The palmetto leader. (Columbia, S.C.) 1925-196?, November 01, 1930, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4

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pr '/ - PAGE FOUR ^aln PUBLISH 1310 Assembly 1 "T"~~ ^: GEO. H. HAi Act of Congress. SUBS One Year ? Six Months ? 1.2 * . ' Foreign ad^ w. b. ziff co., 608 d< Official Advertisements at -the ratt ike1 Leader will publish'brief and terest when they are accompar thors and are not of a default wilf-nat be ?n> t ic ed. : Rejec fed keiv Checks, Drafts and PoStatUT Expr to the order of the Palmetto L N. j. frederick u. w. baumgardner-^-? r.firiimii mentions intended for the CI reach the editorial desk of thf of each week. City news, loca day nightr , . Business and COLUMBIA, S. C., SATi ? S0METM1T J?_ A f^W days since, oin^e-ygs -mspiraU.otu-.and serve a groes throughout the country The fact is that there is lot gest lumber -manufacturing < plant is owned and operated vity. There f he machinery o1 at work fashioning high grad . exportation to the farthest en while on a visit to the pla'i* 1 ?? nesa_done Jby_ the Sulfons, is c Besides a great amount of , V int? an(l loading lumber arid ?-?*- the- Sultons own many portal . throughout the State. A visit one's idea that color alone is Qhe hundred and five years tl cessfully with white lumber ( at "its peak. The Sultoiu heirs have not chores to acquire scholastic established a business for th profits that accrued from it, t profitable, giving employment There are far too few busin in a family through several gc ample set by the Sultons as families that have proposing build them ut). There are cc with whom certain business- a of the pausit.v of such instanc this observation should prove for colored schooLchildren. to see the Sulton plant: STRAINED RE I It.' is.almost a tradition thj between two Negro schools lot -?tion once existed in Columbia cated, but because of an educ the walls of ahe two schools s' .> . of affairs, the student groups gard themselves as comrades - ?- -?Ffr^-^TmrTrT^trmifTtes' 'tvnl nirrf> , swiftly~being transmitted to the friendliest of relations ha past few years. Out of som ^ contests engaged in yearly, tl unfriendliness, for many year the general public has caught -- . -themselves. ?. .. ?, It is a rare experience to fii the part of students at contesi ???^nirit 'lsiHit^iivh a vate tniTii er.ts wax Wrath and hear ther upon all who are not in syn about a.nlav or a decision. Si as to a-ttack officials. What tweeft schools that do not eng lastic compeaition are often m turbanccs of a serious nature of the contesting schools. O! to take, but has often been occurence. Such an occurence \vas thu a game between Allen and...Ha of that city accosted the refei tery by striking him in the fa< a deeistnrv1 n' ft-inf nf. tisan, and if we ai'e i)ot mistal ?, soon forget the man who wa: they will long remember that reputation must suffer becaus partisans running rampant. "Coach Tuttr wants it-rfrstfr no way responsible for what _ pressed regrets that anything We heard it said by many on was the reason why Haines sons are advanced for State i rue the beliggerency of spec contests among those school; bring about friendly relatior ? them, just as they ha-ve-brom lumbia among Allenites and P lastic hatreds are worse than Do Most Of Yoi Trading With-Our A< vertisers. i. * / 1? ;?. ___ iglifl-ffirafor ' j lED WEEK1A a Street, Columbia, S. C. I VlPTOf, Publisher ^ 1 inbia, 8. C., as secunu t-tass matter by on -f l : : f ICKH'TIONS : 1 I.'.. rrii'im Wmrilis __i J .75--t 5 . Single Copy .05 j< i'ERTlSING AGENCY ' j( ?arborn St., Chicago, 111. _L L j allQwedL_by_law. It : ? : ? t rational letters on subjets of general in- i lied by the names and addresses offth?f au.jf itory nature. Anonymous comn&foeations ,' t manuscriBts ailL not be returned. . f IITTANCES . - ? i'i ess Money Orders should be made payable :t eader. j( Editor :' ?1 Acting -Editor (j ; ' ? ?iS jrrent issue must be very brief, and slumid 1 i Palmetto Leader not later than Tuesday -j Is, personals and social news, by Wednes-(t ...... . ' I r Editorial Phone 4523 t ? ' c URDAY, NOVEMBER 1,. 1930. ~j ?J? ' ill" ! } CO TO INSPIRE . ?