Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / Sept. 21, 1946, edition 1 / Page 1
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CAPITOL TO HAVE ONE USES OFFICE CROWDS HUT WHITE MEDDLER WITH LYNCHING Spirited Meeting Almost Proved Fatal to While Man CHICAGO A Negro snti-lynch- j ing meeting almost resulted ir Hie lynching of a Tennessee white mr.n | visiting Chicago The man was re. cued by police. The Tenessee man. ' r)pntnn ( *ll a Chat ( annripa ! delegate to an AFL bakers union convention. was accused of cut-j ting a rally microphone cable. Denton was charged with mal t-j ious mischief and disorderly con- | duct. He denied the accusation an i | wag relased n iJtl bail Police ; said about 40 of nearly 2,000 railiy spectators, most of them Ncgroc surrounderi Denton anil accused Jilin | of cutting the wire connecting a ; loudspeaker to a sound truck. Of ficers rescued him from the ana [ crowd, some of whom shouted ‘Let's ! lynch him, treat him 'he way they ; treat us in the South." The man was spirited away by ■ police after Ui< crowd demanded his arrest Speakers a* the rail spent red by tin Chicago Citizen.-’ j Cora mittei Against t nehing. dc nounced racial discrimination and j lynchir gs in Southern states Speak- ! ers included Canada Lee. v. known actor, au dthe Rev Mai coin) ( Dodds, flirm ngham, Ala executive secretary ‘or Alabama fer the Southern conference f ■’■• Human Welfare GETS RIDE ON TRUCK THAT KILLS SISTER | SCOTLAND NECK. Sept j«. WLen John House, hitch-hiking from Norfolk, asked ;; ride on * passing transfer truck, he c-'Uld : 1 know that that very vehicle hou later would collide with an auto mobile in which his sister, Chris tine Mouse, school tcfcviter of Til lery. was riding. The truck and the j car were involved in a head-on collision and Miss House and An drew Branch, a second occupant of the car. were killed House, him self. was critically injured The accident occured eight miles from Scotland Neck .Saturday night. The truck, driven by J n hn Lyons, Negro of Norfolk, Va dr mo I 'shed the car driven by Branch, of the wreck and had no 4 ap prehended early in the week CONGRESSMAN HEU> ON PEONAGE CO! NT TUSCALOOS A, Ala. (NNPA) A representative-elect to the Ala bama legislature and three other men were arraigned here last Fri day oil Federal charges of peon- • age for allegedly holding a coi ned man and forcing him to work out h debt. United States Commissioner S. H Spxptt indent,i.ficd the men as Rerpresentative-elect R. h. Doughty, of Pickens county Eci dk L. Doughty William Ambrose and James V. Sanders, all of Re form. Ala. Theit were placed under SL OW bond each. A Federal indictment charged that the four transported Willi-* F. Wil Ifrom Cordova, in Walker county, to a farm near Reform, where he was held “in a condi tion of peonage.' 1 The indictment said the deten tion be gar. “on or about April 7, 1046.” The men weer arrested last Thursday at Reform by United States Marshal Murray Hinton and brought here. - ■ »jf lyafo . mw. ■' - *mMW BHr ^> " •- •'- : « Tc*jk wKrit yfßtKßt&r ■'« ** * 1. . ?knl Eebessti, shovn receiviwr i'uwtrs ft-wm Lvveite rtfeiungWii. Tsnmogw S. N. ¥. C, i racer, will h*> a featured performer at the Scuthcrn Toutfe L,sgssUitsrc wiser it meets hi Columbia. S. C.. Oc tober t*. 19, S*. Over » thousand The Carolinian . ■ . ' - 2 ' O ' ■ ' ' ' VOLUME XXVI. NO. 12 HALEICU, NORTH CAROLINA WEEK ENDING SATURDAY, 21, DM 4 rUJCH V Pastor Names Ga. Witnesses ★ ★★★★★★ *#★*★★** ******* Wallace Stirs Counhy In N. Y. Talk f'- WAR VETERAN SAVED FROM ANGRY THRONG FVLVA Paul D rs-v. 24 Negro ’var .-cim'-.n. w;.. being held in ,- Wes-cj r. North jail Mon day night, on a c.r-argr of murder in c'.'iirw-ction with *h<- fatal be til ing :1 ' Bill Jordan if., a Syl'.