken us to gratitude. In little Grant’s
healing, the parents opened their hearts to the
full meaning of Thanksgiving, In fact, all man
kind ought to think of Thanksgiving Day as
being more than a time set aside for the formal
recognition of the Lord’s goodness to us. Tc
us, the true thanksgiving should be an attitude
of the heart that knows no season or limits.
Negro families have much to be thankful
for, since the pasiage of the 1964 Civil Rights
Bill a little more than four months ago. Even
though some businesses must be coerced into
compliance, our racial group is beginning to
feel “like a man” with human dignity. We can
stop at decent places in our travels and enjoy
good food and lodging at economical prices
We can be thankful that few proprietors will
dare to tell us to go around to the back to the
kitchen to eat, or “we don't serve colored.”
We should be thankful for the concept of
the dignity of man. our inalienable rights to
life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness, and
our freedom to worship the Supreme Being as
we please.
President Johnson has offered us a challenge
in the offering of our thanksgiving: We should
be thankful in our ability to meet the ctml
lenges of today and the future.
It is Thanknjivinj!
No wonder the institutions participating in
the federal defense loan to students program
are concerned about the products they have
been graduating since 1959. If college students
learn nothing else of importance while engaged
in study, they should develop a pride in their
integrity, honeaty, and practice the philosophy
that "a man’s word (promise to repay his
loan) is his bond." If students cannot be de
pended upon to assume their financial respon
sibility, how are they going to have a family
and earn a credit rating?
While we ndmire the programs of loans for
assisting students to remain in school and
graduate earlier, there may be some merit in a
student dropping out of school for a couple of
yeara to earn a hank account to pay for his
education cash. Then students won’t have to
start out in life “in the red ” And oftimes a stu
dent finds that when he marries, he doesn't
have enough left from his salary to repay his
loan as he promised. It would be wise for a
student owing a loan to the government for his
education to put off marriage until the cost of
his education is paid for in full.
The colleges and universities involved can
not afford to permit a single student to get by
without repaying his loan. To do so. would
deny other worthy students from getting this
same privilege.
Studenta, remember that your word is your
bond! If you keep your word, people will re
spect you.
Just two months ago tha Jacksonville. Fla .
police department personnel came under fire
for allegedly accepting large-sum bribes from
underworld character*. The investigation in
volved from six to ten policemen.
While we cannot present facts in support of
our conclusions, it may well be that certain
underpaid law enforcement officer* accepted
bribes to increase their incomes. While in the
Charlotte case, we can only ask whv didn't
these high-ranking law officers live above su
spicion? Why was it that certain officers failed
to make arrest* in order to carry out the man
dates of the grand jury? What morr serious
charge can there be against an officer than
“wilful neglect of his duty?"
If the charges against some personnel of the
police department at Charlotte, N. C.. and
Jacksonville, Fla., are true, then without delay
the involved offenders should he relieved of
duty and punished in accord with strict en
forcement of the law governing failure to com
ply with the ordinance* governing the deport
ment of policemeh and the performance of
their sacred duties.
cancel the tax exemptions of several of the
group*, mostly right wing. Whether the IRS is
using this whip to silence the right-wingers we
cannot say The preedure to revoke tax ex
emptions should be fair and applied also to
terms of special privileges.
We know full well that aH tax burdens waiv
ed for organizations of this type must be. in
the final analysis paid from die citizen’s poo
ketbooks. If the organizations cannot qualify
for the ttax exemption, and obey the roles in
their activities then deny them the free ride
Every organization mutt help bear the tax
burden!
Just For Fan
KV MARCUS H. BOCLWARE
THANKSGIVING DAT
Thanksgiving Day is right
>v«r the hill, and I think of the
poem we pupils were required
to learn in the elementary school.
It went something like this:
"Over the river and through
the woods ■to grandfather's
house we go, the horse knows
the way to carry the sleigh,
through the white and drifted
snow. ~ f Then at .another place
in the poem: “Spring over the
ground like a hunting hound,
for this is Thanksgiving Dty."
And it It; think of the turkey
and mince meat pie Ah boy!
UNANIMOUS CHOICE: The
place it located. in Chihuahua.
