The palmetto leader. (Columbia, S.C.) 1925-196?, November 26, 1938, Page Page 4, Image 4
Pa*e 4 .
iBljr . '
$Ialmrttn Urtiiirr
PUBLISHED WEEKLY
Entered at the Post Office at Cov
lumbia^ S. C., as second class
- --- matter by an Act- of Congress.
SUBSCRIPTIONS
One Year $2.00
Six Months 1.25
Three Months ...... .75
Single Copy .05
FOREIGN ADVERTISING
7 ?AGENCY
W. B. ZIFF CO., 608 S. Dearborn
St., Chicago, 111,?Official Advertisements
at the rate allowed by
law.
? ===aBS~
The Leader will publisV'brief and
greneral interest when they are
accompanied by the names and
addresses <^f the authors and
are not of a defamatory nature.
not be noticed. Rejected manu
scripts?will not be returned.
REMITTANCES
Checks, Drafts and Postal or Express
Money Orders should be
made payable to the order of
The Palmetto Leader.
*7 : :
TT TT A
a. n/vivir i uiN T7 ruMisher
E. PHILIP ELLIS Fit Id Agon!
Communications intended for the
current issue must be very brief
and should reach the editorial
desk not later than Tuesday of
each week. C;ty nffWs, -locals,
Wednesday.
Telephone 4523
Saturday, November 12, 1938
1 -r . I
ANKSL _
TO A LAUG H-T??GOD?
In the 95th Psalms David sa;-.p
; his exhortation to praise God frtr
H+s?greatn*So and -fwr?Hr=?cmrwf
n.e?s. Said, David:
"Q come, 'let ,?s-sing unto the
Lord: let us mage a joyful noise
to the rock of our salvation.
: "L&t Ug co mo -be-fore-HL- -pres
ence with thanksgiving, and make
a joyful noise unto the Lord with
Psalms." -
? "Fcrr the Lord ii a great God,
ajnd a great King above all gods".
Americans, white and black,
should and many will observe the
Thanksgiving season with praise
to God for His many blessings
bestowed upon us from time to
time. .?r
We are alive. We have health.
positions, and "larger c/ppc/rtuniITnf.
If we have boon thrifty our
barns are filled with efcrn. and
hay; our grain is much, and in
our pasture^ are many cattle; fat
hogs, fine milch cows. Then there
's the New Deal still holding its
If7c ad Jlines'; soup counters and
jobs relief forces and other welfare
agencies, are actively carrying
an.
Overlooking, if vre can, -lynehings,
disfranchisements and inequalities
in many of the things
that others around us enjpy?wt*
are still thankful ^that our land
?1 is r.ot cantroit^d by--a?Hitler and
uui nui cut:iaminai.eu wiin
? the torrculit of Nflziasm,?Facism,
Communism and such, doctrines
hat undermine a Democratic or^
ler of government or hinder its
stablishmert wherever it is de-iretL*
But material things are not the
greatest blessings that we enjoy,
however gramdyloquent they are
or may seem to be.
The greatest gift to us is the
blessings that come from religious
liberty, happiness and pursuit of
life. The churches has always
stood for these blessings. It
sta -ds for peace and goodwill. The
church is a great blessfcng to man
kind.
Therefore, let* us give thanks
v to the Almighty for/'the things
material and the spiritual as Well.
ThankR for a great America,
thanks for colleges and public
schools and thanks for the church
and the gospel
We appreciate the songs of David
and we are further consoled
?s we sing the chorus so beautiby
the'Rev. Johnson Oatma/.v Jr.
? Listen,:
?f
"Count your many blessings,
-Name them",one by one;
Count your many blessings,
See what God hath done."
THE CHARLOTTE NEW?
The Charlotte News erf Charta."inivMrSr?iy
Novempe.- 16 ini a
big way that should cause many
newspapers?evi'TT in Metropolitan
centers- to git and take motice.
