SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1945
"Next. Door” By ted shearer
THE CAROLINIAN
JOHNSTON COUNTY
NEWS
iic-iuy biiiitii,
luiics 1 wunuer
tlie boys morale."
they realize the job we’re doing on
Lest We Forget w. l. Green*
The problem of what to do
about organizing ourselves for the
pcsi'War adjustments which must
be made is unporiani. One of the
untoriunalc thmgs Uiat could hap*
pen would be the organization ol
several weak local organizations
upon the advice of politicians and
self seekers without the courage
to gel into something really pro
gressive. We have patterns set
lor progress in some good strong
oioSnizations of national scope.
The NAACP, The Labor Unions,
Tile Local Political Paiiy Orgam-
zations, and the National Frater
nal Orders oifor real opportunity
lor linking up with and suppori-
ing strong forces geared to pro-
Business organizations are neces
sary to strong community partici
pation in the national pixigrams
of a progressive nature. Local Or
ganizations which are designed to
appease local prejudice, newly
organized to avoid the criticism
of belonging to a progressive na
tional group which counteracts
local prejudices need careful
checking. The politicians of the
South are noted for encouraging
cc‘lored prople to ‘have your own
organization" free from meddling
■‘outsiders’’. While the truth is
tliat no American citizen can be
rightly considered an outsider
anywhere in the United States.
Too lonfl have wo had a_Dne-sidCfLA
SELMA
BY CA-niERINE LASSITER
Sgt. Russell Davis uf Tuskegee,
Ala., IS vi.sitii.g his wife, Mrs. E.
Reid Davis.
Miss Catherinea Lassiter and
Miss Annie McLaughlin spent the
week ei d ir Fayetteville.
, Arthur Bell of U. S. Navy who
has served overseas, has returned
nonio for a 3o day furlough. He is
: visiting his sister. Miss M. £. Belie
and aunt. Miss Mane Uampbelle.
Mr. John Thomas Edward Reid
, and Annie Freeman are ill at then
nimics.
Alias Mildied M. Belle visited her
. aunt, Aliss Mane Campbell over the
week end.
Funeral ritcs were held lor Rev.
‘ Li Vi Ci.irk whu succumbed at Uie
non e of his daughter. Mrs. Augusta
Bradshaw, recently.
Miss Lettie liray Lee, of White
‘ Plains. N. Y. IS visiting her mother,
Mrs. D. J. Lee
Mis. E. G. Godsdew ^pelll the
! Week end in Greensboro.
H.-rman Eatman, formerly of the
>llth grade, was inducted into the
Aiiny and is now stationed at Ft
McClellan, Ala.
'Hie Evening Star class of the
Flit Baptist Church iSunday
Sciiniil Class) organized fur the
>ea.' Under direction of Mrs Marie
EVcrttle, the club plans u wonder
ful year. Miss Suiluto Belle is seC-
reary: Mrs Lillian Taylor is assis
tant secretary, Mi. M. L Wilson,
principal of the Richard B Harri-
. 011 School, here is serving as Sup
erintendent (if Hie Sunday School.
The Young People’s Chuich club.
First Baptist Church, has been vr-ij"'',', iJt.V,.|„ber
r.nizPd under the leadership ofj2y
Miss Asia Townepseu.
Mrs J M Haskins, music teacher,
was called home because of the
death of her father,
Our observance of Negro History
Jaa West bouUi
an aucuuon six
niomns to tlu- reinuuniig teiUi oi a
z inoniii senienec, imposuu xii juiic.
tf-ft lo uc ' sei\cu out at me uouii-
ly iioiite wneii nv was lounu guii-
ly or escupiiig irom u>c nome in
oepiember.
aiiiiin bald that he went home
uL-cjuse of nis wue's illness, lutu
aiu-r Having siayea mere lor n
hile. was "alruid lo go back.'
