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Page 4 Slic Jllah: ' . PUBLIS GEO. 11. 11/ 1.110 Assembly hinttrcdat the; I'dst ' Hike at. Col * . | Act of Ctatgress. SI U Une Year $2, Six Months 1 * , FOU KUIM AI \\.' B. /ILL CO.. 01 Ofticiul -Advertisements at the ra The1 Leader will publish brief am 1 ** terest when they-axo. areanytwi thurs and are not a 'delimit ? -will not tin 11.11 u > ,!. K. lei't >'i 1 K1S Checks, L) rafts aluTPosCitl-or LxJ to the order of the Laimetti .i ur iiAiuti'.tiiAvi.'ii >n?in lji'i vinii.'UtH''.l .l??m-m? _I_ i ?. should reach the. editorial in Tuesday of each week, (.'ity 7 Wednesday-night. * J lliisiv* si aiu COLUiMliLW S. } " i J <? l'KU.M I'll Is.-.l Edi(ur '1 he Eahnetlo keuder, iillu A.'.'L'inlily' i? 11 I' i 11111 i. S Deui Sir: *, 1 have jtist read \ mii l^udedtt your issue oi' July Ith, qftti 1 ;,i and that ot' our enl ire .- tall". . I .you visited our plant. J should h "Tr FOKMKU MKSSF.M. r.ii .Edijiur?at. T he- 1 tain let to header. Dear Sir: I have seen the Palmetto |.e:.? is: ues that 1 'have read w'iie en and crisp in their logic. ainl i an! .. > 1 like the paper. ?1*^*' ; WHAT IS Tin Wo have vol od I li;it The editor assumed eharov of lie neitainmtr to tho Necn'O. h letter "X" has boon ea?>>t.?li' it not A n ***1 it#> * * I **'i -Tyly 8,.'|o.>; p.?t u-e the cap '.vas uicd oven in tin* ne\\*s : decided upon a dotinilo polio "bdeoirio narrower a-- regardfeatures that it has oarrh d making an appeal 'o "i-idu-ii, Jn an editorial "Cololn alii TiilPihot' a.uuotal ion from i!i in this manner:. "Wo hold all men are r nrfri.\rrrT ahle: rights ; t hat anionythi of happiness." eiiual?" .Then ihoro \va p : ''T1 i^'lo lo'ndi)).-- p. ribiriiT X of t hoir nanio nro. ooMef1 a ? ?the Tn-nrd's prormratTVo to y.-Qt-think I hat I ho all oinpl i< ? 'thr yrratgyt "lMind fur ftm r -? ' As I'l'iinh tl-o 11 "-a 1 o,r-ffj.; St at e raid r dil < rir1!\ MTTr , j i ? ?? I III-. .-rn:ill o< Ui-f and v-T'V Other i*iir*cs--j?nat ionalit i ' frrnr>hioa1 iTurl "<v. and wo Mack race. h;iyr r 1 vr;i*/ ' j ?ft* Indian .. oven?Rrrfrr-m ttt . Km (111(*aa, C am-s HO-H or even ys Xcj'rn ami oven ?folk. like Zrrljrm, ttTTtfHi". Pyg: 'ruinate? *-r" "P.t -S nlos, till, U-o (li' tho ( -t&. llililrl-nnl ial iou orii.fJwym " rare. from the Tticro desorii Wo tjoiicvc t lie ,N< irrooTi the .p ret en Iions or 1 imnroti:: etj-p! A fro-American. "We deplore. however," th _ _ (U, jtt a* loo-, ol'ion i ho' < v the .t-iiivor^al-l-raoi ioo -;:n)o! the Britisher:;, in flair etor mytt^ if ak-4ist ingun iied ; "?" ' OU'II, hy thfs ft'i-ih.?Kn/./yblood and exalted tradition <, "We might lca;o tUu rd> tish and knoW and ,oal.l I lie d: Until American citi/U-n'Sy n r - designated Amercan; and a.-: wt^ hope I ha! all iiou a aeon hope that '1 ho Record may : "N" in spelling Negro., . A MUCH > "TIii T' <" od hv the Ro\\ Pnvmond t Pqnll t rhuroh. A.t!nnta. Co ? 1?the r?hnvrh n.MPT' of The T*;i , that preacher-- and lavmon a v has to ^*ay with math profit! . of view. Tn a recent rojessn Mr. I| p.. . . that a eronn of vhito m'pm and defeated a hill permitfi Pennsylvania, while remain! k; eoual rights designed tp yr; groes presented at the samr a urttu ffieator? ? HE1) WEEKLY h lMI'TON, Publisher. Street, Columbia, S. C. 1 ... a umbiu, S. C., as second class matter by an ll ISCKiriloNS ' ,UU Three Months $ .75 .25 "Single Copy J,- .Ob ~ >\ UM ISlNC AcTiSNCY l! US Dearborn St., Chicago, 111. 1 ito allowed by law. ; . f 1 rational letters on subjects of general in- ' aiurd-t^-the- mcmes-twul -addressee-of-the au- -4 11 t y'Sinl ore.? Anonymous communications il manuscripts will not be returned. ' s PITTANCES if ess*' Albney (JFedrs should be made "payable > Leaden ^' . ?1? r r?: 1: -~-Aciiog_Editor ^ sh uf the Palmetto Leader not-lutein than lu'W;, locals. ptM'soiiafs ami social news, bv i I tlilorutl l'bimc l."