-¥■ KMM|i«MM>U^^ World Conference Planned For Negroes Soon DeSota Courts Playground TTBR picture of rtcroa-lin which «|!ul{s enjoy a game of are benefitting from the tional facilities at DaytoA’s new- crc-quet. Tfte Ohio city i^ only Deal’s hoosing program- ly completed DeSota B»1I Court* one of many throughout the i» obtained from the photo above jcountry where colored citizens New Discuss Possibilites Of World Conference Of Colored Virginia State College Gets Pilot Training Course PETERSBURG, Va. — Enroll- ment in Virgin^ State College's preliminary eparse in aviation, SECOND SECTION ii«rf l»ll i III M !♦■>» SECOND SECTION SATURDAY, OCTOBER 12,1940 BARKLEY’S DENIAL la BE INVESTIGATED Investigate Story Charging Senator With QOP ‘Deal’ JERSEY NYA Fart In zZnd Legion Convention, Boston ftonnoft rnffcKra Plan I Kingston, Jamaica, BWI,—'^ec^ntly granted by the Civil Ae DvllllvLl vUUv^V rldll A committee headed by Monclair ^onautics Admnnistration, was Conference On The National Defense. ■ —u~ GS:£»»rSBOKO — A* K service feature Bemiatt CoIleg>e is again proud to Announce a Conference of Advisor to Youth in the Schools of North Carolina! for Saturday, October 19, 1940, The theme for the conference wjll. be “Youth and National De- fense,” It is felt that this is a most timely ^eme due to the fact ihat the conference will be held three days after the univer- stl selective^ draft becomes ,opei*a tive. It is expected that confer- enco will exceed all expectations with many young people from over the state taking an active part. ISpeakers for \ the diftctisaions, all members of President Roose velt’s Commission on Nationtfl Defense, are: Miss Lola Davis, assistant to Miss Harriett iElliot, Consumer Commission; Frances E. Hoffmann, white aiid compos- completed Saturday in prepara- ed of Rudolph A. Burke,, Amy ttpn fox the oj>ening of actual Bailey, and In^i Bailey, has issu-jinstruction on Monday, Qetob«r ed a call for’a meeting this week This learned from a slate- end at Mount Ida, Hector’s Riv. jment made by A. C, Phillips, who er Post Office, neaJr here, to dis-jwas just referiU|r appointed to cuss the possibility of calling a the position xf Co*«pdinator of World Conference of Colored Civil Pilot Training at th« Gol- People. Mr. Hoffman set forth lege b_y' President John Gandy. the aims of the committee in the following statement: The «o*t of the entire 15 weeks’ course is only l^2S. This mftall “The pTirpose of the week end fee covers the cost of in^turartee, Conference at Mount Ida is to‘physical examinfltibn, and 'tui- oonsider the advisability of call-jtion. Upon Upon oomplettori of ing a World Conferencedl of the ^the preliminary 4k>urse, the ^u- Colored RaRce iminediately aft'ir^dent is eligible for a .private pi- the close of the war. ^ jlcit’a certificate,'said Mr. Phillips j ^ . ladding that thie s^me traininjf 'rt “If thi^ is agreed upon, steps will be diwussed leading toward 01‘gMniz lotion and preliminary work for guch a conference. .“The qtiekion before us are; What shall be the .purpose of such a ccirfearence? How may plans be laid and purch:jed from a private ach.iol or agency wo^ld -cost' the stu dent three or four hundred dol- lars. An advanced course will be ioffered at "^e college it iS'. ex- BOSTON, With delegates a«d visitors 1i«r» frolte il4 states, tihe gireat tht«A| ;^orinir in by trains, bug^ i^tito and airplane, with all hotel aeooewdationB sold out before noon on Monday and privste dwellings taxed *to cap acity, BMton was host last week to the ‘22nd natiotial convention of the Amencan Legion. New York, Pennsylvania, Mary land. District of Coln^ia, New Jersey, Illinois al^d Ohio were the states sending: the largest number of colcir^ Legobnnalres and the convention headquarters at Prinoe Hall Maaonie Temple was the mecica af vrtrious delega tions, the4t bands And drum and bugle corps. ... • • On Wednesn^y at Shaw House Carter Post A4»»I|arx* entertain ed the Women delegates and visi tors with an afternoon tea, the program being arranged by Jessie Harris, ehairn^an, aBsis>ted by Mesdames Lcidfee Perry fgiid Mar shall Cass. Among the prominent units re presented by the Colored Vets were the 9Snd snd 9^d Divisions, and tHere weir* acorcfs of reun ions wheraver’ and whenever these - Buddies jof the World War days got together. On Wednesday flight a review and drill for dele- g^es and visltcirs was given by the Batellion, 372 Inf.’, MNG> at , ]ibip.g&ii Asrmoih, TO OPEN SEPARATE RESIDENT CENTER NEWARK, N. J. — The second tep in the direction of complete segregatdon of Jersey’s Negro National Youth Administration was tsben last week when Ber nard S. Miller, State NYA Direc tor, announced that a ‘jim-crow’ resident center would be opened to provide work training for Ne gro youth from all parts of New Jersey, The center will be open ed on « large trsict in Green Bank state forest, 30 miles from Atlantic City. Only colored, youths, 17 to 2® yeaors of age, will be admitted. White youths from the state go to Verona, North • Hale4on, Bendix dfid Lovclady Grove in New Jersey. Experience is given in these camps in woodworking, machine sbo9>, auto mechanics road build ing and other industries related to defense. White NYA youths are assigned to c4>nps near their home towns, but all colored youths in the state must go to the segregated Atlantic County camp. Some months ago William A. Smith Jr. Negro state NYA head with cffieeg at 5 Belmont Ove., was told to rearrange the color ed work in district NYA set-ups 9a’it would all come under one.head. The separte set-up for OCTOGENARIAN NEW YORK — Senator Alben, jority Leader had recently *oW Barkley’s recent denial of a atoiyp Negro delegation that tbc a»*i wliich appeared in the Chieaeo | lynching bill ia « “dead hona** Defender Se^ 14, quoting him and “has been removed «s w» as having s:iid that the Anti- issue from th« preaeiu: lynching bill ia now a “dead .by mutaal agreement of purpose.? Where shall organizaltion ^pected, after January 15, whicshf'^ . ^ ■ i, V- t f 4 ^ . ii^» in'ChArgethe ^efrdswien. ma segregated office build Heading local coftmittee on Jng dt-. 5 Belmont Ave. A . , . - 1. . a,, j f 1. i.1. 1- /’{MaJor-A;-.L. l&n»-and staff. bft->coloredr people was then directed fbrmed to best accomplish the js the date on which the pielwni-'-' ~ ~ - • . .* r ~ jnary coursg will be completed. Ad such a conference'vanced training will bee patter- be heltT? Who shall compose its ened after'th'e regular • Army H. Williams, and Miss Gladys personnel? How will it be finan- ©ourse of instruction. Baker’s both ajisistant to the:ced? Chief, Civic Group Section, and] “There is a strotig feeling here Frederic A. Jackson ©f Newjthat this criticel stage of world York City. In an eifort to guide the dis cussions some objectives for the history holds vast possibilities for good or ill to the colored race and the future cf the group will conference were stated by the depend, not ^nly on the outcome lesg chairman of the campus com-^ of the struggle, important as that mittee. Dr. Alberta B. TC?her, ^may be, but upon the keen pre- Divlsion of Social Sciences, as paration of tHe colored people to follows: 1) To foster«|idmaintain citi zens of high morale, 2) To give information on governmental activity as applied to consumer problems and nation al defense. p. S) To offer workable techni ques advisors to youth m«^ use in North Carolina in cooperating with national defense. 4) To show the part youth can and should play as boiSi, M con sumer and a producer of goods and services. 6) To show the relationship of youth and ^ult on common economic problems during a per iod of nationef crisis. The conference will begin at 10 a. m,, Saturday, October 19. A panel discussicn will form the afternoon program coming as a culminrtting feature of the days activities. All sessions of the conference will be held in the beautiful Henry Pfeiffer Science hall. There is no registration fee for one attending the con ference. Meals can be secured at a reasonaUe in th« Wil bur F. Steele hall, the college dining center. participtN in the World t^at will emergje and is already emerging from the present up heaval.’,’ URGE SOUTHERN HEALTH OFFICERS TO TRAIN RACE PHYSICIANS Washington — Medical circles are watching with interest, de velopments in public health in the southern states, hopeful that additional barriers may be broken down as a result of ® resolutio.i fostered by Fr. M. 0. Bousfield of Chicago at a recent meeting held here. Dr. Bousfield wa» one of the invited guest at the meet ing of StMte and Territorial Health Officers which convened at the U. S. Public Health build ing. When tibe subject of nation al defense was broached, Director Baker of Alabama' introduced a resolution suggested by Dr. Boua field, urging southern state health officers to provide ways and means of training additional Ne- gro doctors within their stateg in .public health. The resolution carried. Dr. 