Jonn E. Dickens ol -IZb South Mc
Dowell biteei, entcreb a piea ot
guilty lo a ctiarge ol assault and bal-
y on hib wue. Mis. Bertha Dick-
s, and was seiiiencc-d to iz iiionib
Uic- roads .siispenueo on good ue-
havior and on condiiiun that he
support Ills wiie and three children.
bvVviiieen-year-old John McEach-
en, ahas John McLean, 'iZZ Brancn
bii«.et, was sentenced to one year
on tne roads upon his convicUuQ in
a cube charging hmi with assault
and Laiiery on Miss Hattie Murray
of 32(1 East Cabarrus Street.
.VicEachen was acnuited. because
of insultic’uiil evidence, of a ciiaige
Oi being a public- lunsaiicc and an-
oihei ciiaige ol escaping liom the
County Hume.
t-iaiik Smith ol •! biadcii bUed
was senleiiced this week ui City
Louii tii a total of four yeais on
I the roads when he was convicted
I three charges of larceny of clothing
! Horn the Vogue Clothing Company
where he was employed a; ' —
With The TaR
Heels In Service
ucixutmy hoousajul-
CU AIaLi XlcUU
Pictured above is Pfc. James C.
Wilson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Har
vey Whittey, stationed somewhere
in India. He is the husband of
Mrs. Agnes Wilson and is a form
er resident of Smitbfield
ter those planes. Working from
oawn to oara in water and mud
tnai sucaea me suoes on muU'
xeet at ever step, may easea mem
out, genuy nursing mem men oy
'men wtm uopmg against nope umi
tj^- iurming gear wouiu Stand mu
terruic suram.
in me meantime British engin
eers Were preparing a secuou oi
runway t^nuut oa ie«t wine aiui
ii,auu leet long lor me evacuauon.
Briusn piiois were sianumg oy
wim aii me cnaracteiisuc traits
01 a brand new lamer in a ma
ternity nospiiai. Ground mccnaii-
ics stood around nres at me end
01 tne improvised taae>ou strip
waitmg lor tne pianes ior a iasi
minute cneck up ana to oram as
muen gasoline irom tnem as
would be unnecessary lor me trip.
Tnat 3,000 leet was extremely
snort lor the skimpy winged
lighters and every surplus ounce
meant me dmerence between
success and iaiiure.
it was ntaoinaung tO watCh thOSe
engineers baoymg the pianes not
ol the mud and dragging mem to
tiie take-olf point wnere the
ground mecnames would swarm !
' aii over th*MT> nko a bunch ol ang*
w.—A iiiMii acu-
auol
struck uy tnt
b au yAiUd, oiiu
wAoiiiUiauou UiAwioseu a uoiv Ui
ouiie 0X10 icil lop uoiie uxoa&ii ohu
op cut.
rue injured man ol nght brown
.u.iipxeAxoil u.eu »uUU.xUji aixu Was
svUb oy me lamoou uirioxau, to
c.rurt:pa r unerax noiue on Cui-
ui'tam bireet.
beniue tiam is dhot By
uock A. baroner
FaycileviUe, N. C.—On Monday,
reo. am, in me axieinuun eeiuue
nam, age 40, Ol tixS nowan bi.. wax
snot in me rigni leg uy Dock An-
inony Garaner oi 4is Aliens Alley,
m whose nome Ham was visiung.
Mr. Ham was sani to Hignamitb
ixvspiut wnere a severea lemurai
;cry was noted.
Gardner, wno iired the shot, told
xtixs lam Ucgr ui jauuaxy, «•««,■
CXUXS.X XV. XVM1UA.W
31( try, XX4Va4aa k>kx««v,
:eb. 3, 10, XI, ai, iuaxen J, lu.
i.> XiiE borx.*vxc/t» CodhX
.ycaxvxA C.xvxvc/x«xiyxl
•I/VIVO. UOuxVX I
rvciiiCfi
auHxNNiE Mcasud
Va.
xvLLNa oMilH McNEIL
uAc Cw(
ry horaeiTTneTuot qu^-'
ry uwueia. Auepuucwuuxuiiuxwv^^^ ^ ourmg nis
-rinaled. ^Ve siiould not be de-
ccicixi and ciejude-d by Uus trend ...
