I I TAC.E TWO THE NEWS-JOURNAL. RARFOBD, N. C. The News-Journal North Orulinn k J MISS UHCIMKM Telephone 3552-1 Published Every Thursday by The Estate of Paul Dickson RAEFORD. N. C. Subscription Rates: $3.00 per year (In Advance) In Memorlam PAUL DICKSON 1889 1935 MRS. PAUL DIC KSON Editor Entered as second-class mail mattei it the Post Office at Raeford, N. C, under act of Ma'ch 3, 1870. Till RSDAY, FEB. 4th. 1943 A Negro To His Fellows By El DEN R. LIXDSEY (The following is an article clip Ptl from The Christian Science V'"iiU'r which strikes us as one of (be fa 'rest things in regard to the present Negro situation we have seen. It is worthy of th consider ation of Every white and colored Sn herper and t'nitrd States citi tet. I'ditnr). 'iert tlie present d.s us.-ion cf t" Arviran Nct:o sitnat'on. it is r- -;f-i iics-i! le tti.it Warren H. 3--wn, Ph. D.. cx-collego professor ?r ' hie h-r ""king Ne-go. has done ro- is '"acc so'rrthing that no white nan ha : b?en able to do, namely, ex ; tSo fijT ( v 1 1 being done toward race hs'wut," by the 'n-atioiialisni of. t'p Yeg-o press; and calling for re f'.TTS, with a rra-omible chance that s c" M will lie heeded. I'l his ar t.cl? ' A Negro Warns the Negro prrs ; oiitvring recently in the Sat,,"ay F.pvi-w oi Literature. Pro. fess-r Biown lays much of the em tittviort of r. s rare squarely at '.he cf 'or of the Negro pi-ess. It is in 'lortai't that such an article by a esj onsible Negro, has appear ed, ft fits into a pattern that poten tially bod-.?s much good to interracial accoM, ce ring, as it does, close on the heels pf the first charter ever drawn tip by a representative group r.f So' thern Neernes, designed to promote interracial co-operation in the K nth where 77 per cent of all A'-teri'V'i Negroes live. About the r!v cri' ipjsm expressed in the Sou riTi n-pes concerning the charter jt-s be t summed up by Ralph Mc G'H. evecutive editor of the Atlan ta Constitution, in his widely-read v Itimn, "One Word More," when he aid: ''T would have liked for the proposal to have indicated, or affirm ed, a definite disagreement with certain Xegro leaders and elements cf the Xegro press in the East, but :o have done so would have sub jected the proposal to a violent at tack froi'i the powers-that-be in Ne-r-o polit'cs and economic. " Professor Brown does what the framers cf the charter probably a: HARD TO -EASY TO RENEW It is patriotic to improve- the livability and comfort of a run-down home! Yon serve the war effort by keep- C ing up your home. McLAUCHLIN RAEFORD, Remember I could do without having the Negro ! nrpss cnntrnlleH :ic it ic ulim-wl ov ciusively by Northern Negro money, whether published in the North or South pull down the house on his heads. All too frequently the Negro press has busied itself with playing up the bizarre, the sensational, the criminal, the race-hated stirring ele ments of the news. In oalling for a new deal in Negro journalism, Professor Brown points out: Most Negro newspapers are what they condemn the most prej udiced whites for being. They are Negro first and American second. They foster segregation by aiming to make all Negroes race-con-conscious beloie they are Ameri can conscious. They prosper by sensationally playing up the Ne REPLACE Pearl Harbor Every Payday gro at his worst. When they pub lish news of the white community, it is generally an account of the white man at his worst. After amply substantiating these charges with facts. Professor Brown offers what might well prove to be the remedy. "Is the larger centers of popula tion," he says, "Negroes of high in telligence and skill are available to establish and publish newspapers that will be worthier representa tives of the real mind and character of the American Negro. There is no greater opportuniyt before the Ne gr ocommunity than to undertake to esatblish such a press. Meanwhile every Negro with any pride of race has a moral obligation, by protest and pressure, to demand less hate and sensationalism, more fairness at. ULTRA Luniina The new paint, which is now being produced in large quantities, represents one of the greatest war-time gifts of modern chemistry to the American Home. THINS WITH WATER EASILY. WASHABLE. NO SIZING. NO PRIMING YOU CAN PAINT FRESH PLASTER, BRICK, CONCRETE, BUILDING BOARD AND BRIGHTLY COLORED WALL PAPER APPLIED WITH LARGE BRUSHES. DRIES IN 40 MINUTES. FRESHEN THE INTERIOR OF YOUR HOME NOW WITH THIS BEAUTIFUL FLAT-WALL- PAINT. Handled Exclusively By CO. Inc. NORTH CAROLINA Courtesy Kansai City Star. and honesty in his press." There are many fine things now being done by Negroes that deserve reporting, and more and more of them are beginning to appear in the daily press dispatches. Among them have been the stories of the Negro band playing to keep up morale while the transport President Cool idge was being abandoned, not an easy thing to do; Dorie Miller, Negro Navy mess-boy at Pearl Harbor, ex hibiting bravery that won him the Navy cross; Negro troops winning the praise ot officers in the African campaign, to name a few. Not the least of these were proposals made for' local betterment by a group of Negro citizens to the Chamber of Commerce in Valdosta, Ga., as re ported in the Valdosta Times, Nov. What better The Things He'd Want To Know (This little story applies to every mother who has a son in the ser vice: Ed.) "The minute we heard that Bill was a prisoner, most of us in our small town hurried to his mother, j 'he days of their childhood, I would That's the way it is in a small