The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, April 01, 1949, Image 7
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THE NEWBERRY SUN, NEWBERRY, S. C.
WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS
Senate Debate-Curb Row Renewed; |
Rent Curb Bill Favors ‘Home Rule’;
Pit Walkout Slims Coal Stockpile
EDITOR'S NOTE: When opinions are expressed in these columns, they are those of
r estern Newspaper Union’s news analysts and not necessarily of this newspaper.)
FILIBUSTER:
Truce Called
ITie long, weary talkathon In the
U. S. senate was over — but the
battle over the proposed curb on
senate debate was by no means at
an end.
A compromise had been effected
with the aid of GOP support, but
the administration was committed
to oppose the peace formula which
had been adopted.
THE FILIBUSTER had con
tinued 15 days over a proposed
change in senate rules. There was
no doubt that southern senators,
iwho led the talkathon, had
emerged victorious. The talkfest
was staged to delay President Tru
man’s civil rights bill, and it had
done just that.
The provisions of the peace for
mula were:
1. Unlimited debate in the senate
would be permitted only upon a
motion to take up u rules change.
t. Debate on all other matters
could be curbed by the “yes” vote
of 64 of the chamber’s 96 members.
Majority leader Scott Lucas (D.,
HI.) attacked the compromise pro
posal as a “move to perpetuate the
filibuster.”
"Of course I’ll oppose it,” he
told newsmen. "It’s an effort to
take the senate back 40 years.”
MEANWHILE Truman Demo
crats were reported launching a
new parliamentary move to clamp
down on debate. The senate already
had overturned a ruling by Vice-
President Barkley that discussion
to take up the proposed rule change
could be ended if two-thirds of
those voting desired. The vote
over-ruling Barkley was 46 to 41.
Administration leaders hoped to
find some way to another ruling
and, if they could change as many
as three votes, a Barkley ruling
could be sustained.
Mr. Truman had proved he could
win the presidency without sup
port of the South, but it appeared
it would be difficult to put through
a legislative program without sup
port of southern senators.
JOHN L LEWIS:
Herald of Spring
To coal miners and coal-using in
dustrialists of the nation the in
fallible sign of spring is neither the
robin nor crocus—it is John L.
Lewis’ annual call for the miners
to leave the pits.
LEWIS CALLED, and the miners
heard and obeyed. More than 400,-
000 miners began a two-week lay
off, ordered, Lewis said, as a me
morial to miners killed and injured
last year.
Skeptics were caustic. They saw
another, more understandable rea
son for the work stoppage. The na
tion’s huge stockpile of coal, some
70 million tons, was looming too
large in the Lewis eye. Unless this
stockpile were materially decreased
soon, the president of the United
Mine Workers would be in a less
tenable bargaining position later
on.
Another reason advanced for the
layoff was miners’ opposition to the
appointment by President Truman
of Dr. James Boyd as head of the
U.S. bureau of mines. Advocates
of this idea suggested Lewis’ move
was intended to intimidate a sen
ate committee considering Boyd’s
appointment.
IF THAT WERE TRUE, the at
tempt was a dismal failure. On the
second day of the walkout, the sen
ate committee approved Boyd’s ap
pointment by a vote of 10 to 1—
admittedly to show Lewis that its
members would not be intimidated.
But the U.S. couldn't shrug off
the Lewis move. Already 11 rail
roads had ordered 57,425 workers
furloughed. Coal is a vital freight
item for these road*. The payroU
loss to the railroaders alone would
be at least five million dollars for
the two weeks of idleness.
THE MINERS themselves stood
to lose at least 68 million dollars
in wages. In two states steps were
taken to file unemployment com
pensation claims to take up the'
slack. But there was a big ques
tion whether the states would ap
prove the claims, because so many
states do not approve claims where
loss of employment is caused by
action of the claimant, himself —
such as might be ruled to be the
case in the voluntary walkout of
the miners. 1
Meanwhile most miners’ families
prepared for a slim Easter. There
would be little money to buy new
bonnets or dresses.
Bottoms Up!
Attorney Carl J. Stephens of
the Iowa farm bureau takas a
swig of hog cholera virus in house
of representatives in attempt to
show virus was not dangerous to
humans. A veterinarian declared
Stephens, after drinking the
virus, might be a cholera carrier
for at least 19 days.
RENT CONTROL:
Home Rule Favored
The administration’s legislative
program was bogging down at
every turn in congress.
