Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / Feb. 26, 1938, edition 1 / Page 4
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CAIOLMMI TOUl SATimOJIT HK M, ItM ■/ Editorials Comments flu CartlwCte# K«llf Miller Sajs - 117 E.‘’PBab9dy St. ... DuriMBti, CuoUm ra>lk&«d «t l>nrlMa), North CkroiiM Krar^ 6atar(Uj bj FHE CA£OLINA TtM£S FXJBUSHINO 00^ Ine, PHONES I N-7121 J-7«71 Eaf«B« TalaM l- E. AUSTIN. EOITOK AJv«Hi«iac Mmmcmp SUBSCRIPTION BAT£8 $2.00 Per Year ia AdTUico; $1^ Par Six Ifoatka in Adv^aoce; 66c Per Three Uoatiu In Adrsaea; Canada, 13.50; Other Oonntriaa, fS.OO Entered aa aecond'claaa matter at tbe Dvkan Poatottice, oader act oi Maicli 8i4, 1879. Aavertiainf Departint»t— 7%oa« desiring inlormatiOB aii*iiraiay aatlanal a^^r^ing rates, addraia all ciUBiaanicationa |» CAiBOUNA HM£S. Darloun, N. 6. SATURDAY FEJf. 26, 1938 EDUCATION AND LEADERSHIP Leaders' are bom, not made, Rugged individuality, initiative, enterpriae, coura^ and darings requisite to effective leadership must fee bred in the bone. Any one who would not make a lead- without education will not FORGIVING AND FORGETTING # The rinti-lynching bill has gone, aa we predicted it would, th« way of ail other similar bills that have come before the law making bodies of the United States. Hie nation during the fight to prevent a vote from being taken on the bill was treated to one of the 'most tyrannical spcctaclea ever recorded in_tha Juator^-of tliia county A handful of aetmtora, exponents of the so-called democratic form of government under which we of this nation are supiKMed to live deliberately defied the wishes of a majority of the people of thia Country and a majority of the members of the senate and would not permit a vote to be taken on &e bill. Mind you thia handful of senators have sworn to uphold the constitution of the United States, a document born of the “majority rule" idea of goTemmank The Negro js going) to forgive this awful calamity, but he will not forget it. We side with the Pittsburgh Couf'ier ia its aditorial of several weeks ago when it^ said, that the Negro will keep a watchful eye on those ambitioUs young white men from the South who may have an eye on the presidency of the United States. 'Hie Negro win n^ forg^ ^iley, BiS)oa and his ilk if a southerner ever^ throws his hat into the,polittcali arena in t^e hope of holding the highest office this nation has to offer, T^e race may split on Its- jCriends of the opposite group, but it can always get together on its enemies of the opposite group. It will be many years before a southerner will be able to stem the tide of Negro votes tbat will b# cast against him should one ever attempt to run for'the presidency of the United States. The Negro is also going to forgive the anti-lynching ealatnlty be- knows tJjat tottering—white-civilization is goiny te-need every resource at its command to survive the rising tide oi fallow people in the East It takes no prophet to forsee wha^^I ^ to make mere of one with it. Like leadership, inspiration cannot be tanght by a pedagogical formula but may be stimulated by edu cational circumstances and suv- roundings. IMucation and leader ship may b^ united in the lame person; but^e one is neither a pre-requisite nor a neces^iary comeomitant of the other. The superlative leaders have often been uneducated. Jesus, was the greatest leader of all times, and yet his listeners mar veled at his ability to read 'never having learned.’ Charle magne was unable to write his name. Some foremost names in history may be considered to have been great, in spite of education rather than on account of it Shakespeare knew little Latin an^ l«ss.ireek. Vith more Latin asd moTB €rgek hg- might ' been an important pedant Cur greatset Presidents, inclu ding Washington, Andrew Jack son, Abraham Lincoln and Gro ver Cleveland, were but partially and imperfectly educated. Our great ^dustrial leaders , and mer chant princes like James Fisk, Commodoi^ Vandeifcftlt, J'ay Gould, Andrew Carnegie,-John D. Ro4ikefcdler, Andrew Mellon and Henry Ford,-graduated' from In primitive and tinoiyanised ,|.it>ciety whera conditions aro fluid and plastic, edocatad l«ad-^ ffn^ip eotmtfi for little. may b* r^rded as an excep tion; but his guidanc* of the He- tO’ew* 'diroTHli thi WildemesB to" the Promisad Land and the or ganisation «f their social and re ligious life, was the outcome of his spiritual gening, than the higher education which h« received at the University Tgypt. , But' stAtic society wh-ch ha* be come instutionaltzed and proces sed, a systematic course of train*- ing is required «f those who would reach high