Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / Jan. 20, 1940, edition 1 / Page 4
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Editoriali ■-r'--■* ■, dicCa Cloths wat fitnrn mESKLr »y thz CAM3UNA TQISS PIWJMUMG CO. MAIN OPPICS Ilf E. rEABODT ST. DUMiAM. M. C. PMONIS M-Tiai. i*T«fl . L. B. AUSTIN. ruausMiit imjUAM A. TUCK. «USniE3S MANACai CHARU>TTE OFFICS 4M 1-2 EAST SECOND SntSET WlLLiAM ALEXANPEH, M—«t»« Mttw SUBSCRH»TK»« lUTES IX.OO—Y«ar, |1.M—6 moatha^ Mootiia. Itat«r«4 M •*c9iid-«lMs wmUm at tk« port offtM •t Darlttaii K. C., sadcr th« Act of Mu«k «rd lift." SATURDAY, JAN. M, IMO OSOUTHLAND! ' ' / O fioMthlandi O Sottthland! • ; &T* yea not hMtrd th« call, n« tnunjrt blow, th« word made known Te the nationa one and alH Tke watchword, the bope-word^ Salvatioo’a preaant plan? A voq>«l a«w, for aU>for you: Maa ahall be aaved by man. O SoatUaadI O SonthlaDd! _%Jf Do yon not haar today IVa aUvhty beat of of onward feet, Aad ksow yon not their way? * *Tte forward, ’tia upward. Da to the fair whita anch Of Frcedom'a dome, and^ere ia room For each man who weald awrab. ^ O Southland, fair Southland! Than why do yoa atill ding To a dead aad uaeleaa thM>fft , 'TSa apriairtimel 'TSa work-time I Hie world ia young again I « AomI God’a ad>oT«, and God to Jove, Aad men «re only men. —--^AMES WilU>ON J0HN90K SOUTHERN CONGRESSMAN AND ^LYNCHERS "Yon paas thia bill and the aheriff in my town will t»e aomewheri •be wben'a crowd gathera to lynch a Negro.” Theee word w«o 9okea by Bepreaentatiye W. R.' Poage of Texaa In the Houae of JtepreaenUtivee laat week in hU apeech oppoaing the Gavagan anti-lynching bill. to one of the main reaaom'why a federal law againat lyDch> iag ia the United Statea ia needed. Bepreaentative Poa«e, like all aaembera of Congreaa, haa ewom to uphold law and order, bot when the righta of a Negro are concerned the Texaa rm>reaentatiTa ia willing to forgefrhia oath in order that mob law in hie atate may have a ftiU awing. The contention of aonthem leaders that lynching it becoming «' thing of the ^aat, in the aooth, muat be taken with a grain of when a man in auch a high poaition deliberately championa tka cauae of the lyncher. Por if the aheriff, the higheat aathorll7 •f law and order, ia going to be aomewhere elae when a mob ga- tkara to lynch a Negro, then it ia absolutely neceaaary an officer of the law wbcM character ia beyond destroying law and erdar be given the authority to act. TEDC CA£OLaINA TIMES doea not attempt to aigue here juat how many "req>eeti^le'' white citisena in the aou^ c«ae«^ with the attitude of the Texaa congreaaman. it doea realize that ther* ara atill living in the aouth thouaanda at white people who believe that the law of the mob ia tlT& only aalvation ihey have from, bo* coming overwhelmed by tibe humble Megro. If Bepreaentative Ponge aa a congreaaman ia going to advocate mob violence we can not hope to eacape the reign of thoae of bla race who ara more ignorant. It has t>een our opinion that to be elected to Congress one had to be jK>aeeaaed with an untMual amount of ability and integrity. It would aeem however that tbe re- suiaita ia a dialike for Negroes. The statement uttered by Representative Foage ia a^aeriooa in- djctmeot againat the leaders of aouthera thought and prevea concluaive that you cannot make a stateeman out of a man by merely electing him to Goi^eaa.' This is the land of leadership that breaks down when the jcuoh begins to ride, and it ia the kind of leadership that will deatroy every semblance of a democratic form of government. Ulrhat Representative Poage uttered is what a large nuntber of aouthemera fi^l about the lynching question. _ NORTH CAROLINA MUTUAL MOVES FMWARD We would like to call the attention of our readert to laat woelft ^ition of tiie CAROLINA TIMEB which pobliahed aome fmdM eon-^ eeming the pri^esa made by Negro 4>uaineaa inatitntions in Dur ham. X^peci^ly we would like to call the attention of our r^deni to certain information concerning Durhaia% largeat Negro iMirincaa. Aaide from collecting premiums from ita pollcyholdera, a«* pay ing cUima which have amounted to around |18 million the company waa