Newspaper Page Text
PAGE POUR
THE BUTLER HERALD, BUTLER, GEORGIA, OCTOBER 28, 1943.
THE BUTLER HERALD
Entered at Postoffice at Butler.
Georpla as Mail Matter of
Second Class.
Chas. Benns Jr., Managing Editor
O. E. Cox, Ptiblisher & Bus. Mgr.
CALHOUN EDITOR DOES
SOME WISE THINKING
(Editor's Note: Thoughts ex
pressed by our good friend, J. Roy
McGinty in his personal column
in the Calhoun Times, are so in
accord with our own views that
THE COUNTRY EDITOR
OFFICIAL ORGAN TAYLOR CO. Ellis Arnall is going to entertain
By Edna Cain Daniel in
Quitman Free Press
The Georgia editor came down
to his office on Main Street
Thursday morning, lit the fire in
the office stove so the ink would
we "are taking"The’privilege of re- j run on the press. swept ^the floor,
producing his column in toto)
I am glad to known that Gov.
DEATH COMES TO ALL ALIKE
(Rev. J. L. Whitley, Mauk, Ga.)
I Cor. 15:24-25, “For he must
reign till he hath put all enemies
under his feet; the last enemy
that shall be destroyed is death.”
A simple way to look at death.
Death is an enemy. It is the
greatest enemy of man. Death is
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY
Average Weekly Circulation
Fifteen Hundred Copies
all the surviving Confederate vet
erans of the state who are able to
SUBSCRIPTION, $2.00 A YEAR
Established in 1879
in Atlanta tomorrow. There are
now only 20 of these old heroes
remaining alive in Georgia. One
doesn't have to be terribly old to
_ remember when the old veterans
held all the important public ol’-
rongratulations to the Clayton ficGS in the South, and there
Tribune for its splendid Library j wasn ‘t much use running against
! pasted some clippings from the
j dailies for copy and went up to’a hidden enemy to man. Those
the post office for the mail. There | who are living today don't know
were 1G weekly exchanges, some | how soon they may face death.
I dailies,and 10 pieces of mail such They don't know which way It
attend a dinner at the executive j as advice to farmers from the-will come as no man knows the
Department of Agriculture, the day nor the hour. This enemy
salvage drive, War Bond sales .comes to the young in the flower
food conservation and much more of life; it comes to the old in their!even in the conservative religious works in all kinds of na^iif” 1 * 16
... the editor wondering how 1 declining years. The enemy comes | circles where the writer himself the club known as Progr*’
COMMENTS ON HERE
AND HEREAFTER
(Bob Jones)
Our Lord warned the people of
WOE TO THE TIMID
By Eugene Anderson i n
The Macon Telegraph
In providing roosters for his t
His day against the leaven of the thousand hen* over at the pi
Pharisees, which was hypocrisy Island Red chicken farm i n p e
and self-righteousness; the leaven handle district of Taylor count •'
of the Sadducees which was false F. Parr says it is necessary y ’ ^
doctrine, and the leaven of Herod low for some Assassinations^Ti!'
u'hiph tunc u/orlrllinocc ariH rn. minute n ‘ f HP
which wp worldliness and po- minute a fowl or an
litical corruption. The same leaven shows that he is timid or “ a f - la|
of evil influence still works in the the others gang on him and w "
world. There are many people who after him until they can km kee - n
have a form of godliness but de- This is according to Darwin's "i' 1 "’
ny the power thereof. There is G f the survival of the fittest- -
quite a good .deal of Phariseeism, Mr. Parr thinb-e un 4
thinks the
tuuiuii of Sept. 16th.
: one of them for office. Just a
many people are employed to write , to us sometimes while we are at. moves. There is no such thing as a Farmers of Baldwin county
this free copy for his paper. jwork; when we are making our j self-righteous Christian. Our periments with plant life inci T'
He feels important totir.g so I greatest efforts; after we have righteousness is as filthy rags. a test of endurance under ; d
much mail past the Cash Drug made our greatest preparations. God has provided a righteousness conditions. Clover seeds ' v
where the townspeople gather. At I No man has been able to evade j which anyone may accept by sim- p i an ted on rugged and difr ^
few years ago an annual Confed-1 the office he opens up The Atlan- the enemy, death.