?23 ... . , , . , . . r ;ATI LI )AV,J1 'I.V )*, 4 . ' ....... 1 ;C ur UN.Si. ANirxrLibii 1 r __ : LU - . ~l -r Tii;il reietviu-e tro tht' Journal and Guide in ) H willing In express my own appreciation am sorry that 1 was out oi' the city when a\e been delighted to meet you.' With best J Sineeielv yours. 11 i'. H. Y'GUNG, editor ' Norfolk Journal And Guide, Norfolk, Va; ? ? ? ? HOOK UliMKWKli COMMENTS . i o lir for the first time recently. The three (| i".i.J \iii naieh.'. The odiWrihTs are cloui --j !. o'iu- paper with the be t in the country^ ? Yours triilyV- ' ' JA.MliS \Y. IVY, p 11! A!? 111 ,, Street, I'hoebu^, Virginia. ? ? ? | ? ' ~-r : KI'ltOlfD'S POLICY? t . \ ('< ?luml?i : Uecord. since the nfp?en* I it oan<d\ hrt's orinted n few editoviaT? j TTTTrrrpTTn^fjyrse-e<litoriaMdh<? initin1 h Inil in the majority of instance0 . w r/U...; r|'oo" jn is.:n,? of ii.il Idler. In one issue the capifa' , irlicle.;. wonder if the paperdwua1' We hope that The Reror?! will not our eroiip than il has been. Some ) renIIv would indicate that, it is rn/ Our Independent" in the July P. ' l)i .duration of Independence is giver 1 thee truths .to l?e self evident ; that--' .1" ,! la lr i "'i " 11 r wit h certain inalion -c are?li!V: l'hcriy and the pursuit u i rul about leaving ot.it "are Y-reatTf uid' hd.in In t Sunday's edition nr I " "I ' ' 1-et oil .i el'- I lir neooe.ii the cjt y Hi red orv. Of course it i 1 a<rnof "any ??i li.";v If deems best 1 nd r< > I eliule anv people can not re-nit it; n 11 ItI1111M v: " I " V "in yj'i'll:|Vr \(. (rj'o Tlr . itr-i) 'The S'a'e rr?}i|- V(spv acM the: ? >>',I:'I Pop \V;i< ijhe tho XoiTVO people have :il\y''vs received this. tyeono rca ,-on J'.nr <.h n v Ui.orLi.f to ihr-used c.Mnit;|i in printing such name*- ; ' ;! ; d Asijitji ;. (arihy .Maoris-~ n'i"?rr?~a ' a va -r i?rouj\.~ not Negro tribes and peoples among tho black sj iviics. .and'so on and on. Whv (liscri- V1 li ? * ' apital "X" serve? to make a needed [c ,i.s a i.to anil a., member;-! of mu'h ft "q iTtivo. tcriu to hulicate dark peoples, "nt elves prefer this hnnie to any ^1 iTf'riism --such as 'tf'olored people,' or j, a ' weasel elfprt to slur tho name hy_ yy a-e In I he I niled Stales and almost a ie Knglivhmrn, 'Niggt r.' To besure. nal v. Idleness, rail all dark races no u i; aiiyr-u.h-fa-dot'l ier ideals t ban th ejr _b \\ ir'/y and ail Indian" Prince of'"the *; if t he Aryan Mtcd? are both nigger a ^ Hr4-ttmb-nirrrrng foppery tP the Bn-~ K u lv |k ?jj)loj)t' this country the Negro." tl a malfpr what their color,, are simply ^ long as the name Negro is given us '' cies I hat prmt t ho word will give it v pt i pie so denominated deserve.? We tl U t. it it t lie lioliev <. t" 11 c i ii * r tli.. o , ---- i -,7 "i ii'iiif, mi: u Ci ... K >T>rm .1) ( OI.T MX [J * T 11 v l'H<< nf ^ column frw^np*." w IcivVr rt' Vou i-'f. p (\f Wh"ot ^tvprf ? v,f].y 7'1-' : ' (,1ntnp \r. published or j I' 1 ur?rh fnuri'T. n atu>pars to us hie rvi<'hl road what Mr. H<?n<-ipr"on ti I for b\s i'-, a highly enlightened point > (Miflor^on calls attention to tVio fart f, rV>v- had rpppntlv protested nirainst I ru' fhindnv baseball in tho State of X; ircf atiM.t'ntclv silent upon a hill of {>( int move humane treatment to Np- t< ?'session of the legislature. i tl k^.