organized. North Carolina Mutual employa Negroea in practically every capacity that « company of thia aisa re^oirea,* from the preeident to the Janitor. Hie men and women in this organization are not only euployod but are continuoualy in training. Ita agenta go into t^e homes of our people to inapire our youth along c>mmei«ial linea. , It ia significant to note that the North Carolina Mutual has loan- M mon money to ita poUcyholdera for home ownership aa coot* with the combined total of tiie other companiea opemteil by N^roea put together; While the company hM long aince dropped ita al^fan of: “The largeat N^pitt lif* inauranee company in the WMid,** we believe the fi|;urea will indicate that it ia by far liia aaoat »utatandiag buainoaa operated by Ifogreea anywhere in lAaMrica. Thia company ia ope^ted on a budget ayatem aad we andanteud it ma aacceaaful during laat year In operating within Ha bedget. Hja in’eadam income waa a little over two and and on*- half million dollata and ita invMtment portfolio rtiawa the l>aat tmm, certainly in tiia laat five ymr. Bccattae the CASOLOiA TIMl^ ia m Durham Inatitutioa we ara aonatfaMa raloctaat to uk whM we feel may be embarraaaing q-aa ttona the “wky and whare** of other large Ne|ro burineaa entar* piiaaa in other eiUaa. But whaa the Noiiij Carolina Mutoal boaata tbst It haa loaned more tunutf to Nagroea for hraie ownecdi^ than •B tiM other Negro Inaorasea coadiined we are forced to stray aa«Mwhat from ^e path oi athical procedure and aA a few leeatioBa. '.f' Wbat ara othn' large Negro insurance eompanT«i iotng with the thay eoQaet from their Negro pblicrholdenT N^ It ia com- ■aariailga that banka, iimurance companiea .and such oUier I jMtitationa must inveat money tiiey collect somairfam and •• httbke, aafar aad more helpful lovestmcnt a|iy Negro caaifnr aak* aseoiiragbig HegFo bona ownar^. (Fleaee tiim to paje seven) Comments On ‘Gone With The Wind* BY Biyt,T LOQ^ In Aanwriea,. the powcra that we have long recognized the value of DNvii^ picturea aa a regulator of public thinking. This mediutn waa uaed effectively in the firat worU war to convince the AAaricaB people that we were fating to mAe ^e world aafe for democracy rather .han safe for Morgan loans and the firitish JSknpire. Tlie nuin auffer- ers at the bands of ilie novie Bkognla have been organized labor and the N^o people. The first otMmmandment of Holly wood is that labor organisera muat b« shtown only aa enemlea of aociety and Negroea aa foola and knavea. In> filming “Gon« With the WitKl” Hollywood haa aup^ed ita^. Thia film haa bean hailed as a historical document, an apic in movie hia^ry by tiie Commeicial preaa, North and South. Opening night waa a b^ oecaaion in both Atlanta and New York. The reaaona for the aucceaa of the film among the touibona of Atlanta and the top hata of New Year are eaay to find. Hia picture gloiifiea human alatery, aUndfera the Negro people and the poor whites of the South, and Juatifiee Xian terror againat the po*>r people who "d»n*t know their place.” It diatorta American History hi a moat ahameful manner. 1%e heroic role of the Negro peo]^ in their atruggle for freedom ia overlooked and the alavra are ahown aa hanpy children' who love thair maatara, well content merely *o aerve their “better." Tiie Slave aoutb ia ahown aa al- moat a wtopia. The alavea were overjoyed to be alavM and the the mastera and their ladies were able to devote their liesure o the buUding up a high culture. Tliera, are over one bondired As Time Marches On Bj Wn. Uwi(k recorded slave revolts ia t h * South, many aided by poor whites, and the fict that a atate Il’ke Mississippia would have ittore aten «n the Northern arciy than in tht Confedeia'^e should proof enought that all not peace and contentment in the ‘‘good old days.” Aa for the culture of the Old South, 'wbere is there any trace of it? Certainly tive pro Civil War Soutfc is noted for ita' con tribution to literature, art r science. Hie records of auch travellera as Dickena show that the slave owning claaa waa nei ther cultured nor generous, nor could it be aa it waa the pix>duct of the moat shameleaa ayatem kno /n to mankind, ' For