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-???Plge 4 ' ' I Palmetto 3J?adrr PUBLISHED WEEKLY ? 13I(L Assembly?Street,-Columbia, S. C. Entered at the Post Office at Columbia, S. C., as second, class matter by an Act of Congress, SUBSCRIPTIONS f? One Year_-i. ?_.__g2.00 Three Month .75 Six Month* lJJJMSingla Copy .05 FOREIGN ADVERTISING AGENCY W. B. ZIKK (!().. KflH S IVsurtwirn St I hifBirn III. in narrowness; a (Brobdingnagiun iM courage; a { Lilliputr.jn in fear. In short lie was a RARIS AVIS?a man. . \ ^ "Boj?_ was educated at- Claflin, Howard rnd Har-j j ' vard. His education was of sueh 4cnuL that- it never j , matle him feel that he should hold himself aloof '? front the commonality of people who were not fa- ' vored with intellect and finance to the extent that ! they miglit scale the educational heights the-same [j as he did. Almost everywhere he went "Rob" was t disliked and respected by the'bon. tons, and loved j1 by the rabble. - He, whtle of aristocratic lineage, jj was essentially a man ofv the people, and espoused j their cause with all the ardor his fine mind and j t ^physique could master. We lament the passing of ji this big hearted, big minded.great soulod niiih. An-- 1 drews is deserving of biography. We hope some- ' one will undertake the same. ' J j a" 0 ' ! ! " THE IUKAI.S AN!) THE MEDICOS. j 1 ' *S Last week while visiting- in the rural sections j -?=?of lower South Carolina, we were-brought face to"! j face with the fact that tliere is n wvinw I - " U-Ui.-j ^ a.g?fll'''- "" "f ' i.m'-Tn'hn-pinvr iii-,. t of the hinterland by the Negro medical forces. 1 There are people out there who are suffering and t 1 dying from the most-commonplace ills that might L be eiired'with just a little .time and attention being t given them. One wonvan suffering from the effect ; > of high blood pressure is at a total loss as to what J' to do about her condition because of the lack of pro- | fessional advfise. She believes that it is only a 1 ) matter of time before she shall be carried away be-I 5 f1 i because of this malady. The white doctor who has j ' been her attendant does little else save collect his fee. He'gives the mininnim_nf_tiivn* nnd jn i i ii i In those Negro patients whom he attends. 1 {?.> is in- I crested in making collections rather than curing 'I his colored patients, lit* practices on tYTehi because !l he finds the practice lucrative without having to j" exert himself by hie application of professional skill. Most white practitioners just are not interest- j t ed in whether Negroes live or die. . p The Negroes themselWs have come to realize that j their health and-liappiness are to b?. founddPh the j' taking up of the practice of their profession by a-*, larger army of Negro physicians in the rural sec-_ j ???tions.?According io The testimony of these people I it is often days before a physician may be obtained i' when serious sickness claims them. It seems to us j* that in these days of easy Transportation that the,' colored doctors in the several ity'han centers through- I - : girls who belong to the many 4 -11 ('lul)s throughou tile- state become' I etter acquainted ami to obtaii co)lo-ctive> instrtlCtion in some phases of the worl -which perhaps might the more profitably we givi w I h le- a I It litr dent o its t r.at ion ~n go n t s nirl <r?her work ers aii- present. ?"* We bejieve. that this .endeavor to interest our-boy; end girls .in the economics of_hou. ohojd and diver sitied farming methods is a much needed niece o work and van work nothing hut good for our poo pie especially in these distressful times. It ha: been our pleasure to visit and address there 1-1 Clubs several times. Their wo'Efk ha--always strucl lis as being significant. Mr. lb niels and Ids eotorii of'trtrktMrs;~uhd Miss Gardner ami hers. at! Have mi 1 unstinted suppi i t in their endeavor In carry to on people the message of economic independent*?... j BYG(JR ^ COCK^^ - ? o- . . - r Bologna And Bread A few day.-agQ I chanced to p.as-t a white groeerj store in one of the Negro sections of liivlinioiul. Ii and he had on his face a depressed expression thai struct me! He was dirty and I ;i'u looted and rag'goc and thin and from all .indications, Igungry. As lit gazed through the show eases up n "good hings? o eat.", there was something tragic in Iti* appearance for he was to all appearances in need of nourishment.. "What will, voir have niv young man'.'" 