-, .'ki . - - THE PALMETTO LEA! The MinistejdaLC.olpmnist observe; oted for working up a terrible euth ount or count, but little. The Chu eat' over a truly ethical problem." It is too true that too much time i eliefs of other communicants, as ! sks: "When will the Church stop d< uentialities? When will it get dowr ireting the>tmind of Christ to its o\\ f thatday? .... I do not wondei purn organized religion. It is too e __Qur attention wa* called, only a fe ? a white family in Columbia for m oimabiy to inability to pay because^ old that the family's furYiiture had b o all sorts of weather conditions fo his condition took place in-the imn b was sotfges.i?d-io-4Ui-that^in-any-real snirit of fellow-feeling ?.ueh as ome aid would have beer, given ^th< heltered irom the elements. ? A religion that would impel one t< teedy regardless-of race is. we glea s recommending in his useful eolum legrees, some ot our ministers yet rftrrnted if they wilt but read and a> Tenderson is releasing weekly. / ? . CLOSED MINDS* IN 1 An Associated Negro Press Release lapers last week related the story ol retwppn a voting minister seeking or Conference of the A. M. E. Church, a .G. Robinson, editor of the. Church iew.?The ymin<r mini T^phm' vas asked by the Rev. Robinson " E nd literal lake of fire9" trr-ovhH'h n<t after the ACllllg bishop ileliun villi such an unbelief is fit to minis oiu some Church with more libera lot- bothered about hell, and that tr iiost absurd and damnable. unreas< rines of t he A. M. E. Ohurch, and th ipon his belief in sucfTaT foolish dr rdanied.^" This is the kind" of spunk that Rio uhlished the A. AT. E. Church. The nd fewer Robinsons.?It is almost u itellcctual'as Robinson is could hav hip of a Churt-h periodical. It was ur city recently that, a brilliant m o him for publication some time ag own because it presumed to discus: \> him. according to his own testimc iki tus is a closed mind as far as oncerned. It is not our concern. If indo a sad mistake by giving the i nto less dogmatic and more sensible While addressing the Columbia Fc Tdeivss during hi*sAWnogeh.strr cami old about his having spoken at a F< "'here Mordpcai Johnson was to have lad cancelled his engagement hecau: ">arro\y to speak before the Howard lad afterwards spoken favorably necfh. , The sooner men of the Rolii tie 1 etter off the racp will be. A? fa erned we think that Omar was righ <3 * . . ''I-sent my soul through the invis nine letter of that after-life to spell And hv and by mv soul returned an 1 myself ajn heaven and hell: Heaven but the vision of fulfilled < b ll but the ?-hhVlow of'some soul oi Cast on t hat darkness whence- on o Into f merged from, shall si on ret If a few more enlightened minds hat Mr. Fuller exercised instead of imply 1o get the matter over many e struck frOm 1 he router Wo oonj Mining Mr. Fuller. It has recruited -uvok of the closed mind. . BETWEEN THE TTPVT LINES -*>U? ??? moil by cordon b. hanootk ' fere ?Anofher I'nparclonahlp-Sin! rac? Tho problem of the unpardonable not n has vexed theologians from an- don: etlt days. The most brilliant minds ness ave not . been able to clearly tho n4-h?nor even?rrrnrrnTc?wtrrrt JesnS"' ban! bri-l meant when He raised the lap* uestion of sin ag'ainst -'.be Ho\y one host. t'ortunateiy. perhaps, for-the This nfnt sons of men, only one such sin wb.it as declared unpardonable and here- can 1 may mortals take hope! In the ott'ei (fairs, of tbe Negro race there is such not her-sin that should he unpardon- give blc? so far as Negroes themselves the re concerned, and that is the, sin buili gainst the "confidence dollars" and hich struggling Negroes ? have- ipres rought togetlrer-the 'sin against tlxp '.tie I)OUt)le-Duty'1T)ollni\ Dollars.whi^h "prod fegrocs have brought together to be^ groc >mm1 to?fort her . a.. eoupHiuttvl1 pt'o- hiisT ram are sacred dollars, for in truth who uy represent sweat and blood! No that 'egro should misappropriate or mis- are se of maliciously mi-handle one of be > rose sacred dollars and escape the|con| uler^.f rv.? \\t.. i *- 1 1 ' o'wi nir m?, >v u drwny^ iifid j^rc'ci ie suspicion tha-t?frffenders against- ?