__ i ? \v??iv opened TO a faV-T that should--^ s iui example, to thousands of Ne- } t crated at Orangeburg one of the lar- 1 enterprises in the South, and that ^ by Negroes.. At the East end of <, * J. J. Sulton and Sons is constantly I f e lumber., and loading it on cars for j ds of the world. We were informed ; j hat a great proportion of the busi-jv arnecLon _with foreign customers. 1p machinery at the plant for fashionmany trucks for transporting logs r )le saw mills that are in operation I ^ : to that plant would tend to change I {] a barrier*:to accomplishment. For'a ip Snlton fnrrnly hag competed suc,il dealers, and todav their business is , i*1 been compelled to perform menial t training because their progenitors c. em, and instead of dissipating the h hey have'made it bigger and more to many more peole. ; esses among our people that remain t merations, and we commend the ex- / one worthy of emulation by those ^ businesses; and those that hope to j iimtless examples of white-jfamilies s ctivities ara.traditional. bufJb.ecauae. f es among Negroes -We thought that a i helpful. It would be worth while t make ]>ilgrimages to Orangeburg to r .. ? ? ? ' " t t .ATIONS, AND WHY. t at there must be strained relations s cated in the same city. That condi- J( a where Allen and Benedict are lo- > ational campaign carried -trrrwithrn ft howing the asininity of such a state !l of these schools finally came to re. marching toward a common goal. ; _ai-itift'rrent-rmrmsi This1 snlrtt Ts ~ the" ailpporters of the schools, and ! yp obtained, in every lwgnrd, for the '* e four or five athletic ami forensic ^ here has come*'nothing indicative of , s. This has been the case because ? the spirit that pervades the schools ' -1? * - ... . ? 11 id any manifestation of hostility-oil ts-,staged between our schools today. I to see spectators othei* tlikn si ltd- "H h heap their maledictions and abuse ,4' i pathy with their way .of thinking :>metimes these spectators go so far u appear to be strained relations be- li age in inter-collegiate or inter-scho- c erelv attempts at keeping down dis that might arise among partisans ? ? course this is a cowardly attitude , apparently justifid V>y disgraceful it in Augusta last Friday when at ines, a prominent professional man t; 'ee and. committed assault' and bat2c because he was not satisfied with 1 ficial. This man was a Haines par-' * con, a Haines graduate. People will . c so little removed from the status ]< if-himself over a football pamf, but ? it happened at Haines and Haines' " ;e of the unbridled passions of her \v retly tmderstood that Haine<* is in was done by a spectator, but ex- a of the sort should have happened. " .the side lines that such an incident v and Paine cannot pljiy. Such rea- ti and Claflin not playing. While we e tators, we believe that hard clean s * would, more than anything else, r is among the supporters of all of J r lenedictlnes. These traditional scho-j* puerile?they are Infine. J 1 ' BETWEEN THE V} i. LINES ; j BY GORDON B. HANCOCK ^ - tracing me ran,H. I r ?i?hr one of his moat, recent, deliver- j t juncea,. IIl. Pufioig Bald that on? o{ j N TOE PALMETTO yroes is a williiignes to face thfe fact! soi th?Z -44;?? heartening statement to gr< one Who has not so much opposition \ kn n his attempt to set before the Ne*rops the facts about their social and raj economic condition. For quite three pa years this column has been dedicated pa n the very unpopular tank- nf pnrtrny- pit iik to the Negro race certain ugly va nets which pertain to our survival pa md advancement in this nation and so he world. It has been, and is now, >ur firm conviction that we are not ha: roing to~get any w|jer(l unless we are yillhtg to face the ugly, as well as ? leautiful, facts concerning ourselves is a race. It is quite an easy matter o win applause by picturing the phelomenal progress the Negro has made iince his emancipation; it is just as asy to incur the malediction of the ^etrro-. bv telling--him-holding a job ? s the most' basic essential for~Nm~ rro progress. It is dead easy to tell he Negro that he is the equal of any sti ither race?a truth that>has not to th; latp been controverted?b'ut-ils almost""sin iicidt'1 to tell him that he is over)owered in this country and neces- tri 'onu? about that the racial h<*t'oes are -fia hey who can make the race feel the pr, nost jubilant, where in many cases as; hey ought to mourn! The Jews orj ould not "sing the songs of Zion in ae r strangetahdt" yet'the Negroes de- mj nann ah "pnt drink and Ko mai-ni" r ? . WV ?'