The palmetto leader. (Columbia, S.C.) 1925-196?, March 14, 1925, Image 1

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. _ V . - ' ~ . - | SUBSCRIBE AND g-'- ^ ? ADVERTISE?.Cur.- | -?:?|?rent? Social and Geir ?era! Newsy -? ?' " I ?A H fll H rf ___ p B fc^^^J^piBt AgBI^F JOHN n R(] TO TUSK I- T--, '." ~~~r*\. - '. ;.; , " $ By Dr. Anson Ph ^?i * g LtiairmaiPor _f_ ??Gifts-Co: : OF ENDOWMENT! I The Gift Put the $5, i - - at the ~$3,500,00( A gift of'*$1,000,000 to _thei* cause of Negro education at Tus-!. kegee""Instituteiand Hampton In-!. ^ stitute by John D. RockefelterrJ ' Jr.. was anTmi|nr>?d lrvt Sntnr ^ day by Dr. Anson Phelps Stokes' 1 1 ^.Chairman?of- the Special Gifts 1 c Committee of the Institute's ' ? j - !Eiidowmuiil vFurid campaign. ' The gift put the $5,000,000 cam-.! ?mn-/P7^A AA/v - ' - j/oikii <11 vme $>o,ouu,uuu mark arnicas made with^'t rrmrii.| ?tions. ' In announcing the gift Dr. Stokes pointed ?put that ?it \ kruught the?institute .within | striking distance of the $2,000,- ( 000 donation promised by Geo. i j I Eastman, the kodak manufac- ? I turer, last fall, whpn hp-allnf. ^ ted $15,000,000 of his stock to j I __vuri<>us? benefactions. The East- j J man gift was contingent upon'|The Endowment Fund Commit-i^ I ted achieving its goal. "Inasmuch as Lhave been pro^i 1 foundly?interestffri " Iri theso: j J?schools- ?said Mi-. Rodkfeller', in 'i ~~1 forW^rdThg biV gift, "pupi viiu'J. 9 m V Q i Vl n ?? - - ? 11 _ AWKtivi vxj\jiv me as a small j a boy to visit Hampton, when Gen- U . * eral - - tread;; t -Because they provide^aiv^e4uea-ls ' M-tion and girftTR | to be useful citizens,?whether t i ?WtKey go forward to higher and !$ professional education or go di- i -nr-TMrectlv into agriculture indusLi v 1 -xMor -business Vdbecause they stress ; "the development of character a- i jjlong with the development of^" ____Mi?ind ^ndHbodyT'arKpbeca.use of j imy lifelong interest tn the col- j ? WiTed race*>X-shall count it privilege to participate in the i ampaign to the extent of $1,-1 - 00,000. ( "As I understand it, this.J VKeaves you still $1,500,000 short * " if your goal." ? Other^recent large- cohfribu-- 1 i - - = J ?wiis oy Mr. Kockefeller have ^eluded one of $1,600,000 to re- J , iiild the Tokio Library, destroy*^, mi by the earthquake. He gaye 1 *500,000 to the campaign to * B>mplete the building of the Ca-:' . Biedral of St. John the Divine ' B/o months ago and a few days f Jter gave $100,000 to th? drive11 IlBlIpreserve-the- home of Presi- . Bent Cleveland. In the same-Jonth he gave $675,ooo to the Bssionary work of the Baptist ] Big items in his philanthropic * ork have been: Rheims Ga- \ liedral, $1,000,000; NewJ^jarkLAovtMiieilt, $2,00(^000; Metropol ^ Ian Museum of Artf $l,t?00.0U(LL lorThern Baptist Church, $2,- - T SATURDAY _JL- ' " muiiltee ---f ^UNDCAMPAir.N .000,000 Campaign ) Mark and was )00,000; Fine AitsSchool of Harlj rard University, Sp00,000; In- , :ernational House; Columbia Un-1 Seminar y^-Hart^n-dy Con ri.. S250)00i~Y.~W. C. A., 9200,000; ^ark A ventre "Baptist Church, , >100,000; Inc^ffial Relations r Lrrbrary, Princeton University,^ >60,000 and S1.06fr000 to-aid ? .he starving' children of Europe. } MHLLIPS?COCMA, ARK., 1019 RIOT SCENE APPEALS i TO, Nr A. A. C. P. POP SCHOOL, AH>. gj Airs. Bertha Cook Sanders. ^ Superintendent of Schools, in c Phillips * County, Arkansas^ scene ol' the 1919 neonagfr riots^. a-hose eases thtr-N. A. ~Ar~C . I'. c investigated and successfully J fought through the hinhest.^ iouHs^r'The country, has appealed to the--National Assoc ia- r tion tor the AcLuuicemont 01for -lir 1 in h|iilr! :ng a Conn* v Tr-nvnlT|V~ rVltiTTt-jfor Negroes at Ela i n e^-Arkm*^?18. 1- 1? ?