the common people of the Soutii, both Negro and white, glorification of tiie alave past conatitutes a real danger. The future proaperity and freed»m of the NefQTo people and white workers depeiula upon overcom ing all the herhagea of flavehr* Only by unity of the working people regardleaa of color CKp the vicious exidottation of the mill and plantation be ended. “Gone With the Wind,” by pro moting race hatred and by atrengtheoii^ old mytha of racial auperiority strikea a aerioua blow at southern projpeas. All proipreaaive people who hope that someday of the south t Klan, of lynchings, of peonaga and low wages will be replaced by a free and happy South, should voice their protesto to the produceia of “Gone With the Wind." The people who control the movies, the radio, the newa- papers and acbools should be 'n- form^d that t^e s neople of the South are tired of tryin* to feed an empty stomach on myth and prejudices. GONE WITH THE WINU The hour you wasted juat yeater- day. That will not come back again day I It ia gone with the wind. The kind deed you failed to do Will haunt you eternity through; It ia gone' with the ifind. The kind friend you did > some wrong When he no longer waa atrong, Thia wUl haujit you I’ke a helliali ainj Pray not for tomorrow— BilCAUSE IT too GOES ^ WITH 141E WIND. William Strudwick Hobbs Draws Wrath Of Dixie Daily MONTGOMpBY, Ala., (ANP) —A Jackaon day apeech at the Whitley hotel by CongresHuan Sam H-obbs of Selma who aaid '‘white supremacy” waa one of four principlaa on which the De mocratic party was founded drew the edi^al wrath of the Montgomery Advertiaeiv leading local dai^. The Advartiaer e^torial, m- titlad “White Supremacy” -Aaid Then Whatt declared this waa 1940 and not the dsyi of James Vardaman and - Tom Watson. 'We bad hoped that ‘iriiito aupremacy’’ aa a political iaeue waa dead and bulled ao that the reat of na witii any talent for thintdng ratii^ally and conatruc- tiiwUy and with a aenae of aocial req^on^>ility about common hu man ftroblema might at leaat devote o«r talenta, enei^ea and our inflBmce unreaervedly to the raapectable cauae of achiev ing a higher, richer,' aweetor standard tox all of God’s cMlaibfk tiia edttorial aaid. *1ft>ii4^ftaari»in iSaun oUered 'Nlggerr when there aant a woodpile in • thouaand mllaa of hta audience. He lead ed for ‘white aopremacy’ at an hour when civilized men every- Irhere ahonld ba more deeply co»ceroed with aalvaging 1*e iewdto of oor western civiliaation aad defending oor commottFire- aidea againat Han and the Slave. “Ther# are 1«,008,000 N^rro- ea in the United Statea. Because moat of iham llva In the Son^ moat of them ara polMcally tables*. If they were not ^Uti- cally hepleas Huy would not be Jeered by political orators, they would not be sobjact to temQia- tion. Couldn't Sam have left that out of hit BpeMbT” “We have ot|r white auprem acy now bot what elae have we? Have we aolved the problem of employn%iit for b|aohs iind whltea? Have we provided an honest Hviiig for men and wo men of all colors and cl|»aea? Hava we aolved thg ^iroblem of lev^: Have we solved :he ptwblea of j^viag all our hildren, whita and black a fair chance to acquire an education. What have we done to put flow- era on the lawns of our humbler f61k and paint on their wretched houses? Wb^t have we done to improve their eating hablta? What have wo done to give Jiem a sense cittzemdilp? What have we dona to strike down the diaeasea of infection and malnutritiona? What ara we do ing to prepare all our people our people for tiie ways and re- aonatt>ihiea ot democwy? “Here in tSe Soutii two racM are fighting idde by aide to raiaa tlie corain^n atandard of living. Fot a' thousand yaaza hence theae^'^raro racea wUI live here in tiie Soutii. Why muat one be forever flattered amd the and the other jeered and daa- plsed by our leademT We are Just aaking because we do not not pretMid to know.” “We are sorry tiiat flan Hobbs gava a»y tbought to *white supremacy’ about which there ia so littie uncertainty, and devoted hia talenta so aparingly to tiie great human prdblem f survival in troubled world." Pardon KOMTGOMEBY, Ate., ANP —^Parole petitiona