*•-• whim man. who was <-mpl ycd as ■ M-u Officers said i rdan was bc-tcr: vhen h<* encountered ;,*.< Negro while walking along ’he- rniir 'ad tracks near hi- East Sylv t horn • He died at .) C. Harris CornmurtiD hospital here a.jrne time late; of a f; .-leujrt'fl Sheriff I,eor. e-i H' Sden pf ,lark son county permitted the mob to go through the Sylva jail to look f ) the rr.nr, :ft c: they "There 1 outside and demanded that he tie turned ever to tin m The Negro way no! there. In the meantime, Dorsey nod been observed boarding a Trail ways bus Two whit- men are re ported m have boarded the bus and forced the Negro to get off w.itn them near Balsam about 2 a m Continued on back page) IS-YEAR-OL9 YOUTH HELD ON ATTACK CHARGE WILSON .Tohun!*' Knight, Jt iH-year old mute, Saturday war ord ereri held under $2,500 bond pend ing trial in Wilson County Superior Court on h charge of assault on Miss Peggy Borges’- ifi-year-tvld white girl of Sims, on Septum be i R Miss Burgess identified Knight as her assailant ana testified in a hearing before Justice of the Peace John M. Pearce that she was walk ing down -i country road to visit h friend near Sims when she pass ed Knight sitting along the side of the road She said he followed her after she passed and that althougn she "walk'd faster and faster and then started <o run,' Knight, to quickened his pace, overtook her. dragged her into a nearby field and choked her until her cries attracted two men When the men approached to investigate the cries she said he fled Knight was trailed by bloodhounds who followed the trail from the field to hi. home. Boil; Knight and his brother, Marcell us Knight 16. were taken into custody The sec ond defendant was later released. youth from every part of the Svui.ii are t-xper-ied to attenu in response to the call oi the South era Negro Youth Congress whose ] National ofifice is located in the Masonir Temple hui'diny. It irro inghfctr i' f j wmsSw m . j Wstr '8 i - i Hfflf 0 m ; » m i i • \ vir * % y, ter m n Getting Heady to Score Another Kwcknut! Joe l.ouis lends » < bartijis hand to pin a banner on Doris Brmays, enthusiastic vol iir.i.frr worker, who wilt ‘lenu-hei hand-to-Dixieland" .Sept 19. tfl and :!1 in the New York street colletlion campaign of the Sooth <-rn Conference for Human Wel fare IACPQPEHS H BRANCHES IN THE SOUTH NEW YORK A: the Nero y people throughout the ' r " come increasingly him! to {.he an porta nee of a strong drive against n*©s> violenc.', civ:! rights violations and heedless discrimination, the ranks of the NAACP have swelled t.o over 500,(WO members. At the September 9th meeting of the N. A A C P. National Board of Di rectors, dorter R. Current repo'.p chnrlers were granted to thirty -five branches This brings up tlr Uil.nl of NAACP branches m active opto - ation to i.i4a. Branches chartered v'rc Chilli • col he, Texas; Milton Florida; Mont gomery County, N C.. Imperial, Cal;. Paris, Ark ; Georgetown. Tox,.; Le nanah Okie ; PetwPetnn, S C Eugaula Ala.; Bloomington, Inf.; Washington Caur.ty, Ga.; Nesmith, S C : Wellington. Kaos.; Sampson, Ah. . Hearm-. Tex.. Ctewision. El . , Amitv\ die, N. V ; Curritnek. N C.; Lima. Ok hi . South Bound Brook, N. J - Tridelphiu. W Var Bruns wick County. N. C-.; Shelton. S. C.; Kennedy. Tcxr Brinkley. Ark Washington. N. C. Marion Ohio; Covigton, Ga:; Bladen County. N. C.; Elmwood. Pa.; Montgomery and Toombs Co. Ga.; Sul nicer Springs. NAACP Action Frees GI Given 50 Years NEW YORK—Sentenced by a prejudiced ccmrt-martial to fifty years at hard labor. Nr,el W. Greenidge is a free man todav, as a direr* result, of the interven tion of thn NAACP Legal Staff. His period of ermf moment was en tirely remitted and he was given an opportunity to reenlisi in the service. His letter to Franklin H Wil -1 lianas, .NAACP attorney, is typi J«M* Louis and Orson ‘YH!