~^f'" Mrs. Sanders states, that the! chool wilt,accommodate. ^hnnf $00" boys :and girljs and will bef situated"in the best--alluviaI lnhd'(>? tire State. Mrs. Sanders ^ ivrites in part : / ! "I need financial assistance,1 f *nd if?f could geFlwme lieln^ from your organizjUion the t)eo=l of oliT'County would appre-1 date-it. . fIThe?whiter peuple "and .\e?roes are-- iidihg;. all in their ' wwer to have this the best op- t Dortunity for the Negro people n our : ^ - "Tr -Commenting upon Mrs. San-! lers' letter, James- Weldon Jo~hn-< 1011, Secretary of the N. A. A. 3. P., said : _ * c "Coming pfter the tar rible p ^eVetafToiTs of peonage brought ;o light ..through the riots of' 1919,. the appeal for a training!, ichool for Negroes is ' significant of a more hopeful situation-^ n that part of Arkansas. If, as ^ VT.-a ? 4 4- ?. ...U :i. <.? .j. uaiiua.9. OLiUCS, VVIIHeS (tIlClrj Negroes are now working together to obtain educational op-.1 .iort unity for Negro girls" and toys, that is a highly encourag-j ng development and ahqujg-r mve^fte support of colored people throughout* the United \ States, ..^QiLiii--eclucaU(>n: U^ )ne of the Chief safeguards igainst peonage and oppression of the colored farmer. _ "Those colored^- Americans N vho ftre-willing and able to do_ ^ Continued on Page 8. V ----- t'01,U M_BIA, ft- ^^SATTTE HAMPTON I 50LORE&-CHILDREN "l EQUAL THE WHITES rind Colored Children Intelli- I fr<>nt ns White' in Loa-rrrrAr.geles Schools. :iy^ mWN CHYE&R1922-_2fr 1 he TestsWpre GUvenf<>?5M ^ Negio Elementary School Children, ^rho Represent 4 The Elementary School Popnhitinn it T na Angeles. .... .. _ . T . < ( X. A.. A. C. P. Press Spryiro ) .1 A Tepoyt received from Los v Vngeles, Cah, by the NationaLi noiTrof Colored People, 69 Fifth * YTtnue, New York, states that c xjsts made" upon public school\x hildren of Los Angeles show, * olored children to he as intel- v brent as the whites; ^ The tests ueie gfYen "to 500 ^ Xegi'Q..elementary school childuring the year 1922-23 c ind'the lepuit Tays "the group) s f pro!>abiy representative of j * hb?Negro ^erheptary school f4" ^jpulalion ol' Los ,AngeIes." I "The liiuiing^-ai u .auiiinai izud 1 is follows .. ' 3 ' [ Jntojjjgcae^ level.?The nod inn ?jhtefltgTnTce' quotients^ c t nit" the"...distribution of intelli- 1 fence over the various classifi alory _gi^j^s__Jndicleti- that^ here is no -significant difference J jElinil-in TTio^intehigerrce level _ >f. the Negro children and that;^ >f children in the fifteen schools ^ "2. Educational accomfdishnent.?The average ? accom-;c jlishment and range of accpnvj^ mshm^nr fr^ I \ iL * )racticaily_jthe_^ame as for the c 1 I 1-. I - -- T7 A 1 A* ? < umi |jui;uuuiuii 01 tao. nnocn," ichools." jl' -"3. K g a (1 i. n g^iimnprehension,^ ?'The average ability for all 1 NVgt'o ?children?tested^ was : ^ 1.203 Of a grade below the norm ^ vhile-That of pupils in iorty^ele-iT nentarj' Schools was (bOPG of a r* trade below norm: Thiols not * t sginillcani variation.' L. fi ~' AnThfrretic ability.?The (c iveragc ability for"" all Negro ;c hildron examined was OTdHT of i] i grade above the norm, while.1 hat fur-pupiliTlh forty elemen- r ary schools was 0.38 of a grade 1 hove norm. ' The difference 1 epresents a little less than three > nonths_school work. "5. Spelling ability.?The a- J K; 14 .. ?n \u ?i_:i it ti auuiL^' iui ixu U CI111- i " iycrn tested was 0.973 of a grade j )clow theTnorm, while that fort1 pupils in forty elementary.* chools Was 0.79 of a grade be- c low norm. Although the Ne- g fro children are. nearly a whole frade retarded in spelling abiliy, the situation is not material-*-1 y different for the total school * >opulation." [a The report fu made hy WiTITs \ V. Clark of Eos Angeles for the 2 ity school sy"sfqm7 - ?1 VH1TES ADMIT COLORED, -ftre company: " i Tliu vilj Fire Company -of this ,.yil- ? eje.ra Negro "orgattlfcatFon of 1 '.olunteer?firefighters, wfcs ad- c ???J * H-T . - -_ J fie ? ID AY, MARCH 14, 1925. ... $1.000,000 ; NST1TUTES niTTTlXm n ~^2 f^XVO. I .aULli^Ci \jt, 1 atvvellTatIiest runeral Held at Family Home. 4X145- Aspen Street, A*hila- "p delphia, Pa. - 1 rQKMERLY -AT TESK+XxEf^ . . * ' i Jn 4rs. Atwell was"VTVfii?