C I J! I'i i 'i THE WAYNESVIUJ: MOUNT A! 'You Ought To Know My Doctor' Is Interesting Paper By Dr. Fred Brown Editor's Note The following - article was written by Dr. Fred F- Brown, well known Baptist pas ; tor of Knoxville. He has many friends in Haywood, as lie has preached in a number of pulpits In the countv. His tribute to the piedical profession is so interest ing that we are puhli-ihiug it in full. This article is not an attempt to j eulogize the medical profession 1 Members of Hie inedc.v.l profession, neither need nor de ne eulogies.! They would ie:.nl :iuh an t rt'orL from anyone. The message i- an expie-.uon of Bay sincere applet i.n ion ol a (ironp of men to whom 1 loot, with con fidence, a Kioiip i'i 11 whom 1 hold in the luetic-. - teem - our physicians YOU oiciu 10 KNOW MY Dot' I OK Somewhere 1 h.Ae read Hie -lory of a teen-age lo.. vho lived 111 a remote rural oinmuoitv . An ac cident had li t t ln::i with a ions injury to hi- spu: .111 iiijur.v at tended by uureiievid siilliiin".. The Hood t mi 111 1 v doctor told In- parellls of a i-elehralt d -nr. i on u: a distant city who could operate, relieve the .-ull't 1111. and nr.iclir.tl ly re-tore the hoy to iii.rt'i.-l li!e. Tin laa.ilv v. ,i- very poor. but nei .hbo.s m.ide ir. a purse -ullici-t-lit to provide tran-porlal ion. The local physician lelephonid the surj.'i on and w.i- told to -end the boy on then- would be no charge for his service. The boy made the journey to the distant city, and the delicate operation was successful. In due time the hoy returned to his home, Family and friends met him at the railroad station. As they drove home the family plied him with questions questions about his journey questions about his nurses questions about the hospi tal questions about the .surgeon When asked about the hospital the .,......,,. A 1 MR. AVERAGE GERMAN VOTER IN THE LIMELIGHT " 1 '" dVr fc- W ' -r5C; K.'3 1)K. 1 KID I'. 15KOWN hoy roplid: "It wa- wonderful, hid '.'ell cmsihi to M'l- 1:1.'. lloi'o.' '' !ie, a-ked about t tie nur-i - "'I hi v. . re U.! 1 ill i.i'.il cooil hill you on. lit to ei my doctor. Vea oeuiit to know my tloi tor.'" We ale passing throloih a period just now when some unkind and unjust statements are beiny made about the medical profession. Ke ctntly a prominent man speaking of the doctors of America used words such as' "sellish." "mercen ary." and other uncomplimeniary LEAVING A POLLING STATION in Frankfurt, Germany, Mr. Average German voter finds himself, after many ye, To hnpo X that reporters gather around him to check on his reactions. One thing was cerbain-he ilidn' vote fur the Communist Party ticket. Some 24,000,000 ballots were cat and the Union was well out in front. The Social Democrats were not far behind. (International Radwphoto) Letterheads If you haven't changed the appearance of your letterhead in the past ten years, it is time yon were tloini; so. With the use of modern type and engraving, we can design a letterhead that will be attractive and will attract the attention of all those to whom you write. The Mountaineer Main Street Phone 700 eims. 1; seems to -have become oiiielhju of an indoor sport in i ''am quarters to pu-h our doc-rr- ..round. To such an attitude ow.ird our phy: icians millions of is nply: "You ought to know my d.ocl or." The medical profession is an honorable profession. Its history of constructive, sacrificial service to sultering humanity answers all ad verse criticism. And the spirit of the physicians of the past the spirit of faithful, heroic, unselfish - rvice- is alive and manifest in die lives and practice of our American doctors today. All of us know that there are quacks and crooks amonK doctors just as there are quacks and crooks in any ;;roup. 1 make bold to assert, how ever, that no group in .society can l ive a heller account of its sit w ardship than the medical frater nity As a Rioup they represent thoroni'.h, scientific training, high standards of ethics, and steadfast loyally to their noble calling: "Healing, humanity's hurt." Personal Experience As I think of the great number of doctors whose knowledge and skill have brought me and ment hol s of my family through many seiious irises physicians repre senting surgery, internal medicine, orthopedics, neurology, urology, obstetrics, radiology, pediatrics, eye, eat . nose and throat and den tistry. 1 say of each of them: "You outfit to know my doctor." Some Observations A group of us from Knoxville have .-unimer cabins in a remote leeiiou ol the East Tennessee mountains, near the boundary of the tli eat Smoky Mountains Na tional Park While in our cabins I one summer some visiting in a home at the head of a mountain cove found a boy who was horribly club-footed. Immedi ately we called an orthopedic sur geon in Memphis, Tennessee, and asked if he could do anything for I he boy. Promptly Dr. Willis Campbell I call his name because he is now in the spirit world re plied: "Bring him to me." The boy was sent to Dr. Camp bell's Clinic. The feet were straightened, and after a few weeks he was returned to the little moun tain home wearing braces. When Ihe time came for the removal of the braces 1 took him to Memphis and left him at the clinic, telling him that I would call for hiin next day. When 1 went by for him the following morning he was in the lobby of the clinic. The braces had been removed and he was happy. 