Mexico No! not New Mexico.
By unanimous choice, Governor
Praxedes Glnor Duran was best
man for 17 couples who chose to
get married in a simultaneous
ceremony at his dedication of a
new Civil Registry building.
DENTRIFICE: Hippocra t e s
'460-337 B. C.) was the first to
ONLY IN AMEKICA
BY HARRY GOLDEN
ANNUAL THANKSGIVING
COLUMN
Like us, the ancient Cartha
ginians were very brave and
very strong and very rich.
They had so many of the good
things of life they hated' giv
ing any of them up. So they
went out and hired foreign sol
diers and mercenaries so they
could devote themselves to real
enjoyment that came with be
ing a Carthaginian.
They had always had a
Thanksgiving Day until the
Romans came. The Romans
were neither rich nor apprecia
tive of the finer things In Car
thage.
But they were tougher and
braver The Roman command
er slept on the ground with his
Legionnaires and every night on
campaign, the Romans still had
the energy and discipline to
build around their camping
grounds a trench eight feet
wide by eight feet deep. His
torically. the Romans were nev
er surprised at night. They be
jsan pressing the Carthagini
ans.
<»e 4v
venUtti a new kina oi Thank*-
giving. They offered the Rom
ans their young sons If only the
Romans would leave them a
lone. But there was always S
Roman senator to rise before
the people and demand Carth
age must be destroyed.
The Carthaginians went fur
ther. Their women cut off their
hair as a sacrifice, and when
that didn’t deter the Romans
thry built a huge pyre end con
signed the most beautiful of
their maidens to It. They tried
everything but nothing worked.
Nothing proprltuited the gods,
beoaus* the Carthaginians w.'re
not really giving thanks.
Thanksgiving Day Is the most
modest of celebrations because
all it supposedly involves is
gratitude for life, for susten
ance. for freedom.
Ollier Editors Say...
THANKS FOR GIVING •
Thsnks to you, young men a-id
women afflicted by polio and
other crippling diseases are
learning to work with their han
dicaps.
Thanks to you. people born
without hearing and who live in
a world of silence an- being
trained at trades they can one
day perform in private indu.-f-y.
Thanks to you. 530 pe pit- bur
dened by physical, mental and
social handicaps are being given
hope for the future through
sheltered employment at :to
Goodwill Industries workshops,
1500 West Monroe Street
While they are striving to
achieve their Independence and
maintain their dignity by under
going rehabilitative training at
Goodwill, these handicapped
workers depend upon you to
keep them busy By providing
the materisls—used clothing,
toy*, electrical appliances, fur
niture. shoes—you make it pos
sible for them to learn hew to
repair and renovate a range of
items and thus simulate job sit
uations tn competitive industry.
In this way. you make hop,' a
reality for hundreds of people
who would otherwise face the
agony of being useless-to thern
selvee and to society.
Without your help, particular
ly in the w-inter months, these
handicapped people would not
be able to work and le.trn and
prepare for the future.
—Tire NEW CRUSADER
VIRGINIA POU. T\X
The nt’ing by a special p, ,1
of three Federal Court judges in
Alexandria in which the state of
Virginia s poll tax law was -. tv
held. poses a Judicial as well as
moral dilemma. The decision ig
nores a 1963 Cons itution.-il A
men dm or! barring • 'll tnx-w as
prerequis'ires for voti-g tn JYd
eral elections.
The Alexandria court held
that it was “not at liberty to de
viate' from a 193? Supreme
Court decision affirming poll
taxes generally.
The decision carr.e In the form
of a dismissal of two suits at
tacking Virginia’s SI 50-a-year
poll tax as a violtaion of the
equal protection guarantee of
the const it monaliy of a c!a-.*e
tn the Virginia Constitution that
denies “paupers” the right to
-ote.
—THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
do vor xfaijlt Want
FREEDOM?
The follow ing editorial is from
the magazine The Brown Texan,
of Fort Worth. Texas, for Octo
ber. A dell r Jackson. executive
editor- publisher.
4 Ithaugh tha election is oarer,
recommend s dentrifica using
the recipe of carbonate of lime
or chalk mixed with the hood of
s hare and the intestines of
mice.