?W* *. J | in(> of oxhpvtaiiaa-tiy--so-called-race--Trit Whether thq Negroes admit it or SU| toty-we^re pot-going to got anywhere -rrpi f wecry" peace, peace, when-there--,^5-, s no peace? And although for the -p), mmediate present they ate the ratre^-^p icroes who preach an "eal-.xlrink and.^ ie merry" gospej, the oncoming gen? COj rations will rightly appraise those p,.( vho labored in their behalf. The Ne- ha rro can never meet the approaching 'conomic and social ordeal unless he ollow the lines those facts dictate. During the Great War when the , 0u landemic-of influenza was scourging Gf he world, there were two classes , ^h< i ho were its victims?. "Gne class took t Qr irofessional advice and went_-to bedj^ nd remained there until the time of 1 ^u: ecovery; the other class ignored the'-wh courge - as nierely a-little matter.. 'he former' class lived and the- latter ^oi lied. The difference in their lot was''j. difference in their attitude towards j t-? he facts! ?.?J?^ -L^ 'While laughter has its place .in hu- no nan economy, it is a fact that to date ] 0 man has ever arrived at the soltf- Q0( ion of^gny problem through laught- t_;G The world has never been rnle^ j v y the "eat, drink and be merries" to* 1 race to whom must hocrlod "pehce, tju eace when there is no peace" can se( ever hope to compete with a race set hat faced the tomahawk of the jea imericajn Indians and quartered at 'alley Forge. It Is ~3ar<T"that when]"'. >aris was endangered on the e?e oF| 'l he^eeond battle of the Marne, Mar-i IT hall Foch dispatched to Paris the' allowing^- ."The German armies are}?J rdvancing to meet us from the front;, Pe hey are -gradually closjna in on my ] cy eft flank and on my right they are i t nyying in and threatening to sur- J tfr< ound me even in my rear; I am get-' thi ing ready to make niv attack." At-1 in nckiner though already, surrounded j is .omehow strikes us as more heroic .sin han quailing or singing the blues. | >Qineone has said that it is' too do- Sui iressivg to think on all the gloomy iiul discouraging obstacles facing the am v'egro.?To this we might add,, that? f the Negro, is going to crumple up | fro "ml Tile becatise. the ' stm*etmding cir-umstances hold portents of a ..ter- | jy,, ible struggle, then he ought fb,-die. *1. : I lie .lew faced Kir.vpt and Bubyly.n iuT the pogroms in "Russia and 'lived f the white man faced ftfg deep and aiigei-ons Atlantic, the gory tomaawk of the cruelIndians and the . ,inter at Valley Forge and lived to ^r u]g a mighty nation, and if the Ne- "V to is too faint of heart to look he worst in tire?t'Qye" and rekolve to ^,2 iak(. his attack, tnen he.is not fit for he larger eiti/.enship to which he asires. ? 1?-?}-prt When the Negro pfess and pulpit chi n\d*~huine to Lhe race ail 4 the fa cds oyoi veil the ugly ones, Lawtown Shoe i i Ompanies will not die; Greeks will ( ease- tt> feed Negroes over counters .. i Negro sections of our cities; stores ( ke The Fair in Washington whoj mploy forty Negro girls as clerks ' ~c .ill cease failing daily; our "big Ne-1 c0.r roes" will stop "talking black" while W1' trading white!" " : * r li%' at md So Forth. . a]31 Former generations made much of ma oming into on's own. Our present nol eneration thinks more of coming: in- Th i) the other fellow's pocke^tbook! ; wo We have often wondered what the sht ,ord does with such prayers ended dut huti: "Thes0 and all other blessings mo re ask in Jesus name." How greedy,! sar Some week nga we termed the fel- js ] jw who has no particular ideas him- ten htKtH*?htTYmol f" t'T* v i t i ,;,ri TTTI rTTTTTtr^' Tit lit nil i III ^ vv I iTTT* X (Vtrty | | -ith the people who have, as a"nibler" because he is like minnows in ( alt water, that bite