stations, as in xase of the Caillolie Church and the Army and Na^. In any well established nation like Germany. England or France ‘cnly formally educated men^havc any chance for the coittrolling piacM in tlie State, Church. Army, or Political life. Calvin’s Dig^est M Flofd J. Mm '•WHITE FAMIUES" -oO®“ {But even at * time when world order must be transformed an.J new type of Inst^tntions inaugu rated formally educated leader ship is discarded and such rugged uneducated or half adocatfid in- a "Sttliir BoHia, Hitler of Germany, and Mnssoli- To Negroes who buy white pa pen in preference to their own, we wish to call attention to an ad. appearing in the New York Times last Monday. The ad. is 6 ft. wide and 17 1-2 inches deep and is headed: “An Important Announcement to Advertisers and Adv«^rtising Agencies.” The bur den of the copy is: “How to get the most effective coverage of the Southeast,and there are listed 19 /daily newspapers in tiie states 6f North Carolina, S. 'Carolina, FI 6 r i d a, Alabama, Tennessee, and Louisiana. • T%e ad. says this is a f6,H)09000,000 market, and significantly, in heavy black type: “You can rai^ Native-White Families (the real buying pow=jr of the southeast), by these* 19 ciple^ that leadership is not cessirily a school taught product. If we narrow the discussion to outcome of war-mad—Jgiiropean natinna, arming to the I nf the Negro race teeth for the final kill. Italy, Germany, France, Great Britain, Russia and now America, building more and bigger battleships, aeroplanes and dtlier imple ments of war is the spectacle which presents itself toi the world to- jday. Deceit, dishonesty, distrust and what have you, productj^ef Nordic, civilization, are so rampant among the great powers of the world that America may find itself, in the very near future, dan gerously isolated or forced to participate in a war that means only disaster to its own people. - . / So the much aA>used Negro, the stepchild of the United States, the disliked and scoraed pe^le of America who could not get the nation to pass a law to protect them against mobsters and lyndiers may be called upon to help protect America against European and Asiatic mobsters and lynchers; In liiat facfur the Negro ^ill forgive —God made him that way—but he can not forget. * tKe^university of common sen^e. Such labor leaders as William IL Green and John, L. Lewif, who lead the labor movementi of our time got their education to the tune of the coarminers pick and shovel. Any one of. my read ers can multiply instances by the Hi of Italy forge to the front j new*papers." A map is given of Vpten Negro Rfe becomes stand-. the southeast' area, and although arued and crystalised a certified degrree of education will be ne cessary to recruit the various callings and pursuits. Question teaclies how to conform, bni not to transform. At the time of the emanRipa- tion four million Negroeri con stituted a group without orcani- hare a rMe of twelve mOlion human beings, a part of, and yet a part from, the genera! life of nation. In all those ways in which the life of the race differ entiated from that of the nation there still exist a fundamental lack of organisation and leadw- hundreds Ulustrative of the prin J*hip, which two generation«-^f educatioB^ have very imperfecUy »QO - POLICE SHOOTING _ The Durham Committee on Negro Affairs ought to investigate -the shooting of John Cagler by H. W. Carlton, local police pfficer on February 9. The committee ought not be satisfied with the mere report from the police department that the shooting was accidentaL It so happens that John Cagler was shot in the foot, but the bul let might have found a more fatal spot on the bo4y of Cagler. Ac cidental shootings don’t usually pick particular, spots to empty their loads. If the shooting was not accidental, then it was delfi>erate, and an. officer of the law whp will deliberately shoofi down > a uaa feei^y becatfte be-happens to have some liquor under his arm is far more dangerous tb society than all the bootlegers this aide of tarnation , ^ _ We have been reliaibly informed that the officer took the Negro to the hospital, after he had shot him and that all the information the hospital could give was that an unidentified policeman shot Cagler. , , ■. , Frankly we don’t like the odor of this shooting. • Tlie smell, is somewhat offensive to us, especially when we know that a N®frj woman, not und»' arrest has been slapped down inside the police station by i uniformed officer of the law, coupled with the slapping of a Negro not under arrest on, a local bus by aonther uniformed policeman. L i. The Carolina Ximsa. believes there is spmethi^ wrong some where and asks the Committee on Negro Affairs to look into this shooting, before a murder ia committed by ah unscrupulous officer of the law in Durham. . - i. If th^ibcal Committee on Negro Affairs ^W1 not dd anything aboult this shooting, we feel that the local branch of the HSational Association for the Advancement of Colored People should awaken from its lethargy and do som«thing about it. — . oOo TBhe law of Diminishing Returns was what Oliver Wendel Hoknes had in xaind when be said, “Because, I like a pinch of salt in piy •oo^ is BO season 1 wish to be immersed ia brine," .