TttS CAllOLfNA TIIIKt lATUWAT; JULY Tk. IM*
«
Summer Inst.
Announced At
Bennett College
PARENT CHILD INSTITUTE
GAINING MUCH FAVOR
oo —OO
GEEBNSBORd, N. C.—
B«nn«tt Gollece announces
two imporUmt ■untmer iaatitu*
te» to b« held tfn iti campus
this tummcr. The Sutnmsr In-
ititut* on Parent; Education
and Child Development 'from
July 15 ^0 Auguat 4, and the
annual Ministerial School of
Mathoda, from August 21 to
The I^rent Education and
Child DevelopiUent Institute,
following the new trend of
emphaiia o» fan>ily life, i» re
ceiving Gonsiderabla and wide
spread attention; Its aims to
inculcate higher appreciation of
childhood, an enrichment of
family and community life,
and B basic interest in the
values of radiant health, have
attracted the interest of parents
parent leaders, and college stU'
dents. The State Department
of Public Instruction, Raleigh,
will give four hours of credit
to persons completing the In
stitute. Applications to enroll^
may be recetfed through July
12. ^ '**' ■ '
Dr. Flemmie P. Klttrvfll, head,
of th4 department of home
economics at Bfennett College,
will direct the Institute. It will
be In cooperatfon with the
State Department and spon
sored iby the General Education
Board of New York City, using
tha recently estabUshed Nursery
School as a laboratory. Children
of enrollees in the InsUtuta n»*y
be entered in the Nursery
School,
Courses will b« offered by
Miss Roe* L. Mills, Supervisor
of State Nursery Schoals and
Parent Education, Raleigh. Mrs
Bess N. Rosa Parent Educa-
tion Worker at the Woman’|
College of the University of
North Carolin#, .and by Doctor
KittreU, who has made a special
study of the fanyjy and child
development.
Minitterial Initituf*
'The Ministerial School of
Method, directed by Dr. W. A.
('. Hughes of '^he Board of
Home Missions, Philadelphia, is*
making extensive preparations
for the most successful Institute
ever held. Dr. E- M. Cor.ovan f
the Bureau of Architecture of
the^ .Federal Council of Church
es -of Christ in America will
lead a discussion each day on
the Houses of God.”
Other discussions wiH be h#d
on the relation of the church to
its communitv, church publicity
th^^valuation of prciching,
the teachings of the-^-BiblP/ and
present social trends. , ’
REVEALS NEAR
WILBERFORCE UNIVE^TY
Sims Praised As
Savior of School,
Prexy Lauded
ATTENDINC CONVENTIOtl
Durham Men
Attend Medical
IVIeet In Charlotte
REV, MlIiES MARK fISHER,
pastor oi.w.White R»ek Baptist
Church who is attending the
Blational Sunday School and
BYPU Convention *at Tulsa,
(]|k]ahoma. Reiv. Fishar will re
turn to the city the latter part
of the week. * •
OH;.^»LOTTE, (Special)—
Those alhong the Professional
men of the city attending the
fifty second meeting of the
Old North State Medical Dent,
and PHahnaceutical Association
were Drs. Clyde Donnell, J. W.
V. Qordice, Leo G. > Btuc?; J.
N. Mills; Wm. A. Cleland, and
Wm. Richardson, Supt. Lincoln
H'ospital. Dr. Yiork C. Garrett,
Pharmacist. Drs. J. M. Hubbard
A. S. Hunter, Dentists,
Charlotte furnished one of
_the charter members of the
organintiofi and, first meeting
of the State Society. The
sectional sessions, and clinics
held were possifcly the most
practical observed at any pre
vious meeting. There were a
numlber of clinics given by speci
alists >|iom the other group
both ^before the Medical and
Dental Sections. These men
demonstrated the finest spirit
from an inter racial standpoint
yet observed in any other sfcc-
■tion of the state.
appreciation is due the
Charlotte press both morping
and eveninsf for the fine manner
in which they carried the full
report of the meeting.