when such neighbors of oui-s ask w^ek begins on the Ilth Already
us to join them ui rebulling liber- Mrs. Siler, Librarian, has many
als WHO brave our sectional pie- ij„„ks by Negro authors on di.-.play
judicc-esandseektohelpusinthe Tbe Negro History Committee, un-
slruggle lo make Demotjacy work d^r the chairmanship of Mrs, Gods-
here too. National organizations js planning a week’s program,
all- the best agencic-s lor carry- Sunday, February -llh. Misses
uig ionvard a program ol social Louise McLaughlin, Beatrice Mials
and economic betterment of the ;,|,d Brunette Everetie attended an
pc>oi- people ol Uie So-Jlh and the usher s Union at Smilhfield,
proscribed colored citizens, ir- Mr.s-. Ella Wilson, mother of Pro-
reipeclive of economic sUUis, fessor and Mrs. M. L. Wilson and
v\iio must also suffer under the .virs. O Beckwith, hi.s sister, visited
old patterns ol suppression. I Profesor and Mrs. M. L. Wilson last
We should gel into and niilu-i Sunday,
vuce the established organizations sgt, Melvin Jake, just lelurncd
v.'iucJi are in ihe nation to stay, fjum overseas, is visiting his moth-
11 some organizations are not so'.., here.
good, we should get mto them and I ... - ._ v
make iliem what we want them I ii rxii * L' » D II!
lo be locaUy. Integration is the'DUV ihat Lxtra DOUU I I
way. ' - ^ _ __ _
tiapist bound Over
KiNbTON -- Jobie Phillips, 18,
was pound over to Superior Court
.■.nhuut privilege ot bond, charged
with criiiiinally assaulting Lottie
Godding also 18 years old, while
;he was on her way to school on
Januaiy 25
Miss Godding testified that Phil
lips accostc-d her, making indecent
proposals, and when she attempted
to run, he overtook her, struck her,
.Selectees To Ft. Bragg
KALKIGH — Raleigh's two draft
ooards released the name of men
in the latest contingent of Negro se
lectees sent to F'ort Bragg for induc
tion.
Board No. I—Harry Junior Clark,
7Z5 1-2 South Blount Street; Ernest
Duwson, Jr., Raleigh. Route l; Al-
fonzo Dunn. 1108 Pender Street;
W'llliam Henry Anderson, 118
Grime Alley; Jim Williams, Jr., of
Norfolk, Va.. and Elarl Louis Smith
of Portsmouth, Va.
SIX'TH ARMY GROUP IN
FRANCE—Harbor installatioM,
lanitor iquarries, roads and warehouses in
a ih.ou«l, J.iiiiaijlNorth Alrica Italy and Francb
'have been made usable by a com-
pany of Negro engineers now
Fiobjbl.. iau.f wa:. tub,id asaiii.t .serving wHh tile Continental
th.. diUiivai.t ill a .a» diargina yanoe Section . aiyp^OTga^_
/ iif a tar beloiikiiik to Rev. Ihon for the Sixth Army Group
Murrts ot h!u4 A.ide“oniand the Seventh Army in France.
Drive ”his ease will be tiled m I Someti^ und^ fire, ^ese
i-iiuri isoldicra have moved installations
Xeu .11 il„- a.it„-la.tei,y ta.- ’blasted and damaged by retreat-
wm.aii, hL vI 1210 E. .tlaiiin: nig German teooiB^and m record
Stieet. who waived ht'aring in
lower court and was bound ove
Superior Court on $51)0 bond
“'3' ^n
(■living When asked about the
replied lhal''l“ b''ad'‘ebla,i*d‘‘‘hTm“> ““
iroiii Smith. ^ Among the soldiers in theis en-
Frebable caulT^s feiiiid in lb.
case ol Melvin Teasley bl 416 areenj' Lon*, Davidson.
Streel, charecd will, larceny Iron. Kenneth DurhSi, 1123 Hoi-
man St., Ralei^. Pvt. Arthur
L BatUe, Gen. Del, Rocky ML,
Pvt. Thomas L. Taylor, 730 S.
'li'^'erru^en“ln^n-^*uy.u.ere go.__i^ an aismncni
troJs. At the all clear signal he
could gun her down that danger
ously narrow strip and as the dis
tance grew less and less you could
hear everybody shout, "Lilt her
boy, lift her skirts.” Slowly, ex
cruciatingly slowly she would lilt
h«: proud nose into the overcast
and take oil lor a better pasture.