1 asked as I began to feel in my pockets for a little, change. Having been a child and having dealt witl children all my life, I knew the little urchin was going tp "have some candy"?.wu's there ever a child who did not prefer-eandy~4*> almost any other treat? To my \cry. groatfjsurprise' the Jittle fellow said "1 will have sonve lydogna and bread." Of. course I was glad to supply him with bologna and bread; but I began to think what n revision...uf?ideals has gone op aiiiong the children when little urchins are shifting from a "eandv basis" to a "bologna and bread basis!" The little fellow said "thank you" and made one of the nimblest sprints I have ever seen and with beaming face darted around the store to ail alley where I was told his parents lived. There - tl-milili' ilnw.i Ib-if -ill..;- fill- tbn fiitiu-i^ ?= -ense of values. He had found out by bitter exlerience, no doubt, that candy is tine l>ut it does lot last as long as bologna and bread. Candy* is trood to superimpose upon a good meal, but it is 10 substitute f(,r the meal* itself. The Ijttle fellow "ound out that when there are* long intervals be-ween meahs-it is well to tWt H'y* against these long vnit-i?bv?orefc rl i n."-?Imbn' im1-?jipi. i P.i , .1 m r. .r?i, i \ d" can hope to survive; by those we mean those .vho place emphasis on- abiding value* rather than ip'on transient things. The . Negro who would destroy the Church, needing the \yji,ile'its helpful oHlee*; he Negro would seek to lead, seeking'the while to veaken faith in leadership; the Negro who-would ive bv "Double Duty Dollars" refusing the while o dedicate any, is "candy-minded." When this ivriter urged two years aeo Negroes to consider .he Negro had to shift , from our. candy basis. City seriously the return to the farm, hy realized that ife is a candy, life. We need bologna aild bread! ? ?I I *1 III II.I??I.I II POINTED POINTS BY CHORD 10 A. SINCLKTON ;wi"i TTiT H ?A,' The weekly text: . Be strong, and show yourself a man, and keep he charge of t_he Lord your (!<>d, by walking in his ,vays, by keeping 'his statuses, his comnurrrrhnents, his judgements and his testimonies,-as it is written n the law of Moses,'that you may have success in he Lord may 'establish his work that he spake to before- me in truth with all their mind and with all their zealv there shall not fail yj^p a- ngitv on the ui(,in* <ii jsiwi. i wings Z'.i n. i The wAii 1 v JLhot: ' "Wli<*n by Agesilaus's order the prisoners he had Laken in I'hrygi,, were exposed to sale, they were first stripped of their, garn>ents<*and. then sold nakL'd. The elothes found many customers to buy them, but the bodies being. WIIJTJ? and TENDKKSKIN* M\i >, were DFRIBFI) and SCORN Id ) AS UNSKRt'lOKABI.K, Ajfesilaus,-who stood by at-the auction, told his Greeks, "These are the men against whom ye fight, and these the thing's you will gain l)y it." ? The Rife of Agesilaus. Ye descendants of Jungle Fathers, eight generaLions of whom struggled beneath the yoke of Ameribe nvirrr-d thai. fill' h'.fck "TTp the,line of history ancestors of these same slaveholders were also in bondage. We n tending Five Stages of (Ireek Religion by [filbert Murfi'.y you will find an accurate description of a grout) of slaves brot from Gaul. As they in: reht thru1 the streets of. Rome they were laught "t l>v the proud Romans because they were white, deek and fat. It amused the Romans to observe Lliem shake when they fvhlkt. Well, to he sure, no one rejoices or gloats of-er the fact of slavery. But facts are facts. In former titnes slavery was universal. The color of one's skin did not enter the THirPXOlETTO LEADER ? ' ? - t nidation. u "Caesar's cavalry, being one day unemployed, , (averted themselves with seeing an AFRICAN, who entertained them with dancing and at the same tinve L' piayed .upo,, the pipe to admiration." . . . "They - were so taken with this, that they alighted, ^and ?Va(u ilielr horses to some boys, when on a sudden the enemy surrounded tftem, killed some, pursued the rest and fell in with them into their camp: and had not Caesar himself and Asinius Polio come to f their assistance, and put R stop to their flight, the . war had then been at an end." The musical genius of Bronze people is old as the I star's. Their musical, efforts thrilled the Tenth Le < K'uii ui vavsar, mey