Wendell W illkie Predicts Big G. 0. P. Victory Next Year SECOND SECTION SftPCoroSia SECOND SECTION VOLUME XXIII - NUMBER 9 DURHAM, R C, SATURDAY, -FEBRUARY 27th, 1943 BUY WAR BONDS TODAY N. C. MUTUAL ASSETS OVER EIGHT MILLION FROM NYA TO WASHINGTON NAVY YARD Affairs Comoiittee To Entertain AmQf Officers DURHAM TO ENTERTAIN ARMY OFFICERS ^ Approximately 35 commiss- •oned officers who are now sta- Moned at Camp Butner. Xorth Carolina, as a part ,of the 930th Field Artillery Battalion and fhe 27th Quartermasters fipcri Twenty-^ear-old Miwi Juanita E. Gray of 226 Fifty-ninth Strset, Wash ington, D. G., was working as a domestic when she heard about the local NYA War Production and Training Center. With unce^in earninga which sometime* dropp^ as low as |4.50 a week, she decided to register for NYA training. Mrs. Lwa M. Biihmond and Mrs. Sadie M. Franklin enrolled her at the center. . k FISK INSTRUCTOR AGREES WITH WARREN BROWN’S RECENT ARTICLE BLASTING NEGRO NEWSPAPERS By John H. Hou^n, Feb. 23—-(ANP)^ Dr W B. Weatherford, head of the department of Fisk university, m an at the anniial interracial meet in« here Sunday, criticized the Necro press of the country, endsored Warren Brown s ar- tTcle and asserted Negro news papers preached race hate and were propaganda sheets. These statements were made before a mixed audience of about 900 persons. In the aud ience were Negroes, Mexicans. Chinese and whites. Ur. Weatherford also ^whites of some of their short comings. In his address Dr. Weather ford sEHl, “I thought Pear Harbor would have unined us and on the surface it did fOJ there was a lot of talk at first about a. solid front ^but undei the surface there were a lot of cross currents. There was not complete unity in any way raci_ ally, ethnically or religiously. A large percentage of the race? in this country are foreign Iwrn. but newly 90 percent of Negroes are native born. Up to date they have not been given all the rights of citizenship. "Pi'ivlitgt against class causes friction and tension. Whenever there is appreciation we will have a resurgence of the common man. It would be wise if we lifted the presure so that every man has a chance. There is no sound, ui- biased balanced judgment in the South. The white man is not willing to concde that the Negro could achieve. Dr. Weatherford stated that his talk was not all against the white people, that he wa»i dtserving something for my Negro friends.' To qualify for his following statemnts he then said that he subscribed to 40 Negro papers and read them all. After reading I am forced to conclude that one can’t believe everything one sees in news print. Th« N«gro preis is •nenTT will be prflBented to the citizens of. Durham Saturday, Pebniary 27, 1943, at the Al- jfojHinin CInb on Payettevillf^ ■Street. The public is invited to Tieet these officers between the hours of 6 and 7:30 P. M. Among the commissioned of ’,f»cers at Camp Butner who will V so honored are Lieut. Col. )nel W. T. Derricks. Jlajor ftajfmond Watkins, Major K. B. Cambell. Captain Joseph FTrancois. Captain Prank M. Brown, CaptAin Pearl Willi»m«. 1.1 in W. B. Johnson and a rroup of first and second lieu* enant.s of the 930th Field Ar- illery Battalion, formerly sta" tioned at Fort Custer. Miehi- ran. Ther^ are also a nin-iber »f lieutenants in the 27tli Quar- terma.sters Ref?iment who will )e present, . i PRESIDENT SPAULDING REPORTS BIG GAINS FOR LOCAL INSTITUTION Willide ^^ts RepuUican Will FOR MOBILITY \\n^ »i j ireaching race hatred. Thftv ire little more than propagan- ia sheets, preaching disunity ou should read W. Brown's irticle in a magasint. He is ont if them and should ^now. No paper that preaches race ha red is a lover of country, .vhether it is white or black.” Concluding l|is speech, he -aid that “the only hope foi ht Bodth is f^)r each race tf lave faith and confidence In )ne another. We must all cul- ivate j^spect of people, for- *et w^e are unlike and that we should be more like, forget •ur false differences and be- •ieve all men can make prog- 'esg. Love is good and if wo practiced /it we m if h t lemonstrate to the world .vorld that we could live to gether without friction.’ Dr. Weatherford, a white nan, for some 20 years was a ";raveSLng ^nd orgar^ng &^c- •etary for the studenrt YMCA work and for a similar period 5f time was president of the YMCA graduate school in >fashville. training secretaries for work in the south. He is listed among the leading edu- cotosr of the country. Following his speech he wa'4 entertained at the YWCA by •nembers of the Fisk alumni at a dinner, Folowing his address Dr. Weatherford was interviewed ■)y this reporter. Asked if Ne- ;ro papers really preach hate ir merely recorded it when and where it was found, he replied that ‘some of them do but tht majority preach race hate.” In reply whether Negro papers :ihould princt acts of injusti- ‘;es and discrimination against *^he race, he said he thought they shoul not bie) they should but not to stress it “too vehemently.^' Further questioning reveal ed that Dr. Weatherford t:hougbt the Negro press by t>otIighting incidents against Negro morale, had helped in a I'imall measure to ameloriate dome of thes* conditions. Because of the fact that these •non have di.stw^uished ' them selves in the service of mtr ’coun try a.s officers of the Unitetl 'States Army, the Citizens Com mittee is lu-ffin^r tlie public to jome to the Algronquin Club Saturday to preet them and their wives. Crime In N. Carolina Showing A Decrea^ A decidrd decrease in crime in North Carolina during the la.st two years was shown in the bi*«- nial report of the state penal division released by Director Oscar Pitts. By LOWELL M. TRICE Ruahville, Ind.. Feb; 23. — (ANP) Declaring that he fer-‘ veptly hopes the Negroes ol America will continue theii •ight for social, civic, and eCQ- aomic equslitjr, Wendell WiP. kie. Republican presidential candidate in ’40 emphasized his belief in the fundamenta' rights of world minority groups in an exclusive interview with this writer Saturday afternoon. . The Interview took place in the front parlor of the ramb-. ling 10 room Rushville horn? of Mr. Wlllkie’s mother-in lav.- It was a thre^ man conference- Mrs. Willkie modestly remain- ng in another room. The :hird person present was Len Jones, personal assistant and traveling companion to man who someday might nupy the White House. “Liyipg conditions in thf United States‘are far superioi to other parts.'of the world tha I have yisited upon my /twii trips abroad).’ he began In hi'? typical Hoosier drawl. “How- jver this is far from sa3dng that they are entirely satis factory here in our own cpun- tiry, Wei have yet to.rid oursel ves of the many raciar injust- ices and inequalities before we Qan truthfully say that our dt\ mocratic form of government 18 ideal.” Willkie, who had just comp- 'eted a hectic weekend of 'Peech making and interview— mg while in Indianpolis, stated that he was much in favor of certain portions of the admini stration’s foreign policies and A. IRVIN the oe- Loyalty and Devodon — Re ported by C. A. Irvin, Public Relations Director, the Carolina rimes in a message, “The Negro Mobilizes For Victory,” which was broadcast recently over, seiveral of the leading radio 9tations of North Carolina. Ir. vin pointed out thiB gains that -the Negro has made under the American system and warned pf the certain loss to the race should the Axis emerge victori_ pus in the world conflict. ^ ‘ -- - - - — bpposed to others. i. Asked by Mr. Jones to be more specific, he replied: “I have been opposed tn our deal ing with Dalian. Giraud, and Vichy France because I don’t believe that we can rightly fight one thing while condon ing another of the same stripe.” ^ Predicts Republican Victory Regarding his own political ambitions Mr. Willke was non- commital. ■ DeShazor Beauty College Graduates 105 Next Week COMMANDING OFFICER More than 200 .old graduates ^ tf the DeShazor College of Beauty Culture are expected to joiirney to Durham next week :n a Homecoming and sixth an imal anniversary celebration of he Durham branch of the insti- ution to be held here March 12. In ?onneetion with the cele- Sration, the Spring graduating exercises o£.a class of 105 mem' jers will be held at St. Joseph A. M. E. Church, Monday eve- 'ling, March 1. Speaker for the occasion will be