Ncpes
Will Jnrj
Kiglils
j BRIDGEFORTH, Con n.—
TKe right of Negroes to serve
I On Juries in Connecticut was
I recogniz*ed for the first time in
i the State's history when Su
perior Court Judge ^.JiWHik^P.
I McEvoy summoned three
'groes as prospdSfftive jurors in
the first degree murder' trial
of Henry Gray, 36, Stamford
I Negro accused of killing a Ne
gro woman.
[ Judge McEvo,y’s rulint* came
j after he had dismissed a mo
tion to quash the indictment
sulbmitted by Public Defender
^>hnson Stoddard, who challeng
^ the entire Jury panel be
cause it did not include Ne'>'ro-
es. The three were excused
after questioning.
DOCTORS WILL MEET IN
GREENSBORO
C. G. O’KELLY ESTATE
VALUED AT $4,000 *
CHARLOTTE, N. C.—At ^the
close of the fifty second annual
session of the 01? Nortl^ 'Stftta
Medical, Dental and Pp^tma-
ceutical Society in Charlotte
June. 20, 21, and 22; Greensboro
was selected as the place for
the l?40“sesSon. Selection of
Greensboro WBS made by the
conventon committee after invi
tations from other titiei had j
been discussed. The specific by
The estate of Dr. Cad Grant
O’Kelly, former Professor at
North Carolina Conei^l"’‘''’who
died May 25, has been valued
at approximately $4>000 and
was left to Ilia daughter, Mrs.
Ruth Este!T« ■^“6’kelly Bergen
nephew, «Henrir “ Peace, _ A
MEET ENDS
AT SHAW
RALEIGH, N.'" C.—With ap
proximately two hundred per
sons in attendance form alL sec
tions of North Carolina the
Joint meetings of the Shaw
UiHversity Ministers Conference
—Institute and the Shaw Univ
ersity Women’s Leader ship
Training Conference held at
.Shaw during the week of June
1'2 were concluded -with t H e
Minister’s re-electing the Rev.
F. R. 'Wa^n "of High Point as
preddeftt and the Wohlen’s Fe?
election of Mrs. iBSlen Alston
of Frantclin county as Confer
ence Chairman.
iStimulated^ by an unusual
program of instructional and
de\^tional exejccises the confer
ence according to Miss Mary
Burwell, Corresponding secre
tary of the Woman’s Home and
Foreign Mission Convention of,
;th Carolina, and Dean John
L.' TJlllS^lifiXecutive Secretary*, of
the Ministers Conference, were
the most successful in tha his
tory of the organization.
Other officers for the Minis
ters Conference included ‘ h^e_
Rev. J. T. Hairston as vice
president. Th*^ Women’s Con
ference was under the sponsor
ship of the Honie and Foreign
Mission Convention ‘ whose offir
cers continue as follows: Mrs
Viola McMillan, President; Mrs.
R. W. Underwood, '. supervisor,
Hirieans Gable'2 In Arkaasas
PHIL.ADELP1HA, Pa.—.M-
•hop J. A. Gregg, »ec;retary of |
the Bishops* Council «f N h • 1
AME Chitrch has racaived a j
caibjl«gram from a large and |
r«pr4^Rfative group of
Africans, which reads: “All :
South African religious, civic, I
fraternal, educational and poli
tical organization?, regardless
of denominations, demand 1 h e
continuance of Bishop R. R.
right in South Africa, required
petitiona signed by thouiands
of Africans in Soutn Africa,
Joliannesbiirg I)isifrct, lay
members and ministers.” The
cablegram was sign**;! by
Mareka, ^Chairman and kKwayi
secretary.
;Bishop Wright has commend
ed himself to Africans through
his unusal accpmpliahments of
^uadrenmium, bavins built
three new buildings at Wilber-
fo#ce ’(nstit^e, and brought
Death House To
Get Hearing
seven persdi^ 'iC-from • America,
and added 6,000 members ^ to
the church; travelled nearly
100,000 miles in South Atrica,
translated the catechism and
rituals and the Miss'onary
Conatitutibn in the se'veral
African language, published
NEW YORK—Assuranca that
Jim Canruthers and BubbiM
Clacton who are now In tha
death ho'uia at the Blytheville,
Ark. Jail, awaiting execution
on a four year old chargt of
shboting a Missistippi county
sheriff, woul) receive a full hear
in^by Governor Carl 'Bailey,
before the execution date, June
80, was given to Thurgood
Marshall, ■> ,by the Governor’s
secretary here today.