-v'oO**- :——— He Bian wiio msista that aQ folks shall work, be they holy or se cular, teiumed or illeterate, always has a hard road to travel. . *■ . ■ oOo — When a creator of new thought goes into business of retailing product, he often forgets to live it, and soon ia transformed into a dealer in secondhand thought the racts stand out with equal boldness. Our greatest leaders have not come from schools but from the common walks and by ways of life. Our political lea^er^vom Fre derick Douglass to De- Priest, are never thought of in terms of book learning. B'ooker T. Washington and Marcus Gar- )^rey had but slight exposure to the superior learning of their day and generation. *rh€re are bi^ops "who have ten^oyed col legiate education. Our industrial leaders like Madame Walker, W. W. Brown and S, W. Rutherford, rose up from the vrash tuB ?nd plow handle. supplied. We must look, howeTer, to our schools, colleges and onl- venaties for head men, if not for leaders along various lines of endeavor in pro{>ortion as our life becomes institutionalized ac cording to prevailing standards. *0116 failure of schools and col leges to encourage* and inspire Negro leadership today is due mainly to the fact that there is no fixed ideals and objectives which the-ambititMii student can espouse with zeal and aspiration. The devotion which atnonnts to all but fanaticism like the ear’y Christian, the "anti-slavery agita tors and temperance reforms. Inspiration rather than education Is the sine q1ui non of effective leadership. KEtliY MEmSR. Mississippi is on the map, there is no “spot” in that state. The niriateen papers named are the Miami B|erald, 7\ttmpa Tribune laeksonviiie Times-Union, New Orleans Times-Picayune, Mont gomery Advertiser, Savannah News-Press, Columbus Ledger Ebqnirere, Birmingfaam Age-He- ta Constitution, Co- lumlbia. State, Greenville News, Wilmington Star-News, Charlot te Observer, Ashrvlle Citizen, Winston Salem Journal, Raleigh, News and Observer, Knoxville Journal, Nasville Tennessean, and Memphis Commercial-Appeal. Editorials What Do You Kqow Aboal Nsp Weallli I iiBiilfi? We name the papers because recently, we saw an editorial in a Southern Negro paper recom- maading that its readers support one of them, y*t we know ft to be M that tise lot''6f Negro papers is made hard in several cities of the Sooth by the dailies carrying what so^e people call “Jim Crow columns.” Tfcat mearj the white papef’^rries news of colored people (of a sort—never anything demanding civic rights) “for colored” —in many instan ces the paper with colored news do not ^ go to whites—gets the circulation, 'which, is couated iir the ABC report, but turns around and sells the ENTIRE circulation Northern advertisers, but the avowed basis of “reach- iW WHITE Ifamlliei.” We think this is a'fraud, not only on the Ntegroes who bny these papers, but ^the adver tisers as well; it ia/jvst MNmuch impressed than ever that success is a system. It is som€tfimg that “ W9iftea~ DTJt over a loag period, and after a time, it works itself, but with careful watching and guidance. It is like a car—you must keep it in the road, knov when, to stop, when to go, when to go fast, when to slow down, and when to rest, if you can ev>r learn toe sjnstem ^(“combination”) your main troubles wilt be over. After that it is simply a matter of being alert and cautious, 'nvat is true in business, in education, all human affairs. The great need of the Negro is more people who know the "combination.” "NEGROES A>H) THE LAW We trust the public will not forget the book, “Negroes and the Law,” by Fitzhufrh Styles, Florida bom and a Howard gra duate (college and law), who is a member of tiie Philadephia bar. The book has fifteen chapters, and contains a wealth of 'infor- matioB OB the Negro an3~ legal hjbtory. Some outstaH^ih^ law yer?, like Charles H. Houston of the NAiAOP, Former Judge Jas. A. Cobb, and Robert lT Vann are contributors to the work. Biogra phies of twenty-one outstanding lawyers, living