Mrs. Cordelia Green Johnson, national presi dent of the National Beauty Gulturists League, Inc., with Mrs. Willie Ford Hennesees, as '.nistress of ceremonies. Mrs. Hennesees is secretary of the Nk>rth Caroling State Beauti cians Association. The Spring graduating class of the DeShazor College of Beauty Culture ia unusually fortunate to have such an out’; standing character as its speak- r. Mrs. Hennesees is one of the nation’s most noted persons in her field, and is considered the first lady of Beauty Cul ture in America. The organi sation which she heads is the eldest of its kind in the nation. On Tuwday evening at the Algonquin Tennis Club a recep tion for the old graduates will climax the two-day session, at which time* the crowning of Miss N. C. Cosmetologist of 19- ♦3 will take place. A reeepdon for the current graduating class will be held at the same place Friday evening. Prizes will also be awarded at the Friday even' ing reception. In addition to the graduating exercises and re ceptions a luncheon will be serv^ the visiting alumni of the institution at the college on Tuesday, t i All pertK)B« atten^g the Monday night program to be held at St. Joseph A. M. E. hurch w'ill be given souvenirs, after which a fashion parade will be held for the benefit of those attending the exercises. Since its bejjinning six years ago the DeShazor College of Beauty CJulture has had a phc- homcnal growth uiivil today ranks among the leading insti tutions of its kind in America. The fact that the Spring grad uating class this year numbers more than a hundred is con crete evidence of its far reach ing influence. Officers and faculty meinbers of the college are: Mrs. Sadif* riioiua.s, president; Mrs. DeSha Jor Jackson, general supervi sor; Mrs. Eva Jackson Lang ford, Dean and instructress; Louis Wade, class supervisor and instructor; Miss Delphia Pace, instructress and Mrs. Thelma Hill, ustrie1x«p. The annual statement Of ^orth Carolina Mutual I»ife !^n.suranee Company that ap oears elsewhere in this issue, reveals that during Ihe year i,“4£;—rm*—L-uiinraiiT rejrisiemr substantial gains in all phase> )f operation. During the year. 179,l.'i8 new polieies of insur luce wrr? placed on the boftks indieating substantial growth •ind (-onunendable progress. C'«»iitintrent reserves in tht uim of $432. 165.78 are carried n addition to the statutory re- ^rvp of $6,887,225.28 that is "oquired by law. Thus Xorth .'’jirolina Mutual, in additioji tt neeting fully all legal rerjuire aents. has placed a degree of lecurity behind each outstai-d ing' policy contract that far “X- •eeds any pos-sible dematid that nay arise as a rwult of the ah* lormal period through which he world is passing. President Spaulding attribur es the continous growth of \’orth Carolina Mutual to th« fact that sinee its organization !4. j*ears ago. every just claim against the company has been met fully, cheerfully, and’ ()romptly. PajTnents t« policy holders and beneficiaries dur ing 1942 aggregated $1,258,595- 53. Since organization, pay- nents amounting to $21,723,: 090.22 have been made, of ivhich amount $848,057.26 wa^ in the. form of matured fndow- nents'to living policyholders. In commencing on the w-orld •onflict now being waged and its effect upon the company. Spaulding had this to say: “Notwithstanding serious in roads have been made in the a- ■jency force and the Home Of fice 'Personnel, this, condition was anticipated and adequate steps taken to preserve the high itantlard of efficejicy the com pany has achieved and consis tently maintains. The effeetive- nes.! of these precautions is re vealed in the fact that the busi ness on the books of the compa ny has increased to $64,444,- 65. The admitted assets of the company now stand at $8.273..