<fju lc confidence of the Vaoo hayp es- an(| ipod entirely too lightly. The No- coni ro who steals the dollars of (/her oor hard working Negroes should be lade to pay the price of a felon. here must not he sympathy in cases here Negroes willfully an 1 feloni- Tl usTy and maliciously defraud ' fhe" reho oor elements out of their money.' that here must he no niercv in the foce of oft i urh social and economic abomir.a- at fi ion. The Negroes have striven nob- she and j-ight well have they auade. Neg romifting- beginnings- in almost every s-ler eld of comercial endeavor. Even be- <list ore the doctrine?of the "Double- Neg )uty' Dollar was evolved Negroes swoi ere spending "Double-Dutv" Dollars, out lie Negroes who have violated the deed onfidence of Negroes in money mat- has ^rs are comparatively few and withal whi'i he Negroes record is commendable. agai ' . * . .. .! .' ' . 3ER . i that <fOrganizeri-reli'gron is usiasm for things that don't, rch rarely comes to 'white is spentTn inquiring into the Mr. Henderson alleges. ' He ?aling principally in inconse1 to the serious task of inter ;n day in terms of the needs that strong men oft-times ffiminate." 'W days since, to the eviction >n-payment of rent due lire unemployment. We were een out in the Street exposed r quite a few days and that lediate vicinity of a Church, commu nity- where - there -was: religion is ..said to engender. 5 family arid their furniture 3 go to tho assistance of the n, what the Rev. Henderson n. In spite of their Doctors have a chance to become HIE CHURCH used by several of our liews a verbal tilt that took nlace dination in the New England nd the acting bishop tho Rev rnaga/inOj the A. M, E. Re ion Fuller. A M.. R. T. R >o you believe in burning he!' ^Ir. Fuller. "answered "Nrv^ ed the diet urn that no m;m ter in his Church, and should I leanings, said that he was > his mind hell is one of the dp abler and unchristian doclat if his. ordination depended K'trine he should never be hard Allen had when he es? Church needs more Fullers p been elected to the editor^ liis brag iii Bethel. Church ir an had. submit tod an'article 0 and that he had turned it * the Virgin birth of Christ, my the Bible is a closed bool< anything therein written is ut his Church certainly may \hl1orship of its review over hands* >rmn for Social and Ethica1 irum in New--Bedford. Mass. ; spoken, biit that the Forum ie he had permitted Clarence student groun. and. that he concerning Mr. J>ar'*"w1? nson stripe wet off the scene r as Jlie hell finest ion is-con t when he said: ible, I; id answered: . lesjre, 1 fire rselves, ire,' " would exercise, the couratrr ahsweringTin rote fashion sucn asmino <inpsunn-* w:ou" tmIhImIo the Church for or"ono more soldier against thr there arc instances of downright . iJ-ulent malfeasance which have T^tr- oii punished. 'Tl\;is is a trag'The handling of anybody's oy is n trust; the handling of the rot*.-.' money which *hry have ofd in confidence to further the y-pT<>Krnm is a sacred me t and, sqever violates" the same should escape. This is another -Hnpa-r? ible sin!" From Nashville, TVnee comes a dispatch saying ilia'*, president of a natteiyillv known ting house wliicfirecent ly coF~ ed, has hi*i n sentrnrrd tn "frnni . tq, , three years iniprisonpient!" hr a ligh-f sentence- even?for a e man, liut perhaps whi''.e justice afford to be tender .towards white idors. Negroes cannot afford i. A i|egro should have been n ten times lliat penalty; '"fin' | confidence lie violate^ niust be t up with ten times as much sweat blood. The confidence which at ent underlies the Negro's feeble iupl^...at-i^u:iiil rntipern*'"" the . fuct of energy and agony! Ne -? nu>t- UKUIIIAL-U 10 ui iIlg_giA:gl'U nc ;;s (o wlreTf it is. Let Jthose lightly evaluate - the beginnings Doubl,e-I>uty Dollars have made making now take heed. Let them yarned that the sin against the idence of the Negroes^^io thru it tribulation have J^nt the Ljble-1 )uty" Dollar is mr-"gvievaus_ unpardonable sin, and