Marshall is 'National legal
counsel for We National A»-
sociatioti for*! Advancement of
Cwored People, which has fugW
the Clayton Carruther^ case
th,rough the lower courts. On
June 6, the U. 8. Supreme Court
de^nieS a peptftion for *?!ertiorari
(denial of permission lb ifcring
the case IBefore the , high court'
for review to |>#rmit fjinding of
■errors), which aflow63'^"*T h
execution sentence to sta'id. '
Failing in an attempt to gkt
a statement from Gosernor
t'diley, himself, who is in New
York in connection with the
young wtita woman and a white
man were brought to the daten
tion ‘house and identified Clay
ton and Carruthers as haring
bean the two Negroes »ho raped
the woman on January 11.
When they were- arraigned on
April 1 193^5 the Cbu^ appoint
ei) a lawyer from another Coun
ty td' defend them, stating they
did no| want to appoint a Jocal
lawyer. Newspaper reports car
ried the atory that the local law
yers would not take the casa.
The appoint^jl lawyer was >inable
to secure a change of venue
and did not raise the Jury
question because he wai afraid
of possible mofb action. When
the Jury was out deliberating
they requested ■ parmission to
retire for the night. A court
official urged the Judge not to
permit the Jury to retire be
liViifli Peliliiiii
the South African Christian ^ World’s Fair Marshall said he
Recorder and has the circulation believe the assurance
over' 3,000. given by the Governor’s secre-
j tary should' ‘^ba- -lUlo^ed to »et
I all fears of execution at rest
I but »nly provided opportunity
for a hearing. The Governor’s
* secretary ^ told Marshall that
J the chief exec\^ive would re
turn to Arkansas before June
30 to hold a hearing in the
'case. Argument for clemency
wfill be preaw^nted by attorneys
John Hibbler, Scopio Jone, and
J. R. Booker, all Little Rock,
Arkansas.
HISTORY OF THE CASE
Jim ^X. Caruthers and Bubbles
Clayton were arreated on Janu
ary 12, 19^35, and charged with
the crime of shooting Sheriff
Wilson of Miss. Couhty.. They
rushed from place .o place
and eventually were taken
out of the State into Memphis,
Tenn., 'to prevent a lynching.
They were severely beaten by
the officers and three
threatened them -iRftt
• NEW YORK-^t the same
time officials of the NAACP
(announced that 100,000 signa
tures have been received to
dateyi^ reply to petitions sent
out \ to progressive organiza
tions and individuals through
out the country. Expressing
dissatisfaction with the results
to far the Association officials
reiterated - plea'—* for con
certed drive on the part of per
sons all over the country to
spur "the drive. The NAACP is
aeekln'g 1,000,000 signatures to
these petitions for passage of a
.federal anti lynching«-’bill. In-
dividuals^and “^organizstions we*»
also urged to write their sena
tors calling upon them to vot^
for cloture (limitation of de-
batel when the bill come be
fore the'Seniate lor a vote.
Junior'" Department; Mrs. Annie
L. Forrest, President, Junior
Department; and Dr. Robert
P. Daniel; President S h a W
University. Mrs. Martha Drown
was acting director of the con
ference.
a
neice. Miss Fay Peace; a son
in law Isaac Bergen; and two
grandchildren^ lAnnie a n d
Corrine Groves.
the executive board of the
FOR BEST THERE IS IN BARBER WORK
CALL AT THE CRYSTAL BARBER SHOP
MASTER BARBERS TCf GIVE YOU QUICK AND
COURTEOUS SERVICE WITH A,SMlli
CLOSING HOURS FROM MONDAY THROUGH
THURSD^S A. M. TO 9 P. M..
