PAGE FOUR EDITORIALS WATCH THE CAROLINIAN GROW With this issue the CAROLINIAN doubles its size to ltf pages, atul Uk : eby ushers in a new era in Nejrr*’* Tarheel jonmalism. There have been 16-page edi tions "of the CAROLINIAN before, but they were special issues built on an 8- prtpro base, 4 heretofore the regular size of the paper. 'The CAROLINIAN believes it can serve its readers better with a large)* paper, carrying more news and features It is believed also that a paper published within the Ante should have a wide ap peal, so the pubisher is expecting a large increase in circulation for the bigger CAROLINIAN, especially in neighboring cities to the east and north of Raleigh a well as Raleigh itself. Our slogan is, Watch the CAROLINIAN Grow!” Not only in pages, but, also in coverage, quality, circulation, and service to its readers and advertisers. UMSTEAD 1 EARNS A LESSON If the vot»r.g 'll the predominantly Ne gro precincts of Raleigh was any indica tion of the trend m the state and there is good reason for believing that. I lit*' u true, Scnator-nominate Broughton can thank the colored voters ior his margin of victory in a close race. Negroes of the state have always had a high respect for Mr. Broughton. When Mr. Cinstead, hoping to get an advan tage in a hot campaign, sought to make capital of his opposition to Cm Civil Rights program, while the ‘oraier gov ernor played down that issue as became a gentleman, Mr. Broughton won the Ne gro vote to himself. Those who expect Mr. Broughton to act in the Senate as it he wore not from Dixie will be disapp ■ bed. The time has not yet come when a southern politician subject to a southern electorate can run the risk of being labeled a Nogro-phiie, and there- is no good reason to think that the new senator is in any danger of being one anyway. (He sc the man who has said that race relations are better m North Carolina than in any state the Dinted States.) But as has be-n said Ist those columns bob . . Mr, Brougaum is a docent man. a clean man and a man of ability. IR is superior to ’be type of May bank and Johnston to the sou-h of us, and he is superior to 1 instead no re ng our midst. It is of great significance for the fu ture that the Negro voters probably tipped the balance in this senatorial elec tion Notice is thereby served on lutvr- 1 candidates tor state oil tee that the Negi •* vote is a fact >v to be reckoned with, i at will understand that if they are not tor us. they cannot afford to be too vow-u against us. By the- next four years there ought to t>o. and there may be, loU,(KK) colored voters in the Democratic primar ies. THINGS DO CHANGE Those who are inclined to believe (and who is not, sometimes) that the status •of’the Negro in the South improves no. at call, should ponder two items of news appearing in the Negro press. One story ; did of the attendance of 5-'. Negroes as accredited delegates from respective counties to the state Den.-era tic com notion of Texas. It would have been incredible just a few years ago The Negro delegates were welcomed and seated with the rest ot the delegation from their own counties. The other news item accompanied b> a photograph, described the voting by THE CAROLINIAN Rviblisned by The Carolinian PuVJmhihe Bo Snared as second-class matter, April h. 1940. at the' f*twl Office a’ Raleigh. N coder the Art of Vlarch 3, 1879 P. R. -JFIRVAS. Publisher C D HALUBURTON. Editorial* Rijbst.rlbtJon Rates One Year, C 2.50: Six Months, $1.75 Art" local - i ; rs, often barely litcmL themselves, who refuse to be “satisfied' that Negro appicanfs for registration can read and write. The biggest tiling standing in the • av of more rapid progress in North Carolina is its own insufferable so!f-satisfiedrms and hypocrisy. !( is not nearly so tine as it ha* got a reputation for being, and a good purging do>. en that long by se\eral years since a Negro was uvunistakablv lynched in or rear Louisburg, in Gran-’ villa ( ounty, the only county whose Demo-l cralic convention came out for a bolt,, from the pa tv. Fmlher. it is so fresh inf the minds most p me that a wminoi' is r v • ary concerning the agile, fleet and lucky 13m.dy Lush, wfio saved his life, and the State. o1 Noth Carolina from the shame of a lynching, in 1947. Politicians and other states’ rights apolo gists could hardly be expected to recall in their aid writings that two dilt'erent grand juries from two different counties failed to indict the would-be lynchers clearly implicated by the con i'. - si-on