whosoever in its such sin must, suffer. Harvest Time' ~ ,-k ' ! ie Skaggs-Hai per cas,- needs no a r ing-Jo-bill suffice i( to say Mrs. Skaggs has been conviet>f perjury, -and_lu:r sentcnti- svL ve years for swearing falsely that was criminally attacked by a ro. Life is indeed a great, myy, When we think on the long of crimes committed and laid to roes and how those who have n falsely oil Negroes times withnumber have escaped, it is inL marvelous how public opinion demanded the punishment of a e; woman for swearing falsely nst a Negrolj Thousands and thottstmcD'of Negroes have been inur- I dere I and lynched and hundreds and hundreds ?.f thousands of lynchers havr pone free; yet Dorothy Skaggs niujjtbe eailpht in the snare that While "(His-! ice" has been setting for quite three hundred years. iiveiybody who v.an cd to has been pe rmitled to lay -things on Negroes and kill then, too and w.hy should not Mrs. Skapgs? The Negro lifts Trrr rights" thai tlie average white-man is bound to Inspect 'Out-of the thousands Nee roes at sundry times in the courts of our lan 1, why is Dorothy Skapgs. made the scapegoat for the* sins- of a nation?. Norfolk and. Yiiginia and i!ie?l niteil States, have thousands who would do iiist what Mrs. Ssaggs luis "done an?; many have already done, it auia?have?hoc only- eeeapeil. -liut. b?* come heroines in- 'the sight of ttor o" d TtTP Maie ol V irguua holds hip'n its hands of horror and 'the ay rii onger is pointed al a whitje woman that should be leveled at '\ne si'- van Is 41 f the law iu this countrjfc*I? is tup thif*. Mrs. Skaggs is responsible* lor this most aggravated sin ajrainrj, a defenseless NegVo and oeiet.v; hut the servants a) the law who have ahused justice, where NegVocs have hi en concerned, are doubly responsible. Mrs. Skaggs is, jr victim of a system -that-Ms going to bring: great suffering upon -this country, if. the, powers that be are not mindful. The sliame of the situation should not s'? much on Dc?l'o.U,tit^SUuiJKs alone hut upon, the system that produced hert This country has sown legal "wild oats" for lu these many years. Now it is harvest 'thud As much as we would like to see justice vindicatnd -\vhe.i:e a .Negro^was barely save 1 from tlie electric chair f<?r perjuryof a white woniiuii wv are mot obiivi i-us to the underlying causes of the neuistr'agedy! As Kmnninuel v istly said, if there is not a God somewhere, and an immortality, where tli" Tangled si:/in of life liiyy he straightened cut, i,here o,ughv jio he- . ? . . > P ' 1' OINTED ; _ POINTS I ?toorjje A. Mngeton 1 ho weekly Irjct: .Submit yourse.'v. v i?. Clod: iv-.si.-t ,!tio v.. vi 1, ml he viii il.\ lie,.) you.- jA lues 1.7 The weekly thot: "The universe if; dways creatively bringing into ex:.it eiice new ;?i tna.l ions and. new forms." . Gerald Birney Stnith. Speed away ii-1 seventy miles an lioiir Hi Chicago, tlu? great ;city of the West, hinne.ol' At Capone and the giv: -t iup versify. in -the Wcyjld. As fur as fhe eye can see. corn, corn, wheat, fat sleek cows,?robust horses ml well-iUd hog-. Mich soil. Thiss tin prairie region. This writer rides, observes, and reports* for you. toon its you can do so, come to Chicago, America's comm.v, i ll emporium. Ride the tllinni^' Cretral. nof d for elfica-ln y, courtesv,. service. " i '< | endablo lot .SO Yea -. .'' Then n-d With Si. pI.en c*. Douglas-, ascertain his eonne.1 tion with th -Illinois v'entral Riilro.iu and the l';iicrr.bly i-.' Chicago. d-Yw Vla v: o ill I lie wih cr's h..-me a-> he stood where Preside!. Hoover stood when he paid'a tribute to mjianainncoin. Then tic \vr;u i wtni ihru the marble ami graniu Tomb.. V is a tiling of arehileetural beauty Und lull of historic signifiain-o. 