Five weary but live happy en
gineers watted the last plane
leave the embarrassment of mud . e,,
and water lar below h«ir on the condition of Ham. Gardner u bu
i„e time have returned them to use
lu by Uie American troops, “rhe men
lhave been highly commended for
I, ilhuir work and their spirit by
I'craeas for two years and have
u-ned three battle stars for par-
aftenioon of the fifth day. A her
culean task accomplished in un
believable time and just in time.
It had started to ram heavily.
With a scowl at the sky the en-
gmeers turned, cursing the rain
tneir accursed foe.
the per:»oii, and wat> bound ov(‘r lo
Superior Court under bund of $500.
Teasley is accused of taking $15
Irom the perhun of Ed Evans, 1503
E. Jones Street as the two walked
together on the night of January
27.
Ernest Alston, 330 W Cabarrus
Street, was ordered to pay casts
utter he pleaded guilty to a charge
of disorderly conduct.
V
SHARECROPPER HAS LAST
LAUGH ON DISCOVERED
GOLD"
EUFALA, Ala. (C) — Field hand
Will Person, while plowing, dug up
Caldwell St, Salisbury.
INDIA—Herbert E. Craven, son
ol Mrs. Evie A. Craven, 717 S.
Bloodworth St, Raleigh, N. C.,
has been promoted from Private
First Class to Technician Fifth
Grade, it has been announced by
his comnumding officer.
He has been in the army since
AprU 1943, and is a ‘Truck Driv
er. In civilian life, he was a port
er.
He has been in the India-Burma
tlieatre since April 1944, serving
i^f HaaA^..qk)tiQn_2.
knife on the girl and wnen Gard
ner interferred, Ham jumped on
him and forced him against ihc
wall. Becoming fearful ox tus own
life, Gardner took his 22 calibre
rule trom me corner ana shot ai
Ham. Ham is improving.
At a preliminary hearing in
Mayor's Court, Tuesday, the de
fendant is being held pending the
years old and has a wife and three
children. ^
Before buying farm lands. In
experienced buyers should con
sult the county agent or N. C.
State College.
The Day Is Coinin’
BY ERIC HASS
For Calvin's News BerveU
possible to make involuo* 3A of that Act solemnly declares
It
tary servitude, alias national ser
vice, •'truly democraUc"? Doxey A
Wilkerson says it is. He says that
forced labor is "Uxily democraUc"
if the law "will truly sale-guard
the interests of the workers in gen
eral, and of Negro workers in par-
Ucular.’’ 'The safeguards’’, he sug
gests are cl) that tbe law "incorpor
ate specifically the principles ol
FEIPC” and (2) that it be "adminis
tered democratically." He even goes
so far as to say that national service
"could wipe out, at one full swoop,
a whole host of employment dis
criminations against Negro workers "
I disagree. There Is no “safeguard"
that can make national service “tru-
Ihat ' there shall be no discrimina-
iion agiunsl any person on account
of tuce or coioi in Uie seiecuui*
and uaiiiuig of men. cut dmxim-
Illation ill tne seiecuun, ana segrega-
uon in tne training, oi Hegroes x*
a palpitating, irriiaiuig anu exaspex-
ainig latl! isveryoue xiiows ims. aar.
wiikei'son knows it. Vvny, men,
uues ne aeiiverately bail the nauon-
al-service boooy trap with me nou-
oiscrunination "saieguara"'f
Tne fact IS that me power to con
script is the power to discriminate,
if he Selective service Director, ox
the War Mobilization Director, or
any other admmistrato.' is given me
on
^ouiius ox iWo yceus acpalaUUXi, MS
^oviuca m Ole dtMxUkc ox xHurm
'axoxina, piamuui ano aeieiwunt
■lavuig Uvea separate ang apart
xor more uia ntwo years next pr«*
ceaiiig Uie insuiuuon ol mis ac-
ion, and that said aelaadam, will
xurmer take nouce that sbe is re-
Huireu to appear at me oiiioe ol^e
>aiera ui me uupenor coutr ol waxe
wuuiiiy, x'loiox GaxoxnxM, Ui mc
w-UUrti.oUSc Ul XVax.tMXi, 4>wlUl Dae
luiia, (Ax Uic «oux u.y xm «ewi'u«u>,
.kta, or wiunu inmy uays uxcxe-
oiler, ana aiwwer or acxnur to me
..uinpiaiui 01 Moxa acuun, or me
uiaiiiLiU Will apply ku me Cuuxi
me leliel aemonoca in sua com
piainu
his 24th day ol January, iMd.