We as a human family
pie faith. This righteousness hillsides to test their strength•
malioc tho \riloct r\f cinnnrc nrn- n. _ . . . o L>
Congratulation to these three i e rate reunion was a big social I ,a Journal and is pleased to see
dignitaries whose birthdays were | acen t. When you remember that j bis paper quoted in ‘‘Cider From ..
celebrated last Thursday: Editor 1 it has been 78 years since the Civil | the Georgia Press.” He reads the , We have made so many things , false doctrine in our day. The
have | makes the vilest of sinners pre- if they were not able to"snrvi„ a, “
Cider From 1 made many wonderful inventions. isentable unto God. There is much h.,r.n«n , . vwe > 1
hardier variety was tried instead.
Ernest Camp, Hon. George Cox and War closed one who entered it at I editorial on “Uncle Sam, Adver-ijbat take the place of labor. We [virgin birth of Jesus, the vicari- down and^cannot hold heT ^
General Dwight Elsenhower. j 1hp beginning at the age of IS is 'User” about letting the Govern-, have devised many things that|ous, substitutional blood atone
against other cows in a
OWi)
drov
100 years old now. It's remarkable ment pay for its legitimate ad- are so beautiful We have devised, ment which He made on the those that are hardier and strong
oralc may be mu there are as many as 26 of vertising space to promote bond many things that are enormously cross, His bodily resurrection from Gr vvil] attack her as if t &
nr nmn/ran- nM veterans with us. Mav sales instead of sending him page strong. We have invented devices the dead, and salvation by grace out of her miserv . Thnsp ,“ e
The Germans’ mor
weakening, but their propagan- the old veterans with us. May
uists are holding up well. The OWI they live another 100 years!
reports that the recent broadcasts
from Berlin have employed 30 j was vvith deep rGgret that j
painless ways of describing a re- rcftd this morning . s Atlanta
rea ' ! Constitution that the son of my {-^“ dGr ‘ apd h ard e r to "be patriotic' thief and robber. When it lays its colleges. Worldliness has come
Think-incr annti thmmhts about old friend ’ D ^dloy Glass, Lieuton- that way He roads that Senator'icy hand on the hand of man it into our ecclesiastical churches
others k and Ravine eood thines ant Commandor Dudley Glass Jr , Bankhead intro duced the bill be- dispossesses him of things ma- like aflood of destruction. This
others and say ing good tilings wbo was ln the submarine service, raIIM bp . _
sending him page
advertisements to ask local busi- , )bat are extremely dangerous. We j through faith in H»s atoning blood
ness men to pay for. [have invented numerous useful | are being denied by ministers who cruel but true
He liked that idea because it articles. But we have not yet J stand in some of our church pul-
looked like the bank and the ! been able to invent anything that | pits and by teachers who teach in
lumber company was gettine! stop death. It comes as a i some of our
out of her misery. Those who toil
such stories admit that they are
so-called Christian
TWO IDEAS OF JAPAN
Our former Ambassador to Japan
Joseph C. Grew, has stated re-
wanted to help the i terially. It strips him of all his , flood has swept over many of our peatedly that the Japanese win
lnwfl rric mrrecilne a sour stomach iS mlsslng ' l *’f s not acquainted country‘weeklies and that Elmer j wealth. It lays aside all the aims! church altars and over many of JJght to the last man and that
louards correcting a smi ^ with young Dudley, but his father\ Dav j s head of OWI, feared the 1 he may have had. It takes all but the pews where even ‘‘official there si no way to defeat them ex-
' weeklies would collapse if the ,lis soul and leaves it homeless as members” sit and over the choir crept in a last-ditch fight.
Government gave and then tookl far as worldl Y home is con-, loft where people are supposed to |
about our neighbors will do more
than all the? Alka-Seltzer, Turns,
Sal Hepatica and Bicarbonate of
Soda put together.
and mother are among my favor
ite people, and I share their anx
iety during these hours of su
spense and uncertainty.
Another idea is expressed by j.