Rent controls, vital to millions
of Americans, were being pro
longed, but not along lines desired
by President Truman and his ad
visers.
THE HOUSE had passed a rent
control measure, but fixed exten
sion at 15 months, instead of the
24 the administration wanted, and
provided for home-rule application,
a factor opposed by the administra
tion.
If the senate accepted this ver
sion of a rent control act, it would
be well for all concerned in the
nation to begin ascertaining views
of their local rent control boards,
for that’s where authority to relax
or continue rent controls would
rest.
Hie bill, passed by a vote of 261
to 153 is now in the hands of the
senate for action and administra
tion forces are reported ready to
renew their fight for more ade
quate rent curbs there. Action on
a senate version of rent controls
had been blocked by the filibuster.
CONCERNING local-option au
thority to do away with rent con
trols, Tighe Wood, federal rent
administrator, expressed the opin
ion it might not work out too badly.
He went as far as to say that “I
would be willing to bet that 90 per
cent of the 1,100 counties where we
have rent control will not lift rent
control under this amendment.”
Many Americans would wonder
about that, and hope the housing
chief was correct in his views. If
he were wrong, and the senate en
acted the house bill as drawn, a
grave housing emergency might be
created overnight.
Wood, however, saw two essen
tials lacking in the house bill. He
termed these as criminal penalties
for landlords overcharging on
rent, and authority to recontrol
apartments in residential hotels.
STAFF OF LIFE:
Cost Probe Due
The housewife who had read that
the price of wheat and flour had
gone down, but who found bread
prices remaining up, had company
if she had begun to puzzle about
the paradox.
The senate of the United States
was becoming interested, too, in
this situation. And, a broad senate
investigation into prices of bread—
along with other things — was
"ready to go,” according to Sena
tor Maybank (D., S.C.).
AS CHAIRMAN of the senate
banking committee, he called on
government agencies for latest data
on prices—especially the spread be
tween prices consumers pay and
those farmers get for their prod
ucts.
The chairman said the price in
vestigation wants to know:
Why are bread prices at their
level in view of the wheat and
flour price drops?
Why hasn’t lard, soap and short
ening prices fallen off more?
American housewives also would
like to have answers to those ques
tions.
"BIOLOGICAL WARFARE" BUGABOO
erms as Weapons Potent but Exaggerated
■. i ▲ _ i ^ V- — 4
ames Forrestal. retiring secre-
r of defense, has broken an of-
al three-year military silence on
use or discussion of the term
ological warfare" and in a for-
l statement characterized much
t has been written about the
ency of germ weapons as “exag-
ated, fantastic or unduly spec-
Forrestal advised the public that
“it would be folly to underestimata
the potentialities of biological war
fare” and he disclosed that re
search had shown that “germs or
their poisonous products could be
used effectively as weapons of
war.” At the same time he denied
the existence of any “biological
super-weapon.” The secretary’s
statement ended a secrecy curb.
RED TARGETS:
America First?
If Russia decided to launch a war
of aggression, where would the
Soviets strike first?
The Kiplinger magazine has pub
lished a thought-provoking article
on the subject.
Entitled “Where Would Russia
Strike?” the article draws these
conclusions:
THE UNITED STATES would be
the first target of the attacker, for
an enemy could not afford to let
the United States build up its tre
mendous war power after shooting
starts, as was done in the last war.
The initial attack would come by
air, probably at night, on a whole
sale scale, on many cities and cen
ters within the single night.
This attack most surely would be
by atomic bomb. Russia would not
attack the continental United States
Without it. At present the bomb is
believed to be a U. S. monopoly,
but probably won’t stay that way.
. Two kinds of targets in this coun
try would be attacked simultaneous
ly by the Russians. First, the air
bases from which we might launch
retaliatory attacks against the Rus
sians. Second, the places crucial to
U. S. production and mobilization.
ANY FUTURE WAR probably
can be won by the nation that
strikes a heavy blow first. The Unit
ed States, being a democracy, is
traditionally averse to striking
first. This conflict between tradi
tion and the hard facts of future
war might have to be resolved in
due course by our national leaders.
The article lists the following tar
get areas which would be given high
priority by the Russians:
Augusta, Me. — site of a B-36
base; Rapid City, S. D.—another
B-36 base; New York City—seven
A-bombs could wreck whole port
area; Washington, D.C.—one bomb
could demolish Pentagon, nation’s
military narve center; Sault Ste.
