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LEADER-TRIBUNE, Thursday, April 19, 1956
LOOKING
AHEAD
w GEORGE S. BENSON
k Pmidcat—Merdhif Col/efe
R Setref.Jrhvuet
COMMUNISM AND
RELIGION
Nothing the Communists
Dow doing should lead
to think that it is their
to tolerate the Christian
in the lands they control.
munism itself is based on a
entific explanation of the
and mankind. One of its funda
mental aims is to create a
world. If ft compromised to
extent with the Christian
it would be inviting the
tion of its whole structure
operation. It won’t do that.
Here are statements from
ficial Communist documents
lished in Moscow in recent
ti As tjie Party bases its
on scientific foundation, it
bound to oppose religion.”
68, Molodoi Bolshevig). “No
munist can believe in God
there can be no compromise on
matter. (Komsomolskaya
da, April 1961) "Truth lies in
Marx, Engels, Lenin, and
and nowhere else. , i
kaya Pravda, April 1951)
we suppressed the reactionary
clergy? Yes, we have. The
fortunate thing is that it has
been completely liquidated.”
69, Leninism, International Pub¬
lishers).
FROM AN EYE-WITNESS
These are the documentations.
J
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! For the se who cannot believe the
j Reds are genuinely anti-religious,
j I recommend Lieut. Thomas A.
! Dooley’s book “Deliver Us From
1 F>il,”(Farr§r, Straus and Cudahy,
j N. Y.) which was published in con
i densed form in the April Readers’
! Digest. A voung Navy doctor
stationed .in South Viet Nam when
the Communists took North Viet
j Nam, Lieut. Dcoley organized a
makeshift refugee camp and em
' ergency hospital for the wretched
Vietnamese who fled the horrible
consequences of Red victory in the
North. Hundreds of thousands es
caped after the Communist took
over. Lieut. Dooley’s camp helcf
12,000 refugees at one time last
spring.
In one illuminating section cf
his shocking story, medical doc¬
tor Dooley writes: "As the weeks
passed I found myself puzzled not
only by the growing number but
by the character of the Communist
atrocities. I was accustomed now
to patching up emasculated men,
t and women whose breasts had
been mutilated, and even little
children without fingers or hands.
But more and more I was learn¬
ing that these punishments were
linked to the refugees' belief in
God.”
HALTING PRAYER
He gives vivid details on the
cases of preachers, horribly tor¬
tured, who were brought down to
his medical station out of Com¬
munist Viet Nani under cover of
darkness. He gives details of
other fiendish anti-religious acts
of the Communists, "On (one)
gruesome day,” he relates, “there
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came to my hospital tent seven
little boys and an emaciated young
man who was barely conscious.
The children looked like Zombies.
Thick pus was running from
ears. Two of them still had queer
looking things protruding from
j their heads. Chopsticks!
! | “We pieced together the story.
1 i The young man was a school tea
I cher - The Communists haa caught
him leading his class in the
I Lord’s Prayer, They made him
| repeat it for them, line by line,
j and made a mockery of the words:
, (Then) Viet Minh guards held
two
a child by the arms, and another
grasped his head. Then the leader
rammed a chopstick deep into
each ear, splitting the canal and
shattering the inner ear.
TRUE NATURE
I • When ail seven children had
been ‘treated,’ the guards turned
to the teacher. They drew forth
his tongue with pinchers and
sawed it off with a blunt bay¬
onet. *• In Lieut. Dooley's im¬
provised hospital, the seven boys
and the teacher survived: “One
young man who never again would
pray aloud, and seven children
who would hear the Word of God
only in their hearts. 99
At another time, the young doc¬
tor was summoned to attend a
clergyman who had been brought
out of Comrfiunist Viet Nam on a
stretcher by members of his flock.
Lying on a straw mat was an old
man moaning in delirium,” Lieut.
Dooley relates. “I counted eight
swollen and badly infected
wounds encircling his skull. In
this instance Communist re-eduea-
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200 PERSONS STREET FORT VALLEY, GA.
$123-Mi!lion To
Qq IlltO Ga. Roads
Starting . July 1
ATLANTA (GPS)-Beginning
with the new fisca , year Ju , y , a
total of $123-million will be 'spent
on road construction in Georgia
during the ensuing 12 months, ac¬
cording to Goy. Marvin Griffin.
A breakdown of the annual al
lotment is as follows: State ap¬
propriation, $58-million; federal
funds, S20.5-mi!lion; grants to
counties, $9.3-mil!ion, and the Ru¬
ral Roads Authority’s program,
$35-million.