of ue of their number. NoGh Carolinians sh tdd find better arguments against the Tre:-: . ml s pro gram or else keen qu: n the subject. Concerning: the p**'. tux, he tact that North Carolina repealed it 27 years ago, yt't it is still a prerequisite for voting in a number of states, is ~n argument for ratlvo than a rainst f'Geral U ' datiari. Prominent Tarheel- si ouid jo ;3 better arguments against tin- President's propos als, or else keep quiet about them. VERY SAD .then it sons■■thing very sad in the fact that Candidate Bn.tughj.ofl you id not safely refer in hi' broadcast speeches or thought be couldn’t to on® of the fine achievements of his term e office-—the equalization of the salaries of Ne gro taaoners wth those o" vvnites. Maybe he did refer to it, but th*; writer never heard it, the ugh he listened t . sever > of the former gov • envn ’? addresses. Nor did ' mention in hi newspaper advertising that he is a prominent and vah od member of the board of trustees of Shww Uni vers! tv. E' ln in North Carolina a politician cannot publicise his interest in the Negro, for tear of j epmal. THE CAROLINIAN | . v, /y-25 ye _____ - • - | IHE WHITE SUPREMACY HOOD AGAIN +■ '4fM 1 1 fog Xeccncl flietignt* |j By C. £>. Not long after A Philip Ran pi:,;..; j... t'• ,1 Ot i-'U-.c ai the r.ati- it’s press by testifying before a Senate committee that you'd oppose an i counsel against am/,he. draft mto an a; my operated under a system of sc l : c.ur,ti. t and li-scrinana tion, the United Pn -s tr.te - viewed several southern Neg > "leaders ” as t . their vie tvs on th.- civil G.-obedionce proposal of Kandoiph A p.-w days later th- Ash*, tlli.- Citizen, an im p,v tan! arm intdkg. rrtiy mri bailv new-psuer, printed an edi to; ini on tin : cplu-s. which, ac cording to the Citizen, were un animous G .opposition to sem* oai i.-n. " '■ t:i<: .erniv Ci. . ’ All those interviewed no~.elr.el - turned thumbs down on Randolph's idea. . One th -* nnot : 't i! V r*- n him li; * tor •v I '.a‘ h-* v a Prcbablv a substantia! ma SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON By Rev. M. W. Williams Subject: Es'b:.r*.s Zeal for Her People. - Esthei 4.6-8. 10-17. 5-1-2; 9:20 22. 20-27. Key Vcr-f- -‘Who . known h v. ho titer thou art come to the Kir.-.rrioT!i for such a tinie a- tins * - Eftlicr 4.14. SHE BOOK OF USTIIER ii::s ih: • of A’la.-.uci'u:- ” Kmc, .if Persia 485-464 13. C . th< = background for the story ot Es’.hoi ijivf iVi c Ec s* ol pur jn i I s * iicd j; U; booG of El her U imique in ■ : G'"'«rs name doe- rfot appear. Yet i <’<■ H mucit tr* ltarn tronr* jr ; ; (ontvnts a- one of the most i .mrrkanl testimonies ol God’s band hi a nation , life. ! STUCK —1 Hi: QT I KN MOUJDFCAI Life is funny. No one but Goil undcrslands in its u.tiroty why certain things occur. At Shu*hai •he |,;:1 cc Vasiiti the fiuven - 'flu- - (• ■ t) cceoo'.i .o a .’runken kings ,-.- M* ■; sh: uphold ;ho pe: canid riuhts of worn mhood, she ivovi-od and her place in the palace mnew vacant. Esther, a ,f. wish cauih i- livin': \v h her ■ » urderai ?ion« w b 1 r,c: '.aiiuj maidens was selected to tr’.v:.:: 'he «;:sz 1 his elbow up to his right car. I asked him what he whs doing. !-!•.. vis M-year-old bvollhp: Louis, broke in to say that the teach, r told the class “to put only then . ",»• in their ears” and that was what Tommy was trying to do . I laughed and explain d that the t cher : war. actually advising ibe children against sticking small or point, d objects, into their car be cause serious injury might . result. The tittle fellow listened attentive ly as i added that the ear was a iorii> a' f Antei scan Negroes l would endorse the opinion qu n I td above. Certainly the conduc j tor of this vulumn would. Whirt , jiked me was not the quota i tion, but the Citizen’s comment on it: "Tnis is not only elementar, > common sense; it is tar- soured : philosophy t't ’the man wh o : italizes mat he must take me world as he finds it: must strive ivemnjiouusiv ie: ttie- sminove i ,a whatever ho minks wtong; must leave to the years, oossibiy c-vcn to the ••onturie:-. tie "t the achieve'ru r.ts v may not attain in his tifetime.” In th*. first place a* cannot a,.,ee that a man must take i.h.«. world as he find.-, it. unless that statement moans *:>nlv that must, dart from wre.-rtver he is We- must agree to that. * o -v ; ,ut ■ < cannot ag-ee tb ' • !,<* must resignedly a cip: as istevitable *a .latcvci is. No pes i hnGtic fatal;.-m - geo : n n. h i But what realrr burn? us up and we have sc n and ::<»ar.i • a mw!