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY # A. 1^1. 'HL 11,30 P. M,
PLEASE CALL EARLY AND GET YOUR WORK
IT PAYS TO LOOKv WELL
Crystal Barber Shop^
708 FAYETTEVILLE 5Ti
.J. S. Shipiaiaii, Prop.
dates will be chosen next April society.
?TiREO
UNTIL
UNHERALDED! WILL IT WAIT
CAN APFORQ TO PAY THE
"UKETHBS?
'Niv^Goii^
TO GET ^1
mSURANCf
#«XT PM^YDAY"
L j:!'
yHMI.UO, VA00. ^50 011
CATCH
cause h^ would not be able to
get the Negroes' to theJail If
this happened. The NAACP
through its local Counsel, ap
peal the case through the Sup
reme Court of Arkansas where
the conviction was affirmed on
November 11, 1936. A writ of
Hsbeia Corpus Was filed in the
local Federal Court on May 5,
l&a^ and a hearing was finally
had and the Habease Corpusi
d«nied on March 8, 1933. An
AjJpeal was taken to the Unit-
led States Circuit Court of Ap
peals which affirmed the Lowei
Court on Tebruary 2'6, 1939. A
petition for iJ«!rtioi^ri was den^
ed by the United States Supreme
Court on June 5, 1939.
• SURPL.US FOODS CO
TO »S PER CENT CERTl-
FIELD ELWIBLE FOk tCiXr
BY G. JAMES FUCMIMG
PHILADEUWM. A «
—'How Wilberfoirca univer
sity^ cam* near being srri-
Lualy crippcd or wiped out
was ‘ revaaled for tba first
tima last week a* Bishop
D. H. Sims was eommcnd*
ed by lii* AME- collegacs
for having saved tha > Ohio
university by qqick think
ing and action.
What tbs Ikreat was bow
it was stalkd was told on Tuas
day when tha axacutiva e«ni-
mittee of tha bishop’s council
laceived, newspapermen in in
terview. The bishops present
wera S. L. Greens,'Little Rock,
and W. A. Foantain, Atlanta,
in addition to Bishop Sims
Mnittad
«ra4s “A”
aaasriation bad
Um ioatitatioK t«
rating.
0«t of tb* timmt, rambling*
Ncaa to ba haard tt tha aitwet
that Govanor Bnckar w a a
toint to siaab tba propusad ap
propriation. It was not Juat a
fujaor; tba goaaraer bad dacsd-
ar to eut tiba Wilbaciaxca UMAaf
lo*{ba ^naa—ap muck . that
WIlMrforca eouid not bava
fa&ctio«ad, it ia mii.
Wbatavar woala jiava been
tba oflf),cial raaaon gives, t h •
real motiva liea daep in tha past
political a«tia!lia« ol tba gcver*
B»r and tka luuaacaity reii-
dent. Tliey mra on difforent ^
«a of tba fanea politically, abd
Dr. Walker baa baas ou^ak*»
It was jmt a few week. ago. ^^a tlitec th«t t h •
Wilberforce had sobmit^d its ^
needs. In the UgisUtur, .vary- ‘ '
Dhin« seemed to say that tba ^
over half a taillion dollar, naad jj,, ii^oua wai tba
ed for the next two yewr, wopki ^
.approved
De appropriated
by Ifce governor. .
State Asaenlblysian Cbestar
K. Gillespie had attacks! Wll>
•fore’s pre^iderlt, D. 0r-‘
monde Walker, but nothing bad
ome of Kis ■ efforts. Many
friends had risen up in t h *
university defa*sa «od tba
■ - ■«"
RALEIGH, N. C. (Special) —
Almost 915 percent of needy
North Carolinians certified by
county welfare staffs as eligible
to receive surplus commodity
{products during the mon*:h of.