'I'llc - v'l 11 |M lll'c I ll.uill'l'-. M hich oik 's gaze at-every angle art* superb, lil'edike, pnlpi'ating, breathing. The.v represent men wlio gave their lives that you might be tree. Tliey guard rtTT- "tTTnib of Idiuolin Tlii' Pointer limit lied a prayer, May the (io?I of his or-y light the angelic r'Vet-df-l hose who died for llbblo ends and found dying swget. . -?Ni'igbiis eunntht* -cloud* dice banktovei lu'.al. ll is t old enough for an >\} i oat'.?Dm'i1 dAvai'il ; lie lake l'egdili ll.i 11 are .<iy/iis ayf -raim? Tfv?win d-?inaUing a valiant olVor4~to shine t?*.:"!* clouds justois be did;, yea is at whir he look-U_dowji upon "he prairie lit linns, the fur traders, trappi r-', t.cv i S, settle! s". i his is I >" 11.11 nf I i > I I 'ai l wru,ln I'd " n n: . V Muni. ;. >? Tlieh do so. tion and. ntovulation, because ig n. Tnh<v is lure of Ciod.- All. educated people j.'.i.ot hi* exploited. The wra . .I: ii?*t gl..nees about the chain rat t^d .? ;*--r-t Moan save htm.-cli, a .u lV" p viol Nordic lady and gentleman, 'fin a the w'liv.iow he sees a few sVieep br.mvsi n*r. , Along the Illinois <'ctilial nil., hcTrnTns n new -west. The thundering lie rds of bison are ' .gone. Before them went prehistoric animals. The Hr.,..4 : . 4. t .. i - - >> i-M is iiniay moils .nausea, the rich granary of the nation. I see from- the train car the tower of tlie University of Chicago tfhanel. Precious" memories of glorious momen's spent in a great school. Then to walk the ciiiiipus, Jo meet "Nordic unci npn-Xor<TTe friends:?Miss Thomasina Thomas, Professor firumfield of Risk; iiloah of Africa. Then again to sit in tire class of the mighty HayIon, a real teacher. To visit the office" Monthly, and th,- Rronzeman. Editor t'rew's is hoping to bo elected editor of -'he A. M. K. Review next May. -Sidney. Oscar, an.i Wi/liani, three brothers in the practice of law, an 111spiraton to meet them. They are making^ he grade. News has jus-' been received hf the death of ".Raster" Spears. This writer is tod overcome for comment; h'or th, tinielpeing his heart, is heaVy. This column sorrows with Dr. and Mrs. Spears, family- and friends.' Now., back to 'the capital of the state and good bye until next week. ( Saturday, July 18, 1931 CONGRESSMAN* DfePRIEST'S " POLITICAL CONIFKKENCE By K^lly Milter AYusliiiigLun, D- C.. July 14,?-The .Capital News Service, in last week's release to certain of our newspapers, carried a caricature of the preliminary conference recently called by Congressman. DePriest. It is generally assumed that a news service engaging 'to supply--the general?press should give, the uncolored facts of any nun omen I with a fair aiVd.lnipartiul analysis of their meaning and impoiA. . I opine that the illiberal spirit and partizan temper display by the- Capitol NeWs 5Tfjrvi.ee will ? iheet with the fate, that it deserves. ' . It is generally believed that the CNS is on-hf. pay-roll, of the Natibr I??i. ? ?L. mu. liic-v .ik- uuni mi ine same ,pay roll. Presumably,, it speaks with the approval and authority of the organization which it represents. 1 would very much like to believe other- wise, l'or I hold the head of the National Republican League in highest regard as=> touching his personal and public probity and hlgn-nundedness. I do no-L deem it wortJi-while to -deny or explain any of the iiitinua- r lions and illogical .a ndill tempered *de- ___ duct ions of the C. N. S.'s misleading yutput. Nothing is to be gained by engaging in controversy such easily '.provoked irascibility, j .If, however, the ?N. S , nt ii.-| ft| leged, speaks for the National Negro Republican League, I would?like -?to propound a few qufies with re-, quested authoritative answer. ff* 17 Hoes tlie "Natidna 1 Negro Remiblk'tm League object to the Ne- ~ gfo's presenting his claims to both of the great, N.atio'nal parties ? 