enspirited the hearts of the , Boys in Blue in G1 as they fought to preserve the nation; they, swept the lads of '98 up San Juan Hill, 1 and helpt dethrone the Kaisar in the recent Wrold i War. Nothing new. Head line in the Cincinnati EnquiiVr as the writer writes: "Reparations Dispute Settled." Took | about fourteen years to reach this point. When ? I man is bankrupt, broke, busted and out of a job, t "the only thtng to Ttts^s to cancel Ti>s debts. some | hotheaded Americans \^ll say that Germany ought pay the last Mark. But, brother, she "has it not. Wipe the slate clean and begin over again. Say what you will or may, but if the nations of the world do not learn the lesson of brotherhood 1 i*lul .peace, then the jig is up. It makes one sik at r heart when He" reads tne lives of Pyrrhus, Pompey, t and Anthony in comparrison with Christian .Gener' als of thefvpresent century. The only difference is 1 that the Tormer were pagans, and these of the present Christians "and have more scientific ways of > taking human life.?With his great fe\V6rd Pyrrhus would slice a man in two, from his head downwards. L Today men use haynnpt.s and ptick thorn thru the ' bellies of the enemy. -This is the day of poison > gas, bombs, .aeroplanes, and ^submarines. J- Until an- economic formula is found by which v f lm?T'nri r\n -. *m??i rwiimitwl ??* * a p At - 1 v..?- ?uitvus Luniiiiciviai imeresis oi me woria may be taken_eaiti of there will be no peace. At the base of all must be mutual confidence, goodwill, brotherhood, and fellowfeeling. The millennium has liot dawned hpt a great, stpp haa-bean- lakpn thi>right direction. Self determination must be accorded the weaker nations. Kxploitation must cease.' Social injustice will in the end stop. So easy to dream of the day ul righteouipess and long for the time, of goodness. _ V?t wilb " y-'T nvrn group him flilil llnil lull lln faithfulness, chicanery, discrimination, lying, stealing,. shoving and elbowing. What is the way out? Time will have to assist. In the same season you must permit the ideals of , goodness, beauty, . holiness, and dovingkindriess to : overmaster you. Denounce Carter G. Goodson all you please, but . this man delves into facts. Resolutions will not - ihmM him. tJpon the solid rock, by the grace of 1 God, he has his feet firmly planted. One would | l.ot expect the priesthood to accept his preachments, but ho who has the gjft nf prnphwy, and him the i courage, .to prophesy, welcomes this brother into the goodly fellowship. The race needs more like him. Hen who love tjje truth are few. L.i I When they arrive they must be willing to hunger, - thirst, go-naked. and suffer for the cause.?They will not be popular, and hold high offices. Like Theniistceles they will be driven from home and the very people they helped, to die in a strange land, beneath foreign skties. But what difference will it make? Such straddling,' sidestepping, pussyfooting, catwalking, and hypoo in the Democratic legion in ' AVaslnnatbn' Thev arp 7,f n nlinn|, .n p,.. hibition until after the election. Chicago con- ' -,eniion was. moiU.-i. This writer knew they did , II flit,, thus getting an -example for ofhers to follow. N'i> minister has wrought such marvelous changes in Cocoa, in such short time as has this spiritual monarch. Ik- has achieved wonders which have-sur7 passed our most sanguine expectation, and has been a great centrifuga force in his church causing things liov. Baxter, bemg a young energetic man with an - old fortline church, found it necessary 16 mate many changes. St. .Paul has done unljike marty old churches, she has welconted this ypung up-todate divine with all his progressive plans." The closing features of the anniversary was imrpressiv^ as well as profound. Expressions of deepest gratitude and genuine appreciation was sound, ed high amt~hnidt for the exhibition of vtision and power. Those churches that fail to honor .their pastor tan take lessons from The Old St. Paul. This church honors her pastor as few churches do any ,..iw ?Ni. ?? -- - V ? ~lg-'??" ^ I Rev. Baxter. Every body in tfiMnow tie city by the river knows by 1Xon that Rev. Baxter, has a seraph's t.