An aim Ln life is the only for
tune worth finding. And it is not Once again the “haves” have
to be found in foreign lands, but tr j ed to put over a sales tax on
in the heart itself. To be what you td e “have nots” and have been
are and to become what you are defeated in the attempt, if pres-
capablo of becoming is the only Grd indications are to be relied
end in life.—Robert Louis Steven- upon Like everybody else.' I do
son. : no t like taxes, and I certainly I
have no love for the income tax. 1
Messages, though it be only a But I don't have to pay an in-
uuvciilintriil gave anu uiuii iui"\ | ^ i * * 1 L ddh 0 ,
away advertising and that was too cerned - This soul has to go some- ; sing God's praises, and also over «. Powell, Shanghai newspaper
much power to" wield over thej vvhere as 5t is left homeless here ; some of the pulpits from which editor,
pow<
papers. He read that the advertis-
this world. Since
who was crippled by j apa .
this! God's Word is supposed to be nese tortue. Writing in Liberty
post card, from loved ones and come tax when I don't have any Confederale War . The combination
friends are most welcomed by our income, but I would have to pay linotype operatoI . foreman and
boys over seas. Let us not forget a sales tax whether 1 had any in- makGl(p m
£ the
.... , , , _. . * j, makeup man and job pressman " ~ ---
to remember them in our rush of come or not. I he income tax is came to thp finnr tn K £ p l( thp ;have never done anything yet that
other duties, none of which could the fairest method of
be of more importance than this taxes yet devised, and
collecting
it doesn't
need a sales tax as an aid.
, Prince Nesmith of the Pilgrims of
Faith should be printed ahead of
( ; the school grade cards and was
Week by week and day by day ( The da jj y newspapers are par- ! ment by a blast that swept jobs
the horrors of war and its result- Dcularlv irksome to me right at’out of his mind,
ant sadness is being brought near- tbp pieson t time. The reason for it j What's the matter
ing orders would be handed out Gnem y. death, hath robbed it of preached. There is much political Magazine, Mr. Powell says: “Let
by a committee in Washington in its ,lome > the first place the soul , corruption in our own land and in the Japs htink they are losing and
stead of bv a regular advertising! wil1 rea ch is the judgment, for it all the other nations of the world, they will quit trying.”
agency which would be content is written > “J 1 is appointed unto j We who call ourselves Christians The editor points out that the
x- -'A— • ’ ’ ’ ' ’ of Japanese people do not know that
the they have suffered any defeat,
of Once they do, he adds, and if the
l defeats are multiplied, it is likely
| that they will crumble and turn
be upon the leaders that they thought
light; and there was light.” God invincible
is the author of light. The devil is ° f ™urse, both Mr Powell and
the author of darkness. Man may : . Grcv 'L t " p . entlt - L 'd to their
with the lamp of human reason °P inians - There is no way to tell
discover in the field of research w lc ^ one 1S cor ^ ct ’ but \ as the
certain scientific truths, but no v ' ar deve i°P s in the Pacific the
man ever had a lamp of reason answei vvl11 come
lliat was not lighted by the match
with 15 per cent commission and
would not expect to be voted for.
He backed his chair away from
the old battered desk that had
been in the office ever since the
‘It is
man once to die and after death ! should beware of the leaven
the judgment.” The next place! the Pharisees, the leaven of
this soul w’ill see is its eternal | Sadducees, and the leaven
home. Will that home be rest or
will it be damnation?
I have thought many times of
the marvelous things the human
family has accomplished, but we
Herod.
“And God said, let there
uoor to see if the
i A, will destroy this enemy, the great-
programs promised Grand Noble . . , J „ .. & „ .
est robber of all the earth. But
thank God, He has a way, He has
;a plan, a salvation plan, that
will get us safely by this great
with these 1
er home to us.More recent of these j g tBc j r attitude toward a bill I people in Washington? Here this
esteemed friends, Mr. and
Dudley Glass of Atlanta.
Mis.
is the report of the missing in ac- pend j n g j n Congress which pro- [ paper's been running the past 67 : a loug e ro • - re > (ie
tion is the son of o^ur most highly v j dGS tbat the Government shall | years and it ain't never had a
pay the newspapers for advertising [ subsidy or a handout from Wash-
that the Government has been: ington and it has weathered two
demanding—and getting—without j wars and the Great Depression
paying the newspapers a dime. J expects to survive this war. What
The daily newspapers are de- ! kind of people do they think eoun-
nouncing this hill as a proposal to [ try editors are?
