Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 April 1951 — Page 8
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TUESDAY, APR. 24, 1951
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Maijerity of Human Race Is in Need
CHAPTER THREE By FRANK C. LAUBACH BUSINESSMEN are always on. the alert for opportunities. I will try to talk their language. The most stupendous opportunity to meet a need began just after the first World War, and it gets bigger and better every year. It is new and it includes four-fifths of the world. This opportunity is due to the titanic efforts of the hungry,
destitute masses of Asia, Africa, Latin America, and Europe to escape from their misery. They were in despair, but now they are making up their minds that they will come up—or blow . up the world. They are des-
| perate, grim, irresistible.
Our opportunity is to help
| them up. Our doom is to seem
| United
to block their path. That is the new immense crisis, involving four-fifths of the world. " s 8 THAT RISING tide is so awful that all other things that go with that tide will also rise, or be deluged if they try to go against it. This is true of the Nations, democracy, Communism, education, industry, the press and all armies. I had nothing to do with starting this world upheaval. I did not encourage it—but I saw it. Anybody but a blind man would see it if he worked’ among these masses in more than ‘seventy countries, as I have done. » n ” THIS NEW THING that took birth after the first World War is not sullen despair. It is sullen, but it is not despair; it is grim purpose to come up out of misery. Let us get clearly in_mind how many people we are talking about, and where they are. Out of the 2200 million people in the world, 1700 million are usually in debt all of their lives. They are in want, more or less oppressed and exploited, and increasingly unhappy and determined to be free from want. They are not in the United States, except a million or two migrant workers and many of the Negroes. They are not in Canada, the United Kingdom, or in the Scandinavian countries. But in all the rest of the world there are multitudes dissatisfied and groping for some way up and out of the dark drudgery and pain of empty living. s s 2 WHAT caused this tremen-
| dous change from sullen hope-
lessness to grim resolve? A great many factors. The first was the teachings of Jesus, especially the gospel of Luke and the companion Book of Acts. Here was ‘“‘good
| news for the poor, release to | the captives, liberty to those
who are oppressed, sight to the
| blind.”
For all these years missionaries have been spreading this
| gospel of hope, and even th6ugh | they were not stirrers up of the
| people,
the Bible was. The Bible is dynamite, and it is the
| most widely sold book of all
time. ” » s
BUT THE THING which has really broken the masses loose
| from their moorings in the re-
| network
tarded areas is the vast new of communications. They got acquainted with cars, airplanes, motion pictures and phonographs, swank homes, business enterprises, drug stores
| NEVER BOUGHT STOCKS BEFORE... HOW DO | GO ABOUT IT ?
Can | choose any broker | want?
You certainly can. Member firms
New York Stock Exchange have 1,600
offices in 396 cities.
Suppose | have only $500 to invest?
Here are some questions that people ask:
of the
one per cent.
Whether you have $500 or $5,000 to invest,
you will get courteous. intelligent at-
tention. Handling orders for a few
or hundreds is the day-to-day business of
member firms of the Exchange.
Will | be high-pressured? Helping people invest their money is a serious business. The broker’s job is to help you —not to high-pressure you—and that goes even if you just want to talk things over.
How much willithebroker charge me ?
shares
Once you've decided why you want to invest — considered the risks as well as the rewards—you’ll probably have specific questions of your own. Your questions will be answered simply and directly — and without charge—at any member firm of the New York Stock Exchange.
: Member Firms of the
A. G. Becker & Co. 1117-1119 Circle Tower Bldg.
Hemphill, Noyes, F. 210 Merchants Bank Bldg.
Merrill Lynch, Pierce,
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S. Moseley & Co.
1020 Circle Tower Bldg.
Nothing for information or advice. If you decide to invest, he will charge you a commission based on the price and number of shares you order. The average commission on the great majority of stock transactions on the Exchange is about
Are women customers welcome in a brokerage office? You can count on it. Women are important investors.
David A. Noyes & Co. Board of Trade Bldg., Rm. 716
Themson & McKinnon 5 E. Market St.
Lg
Frank C. Laubach is a worldfamous missionary whose “Each one teach one” educational program has been adopted in 63 countries. As foreign representative of the National Council of Churches of Christ, U. 8S. A, he has taught more than sixty million illiterates to read their own language.
and the sewing machine always out in front. These commodities produced in the hungry masses a great envy and a great longing to be like “millionaires,” a great longing to better the condition of their children, to rise out of their wretched hovels to the new level that they saw in foreigners. This turn took a sudden rise in 1920 and it has been rising ever since, with evergreater momentum.
n ” » IT WAS at this time that communism came upon the scene in Russia, adopting the
philosophy and program Af | Marxian Socialism. | When the Communists set |
out to conquer the earth, they
world, the more invincible it becomes! w . ~ RUSSIA, for instance, is trying frantically to keep us split from China, excellent reason why we should refuse to be split from China! We need China, and China needs us. When 1 said this in a western college, a Chinese professor stood up and said: “This man knows the truth, The Chinese peasants are not going Communist, for they do not know what communism is.
at once saw their opportunity | A
in this stupendous new determination of the hungry majority of the world to come up out of their misery. However, date, we still can arrest the initiative from the Reds and call the plays! America could do that with an all-out drive to help the hungry people of the world out of their misery, finding out what they need and
giving it to them and asking
nothing in return. That would be doing what the Communists promise to do. The weapon of selfless kindness need not be concealed. The clearer it is seen by the
even at this late |
It's a big, pastel color Cannon face | cloth! Hurry — get yours today!
and that is one |
All they know is they are hungry and that the Communists promise to give them land and to fill their stomachs. They are hot Communists; they are come-up-ists.”
The American representative
in the United Nations, Ambassador Warren Austin, protested our friendship for China, and mentioned our contribution in schools and hospitals and in
TUESDAY, APR. 24, 1951
other forms of missionary service in China. How we wish that contribution were a hune
dred times greater! (Copyright, 1951, by
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