“This is by far the largest
amount of money ever made avail¬
able for road construction in a
comparable period for our state,”
Griffin said in addressing a recent
banquet sponsored by the Gines
ville and Hall County Chamber of
Commerce in honor of John E.
Quillian, of Gainesville, a member
of the State Highway Board.
ti We are proud of these big
plans for our Highway Depart
tion had consisted of tying /he
priest’s hands behind his back and
driving eight nails into his skull
to simulate the Crown of Thoms!”
This is the nature of Commun¬
ism. Those who accept Commun¬
ism must accept its evil nature,
for Communism and evil (as the
Christian world understands it)
are interwoven and inseparable.
“Our morality,” wrote Lenin, “is
entirely subordinated to the in¬
terests of the class struggle” to
conquer tHe world.
m « n t and we are proud-that we
have on the Highway Board a man
of such ;nt *X rit X> ability and far
sightedness as John Quillian.”
Contrasting the past with the
fH ' esent ’ the Governor said:
very many years ago many of
North Geor?ia ’ s most valuable
scenic attractions were inaccess
ible because of the last of modern
highways. Today there is hardly
a pait of this section of the state
thc-c cannot be reached easily and
safely over a modern highway.
“Because of the improvement in
j highways nerthern Georgia is
en
joying a substantial period of
prosperity. The development of
the broiler and Poultry industry
' vi-hich has been prenomenal and
Georgia now leads the nation in
this particular field. Its growth
was made partially because of
the improved roads and now high¬
ways built with the co-operation,
the wisdom and hard work of Mr.
Quillian.
“Let me add that our new rural
roads program for which about
$35-million will be available this
fiscal year will bring many new
roads of this class to Georgia.
Rural roads help the whole
munity where they serve.
"They enable the children to
reach school in all kinds of wea
ther. They allow the farmers to
go back and forth from their mar¬
ket towns and permit the people
to attend church services, enter¬
tainment programs and other
events under adverse weather con¬
ditions.
“Business firms also
greatly from the improved roads,
1 Gus Stark Named
1
j Georgia C Dil’CCtOr
IllSpeCtlOll 1 ^ DlV.
.
R f , l
Oepi. OI Georgia,
- Gus Stark of Monroe,
S } been named Director of the
)as
Factory Inspection Division and
Conciliator cf the Georgia De
, partment of Labor, The an
nouncement was made today by
Commissioner of Labor Ben T.
iHuiet, and is effective as of April
fi rs t_
A native of Walton Coupty, the
j new Director has spent many years
in public service. He served his
j home county as Tax Commisison
er f cr ig years and ,was a mem
ber of the Georgia. State Senate
j •o m the 5th District, 1949 50. He
has been with the Department of
Labor as Conciliator f&r the past
four years, and succeeds Mr. E. M.
Beaton, who returned to field
work of the Department.
Mr. Stark is widely known
throughout the State and is quite
active in civic and community af¬
fairs, and particularly interested
in all programs designed for the
betterment of the people as a
whole.
I married
Recently Mr. Stark was
; to the former Miss Emily Johnson
of Elberton.
In making the appointment, Mr.
both rural and trunk highways,
] The entire State of Georgia is
j prospering from the big program
now being carried out by the State
j Highway Department.’’
Legal Ad
CITATION
Peach County.
Whom it May Concern:
A. E. Arrows.nith, Jr., ha\
as Guardian of Mrs. Le:.a
and Mrs. Ruth A. Bass
applied for guardianship
the person and property of Mrs.
Lena Lexow, notice is hereby gir
that said application will be
heard at the next regular tern of
the Court of Ordinary for said
County, the same being held on
the first Monday in May, 1956.
Witness my hand and official
signature, this 9th day of April,
1956. B. A. Young, Ordnary,
apr 12-19-26; may 3
NOTICE
Mr. Bass and Mrs. Bream
cordially invite you
to
spend the day
(and $1.00)
at the daily
(except Sunday)
snatching party at
EVANS LAKE
You are requested to do your
best to relieve them of not more
than 10 young Bass and 25 young
Bream.
Invitation may be obtained at
A. J. EVANS MARKETING
AGENCY, Ine. (adv
Huiet commented, “Gus is a good
man and I feel that his 20 year
experience in dealing with the
public thoroughly qualifies him to
serve the people of Georgia in the
important position to which he has
been named.