The American Dental Associa
tion. reporting this bit of toothy
history, noted also that dentri
fices of more palatable formula
were used by Americans last
year at the rate of 10.3 ounces
per person.
MAN-EATING CROCODILE:
(The mean old rascal) A story
comes from Bangkok, Thailand,
recently and which stated that a
crocodile more than 13 feet long
had killed six persons and ter
rorized villages in Chumporn
Province of South Thailand for
several months was billed re
cently with an antitank bomb,
according to preM reports.
The crocodile, named Ai Darng
(the Piebald), because of a
white streak on its neck, was
killed by a soldier, the brother
of the crocodile's last victim.
Thankgsivln* Day is as old
out he Hebrews whose holiday
"todah” literally translates as
the day in which to praise.
Yet old as It is, each national
Thank-vuhng Day seems the
most :ndigeneous of holidays.
New Year s Day is celebrated
the world over at some time in
the year. Every Western coun
try knov. s Christmas. Most peo
ples celebrate a day of Inde
pendence or liberation. But our
American Thanksgiving Day
seems absolutely, unique. And
unique it is, for It was the first
American holiday invented by
the Puritans and sanctified by
Abraham Lincoln during the
Civil War.
We are at the same point In
our history Carthage was. We
are brave and free and strong.
It Is for these gifts we ought
to thank Ood as we celebrate
happiness and friendship with
loved ones.
Like Carthaginians, however,
we are menaced. The Cold War
with Russia and China has
changed our lives, every one of
us. It Is hard to try simply to
and the Lincoln spirituality on
surresMve Thanksgivings. We
are in a desperate race which
itw if can strip man of his In
dividual dignity and make of
him an hysterical faeeleua be
ing.
Instead of thanking God for
out material well-being and
abundance we ought to ask God
how can we share it with the
world.
Instead of thanking God for
the love we receive, we ought
to ask Him how can we share
our love with all men.
Instead of thanking God for
peace, we ought to ask Him how
can we continue to preserve it.
If we do these things. I think
we will never have to thank
God for not being overcome but
we can give thanks that we
have persevered.
we think it’s timely and worh
while of reproducing:
“For more than 100 years the
Negro lived as a second class
citizen tn the United States.
Now. with passage of the civil
rights bill, he has a chance for
the first time to become a first
class citizen.
But the bill only grants him
tus rights, it doesn’t force him
to use those rights.
Wouldn’t it be a shame if.
with all the work and sweat that
went into obtaining passage of
the ’’Negro Bill of Rights,” it all
went for naught? It could you
know.
Apathy on the part of voters
could erase most of the gains it
took a century to gain. The man
who's too lazy to vote on elec
ts days, the man who is “too
busy” to take part In civic af
fairs. These people could nulli
fy meet of the good done thus
far.
Such persons would be play
ing right into the hands of the
whit* supremacists They could
then say: “I told you so. The
majority of Negroes really did
n't want civil rights at all Just
a few agitators."
Don't let this happen. On
election day, vote. When called
upon to take part in local gov
ernment projects, accept gladly.
When asked to participate in
civic affairs, do so willingly.
We all can remember how
things used to be. how we might
have to travel all day withou
finding a restaurant we could
eat In, how we couldn't use a
public drinking fountain or rest
room, how we had to ait ,on the
rear seats of buses.
All that’s in the past now. We
must make ourselves worthy of
the gains wa have mad*.
Freedom on the shelf Is no
freedom at all. It's like the rtcry
of tha bear In the cage. For
years tha bear had been in a
six-foot cage. He'd pace those
feet then turn around and walk
back again. He did thia ewery
day tor years. Finally they lift
ed the cage off him. He etill
paced the six feet, beck-ward
and forward, all day tong. He
had become a creature of habit.
Let's don't be like that beer.
This Is a fast-changing world
we lien tn. We've got to change
wi:h it or get left behind. If we
ijet left behind then we’re no
better off than we were to start
with.