The Charlotte News came to its
readerg with 136 pages "brim
full" of fine news storuT, 424
engravings of the faces of som?
of the p?b).T/ect-B and illustrious
men and women who had much to
do with, making Charlotte our
neighbor and one of the leading
'"iXMlrf'H n in
- - </
citie, in industry, thrift apd cdu
cation iv the Piedmont; it als'
carried thousands of inches of a<
matter well arramged and atis
tically displayed, alsa including
its array of group pictures aru
its magazine section which car
i lied the?colorful photographi
news, not counting the "historic
stories found jn the news columns
The Charlotte News was found
ed fifty years ago by William C
Porwd who departed this life ii
. 1927._..The paper is now under
management of William C. Dowd
Jr., as presidarvt and J. E. Dowd a,
editor. They publish 35,000 pa
- perB daily. The News- is issue<
every afternoon and Sunday rnori
1 ing. It is said ot be one of tin
! most widely read afternoon p?per<
I in the Carolinas.
I . the- Coldon . Jubilee issue cr
I the Charlotte News two page
j ' ave been devoted to a writes uj
of the Charlotte Negroes in odu
,| cation, insurance, business ani
| medicine; The stories about Col
t Vnimcr'o T.ecioii. aind the nrocres;
of Johnson C. Smith university
tinder the leadersihp of Dr. H. L
McCrory funnish interesting new;
and lekid encouragement to th<
: -hfrpgro r?r9 in our endeavors t(
make a place in the sun for Ne
gro youth as we preach race prid<
and race consciousness. .
The Palmetto Leader joins th<
press of the country in extefndiiif
congratulations to the Charlott
News In its period of - .gloriou
jsuecess and its noble achievement
yooo.o.o.o:oooo;o:o^.o.oo.o.cioo:oxe
8 |
2 Kampbellgrams {
8 : S
.? By Stephen C. Campbell {
I ' '
to.o.aao;o:o:o.ctc(ox>:o;o.O:aoo.oo.o.o.c
To the Baptists of S. C.
have had time to study the pro
gram adopted at Rock Hill las
May. Kampbellgrams said i
May that all plans ^were referrei
to the committee that were no
appointed and that the conserva
cive leadership of the conventioi
was safe And that there was n
langer of any progressive plan
being set up nor was there an;
danger of the minutes beinj
printed and distributed hefor
what,plans were voted and tha
-wh^.t was-voted would not beact
severely eritrcized and were as
s-jiled as coming from one de
throned and repudiated. It is nOv
November and nothing has beei
heard from the great Rock Hil
respect to the leaders of the con
vention, the time is at hand foi
action. r
TTn 1930 we of the frogressivi
Gfoup clamored for ACTION ant
again, I am in favor of calling foi
action again. The' Woman convex
tion board - has met and mad<
plans for its June session. Th<
S. S. and B. T. U. conventioi
board will meet Friday aftei
Thanksgiving Day to map plan!
for next July.?T4*e?Fk?and?M
board will not meet before Feb"
ruary unless the president calk
it earlier. In 1933-36, we alwayi
had a fall meeting. We always
"Bad"a* state wide hioderators mee
ng in August or early October bu
now .nothing- u said about this
Planning Conference. I have nt
complaint to make. I simply asl
'he prngresshe leaders to writ<
the president your wishes.
The Baptist's Headquarters
Where is the Baptist Headquar
ters? I have read with deep in
~ ~ - e r? : -i ? ^
c^icoc tllf. HI litiu U1 I~ rifJSltlU IIU 13 u
lor in the Unron of November 1
Quote: "There is a great deal oi
information we should have bu'
an't get it unless someone on th(
field suuplies us with same." Th<
oonventinn did name for the tiirn
.hemp the office of the president
ind residence of the same as the
headquarters for the State Body"
I like the wording of thisJast que
tation, State Body. I have no re
"ord of either the W. M. C. 01
the S. S. and B. T. U. conventior
accepting this plan because the
"ommittees appointed to work ou1
he plans did not report.
Kamphellgrams holds that there
are FOUR DISTRICT HEAD
QUARTERS headed by Rev. H
W. D. Stewart, Greenville; Rev
T. H, Broadus, Kershaw; Rev. C
A. Zeighler, Bamberg and Rev. J
W. Easley, Greelyville. . These are
the four field directors who haVi
all the information needed to se
j.p a General Headquarters a
Hartsville.' The gentleman wh(
made the motion at Rock Hrll tha
no one would have any kind o
central place from which to op
"rate was in error. Th? S. S. aru
B.TJJ. convention disapproved o
the suggestion that wa have i
Headquarters thru which all S. S
and B. T. U. funds would go to th<
various objectives. But they di<
vote to adopt the Monthly Offer
ing Plan for S. S. and B. T. U
Missions, of which Dynamo Cam]
bell is corresponding -secretary
From this office.^ we are pushini
the program of the convention. Ii
this office is the name and ad
dress of every resource the Bap
tists have and it is had for th
" asking.