heavy but when ge catch them we don't gfct much. eX{ l^thhling" is- fremg-raised almost to profession these days. Even a better pa ame than "nibblers" is "hit-an/l-fiir,''' . . . nwkars- with '-flat tare". arguments. fhen "hit and run" driyers acciden- a0_illy bump into something they never xamine it; they just Jhurry along. ( o when these "hit and run" thinkers un jnto a thought, they hit and hur- ! y on without examination. - "Hit and un" thinking is far more dangerous fa* bare th<^ "hit and run" drtvar. _ Russia rocks along smoothly in pite of the many adverse reports th< nany bad things have been said about OU| oming in-here and there. Almost as ^ tpssia as about the lowly Negro, but ?* h?ssia goes steadily ahead with her xpenrhent In social living. While tussia's government mav not be deal; neither is the government where th< hf. few feast and the inflTioh famish. n?is world is on the eve of some great of hange for better or worse and the lar nan who doe^ not want to face it sir nay as well die antTTie done with it! For all we know human irtay be as na ?? -"""Jr r." I.BARER ' . ??^ tie microbes, in the great body of lie great being who must use some far?miSC6gC6IX? to lind us. Wfto:: ows. \Ve read tbe following in a resaunt in Rochester, New York: "You y me, so I can pay him, so he can y them, and they pay you.",' This by statement. sets forth tHo aHntage of paying debts. When we y our debts we make the settling of t many other debts possible.* ThetY y- your debts and especially ^0 rd-pressed Negro newspapers* POINTED POINTS George A. Singleton The weekly text: We who - are :ong ought to bear the burdens at the "'weak make for themselves cTus. Romans 15:1. The weekly thot: Calamity is man's le touchstone. Fletcher. The question before the house is s c&lled tb Cabinet to consider th<? " omem. uoionei woous nas oeen igned the task of coordination and ganisation, and to lead the "fight ainst human misery." It is estiitedTay the authorities in Washing i that there are Jt,700,000 jobless Tr-rn- America? ?, ' , A leading Smhahstr-m~New~ York ggests that the President call a L'cial session of Congress to devise me~~means of" meeting the situation. * is labor problem concerns the peoThey must have Immediate re = me from a instead of >m ^Socialist-the session? would ve been called. The richest country in the worldmds face to face with untold suffng and misery. If America fails meet this emergency we shall hang r heads in shame,?that is,.' those us who will have not died during j winter of starvation or freezing, le great metropolitan daily advo- : tes an immediate subsidising of in stry and municipal improvements lich will enable thousands of idle get employment. This could be ne easi1". A few wealthy men are vancing money to cities to fostfHH* ilding projects as a solution. One ng is certain, pataWFTTncTTaTk Will t meet the issue. Italy, a few days ago, set aside 1, 3,000 for the unemployment Situan. The nation does not need charbut give them people something rln TUo cim nontitninc Jiln elurm UV. A ??*, ^un wnnnuio. "IV aiuiu , _ ? seasons come and go, there is 'd time and harvest yet, we face a ious period of hardship.. Who the der will be to guide us forward iviins to be seen. Perlmps the situon has been caused by gambling Wall Street, but it is felt on the urse and Dowing Street. .... Funny, how some "Leading Race pers" funic and fret about the poli arid "numbers," and . shut up as " htly. as a clam in the face of the . latest problem which ive face a" s hour. The man who gambles terms of six figures and upwards j a great man, but , the fellow who . >ots dice for a niekle or puts bis '-".on a "number" is put in jail, eh is life. rhe record breakers * are still ongst us. Captian Kingsfordiilli has recently flown his airplane 111 ' England to Australia in nine t days and twenty-three hours, irtening the distance by five days. ^ post in the same breath we are told j 4-4 ? | ?rrrrn?.