were fOed in behalf of l^e five Seottaboro boys in prison dnce 1981 b«tore the naw atate board «t pardons and paKQiea ISinraday by the National Seottaboro Defense ^lommittee headed hf Dr. A&an Saigfat Chalmeia; New York minlater. Ttie five who have been in prison now for almoat nine years on charge f bavh^ nped two white girls hoboea on a freight train are Charles ^rzls, deafth aenteace waa re- diMed to life; lAndrew Wr^lit, who ^t 99 years; Haywood Fatteraon, 7S years; C' Charte Weema, fS yeara, O |e Powell, 20- year*. Tlie otiier four Maadsiits ireH frMd a fnr afa. “We’d rather have one stu dent here who understandingly abided by the rules and regula- tiona than ten thouaand who did not.”—Dr. James Edward Shep ard. The aatounding power of the diaciplined mind will ever give aubatance to civilization. The mental and spiritual force behind concentrated thought haa held at bay the greatest world power of today. Great Britain veraua Ghandi. Training can go a long way toward beginning the process, but the core ia ever within. AND TELL OF TIME— Reminencing of days gone by one thinks of time when the streets of the Friendly City were rivers of blood. Denisons from Peachtree Alley to Pearaontown filled the dark ledger of tiie law with the bark of guns and the biting steel of knifes. Peace ful Citizens walked with fear and trembling through infamous “Mexico” after dark. Today the comparative docility of theae former haunts cf violence make one reflect and think we ara traveling upward. *■ And of time wheta Clarence Muse came to town with a ro^ show and recited of King Antar and HannibaL And when the “branch wine" flooded the gullets of men and turned their hearts to lust and death. When money flowed fast and free and those primitive loving, hating, and raging bad men of the shadow world haunted the streets and deaths were greater births. Gone with the wine and lust are they—gone back to the dust. ••«***•**•* BEHIND THE SCENES *nie thinly veiled ommission of Kenny Washington by the Na tional Professional Football Lea gue ia indeed a sore in the side of sjjiortsmen everywhere very fact of his worthiness is aa a shade Itofora a many watted lamps which when the shade ift removed blinds all -eyes by its dazzlhig brilliance 1 The sporting world shame- lacedly turaa in disgust at such an obviously flimsy attempt to ignore merit. Sometimes we wonder if men are mica or mice or meni That certain Clei»yman haa informed thia acrUie the event ahall taka place within a month. The “Birds” have it that the ■NCC “Knoxn” are ei^ecting the. stork. With all due respects to Mias Nina M a « McKinney—Florida ia certainly no place to asaert one’s self In a pinch. 'There 't a eivll l«w there. There are about iT^million of our group In North Carolina enough to control every ballot is every county. Shouldn’t we rank higher in the educational status in the country? *««•••*•••• OW PLACES— Jostling massea, on U-JMreat ip Waahlngton, mad—mobs ^n Lenox and 7th in Harlem. Tramping Crowds in Detroit —parading Castes in ^Chicago and Doriiam went road when the Brown Bomber battled and wonm—battled and woo and then battled and won again. During •11 of these fighto atreeta were deaerted. When the opponents Were anaounded defeated, i&, 000,000 sepia Aanaricana bow led witfi delight—yes. Now—let 12,000,000 root, cheer, and fight for aomathing that will in a If ™rt sld In tnidiesttini of one American’s moat ahame- ful evils.— G r e y-Bearded GfilAINDPA— Lynch—Let ua see that So much presaure ia brought to bear that any flUbuateli* will be a farce— write wire and telegimph to your senators now-^now-now or never! PACING PROGRESS The saddest of men ai'e those gianta of genius who reach the peak of llfeir chosen field leav ing their fellows behind them and must^ alt there alone in a World with no peer to chat about it. ' Aa understShding grows the millstnnes of i^rogresa will be paced as per the degree of thia deep chasm is shortened between genius and the people. How pitifully few are ^those who can look at mankind with a birds eye view and see what ia to be. seen. •*••*•**** We are ever glad to sea new pioneers in new fields. The ladies