JM CROW TRAIN IS TARGET Hjß a\^ jß(3 l j i^- j :,L I.S,L:. , —* - f - } - —^ V'OLUME XXVII, NO. 8 IIAS',EKSii, NORTH CAROLINA WEEK KNPINO SATI UDAV, -Aid ST ;’.(), OH7 Puli'E '< c Beach Police Make Mass Arrest i j|l 4L f, if « *, •» * if i f- % * ¥• ■& ★ + /V£G/?0 FIREMEN’S SENIORITY UPHELD s 50 ABE FINED $5,90 EACH FOB TBESPASSING WILMINGTON - T. C Jervay. editor of the Wilmington Journal, Tuesday charred »~ Two pris oners escaped from the S? Clair . County jail at Belleville early last Tuesday after preparation lasting j more than a week in which they i used a smuggled hack saw to cut a hole m the steel Inttir '-vail of a second-floor cell block. A third prisoner was caphuo.l by jailer:- as he was climbing over a gate in the courtyard. * Those who escaped were Theo dore Gardner, held since April 4 on a burglary and larceny charge, and Delton Windoro, arrested July 22 for robbery. Both, gave East St. Louis addresses KKKUNDERCOVER HINTS REVEALED Chicago lANP) A series c items in the “Ticker Tape”, fea ture of the September issue o* j Negro Digest, leads some observ- ; ers to hint that the monthly pub lication has an undercover ope rative who is actually a men.- • let of the infamous Ku Klux Fsan Items carried in the current issue unde the heading KKK KOMMUNIQUE and not covered elsewhere ip the nations prose are: “The sheetlers arc- airborne paw. They have been dropping literature over Wash, by oJam.. Bill Mauldin's cartoons notwilL standirvg. Klansmen don’t really wear sheets. Matter of fact they lev out. sls for corded robes, crested with insignia and cheese Cloth-lined hoods. Money goes to p Georgia cotton mill, which gets SI! 02 profit on each brothe New York customer can duplicate outfit for $3 98.”' FTC Charged With Unfair Practice Towards Race WASHINGTON iNNPA* Tha dismissal rrf a colored clerk-typist by the* Federal Trade Commission test week brought from the United Public 'Workers of America a r barge* that the agency is engag ing in '‘unfair practices" tw*rds its employees. The work of the clerk-typist. Miss Pauline A Manson. was rated "unsatisfactory ” by Alfred D'Ales sandro, a FTC supervisor, ant! a no* ice of dismissal was sent to her. Charring that Mist* Mention's dis missal is the latest Step *n another drive by the agency to rid Itself J cf calf rod employees above the 1 grade of messenger, the union J pointed out that her last efficiency • rating v. as "very good" and direct- ; *,/•! -,-HtMv, ion ia lit previous charge 1 avai.iM Mr D'A.iowsndro turn he is biased against colored peop h. y New Ehapiahi #"■' :Wl Wmmfoi. ■ ' \6f. : r ii' ' yv; -yf - ■ v, ; > 's@sSj§gss&> Rn. l.lovd M. Alexander, pi< - lured ah<»\<, is the new St. Anc u Stine's College chaplain, who will assume his dulses on the opening of the school year on Sep tember 18. Kev. Alexander is a St. Augustine's graduate and served in the Chaplains < orp of the Army with the rank of cap tain. MAN KILLS ITFE, 22 IN HERB DOCTOR Rn, Reidsvflle chit f of police reported acre Wednesday Naval Veteran Cites Bias in Many Service Ratings New York A story ; ..if how Negroes underwent c seg- I r••gated recruit training in the navy and how they were kept in low ratings despite their capa !. ’hies is told in an aritcie ap ; pearing in a *u: rent issue of Su. - . j vey Graphic. The article “Yeo j man. First Class: Negro” was 1 ! written by Felix L. Paul. Paul, who is a navy veteran i advanced to the rating of yer. in.on and was in charge of nm«. I other yeomen and civuiar s at ; Lido Beach. N Y Here he e*x ; c mined over 100,000 service rec ; ovds from cover to covei. He i counted 1,215 men who had >. n I If-red the navy with advanced . r ites. varying from petty officer third class up to chief, thereby valving boot training altogether. Not one was a Negro-. He also tabulated 1.008 cases of ‘ ! rt:cr, who had skipped rates afte< going through boot training for ! example, from firemen second class to motor machinist second Iclnss or from yeoman third class !to yeoman first class. Only one was a Negro. Many Held Citations He saw