The S. S. and B. T. U. conven
tion executive board is waitm;
for: the E. and M, convention t
complete the plans but while w
wait, we are laying: out our ma
1 chinery for action. Whrle we wai
we are at work gathering data an
mapping nd in many instance!
we re mopping up material fc
that day when all our work* wi
' be under,one general head.
L -President Butler need have r
\ fears that we will "transcend <
* o
o <
\ (By W. H.
:
GOOD OUT OF BAD
You know that old adage: "It's
an all v/ind that blows nobody
1 good." Let's see about it.
- r Everybody and everything af'
fects everybody elsct and every
* other thing. We just cannot dodge.
j But how can 'good come out of
! bad
} A block of buildings burns down
3 Great loss to the owners'and inconvt
nienec's. to the former occupants.
:.I5ut in a few days carpenf
ters, bi '.ktnasons and other work^
R ers are busy rebuilding. Work
^ and money.
j Patients a:e confined to homos,
I hospitals and sanitariums a t
great cost and inconvenience.
^ That's bad we say. But physicians
druggists and hospital attaches
3 are reaping dollars.
3 is bad we hay?bad for the re'la
tives and friends. There" is much
supercede the plans of- the origic(nators
of the Headquarters pro
j I gram." The plans were ready for
e submission at Laurens. They
s were drafted after several trips to
Columbia and to Atlanta bruL I
was asked to hold them. Like
t Paul, let mo boast, your Dynamo
? is one of the fathers.of this idea
3 and rs one of its greatest adher5
ents. I do not think that we
5 ought wait ten years to start it.
jjj If it was- not * for jealously and
" envy, this plant would now be in
? effect. Why do we wait longer,
ask for ACTION.
EMMETT SCOTT HIGH SCHOOL
?
H
- "Rock BH1, S. C. ~
1 November 14, 1938
" The Editor ' !
^ The Palmetto Leader
* Columbia, S> C.
In the Palmetto Leader of Non
vember 12 there was published un0
der an Item froriL Union ce.rtarn
s charges against Emmett Scott
yJ High school and Rock. Hill in gen
? j eral. Inasmuch as you allowed
e these unfair charges to be carried
* in your paper, we feel that rn sim
1 pie justice you should allowing
2! space To?present our side to the
e! public^ We have no desire to engaee
in a newspaper controversy,
" and have made a faithful promise
trWit ourselves?that-rve statement
j will be-rrrade by us for publication
{ after this one, on the above matUteri
:
r In every game that we have play
~edThls season~we~expected to win,
--tie or lose. The Sims game was
vsv oit uAtcpuun. i nereiore trie
' tie score was not a disappointment
to us as the artrcle charges..
We extended the usual courtesjes
and hospitality to the visitors that
Rock Hill is noted for. We are
at a loss to know how we could
have made them feel more wcl-i
come. The article charged poor
sportsmanship on our part.?"He
?that la-without nin,?let him cast'
the first stone". Despite the fact
that the game had been scheduled
nearly a month before with all
arrangements completed concern-1
ing the guarantee, the sudden de-j
mand was made on us ?n lhe very
week of the game to raise the
gua-afttPe or th^k-_they (Sims
High school) Ivoul^l cancel the '
game with us. They knew that
we ywere "on the spot" then; that'
' ;.jt would be impossible to find a"
nother school on such short not-'
ice. We had to meet their de-i
' mands. After accepting officials'
for the game, because the referee1
dared to impose a penalty on their
} team because bf "slugging", they
then flemnnrlerl ^ <T 1 ~ 1
..c?? uuiLiaia UI1U
' named the persons that they Want
ed or they would walk off the
"j field. We did not get the new
' officials and they di4 not walk off
) the flora. ThottfTmr wgir called,
j And yet they charge poor .sports|
manship.
i If persons from Union other
t than the coach had remained on
. the sidelines where they belonged
J instead of on the field- where they
certainly did not belong, there
would have been no occasion for
the remark's being made that per
haps they considered?disrespect-]
' ful. In the future we shall try
jj to schedule games with teams
I that wrll play the game on the
I field instead of in the newspapers.:
^ R. W. McGirt, Principal.!
