Page 2 The Chronicle - Saturday June 25, 1977 Liquor By Drink Pc 1 .'i ."* .*^1pfijUMtlWi' * >? Continued From Page 1 trials and stuff,'' they East Forsyth High explained. School sent two represen- The major issue that the tatives: Ron Blaylock, who four did not agree on was was elected senator of capital punishment. Ruffin County, and Roy James Andrews was for it. Bacote who served as a "It costs the taxpayers too city judge for the mythical much money to keep a "Craig* City." James man in prison for the rest Andrews, a county com- of his life," he explained, missioner for Hoke Coun- "And rehabilitation ty at Boys State, repre- doesn't seem to work." sented West Forsyth, and Darrel Scales, the "Senator" Darrel Scales soft-spoken senator from is a rising, senior at Hoke, said he realized w- Parkland High.* that imprisonment was The four agreed that expensive but: "It just there is very little racism doesn't seem right to tftke 1 ^ at gays state: t ou puii a human lite even if it's Hoke County or Ruffin or "Don't get me started whatever,'' explained Ron talking about liquor by the Blaylock, "And you vote drink said another forthe man you think with Forsvth ^mmtv ? ,? ^j ? r v? do the best job/' Counselor Ronald D. The issue of the Wilkins. Wilkins, now a Wilmington Ten did come student at Lenoir Rhyne, up in the group's twice represented Anderlegislature, "A lot of son High School at B6ys white guys were concern- State and went on to Boys ed about them," said Ron. Nation in Washington, "It really surprised us.v D.C. In this, his fifth year The senators agreed that with the program, Wilkins they would push for a full was one of the two black pardon in that afternoon's counselors at Boys~State, session of the legislature, serving as the advisor for 44We don't want to gefT Taylor County7 bogged down with new "We counselors aren't WFU Seeks More Blacks 7 Continued From Page 1 to professor, and , they -in finding black emplo- want to hire more blacks, yees. Very few apply. He Wake seejns to have hopes this situation will come a long way from the . change, in spite of days when Edward Rey competition from the local nolds had to spend his industries which may pay first 2 years at Shaw while more. There are jobs at the trustees argued about WFU, says Griffith. At integration. At least it's various times they need trying to change its skills ranging from painter image. Olllt E ON 1 P , : James Randall Wilder was this consequent admixture of c born at Columbia, S.C., the "similar" blood cannot be r son of Charles M. Wilder, denied, and must bear a s who was postmaster at Co- modicum of responsibility < lumbia for manv vMrt Wic for th^ ? j j ?. . . >. inwiiiuiijr ui c mother was Maria Coleman, the Negro of to-day. i also a native of the Palmetto (2) The fact that the great s State. majority of the Negro women \ Dr. Wilder was a man of in the cities of the South are c spotless character, _ind en- compelled to work steadily s joyed a striking appearance, even while they are enceinte, i a magnetic personality, and a doubtless ofien.Jiuerferes n brilliant and versatile mind. with the normal development c His early training was re- of the internal organs of their t ceived in the public schools offspring, causing a lack of 1 of his native city. He spent a vitality which is not apparent j season in the classical depart* to the casual observer, but ment of Howard University, which must make them an > and from there went to easy victim to disease. i Howard Medical College, (3) The same social and t from which he graduated in economic conditions that ! the year 1888. Availing him- keep the expectant mother t self of the unrivalled oppor- busy with her daily labors, r tunities afforded by the also abbreviate her "lying-in- i Freedman's Hospital, he period," which not only i rapidly acquired both theore- weakens her physically, but t tical and practical know- t deprives her newly-born off- t ledge, so that when he spring of its natural food? '? _ stepped into the world he thus consigning it to an in- > possessed a preparation sel- fant's grave, or so debilitat c dom equalled by the ybung ing it that it succumbs to the t practitioner. He held also the Orsi disease with which U ?t degree of Phar.D. from becomes affected. It is bad ! Howard. enough to be bottle-fed, phy- r (1) American slavery, with siologists tell us. but it is ? its unparalleled crueltv and infinitely worse to be hand- t bestiality has injured the fed The majority of the j Negro, intellectually, physi- Negroes in the Southland are \ cally and morallv It has been hand-fed from btrth with claimed that the admixture of food decidedly improper I the Negro with the Caucasian both as to qua lit > and quan- * ha> given us a resulting mu- tity, thus making defective r latto, weaker physically