and dead, are re corded. E. Washington flShodes, former president of the National Blar Association, former Assis tant U. S. Attorney, and editor of the Philadelphia Tribune, writes the foreward. The book is published by the Christopher Publishing House, 1140 Colum bus avenue, Boston, Mass., and We oft«n find an avt>wed and reiterated love for Jons, the non resistant Soing band fa faafid witii passion for war. a miswr’s greed, a lust for power and a ^hrist for revenge. ^ . r oOa>— ; ba a intmtiDir about righteousness while the hand j>i. is^MiiBr f«r his sw6rd-h^ and his eya is kcaUng your ^ ^ . It J: (By Jamie* Boxeman fMr ANP) To read or hear orations on the plight of the Negro in Dixi^ and then teavel and do your own investigating, you would no doubt jbecome surprised. Most writers and speakers only refer to the South as a section forever boil ing over with nothing fessthan bai4>arism, lynching and starva- tion“*i^or”ltfe Ntgro. Motoring through Louisiana and aterora Texas plains, one gazes iSpoh’Ti dense forest of derricks and ftU tanks as "thick as mushrooms. I dare not niake the assertion that Negroes own these dttelds, but on investigation you would fbe am&ze^ to find jjist how deep his hand is buried in that pie. 1 I%e Universal Oil and D{j]lln^ Corp., a race organization whose headquarters at Shreveport, re presents stock of $2*00,000.' Prof. J. L. Jonesk president of that firm, is said to be wor*h more than a quarter milli*)n dol lars. Individuals ^longing to the eolofad group own around ISO walla in and around the Eilgora (Tex.) fields bordering La. *mact Gold” alone is not «ht only means by whict Negroes >n this grrat i«^on~havf1rS^lQ^ the financial limel^t. Like other races they are gradually becom ing a commercial competitor in various fields. ISiere is no great er example than the rise of Vic tor Simon, president ^d ovmer of the Union Stock yards at Ba ton Eouge, a horsa trader since IS years of age. At statistics show that his Budiesa exceeds his two white competitors com bined. Ninety-seven percent of his business is from the white race; BILBO ABUSE MOST \nOi-ENT OF SPASMS The Tribune haa always re mained aloof from the practice of “playing politics.** We have alwayf. enjoyed the belief that the city of Washington and Its citixens should have a voice in the national government, but >in- til such a time aT this voice is given us, we sbeoRP refrain from any activity which is not, pri marily, racial and secondarily, local. I^t when a man in wnose hands has been placed the reins “of national guidance, so wantonly disregards the rights of Ameri ca's millions of colored citizens a« did ^e senior senator from -Uisslssippi recently, it becomes time for every organ capable of speaking—^policy not withstanding —^to bekh forth in protest. The attoek of Senator Bilbo on a Negro newspaperman during the infamous filibuster against the anti-lynching'bill, was'^doubt.'j lessly one ot the most violent I of the colored ever found its way into the seat sf legislation, not even exce^hig the filthy, stinking tirades of the Ellenders and the Connallys of the past few weeks, or of th3 Simmonses and the Baileys, or of the Tillmans and the Geot^ges, oi of the Xlleases and the Heflins of earlier eras. Were it not for the serious im- plica^ns of worse things to come, the Bilbo vklouaness could be passed off as self-destructive In its acquaintance of the public with the calibre of the Mississi- pian. But there is more to the thing than just this. There is the positive demon stration, for iiisunce, of the fact that if this land of “democracy” is ever threatened with fascism— which it surely is—^the gravest danger will come from the legis lators with the intellects of the bittios. „ , Fascism impoverishes the poor, makes richer Ihe rich; it he boasta of this passion for per secution would be amusing if it were not quite so alarming in other respects. ^ If a Southern senator chooses to-iJ»ak« of himself, “tiiat- is hhi business, and we woul^ remain indifferent to the effort ^lo mat ter how completely he seWed to accomplish his purpose, iftt the responsibility^ of perpetuating what little there is of true de mocracy in America ia distinctly our—even if it means stamping eut senators 'who prefer to ba monkeys than men. —Washing ton Tribune spasms o^aEuse race in» general that has Sales Company, 3200 ~W. Colum bia avenue, Philadelphia, Pa. It should be a pdint of pride for Negroes t o have a work of this kiad In their libraries. “SOCIAL RIGHTS" 'The Very Rev. Francis A. Walsh makes an eloquent plea for tolerance and secial justice in the current Interracial Review of