hundreds of Negroes, ■with high school education and more, who had been in the navy . i ears and longer, with outstand ing records, who were being dis cnarged as steward mates and FIGHTS COLORED GROW Henry C. Daniels, president of | Local 3 of the mBwA. chargefl tha‘ the FTC has curried on a f.yht. a gains: the group ot colored em ' y.lo.vees sver since they were •trans ferred to dial agency from the Of fice of Price AdtavirnstrsUms. They are the first colored clerical work ers employed by FTC. Upon their transit--- to FTC that agency refused to accept Ihc-iv. *un-’ j til directed to do >:n by the Civil ! Service Commission. According to; ’Mr Daniels, tne FTC has tried to 1 reduce their grades to compel j j clerk-typists to accept training as I I card punch operators, ha:; refused j !to assign proper work to account- j I ants transferred from Ob A. and! ; finally att'urvotad ar''«f.rnrily to re jduct .. ;'v.viit£' . _ , INJUNCTION IS SUSTAINED BY APPEAL COURT Rich,mCnd, Va, (NNPA) The Fourth United States Cir cuit Court of Appeals last Wednesday affirmed a deci sion of Judge Sterling Hutcheson of the United Slates District Court for the eastern district of Virginia upholding the seniority rights vt colored firemen on the Norfolk Southern railroad. Judge John J. Parker, of Charlotte, N orth Carolina, who delivered the opinion, declared that the policies of the Brotherhood of Locomo tive Firemen and Engine-men had the “purpose as well as the effect' of depriving col ored firemen of their senior ity rights. He said the Brotherhood ap patently brought up the facto: . J “promotabiiity” to explain v.hy it had compelled the No: foik Southern to remove Ton: Tunstall, a colored fireman, from his assignment as locomotive .fireman on a passenger run from Norfolk, Virginia, to Mairden ; North Carolina, and give that ' run to a white fireman who war :member of the Brotherhood. Judge Parker pointed out that the Brotherhood, as the bargain ing agent of the entire class o . c. aft of railroad firemen, had nc r i'dated an agreement with Southeastern carriers on Febru ary 18, 1941. and a supplemental • agreement on May 23. 1941. which Continued on page eight seamen. Some had survived the j Slaking of ships and held cita- j tiotiS. even from the chief of na | ipersonnel. But they had not i been promoted. Paul maintained an average of j • 4 in conduct, proficiency in rate. i and ability as a leader of men. • ; Tms is the highest possible mark •in the navy. And yet he never ; ; get higher than yeoman first ! ciass. And as Paul puts it. “Manv ! considered that excellent f,r ■■* i ■Continued on back page) BACKWARD FOLK WANT TO LEARN WASHINGTON *XNPA> - Util-! ■rates arc especially eager to learn ; • to write their names and are gen- . rally concerned with the immediate j • pohlcms «f thier work That is one j of the findings of Ihe project for: i the adult education of colored peo ple «i i--nmred by too United States , f fie•:• nf Education with fund.- pro- ' ided by the Carnegie Corporation f Nov, York. One example cited was that, of worker in an airplane factory vho wanted to learn how to till , out forms and compute the deduc tions made from his wages foi in- • : su ranee and taxes. Another was that of a weigher in a snufi factory who was especially concerned V-th 1 the phase of arithmetic with which : 'he had to deal itt his daily work. Still another example was that of ■ lilts who belong to organizations and wanted 1-e know hem !o con- I dttet a meeting properly. To train the adults, seven insti tutions Atlanta University, Fort Valiev State College. Virginia' | State College, Hampton Institute , and Tennessee State Agricultural ; j rod Industrial College last year; j offered an introductory course in adult education for teachers. Enrollment in these courses rang- I , od from twelve to twenty-three and i totalled H>s The anrstliees repre -1 sealed lay leaders, undergraduate i '•and graduate students, teachers ' and principals in oieme-tte-v. high j ->nd evening schools, ami teachers i . . -'* •*» ... » Y 1 , f .mi-rmii' Endorses Bill (bins Governor Gregg Cherry left, is shown as he save -ri.vlul en dorsement last Monday in Raleigh to the current campaign to estab lish the birthplace memorial for the noted Negro educator and leader. Others in the group. left to right, are John R. Larkins. Ne gro director of North Carolina Tiihiie Welfare? Alexander W Stephen, field supervisor for the memorial campaign; and Warren E. Allen, business manager of THE CAROLINIAN. Stephens announced in Durham that sev er:!! Durham bark had purchas ed the Booker T. Washington Me morial 50-eent pieces in amounts NEGRO UNIFORMED POLICE URGED FOR RALEIGH By SCOOP JOHNSON, Carolinian Managing Editor The move now on foot by the Negro Citizens Commit ; tee to have Negro uniformed police, gets oil' on a move I recently adopted by the Committee mentioned. This committee is headed in )>1 W Washington, who j calicd Cin Council’s attention to a‘cords of Negro police | men in other southern cities. rimtimied im pig«* fight Pioneer leather Passes ; , s» Hk. i ; ■■■ I % * % * M r F ' , ".'T'*' V 4, *► ii \ V X % ? i F, N ' -jw' :■ L> . ./■ ■ -V - —. .— Mrs. Julia up. lists V, i Ilia ms. oni* «f RaJrigh's pViwors in thr irx-din; profession, passed swuy ; last wet after a fruitful serviev rn bei < i vho«eti work. Mrs. IVii baui* had the dfettnct-itst t*l oh- i ranging up to 81.00 b. Many- per -on- are securing the coins to keep as souvenirs. Limes E. Stephens, not pictured anttve. a brother of the field sup ervisor of the ETW Memo ia! ! inundation program, spoke at. St. tmbrose Episcopal Church and l edoral Street Baptist Church last Sunday in connection with the drive. Mr. Stephens, a lawyer, is a former Assemblyman of the N’ineenth District of New York's Harlem. Dr. .1. O. Plummer of St. Ambrose Church bought 50-rents mt mortal coins for all women present last Sunday morning. lairing her Bj.fhfV.ir ©t Seienee degree m th. ripe ngc of ?S» The deceased was widely known lk>«!ienmt iiif whm.-Wm*; «>•«!»« ©S' (hft <: - ‘ ••• «s r *' 'rtrohn :. Crack So. Ry. Train Race Segregation Stated As Unreasonable Ry NAACP THREE NAMED TO COMMUNITY CHEST CAMPAIGN RALEIGH - The appointment of j 'hrt-e colonels and nine majors to, ! serve In the Community Chest cam j ; o.;n this fall was announced this | week by F B Caudle, campaign j general. Rev. E C. Lawrence. pastor of ; First Congregational Church; E L. Raiford. executive secretary of the Blood worth Street Y MCA; and Kev M. W Williams, pastor of Cal vary Baptist Church were named colonels on the campaign commit - This comm;tt.ee controls the tumpaign, sets policies, and. makess f'tial dccisioti- on all matters. These men were also appointed* majors ;i: the prospect rating, quota divi sion which determines amounts to hr- raised by each unit. Other major-, appointed include; (Continued on hack page) Whites Start Tyrrell Affair, Writer States s Greensboro Whites imposed themselves on Negroes and whites led in the series of events which finally led to revolt of the community, W. T. Boss said in a 10-inch article entitled "Among Us Tar Heels" following reports that white and Negro students had been living at the home oi S. P. Dean, prominent leader of the cooperative movement in North Carolina, while working on a project, in the Greensboro Daily News last Wednesday morning. “The Tyrel! trouble seems io have been precipitated not by Negroes, but by whites’", the article reads, “and it is evi ihe ms elver. upMa the Negroes. "Perhaps not entirely, but all the signs are that the whites dent from the fragmentary reports that white people Imposed led in the events which finally led to a revolt of the community which perceived in this mixed residence of whites and Negroes an attack upon what we call 'our cherished traditions'. It is evident that they were not invited to make their abfcdc wilh a Negro schoolmaster. , . . "Sometimes one feels that certain whites are saving more about segregation than certain blacks are saying.” j Equal Military Policies Seen As Guaranteed WASHINGTON -NNPAI -Fair, i and equitable