1 said to him, "We have a long, hard drive ahead of us and must get started." lie replied: "I want to see Dr. Campbell before I fo." I found the secretary and told her that the boy insisted on seeing Dr. Campbell. She went to the boy and told him that Dr. Campbell was operating and couldn't he disturb ed. Then, noting the look of dis appointment on his face, she said: "Why do you want to see Dr. Camp bell'.'" He replied: "I want to thank him for straightening mv feet." She threw her arms about himJ drawing mm to her, and said: bo on, boy, Dr. Campbell is as proud of those feet as you are." Thai hoy is now a school teacher. He and many, many others think of Dr. Willis Campbell with bound less devotion and gratitude as they unite in saying: "You ought to of our wives ( know my doctor Value comes from Volume Chevrolet offers you Ihe most value because Chevrolet builds the most trucks! I! yJ A ' L ? fe'll A-Hiff "Tm ""ift I Such incidents are being repeal ed across America every day. In every city, village, and coi.nl ry side of our nation these scenes are being re-enacted continuously. They are so familiar that they are commonplace. We have witnessed them so frequently that our eyes are blurred to the magnificent spirit which they represent. The circle of suffering is always changing, but it is always full. Those in that circle represent every age, color, creed, and siauon oi life. Our physicians spend their lives in that circle where pain and anxiety form an atmosphere that is heavy and tense. Calmly, intel ligently .courageously, they wage a truceless warfare with the grim, threatening figure of death. It would be timely and appropriate for the people 4f America to catch the spirit of the little Scotch com munity so beautifully pictured in Ian MacClaren's "Heside the Hon nie Briar Hush," and applaud our doctors. If the grateful voices of those in hospitals, clinics, and homes of suffering where faithful physicians quietly minister, were all blended together they would form a mighty chorus sounding across our nation lifting the refrain: "You ought to know my doctor." Paralyzed Veterans rut Back On Feet MINNEAPOLIS ( UP A couple of University of Minnesota medi cal scientists have treated paralyzed veterans, with rehabilitation re ported for three-fourths of them. Drs. A. B. Baker and Joe R. Brown summed, up in a Veterans Administration pamphlet their several years' experience at the Minneapolis veterans hospital. Chill VA medical director Dr. Paul I! Maptiusun .in a foreword. ,ii nibed .the report'as "one of the ino'l encouraging pieces of infor mation ever published by Ihe Vel ti.u Uhuii. titration." iiakti and Brown say that dur w a Iwo-aiid -a-half year period. uaiiont.'. were treated, wilh i;f.l hi log released to their hoineLi and '"ti considered to have completed ireallnelit. Sui.ie of the veteran; had been !,or.. iialiied as long as HO years. Oulv 10 per cent oi' those treated f.,ih-d lo ri spund in some way. Sour, were able lj walk aj".aiu while oljii i's wi re well eiiouyh lo woi k. lietoveiy time is longer for older oalicnt.; and tho e hh prolonged disabilities. liakcr and Brown said the peed for early treatment is indicated be cause the maximum benefit was attained by those who had shorter disability duration, wilh a v lu v in ; only a slight effect. The pair claimed that establish ment ol similar programs through out the nation would save more than $1,000, 000 in one hospital in Ihe first year alone. 'fhursdav if. I - 'e'H l I Lost In Air Crash v ) S RADIO operator aboard the Trans Ocean airliner that crashed into the sea oft the Irish coast, Herbert As bel. Coney Island, N, Y. (above) was reported one of nine persons' who lost their lives. Surface craft were said to have rescued 49 of the 58 persons aboard the plane, which was. en route from Rome to York. Most of the passenger vvtr Italian immigrants going to South America. (liitcn,U(,wu,i HOMErf ERMS See Our Want Ads For Bargains In the 19th Century ice from the United States was shipped to China and India. Inroll With 1 IIIIIIIIM:iiUMIiWlWINI Ullllli. Ill iimsiiilllliiiii tte, SEIIJ WkifJ ; pnoiie 1351 I eserve Uosnih m A mild winter in lf,!)l) canned a world-wide shortage of nalmal i and slimulaled deveh.pinenl of 1 maKing macnines. BENEFITS ARE NOT REDUCED FOR CHILDREN OR ELDERLY DEPENDENTS AGE LIMIT 1 DAY TO 80 YRS. GUAKANTI I'reviii vie va,.. ACCIDENTS-SICKNESS-Cfflfl INDIVIDUAL AM) FAMILY aJ LIBERAL CASH BENEFIT POLIO PROTECTION M PAYS IN FULL REf.AUnira OTHER INSURANCE YODI Hospital lloom, Operating limmi Amsli Medicines, Laboratory Kxpenx- and Ambl Surgeons l-ees for Operation'; Due In Sickness, t osts Only a few Cents Per M family. 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DErafeEDIJtKolOD To carry out findings of an Emergency Board appointed by the President of the United States under the National Railway Labor Act the nation's railroads necessarily agreed with the Non-Operating Railway Labor Unions to establish a 5-day-40-hour work week effective September 1, 1949. s . This will require the closing on Saturdays and Sundays of many freight stations and offices heretofore open to the public on the Southern as well as on all other railroads throughout the counfey so that employees generally may be given two consecutive days off each week. Under e settlement, the employees will receive for five days wor the equivalent of wages formerly paid for six days yw President Truman's Emergency Board points out that the shorter work week is in keeping with the increasing trenn in industry, banking and business generally. For the railroad industry, which must keep the train running day and night every day in the week, the cnan? Will create many difficult problems. The Southern, your whole-hearted co-operation and sympathetic un standing, pledges to make the changeover wM -possible. Incpnyeniencetp the RubUs"" SOUTHERN RAILWAYiSYSTEfA ' i ' ii i ii I IILiTMtia3a