New York, in an article enUtied ,'*'Societyf'HorizentSl or Vertical.'' Continuing the saroiring Catholic demand thSt Negroes be treated as human beings, and be granted privileges enjoyed by other eiti- zens, the Rev. Mr. Walsh says; “It is the normal and nataral tltttg that people who understaid one another|s type of mind and cultural degree, Louis'lie drawn is distributed by the I#ngsten f - - - -—rmdvocatas the eHnjiaation of ra cial minorities; it denies the mas ses'of these minorities the right to participate in the government al'affairs of the majority. Bilbo stands for all these illmeant ends. With Connally and Ellender he would repeal the fourteenth and fifthteenth amendments to the Constitution. l^e recklessness with which WHY A NEGRO NEWSPAPER? Fundamentally the same rea son exist for~* the Negro news paper as those that maite clj^r the need of any newspaper; ^e reporting of news objectively; the stimutation of projects for the general development of the comnranity; the projection of un selfish personalities working for the common good; the analysis and presentation of local, national and world forces which have to do with the welfare of humanity} the advertiaihg of goods and ser vice by those who wish to sell their commodities to its realers. There are addienal servicts ^ ^ich can be rendered by the press of minprity groups and the Negro' is not-alonft in approach ing siich a need. The*^ew under- stands and meets this need; the forei^ language newspaper ft a well-established institution in this country; Labor and other special interests have their jour* nals. Negroes especially need the' power oi Intelligent propag&nda in their ecort to overcome ob vious barriers to success and ■ safety anS the Negro newspaper is the logical and sole medium through which thia can beeffec> tively don«. " 'Owse who take the financial risk, the men and worn eh Who do the actual work and the read^ have mutual obligations. No pa per, however TBgh its ideals~or sincere its inteFest _ in those it serves, can accompllsK significant results without an ever-broad ening group of suibacribers and readers. The man who buys and reads the pa^r is a partner ia the enterprise and a contributor to racial progress. —DalUa Hillside « - I CUtvursi fraud as tiie South electing J I believe that we have At Crowley, La., a small town of 10,000 population, William W. Mudd hai^ade an unsung record as a real estate dealer. Now only 30 years of age, Mr. Mtidd owns 12B rent houses and holds 113^- 000 worth of Biell Telep^na stock. Only ten Tears kgo he was employed by the Rice plant ^at Crowley unloading triMks for lOe eadi. His education is limited to beneath the fourth grade. 1 Dr. Robert Butler, pharmacist |a‘t Baton Rouge,,owns and ope rates the South West’s mosl ela borate drug store, located ii his own building. Several other wor thy enterprises are housed under the aupervision of Dr. Butler. He received lus educatidn through an international Coyrespoi course and passed the state board with highest fibnors over 83 white* and seven colored . Since 1030, Dr. Butler has risen from 17160 to a reported wealth of ll29uOW and eif^f; pieces of val uaMe property^ He is only 85 yetai ^ age. EUGENE GOmxm BACK FR(MM RUSSIA Congressmen on the basis of TOTAiL population, but onlv a PEW (mainly white) people voting. And those same people stand on the floor of Congress and berate the Negro, when they are Sttpposed to represent hlin. Ehrery newspaper mentioned above is widely read by Negroes of the South.* Suppose Negfro«l just transfer their support to their (5WN pajpers, since these daily papers are advertising be hind their back that they are good for “Native White" adrer- tising only. ' • . SUCCESS A “SYSTEM” here an issue of importance in interracial relatiozia. fBe -t^ial equality which/ia^ sometime talk ed about is a, ,very cenfuaing thing. Surely the N^ro,has the xight to..social. fiOluJltyjU jftiB meaos equality underth e law to all thoae rights which same to him as a human being and a -member of civil society. To deri^y him >^these is to make hito a victim of force and inljustic«._In a simi lar way it is wrong to deny to (him or to any other group the (right to any of those forms of in' modem High School Band I - - ' I , . organization which -. .1 times are necessary for the wel- Last week we dropped off te l fare of industrial woriters—:The Durham, quite une^5ggted__ aftJ remnants of the fears' and miaijn- unannounced. It was the ^irstjl derstandings of bygone had ever been to Dar-^ rtiU present certain o3)st|i>^s io HlBli' fai mid-winter. We found the f the normal acceptation of weather perfect,, almost a Sipring day. But the thing that impress ed us wia the smoothness ^ with which the Durham business ma chine mns as a matter of routinf. 