I THE RIGHT MAN IN THE
. RIGHT PLACE AT THE
RIGHT TIME
j By J. C. Moore
I Company 3263 C
1 ? < *= |
Cherry Plains, N. Y.?We pre-1
B fer much credit and honor nnnn
"j Mr. E. S. Peterson, our newly appointed
Educational Advisor, who
improves our camp very much,
p Since Mr. Peterson came here
, many games wqre organized such
? as basketBaTTT soft baft) skating,
n and running or broad jumping.
. Lajjt Tuesday the skating contest
. convened at the Booker T. Washe
ington Community Center in Al?t-bany,
New?York. Mr; Fnrrrlr
'-Smith, a native of New York City
g, won the banner ^fKbrp- .tthe Boy
o Scuuts in the Capital iCity.
e| Our visitors as follows: Messrs
i.] Ralph Diaz, Frank Diaz, Clarence
it Myers, Raymond Brown, Thomas
d Sawyer, James Chappell and Hui,
bert Billie, who spcpt Reveral days
it in New York City with relative!
11. and frienda. They reported an en
i joyable stay. Mr. Jiames Howard
10 is sick at this writing, the mem>r
brs of. this company are hoping
THE PALMETTO LEADER^
D MAYBE NOT
Shackleford) ||
<?
< i
wj?,> X"!"Xn**'-''
weeping: and sorrow. The cost in
dollars plus the rugrets and tears
cannot be computed. Yet at the
same time undettakers and grave
diggejs-^get breaks and profit by
all thfs misfortune*.
Parents punish children (or do
they now?) and children resent it
inwardly and sometimes~outwardly"
In a few years, however, those
punished children become doctors,
lawyers, teachers and trained mechanics.
I burn my Jinprer^ hurt my toe
or sprarn my anklet All these are
misfortunes that we consider- bad.
I But somebody profits by my misfortune.
Good out of bad.
Yes, brother and sister, out of
I ??l < *"? ?
j every Qaa situation some good
emerges. Whether you.profit^ b y
what happens depends upon what
end of the plank you are sitting
' upon. ? !i?
I . (Copyright 1938)?; 1
him a speedy.recovery.
Armistice Day A Success
On November- 11, 19113, when
peace was declared v/as observd.
Mr. E. S. Peterson was the guest
speaker "of-the day. My County
! Tis of Thee was sung.. Remark!
j by Captain A. J. Homan. The
Iyord's j,Prayer was chanted by the
company. Mr. Peterson has prov
en himself second to none in his
position.
Our Church SalvatMn
My heart leaped for joy when
I read the Palmetto Leader and
saw the promotion of the fullow1ng
ministers: Revs. W. B. L.
Clarke, S. H. Lev/is and D. N.
Wilson. I was in the CCC camp
in district 1, at Awndaw, 27 miles
from Charleston. I visitd St. Ste
phen and Bethel A. M E. church
at Georgetown. T navt listened
to the gospel deliverd by both min
Bethel have had some of the best
preachers in the church. May God
pour His rich blessings on them
and we hope for them a successful
year.
' SANDERS HIGH SCHOOL
Sports _
Laurens, S. C.?The Sanders
Hi "Wild Cats" have caught the
spirit of football, and the right
kind of spirit. They have bcenJ
coming along fast for a 'green*
teani of their type. They were
able to jump into the winning eol-<
umn last week when they went to I
tionea Path and ran roughly ovei t
the Honea Path "Tigers" to the.
tune of 24 to 0.
The following Friday the Hon-;
ea "Trgers" came to get revenge
but Sanders Hi would not be denied.
This eame ended with the
score 13-0 in favor of Sanders Hi.
Much credit is due to Mr. J. W.
.Mathis. Jr.. and his hoys for th<?
way thev have improved in -one1
week. . ,
We would like to have a game
with some team within a radius
of SO miles of Laurens.
Mrases Dial and Watts,'teachers
of the first grade, announce tnaitheir
"little people" will entertain
us with a Thanksgiving play on
November 22, in the school auditorium.