“subsidize” newspapers. Not that; This is a poor, respectable, in-
tho d rily newspapers do not want | dependent bill-paying paper w hich
Government advertising; oh, no! makes a fair living for five work-
They are already getting quite a! ing people and it never asked a
bit of it, and not refusing to take senator to help it although sen-
the Government's money for it ' ators have asked it to help them,
either. The fly in the ointment so Yessir, it's these people in Wash-
far as the daily newspapers are; ington who need help, says the
enemy. He most assuredly has
destroyed this enemy and put
him under His feet. Thank God,
... . ,L j He hears with ears that God gave lin ‘ c l L tc record, that of having only
wiil never come to us over there. tongue that heat wa vc-a sizzling, swel-
He has robbed our homes of our 1
of God's power. Everything that' * nd L.fP ea ^ ln ® wea ther
man has comes from God. He ^ er sa y s> Indications are
sees with eyes that God gave him. ^ bls summ er will establish a
. , . . . . , .God gave him. He walks on legs ^ Gr ' n S vvave that began early in
^ ! that God gave him. He thinks and continued far into Sep
People who have little, worry
because they haven't more.
People who have much, worry over
how they shall invest it so that
it will be secure. We believe the
ideal state is that in which a man
has enough to live on but not
enough to worry about.—Com
merce News.
Newly formed is the Associated
Poultry and Egg Industries, a na
tional organization comprising
nine co-operating groups. It will
tackle problems of price ceiling,
OPA regulations, rationing, feed
shortages and other headaches P. e „ ,° say
w'hich beset the industry from
hatchery to store counter.
concerned is that the bill provides! editor, who by that time had
that one half of the money must | worked himself into a fine frenzy
They need to run a country week
ly with two men in the shop and
the draft board after them. They
need to fit themselves into a tur
nip sallet and su'eet potato eco-
go to the weekly newspapers,
i "Leave it to the advertising cx-
where the money
shall be spent,” shout the dailies,
knowing that with their powerful
influence with the advertising. nomy, taking the same on sub-
Amusing typographical errors
creep into newspapers almost dai
ly, but this dilly appeared Sunday
in the Weekly Bulletin of the Pre»-
byterian Church at Sebring, Fla.,, ... .
“This is: eyes, for the weeklies to get a
agencies and "experts” they will
get practically all the money. It's
all right to pay the dailies for
Government advertising, but it
would be a terrible thing, in their
says a news dispatch:
National Bible Week—join with! dbne of tho money. I
• I hand in this fignt;
Christians all over the country in
leading Boob of Colossians.”
Veterans of the last war will
find it hard to believe, but the
Army lias conferred the Legion of
Merit medal on a mess sergeant,
“for exceptionally meritorious con
duct in the performance of eout-
standing service. Sgt. E. M. Dzuba
of Schenectady, N. Y., was cited
for his ingenuity in using left
overs in original recipes, so as to
reduce losses from food waste and
spoilage to a great extent.
Mrs. P. B. Trawick gives a
graphic account of the moving of
her newspaper plant—that of the
Commerce News—from one build
ing to another. Those who have
never had such experience do not
know the joy that is felt after the
.ii s over. We know how Sister
Trawick feels now and congratu
late her both in the task being
over and in producing an excellent
issue of her publication under
such conditions.
If and when the new postage
sale proposed by the Congressional
advisory staff is put into effect
they will be as follows: First
class—now 2c local and 3c out-cf
town, increased to 3c local and 4c
out-of-town; airmail—6c per ounce
to 10c; special delivery—now 16c
to 35c, to 12c to 40c; second class
mail—lc each two ounces, to lc
per ounce; third class mail—now
1.5c and 2c for each two ounces,
to 3c and 4c for each two ounces;
money orders—now 6e to 22c, to
10c to 37c; registered mail—now ers have found in him the Le^t
haven't
taken any hand in this
haven't sent a s ingle letter or
wire to Washington about it, be
cause I don't think it makes a
great deal of difference whether
the bill passes or not. But having
read several editorials in the daily
press during the past two days
“viewing with horror” this bill, I
am disgusted. Because I know
from reliable sources that if the
provisions guaranteeing half of
the money to weeklies was strick
en from the bill the dailies' asso
ciations would support it. And 1
know the dailies are already
gladly accepting Government
money for advertising and do not
consider that they are subsidized,
byit. Of course, the Governmen
should pay for newspaper space
which it needs, the same as it
,ays for any other commodLy.
\nd it needs this commodity i..