< s arc j td!-ni:nrmi‘i! of IHivi drap* l rur i t.o extend and \ t.h<’ work of the Goiifcr* nr»* in thr ‘ Sout h The Southern < 'nnlrreni ■** ] lor Human vVplfare 1 arm*s on I daily a #, iix(iirs bHm* the Mason- ! J> ? xir line to h< ip make a nif»r#» I democratic and prosperous Smith (MIMS 1 WANTED FES WIPE&MIIRBER HENDERSON, Sep* 16-- Wanted i on charges of murder in Vance r ' • i- Couri-1 ly, Leroy Grassland, 26 year-old fu- , tttiv- was captured Sunday after 1 om of the greatest manhunts in the hist ry of Vance CoUn'y. Cmrsiand. wanted for the alleged assault Slay- ; mg of Mi'.-;. Ola Clark, fiencjersori i whit'- woman, was captured by law enforcement officers at ML Carmel Church, a fev miles south of Henderson and taken t.o Cen tral Prison in Raleigh. He was found by the sheriff and city and county oficers in a nearby field and did not resist arrest Crost-1 uid is wanted also for th* alleged rape cf his mother-in-law at Lau.rinburg Monday morning. According to ‘he her iff, Mit Clark had been hit over Hr heac with a stone and a jug nr bottle She -lief] a! Maria Pvn'haru ho/pi!--.’ in Henderson late M ndn> after noon The search for Crossland hen been unde- way sine- last Monday aftorno n. In Ihe sear-h for Crosc land. bloodhoutsSs were brnmrht i - from Wilson in an st.tempt to track down the slayer. Following the arr°si the Sheriff praised citizens of Vance Count-/ for tnrh “regpert fu, law and or der - «aying that *ot one time was there any hint of violence from the citizen ry. cal of the many received by this office. Says Greenidge; “Your efforts instilled in me the courage to sec it through and to retain the intense faith m +l»ir ryi ty 0012T1 ~T’V XxHxi for which it stands. “Having laid aside the uniform ■ which I wore proudly— and in which I was still the object of an insidious prejudice —I find the ■ I (Continued on page eight} t PASTOR SAYS SAME PATTERN COUNTRY OVER nr; ;tth Mmr. anti t ••.•- ot ■ r • O'lttlH r.f rifncssaj W !h° ■ r i jjnichinu in Monroe. Ga . on ’ ;;y wor< r'-v-alcd i ere i oho t:\e R-v I'.-nce T H Nf i,n. past* r t*f ('tripbjr ;V; # 'iv,r i,»! Metnodist church of St Paul, during m .drlv- g before CIO' rf n 1 Broihei hood of Railway Traimo.n rr-pt’Cscrt, u i",'v- in tiw Stworkers Speaking • n '.no <-.ojeot f-' Georgia Pattern in Duluth. Rr\ Nelson caid : i.e wisre':-e, wore Wil lie Johnson, who formerly liv’d near Macon. Ga . Roy Green and -- !o,Thr; m~i Tiseir ’s’orn stair’ urot n the Ivnchiug h- vr be "i turned "ver to the NAAC'P and the i Workers Defense league in Newark .’lev Nelson reve-ted. ,. ( ..'t, «•> Itp i SOLDIERS FINED IN VIOLENCE THREAT CASE BY S. C. COURT 1 FI / )Ti If NCF.. S N J'A * War Department officials last T‘; . ’: ! ■■: ;; m\'i ! t „•!' i»' i of if.i circum-tanc-i-s connected with ;i disturbance here involivirg civilan. military and railroad po lice discharged veterans or; route ■ p, ihcir homes end 200 northbound | The disturbance started when | 1 "vo n,i 1 j r or \ policemen, or - me ■>u i|> fi ■■ op F- at Bragg. Nurtp r;,inline, whore the men had been I earlic r discharged, boarded southbound train to see how the ni'n were behaving and found .-.niv one slightly undo; the wivth- I t' l ■ ah/.. ,♦ 20h additional colored soldi*■ waiting m the station saw the MFs arrest, this one soldier ~nd began to grumble When sta- . tion officiate asked the MP s It . clear the soldier- away from be 1 gate so that passengers could I : board a northbound train, the sold ONE KILLED, TEN INURED IN Herbert Sharpe. H year-old couth of Statesboro. Ga.. was kilted Friday night and ten oth ers were injured in an accideir trwolvisg a ton and one-'haii truck, a largt truck loaded with I sit el and a Ford coupe ne a r Town Creek, about 20 mile south of Wilmington on U. S. route Vr According to Patrolman R C. Duncan, who investigated the ae i. idem the Ford coupe and the light truck, also a Ford, coll id - Mi and the co’jpr overturned: and came to a stop across the road. Immediately after this sc cident. a large truck loaded with ■feel cam*, on the scene. The dr .