^an ofL Much Talent and Skill.?r j?. Wife of Ernest T. Atwell 1 Well-known throughout ....... The Country."" -f" (By The Associated Negro Press.) __J^ilado^Har^=Furierat_=l^- ~ 'ices over the remain's oE the ate Mrs. Paulino-^?At >f Ernest T. At well,. Avell-knowir-r hroug'hout the country because j| ?f his activities m connection j i-1- - t * - vim ine playground and recrea- j_. ion association of ' Amereia, (_ vere held" ,at the family home, [ L045 Aspen street. -Monday n~f n ernoon, March 2nd. Mrs. Atwell has been a re si- n lent of this citv for nhnut ; i;'f [ years,I'TTaving?eome originally' rom Tuskegce Institute, where j he-was-,yonner1efl with .the de-^ )artment of music, her husband icing^ tin; business administra- { or there. ^111^? S he "tra (TI men -net ivr? -Trr-mif <oT~ ~ al circles here^ami-had- become q iromjnontly identified with seviral of the leading clubs. She iad been president of the celeirated Fiak^chib, but lately had-, not?bee11 active~ Mrs. Atwell vas a musician of much talent ms kill. jiosses.<hvg-a-corr1-rnttrr^: ^Tce" oT rare charm. n She was known liecause of her' haritableness, being ever ready n o contribute to the variniw ^ arcr~etntcei hs I hrollgTfqut the :ity. ; - v -JEaLhor Durantr prom i nont E- H >iscopal clergyman, a lifelong L rieiLd^^?tbo-family, tronduclecT^ he services, coming from New j rorlrxity lor the purpose^_Xhe ervires butr^trh1 n'Gssive, and the floral tributes 11 vcre gorgeous-coming from the ^ aide Club and from pbm-? ground,and?recreational survlOb "e ?f America. Prominent?vttzeiT3 a if both races attended the funer- 11 iT, .Mr. itoy~Smkh Wallace, rep- ^ esenting the 'playground?and-1 ecreation service. __L_ - i Surviving Mrs. Atwell, aside ? rom her husband, are "two ^ -otmg children? Ernestine and 3aul, and two sisters, Mrs. Ben- a am in E.-Ammons anil Mrs. Es- c erline Patterson. TTiUed to the Delaware County t" firemen's Association by a vote:0 >f 51 to 19 after a long discus- ^ lion. This action was, taken at the d no'nthly meeting of the assoeia- s ion in Oakmoht Tuesday night,,* ind followed some sharp debate. >x Vh It or Ithoads. j( tied i a* objected to admittim^ Te Goodwill Company, plead- a ng that the charter of Media n nc tyin^ainca rygli H-LUU 1-?* icrshi'p to white males over 21 p ears of. age. . i ??~zzpA Kiwriunj 11 |iii iilllliiji w Darby township, recommended" tdmisskm of the'Goodwill Com-'d >any, which, he said, had fre 'j?. ? ~1 I juently rendered signal service, p s lj x-- .... ? ?~~~ ^ MATA. C. PA PRESIDE Georgia B Negro at Sta By a Lav SOME OF THE LY Secretary James W? . Public -The-Tes ... to. The F XX. A. A. Cr P. Press SoW'icc.). The National he Advan^enKuitJ^fcJ. Colored *eople, 69 Fifth Avenue, thru ts Secretary., , Jkmqs-'f Weldon ohnfjon, today made pubhe-the e>:t of a letter to 1 president molidge,, calling his attention o the burning at stake on Mar. irr Aiijorgia or a Negro "by a nob. whose members made no ttemnt to conceal *!Hr idQntiThe letter offers this lynching as evidence. of.the conjiiiued' Fmbitrty^rjf" the. States to sup>nniuli murder find n : tm aining President's __CooIidge's ftyaZEoX'ongre.'.', that ieaeral acion be taken_- to amTrthe crime f lynching. " The letter is as follows: My dear Mr. President: "As evidence-of the continued ivabthty of the States .to appre,lend r(antl punish lynchers, I erfci-Aiou?onclot'ed ?a* ebppbrg' ...."j.j nir?w ' - ?