military policies as- j f'Ctinp colored personnel were virtually guaranteed by the ap-: poir. tmeTsls of a Secretary of the i Army, Secretary of the Navy and Secretary of the Air Force by Pres ident Urumnn last. week. The three men. who will head . th- department comprising the Na tional Military Establishment un . der Secretary of Defense James B Forrestal, are Kenneth C. Royall. Secretary of the Army; John L. NCCGRADUATE IS UNDER $209 BOND E IN BUS DISPUTE BY S. n. JOHNSON JR. SUFFOLK. Va. i NNPA) W. L Hamilton. Jr, son of the Rev. W. L. : Hamilton, well known Norfolk j minister and a World War II vet ' crac. who was injured while serv- E ing with the Ninety-second Division in Italy, was arrested August 14, land jailed in Nansemond county, i charged with violation o.f section 4533-A of the Virginia lev, i Young Mr. Hamilton vas ei,route ifiom Kinston, North Carolina, to i his home in Norfolk. Occupying i ihc second seat from the rest he j 1 was ordered by the bus driver to j move to (he re r of the bus. Being j E an interstate passenger. Mr. Hamil ton loiri trie driver of the “Irene Morgan Supreme Court ruling." which forbids segregation of inter state travelers on buses, and did ■ not move. The Vras driver summoned a Suf ' folk police officer in nr, effort to have Mr. Hamilton move or leave the bus After some discuss ion with die driver the city officer would not interfere in the affair. A S'afe police officer was sum- j rnfmed and. after more deliberation j wiih the driver. Mr Hamilton was , Hold that it iie did not move that; he would be put under arrest. Contendin', for his rights, the 1 passenger refused to move and was ! arrested Mr. Hamilton reports that j ! the officers were courteous while | making the arrest and during the ; four hours he was in custody ; if-- •• id op v-k pag«> i NEW’ YORK The requirement by the Southern Kail way Company that Negro passengers be segregated on the Southerner, crack’train from New York City Lo Nevv Orleans, is unreasonable and should be set aside by the interstate Commerce ('omission according to a brief filed by the National Association for the Advancement of Col ored People with the ICC last week in a suit on behalf of V a slit? Brown, Lillian Falls, and Muriel Hoicome against the railroad. The brief was filed in support 1 of exceptions to a report of an ; examiner of the ICC and was ; ix.pared by Attorneys Spotts wood W Robinson, 111, Thurgood Marshall, and Robert L. Carter. The examiner’s report had 1 found that a regulation requiring segregation is reasonable. The brief took the position tha. the railroad is without authority t, adopt such a regulation bas ing much of its argument upon rlu logic of the Irene Morgan de cision where the Supreme Court itruck down a Virginia law re quiring segregation of interstate bus passengers because “It seems clear to us that the seating ar rangements for 1 he different races in interstate motor travel require . <1 single, uniform rule to pro mote and protect, national travel ’ Regulation Unreasonable (Continued on pag. 8) j Sullivan, Secretary of the Navy, and W. Stuart Symington, Secre,- j ’ary ,-.f the Air Force ; Os the three men. Mr. Roy all, i ! who has been the Secretary of War ! I since July 24. is the only one who’ is not considered liberal in his views toward colored people A North Carolinian and said to be an aspirant for the governorship of his native State, he is not expected to take any action which may be regarded as offensive. It is believed that he is most likely to pass on to one of his assis tants matters involving colored | people where a decision may place I him in a position regarded as un- I friendly by colored people or as | too friendly $0 colored people by j white North Carolinians. CXFRIEND 1.1 NESS NOT NOTED There is nothing in the record of ! the other two appointees which | would stamp them as; unfriendly in i their attitude toward colored peo |oh Mr Sullivan is a native of New Hampshire and lias been Un der Secretary oi Ihe Navy since June 13, 1946. He is a lawyer by i profession