W'. S. AiGHdx:.CHo, (..leia
ox aup«iiior Couii
F. J. CAxtNAOE, Ally.
Jan. 27; Feb. 3. m, i7.
cALULTlUA. AOllEI:.
rxaving quauueo oS executrix of
me eoUtkc Oi UaXiiuei j. Gxxx, xm,« (U
axe County, xSorm caxuxxxxM, im-
lo nouxy ail pexsouM i*avixig
|gims against me eaiau; wi saxu ue-
.eMaea to cxiixuit mdu ui me uixacr
agnea on or oeioie me aom “oy at
aanuMxy, xM-io or mxo nouce wixx dm
pxMuca in oar ox me.r rccovexy.
rxii persons maeuiea lo saxa esuiic
ixx please maxe umneuiaie pay
ment,
ims 25m day ol January, 1845.
tihiissi Gweiiuuxyn uui
cxecUkTix
Haxeign, N. C.
aan. 27; Feo. a, xo, xv, z4; Aiarrh o.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT
xHUnin Caauc.u^a
nAjtWE CGUAik
aix/cikxiA. JUNES
VS.
DOUGLASS HINES
NOTICE
Tbe delenoani, Douglas Hin— will
lake nouce tnat an a.uon enuued
aoove has been ccuzunencea la ms
superior court ox Waxs Coun>y,
xVorm Caraonna, to oouun an aoso-
luts divorce on me grounns oi two
AiiiUiiiiiiiiMMIlllllRiMMlRM
tl*al no American citizen can be;
rightly considered an outsider |
anywhere in the United Slates.
Too long have we had a one-sided
process of infiltration of South
erners into every part of the coun
try, welcomed by natives with
out a counter infiltration from
other regions into the South. Far
tO( many Southerners an* "pro-
ftssional" Southerners, mission
aries of segregation and racism.
Ni-turally they resent the influ
ence of those who come into the
South and refuse to be indac-
lips accosted her, making indecent
proposals, and when she attempted
’» run, he overtook her. struck her,
ihieatencd her life and assaulted
her.
The Kill's brother and two oth-
I witnes.ses approached the scene
i f the attack and turned Phillips
"ver lu the police.
Thi' date set for the hearing is
.April
Kaleigh Boards Send
Grime Alley; Jim Williams, Jr,, of
Norfolk, Va., and Earl Louis Smith
of Portsmouth, Va.
Board No fl2—Willie Gibbs Reid,
Lester Stewart. Charles Robert
Crump, Sampson Boykin. Jr.,
nest Massenburg, James Shephard
McQueen. Delma Stewart. Andrew
Bridgcr.s, Fonanuel McCray, Oclavia
Wilburt Anderson, Frank Sapp,
Andrew Alton Wilkins. Cleveland
Faison. Henry Clay Hemphill, Rich
ard Moore. Willie Osborne Bridge-
ford. and Charlie Love, Jr
EUFALA. Ala. (C) — Field hand
Will Person, while plowing, dug up
10 bricks which looked like gold.
Tile plantation owner, A. S. Jones,
well-to-do lumberman, however
i claimed the “gold bricks," as under
the law the owner of the properly
;has right lo anything found on it.
When Junes had the bricks valued
in town, he was told they were
worth $7,500. But when geologists
assayed the metal, it was pronounc
ed at least 99 per cent BRASS!
jack DAVIS
ay TED WATSON
□he priest
oTlife.realiz-
inCt the need
FORGETTIN&RID
OF THE DRIVER'S
bODY HAS FORC'D
JIA\ AMP SPARKY
10 help HIM
EUR'i ri "
fKHr.p-
By T. MflVIN
/AmTCORA “aAlD TtW"
tte puzsTOMe mvie/
FRowsom-msTP /
"CLEAW thc CeuAlZ f.