•very community in America, not
merely inside the circulation lim-
.s oi the daily newspapers.
Thanks to Tom Linder, Georgia's
handsome Commissioner of Agri
ulture, who Saturday paid ur.
.hat much delayed and eagerly
ooked forward to call. Taken b\
juch unaware and following a
lay of heavy toil and genuine
atigue we were unprepared to e..-
end him the cordial welcome
jtherwise reserved for him. Foi
all shortcoming an embarrass
ment displayed we trust you will
pardon us Brother Linder. Speak
ing for the genial Commissione.
of Agriculture, who is also editor
of the Market Bulletin, the farm
15c to $1 per article, to 20c to $1.35
insure mail—now 5c to 35c per
article, to 10c- to 70c; COD mail—
now 12c to $1.20 per article, to 24c
to $2.40.
friend since the days of the la
mented Tom Hudson and the
greatest foe of politicians sine,
iie days of the lamented Thomas
J. Watson.
scriptions.
They need to learn that the
country editor is rich, even if he
doesn't have much money. He's
got subscribers who have taken
the paper 40 years and come in to
argue politics with him. Some
who used to pay him in eggs
come in now and tender a $20 bill
and he is pleased, although em
barrassed to make change. He's
got plenty of elbow room and
plenty of the blue sky. No housing
shortages plagues, him, he has a
house and a fire on the hearth.
“Bud, you git on back there and
clean those spacebands, that ma
chine has got to last for the du
ration. And I’m going to write me
an editorial. I’m goin’ to say the
Government can do as it pleases
about paying for its advertising
and I'll do the same about print
ing it. I’m goin’ to say that when
they spray Washington to rid it cf
fearful folks with no survival
value there won’t be a single
honest-to-goodness country edito:
who will be perished out.”
Gems Of Thought
Peace is liberty in tranquility.—
Cicero.
You may either win your peace
or buy it; win it, by resistance to
evil; - buy it, by compromise with
evil.—John Ruskin.
Nothing can bring you peece
but yourself; nothing can bring
you peace but the triumph cf
principles. Emerson.
Peace and friendship with all
mankind is our wisest policy, and
I wish we may be permitted to
pursue it.—Thomas Jefferson.
as well as all of our earthly pos
sessions; but he most certainly
will stop at the grave of the
children of God. Jesus said as He
stood at the grave of Lazarus, “I
am the resurrection and the life;
he that liveth and believeth on
me shall never die; he that be
lieveth on me though he was dead
yet shall he live.”
So, my dear fellow-creatures, we
are facing this enemy in one of
the most crucial ages the world
has ever known; this enemy is on
every side of us; he is before us
though we may not realize it,
right at this very moment. lie is
going to take us some day. Let us
therefore, flee to the Cross of the
Christ who died for all that we
might live. Let us flee to the foun
tain of life to all mankind, and
drink of the water of everlasting
life.
This little message, simple as
it may be is written by an hum
ble servant of a great God. The
writer loves the souls of men; we
hope and pray that the s-.uis of
men may be s.cved.
ternber.”
Keep your refrigerator in good
repair, the service company's adv
advises. Who can tell; one of
these weeks you may have meat
to put in it.—Detroit News. Here's
hoping.
Ernest Camp, editor of the Wal
ton Tribune, Monroe, Ga., and
conductor of a most interesting
column in his own newspaper un
der the title “Tenting on the Old
Camp Ground,” records the fol
lowing: “I saw the sunrise Satur
day morning for the first time in
many moons, and it was a mag
nificent spectacle . . . These Octo
ber sunrises and sunsets are glo
rious beyond compare.” Agreeing
with Ernest as to the loveliness cf
the October sunrise we take him
one point further and invite him
to join us practically every morn
ing the year ’round as we listen
to the musical notes of the lark
in the far off woodlands,, the
awakening and responding call
of the fowl house coekerl and view
the beautiful gay eastern sky
line while we meditate on the fol
lowing lines from Bryan, natures
poet: “Is this the time to be cloudy
and sad, when our mother Natuie
laughs around; when even the
deep blue heavens look glad, and
gladness breathes from the bios
soming ground?”
LEGAL ARVERIISEMEHIS
APPLICATION FOR LETTERS
ADMINISTRATION
with a mind that God gave him.
