Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / Sept. 9, 1939, edition 1 / Page 4
Part of The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
rMOtPooft Editorials Comments €ht€a Cim^0 PUBLiSHEO WEEKLY By TH£ CAIUMJHA TIMES PUBLISHING CO. MAIN OFFICE 117 E. PEABH?V ST. .... DURHAM, N. C. FHONES N-7121. J-7071 L. fi. AUSTIN, PUBLISHLK WILUAM A. tUCK, BUSIN£i>:> MANAGLH &. PHILIP ELLIS, MANACiNC EDllOK CHAKLOTTE Of-f ICE 420 1-2 EAST SECOND SIKEET WILLIAM ALEXANDER, MaMging Lditor Your Health And Mine By Dr. I^elfert C. Pyle Entered m s*cond*clMs mali«r at the p‘>tt ulfiM . ftt DuriiMH, N. C., under the ot Ataiiti - ard ia79." SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER »th. 1^39 A THOUQHT FOR THE WEEK *'HE RIGi^rEOUS MAN: And he shall be like a tree pUnt«d liy the rivent c4 water*, that bnogeth forttt his fnitt in his-seaAun; his leal also shall nut wither and whatsoever be d'eth shall pru&per.—Psalms 1:3. ORGANIZATION NEEDED r - * ^ Several weeks ago a movement was started in Charlotte to have a hegro emjiloyed as a mail cATier at the luoal post olhce. 'i'tie committee composed of representative colored peopie was suppob- •d to see to it that the fignt was carried to a successful cuUnmaT VJon, or report to the colored citiieury of Cnaiflt/fte the !ca»v,ii it w«i unable place a >iegro as mail carrier in the city of .'CbuTotte. As far is «e have been able to learn tl»e committee has g'iven up the fight beciuuse it met with certain expected ob jections which came from the postmaster in the Chariottu pipt- OneolJe^Ui,n was luai a i^j•gro mail £irrier would .cause aiasensioa in the ranks of the white mail cairiers, and it ub the duty^'of the postmaster to^keep barn^O]]^ among the post-oflice «iBsdoy«fc • ^ ■’"* ^ ^ II ii' inialm Aa much as tne CAK(>L1NA TIME^J would like to remain sileiii OS the iMUe m~ this matter it cannot do without first oblaiMing from the Charlotte postmaster a reply to several questions thai ought to predominate whatever decision is reached in this matter. From ail indicativns Charlotte is not in reality the large city it ,pret«nds to be% i>ut rather an overgrown smalP country bujwa with small country ideas eoncdHbMug racial matters: tti Kaleigh, Wil mington and many ,>.other smaller cities in North Qarolina Megro mail carriers have been employed for a long number ol years witbupt Judgement having fallen on those cities. ii^ven in such states as South Carolina, Georgia and I'loridu Negro mail carriers have been, and are »iill, employed without (bringing cun- sternatieu to the world. It remains for Charlotte, tne suppu,setl largest city in Nonh Carolina, ti^ raise the bdr*-. against Negroes delivering mail to tne homes of Charlotte citizens. Are the white mail carriers the' Charlotte post ol'tieo any different or is it Charloite Negfoek who are>liit’erent fru}n those ‘in'other citiea? If the presence uf one Negro mail carrier at the 'Charlotte post o£Bce is ff^g to destroy the peace that now txiais among Cliailotte^s mail cliriL-iers,' the mahliCjpd witliih Iheir ratts is too weak to be entrusted with the United State's mail. The attitiide the ChaAbtte postmaster is d^tructive of sound government. It has no place ia a democratic nation and 8h>uld be discoui^ed wherevei* It is fdUnd. Such an'attitude, if allowed to prevail will sap the very life out .ol —that which this nations values most—equal .^pJJortunity under the law. It eats at the very vitals of the pillars upon which the government of the United States rests—equal dispensatiun of ju&tice. , Here the ocpistitutional rigb'» of this ^^ro*^ oitizeq^ has been violated. As a representative oi the federal gi^/verument'Chai'lutte’s postmaster has said'^by implication that he does not give a damn about federal laws which prohibit discriminatii^n -on account of race or color, so k|ig as he keeps step with those who arc still fighting the" Civil "war and daiing .S^herman to march ■ through their cit^. » ' Mendtters of that oo^mmittee who have been entrusted with the leadership in this fight to see that iustice'is done shpuld not be halted l>y a denial from the postmaster of Charlotte. There are higher authorities to appeal to, and the case should be carried directly tq them. It is time for Charlotte Negroes to lay aside petty jealousies and selfish motives. It is high' time that they cjrganlze