He has been in the India-Burma
theatre since AiH'il 1944, serving
with a unit of Base Section 2,
India. This is tbe organization
which has led military installa
tions throughout the world in the
handling ol vitally .leeded mater
ials of war.
WITH THE ARMY AIR FORCE
ENGINEER COMMAND IN ITA
LY—Jesse Lynch of Enfield,
N. C. A Technician 5th Grade
in an aviation engineer unit buil
ding bases for Allied air powez
in the Mediterranean Theater of
Operatioois, was recently awarded
the Good Conduct Medal for ex
emplary behavior and superior
ptrformance of duty.
Technician 5th Grade Lynch,
ihc son of Mr. and Mrs. laouis
Lvnch of Route 2, Box 115, En-
fu Id, North Carolina, left his po
sition with Louis Soliana, Brook-
In, New York to join the service
in May 1942. Sent overseas, he
ha.s seen 23 months of active duty
in North Africa and Italy as
Cha'jffcur with tlie aviation en
gineers.
Lynch’s wife, Alma, lives at
Route 2, Bok 115, Enfield. North
Carolina. They have no children.
INDIANTOWN GAP. PA., Jan.
—James 1. Everett, son of Mrs.
Laura . Best, 517 E. Baker St.,
Tarboro, N. C. has been promot
ed to Corporal at the Array Ser
vice Forces Training Center at
Indiantown Gap Military Reser
vation, Pa.
Cpl. Everett entered the Army
on the 29th of May, 1942. He was
formerly assigned to the Corps of
Engineers and is now with the
Transportation Corps.
WITH THE ARMY AIR FORCE
ET^GINEER COMMAND IN ITA
LY—As a result ot the ingenuity
and untiring efforts of a detach
ment of Aviation Engineer includ
ing Lt. Rosewell L. I^nlay, Lake-
voUe, Conn., T-6 Gemge W. At
kinson, Macclesfield, N. C., T-5
Walter R. Hare, Little Rock, Ark.,
Pvt John R. Hutcherson, Madison
County, Tenn., Pvt Andrew W.
Fordson, Eiberton, Ga: a British
Fighter Wing was able to move an
all weather airfield and continue
r eraiions against the enemy
many weeks earlier than at first
was thouj^t possible. For the
work performed this detachment
of men have received a letter of
commendation from tbe British
Air Commodore of the Desert Air
Force in the Italian Theater.
Their thoughts were not too
optimistic when they arrived at
the airfield and saw over fifty
planes hopelessly bogged down in
the mud and some of them stand
ing three lee4 of water. They had
one bulldozer and abo'it thirty
feet of steel cable to do tbe job.
The weather was discoura^ng
and it looked at first glance as if
the planes mi^t have to be
abandoned far me winter, if some
fast work not accomplished.
Maybe it was the Engineer mot
to ‘T^savOTuf’ (We will try) that
urged them/on or perhaps the
thought thaU the 'boys up front
needed thosd planes badly but
whatever it Was that small de
tachment of engineers went to af-
criminatiuns against Negro workers”
I disagree. There is no "safeguard"
that can m.tke national servi% “tru-
iy democratis'.” National service, or
forced labor, u. in itself, the anU-
thesis of democracy. It Is unadulter
ated totalitarianism. It was invented
by the Nazi. To adopt it here is to
yield the Nazi principle. After Pearl
Harbor, the slogan went up on tha
factory walls "Free Labor Can Out
produce Slave Labor?” And it hasi
But now the brass hats and slave-
labor advixates, to cover their own
ineptness and miscalculations tel)
us, in effect that this is wrong, that
compulsory labor under threat of
jaill and fine is the super or systemi
The nation that forced labor can
be “truly democratic ' collapses at
the first test of logic. For, It u
true that "safeguards" make invol
untary servitude, alias national ser
vice, "truly democratic," then simi-
safeguards would make any
slave system "truly democratic."
chattel slavery, for instance. Wa
could put it this way:
"Chattel slavery in the old South
could have been made truly demo
cratic if it had been democratical
ly administered, and if It had for
bidden discrimination on the
grounds of race, creed, color or na
tional origin."