The lamp of human reasoning is
of course, dimmed by the fall of
the race. If man had never sinned
his reasoning faculties would have
been better. Our intellectual hori
zon has been narrowed because of
our fallen state. If ama nis limit
ed by the light in his intellectual! ^
sky because of sin, how dark must GEORGIA—Taylor County:
be his spiritual sky. An atheist To All Whom It May Concern:
may discover that twice two is S. P. Edwards having in proper
four, but no atheist can light a for applied to me for Permanent
lamp bright enough to shine from Letters of Administration on the
earth to heaven and reveal the estate of Mrs. Luna Vann Edwards,
existence of God. Man may come late of said county, this is to cite
to the conclusion that there is a 011 and singular the creditors and
God, but no man can know God n ext of kin of said deceased to be
except the man to whom God re- an( J appear at my office within the
veals Himself. All the spiritual time allowed by law, and show
light that shines in the heart of cause, if any they can, why perma-
man is kindled by the Holy Spirit np nt administration should not he
when man in simple faith accepts granted to S. P. Edwards on said
the Lord Jesus Christ as his estate.
Saviour. Jesus talked about the i Witness my hand and official
signature, this 4th day of October,
1943.
J. R. LUNSFORD, Ordinary.
SHERIFF SALES
blind being leaders of the blind.
It is all right to ask the scientist
questions about material things,
but if we want to know about God
we have to go to the pure in heart
for Jesus said the pure in heart >
see God. The heart of man is made GEORGIA—Taylor County:
pure by the cleansing blood of There will be sold before tlw
the Lord Jesus Christ. There are e° urt house door in said county on
many poor, benighted, worldly- tbe First Tuesday in November,
wise scholars who are groping 1943, the same being November 2,
their way through this world in 1943, within the legal hours of sale
spiritual darkness. Such scholars t° the highest bidder for cash the
aer on their way to the “outer following described property to
ri arkness” of eternity “where there wit:
is weeping and wailing and One house and lot and one-half
gnashing of teeth.” There are of one-half acre of land lying be-
many lowly saints who have litt.e tween the colored cemetery and lot
worldly knowledge but who of land owned by Levi Baldwin
“walk in the light as He is in the and lot of land formerly owned by
light.” These lowly ones are on B. S. Battle. And bounded as foi-
their way to a holy city where the lows: On the south by land of
shadows never gather. Heaven is Dave McCrary and on the east by
a city of light because Jesus, who road leading from Butler to the
is Himself the source of all light, old R. M. Garrett place. Said
shines unhindered because no in- propertylevied upon and to be sold
habitant of that city prefers dark- as the property of Luella Stallings
ness to light. All citizens of that for the State and County Taxes for
city are sinless, blameless and the years 1938, 1939, 1940, 1C41
faultless forever in the eyes of an and 1942. Levy made and returned
infinitely Holy God. *to me by J. M. Downs, L. C.
— j This 6th day of October, 1943.
Its getting to the point now that J- M. BONE, Sherif,
when we ride along the road and
see a hog or a cow we look at
them with yearning instead of dis
gust as they block the highway.
Taylor County, Ga.
FOR DISMISSION
When shall all men's good be
each man's rule, and universal
peace like a shaft of light across
the land, and like a lane of beams
across the sea?- -Yennyson.
local markets each month in
which the letter “R” appears and
as for mullet we are accustom to
( i (
ABLETS. SALVE. NOSE DROPS
GEORGIA—Taylor County:
^ tJo""??;. T. Ingram, S teceS,
represents to the Court in his pe
tition duly filed and entered
,, -u record, that he has fully admin* 9 '
bnnnrf Sit rnfo 1 y the y fJP terod said estate: This is. therefor*
lound. But not so tins season. We to cite all perS01LS concerned, kin-
have not seen an oyster and as dred and cred p orSi t o show cause,
for mullet the very notable shcr.- if any they c£n> why said a dmin-
hv the fart t0 thJ S acco .V ntad istrator should not. be discharged
at practmaHy all from his adm i n istration, and re-
hlvflif th! h p u r he vvatcrs and ceive Letters of Dismission on the
ba>s of the Gulf Coast are bemg ^ Monday in Novemberi 1943
si upped to the i acme coast for tne This the 4th day of October, 1943.
use ot our aimed forces. j. r, LUNSFORD, Ordinary.