\-rrrr:???mum** 1 -~t?win Mac tu uii_aiin.uuu. ui oia seven miles* and maintain a speed from ftve?bundled eight hun? d miles per hour. They, hope to to New York^Jn six hours,*! In 2 the great Columbu? took about 00 hours to maks the voyage, ring-the war your scr\be erost the iie body of water in slx^diys. agress is-^all about-you. It isa iracteristics of your soeeity, and 1 do not take (TueHulite !n his student days at Boston Uni sity your slave heard his professor exist the question off war debts jsequent to the Worl(| War. He > f Un 1 f 1 av> tliot t Vin rin\ifdve icerned ought cancel their debts, pe the slate clean and start over aim- -His position was far fetched the time, but those of you who are reast of the times know that Ger,my is at the point where she eant pay the required installments, is writer is of the opinion that it ' uld be bette for all concerned if 1 : were set free to develop her initri.es and trade. This would mean re by returns than a few thouidsJ and million of dollars. There point to Sach's argument and con(tion. A nation, like an individ: can't "pay that which it dees not- H /e. -." ' ^reat Britain has broken her pled- ! with the Jews. She intends to rcise rule and sway over Palestine ropes which the descendants of vid and Solomon, cherished of re Idirig historic city of Jerusalem come, but you disagre and say it their Jesus was he. You will recall that one John was agitated nr this question while in prison. fnil/ allCfVnf nnf ninlrn paiyirvian lse with the Jews in this hour of ;rayal. They ought not make "hrnon cause,with thftm because " ;y are Jews, but all oppressl folk ght have your sympathy. For ars you have been in the furnace fire like the Jews. * One Rabbi in w York tolls his people to take art, that- history shows plainly sry nation which has mistreated ; Jews reaps the wind. Th?re is irrt tn -this statement Any-student hisory should bear winess. Engul has been mistress of the world ice the ships of Philip 2 t>f Spain re destroyed bv a storm and the vy of Elizabeth, The end must * ? \ \ I?II I I III II I N ?. ?? L.~- ? y ' * _' ' sortie day come.> ~ f ?Oppression, injustice, disfranchise- 1 ment,?oxplnitntinn.?utll must, some c day cease. In spite qf lynching, un- c employment, war in Brazil and China, t the Facist movement in Europe, rot J t ten politics in America, a group of I Protestant Episcopal Bishops in their , ^ meeting,, recent,ly held in a northern j city, went on record for better observ- ! . ance of ttfe "Lord's I)IayTw' Selah. j Last week thousands of people attended thr Hit Idnnd County Fnir at-i? Antisdel Field", this city. This write:' : was particularly interested ip looking ! over exhibits, which were very good. ! I They gave evidence of material pro- | gress. The cahn?**~ and domestic art j c; were df a high order. Naturally the* people enjoyed the sights to be seen l-ji on "Midway." Did noe-iuok liK.e hnTd ? f times at all. . Many may be out of ' i "work.but~~nTonev^Tvgs found some- f":. where. The president of the Fair is , ( the Reverend L, G. Bowman, ami the \ Secretary is Mr. Dixon. They are 1 to be conlmended.' .The people showed , i their appreciation by 'heir patron-' t age. , , I 1 mm 9 m ? ' v 7 ^ By -p# 4--c J YiVi, Valdosta Star! , Last week the writer received a j * copy of The Valdosta Evening Star, P published at Valdosta,""Ga., by Mod- j 1 ron . Hadley. Thisds the~most recent v?X IIIUIIJ *a\; wo|Sci|JVi ?UVCIIlUlt'? 111 UUJ chief city of South central Georgia -I $nd the paper' excels" irT appearance and news matter all of the former ,J publications in the town.? 7-J The?-Kvoning?Star is one of?the- ? several newspapers affiliated with; Thc-Atlanta. World, and this writer is ( happy over the fact that the new pa- 1 per is a link in a chain that is grow- I ing stronger rather than an indepen- 51 "dent effort in a city of only IB,000 in- * habitants, of whom half .are Negroes. * .Editor Hadley is the son of Rev. and n Mrs. , A.""Hadley, 01 Atlanta, and ' with inherited ability from both his" ^ father and mother, we feel sure he will be able to carry on. This writ- J1 er is proud of such a blbessing to his. home-town. ' -M _, -i ; c Tuskegee, Rah! c Tlie students in everv colleere south of the Ohio River must ftel proud 1 that the Tuskegee foot-birH?team went into hostile territory and held t the strong Wilberforce eleven to a 1 0-0 deadlock It was a battle between north and south, and the game 1 occuring in the north meant the greater amount of support for the e northern team. We ekpeeled either "T a victory for the lads from Booker T. h or a tie. And a tie, that it was, meant li victory just the, same in a great north v ern city where the boys had little sup. t port outside the Tuskegee and Hampton Clubs of Chicago; and a very un- t friendly breeze from Lake Michigan, ii n Say, Palmetto Leader! 