and select a leadership and follow it. When this 1s done Charlotte Nejfroes wiU{ be able to estalblish their own taxi QU>,mpany, a building and loan kssuciation and many other institution that Charl,|tte Negroes are bSdiy m "irted (jf. They will be able t(}^§ej:jure not one Negro mail . carrier, but several. Instead pi’more itiaa thtrtjr Negroes Charlotte will be able to boast of thriving Ne- gru business .institutions operated and cijwned for ' Negroes' and ^•by Negroes. With the advent of school ing or sneezing during th* per- days, one. is nclinod to consider ^ iod when it l^s what appears diseases of children especially ' the infectoui diseases. One of ■ the most pVevaWnt and most contagicua diseases is measels. Procticully every per son who has not already haU an attack is susceptible, though inviwrlftul^ au attuik of Wie li>- easa is protective. Seve^'al at tacks have (been known on the same individual, but it is pos- sijlv* thut theuL' cuat.s were somt. •ther form «f the diseases, as German measels, or eruptions due to food poisoning. Children under 0 months of age are,less likely to contract this disease than other children. Extremely old people are idso less likely to have it. . The disease is Uost disastrous in its effect#-on Infants, on persons who are tuberculous, on the run 5own and on pregnant - women^ or those recently conjined. The berm of measedls alone tafeiy causes death, most death during th* course of this disease ye caused by”tHe'” cfimplication of hroiicho-pneumoma. ^ Measels is spread tlirou^h the discharges from tlie nose and mouth and « especially con tagious when the child is cough to be a seve'rT "cold!’’ Thii period i# before the iktii erup- tiohs appear. Measures applicable to cases uf measels are: Isolation of the patient, selec tion of a single person who h** already had tne disease care for the patient, destruction of hooks and t^s used iby the pti- eiit d-uring mness, disinfection of dishes and clothing before being removed from sick room. Quaiantine of patient for two weeks. Disi^'fection of from weeks. UistinfecUon of ' room ufter patient has left by expo- liure of fresh air^aiMl sunshine. I'he cou|;fi can he taken care of by. gargles, sprays and proper cough mixtures. *■ The bowels shQuld be opened and kept open. Diet should be opened and ke^t open. Diet should be milk and gruel. As looji as the tem perature runs high, no m«ac should be eaten. .follovYing the illness, before Ih# child is allowed to return to sSilibol the cought should liave ceased, weight should be normal and nutrition-sbould be good. opening of its department SHORT OF EXPECTATION The $117,000 allotted to Negpoj teachers Tor the purpose lessening the differential existing between v^i{e and Negro teach ers salaries in this state, falls miserably short of wha{. Negro leaders in North Carc^na had expected and^romised_jwhen the 9250,000 was set aside for bettering the salaries of North Caro-' lina teMhers. 59 th Session Qf National Baptist Confab^Opens PARENT BODY AT SjEC- OND BAPTIST CHURCH WHILE THE AUXILIARY; , OLOING FORTH AT W HOPE—DR. PRINCE AMO MRS. FULLE^ PR£^ SIDING IS H( “trEw LOS ANG£l4ESj_^JS*M-i- Messengers from practkally every state in the Union are for the pening of the j Fifty ninth Annual Session bf the National Bapt^st__Con^ntion of America, luis city, the. nnetropo lis of southern CalUornia, that has claimed the spotlight in the motion picture world, is rec’eiv* iij|[ thfim with opitn j^ms and with hospitality unprecedented. The parent body is meeting with the Second Baptist Church, 2M,h Street and Grithth Avenue^ of which the ftev. T. L. Griffith, D. D is the pastor while the Woman’s Auxiliary Gonveution is being held at the New Hope Baptist Church. 