Marie, Mich.—demolition of canal
would impose tremendous extra
burden on nation’s railways; De
troit—because of war conversion
potential great automobile plants
would be targets; Chicago; Han
ford, Wash.; Los Alamos, N. M.—
atomic weapons centers; Oak
Ridge, Tenn.—sprawling atomic
energy plants here would be cer
tain target; eastern seaport cities
—for obvious reasons.
Safety First
Martin Larson, 41, truck driver
of St. Paul, Minn., has , been
named the trucking industry’s
“driver of the year.” Larson
was chosen because of an 18-year
record of driving without an ac
cident, combined with rescue of
a motorist pinned in an over
turned car in below-zero weather.
BEST DRESSED:
Among The Gentry
Had you the intangible faculty of
“ability to wear gaily-hued clothes,
plus knowledge of how to get the
‘most out of’ money spent on
clothing,” you might have wound
up among the “ten best dressed
men in America” as announced by
the Custom Tailors Guild of Amer
ica, Inc.
HOWEVER, the field was some
what narrowed so there was really
no cause for widespread anguish
or concern. After all, the tailors
couldn’t include everyone.
At any rate, here are the “10 best
dressed men in America” in 10
special fields of endeavor:
Government — Dean Acheson,
secretary of state; sports — Lou
Boudreau, shortstop - manager,
Cleveland Indians; comedy—Morey
Amsterdam; society—Charles A.
Munn, Sr.; screen—Clark Gable
music—Elliot Lawrence, orchestra
leader; education—Harold E. Stas-
sen, president of the University of
Pennsylvania; radio—Richard Koll-
mar, actor; theatre—Ray Bolger,
and business—Lawrence C. Gum-
binner, advertising agency head.
IT WAS NOTED in passing that
another front-runner, Mr. Harry S.
Truman, was barely nosed out by
Dean Acheson. It seems Secretary
Acheson’s nomination was based on
his “perfect choice of clothes to
reflect h i s agressiveness and
poise.”
However, there was a crumb for
Mr. Truman. He was second best.
Crime Record Up
J. Edgar Hoover, federal bureau
of investigation chief, reported there
were about three times as many
major crimes last year' as there
were minutes.
In a report on the nation’s 1948
crime record, he estimated there
were one million, 686,WO major law
violations — "a serious crime for
every 18.7 seconds.”
The total was 1.3 per cent greater
than that of 1947.
Wayne University
Records Lessons
For Use by Blind
DETROIT.—In a cramped little
room Donald Jenks, a Wayne uni
versity freshman, sits down before
a recording machine and begins
to read from a textbook. ^
At first he is hesitant, but soon,
following instructions from assist
ant librarian Ted Manheim, he is
reading with confidence. His voice
is grooved into a seven inch plastic
disk revolving before him.
Jenks is one of about 80 volun
teers helping out in Wayne’s pro
gram of recording textbooks for
blind students.
A few days later his record is
spinning on a turntable in the room
of Alfred Plaiz, a blind senior
studying history. Platz listens and
occasionally takes notes on a
Braille slate. The strange voice of
an unknown fellow student is read
ing his next day’s assignment to
him.
Besides Platz are other records
with other unknown voices. Each
one contains 14 minut?s of reading
on each side. No longer does the
blind student have to adjust his
studies to times when he can make
an appointment with a reader.
Everything is on the records be
side him to use as he sees fit.
Procedure Outlined
This, in brief, is how Wayne’s
textbook recording program works.
The records have suddenly given
six blind students at the university
a whole new approach to their
studies.
To make all this possible the
volunteer readers work tirelessly
in the university’s only available
space, a virtual closet adjoining
the library reading room. Every
day se /eral students give their
time so that their -voices will bring
knowledge to the few who cannot
see.
So far more than 2,200 pages
have been grooved on 175 disks.
Blind students all have portable
“talking book” record players
loaned by the government and
they need no extra equipment to
take advantage of the project.
“We are able to record almost
everything that’s asked for by the
blind students,” says Dr. G.
Flint Purdy, chief librarian.
Dr. Purdy envisions a whole li-
“Brary of recorded textbooks.
“We’re trying to look way
ahead,” he says. “We’re hoping
to build up a collection of elemen
tary texts that can be used over
and over.”
Students Enthusiastic
Platz expresses the blind stu
dents’ enthusiasm when he says:
“It’s much easier to study this
way. I don’t have to take so many
notes when I can play the records
over and over.”