0 In our last contribution to The a Palmetto Leader, Columbia, S. C., we said our interest in the paper had R not been on the blink, but when we c saw it in print it said our ^interest n had been ditto. Don't blame me, readers, ,1 Fleming (loes to Prison. "They're brought an innocent man ? to prisop," said Thomas W. Fleming v to reporters, as he stood in the bull pen at the Ohio Penitentiary at Col- '_? umbus, Saturday. - (j Thomas W. Fleming, was until a y few years ago the only colored mem- ( ber of the city council of Cleveland. v Hp has hmn a 3!} month dhsqii tence for bribery in connection with his acceptance of $200 from Walter ] Oehrno, crippled former city detective For twenty months he has protested j his innocense and fought the ease in the city, state, and federal courts, p Public opinion regards him guilty, j Yet all say he did only what others ^ ing every day in the, year. n TTie11 colored pebble of CleVFtTmriTdrr -p he- ^ cause, it is said, he was only a stool ^ pigeon and did Very little officially on >, their behalf. They say almost to () the man, "he 'wanted to be white." (J All Eyes on Ohio It seems that the senatorial race h in Ohio between Roscoe McCulloch, t republican incumbent, and Robt. J. y Bulkley, democratic nominee, is claim n ing the attention of the whole nation, ti At least, that is what the newspapers j, of the Buckeye Stated claims. Mc- 0 Culloch's greatest popularity exists y in the republican machine as he is a just a carbon copy of it. Bulkley is y popular among democrats and repub- s licans <?f all races and nationalities . that dwell in this great state. It islf said that if Bulkley is elected the de?fi , oqrats will likely have a majority of one in the senate. That WPrvery doubtful with so many candidates to < be elected. , , Mr. Bulkley has show^o a more ( friendly atitude towards our people j in this state ' than " hif* opponent. There ftfe many Negro ^democrats in , this state and with their; votes and the f votes of many republicans of our ( group who are disgusted1, with the bogus promises and Jekyl-I'yde conduct t of the republican bosses, Vt is likely j that our vote will prove the. undoing j of McCulloch and the making of Bulk ! ley. It is certain that a "united vote on our part would be the balance >f power in this particular election. WHAT WE MISS MOST . t* 1 ? II asKeu wriuv puruiumr icaiuic of the south we have missed most since moving our hap to the north, this writer would" say /foot-ball. - Wo lueaTTthe honcst-to-goTHlTiess colored foot-hall . gJuuvs as we lised i<? SrO every Saturday durimLahc._aga3on. U. how we would like to see, Allen 6rtd ? Benedict lock horns again, and the Morehouse Tiger , claw the scalp of the Fisk Bull dog. When this writer ea a football game he wants to hel -? . > ^ :?;? : ? Saturday, Nov.-1, 1930.>artial to one team or the other. ?Vhen white teaitns lock horns, we Tire not who wins. _'l he rot ore we ~ lon't "?*t that ohr kick OUt flf?Hie ^Jj canjeT Give me colored foot-ball in "he south.? ~ My friends can reach me at 5UUG icovill Ave., Cleveland, Ohio. MtRM A I. OPENING OF (ONSOI I DATED ROSEN W A LI) S( IIOOL AT SOCIETY DIM,. ? by J. S. Dickson. * alitor - Palmetto Leader: .1 We had here this week the formal ? ipenimr of our Consolidated Rosenwatd SeHoiil," .1ohn. L. Dickson, a traduate of A. T. College, Greensboro ?J. C...?Class I'.'mO is l4,iiH,i|?a4-. ? Tav>? >f the white tiau tees.M r. Ji. II. Prince iTKt Mr. TT. A. Sampavlac ? lit, .also Rev. I'k. C. Stevenson. a vhite Baptist minister of this section."hey each made a most timely anil mpci'ssivp address. There were pi es- * nt also Mr. S. rC. Disher, our.County "arm Demonstration Agent, and his- rife, Dr. Dong of Darlington, and his .? fife. Each f?t' wlio u added much to he success ~oT" The occasion.