should find it fashionable to dress “M’Lady’s Way.” Ever and always there will always be that great leak in the Business “Cycle of the Dollar’’ aa long as we have ao many un touched fields. •**•«*•**•* Check your dollar—^How much of it stays home? «***•*•***• Of Advertising there is much gnashing of teeth—But a mer chant will get up from an ad vertised bed, look at an advertis ed clock, wash with advertised soap, use advertised tooth brush and powder, put on an advertis ed suit, eat advertised Cereal tab on a advertised hat« drive to town in an advertised car— Ij^en—walk into his store and say IT DOES NOT PAY TO ADVERTISE—!! '• ■ ♦**♦*♦♦*•*» THE BEANERIES— HOULYWOOD INN has been remodeled modemisticly lookout you other guys! LINDSAY SHORTY” DAiVIS has definite ly become a fixture of the College Inn-—but after all the “scenery’’ is grand there. Of course digging Malone’s ia a natural fellas (—Last but still one of the tops Lath “Scope” Alston’s got the only draft beer •round I Did ya lear that you? We think of time when a certan Senator Bilbo Marshalled a group of ‘his own’ of ‘our own’ to WashiAgton to say they' were ready to go back to a land they knew no more than they knew LITTLE AMERICA— ridiculous!! **««••**•** W« are glad to see Aaron Day Jr. on the scene reporting to work again this week. If we aren’t to“ partial— Tons of dynamic vibrant per sonality rest and “Heanses”, Day Mid Cox—More and more power to those subs! *♦♦♦*♦•♦*»♦ - BITS OF sagacity “The most proJaund utter ance of the wisest of men ‘have at one time been called t ..h e prattlinga of Tools." “When men speak of my intelli gence highest I feel humblest.” “For nuaaberlesa centuries men have scratched tlie surface of TRUTH. “There is nothing more eni gmatic than simplicitiy.” “Dame Justice glitnpsed the LIGHT OF TRUTH and from henceforth haa been, blind.” ••••••**•*« “The invincible duat equalizea the statua of all men.”— “^eak not of life and blood but of blood with life.” “H£ MET THOUSANDS DAII4Y—YET KNEW HIS SOUL WAS BABE.” NCC ENTERTAINMENT Dr. MoClond former instructor of l^ech at Nortiiwutarn and IpbnMk» Univeriitiea gave • meat entertaining reading fit “David Crockett,” a three act play. H« ptoftd' 1k$ fKi at Poet’s Corner I BY WILUAM StWDWlOK 01 GREAT AN^ WONDERFUL KING! O! Great and Woadairful King ^ch peace thou doeet ever bring— * Such Joy to thgae yoa call your own. Who fear not to make your name known. For theae who feel thy great will. Their hearts with joy yoa ever full; 01 King—^mle forever. O! Great and Wonderful King Thou who cauae all earth to alim. And fill nature’a cathedrals with thy songa. Which give men strength to en dure all wron^ Thou who alone drank the bitter cup. Suffered all for men; gave life up; O! King Thou didat sweat blood. O. Great and Wonderful King T'waa a nwignificent thin^— T’waa auch that made men brave, Denied thee not, their Uvea* to save. ^ Adamnant, cbangeleaa, this mighty bond Which has held mAn'true these years long, O. King—Thou ^Idst Forgive. Button Drive NEW .YORK — FoUowing passage of the Federal Aoti- lynching bill in the House tbia week, the tota Isales qf NAACP anti lynching buttons spot 1^ to 64,000 to pass the half-way mark in the drive, according to Mn. Daiay Lampkin, national field aecretary of the organiaa- tioa, who ia* directing a nation wide aale of 126,000 buttona carrying the' alogian "Stop Lynching-Suild Democracy.” Mra. Lampkin made psi»lic a atatement conAained in letter sent to the association thia week by Miaa Efely% K. Dobaon, 19 Eaat 39th atreet. The atate- mcnt read; ^ I aiocerdy hope that 1940 will gain for the Negro race the real democracy that Aanerlca boaata of. I am among tlkoae who would, like the preaident to name one of the race to the Supreme Court.” The letter contained fS.OO for an anti-lynehing button. O^er five dollar contri butors in the drive included K. E. Ucbtman, Waahlngton, D. C. theatre chain operator; Carl Van Vechten, Mra. Amy Spln- garn, wiifow' of the late Joel B. iipingarn, former^ preaidelit f the aaaociation; and Adolph Hodge, of Brooklyn; alao Mrs. Maxwell Barua, Montclair, N. j. The largeat aingla order of 1,000 hattom, eaaae