a5ES = NUMBER FORTY VOLUME FORTY-EIGHT CHARLOTTE^ NORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1924 TRUE TOLERANCE. -i ■ ■ ______ ' By The Late Bishop Phillips Brooks. My friends, be more afraid of the littleness than of the largeness of life. Let that be your rule about your people when you come to be their minister. Never let yourself think, and never allow them to think, that mere intol erance upon their part, mere bitter ness against those who differ from them or from their Christ, is faith. Never discourage them from think ing. If they are thinking wrong, do not try to stop their thinking, but teach them to think right. Never doubt their capacity for the best faith, the profoundest experience, the largest liberty And for yCurse f, let the same rule be master. Be more afraid of the littleness than of the largeness of life. Seek with study and with prayer for the most clear and con fident convictions; and when you have won them, hold them so largely and vitally that they shall be to you, not the walls which separate you from your brethren who have other convictions than yours, but the medium through which you enter in to understanding of and sympathy with them, as the ocean, which once was the barrier between nations, is now the highway for their never resting ships, and makes the whole world one. This is! true tolerance. Into a deeper and deeper abundance of that tolerance /nay- our Master lead a l of us whom He has called to be His ministers! • ■ / RUSSELL SAGE FOUNDATION. New York City. Nov. 22 —A report which points the way to greater .em ployment, opportunities for colored people, whiph throws light on their difficulties in securing jobs, .and which suggests possible jneans of les sening these difficulties hag just..becn issued by tjie Russell Sage Founda tion under the tit e “Public Em ployment Offices—Their Purpose, Structure, and Methods ” While the study on which this report is. based was not' confined to the employment prob'ems of ahy one race, there is much of interest to students of race relations in the findings and recom mendations of the - Foundation with respect to employment problems af fecting . the country- generally, *^and an entire chapter in the renort is given over to - the problems Of col ored workers. • ' , The report recommends the estab lishment of a nation-wide system’ of free public employment offices, to be operated jointly by the federal, state; and local governments,' with the state government as the chief unit of administratin'!!. Tn the section d scussing the management of local emoloyment offices, the point is made that placement work for colored peo ple can be done best by members of their own race; • • ‘ - ' .. '' The Foundation’s investigators I 'died employment conditions' m t e north and :in the south, irt large cities and in agricultural sections throughout the country. They find that race prejudice is limiting- very much the occupations onen to colored people; until comparatively recently alme’st the only lilies of work to which they were admitted have been farm and plantation labor* personal service, and common, labor. This range of employment should end can be greasy increased through intelli gent and persistent educational' work among employers as to the suitabil ity of colored Workers for certain c+her kinds - of work, /together with discriminating placement. “If a colored man v/ith good train ing and ability is held down to a common laborer’s jbb because of prej udice he, iiidus ry. and the, commun ity all suffer an economic loss,’* says the report; " The report declares that southern states, in an effort to restrict the emigration ‘of co’ored labor ..to the north, are through? legislation »nd license fees making it difficult, and; in seine states [ s^ble, itofi private agencies ,to send i workers out bf the -state. There are [ numerous; instances, also,; says the report) ‘of the efforts of citizens to ! prevent the recruiting of colored peo ple for work in Other localities or states, some of. these even going so far as threats of violence to the re cruiting agent.’ This opposition can be removed through intelligent opera tion of public employment bureaus, whose object is adjustment, not mere shifting cf men, and whose tendency is to place workers as near home as possible. . Referring to migratory labor in general, without special reference to the coloped race, the report says: “The transfer from one section of the country to another of workers in increasing numbers is an uproot ing of home and community relation ships that must be looked, upon with concerns In the past we in the United States have talked very loose ly about shipping men from one part of the country to another, as though the desirability of shipment from - an industrial and social tpoiritof view were unquestioned.” ’ V (Ccntnued to page 5) FRIENDS GREET BRILLIANT YOUNG BISHOP. 