> ei of the large truck, Hoy Den stop of Norfolk, said that the lights of a ear parked at t. h•• scene blinded him, and that he did not see the coupe across the icad until he was about 50 feet away. He said he attempted to o'edge the ovei turned car. and pulling away from it, headed for the‘body of Sharpe, which had not been removed from the road. He then swerved the truck off the mad when it overturned. Seventeen others were aboard the light truck. Claren.-e P. Martin, white, operating t.heFord coupe, was operating on a charge of drunk i cn driving. W. L. Floyd, of ■ route 2, tV, 1 r,,;r,gfr,r., was a pas senger in the cai. * Passengers on the light truck 1 -who were rmiireri ar.ri fa ken tn i James Walker Memorial hospi tal were Joe Collier, Rosie i tContinusd on back page) Secy, Wallace Denounces Monroe, Ga., Lynchings DIVINE FOLLOWERS TAKE VOTE CASE TO COURT PHILADELPHIA (N N PA; --Three of Father Divine's followers last Friday asked fudge Clare Gerald Fcrmrty. in Common Pleas Court No. 5 to override Jhe Registration Commission's refusal to enrol) th»m as voters because they would not slate their birth names. Using their ''religious” names in fbe suit were Job Patience. 49, of 372 South Broad street; Prodigal Son, 42. of 507 So. Broad St., who said he served in the Ar my under that name, and Miss Victory Love, of 395 North Forty-first street, who pointed out her original name had been wished upon her an vesiors by slave-holders. Judge Fenerty took th.- case under advisement. The TvlP's saw a <-ol»n ed set geant in the crowd and askeu him in assist them. lie talk'd hack to them, which th<-> did not like, and they arrested him H arrest caused fighting to break out. A half hour later two soldier; approached the ticket office in the station and .nr of them asked the- woman ticket ;d2Jer tor a ticket. She ioid ’..he soldier tc wait until she was through wait- I ing on ’he first soldier He said something in reply, which she did r,.,t like. She called over ih" loud l speaker system for toe MP's A major and- a captain seeing he * disorder attempted ;<> assist uv; MFs and restore order The cap- . , tair. was struck in the mouth and knocked down Four or five sold iers were arrested by the Mr's When the situation grew worse ;H. F Swilley i railroad poll c ; man intervened He had a ri >t c«r» in his hand *nd attempted to hold the soidiers at bay. At that | moment the city police arrived, surrounded the soldiers and inarch 'd about 130 of them off to the local jail. Two men were released. The I others were held. At about 3 o’clock the ri' xf morning, the men ' were tried in police court here Os the five individuals arrested div ing the fracas, two were fined $10!! each or thirty days .in jail two wort fined $52 each or l.htry rhijs in jail, one one was fined sl7 or fifteen days in jail. All the others were fined sl7 each >r fifv-u: • days in jail All ■*f the men ex cep' thru naid their fines. The mass trial war ;'r,Tr>oleted m about ' half '"hour and at. about 5:30 a m.. tha men word marched ’n the railroad -tat ion and put aboard a south rnound train They had been dir eh treed at For Brace. Norte I Foot.inucd on *t,mK pa,.’ '» VV. SOI.ON GOES WITH VVSFXS TO WHITT HOI SE W ASHINGTON NNT'A i - Sena frir .Tomes M. Mead, 'he Democratic York, ‘accompanied a delagatiun of churchman from the African Met ft odist F.piscocpal Zion Church io the White House Inst Wednesday ‘ The delegation, headed by Bishop W ,T. Walls of New York and Chi capo, celled to invite ‘’resident Tru man to the sesquieenter.r.ial celebra tion which the denomination is hold ing m New York City through S^pteither ?2. The P,ev Marshall L Shepard, Recorder o.T Deeds of the District of Columbia, whose office has been under investigation by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, was else with the delegation. .