May actually were serviced
with the food supplies shipped
officers^ to the State by^„ the Federal
if they gbvenimept, Arthur E. Langs-
,did not confess they would bring toii. State director of commod-
tn a white .wpman to identify ity distribution with the State
them. Deapjte the severe beating Board of Charities and Public
the two men refused to confess Welfare, said yesterday,
to the crime. When the Sheriff | Certified as ■ eligible
recpvwad from hia wounds M i8,l99 cases representing
were
224,
Sow liasler-To-ReiHl
Bus
Schedul
Ttodav ^our ba* oparator will hava aa»*a* «f tba "W, easjar-
to-i;aad scbaduU*. Ttay .bow yon tha t«i»as of ar*lval at
aantral Potnt..^bolh^ «•■*»"« foi-*, of all ^ tb. ro«t...
-Yaa will k»ow mors ac«brataly wkaa tba b«»-wlll pas* yOur
marp»r. th»» allmlnatlnf any «aiiae«**a»F waltlag.
Get your copy from aparotor of telapboae F-IS
wHJ wall'yoH fra, a copy of tba aa.iar-to-raad *ckad«la.
il4 parsons wbiia 4&,73 e
omprising 21-0,510 individttaia
actually recaived the coaaaodt^
es.
Langston said 108 carloads
of farm food surpluses wera
received in Ncrth Carolina dur
ing May and a total of 2,S43,37
pounds was distributed in the
'’in.tics.
Se-**niy two carioads o ^
grapefruit wera. c^aiyad; or
anges, 3; grabam flour, 9;
whole wheat cereal 6;
6
3tvd
Beid for spaed tbat the bishop
had to get audience imraeditaly
wilb tba governor. His worda
•fid pU» alone were not anoogh,
so ba *ad to tarn to Penoayl-
vania's Governor Arthur H.
James as an intereeeaoT, _
Govetnor Tiaies isdoeod tha
OIR0 axacutiva to fiva aadiaaee
to tba AME bisbop, who waa
«ccompaBied by Bisbop. Greane,
••but all flTa cr»ail H due f&
Bishop Si»is,” ' Bishop Greene
decltted.
Wliat Bishop Sims said aad
what wrgiunanta ba ,«»ve, only
those praaent know, but 6>var-
Dor Bricker was won over and
the $660,000 for Wilbarforca
left in the approprisrf^ion biU
and tbe bill signed.
Tf WltkcrfQCea bad mS,; fecarf^
ed tkia'monay, its entire eUaca-
buttar ' tional program would have been
tile extent
patfe fonr
vnoie wneat cerejii o; cuuer uouj wuuj
I; cabbage 11; corninettl. li jdeaply shattered, to
itvd textiles, 1. ^ PiMse tnro to i
Better
Pri3teefion
aROUNA
g>--0€#CNQASL(
ACME lt£AL7Y COMPANY
RALEIGH, NORTH CAROMNA '
UNION INSURANCE AND REALTY COMPANY
a09.ni C^0|J|I4
“ GOOD NEWS FOR
LAKEWOOD f ARK-HOLLOWAY ROUTE
... - V
Nawar' typa bu»a» are nOw oparatad on tha Lakewood Parh-
Holloway raata. ^ara I* a «n»aH ekmg* « *•»« schadol^.
Ash your bn* eparalor for detail*.
Wbaa yo« bay fmm waat tha baat protocUea
roa can gal at th«^ lawast paeaM* aO»t. '
Plaao.. yoar property la Mm haatia af • raal alatata
brohar if jrau wavt tha haat atfaiaahla—omm who U
in po^ioa to aaeara for yo« Ugbaat paeiililo {■•
9 coma from jrO«r wayUwa^
Our yaar* of im aU hla4« af iasyinaca aa4
property laaaagoaiant I* aaaaraaca that _ywa -will gal
urAat «wa»t, Evatr aafipilayed hy aa w aa M-
p«rl in bis or her Kaa, WWathsi tAo hwela»«g yoa
^ioce into oar is ji*aat ar sasall it wiU ha. loohad
after with th« sasaa carm.
WE ARE SSSClAUSt W •«
Fira la«iiranca~>-Raw>al> >t)i»l £at*ta—
lat, n«ta Glaa* aad Asrtaaa«»hila
Durham Public
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mm
IL MICHAUIL
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