- - rum inn .?iacon (Ua.) Tele;raph of March 3. I wish,to alPvour attention .to fhe^stateiH'nl made thei'eim both in the deadline umb in'THe^account of he lynching of a Xe.pp-o jn r.pnraa on March 2; that'the lynches arc well known in the ,cprn-N and- that there was ' no t ternpt at concealment of fea-HFeS. " - "We have LOtlUj^ wired Goveror Clifford M. Walker of Georia as follows: ___ . "f<Tn Mirr'h fin-.t, n Vn^m ue.' H^ethof rrini o was captured by jneb. and burned at the stake ear the town of Rocky Ford, ereven County. Georgia. ?o pliable a pappy- as The Macon 'olegraph- in-printing an account f this lynching,, states in the eadline 'Lynchers All WelL Cnown.' and in the body of thfcj Flicle, 'Men well known in the. ommunity were in the mob. here was no attempt at conceal lent of JuMUi^jg/ We-?notts hat you have offered a reward f five hundred dollars for the pprehension of guilty persons. Ve earnestly urge that in order hat the -State of Georgia vinieate the law and uphold its overeignty you alsofcall"apfWF he police authorities of ScreenCountv. particularly the oher T, and use all the~axailable poT?e poweits of- the State- at your onimand" to secure; the prompt rrest, probation and punishient..-ot' t he ^murderers .whos? lentity-afirf conn ecu on with the rime ar? known. We urge this irrespective of the guilt or irrocence oi the victim, which arinot now/be determined by ue process g? 1 Mantes Weklon JohnsSnT, secretary, National Association . , ^ ^ _z. ? * i++*-j-.*9rr - "*nL?? v ? . J ? - THIS PAPER IS ? !& | DEVOTED TO THE f -j???IXTEHESTS^t^ K r " fllHE PEOPLE. ?? --i X===^== ~ ?fir-A -COPY. ~ [IDMHir UKWlPHi VRTTES NT mm inr.F i ?'? " " urnincr AKua A D ,? ^ s. m ike March 2, j ~ /less Mob rr=r? "NtHERS KNOWN ; ^^ r: ^7y- 1 sldon Johnson, Made :t of The "Letter 'resident. ? ?=-ed People, ^ . "We Submit this matter as '4 __ _ *. 'sustaining the correctness of the istatEinent^made' by you ni your first message, to Congress, that? 'the Congress ought to exercise * ' >" its pmvoro of prevention and pun' ishment against the hideous crime of lynching.' . "T. - ?? i%fa^~VV157ln~ofFe?TmrtVnc nmf example of mob bestiality which disgraces and humiliates Amer- u -ica?before t)ie~~cfvflized World, J4"respectfully and 'eaim^^y rp- ?:? ? -ques-t-yotrro urge upon the incoming Congress _the nocoonitv forL enactment of an adequatel^w making lynching a federal .crime." - ' ' _ ' , ' " ' * VETRANS' BUREAU PLACES NEGRO SOLDIER IN HOS- 1 TAL AFTER N, A. A. C. P. DEMAND ThankrN. A. A. C. P. For Interest Shown in Case. ; veteran of the TJ. S.~ArrifiyT gass :ud in France, who was denied hospital accommodation because ' of his color, has Ijeen placed in AhcJ^alionabSanitorium at Day- ; i - jTuiVi Ohio.-uci'ui dthg To^^letter .. -from- 1^7^07'XJro?s5^aTrr^^cticar_" Director of the Veterans' Bureau, sent to the National As snciatirm?for-+hp Adynnccnrrnt ~ joTTColoredTpeeple, 69 Fifth Avenue, New York. The N. A. A. C. P earlv in February wrote the^Veterans* B u rea u(i^a^mg7 w hy._ this- vete? ran was refused accommodation in the government hospitals at t ' Dawson-Springs, Ky.> and Bea-eon,' N. Y. - The Veterans' Bit- ~ Jrl[au promised an immediate in- 7 " ' '*Ltt " ? "Vestigation of the case and un- : der date of March 2, writes the N. A. A- C. P. as_ follows: "Further reference- is made to your telegram of February 11, 1925, concerning the hospitalization of the above named benI j eficiary of the U. S. V. Bureau. ^'Supplementing previous Bureau?communication regarding r trhTS case, you aro informed that faccordlhg to a report^fUFt re- . rceived from the Pittsburg Rei . ? \ ' . _ igional Manager, transportation land card* of admission to the 'National Sanatorium, - Dayton, | ri i * - ? * Ohio, were issued to this patient .. juii FybPU&ry U4,' 1^25." Tt is be- ??J?? lieved that his hospitalization, has bflftft^c^nipliflhBt).^^" *~It is desired to thahk yov^ for your interest in this cas6." - T