The university has three record
ing machines, two on loan from the
county library. Records cost 11
cents apiece and the university
foots all the costs.
Manheim, who spends almost all
his time supervising the program,
plans to have Braille inscriptions
marked in the center of disks to
enable listeners to identify them
easily.
Librarian Purdy is interested in
seeing whether the project will en
courage more blind students to un
dertake college work. He says he
knows of no other school carrying
on a similar project.
“Students come back glowing
with delight after using the re
cords,” he says. “If the program
helps one intelligent blind student
who would not otherwise make the
grade get through school, then it
will be worth while.”
London Plans to Do Away
With Street Fire Alarms
LONDON. — Since boys will be
boys and pull street corner fire
alarms just for the fun of it, Lon
don is going to do away with them,
it was announced by the leader of
the London county council, I. J.
Hayward. Fire calls like those for
police and ambulance will be made
instead by any telephone.
“It was a shocking thing,” Hay
ward said ill a press conference,
“that from March 1 to Dec. 31 of
last year more than 75 per cent of
all fire calls given by fire alarms
should have been false.”
False alarms over the telephone,
he added, are less than a fifth of
those from street fire alarms.
Removal of the street alarms
will be gradual and will be accom
panied by an increase in street
telephone booths.
Bass Fiddle Player Ends
Door-Passage Problems
NEWARK, N. J. — Peter Rug
giero, 30, a professional bass fid
dle player, has been wrestling for
years with the problem of how to
carry his instrument through re
volving doors.
He came up with the solution, a
bull fiddle that shrinks. He worked
two and a half years to perfect
his invention.
The collapsible fiddle divides in
to three parts and is made of ply
wood. The sections fit together
with the fingerboard inside. Every
thing goes into a case about the
size of that used for a saxophone.
“Experts who have heard it
play,” Ruggiero said, “tell me it
sounds just the same as the stand
ard kind of bass fiddle."
Observing Rules Is 'Must'
When Home Cooks Make
Dishes of Cheese, Eggs
IF YOU’RE BUSY juggling menus
for Lent or simply trying to add
variety to your meals, then there’s
concrete help in today’s column of
recipes. Cheese,
eggs and. fish are
favorite foods
right now, and it’s
a wise idea to
know how to bring
out the best in
each food.
All these foods,
cheese, eggs and fish are economi
cal, which may be an incentive for
you to give them more than a pass
ing thought. However, they’re also
foods which are highly nourishing.
All three contain high quality pro
tein which you need for building
and repairing tissue.
Aside from other vitamins, cheese
furnishes calcium and riboflavin.
Eggs supply vitamin A and riboflav
in as well as iron. For these rea
sons, both foods should be included
in the daily diet.
THERE ARE MANY schools of
thought on how omelets should be
made, but the main thing is to have
them light.
A light touch is necessary in put
ting together an omelet and it
should be cooked until just done,
.then served at once. The omelet
A flavor triumph is this new
way with omelet which uses
broccoli in the fold and is ser
ved with a delightful cheese
sauce. There’s nourishment a-
plenty in this cheese, egg and
vegetable combination as well
'as variety for your menu plans.
recipe given here uses one of the
season’s most delicious green vege
tables and is made even more ap
pealing with cheese sauce. Serve
it with a vegetable juice cocktail,
hot rolls snd relishes and a simple
fruit .dessert, and you have a meal
you’ll be proud to serve anyone.
Broccoli Omelet
(Serves 6)
6 eggs
S tablespoons milk
% teaspoon salt
I tablespoon butter %
1 cup hot, chopped steamed
broccoli
% pound American Cheddar
cheese
H cup milk
Whole heads of cooked broc
coli.
Beat the egg yolks until light. Add
the milk and salt, then fold in stif
fly beaten egg whites. Pour into a
skillet in which butter has been
melted. Cook slowly until puffed and
lightly browned on the under side.
Place in a slow (300°) oven for a
few minutes to dry the top. Spread
half of the omelet with hot, choppfed
broccoli, fold the other half over
it and turn onto a platter.
Melt cheese in top of double boil
er. Add the milk, stirring constant
ly until sauce is smooth. Garnish
the omelet with whole heads of hot,
cooked broccoli and serve with hot
cheese sauce.