2. Is it aware that the small coriteivnee called by ITTF: DePl'R:ll tTas for prelintuiary purposes to arrange for a race. Wide convention to de liberate and determine upon the dei sired course of action? Was not the \t..i : I M i> iminMni iiu'riu ivepuoncan League -orgunizud by. a small group of_persous called together by a single in<11 via u aTT ^ T ? Was not this liKle band full of "race statesmen" all but uni.versall.v characterised by the Negro press as being hand-picked, self-seeking, and non-representative? 4. Assuming the pertinancy .of the j-xtspersittna?of the C. N. IS., will -tbe National Negro Republican League | engage, to compare the r> lative in- % telligence, . character, public service, and race loyally of the personnel of"' the groups sponsoring the two movements. to the disparagement of the latter? f?. Will, the public please keep-in mind that. the? pePriest's bakers dozen did not of themselves formulate and launch a race-wide movement, but merely agreed "do call a convention for that purpose while the Haw- , kin's bakers dozen splitting Republican NegYoes into bitter factions, proceeded out of hand, to set up peiintanefit,organization for all Negro Republicans", wi-'h insistence that all Negroes be Republicans, since there is no other way, but its way? 0. If, as is universally believed, the National Negro Republican League operates under pay.l'r.oni the Re;., publican National Commi*tee can it candidly hope to i-xpress the untrammeled voice of the Negro race? 7. Does it hope to. stille mdependent political thought and action on part of the soTf-tlunking Negro .by manipulation of pap and patronage. Before coming across the release <>f r s; I h:iH indicted a relouse on the IL Priest Movement which Was not controversial but analytic and constructive. I-deeply re gret 'that uiiV factional animosities 7 should arise to frustat'e Mr. DePricst's statesmanlike pro'posal. The ('. N. S. '^as seeil-lU.tn'-hum the upph of die, cord in the ring. -If it speaks for the ? pailizuii organization with which it i. I,rocketed. will .it please answer iliis heptad of queries autnorauvcry~~ ? or hereafter hold its. irascible tclttper in restraint? ' * * *-* WLNNSBORO NEWS ^liss Mariorf Richmond of Columbia 'is visiting in our town the guest ^nd._Esther__ ^ Gaston, . . * We are indeed proud to see? MrS. Florence Young and Mr. Robert Roseborouirh ut> and out again after ft* brief- periodwjf-^serious ilness.? ?The A. M.'IO. Mion Kunday School is now the possessor of a nice piano, thcr gift of the Silver Leaf. Club of which Mrs. David Bratton is the honored president. These clubs in our churches are- wonder-workers. In the absence of Rev. J. M. Beatty St. Paul's pulpit was filled by two ministers last Sunday. Rev. T. J. Roseborough for the 11 " o'clock the services and Rev. H. Westbrooks for the evening services. Both gave Thesg "Bgrrttetr^aints a treafcr?-?????? Mrs. Agnes Gunthrop, daughter of ?1 Mr. and Mrs. Ed Hall, returned to her mothers home here last Friday from Waverley Hospital where she underwent an operation. At this writing she is doing fine. Miss Lnrmtta "Wallace-of Char'1 lotte is a welcome visitor in our town the guest of her aunt, Mrs. Lucy Sims. Last Friday night there was a moonlight picnic on- the Wavman A. M. E. Church green under the auspieies of Mr. B. Wihitner. Both children and adult enjoyed themselves. Miss Minima Beatty entertained tne " ? Junior club last Wednesday evening, i ^ Besides the members there was a number of visitors present. A good hunch of vs are-looking for ward to attending the B. Y. P. U. and Sun-lav School convention to be held in Union this week. All lead to Union, IS. C. . ' Mrs. Bessie Richardson of Ronoke, Va. was a welcome visitor to our B. Y. P. U. last Sunday evening. She is indeed n 1QQ. per cent B. Y. P. U. _ worker. Sh?""is spending awhile In our town the guest ?f ^er sister Mrs. Savilla Davis.