1623 Paloma Avenue Rev. A. Lively D. D, pastor and entertaining pastor the Convention. The theme for the entire four days’ session is “Witnessing For whom a^^rived on the evening of Sept. 5 to witness the pre-con- veri tic n concert staged by a Joint chorus directed by Mes- dames Marie O. jackson and Lula Mae Hurse. were confid ent that"* this sesaion which will ue held truiu ti.o o w me 10 in clusive, would be epuchmaking in its denuminatioinal accomplii- shments and ita far reaching objectives foif loreign nus>s«>u», home missiuiis, education and uenevolent work. Races Have Same Coior * i'- hpeuit CAM£R11>G£, Mass. (ANP) —-A thorough, leiantific study ol‘ human sain colors, now be- cunuuLiea ai Matsachusatts In stitute of 'i'^ciiuology andet 'direction of l^r. Edward A. Ed wards u t Harvard Medical Scnool and i)r. S. Quimby Dun- tley of MlT has rtivealed sume nitueri.u uukirowu tacts concern ‘iig pigmefitittioa.. Kegarded as outstaMidinj|| their tinuings, declared the scientists, is proof tnai ail faces ha've the same live color pig ments aiiu tnai variatiua^ 4u aaui color are due to tne pro portions in which they are bland ed. • ^, Doctors tAiwarUs ana Hunt ley are using tiie newly deve- iupeu recoruiug spectrophome- ter m stuayiifj variations in the live piguienta which make up dam cotur. 'iHeir investigation, as reported ui the current issue ; ^ Markham and Fred of tiie Amwican * Joornal of McCall of the Univeraity of Anatomy, way lead lo tjuicker, jsjorth and Prof. Douglas Maggs mtlre accur^ve diagno^ces of qJ Duke University will teach anemia and a reiiaoie method j,j jjjg first semester, - while in of checking results of treat- | second smester Professors Mill ard S. Breckenridge of ■ h ^ University ot North Carolina and Douglas Potea^ of Duka University Law School will be instructors. In an accompanying statement. Dean Van Hecke said: “The arrangement whereby the instructional, library ^ n d administrative work of th-3 Law School of the North Ckrulina Colle^jfe for Negroes will be carried on this year by memJa^ers of the , fac^ltifg,. of th®* '’iSSf gciwol of Duke Universiey and of North Car olina should be regarded as tem ACC Announces Opening Of Law^ SchoolgSeptember25 llh* North Carolina College cousos in Contracts I, Personal for Negroes announces t h, •, Pi^perty, Real Property 2 and doubtedly be one of . the most oiflstandlng departments of law for Negroes in the South. Dean M T. Van Hfiifte of the Univ«r- aiCy of Norlh Carolina baa agreed to be the licting dean of «the school of Law at the North Carolina College for Negroes for a period of one year. President Sh«pard in making the announcemakt statad that it was one of the most fortunate things which could occur ui the acceptance of Dean Van Hecke of the. University of North Carolina and of the fine irstruc tors who h>ve agrsed td aerva for one year, and that it means much for the cooperation of the races in the State'' and in the South al*^ng all helpful liuas. Professor^ John F. Dalzell, n~wS^h ©’"clock Pacific time, when the devotidua open ed, with the Revs. • Jordan of Smyrna, Tena. and L. Neal of Birmingham, Ala. conducting. The fervor was at once felt, and the spirituality of the oc- casi,oii ibecame eminent when the huge chorlk samg the open ing son; then the eniollment bean ah1d~lffe "re^stratioa of messengers was , thg- OEder. TUie introductory sertnon for the en til'e'Ti^ssion was delivered by Rev. Samuel R. Price pastor,of the Mt. Pisgah Baptist Church in Fort Worth, Texas who as the entertaining pastor of the last.session. He had a* alter nate the Rev. A. A. Lucas ^pas tor of Good Hope Baptist' church Houston, Texas and treasurer of the convention. Thus went the first half of the first sess- it)ii of this> ofganiaatioi claiins''1iatlonal as well as inter national meanhership. The ad- foUmament was had, following an announceent by'the Presid ent that certain features j,ither t^ot even attempted, would be put into this year’s meeting. Of Cc^rse whatever promise Negro leaders made to. the rank and Negro teachers was ba^d on whatever promise their wfdte overlords had made tc| them. J[t ^w appears that instead of getting most of the fZSO.OOO, as was^romis^f by certain Negro leaders in the state, the Negrro te^^ers V^^e gotten only the. ■mjtller portkfi of the amount. .Hii fact that Neqarf"lexers. esp£iallv -in 'the Educational wwld, oo,uld not going to make it hard for them to ke«p in line young thinking teachers who will be at!.the «ext meet ing of the Niojrth Carolina Negro Teachers Association. Like Great Britian’s Chamberlain th; appeasment pc^icy of the old line leaders has about played out and there is'' stormy weather ahead. With Virginia and Florida Negro| teachers' already resorting to the^urts to-settle their saUwy questicn it is hard to expect Negro tcaehers in North Cart^ina to remain silent on the matter of more pay. llie old gag aboift being patient, and that North Carolina i# geiiig to d6 th# fair