\m;ro vottos LODGE COMPLAINT AGAINST BILBO Jark.-on, Miks.. - The Him enn• plsunJ ft m wpti.u M;r-,r,.-ippl against Sen ThfOiinye Bubo's r< :<-r. ’ rc-unrruruit !u;i '■■ in the ,i..t; '•.'•route to Washington ; 1 ’.v.-u; re vealed tonight Some 50 whit*? and Negt’o v- i •ts in Misrtsriptji f’i.'t ;< ..-worn siateincnt enarging tint Bilbo’- • "lection w-'s "1 nnied w.ift !>•;■ .<t me '.,■ Hciuev.d uy ic>r- <■ anri violence.” NEW YORK • NNl' \ ■ I>■ IP lynching ot lour pei -om- iie-i. Monroe Gc.rguo July J.f. eitro; by S'.ere l .ary |f t” mmt*t re Henry \ W’dtace i.,-t Thursday night <s ;;r, illustration >f tl.*- kind of eidire ti t makes 'var in c \ jtable. S” r* ory Wail -ICC’ poke in Madi ■on Kqu...’’< G.’- 1 der .U •' anti-i > v. f \ :))■] »_J ; n. i bl:rori *a Ij-v.- rpr.r.ot ed jointly o> tv- Irideoeudcnt fit* - men • C itui.itt'" f ihi Arts. Se cs -i • tessions and the M ■ t.iouei Citi/iT ■? T’otjtn o Anjou Gnrn- Th- subj<K: <f Mr. Waiino- .*• ■•jK’cch was Tin W. v to Peaer ' in it he s’t foi t.h a u laiiod j reign progrem which m cH-ct mark) i .«v- ->• .♦* :~ci i- - ■ )<•* •i • ■' * .11 i*•. *, \ * j• * i .••■ii Hu ni -i oiiri iL" Wei;! -rn pow«*rh 'Tli” i’ok! ot p-’-'-e. Ml Walla”.’ c, Jait-J. i;. t'i oe mtusuicd n i in •huiarr hot ir, the hearts an i mind'- of men." (''ont’tTuitrg, he vod r o.: . 5 : -, j prifi;- fur u.. surd tor every i •H lie we’ln A thi pri<”- of giving up piejuriic? hatred, fear and ignorance. ■‘Lets down to eases here at heme. ’First we hate prejudice hatred, fear and ignorance of certain rue es. The ret-.-iit muss lynching m Georgia was not me* civ the must ■ uru.vari anted brutal act of mop violence in the United States in recent years: it was also an illus tration .J the kind of ort-jodice that makes war inevitable. ’‘Hatred bleeds hatred. The dot trine of racial superiority proriuc us a desire 1 get even on the par’ of its victims. If we are to vvoiv for peace m the rest of the world, we her.* in ihe United States a,I eliminate racism from >ut unions our business rganixations. our ed ucational institutions, and cur em ployment practices. Merit alone must be the measure of men. ■‘Second, in pay-met): for peae", we must give up prejudic* . hatred, fear and ignorance in the ec nomw • world. This means working eara iday alter day. for a large volume of world trade. It menus helping undeveloped areas of tie. world : ■ industrialize themselves with the help of American techni cal assistance and loans.” Secretary Wallace was hissed several times during h:s speech. T‘.*e first outbreak occurred upon his mention of President Truman's name vhen after Mr. Wallace saiu .he was neither anti-British nor pro-British, neither anti-Russia nor , prc-Rusutan. he reported that when President Truman read these word-, be said -they represented the pol ' Continued on ba.k pa get T Jji§f V* «, ' Wa& ■ I 1- § I <'Vj§§ r' r - r. T * WBtfBMKSPTOBSaBt a hjK v '■ .? jft’ G. -Tp a*S®hK Mm JUsSßßtjMmm muTpingßTiTii nr -*% - WESLg&m lev / 'i-'/ji? 7-I-I' t AV. ' tfWflptrfs " v,f.;sG •; \ . ~ ' - . ■ several «i the world s Hip youth leaders coining to America to at tend the Southern Youth I.egis latnre which meets in Columbia. S, C-, October 18, IH, and 20," said 1 Mrs, Dorothy Burnham Fdyoa > tional Director of the Southern I Negro Youth Congress, upon her • arrival from Paris. France this J week. Mrs. Btimhani Ss pictured D. C. USES TO ELIMINATE TWO OFFICE SYSTEM JSv .FA.MKS 1,. UK KS N'.VPA SUfi Writer W/»SHINGTON. D. (' Secretary of Labor Lew;:- Ti. Schwellenbsch •«*i tr> aboHal! ego cat ion in the District of Co lumbia office * f the United stages r.iupioyfm nt Service hot .