and a veteran of World Wai 1. in which he served as a bluejacket in the Navy. He served in the post of Assistant Secretary (Continued on back page) | - - - - ~ ’ interracial Church’ 1 Group Is Ordered Out Os Halifax ROANOKE RAPIDS -- A group' of 30 white and Negro traveling missionaries Thursday moved out of Halifax County in compliance with health department regulations’ that their camping stout-d was not sanitary. The order to move was given af ter the missionaries had spent Wed nesday night in the house and on the groudm of Mrs 1 Ir/ k Clark where the group had stopped on ; their way from Florence, S C.. | where a new church has just been : | founded to the headquarters of the Church of the Lord Jesus Christ of the Apostolic Faith in New Jersey, with which the inte-rnical body is i affiliated. E. A. Hasting, sanitarian of Hal ifax County said Wednesday he i had ordered line group to nteve j i ebu where because there was not. -a i VILNFJTS HOME IS DYNAMITED Birmingham, Ala. iNNFAI— \ coal miner's new home, the object of throe recent court suits involving a city ordinance pro ii bit in s - colored persons from living in property stoned for whites and whites from !i virlg in j property roned for colored, was (iatr.aceci bv a dynamite blast last Monday night. Sheriff Doit McDowell reported last Tuesday. The ordinance had been de clared unconstitutional by fed eral District .fudge Clarence Mullins on the ground that it violated the Fourteenth Amend-. 1 - merit to the Federal Constitu tion. but the owners, Samuel ami Issic Mar Matthews, had not i I yet moved into it. Mr. and Mrs. Matthews built the house but were refused an occupancy permit after it had bet n approved by the city build ing inspector's office. Judge Mullin- had issued sr. injune lion restraining city authorities from interfers-ir.g with Mr. and Mrs. Matthews. One side of the house was destroyed by the ex plosion. Racket Baron* Flee From Miami Dragnet y BV JAMES ». LAf'OfUCHE MIAMI (AJj’P' Cadillac rid ing barons of Miami's Negro un derworld. and Buick driven mani pulators of bolito and Cuban lot teries here, are fleeing the city : following an edict to “stop gamb { ling." A police dragnet, in the Ne -1 am section of the city last week, : spread by Lt. O. W. Faircloth, net ted the city $4,420 in jail fines, i It is estimated that more than . $10,000,000 is extorted from Negroes l yearly, living in greater Miami, by number racketeers whom the police head says he will “drive from th* i streets.” VETS PROTEST JIM CROW LAW j RICHMOND. Va. -- Negro le | gionnaires walked out of the tnorn i log session df the twenty-ninth ! annual state convention of th? American Legion here Inst Tues i day morning when Robert B. Crav;- : ford, state commander, who was : presiding at the session, read the I Virginia Jim Crow Law U the col | uved veterans and upheld the sog regatta! laws against their pro* 1 te-I. Trouble began when the Negro veterans who were provided hous ing at the Monroe Center while white veterans were provided lodging 1 in the John Marshall Hotel, insisted on sitting in a space al ; located to white delegates, aftsr the convention committee had promised representatives of tha I John Marshal! high school where > the convention was being held.- that state Jim Crow Laws against mixed seating of white and. Negro*# 1 would not be violated. -. camping sit in the county whidt could comply with regulations gov erning rest room facilities, adequate fresh wafer supply and bafbag# disposal Since no approved trailer carnlj in the county accepts both wfclfe and Nejrro patrons (he order to the group of about 15 whites -and i.s Negroes of noth sexes wigs tan tamount to a demand that th# group leave the county. It was the second time within the past few- days that repr«*#nt*r lives of an organzatlon faVoriM non-segregation of Negroes atid whites had beer, asked to movh «Ut of the northeastern North CM*!ton county. mwKLi., covsrr Arv&m-i in Columbia in Tyrrell cotwMy - . g, i * »t,WKtw gMJVfcftSM pvuuvu‘o v» mv >««mi fContinuetl or back page)