tiling by its Neg^ro teachers wilt be drag- g«d wt and i^bed up once more in ahiatteihpt to* get it througii tins gull hut unlen we are sadly mistaken it is g#ng to take some tall palling fo¥ it to mak,e the grade. Frankly we do not see how the differential between white and teachers salaries is ever to be erased if every time moiney is allotted for that purpose, the salaries of white teachers are g09ng to b« raised. less ffoloouccessful Session In Okla„ mant. ___ One of tji? pigments revealed by tne investigation—and named uie'iaiioid by it» discoverers— aas herttoiore lemaineci a my stery. it is a ^itfuse form of the familiar *=" iiifown pigndent, melanin, ‘fonnd in abundanc# in colored persons. GLASS eater UNDS KAZOR blades not « itO EASY DIGESTED JKFFEitSm -OITY, Mo.-.^ For more than 18 years Alf;^ University of Edwards has made his living at carnivals and coi^nty fairs^poyaj-y u^d provisional in charac by swallowing pieces pf broken jje continued only untU boTtlesr knives; tacks; razor t qualif^d Negroes can be recruit ed for the service. Meanwhile these representatives of the »ei ghbori^g law schools t^ie proud of_ihe opportunity to cooperate witH the authorities of the North Carolina College for Negroes during the new lAw school’s for mative jjteriodj Eyery -effort will be made to extend through this School to memtbers of the Negro blades and otuer articles of cur But last week misfortune be f/ell the “swallowing champ’' when after disposing of a beer bottle, some tacks and three ^urives—ralor iblade stuck in his throat. p^siSan order ed a strick fast until blade work ed out of his throat. Last Fri day out came the' Shaving acces sory and Edwards is reported seeking a less nazardous occupa tolMli Hold Torts. Each course will meet three hours a week and will be taug'nt, resfet’tively, by Profs. John p. Dalxell, Donald W. JSflrkham and Fred B. McCall, *11 of the University of Noith Carolina and by Prof. Douglaa Maggs of Duke University. Dur ing'this spriog aemester the currieultim will consist of. cour ses in Agency, Civil Prueedure I, Cdmrset* 1 and'^rtj.' ^e last two subjects mentioned will be continuations of th,e course! begun in the fall and will be carried on by the tame instruc tors and for the same amount of credit. The course n Agency will bs taaght by Prof. Millard S. Breckenridge of the Univer- sil^ 0^ North Carolina and the course in Civil Procedure I by Prof. Douglas Poteat of the Duke University Law School. As indicated during the year 1989-40 orfy a first 'year pro gram of studTy win be offered. The second year curriculum will be added in 1940>41 and a third year in'fS41-4S. "The Law Library will be purehased, installed and or- ed by Miss Lucile Elliott, Law Gets Mlidavil ‘ Od Hlan Tlireal iofoteCase Colleges’ ipd Secondary Schools. If the^s^dent comes from a . college^ated as Class “B” by race the same opportunities for ^ Association he must haTe legal education as are a«ord-1 Bachelor’s ed now at Duke Univ and, ■£l will at^^Ute UBi«ei»i^ o: Una. “The* "Law School operated upon the smester | “We earnestly hope that system instead of the quarter everyone interesEeff in legal edu system and the ffffl term will cation in North Carolina will I open on Monday, Sept. 25. The I spring term will open early in ' February. During the fall aeme* ter the curriculm will consist of 'J®W Y0EK-2^Det«rmined ta open up an avenue through which the Federal Government can proceed to intervene In the frame up and convietion of Wiliam Anderson, yauthful president of the NI^CP^ youth council in Greenville, *S. C. July 24, the National Asaocia- tidnal| Aasociation , for. the Ad- v«neement of Coloi*ed People sent an affidavit to the Juatica department sett^ig forth an account of Ku Klux K 1 a n fl»eata against J. C. Williama a CO defendants of Anderson in the noiw famed voting eaae.' Anderson, who has been lead ing the drive to get Negroes to register for the municipal elec tions to be held Sept. , in Greenville S. C. was framed and ttfbrarian of fhe Univeraity i of last July, charged with North Carolina. And I will take j white girl for a date charge of the administration of telephone. The charge ^wa^officlally listed as disorder- ly conduct. He was ordered placed under a $6,000 peace bond and sentenced to secVe thirty days in Jail or pay a 1100 fine. Williams, in a signed ^ida- vit said that following hia arrest August 7, h« was’visited in jail by one Fred V. Johnson “who pretends to be heiMl of tho local Ku Klux Klaoi," Johnson, according to the aflidavit, told W'^lians that he (WilliamEi) and Williams’ Mtwyer were head ing the drive td* register Negro es to vote ia Greenville. Later but remanded to Jail on a second charge. Johnson threatened te jail on a second .charge, John son threatened te ‘‘taka^e out of the Jail and kUl me, if X did nol tell him why the Negroes wer^ registering in Ckreenv^ille/’ In a letter to Assistant At torney General 0. John Rogge, Thurgood Marihall, special coun sel for the IfAACF painted out that the afft'davit repreaeoted “sjpecific evidence of an overt act in violation ot the la^ of the United States,” the ’type of evidence which the J ustice De partment has said would, permit federal action, c the School for the year or untll^ a qualified Negro l%w scI administrator can be secured. “The entrance requirements and the stanaards of work which will have to be met by students in the La.w School of North Carolina College for Ne groes will be the same as those in effect.^ j^t the University of NortlT C^oiina. Thus those seek ing admission to the Law School must have completed with an average grade of C the first three years of college work lead ing to an academic degree from the, North Carolina College for Negroes or some other Negro college approved as a Class ‘A* standard four* year qollege by the Southern. Association of Degree and. with an averaSe, orth grade of C on all of hi* under- H* gra^uate worC Join with us In Helping this new venture to get - started under the most encouraging conditions and cewstruclrve auspicoi.? CHARLOT’DE^lIhe Davidaon family, one of the most promin tenth annual reunion Uast Sal. urday afternoon a t Sunset Park. Matjjach of the family is Mrs. Emma Davidson 88 yea* ol^-resident of the Hoskins section who y/as on hand to re ceive congratulations as she has been each year foif'the past decade. = ' * The prografe ■ * was given en- ‘fiffelv by —of, Mn*r [It the only gain we see that has been made is that white edaeational leaders have at last admitted that there is a differen tial and ilMt it should not be. How the name of tarnation they win ever, be brought to th# place where they eraae the differential is a k«rse «f another color. We think the courts jjhould .be resort ed to fifteen ^year^o^ patiently wafting fer a miracle to ‘ ^ which is ’tlM voluatary equalization of white and Negro 1b North Carolbia. 0mAJ10MA. CITY, (ANP)— j delhonstrated s\icc^as in given ThrUled by the liberal and en-1 fields. ^ ‘ ' ; couraging address of Gov. Leon ^T?early 200 members C. Phillips of Oklahoma and the rising tide of interest'in the ])rartical devfelopment bf business among Negroes, cxhlbi ^ed by the large delegation of businem men who came from widely scatter^ sections of the country, members of the Na tional Negro' Business league ended its 39th annual session here Thursday night. Stimulated by effective program whfflT got down to brass tracks, porticularly in its study of the problems of the small Negro business matt, the league enjoyed the best spssioa it has held in a decade. Meank were mapped out. for extending the practical programs outlined which these leA'ders of business feel will make available for the small operator the experience and counsel of these who hare were eni%lled, the largest number in recent sessionT Oidahoma City had been deliiberately selected fof the "meeting because one-ol the Baojgt thriving-—Negro Jsaai^ ness communities in' ‘th6 coun try_^ exiistfl here.- Urgent invitat ions from New York and At lantic City h^ been passed by because the business men want ed to be free from distractions in order to put their time in at actual work. The response from bonafidd business men and stu dents of business vAioi teach commerce in Negro schools was gratifying. C. C. Spualfflng of Durham, N. C.. the ibeloved president of the organization, i}esfgned be» cause of his physician’s orders Mr. Spahlding amid a rising vote of thanSs and appreciation Davidson and consisted of music by the Smith University Trii> consisting of Evejyn, Willie and Thelma Davidson. Rev. J.,L. Powell pasfoi: of Friendship Baptist churcTT whose wife is a grandchild of Mrs. Davidson, was-the . guest speaker. Sey«tal'' readings and other selections were. on the program. Children of J4rs. Davidson are Rev, Wi H. , Davidson, Rev. R. 3, Davids5n, ‘Rev. M. L. Davidson, J. S Davidson, Rev. S. M. Davidson ' of Gastonia » Mrs. Marie Osborne and Mra. of the Reunion, succeeding his brother. Rev. P. J. Davidson who died since the last reunion. Out of town guests included Lynch Bill, Saiary^Prive BUFFALO, N. Y,.