thia week , , from the Rev. O. Clay Maxwell, That we, must confess »H*quie>- p„tor of I&rlem’a Mt. Olive ly then— And I answer atraight and clear. Because my heart has no fear; What will you aay? When Qod on high calla ua in— And reada out our liat of ain, Read the right—and reada the wrong. And aaks us did we live kind strong. And I reply, “Such and such did. I” Because my soul l^as had holy fire; What will you «iy? And when of Lynching and such He speaks. And you stammer, stutter and repeat. Then, when He sees the sou venir— You took from a hanging friend here. And He looks at you who quake fear Because you know your finSs fa near. What will you aay? WHAT WIIX YOU SAY? When Juatice blin^ different akina. And Judges all mankind men to men. And aaks ua 4rho did we wrong and when? ignorea Juat Baptist Church. “The Rev. lb-. Maxwell and his congTsgstion veterans in auch NiAiACP cmb- paigna,” Mra. Lampkin aaid, in praiae of the church’s w«rk. Calling upon oiyanizationa and individual* to b>lp push t h * button sale to a successful end by Febru^ryl Mra Lampkin paid tribute tp the “thousands of youngsters and adulta, who, un>- able to give a dollar or five dolar for a button, give their ten cents gladly for a cauae ia which they eameatiy believe.” Lile lleiDber The Editor WRITER D^IRES NEGRO POLICE Dear Editor; “NEGRO PCH3CE PRO’TEICTION NBHDED” Crime among Negroes cag be stopped with Negro police pro tection for Negrots. A^owt 40 tbouaand Ne^o citiuM wilH not a single Negro polieem&n is shameful. Tha Honorable Mr. Friendly Mayor, tiie City Mana ger, Councilman, Chief of PiUifj theae honorable gentlemen have the answer to tb* problem Nard the gentlmen have the couraRe. But wh#'do they wait, while good citizens among Negroes ar# be ing murdered by those over pritileged criminal Negroea. 1 have no ax to grind with the preaent police force. I think we have a very fine chief of police and a very good force of men. 1 don’t blame white policemen for ataying in thf li|^tad aU., where they e«n >*|! what ita all BALTIMORE, Md. —Tiie ZeU Phi Beta aorority, meeting here at the Douglas Memorial chureh the last week in December 19S0, (voted to take out a |!600 life membership in the National A»- •ociation for the Advancement of Colored People. This action waa taken at the aorority’a 20th annual boule. Other sororitiea who have taken out aimilar memberships fn the association include the following v « Alpha Kappa Alpha, whose BMmbership ia paid in full; Delta Alpha and Omega Pai Phi. aix chat^tm.With demeanor and fiharacter—latics toni*wbat similar to tht ,'Ute Will Rogers he portrayed the quain^ back woods Characters to the . delight of all who hesrd. In a short talk following the reading Dr. McCloud emphacized tbe fact that atudenta muat learn to sell themaelves along with tht education they wish to aell. The simplest way to develop persoiwlity to thrqui^ eeurtei^. 'The essfpcf of coiprteay ia con^dtrnti9|» qf otiier peoi^.” Aad na* KiMliM W. 8^ FROM TAe FIRESIDE By WiUlam Htmrj Haff I One doea not have to be ■ dirty rat Becauae hia home ia in the alley; («ng y.eiita ago my mother told me th#t Down in • crimson Georgia valley, 8b» told mt to forever lilt my head. Not at a but like a aoidltr. In after years that came alMg •he said, “My son, you're doing as I told you." , about. They don’t knew Negroea and don’t know wfiera they atay. If I was a white polic^an, I would wait until everytiiing waa all over before I woul4 go back into those dark holes where th# criminal Negro it|nge|. . Then | wou|(| gvt fn toMh with fripndly Negro, }«t Mm N poiicf or wh*t n*ft informttion, wi4 mtk* In- ▼•sti|3ltUMi in litatqaarttrt wliil* the Negrtet are geftitif lober, then go out with ft ffw folict companion* and tpol ny m«ii, if he to net In the Qod only knolM where. •Negro poli^ would know where to find Negroea ^ a white policeman wouldn't %aTe an opportunity to know. V^ro police would not only get ttto man, but wou|d be tlltrt to/pn. vest many of those etim^ Rev. Aaron Moort, ciiwiott#, N. e.
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 20, 1940, edition 1
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