Don't be a bear. B* a respon
sible citizen. You're got the
chance now. Use it
—THE MIAMI TIMES
CHANGES Dl l
No one knows what appoin
tive change* Governor-elect
Moor* has tn mind bat Mi*
Only The Stars And Stripes Must Prevail
' jjf
'r 1—
. .. _ -t*-" n nmm
•**"Rit , TiH L *'* l Tii A?iffi -y- —_• ijii ilrtit. ~ S"-rCr->£l£-ifeL>kLr
— - r 11,, -i ■ - m tn-. -T .
i
ALTAR CALL
i
BY EMORY G. DAVIS, DJ>. (For Negro Proas International)
"TIME TO TEACH THE TEACHER"
.•miu vgauuiuß’tn ntcu nuip auu miucr
ztanding,” Director Leßoy Collins of th* Com
munity Relations Service (USA) explained to a
meeting of all religious faiths In an address In
Alexandria, Virginia recently. He called upon hie
audience to “enlighten moral segregationists.”
This former avowed segregationist, once gov
enor of Florida, and now head of the agency sot
up by President L. B. Johnson to Implement the
Civil Rights Law, has in effect said, IT IS TIME
TO TEACH THE TEACHER.
Segregation has been taught by thousands upon
thousands of American whites. It is still being
taught and practiced avidly in the deep South
and subtly in other parts of the country. For this
the CRS Director give* both an apology and an
explanation.
“Most defenders of segregation," he says, "do
not harbor hatred tn their hearts against Negroes.
Nor do mo6t segregationists feel, in their consci
ences. any sense of guilt as they discriminate a
gainst Negroes.
“They were brought up in a society In which
they were carefully educated from childhood to
believe that the Negro had a secondary plaoe—an
inferior place—and that he should be required to
stay in it and accept this as his lot in life with
out protest."
Admitting that he is firmly opposed to those
who base segregationist views on hate, he ex
plained that “many fine white people” feel that
segregation “is perfectly compatible with their
sense of moral responsibility and even deep per
sonal affection for Negroes.”
Yes. Director Collins, it ia time to teach the
teacher and you are right when you ask all
church members to “help educate those who do
not hate and who do not intend to harm and yet
who still insist upon keeping the Negro in a state
of inferiority.”
Twenty million Negroes in America agree in
principle with what Collins has said, but they are
wondering where we will get enough teachers w>
teach INTEGRATION to those who once taught
SEGREGATION. We are grateful to have you
now as head of the “school of integration.”
Another comment in an address made by *
“white teacher of Integration” was one of the
NEWS AND VIEWS
BY J. B. BARREN
lEACH THRIFTINESS
ROCKY MOUNT Opportunity haa to knock,
says the Cherokee (Olds) Republican, but it is
enough for temptation Just to stand outside and
whistle to get us to accept it.
That certainly is the ’gospri truth’, says the Old
Mountaineer.
It ia a disgrace to the Negro race to see us pass
up so many opportunities by which we could easi
ly IMPROVE OURSELVES if we would on.y
teach our people to stop wasting their little money
in riotous living as did the Prodigal Son in the
Bible, and put our money to the exchange as the
Master taught in the Parable of the Talents.
Therein. God rewarded the two who made use
of their taients and earned more. He took awry
the one talent which the lazy man had and did
not use. It was given to the man who had done
the most. Thus R Is throughout our modern and
profane lives.
Let us teach our children, (if indeed we oldsters
are too far gone to learn thrift! that every dime
saved means a chance at education for the future
rather than just eating and drinking up all we
have for a season and then Bring In poverty nine
months of the year.
It has been established that Negrons waste morr
mor “T per capita and according to what we earn
than other ethnic groups on toys and non-essen
tia'.s, to say nothing of confections, soft drinks,
strong drinks and just plain foolishness and nick
Moore himself, if be has made
up his mind. Those dam to him
hare the feeling his aa—pOen
of office will not affect the
rank and file of State employe
es who are efficient. However
every incoming governor ts am
customed to dealing got png.