> if it—Us the white man's groat pati-mc: with 1h • bn: cii -is the* Negro ha t* > .if he. b0..-ul> the king lined ivth* r abaci all -.vuiiui; placed too royal cro vii upon he; i.ead and maue he: queen instead n: Vashli >4or ., i- ■ cvi :h; :wd ;v„ keejv.ns ot ’i,- P!ol ‘ie. g to Kill tno kin r ',. f: • rtyjort f i h hN: gi. 1 o hsiher wno Tells the Km-. The c*onspiratoi>. wire him;: and .m account of th.e matu-t wa vuilu-n n i King's history. HAMA X VS. JEWS Hainan’s place in his*wry will be remembered along wo.: Juoas. .For some reason Hainan’s favor in the sight of the king rtquired obesianee <>t ait serwunts and prin ces.-. Mordecai’s refusal brought the wralii of Hainan down on his j-cai and ait the Jews in the lanu. By intrigue and promise of a large sum of money, the King decreed that all Jews should be annihilat ed. when this decree was known •.lien was much weeping arid mourning among theirs. Morocco: plead.- with Esther and persuades h post pone tin vi.tr vvnat i aught to nave until itoo or 22W _ when i have oven lone. gone. i non t want anyone else exercising my patience iur me. or congratulat iup me on it. Wnat 1 would iiice b. to see it happen that wOse exhorters to and approve).-; patlfrliex i put ill !Tt> pjHCe unci ,0,. ho\v much noble patience they themselves could apply. 1 want to sec sonic things happen now My interest in the. iaci that Rome was not built in a day is very feeble, lor I h. : jv.ji ;ive in R; mi It is so easy i„ tell the othei fellow how to bear hardships when you are doing line, it is a simple mat t, s i',> ( uni.o-mi- another for his h: litudi. and chanty There used io be a charadei in -j ■ r t'in who s owned u'i that attitude about some thin 1 else. He user 1 alwav _to i; ior ‘lad's ycu and him fight.” be. idelivered. i snu.it nil kin*; The queen'a appearance before •he king finds inch a favor line ht promises whatevi r she desU' r 8m she, tells of the plot lo kill the Jew.*..' and got the m rreo r - \.r eu Murder .: is honored. Hanson is hung on the i". '.tow he i:i■ i]t foi Mordceai. His sons and i t ciuinirs of the Jtws art skun am.) .he rear: of Purirn is esf.b !JSSON HINTS 1. Tilt* book of K ilu-r should give us a clearer understanding of and a depei appreciation for Die overruling province of God. 2. Esther's love lot her people and the risk of life suggest Die vicarious sacrifices of Christ. 3. God s providential rare foi Ids children gives us security. i H nv ii rallows for Mordecai should otter us from plotting against others. Esther was ready for h>. r 1 tsk when the ‘Crisis' came. Arc we preparing for our ta~k" -Who knoweth whether thou ait O'.me to the Kingdom for such time as this? Esther 4:14. development and handicap him se riously in later life. Defective heal ing ran result from dtohthcria. scar jet fevei. mumps, meningitis, mca -le. and other disea-es. In addi tion. viol* nt blows or punches on the* car. loud noises and explosions, can injure the organ and its fane ions Foreign objects which get into the ears, oi which small chil dren stick in their ears, can in jure the organs. Blowing' the nose vigorously with the nostrils held dosed frequently forces infection into I’o car can,ah hack of proper food and nourishment. cor.-tarn fa tigue and exhaustion, can eventual ly lead o deafness. Certainly, habits of cleanliness art important to good hem hie.. r Uit nroper cleansing of the outer ear mean- simply washing it daily with , chan, soft cloth held over the , sing-r tip arid making certain 'lie ;-i wiped dry. Th • wax forma tion in the car is nature’s way of cleansing the ear canal. The wax t WEEK ENDING SATURDAY , JUNE 12, 1948 if Bv DFAN B HANCOCK FOP AMP AND WE PRAY FOR PEACE! ihe press ol the nation is passing along the account of the 1m orient-v prayer tor peace at the tomb of the Unknown Soldier. Ihe President of a nation lev rishly preparing for war praying lor peace: That reminds us of the old hackneyed story of the Irish general leading his men into battle with the exhortation: “Ye valiant sons ol Ireland, trust in the Lord Put keep your powder dry.' The President s prayer reminds of yet another incident that is suggestive. The story • goes that in the great days of the great Henry Ward Beecher, he was invited on a gre at occasion t(\ offer the invocation;)! prayer. Dr. Beecher prayed as only he could pray on public occasions with an eloquence and fluency that thrilled the 1 vast audience. A reporter for i. no of New York’s most infill ntia! dailies wrote: “Dr. Beecher etfeied thi invocation which was one of ihe most eloquent prayers ever offered to a New York audience The reported could not see the prayer as offered to Almighty Cod but to the New York audience. We as beginning to wonder about the President’s prayer, d it were not one of the finest prayers ever offered to an American Memorial day audience. We must look the ugly matter squarely in the face and admit that our nation is .