1 Bishop W. J. Walls, elected to the bishopric of the A. M. y E. Zion Church at the General Conference of that tChurch lin Indianapolis, Ind., lsst May. from the editorship of the Star of Zion, the Church organ, made his first public visit to' Louisvilel,‘dur ing the Kentucky Annual Conference in session here last week, with Bishop George C. Clement of Louisville pre siding. Bishop Walls, who pastored here at Broadway Temple six years after* buildijig the magnificent church, edifi e, whi^h Will ever stand as a monument tq^ the untiring efforts of the young divine, faithful members, , and loyal friends, was given a great ovation when, introduced to the 24, as principal speaker on the big welcome program, his first appear ance since his elevation. Speaking from the. subject: “Enterprise and Business and Religion, the Challenge of Our Race Capacity,” the noted young pulpiteer and platform orator J held up he reputation made in this community several years ago, elicit ing prcIcnge. ' Bishop Jones, was fortunate in securing such-^a great personage ,to come to Winnsboro to address the Palmetto Conference.’ Winnsboro, S. C. COLOR LINE DRAWN BY GOD. Covington*, Tenn , Nov., (By Asso ciated Negro Press) Bishop E. D. Mouzon. chairman, of the commission on un fi cation of . the Methodist, Epis copal Church, South, took,,a long step toward 'agr ement with Bishop W. A. Candler arch opponent tfcb scheme of unification ^f^sen the; northern southern Methodist churches, when he declared in a sermon here that the “color-line had beefi drawn indelibly by God.” ; vv The -i statement was' nifade in an swer to criticism from Various south ern- so’urdes to the effect ‘ that ’ iii fighting -for -unification' he was Mak ing social equality 'for *the Negro in the south .possible.- The Nashville bishop denied this. > •-'•'-V-Vv “AH' decent and intelligent people in both races are unalterably opposed to social equality between the races,” he exp ained; ,“the indecent elements in both races jpre almost entire’y re sponsible for the existence of the so called race problem, as evidenced by the fact that of en the white man, who would.. buVn a Negro at the stake at night would the next n^om* ing be the father of a mulatto child.” Negroes have been much interested in' the cob roversy waged over uni fication. Bishop' Candler wag the fi sL southerner to speak outright against thfr. plan. He* opposed it on the ground that it would enable Ne gro* bishops of the northern church to superintend the affairs of white, communicants in the sou h. Most of the leaders of the church in the south agree with Bishpp Candler. They are not ashamed to let the wor'd know that they will not set WANT NE Educators F: Praise N~mi Negro Sch ■ ■ • • : • ■* - ■ Passing a resolution urging the North Carolina State Board of Edu cation and the North Carolina Gen eral Assembly to take steps to create a four year college /or Negrp teach ers ki No’rth 'Carolina, > Common Ground of knowledge. The majority of the conference was composed of Negro men and women who had thrust aside the barriers and handicaps of race prej udice and ignorance and gained to the common ground of knowledge Where f 11 mein are equal"; Their honest faces beamed with pride as they heard recifarof tlie ptbgfgss of Negro education in North 'Carolina and the audience was swept by spon taneous bursts' of applause time and again when speaker after speaker mentioned the erection of some cost y Negro high school'‘building in va rious sections of the State, Principal addresses of the day were made by ProfCssqr N, C-, New bold, division director of M Negro education of the Ndrth Carolina Boardof Education 4hd. by A T. Allen, State Superintendent of Pub lic Instruction. Tribute to RosenwaM. After commenting on the work that the State wa* doing, fo'r the education Of 1 the Negro '' citizens, Professor Newbold p auced to pay a handsome tribute' to the geherosi'y -of Julius Rossnwald, 1 Chicago phil anthropist, whd has invested more than‘ a third of a mil'icn of dollars in’ rura' schools ’ for 'North ; Carolina Negroes; >1 • ’H&j':'-■]" ‘We must pause in this hurried re cital to say that-the Hosdpv building programjhas,*! and hope to' housands drf . pie, some ► • of, whom ‘ had lost hope,” the speaker deck hap also ^gladdened the hearts of conscientious superintendents, : who, through the use of Mr. s benefac ion, have been able to!, get respectable schools for the . colored children , under their supervision, Whereas without this aid they-might not have been ab e to do anything now to improve wretched conditions.”1 The speaker also complimented the work of the Jeans and Slater fundi agents-, in Norih Carolina'in ad vancing the educational possibilities ef the Negro race. lie also held out hope to the heads--, of North Carolina private Negro schools gathered that aid from: funds would tance. He . po: t’rae the private were far in the ported institutio ed the public had outdis-an and-that fering because ... raise the funds to on a level with State. “The StaAe