ronage to his friends and sup
porters. Some of Moore’s bit
terest pre-primary opponents
hold paying Jobs in State gov
ernment. Reason and pzscadoat
give rise to the assumption that
these will be among the first to
be retired Vo private Me or
forced to seek amptogmsnt else
most forthright I've heard In a tan* time Rieh
iuu j. iaau 4, Ji„ who directed the 1064 inven
tory of Community Relatione in Evanston. 111.,
publishing a 50-page volume that really bared
typical subtle Northern segregation, said, "them
is no way to escape from living with Negroes, but
we must find away to make ourselves acceptably
to the Negro rather than to make the Negro ac
ceptable to us.” Whew! That’s a hot one I
For the white man to “be acceptable” to the
Negro is quite an order. MY first reaction was
what kind of a white man Is acceptable. Bur-I*
not a patronizing, feel-sorry-for-you-Negror s
type. Certainly not a hand-me-downer, who pass
es his left-over materials and kindnesses to nts
“po’ brother.” Then too, neither do we want tvrn
to face a wall of black nationalistic arroganc
and resistance.
During the summer riot* we heard the w»rd
"whiter" used quite frequently hurled both at
those whites who would do good as well as those
who will not Once In a mid-western town where
they once had separate beaches on each side c.
the lake for Negroes and whites, they changed the
policy, opening both sides to everyone. As you
might suspect the Negroes still thought they hid
“their side” and one day a white boy came over
on the former “colored” side to swim and .-.-. is
chaaed out by a group of Negro boys who said,
“get over on your own side."
So it looks as though there’s quite a teaching
Job to be done. Not only do we need to teach the
segregationists but we need to teach the SEGRE
GATED.
Once, quite facetiously I said, we will have full
INTEGRATION when a very dark-skinned Negro
man can slap a blue-eyed blonde white woman in
front of the City Hall in Jackson, Miss, without
any more reaction from the crowd than, "he’s no
gentleman.” This may not be an honorable goal,
but it may suggest what kind of a white man it’s
going to take to be readied for Integration. If he
can stand by and see something like thia happen
brother, HE’S INTEGRATED!
Teaching Is really the answer both the seg
regated and the segrationist. Church people of A
merioa ought lead the way to this challenging
altar THE ALTAR OF A TEACHING MIS
SION IN RACIAL BROTHERHOOD.
nacks.
Our schools have rightly requested and gotten
cafeterias and lunch facilities even among the
rural schools where our people have little or ne
money to support them. Pray tell us how many
tenant farmers or sharecropper families or wid
owed mothers can afford to give three to five
children from 15c to 25c per school day to pur
chase school lunches with, meaning up to $3 75
to $6.75 per week Just for lunches when that a
mount will go a long way Into the family grocery
budget each week and the poor child could catry
his (or her) own lunch from home.
O, we know no one thinks of that nowadays be
cause its old-fashioned. But the men who made
this country great carried their own- lunches to
school—even Lyndon Baines Johnson, well bet'
Now he’s a millionaire—and President of the USA
besides. Many of us would get somewhere in life
if we did not eat up, drink tip. and sport out th®
part of our income we should be SAVING for the
RAINY DAY in life.
Thriftiness is the law of the ants, squirrels, ar.a
many others: but too many Negroes fear they wnl
die and leave some food, bottled drinks or mon'-y
for someone else to use. being too selfish to re
member that others left somethin# for their ad
vent on this planet. We forget that unless we
have something to leave for someone else—we can
not have enouzh for ourselves on this earth Let s
SAVE SOMETHING.
where.
From remarks made by Judge
Moore When he was running
for the nomination the lightn
ing likely will strike hardest in
the State Highway setup. In
task, it would seem to be not a
bad bet that the entire State
Highway Commission will je
rmlv i'd. This, at course, would
be foi jwad by the replacement
of certain key workers m the
State Highway Department At
to the “tittle fry." they likely
will remain on the Job, if the
era efficient.
Also, each incoming governor
names the State collector of re
venue. Then, there are other
key administration officials ap
pointed by the governor, eepe
eially those ..drawing from $lO -
000 a year up Perhaps, the n.'w
executive may see fit to do
something for the "forgotten ’
men ?n d women who do the
drudgery for the state.
At any rate, we shah see
wh*» wv shall see. come Janu
ary and the months fotiowin*