YOU’LL FIND THESE supper
rolls quick to fix, and an excellent,
nourishing way to solve a meal
problem:
Lenten Supper Rolls
(Serves 6-8)
1 pound grated American cheese
Small bottle of stuffed olives
% cup butte' or substitute
H cup finely chopped green pep
per
% cup minced onion
1 (8-ounce) can tomato sauce
8 hard rolls
Mix cheese, sliced olives, butter,
green pepper and onion. Blend in
canned tomato sauce. Cut off ends
of rolls and hollow them out. Butter
insides of crust and stuff with
cheese filling. Replace ends of rolls
and wrap each roll in waxed paper,
twisting ends to hold paper tight.
LYNN CHAMBERS’ MENU
•Lenten Baked Beans
Molded Fruit Salad
Cloverleaf Rolls
Chocolate Cake with Caramel
Icing
Beverage
•Recipe Given
Bake in a slow (250- to 300*) for
30-35 minutes.
Here’s another quickie for a meat
less luncheon or supper dish:
Lenten Broils
(SerVes 3-4)
1 tablespoon butter
1 tablespoon flour
H cup canned tomato sauce
Salt and pepper
K cup grated American cheese
1 cup flaked tuna fish
% teaspoon tabasco sauce
Melt butter, remove from range,
stir in flour to make a paste. Add
canned tomato sauce gradually,
stirring until smooth. Cook until
thickened, stirring constantly. Add
remaining ingredients and blend.
Spread on slices of bread and place
under broiler until golden brown
and bubbly. Garnish with a sprig
of watercress.
• • •
CHEESE AND POTATOES are
two foods that combine naturally to
make a pleasing flavorsome dish.
This souffle may be baked in in
dividual dishes or
in one large cas
serole. For a
meatless meal,
serve it with as
paragus tips in
drawn • butter
sauce, minted
carrots and
creamed onions.
It may also be
served very nicely with a roast leg
of lamb in place of au gratin po
tatoes.
Potato and Cheese Souffle
(Serves 6)
1 tablespoon butter
1 tablespoon flour
H cup milk
1 cup grated or shredded
cheese
1 tablespoon grated onion
H teaspoon salt
Dash of pepper
2 cups riced potatoes
3 egg yolks
3 egg whites
Melt butter, add flour and blend.
Add milk and cook, stirring con
stantly, until thick. Add cheese and
seasonings and cook over very low
heat until cheese is melted. Add po
tatoes and well beaten egg yolks.
Fold in stiffly beaten whites. Turn
into a large or into individual cas-
Light-as-a-feather cheese and
potato souffle is an ideal way to
serve the family more milk, for
cheese is a concentrated form
of milk. It’s delicious as a lun
cheon dish or a supper dish with
a meatless meal.
seroles which have been buttered
and bake in a moderately (325'’)
slow oven for 40 to 60 minutes.
■ BAKED BEANS,
prepared as they
are in the follow
ing recipe, are
tasty and tilling,
guaranteed t o
take the edge off
sharp appetites.
•Lenten Baked Beans
(Serves 4-6)
% cup minced onion
1H cups minced green pepper
4 tablespoons fat or salad oD
4 cups codked or canned baked
beans
14 cup chili sauce
% cup grated American cheese
% cup buttered bread crumbs
Saute onion and green pepper in
fat until tender. Add beans and ar
range in a greased casserole, alter
nating layers of the beans with
cheese. Top with crumbs. Bake in a
hot (400°) oven for 30 minutes.
LYNN SAYS:
Here are Facts
About Yeast Breads
It’s important to use all-purpose
flour in making bread and rolls with
yeast because this contains gluten.
Cake flours are short on gluten and
do not make good bread with yeast.
When the temperature goes higher
than 88°, the heat may easily kill
the action of the yeast.
Mix finely chopped, hard-cooked
eggs with cream cheese and spread
on toast. Broil until slightly bubbly
and serve with bacon strips.
When you ready the dough for
rising, grease the top of it lightly
with butter, fat f or salad oil, and
cover with a clean towel.
Light greasing helps prevent a
crust from forming on the dough.
The towel prevents dust from com
ing in contact with the bread.
Bread and rolls should be re
moved from their pans immediate
ly after baking so they will not
steam and become soggy.
If you like a soft crust on rolls,
brush them with melted butter U
soon as you finish baking.
i> 1 bund«y School Lessons
SCRIPTURE: Mark 8:27—0:1. 31-34;
Luke 9:28-36, 51.
DEVOTIONAL READING: Philippiani
2:5-11.
Trail of The Cross
Lesson for April 3, 1949
CLASSIFIED,
department^
BUSINESS & INVEST. OPPOB.