&r ' gue, a flame of eloquence. The chai \I man of the deacon board and Mastelfc .! of ceremoittvs dfe^nonstrated to the {audience tlmt?they possessed great I gifts of speech. S,t. I'aul is^one'of I the "most progressive churches in the I county, and allows none to surpass her and few to equal her in honoring land supporting her pastor. The ch 11mV* iri 17/11' A. ? #*11 * ? ..V..V1I T CO to an nuiui^ touses, III, eluding both foreign and home missions and education. . iW|e are proud of this great man with a vision and - a message. - , ] SIMMERVBLLE NEWS Mrs. Susie. Fickling, house guest f Mrs. F. L. Edney, is at Sullivan's Island for an indefinite stay. IMrs* Alice Harley who spent a week in _AshevUle? N? C., has returned -heme. ' i. jMrs. Emmie. Boone has had as her | guest for many- weeks . Mrs. Emma ] Lee of Charleston. Mrs. Lee, wife i of Mr. Samuel Lee, one a barber of 1 this city, recently lost their daughter . Gwendolyn. Dr. L. R. Nichols, presiding elder -of the Ediste?District- -spent a?dayI with his daughter, Mrs. M. N. Coop{er, last week. i Mrs. Annie L. Simonds, one" of the i foundation members of Emanuel, in ' Charleston ami wnrltPr in TThnnmar ? Lincolnville, was funeralized at Lin T -?T 1 Fine Industrial an ! > Music and Phvsi Tndividnn '!? Cultural ?? Modern I & ? ? - Efficient High Chi i <' J Approved as a Junior College h inj? Agencies. T . ~ MARY McLEOD III V Saturday. July 16, 1932 '1 -J| j YORK NEWS One of the best brick structures ^ in York among our group is .ue ?BaptV.t?Church, built laUly ^ Vjut denomination because of the | by . C-W?g o ;'*'hvir former 'building. lA'Tn ^re planning to worsHp in it They ?*. *-h Snntinv in tk'c ninnfli popular pastor ou. st. James cnarge ccminues'to be sick. Mrs. Dora Erv'n of Wesley M. E. Church is-very ill. We w'ish TKht, both of these parties will speedily ftcover and-b?given back t... their val'lod aihl IH'Od- j? ed mission field of labor. I Miss Francis Rainey,. a beatuiful member of .pleasant Grove Presbyterian Church of York died at Shongum Sana- orium, -Jtriy 5,. Morristown ' N. J. She was funeralized ' fn the Wesley M E. Church Try Rev. J. C. Gibbes. ' . h .* ' __ " The Ministerial -^Union was in .'session at the Methodist E. Church parsonage, Monday uly 11. The meet was called to order by t. ing was called to order by the presden .. Rev. Joha- JCL-Gibbes. ? Many ~ ' plans wei e set' looking toward iho The Colored Negro Fair picnic of July 4, was attended by one of the biggest gatherings of colored people ever seen here. The day was an enjoyable ione ?itk_ Jtem?afld passed ' ~~ off and out without a discord or ae-eidenti? ? ? ?? niyriirf A -?IL ? u CUUDCU ?* ijd rll VjIj J\. XVI LH u Kv it Dr. R. E. Brogdon, Pastor 10, was the beginning of the 3rd Qr. at this point. The P. E., Dy. Beard preached two able sermons,- both in the morning and evening. The morning discourse was chosen from Job 1 '? And rho I -nrrl rni.l lintw fl^rrr Hast thou considered rnfy servant, ^ Job that there is' none like him in the earth, a perfect and an upright man. One that serveth God and es oheweth evil? The test of a Christian was the subject. It was well !or i^s, saith the speaker, if we are ible to be called God's servant.. ?' The evening text was fourrd the first Rpistte General of 'vJohn '5th chapter, first and 4th verses, the presence of the following visitors: Prof. H. W. IBaumgardner of We were pleased to acknowledge Columbia; Mr. Brooks formerly of Conway but rrow of New York? Mr. Christie, brother of Mrs. M. L. Brogdon and Miss Jenkins of Lake City. We enjoyed much the splenlid remarks by Prof. Baumgardner relative to our own Allen College es- ( peclally. ~~ - ? At the usual hour* the S. S. conven?d at the end of the study period by ;iupils and teachers. V The presiding jlder was presented'.who interesting- <-* ly reviewed the lesson. Each service >vas well' attended. Auxiliary Board No. 2 met at the home of Sister Julia Grimmage, cn [)uke St., at 5:00 P. M. A splendid meeting was had. ine \v. H.. and F. Society wet at % the home of Sister Lena Singleton Monday at. 5 P. M. The attendance was good. A spendid report front the ice cream sale. -.V ; ?At 8.MO Monday evening the quarterly conference convened. The reports from the different departments of th church were good .cons'dcring conditions. * t c :man College ? CH, FLORIDA % Personality" J* Teacher Training X School V X d Manual Artsi Y * Y cal Education 1 .Guiilaiii'U X Environment JL ^ ? facilities A Faculty , ristian Ideals ?? A y State and Sectional Accredit- t A * f . .V. x ITHUNE. Fresiden/