town. ee to their building strong the Bill's mother was out in the barn, ! structure of memories. I want them helping a cow to "birth" a wobbly ! to remember that in our little house legged calf. No, she didn't want any-; we tried to be kind to one another, thing, she said. They told her she j that we knew the dignity of hard could get a letter through to Bill : work, and the silver sound of laugh soon. Yes, he'd stand it all right, ter asd the Tightness of respecting she thought. Her boys stood things one another's privacy, and the im- without much to-do about it, she no - ticed. Got it frcm their father most ly. she thought.. But I watched that woman's face, and I knew better. It was not all from his father. Much of Bill's courage came from that gaunt wom an standing there tending to the sim ple, everyday, age-old problem of birth. No tears in her eyes, but on her face the terrible, strained and j to light his way in the present dark curiously peaceful look of the brave; ness. So may my own children, if who have struggled with sorrow and are not afraid of it anymore. She'd write Bill, she said. She wanted to tell him that his cow had calved, and that the boys had clear ed the new ground and put cane in the bottom land. Those were the things he'd want to know, the little things that had been woven into the fabric of his life. She knew, with an ancient wisdom, that these were the things that would help Bill; the knowing that the way of life he fought for was safe, and going on, like a river rusning forever to the old, old sea, in spite of storm and earthquake. And suddenly J knew how right she was. That letter she would write, with fingers gnarled and cramped with the churning and the milking and the picking of butter beans in the garden, would be a re newing of Bill's covenant with life, a re-affirmation of all that his child hood had meant, for out of that chidhcod with its simple things, its facing up to realities, the dignity of its work, and the shining beauty its dreams, had come the courage face what he was facing now. I speaking for him. He would be remembering the J It is encouraging to note the in pink mist of peach blossoms in the i terest shown in organizing a Farm spring, and the new creak of his Bureau in Hoke County. Names of dad's Sunday shoes going to the lit-pnid subscribers will be found in ue wnue cnurcn on si.na.tj, me ture spring, and the way the wagon wheels cut into the white sand when the horses turned into the gate, his sister's playing on the old organ, the night sound of crickets and cows lowing to be milked, and his father 25, and widely republished through out the South. The report points out ways they see to increase the output of Negro labor; to reduce il literacy and disease among their race, and to improve housing con ditions. Such proposals made in true hu mility and deep sincerity, are some thing to seize upon for interracial co-operation. They should be even more widely published, discussed, and acted upon by the majority race. At the same time, if the Negro press concerned itself more with constructive stories such as these ana ir.ere must oe many more oi them if the trouble is only ta to dig them up a great step willVr-l been taken towards promoting Beir. ter understanding between the races. t 77 71 T.' time than NOW to attack old paint jobs? New coats of paint mean "Duration protection!" And Hew About That Apartment You Have. Been Promising to Repaint THURSDAY, FEB. 4th, 1943 saying grace for food. He would be remembering the whole way of life back home, and its preoiousness. And holding on to those memories would give him courage in the dark, ness, and a bright flaming anger at those who would destroy his way of life. I came home to my own children. And I highly resolved that now, in ' portance of belonging to one anoth- er and living the days as well as we could. For I know now that the gentle, patient courage, and the fierce loyalty to their way of life of all the Bills we know is born of a lot of memories of leisurely years and simple ways of living. From the shine of quiet yester days Bill carries a gleaming memory ever the need come." BERNICE BROWN MeCUlXOUGH, In Christian Science Monitor. DIVIDED THEY FALL Surrounded by big government, big business and bigjlabor organiza. tions, the farmer who tries to strug gle along by himself today is rather helpless. He finds agencies on every side telling him what to do, what not to do, when he can do it, and when he can't do it. Planting a crop, milking a cow, raising a hog or selling a steer have all become acts which virtually re quire a lawyer's advice. So today more than ever, a farmer needs the help of cooperative mark, eting organizations. He needs the advice of experts. Adting individ ually, he is sunk. Acting collective ly, he can compete with the power and the influence arrayed against him. , It is up to the farmer to solve his ofrown problems by intelligent action to through his own farm organization tms issue of The News.JouriuiL J. M. McGougan and A. S. Knowles want it understood that the campaign for new members is now on. A.B.D. COTTON GINNING REPORT Hoke County's latest ginning re. port, issued as of January 16, shows prior to that date 13,500 bales of the t 1942 crop were ginned, as compared with 11,203 bales at the same date a year ago. J. R. Shaw, Census Bu reau agent for tiie county, states that the next and final report will be made as of March 1st. UNITED STATES WAR CONDS ANO STAMPS Mil PATRONIZE THE NEWS-JOUR- J.NAL ADVERTISERS. 1 'f f