LADIES: Sell your crochet, embroidery and
fancy work. Three methods. Sells every
thing. Send $1.00 for details. FLORENCE
MONER, R.F.D. #1, Dunkirk. Ohie.
INVESTOR
Business property Leased and producing
better than 12%. Located in fast-growing
Fort Lauderdale. A real investment at
$2,000 cash. Write
P. O. BOX 588 - MIAMI, FLORIDA.
DONUT MFG. BUSINESS IN ST. PET*.
Wholesale route. Established, equipped.
Fine for couple. Sacrifice for $5900 due to
interests in North. ^
ROGERS. P. O. Box 83 - Gnlfport, Fla.
HAY. GRAIN, FEED
Dr. Foreman '
T HE TURNING-POINT In Jesu*
career was dramatic. But the
few friends who were present did
not then realize what it meant. On
a vacation journey,
Jesus put to his
most intimate
friends this ques
tion: “Who do men
say that I am?”
Peter’s answer,
“Thou art the
Christ,” may sound
obvious to us, but
was not obvious
then.
It was sensational
so much so that Jesus did not want
the publicity that would come to
him if that name “Christ” were free
ly circulated. For the word “Christ”
meant nothing less than “King.” To
the Romans it would sound like trea
son; but to the Jews it would sound
like Judgment Day.
When Peter said, “You are
the Christ,” he was implying
also: “You are Immortal. You
are the coming conqueror of the
world. You are not in the same
class with any other man. Yon
will do for mankind what no
other hero has ever done.”
...
God’s View and the Devil’s
O N ALL THAT glowing devotion
Jesus’ next announcement fell
like icy rain. In the ears of those
friends of his it sounded like the
bell of death. Never before had
Jusus told them anything like this,
and they must have found it hard to
believe. For he had not a word
about a throne, nothing about suc
cess, nothing about mastering the
world. Quite the contrary. He must
“suffer many things ... be rejected
. . . be killed.” If they heard the
words “rise again” too, the wor<ls
made no impression.
For Jesus had announced what to
them seemed impossible, absurd:
He, the Christ, would be killed!
Small wonder that Peter broke out—
No, No! But Jesus would not com
promise. He even called Peter
“Satan” for thinking as he did.
The Christain chnrch agrees
with Jesus, not with Peter. We
realize today, as Peter himself
did afterwards, what the Cross
of Christ means.
Buddha, founder of a very differ
ent religion, died in old age of over
eating. Can you imagine Jesus do
ing ^hat? Suppose Jesus had taken
Peter’s advice and made arrange
ments to retire comfortably where
he would never see a cross? Then
we never should have heard of him.
He would not have been worth hear
ing from.
+ • *
One Cross is Not Enough
Y ES, WE KNOW now that the
Cross of Christ is important.
But we are a good deal like Peter,
after all. For we do not listen to
what we do not like to hear. And
the next words of Jesus, on that his
toric occasion, must have sounded
then as they do now, most chilling
of all. “Whosoever would come
after me, let him take his own cross
and follow me.” In Jesus’ time
no one was ever seen carrying a
cross who was not already under
sentence of death and on his way to
be executed.
Translated Into modern terms,
what Jesus said would sound as
horrible as this: Any man who
wishes to follow me must take
his seat on the electric chair
. . . must take his place in the
lethal chamber . , . must put his
neck In a noose . . . and follow
me.
One cross Is not enough. -There
must be other crosses. My road is
a death-march. I want for my fol
lowers only those who are willing
to take the same trail.
Trail of the Cross
S UCH WORDS sounded harsh then;
they do still. But in the light
of the centuries, we can see what
Jesus meant, better than that little
band of frightened men around Je
sus who did not want to hear the
words “suffer . . . die.” Jesus was
not advocating pain for pain’s sake.
Why did Jesus set his own
face toward the cross? .The
Christian answer is. He did it—
for others. Now what is wrong
with the world today? It isn’t
that we don’t wish our neigh
bors well; but the troube is, we
don’t want to be bothered, our
good-will is too tender to stand
any strain, we will do anything
for other people provided It
doesn’t hurt.
But the world can be saved only
as men and women imitate and
multiply the spirit of the crucified
Christ.
(Copyright by the International Coun
cil of Religious Education on behalf of
40 Protestant denominations Release*
by WNU Features.
FEED FOR SALE, baled peanut hay, $17.00
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62 Laurel Street - Manchester. N. *
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WNU—7
U—49
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