* In the : " ?ery beginning 1 wo unusually sweet ind inspiring soles were rendered I>y llrs. John 1.. Dieksoii. Sytgr, is eoijleeted with the (pinrtetto.of Rennet I , College, Creensboro. N. (^... after vhieh Mr.' K. ~~Pi.' fcamfiayrao. Chairnan of the white. board of trustees. leliyyrv'd a "I'M !* " ?*-u-?me ???? tire and quality of which justify-ifs " . \ eproduclibrnr It was as follows: Visitors", 1'atrons, Teat tiers, rjipit-. " ~~ \s one of your trustees, 1 am happy ^ o hi' im this vniir opeiiimr dav of the l_ 1)30-31 session. ?? " . I am glad to see so many here tolay, and sincerely hope there will he nany more' enrolled just as soon as i?? lossible. 1 shall visit you again soon md do all I can to help you niake, his your School. one of the best in he county, and to dp this we must :.ave the, co-operation of Par<*nts, Teachers and pupils. This spirit of . o-operation is an absolute necessity, I want all of you to become edueaed men and women, educated mental v, spiritually and physically, because sincerely believe that only in edit- / ated leaders of cbiuracteJC?JrUi the hief hopd of our age. \ -- ?~ I hope you pupils' will work - for ltdividua! completeness, mental,*spir^ tual and physical for a better, healhier,'.happier and all around superior lumun race. ? . * Our modern world litis been made losible by education?Knowledge. Knowledge is real and 'its effects an be seeii. weighed and measured; i has always been and always shall >e the educated men and women who ave dotie and will, do inosi, to allocate the oppressed and bring peace o those distressed. I hope you pupils will learn to*l<?ve . ruth. It is noble lb seek truth, and L is beautiful" to find it.' Not only iiust you study to (mow the truths * f literature and science, but best of II spiritual truths. ? Ignorance is one ()f t he most depicable vices with which human so- ,, lety has to contend. An ignorant lan or woman oftfn t'wuls himself or orself in throes of abject, complete ' I hope you pupils will learn to half ileness and sin, to. respect and obe* ur laws, to. will, to do that wlrf* our" conscience dictate. and to let - . hat material things do not co*iute happiness which is mainly arfiition of the inirid. Remember at . ? our full and vigorous resp'or to lod's will is absolutely essen! to our individual peace and sue Se UlitVi ' '"r There is one inure of. life's ittic.y hope and pray you cliilHrejfight now.?might?leal n,?might pess t is love. ? ' .': 5 To posess truth- aod love y-nmst iingress spiritually. You u: grow ti stature of soul. You luuoe contad us~7Tr~ybinra?\vn~RTTrTt^ he same'time conscious t the law f progress is the rule life. To no\vti;uth ami love, yomust look ntir yiirn1 lnnirt-and scci cnpalnli ies. Not only of grirJut of joy. ^, Jot only of sin but oirture. Not nly of defeat but dyiumph, Not. * nly.of hate but of l-< Not only of . egrada'tion but dfory. inai me exeriasg joy, thc everasting love, the'rlasting triumph, he everlasting ry may be yours, ou must not ?r "study and-' wjark, ot only eo-opte..and .expand nrta-. erially, but yoyfi musV^ttyi kneel ^ r> prayer toVmnn who in the fo\in t that knowledge in which stanu . " our ete: yiial life, to Him from whom' 11 thcs/&. can come?Only then will 'ourV>ouls inherit?tlie exhaustless? pijfitual Wealth of his divine nature. _ I >^rhen you will learn to radiate nealth, cheerfulness, courage and good will. Then you will learn to . 1 live without halt'. Whim. jroV]ou*.yT j vy and fear. Until you learn to lito-i . i j such a life ynu will not know the true meaning of an education, as I eon- i :eive it to"" he. Learning is only what 1 ?o.u make it. ' , ' ' | I am always-glad to co-operate vith you patrons and teachers. -Feel * ree to ynlUnpnn at?any time? hat I can be 'tff any service to you. I am your trustee, not alone In tame but in spirit. I am your friend, tnd I again assure you of my keen nterest in your welfare. ' DANTZLER BROS. C / Shoe Repairing1 ? Shoos Called Forarttf Delivered SATISFACTION GUARANTEED 2431 Ckivatw St.. PHONE91B2