4 progress when the social philosb- ^erjbody was occupied, fcut no- ’ phy of central levels 1T "better body was sushed. We ifirere more i imderstood.” ' ™ the Nein^o according to his relative position in th^ horizontal strata of culture. His social advance aind recognition will make rapid COLORED DINING CAR STEWARDS IN I^OUTH 1 ATLAINTA—(O—I- H. HSy- wood, agency direc&r of Atianta Life Insurance company, in a fes ter to the fiel*^ force of his com pany last week, said-: ‘'Recently, while enroute from Atlanta to a eertain city, a dining car waiter told me that his road now has several colored men wfio now are ing'^thd entire per^nnel of theso BOSTON—'(C—Eugene Gor don, former feature editor of the Bbston Pos^ who has beeh in Russia for tErSra years, yiidted firiends here last week, Mr. Gor don was employed by the Mos cow Daily News, and returns to New York immediately to become feature editor of the Daily Wor ker. . i -- -I-.;. . . cars coloredi This is an innova tion in the sailroad industry, es pecially in the South—^In addi same gentleman told me that his o^jad has-dispensed with the ser- vices of news agents and that ser vice haa been placed in the hands of the dining car creW. . .” PROCLAIM SECOND HATIONAL INS. WEEK TAMPA, Flft. —(C)— Presi dent Garfield DeVoe Befera of ■the National "Insurans;' Assoeitalen haa proclaimed May ■9-I16 a the aecomfwinual National illegro IraKrtMKe Week, »nd nam- Ud G. W. C« of Durham, N. C las chairman. President Boffers Special effort is being made by the faculty and students of Hillside School to raise money in order that musieai instruments fee purchased school band. For several years, a number of talented children have been denied this type of musical training due to the fact that there were no instruments avall- aible. It is felt that a band will add greatly to the work that is already being done along lines of extra-curricular activities. The principals and teachers of each elementary school have been » lears ana m«avi>-,4.^ked to make a contribution as of bygone ^ityyywfell as all patrons of the school. “ Anwmpletar list of ^onora will be I published after - the campaign closes. Several white friends of the school have already respond ed very g^na*o\}sl;^ to the letters which have been wnt to them. A number of entertainments will be given at th« Bchool in the near future and l9ve proceeds will be added to tiie Band Fund. The public is . cordially invited to attend the “ASasl^eur Ho^r’' which will feature the best danc ing lalent of the school. Thi date will be announced later. Mrs.”^6r"A. Windew la tha apoji- itor of^this entertainment. She is al.so Treasurer of the Special Band Fund. Anyone who wishes to make a donation make your checks payi^le to her. Any con tribution wiirhe greatly receive^ by the principal and faculty as ^11 as “«5d gii^ for SUSPEND DEPUTY FOR SLAY ING IN RAID - JttlCMPHTS, J’eb._,ja3-rr^XANP) —For slaying Jeff Buffett, ope rator of^"Still, in a raid Sunday John Friddle, white, veteran de puty sheriff, was suspended Tue sday by Sheriff Joyner. Deputies 'Friddle and Powell raided the still an^ Staffett start ed running across a ^ field to where equipment was being load- bh a tc^k. Friddle said he fired toward Bu’^ett “io frighten him” but 6ne of the bullets struck his heart and be died within a few mintites'.* Hie slaii^ man was w3Tknown to the aheriff's staff, having been a county jail trusty while serv ing time in a liquor wae lew than a year ago. Sheriff Joyner said he wanted to “investigate thoroughly.” c^led on'executives, agency of ficen, clerial forces and fi^d forces of Negro insurance com' tidies of Amarie* *• prodttca 1^,000,006 in nef bn*- iness dorfng^ tluit week. COLUMBUS NAACP OPENS PERMANENT OFFICE COLDWJB.US, ,Ohio. Feb. 23— (AN|»)—-ihe address for the new offices of the (jolumhos NAACP ia loeati^at 1026 Bast Long st. Offices of the local br*nch-«d--—I vis^ that arrangements have been' ' made for formal opening on Sat^ urday and Sunday and tiiat re- decoration is well - tuider way. IJhis is th efirst time that Colum- has had the opportunity of af- fordiHg. bers of the NAACP, and Its of- ficers the faculties of a perman ent office. Sxhibits of the Branch activitiM will be on'diqtlay. whom this, musical ttainfng • will be made possible.
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
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Feb. 26, 1938, edition 1
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