•;> ••ping company with one of the greatest international sinners of history and that is the decadent British empire We have assumed the catspaw role in the great international drama and we arc committed to pulling Britain's cnestnuls out ol the fin and this can no more be done by peaceful means in the future than in the past Praying tor peace is perleetly useless while we keep company with Great Britain, the arch war-maker ot history. When Britain was a 1 le to do hi r fighting she did. now that she is feeble and decrepit we are committed to doing her lighting for her. Britain’s role in the tragedy that is Palestine is striking proof of our con tention that she is the great international hypocrite that is quite as dangerous to world peace as ever communism was or is The Britis.ii to be suie are more suave and studied in their machina tions. but they are not. a whit le-s dangerous u peace than the Com munists. When Britain had to get out of Pale tine she got out in a “huft" and wu; quite willing to arm the Arab.-; fee an assault on tin ll.dy Land. Si it has come about that the Moslem world is abetting the Arabs in their bid to exterminate and conquer the Jews. This is Great Britain's reprisal for having to evacuate Palestine. For quite 100 years Britain subjugated and exploited hapless India with its hundreds of millions: but before she departed she was sure that Moslem and Hindoo ha.i been sent against each other's throat. Thanks to the Christian spirit of the immortal Gandhi;.-, the cause of unify in India ;s not a total loss It ;s more than passing strange that things are quieting down in India aftei a fashion that must make Gi.-at Britain blush for shame and chagrin. Bi -.tain's “divide and rule" is about to lose its magic hi India, a wring that can be traced to the- martyrdom of Gandhi Gandhi has done something b> his death that he seemed unable to accumpli-di in his life and that is bring the .Moslems and Hindoos to the council table qf reason and brotherhood. But in India, as in Palestine the great sinner is Great Britain, wen as it is : n behind The pity of 1 is. we tit • great United States es America g tagging along aftei B;-tain as a peeving ehiid t.< its mother's apron. An i we pray for peace while our chief pamci is abetting the slaughter of the Jews m Palestine' The chief difference between what Rntain is doing in Pales tine and what Hitler did in Germany is chiefly one of degree and ol hypoc:isy. Hitler was brazen and defiant: Britain is suave and soft spoken. Thi- e. Uncle Sain' company that he paying billions to keen Britain has committed tins nation to a policy of spending in Europe t ■ kci p back communism* that would bankrupt the world When-, vtr the managers ot certain xchequers in the Euro pean nation want a few billion, all they have to do is in wake up one morning feeling “inclined’’ to communism, and we are there v.-ith a fen cool billions, {.treat Britain h.v made of ours, a color .truck world. And we pray for peace! r ' ’ I ! ALABAMA-BOR* LIEUTENANT JAMES REES*. EUROPE, A sj£F>' X MACHINE GUNNER IN WORLD W' WAR. I AND CONDUCTOR OF THE j#T;- V FAMED 100 PIECE N Y- IStk a NEST BAND, CREATED A MUfe'CAL ife-'ri _ SENSATION IN FRANCE IN iSH6.' *&; e V . ■ .immnminn- MIS COLOilFtii. DR CM--MAT OR. jgpf" and vocalist was none other ■ ‘ w§gr THAN CORNET IST NOBLE tW-SWJE' - ML UEOT- EUROPE, A THORoy*H <,*: 7 JSri musician, cut Many victor RECORDINGS FOR THE IM- f .jf ]Pf MORTAL AMERICAN DANCE V M I TEAM OF VERNON * IRENE W-. f • if X J/jL CASTLE.' THEY ARE RARE. .- / ' ? tiW&L DISCS •IN ISMC EUROPE FORMED V - fa WjMßk ’ THE FAMOUS H.V CLEF CLUB, W#**? fa' ; AND a YEARS LATER THE CLUB If a-. r TOO& JAZZ TO FRANC* pins, p ,pv; clips, etc., that can should ji v, r be removed with hah puncture the eardrum, cause ear ache. ml ct ire outer ear and im pair th !rearing. If too much wax colift Is. bo oar canal must be cleansed carefully by a doctor, nev er 1 v jabbing . hard metal ab ject lik u hairpin into the deli cate parts of Die car. Parents who nolle, a child strain ing I