'Thomas Parran, IT. S. Surgeon General, presided at the meeting. To be eligible for the primary course, a student now enrolled in ooil^ljp he must have two full years of college work. He must also pledge himself tc complete the ground and flight course an- disqualified by the flight or ground contrdctor and must pled ge himself to aPPly f'O^ flight training in the nation’s military service. Ground sc'h'col classes will be taught on the college campus by D. P. Murrill, instructor at the University of Richmond, on Mon day, Wednesay «lid Friday eve nings from 7:30 to 9;30. Flying instruction will be given by T, B. Martin, recently bro-ugh't to the Hopewell Flying Service, All fly ing instructions for thi college Lafayett* Sought To Geoi^jtt Waahington To Frea American Nagrjo Slava* The complete course comprises 72 hours of grcund school and 35 hours of flight instruction. Ground school classeai include work in navigation and metoro- logy. r_ HAMPTON TO INAUGURATE PRESIDENT NOV. M Hamploti — Dr. Malcolm S. ‘i|^;«ji^eme‘i^. was ll^irshall tCass Comniander of William B. Carters Post,'and h« was «b!y assisted by Le^onnaires Percy Steele, Geo. H. Sinvmicma, TTUliam B. Reid, J. W. Crockett, Henry C. Beckett, Clarence A. Dorfer and Henry Perry. 1^6 Boston TraBe associa tion w.as also host to the delegates their wives and friends. Monday evening along Gamden street and Columbia avenue, jU|f; prior toi the heralded Cootie pfi.-ade of the Forty ‘an’ Eight, several Negro'unit* from varoius parts of the country strutted thSff'fftuir to the delight of hund reds of on1oc3cers. Units repre sented were Federal and Walter Green Posts, No. l4, Baltimore; Emmett GuytoiT“l*o«rt, Newafd, New Jersey; tflrtColn Post; Geo. P. Davis Post, No. 116, BmMyn Chas. Ycfung . Post, Nuniber “ 77, Detroit; Jalnes Reese Europe Post, Washington. aenes of newspaper exposes of the se gregated set-up was written in the Negro Pressi by Harry B. Webber. No denial of any facts hag ever been made by Mr. Shiith. Although the New Jersey set up of NYA is lOfl per cent segre- g:|ted. the general idea behind the New Deal NYA program em-. anating from Washington is that the races be kep separted. This waj, mcHe clear some time ago when Mrs. Mary McCleod Beth- un» was placed in charge of ‘Ne- Jersey. horse” to this »e—ion of Con- gress, brought th« following re- ponae fronv the newspaperfa publisher, John H, Sangatacke: “If «ar mrrmJi erred in kit report a* Scm- tor Barklejr’s letter Mema to iadieate the Defender will be glad to correct tb* iai|^reM- in ||kn awrl^ iu«a ef the pap*r.” 'The pUblisher'a statement was contained in a t«l*tram sent to the National AooeUtion for the { Advancement of Colored People October 3 in rec(|}onse to an ek- scciation inquiry about the mat ter. The newspaper, in a signed story said that- the^ Senate Ma- parties concerned.” Senator kley in , letter to the NAACE* characterized 'the atory aa a ‘*wil ful misreprMentation.” In a letter seat to the KAACW September 30, BarUey ref«rr«4 ^ his speech before a meetrneg at tended by NegKo Demoex#^ Jna| prior to .t^e National Democratic Conention in Chicago laac July. In this letter berefeis to the D«. fender aa foIIc.w»; “Nbt only does this paper misquote my speech in Chicago in Jnly bat th# so called and alleged interview with me concerning' Anti, lynching bill abo«t which yofi wii«d me, is .“t pure and ua«da^ erated fabrication." UNDSAY FAUCETT, reas?ec- ted citizen of Durham who will celebnato his S5th liirthday inj .Novemiber, Plans are underway to give a testimicnttal in honor of Mr. J^ajucett who after nearly a half century still opcrate« a tranisfer business!. gro Activities” in the NYA. Her position has no executive respon sibility. Most of her time is spent making aP®eches to Negro organizations in favor of the New Urges Negro Nurses'Freed Of 1912 Seek Army Service NE W YORK,r—ANP—'The next bulletin of the National Associa tion of Negro ^ Nurses will urge colored nurses to join the Rmeri- can Jled; Cross, qualifying Sor •»r- vice wi^ that organiatiqn so that they might be ii» liiie for call to army serviw. When tha ld»t war occured, numb«^ of Negro nur ses sought to enter the army ser vice. They were debarred be cause in moat instances they had never qualified fo rRed Cross work. Slayii^, Because No Witnesses EUX)RADO, Ark., —By Jame« R. Johnsan for ^NP—Because t^# state eoald present tt caM since naither evideace aer wit nesses were available HSBkitd Hadley, alias Coraid Boet«» Intyre, who fled the Uriiaaa community 28 yerlF, ago t© avaiJ a murder charge, became a firea man last week arid can ratam home without fear of dtmL The American Army places a nurse upon about the sftne sta- Detfi. Bat her appointment wasj^us and pay as * Second lieute- the signal for racial separation in nant with liberal leaves and~spe- ^ . all NYA set-ups and she approv ed all of them, even that in New Knoxville Matron Narrowly Escapes Death By Plane' Crashing Into Residence KNOXVILLE, —By O, B. Tay lor for ANP)—A crashing plans that had been flying for several Valiant Frenchmen, assertinK their readiness to defend their . ^ country, might start working at an unusual low alti- upon the German army that is *nde over the hotnes of several bestride their land. Whenever a nation is ready to have peace, regrardless of cost, * residence. . I you can write the nation off the of West Knoxville was call- Negroe, finally went into a tail spin clip>ping off the tops, of se veral trees before plunging Into Mrs. Leither Hub MacLean will be formally inau-j record. It''only a question of gurated as president of Hampton time before some other nation institute on the morning of Nov. will. I — * What has become of the peo ple WKo denounced our adm^Us in M .by h'er. mother from, a nelJ, t-> see'the flying plane and saf had outside but a few se cond, before the ^ane crashed, 2i&. Following the ceremonies Ogden hall and the address by a nationally known ^'few years ago, when they com^^Wclr-she-h^d been called. two day rounai «n^v> Sam Chessnev. next there will be a two >»y j pared our naval itrength with Sam Chessney, next door table conference on tha combined flaeta of Geftnany, neighbor, seld “I and some visit* part in national defense. 'Italy and Japan? 'ing friends wer^ sitting under tha demolishing the very room from trees in my front yard when we saw the plane start falling. A, second later tlie tops of the trees were clipped Cff, the chimney to my home torn away, then the plaUg came to 4 stop inside the Hubbard home.” The occupants of the plane were two University of Tennessee students. -One died instantly *nd the other is near dedlth in a lo cal hospital.^ United States inspector >Geo’. Gay from the Atlanta offices of the U. S. Civil Aeronautics board arrived and began a thorough nvestigation of tiia wrec^ag which had been roped off, to determine the cause the cra«h cial allowahces with attractive, retirement privileges. Tbere are no Neero nurses now in the ser vice althc-uglv in northern cities increasing numbers are qualify ing for civil service and public health posts. The Nursing Council on Nation al Defense h]|i invited the Nat ional Aseociation of Nei^ Kuxses to beccme a part of it, Mrs. M. K. Staupers, executive secretary of the associatMn revealed. Observers have marvelled that more Negr« nurses in the north do not qualify for Red Cross Ser vice. There are very few in N. Y. City enrolled and in Chicago with its superior facilities aad the remarkable school at Provi dent Hospital graduating tu^Mr- Several days ago Hadley walk* ed intc’ the office of P>os«ciitiiic Attorney Oren Harris and asked of another Negro Urbana in 1912. He remembered only tliat the victim’g name was "John”. Bad ley said Ue fled the sees* and remained away until he was recently ciflled back because ef his father’s death. Bat in order to legally qualify as an heir, aa had to have Qie murder ehari* against him elea#ed. However, "Rw court records couId be found of tile alayiag and officers were anable ^ ^ cated any witnesses. Proeeeetor Harris then filed charges agaliMl J^sHley for ffrst degree wwlar in connection with the death f one John Doe. When tiha was called for trial, nobody peered again^ him. Hadley an ilcquittal and now eaa fefani ior nurses every yMor, it is i»id|!® Uriwna as a legal Imv ta kb that the o»ly i^Negro norse in father’s the ci^ enrollefl with th^ Bed ^ Cross is Miss Befva Overton, S«- perintendent of the Prerident School. ~ Adviee to StudcntK the about ths flujr road I* knowledge. An experiment that fails is| Japan loined th« not wasted; it opens the way for something els*. beeaaaa it is roUMaMbtat a»dl m «r« they. Old BMB. hm ft Many people who ttph«!d the _. _ _ Ck>nstitution ara rmiy to iBter> talkiiMt about tl* pret the decunent. *laadaaap».