than the very substructure of their < either of the parent stock. being. Is it any wonder that < but this statement is based such a people die faster than upon hypothesis, and is not another people, who nurse ; borne out by the facts in thr their young or have it done, case. It is true, however, that or *ho give them pure cow's i a resulting lowering of vital- milk modified scientifically i icy has followed the admix- or other artificial infant food r ture of "kindred blood," prepared skillfully amid the which was aJmost unavoid- best sanitary environments'1 t able during the days of Slav- (4) The early motherhood i cry as the result of certain of the Negro has its evil well-known procreative prac- ^ effects. The proper age for a j tices that obtained on the woman to become a mother < pan of the master, and on is at twenty-five years old account of the itineracy of and usually before that time r the Negro incident to his development is not complete, t chattelism In "those dark and the whole organism is in t days" it was hard enough for a transition state. It is equally li the Negro to recognize his true that the use of any organ t< near kin on his maternal side. before it ha* attained its w and it was infinitely impos- complete growth or develop- sible for him to trace the ment is damaging to that m "family tree" from the pater- organ and interferes with its ig nal side. Tne evil effects of normal function, and "we th I v ? ^ * ~ issed In Conventi&n - ft(,- --:^4^^^xrxzzzzx::^v~zrr?r... |u t..n - ti n.r-*~-^mM+^u.mtr*-juna;'***x*-<*^ This is not a threat but it is so-called renovation of ?? n. .* w ' a promise, Mrs. Fulton this building, however, . , .? ... said in conclusion. renovat.on dad not Mr wm g prov.de any additional precinct chairman space or equipment. The - ? > * *? Happy Hill said /another t President said the area ^ ... . /Ti , ? . , meeting will De ?held on i needs a gymnasium and a xhursdav 21 < kitchen in the immediate ?T,. . Mm j i ? . , . , This time we will send J future and said that wT i ** u-- r , . , r Mr. Jamison a letter because of the lack of , requesting his presence i space e communi y s ag^ ^ affirmative t senior citizens club was Tir A , . ? , , . , . . response. We sent him a c forced to hold their f A. ? u , , , , copy of Mrs. Fulton s , meetings elsewhere dur- l j i *. u- i * .? speech and let him know . ing the summer. .r . ,. , . ij thgat we didn t get any "Maybe the city thinks answers. We. think it's ^ we are satisfied with what time the?city realized that ^ we have but this is not the we in Happy Hill care ^ case. We are asking that about our kids and our afction be taken now. Our community.'- B IpIANTS MAK ? >R. J AMES RANDALL WILDER: * HIGH BLACK MORTALITY RATES ... IN ftOfe annot but believe that child- people, ignore the teachings r en developed in immature of hygiene, because'they are s exual organs must be ignorant, and not because i ieficient in true^vital force they are black. They do not t ind energy. It is often notice- know the value of fresh air t ible that a child~ apparently and sunlight and cleanliness, ^ J trong and vigorous, may and hence are ignorant of the s lave but little power to resist fatality attached to the un- < iisease, or may even be holy trinity ? darkness, ?~ i trongly predisposed to some dampness and_dirt, which is P nfirmity." The colored responsible for the tubercu- 1 to men in the section under 4osis that is charged to their liscussion who become mo- "inherent tendencies." The hers, are usually multiporae pittance that is paid to the ong before the twenty-fifth Negro in the name of wages /ear. forces him to crowd together (5) The element of over- in narrow and ill-ventilated *ork must come in for its sleeping apartments, which is ncrement of responsibility in decidedly unheaJthful and he excessive mortality of the favors the spread of conta^egro. While deficiency in gious diseases. Thus smallrxercise favors a lack of pox spreads rapidly in a lutrition conducive to wast- Negro settlement, not beng in size, on the other hand cause they are Negroes, but oo much work favors hyper- because their manner of livrophy of vital organs and ing brings them into the most issue degeneration. The intimate contact with one iverage healthy man should another, so that whatever vork about eight hours per disease attacks one, rapidly lay and "should do work to spreads to all of the others he equivalent of 150 foot- who are not immune. ons daily." The American ?The lack of suitable cloth^^fero's working hours, as a in8 ar,d proper food, as a tile, are regulated, if at all, result of poverty, weakens >y Jjic exigencies of the work the Negro physically. The neo bo performed, as it ap- gleet of the bath through lack *>ears to an exacting em- of time, is responsible for clover ??????? (6^ The kind of work perrormed b> Negroes in the . . .. Southern cities includes all nenial occupations, which w w II II III 1^ \^V ronduce to accident and exposure The death-rate imong the laboring class of ?n\ community, irrespective ind independent of its nationality, is necessarily greater than that of the well- ~J odo leisure class. (7) The manner of living of TTC~ he majority of colored people in the cities of the South [\ ? which is sometimes ihr - orogeny of ignorance, but iftener the result of necessity - is ^responsible, in a large neasure, for their high morality They are crowded ogether on back streets, in ines and ill-smelling bot?ms, near ponds of stagnant ater. on the banks of rivers a - wherever their scanty leans consign them. The norant among them, like e ignorant among any other c I V J ; K^Bl En ^ ?HB Northwestern Bank celebrated the comi Tuesday. Bank employees in green "We A middle of the bank/ surrounded by campin there are more enjoyable ways to use m Winston Mutual Mt V * f The Board of Directors tary. He joined the )f Winston Mutual life company in 1961 as a insurance Company has General Sales Agent and" mnounced the appoint- is presently Manager of tient of the toliowirig^ Underwriting Departofficers effective June 20, ment He fa a graduate of \ji7*n* U r- A ,1 A&T State University in William H. Good all was Green8boro ^ resides at lamed Assistant Secre- 3Q1Q Butterfield Drive.' ary. He joined the rompany in 1974 *q ??.r "SKSE?" \ ng. He attended Louis- ^ i ille Municipal College in I'he Wln.ton-S-Jemt iOuisville, Kentucky and Chronlcle ,s Publlsh^d| Jorthwestern University every Thursday by the ) n Evanston, Illinois. Winston-Salem Chronicle I William F. Fulton was PubIishing Company, Inc. I tamed Assistant Secre- *?3 Building - 1021 W. 4th St. Mailing I Address P.O. Box 3154, c Winston-Salem, N.C.J 27102. Phone: 722-8624 7 ?1?, " - Second Class postage paic f at Winston-Salem, N.C ? ~ Subscription; ?8732 pet J year payable in advance I (N.C. sales tax included). ? Opinions expressed by j columnist in this newspa- j per do ? not _ necessaril> 4 nuch of the heart, kidney represent the policy of thiA ind skin diseases so prevalent Paper |j imong (belaboringclasses of Nat|ona, Advertl8lng ReK he colored people U takes 1# ime to keep clean, and the presenUtlve - Black Medial^ aborer has no leisure, lgnor- Inc. v ,nce of .he seriousness of PUBLICATION 4 :erta?n diseases like syphilis. x crofuta and rheumatism, has NO. 067910 >layed an important role in 1 ^? k he drama v eeee Key Questions: 1. M hat are three main Doctors find many corns anc issues raised in this article? calluses can be removed medi2. What does this article cally without surgery The suggest about our life situo- same medical ingredient docnon today? tors find so effective is hov J. How many words did available without prescription ir you look up in the diction- DERMA?SOFT* Creme Nc ary? (If we do not use a die- wonder this unique stainless, Mntixi nmM fnr penetrating creme softens tionary daily and for every and rem0ves corns and calluses J? whose FULL meaning so easily and comfortably Use we may not know, we cannot Dniy as directed Insist ?n grow individually and assure unique DERMA*SOFT Show the best use of our resources this ad to your pharmacist For for group freedom and a free booklet on corns, write to better America.) DERMA'SOFT. Box 4321 MY Greenwich. Conn 06830 ish Is EASY As Listening... A$H CALL on *>B80 v ?. ) f |? I ^TflTT*Wl|flWf IIWP'IWft MiPW" if mmm inff'l iH'i iT ~ ,'r^r''lTimnfffP riling of summer with a weinie roast gree" tee shirts served hot dogs in the g equipment and boats, reminders that oney than piling it in a vault. , - ' . ? ikes" Appointments Conrad J. Baran was - Marie H. Roseboro was - ? . n xr named Assistant Treasurnamed controller. He OL , , joined the company in er< e Jol"e e 1976 as AssistantXontroTr^"?PalIX "5T^A??,stant lerrhe is a graduate of Cas^ m Svhe 18 8 Syracuse University. He graduate of West Virginia i?. - .. . , ? State College in Institute, and his family resides at w Va (md regides at 303 Foxcroft Drive. 1432 Hattie Avenue. Personal Invitation j To visit Nottingham Studio and view the colorful 7 Mola's ? a primitive Indian Art done by the Cuna 7?_ Indians of Panama ? I ' These durable frame pieces of; art are both 7 exceptional and beautiful ? stop by today! I * * 2120 New Walkertown Road . V _ NOTTINGHAM STUDIo! PHOTOGRAPHY ) 2120 NEW WALKERTOWN ROAD J WINSTON-SALEM, NORTH CAROLINA 27101 S Phone 723-1210 ^ Invest in your Community... I Subscribe to the | ? ^ CHRONICLE I * Black Owned* I -Clip and mail I Winston-Salem Chronicle P O Box 3154 I Winston-Salem, N* C* 27102 I I | 1 year ...#8." I | 1 6 months.. I (payable in advance) Name i Address * - * f City & State Zip Code ?