-*-Full sup- climaxed a long drive hv gett- port of the National Association for the Advancement of Colo red People’s fight to equalize Ihe salaries of, Negro and white teachers, 'to' "open the University of Missouri to Negroes, and,, to pass a federal anti lynching bili> was registwed here by . t h e American Federation of Teach ers which closed a four day convention here August 25 at the Hotel Buffalo. mg the 218th signature on YOUTH GROUPS AID DEFENSE FUND .. with " th« action taken by the NAAjOP’s legal counsel, announcement was made by Janaes H. Robinson, acting director of the associa tion’s youth councils, that res ponses iiv the form of funds to aid the defense of . Anderson and memlbers of the youth coua cil, were now coming into the national office. “Wn atni-tAj 1 our youth ,co|incilB discharge petition to' bring the ago,” -he said, “to Gavagan Anti .lynching Bill to the floor of the House of Repre sentetives. The fact that lynch- ings are again increasing*' and- a mcti spirit of fascistlc tone evesywhere rising will not deter a reactionary bloc from attempt ing to bury this -bill. Filibusters will once more develop, eape- cially in the Senate. We recom mend that members of this^^APT urge their Congressfiiien tb support the bill to the last ditch and to vote cloture, if necesaary to remade from America the stigma of protecting the moat The convention went on re cord as ^$hdemning discrimina tion in the United States again st Negroes, pointing to the «e- _ ^fusal of the Daughters of the ^ Grace Ledbetter. gev."^. S.J^erXcan~Re^gttgir- JDavidson was elected presidenf 'Marian Anderson to sing in -their auditorium in Washington, D, C. a> most glaring exam pie in recent mototha. In her annual ^report to the Miss Laura Lacy of ScKeesport conygjjtion’, Mrs. ^Mary Foley Pa. John Lacy jof McKeespoif also Charles”' Lidbetter of Chim ney Rock and Frank CorSefl Rocky Mount and others. ed his unwavering loyalty to the organization and his contin- uet! activity in the less .arduous offiee of president emeritus, to wftrti ha w«#, elected. Dr. J. E. Wialkepr, Memphis insaran4)e from the great gathering, pledg | executive was elected president. G|rosman, of Philadelphia na tional legislative representativ^e of the Teachers union, urged continued support "to the lart ditch” in the _ fight to pass a federal anti lynching bill. That section of the report dealing with lynching, follows; ,‘Just ^before Oongrteas ad- jou^ed a -group of hard work ing progressive people. Includ ing representativaa of the AS7 Doxfey A. Wilkerson, professor of education at toward univer sity was relected national vice president at large by an over whelming majority ; at the con vention. The convention applaufl ed Wilkerson’a plea for f«nieral aid in education, especially for Negroes in keeping with the union’a alogan: “Edaijation for' Democracy—Democracy in eduica tion.” I; , - . taurence Wood Patterson, formerly of Durham ia viaitlng our city from New York. THANKS FROM NEW FARMERS .. .. two weeks raise funds for the prose«S\it'ion of tWa ease. I aih'hif^py to say that despite the fact" that many of our coun eils all over the country are not^ very active during the'*1fiimmer, definite respoinses to our plea tor funds are coming in. ■ We, the New Farmers of merici^ weul4 UIc* to expiess publicly, through the columns ^ your paper, the thanks of pur 5S,00tr memfcera tii«ae -per sons whose cooperation played a great part in making tho past year the most successful in the history of the organisation. We do^« especially to thank W. R. Valentine, the teachers §nd students of the Manual '^naining School Bordentown, New Jersery, for the most pro- fitdble and enjoywble receptien given the delegates who attend ed Che national convention. JAMES W. WABSil^, JR. Sbcretary LESTER AUBERT ' Prudent Qreiiaiboro, N, C. *' 7
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 9, 1939, edition 1
4
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75