-‘jerffd hi- rfcnmincniiatiiin of minority ••••'"Up i -.-pri smtaSi to stop !h» filling "f diserfmmat' -rv hiring or 1 s v dCn the- public employment • "ifices are returned to the stales November 15. ....loiiuon of segregation in the "h-'Ui USES -ffict-, *vus expected in bo effected within a fortnight. Administrative procedures ir.volv ■o' .1! making the change prevent •l ihi ."v-errfarv from taking im mediate action, it was -aid Mr Sen -vellenbaeh's promise * owlish -. etegatj- n in the local of- Dor’s, t.iin- iftcr 1 -presentatives of mjtaii ity g: nip 01 sanitations and ■ on-i - had held -i conference '■ith USES iffieiajs and presentee •‘ ■ v.-ni-i six-p nit progiam foi pi -'-‘ion it rnioorhv group i'*ei wiv-o the public eiopitry iK-nf office.- 31 ret 11 ■rued to lbs stales’. oocr Mwiiiiriipr subrn it er :viSchwciienb-ich called for 1 (Musa! :o accept discriminabuy hir orders, denial of sn /ice to employer: .-uliniii 11ng <»; li indusji>n ’!> stair operating plans of p licies and prO'-o' 1 1:- <- to o-'i*- iTiot.c ibc full ion ■! 1 >r t\ grn 7, oi-kcr . • ogMV-rnt of ” r "nn«-i ’o ■ - ’ii it *!.«—,c poji : i-es mo i ilnwpd. and equal an pioymeni. ipp’it i- untie f-n all of the -g ! ’hey employee; i < gardless ■" ’icr- i-r-y color •••. nat-ioad ! origin. -p -it eajjj ;r.- group rivrstn 1 .?-} ■ '-he f.-.Jlwvi:;:' ; *-- () rmr.*'ndatisms. ■.V.. ,pr, , 'tv pi-rpeUlhtlcn i o-grt g-i’i inn it: t-h- USES an T ■ ill upon Ihi Fed'-ral Government 'll Ink ■ tl'v inhiative in aboil ,h'r g A- • fu . !ep ,n this direction 'old as indicate ti .of :.. "1 salt-h ■:f •: •• Dr-j-.artpjcnt of I-ibor. *t :g-” .rnrn'-fiiate abolition of all ■ - mis -it -ont egat i ri in the District •1! C lun 1111:. USES offices W• i - -n agreement that no .'ovcrmneni.i! agency f?iuin"ed by the F-dct '.l g-' -"0»i vHivnW ico ter ;;od facilitate.' r -a‘noone dip c-iiainaticwi in its operation. Far that reason and because of the aft on ir u need Federal police of non -ii-pi’imin ‘ion in cmplnymeni. we u-ec that USES refuse '■> accept dis criminaiory hiring orders i -We feci i hat. powerful «S S£t forth in Field Instruction 379 (re \ ;scd 1 fail to accomplish the an u uncpd policy of 'equal able «tn pjoyroent npportunities.‘ 4 'Each state plan of opr i( jfiot! o.bniitbcl for approval should con tain p lici-';- and procedures tor pri-t-iOi ijtg 'he full utilization of minority group.- in local employ ment training programs set viced by the agency. f. "Tbe-J t ahuUliJ 1»o -■ > gi.trd otic juate qualified personnel to see that policies designed to eliminate discrimination'. arc followed in lo cal offices. it "All persons should have equal opp rtunities for employment, c the staff of the agency without t~ oird to raci. color, creed or na tional origin.’' -- V- Kr\. I h<mtihs l«* Chest (Campaign l)irr< for WII.rvUriGTON -- The Rev. C. i Tr. mas. niisustfci of tin Wilming -1 :. 7th Dry Adventist Church, nn? been named 1946 campaign rec- Wr of the Negro division o. the Coiiirr.imilj Chest The Rf Mr. Thomas successfully directed nr- re -1 cnl Red Cross Drive here. He is forceful speaker and is p. >rnin r:i| in church arid civic affairs receiving Bowers and honors from the youth of Frar„ r. Siv was one of the p-inciple speakers at a French Youth Rally given in honor of the World Federation of Democratic Tooth in Paris on August Ist. Shown with Mrs Burnham are two w’orld renowned youth leaders. Arnold Mcri from thf Soviet Fnidn. right, and !?rns cm* Gallego. Spain, left, _
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
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Sept. 21, 1946, edition 1
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