Moreover, It is Utopian to Imagine
that a non-discrimlnatlon ”^e-
guard” In a national service* act
would be any more effective than
the Si nllar "safeguard in the Se
lective Service Act of 1940. Section
If he Selective service Dxiec^ut, o^
the War Mobilization Director, or
any other adminuiraio.' is given the
despotic power to lorce workers W
take this or that job, under penalty
of imprisonment or fine or both for
refusal, be Is given the power to
'direct” the Negro worker to a
menial, low-pay joD.
Make no mistake about it. 11
we yield personal freedom now,
whether lor lack ot energy to resist
or in the vain and fatuous hope that
forced labor might break down
jimerow barriers, we take a long
step backward in the struggle for
human liberation. We delay the
achievement of that free society
wherein exploitation of tbe many
by the few have been aboUsheo,
and, with exploitation, the sunder
ing system ol color caste.
HOWARD HIGH FIHST YOUTH
GROUP SENDS CHECK TO
WILKIE FUND
Chattanooga, Tenn.—The stu
dents of Howard High go on re
cord as the first school in the
country to make a contribution
to the Wendell Wilkie E'und. An
nouncement of their gift of $25.00
to the fund was made by Mrs.
Daisy Lampkin, NAACP field sec-
retail, now conducting a mem
bership campaim in Chattanoo
ga. Ii&s. Lampkin predicts this
group will form the nucleus of
the largest youth council in Amer
ica.
(CPORTS
OUT OP
ADAM'S HAT
'a
JACK
Lovelock
SET A NEW 1500
METEft MASK OP
3^76 IN TVE SAME
OLYMPICS. BEATWO
The Sfl£ATE9r Fi£lO
E/SP ASSEM9LEQ
pnpismpiiiiiiii
xTorth Caraouna, to ooiaio an aoso-
lute divorce on the grouoas oi two
jears separauon, as pruviaea m uw
statute of North Carouna, pia.min
and aeienaant having uyec x«part«
and apart xor more than two years
next preceeamg the xnsutuuon of
this action, ana tnat the said de
fendant will further take notice
that he is requued to appear at the
oxiice of the Clerk of tne Superior
Court of Wake County Nona Car
olina, in tbe Courthouse in u«i».igK
North Carolina, on the 3rd aay ui
March, l»45 or within thirty dsys
thereafter, and answer or aemur
the complaint of said action or the
plaintiff will apply to the court for
the rcUei demanded in said com
plaint
This 30th day of January, ’.945
W. S. MORDECAI, Clerk
of Superior Court
F. J. CARNAGE, Attorney 1
Feb. 3, 10, 17, 24. '
N THE SUPERIOR COURT
.'fORTH CAROLINA
•VAKE COUNTY
NDIANxV HENDERSON
VS.
•SAMUEL HENDERSON
NOTICE
The defendant. Samuel Header-
on, will take nonce, that in «c-
non entitled as above has oeen com-
; .lenced in the Superior Court of
j Wake County, North Caroli.na, to ob
tain an absolute divorce on the
rounds of two years separation, as
j ovided in the Statute of North
•rolina, plaintiff and defendant
ving Lved separate ano e.>art for
...re than two years next pr'Keed-
mg the institution of thik a 'Jon. and
.hat the said defendant wxil further
take notice that he is required to
appear at the office of tbe Clerk
of tbe Superior Court of Wake
County, North Carolina, in the
courthouse in Raleigh, North Caro
lina, on the 3rd day of March, 1045,
or within thirty days thereafter, and
answer or demur to the complaint
of said action, or the plaintiff ifiU
apply to the court for the relief de
manded in said complaint.
This 29th day of January. 1945.
W. S. MORDECAI. Clerk
of the Superior Court
F. J. CARNAGE. Attorney
Feb. 3. 10. 17. 24.
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wastes ars swIUd aaiootbiy and SsaUy.
0«t Knuebsn Salts at all drut ftorso.
Over 245 million bottles sold Is
tbe peel IM jtmn It Btnst be good