- 734.21.” “This.” Spauldmg stated, “is conclusive evidence! that {regardless of eeonomie. changes, dislocation of person nel, and other influences cal culated to hamper progre*w and disrupt the organization North Carolina Mutual has been equal to the occasion and continues to move steadily onward.” “The officials of the company recognize the obvious conclusion that the progress achieved has been the direct result of the "onfidence and support accord- id the institution by the public. In recognition of this fact. North Carolina Mutual wil maintain its policy of increased service to its pcrficyholders and the public by continuing to. make loans on home and buai ness property where the semr- !ty is adequate and satisfactory The company's statement will reveal that $3,297,475.79 is now invested in amply lecured fixsk - P]^ I» &«• ifm ' Ck>L Chatincey M. Hooper, comnuutdinv oSeer tt aU-NegT* aircraft regiment now on duty ia the Hawauaa Uaada. Hkat»bw3l0mtlC0rwt.V.M. Oppose A^otfflent Of Harry Blanton As FeiM CoHit Jiidge St. ,Louis, Feb. 23—rANP^y' Opposition to the proposed ap pointment of U. S. District Atty.. Harry C. Blanton aa a federal judge was exrresaed last week by the Mound City Bar association in letters to federal officials signed by Jo^ eph L. McLemore, presideirt ind David M. Grant, chairman of the committee on judicary ^ 'Blanton has too much race prejudice to serve as a U. S. judge, according to the bar as sociation. One instance wHi: cited in which Leslie Greea postal employe, was ordered held in $5,000 bail by Blanton followiOjr a fight between Gree^. and the white superintendent of the post oflSce resturant which started when the for mer refused to be jira crowed. BefnettsviOe,S.C. Hors of Gfoap Meeting 1b Marlboro Cooaty Gronp Number 2 of Maribir '’o County Colored Teafefccn leld the regular laonthly meeting ».February 12. at the Beauty Sp«)t ;H‘hooi with Mrs. X)ora P. Bmst4»w and Mrs. nia Stubbti. teachers. Although Green insisted that the superintendent started the fight, Blanton refused to issue a cross charge against him. The high bail of $5,000 was dropped to $1,000. the legal limit, only when a motion on its unconstitiitionality was about to be filed in court. Under direction of the attorney gen eral, the charge against Green { Devotions were eonduetcd Mrs. Akia Wj-4n«. This wi owed by retKting of the mirt* jteti of la.st meet ins. The *>ers of the gmnp worked dfifir rently for an hoor develojitig iu)re points on the genenA heme for the year “Tlie Fomt ion of the SchotJ in the Oin»- Tiunity.” Following this iod the snperv^r. Mi» B. iiraham took ebarige and a i|tie seasonal fortai of rcerw-' '.ion was introdaeed l^* bar wliii’h eousuited ui the foUofK*- uig: A flower contest, a bnst •ontest and drawinfr of for tunes written mi small hearts v'oncealed under a larfe red heart. These contests eanmd much merrimeat among the group. The winners in the flow er contest were: ifr». Dora Biir tow. Mrs. G. T. Kennedy. Mi^ Verlie Quii'k. Mrs. Lnvmia Stubbs. Mrs. Hallie Frasier and was dropped without preliminary hearing. even a Blanton is the brother of David Blanton, prosecuting at torney for Scott county when* the Sikeston lynching took >lace and where none/ of the mobbists has been indicted, as well as the son of the Sikeston editor who in his paper cond- doned the violence. The letter stated that the bar association had unanim ously endorsed Harry F. Ruu- »ell. St. Louis circuit judge, and Ruby M. Hulen of Colum bia for the poet. Copies were sent to Presi dent Roosevelt, Sens. Bennett Clark and Harry Truman of Missouri, Atty. Gen. Francis piddle. Judge Russell and Mr. Hulen. MARIUAGE AWHOUHCE HUrriMgt AsMuacaoMit Mr. and Mrs. Roy S. Foster announi'e the BaarriaKe of tlMir 4»9fiht»r, Marfaret Bliaabatk. to fit. WilKa Edward Powril oa Wedn«d«y. Deember 2^ 191^ Miss L. Black. The winner of rbe Heart game was Rev. Gup* >le of Benuetteville. Msa Gra~ 'lam presented eAeh winner a irize which consisted of a Hov *r vase, packages of flower ^eeds. handkerchiefs. immI m leart'iihaped box of eandy. Rev. Supple was pre«iented and interestinir remario. After nisi>al the teachers invited Hmt ;ruup into the inni-h raopk where an appetizipjt oieal baked-jiiifck^- peek hot rolls, iee eream was served by the pmtnm oiil teachers. Quite a laiye m ber of patnuw ind they were pi the gnmp by Mrs. BriaWlirf. priiK'ipal. &eh 9way feeling that tkia vaftt'j of the best neelinfs «« erer held. Loellai BtadL Bapurt>i Marvin Speara. ^ fwMwal Tkmvell Wednecday offiee. TW '^nnd^jr. 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