. . I
Our grounfls are Wng made
beautiful by Prof. Sanders and .
his boys. They seem to make
shrubbery grow overnight.
Miss Nance trci/orts that the i
music department is coming along
finn arid that a'n mnv ?vn/inf n X
appearance alter Thanksgiving
holidays.
Miss Idella Jenkins of the Foun
tain Inn school was the pTeasanF!
guest Sunday evening of Misses
Watts and Nance. ,
ST. JAMES ROSENWALD 7~
SCHOOL NEWS
Burgess, S. C.?The faculty of
St. James Rosnwald school attend
ed the Sea Shore group meeting
Thursday, Novmber 11th at Big
Swamp school. Rev. A. W. Stack
house principal of Myrtle Beach
Jr. Hi*h, was efectd chairman. I
Mrs. Eula G. Owens of St. James.
Rosenwald school was elected
scretary and the program committee
are Miss Florence L. McCray
of St. James Rosenwald
school; Mr. WHliams of Myrtle
Beach Jr. Hi, and Mr. George Best
of Big Swamp school, chairman. I
Our there for this yar is pro-i
gressive. productive ' education
which was suggested by Mr. B.W.
| Owens principal of St. James Rorsenwald
school.
This meeting was called by our
Jeanes Teacher, Mrs. Nellie B. Le
vister.
| The St. James Chapter of New
Farmers of America sent its first
dlegate to the State Corivntion of,
incw farmers of South Carolina
"on the 12th of November.?The!
delegate was Leon Butler, treasurer
of the chapter.
| Mr. and Mts. Owens are sponsoring
a Red Cross Roll Call
driveTn our community an<T the
churches arc cooperating 100%.
. WINNSBORO NEWS
Shady Grove
The "Silver Stars" club met at
6 o'clock at the church. The meet
iiusr was called to order by the pres
ident. BurwelL Armstrong led-tha
song "Wherr I Get Inside the
. Gate". PrayeT by Macy JameB.
T\he house was then opened for
business. The minutes of the last
?
I
Columbia, S. C.?so:.-in tCarolin
j sion at Benedict College, November
at the left is: President J. J. Start
and at the exerpme?right on steps
years, of the body.
When The Stars Fell ^
? ' ]
My father remembered when
"the stars fell" in 1833. Often 1
I have I heard him tell how the
paraliztkl with dread of Judge-^
ment Day and the end of the t
world. The incident has become I
historical, how they fell on their t
knees and prayed for deliverance t
at that awful hour. t
The dramatization of H. G. ]
Wells "War of the Worlds" exert- i
ed the American people with sim- 1
ilar frenzy. Fo^ the following I
week this phantom play and its r
aftermath all but monopolized the I
press and radio not -withstanding J
the approach of the National
Election. The 'jitters which sud
denly seizedtupon the nation illus- d
tratos the relative place find rm- }
portance of instinct reason in their
control of human -conduct. In- f
stinct is instantaneous while rea- c
"son is slow and deliberate! The s
instinct of fear leads to precipi-'o
tous action before reason has hao li
a chance to assert itself. The jitters
aroused by the phantom t
broadcast Sunday, October 30, was R
not unlike hysteria which sudden- c
ly -stampedes" a hm-d of cattle. It
reminds us of Uncle "Ramuss' Brer d
Rabbit, who hearing a tree fall in P
, the fo:est stampeded aH the animals
with atlurim?"The sky is
falling?run, run, run." This hystprin
is independent of intellectual
or cultural advance. Instinct re- ^
duces all grades and degrees of p
primiVivy^^
The meteoric showed of ^1833 F1
frightened the plantation Negroes J,
with the dread of Judgement Day- ,
and who fell on theii knres at the
approach of the end of the world.
We have a reminder of the effect
of this phenomenon in the spirit-'
ual still heard over the radio. "Oh
Lord What a Morning, When the b<
Stars begin to Fall " tl
?The dread of firo is a terrifying T
instinct which, religious fanatics c<
sruzu ujjun to sinner? u
from their evil ways. The pictu- w
rization of hell fire is relict! upon tr
as a deterant by the revivalist 01
Revivals always flour teh among -ni
peoples of low inteHectuahxulture
where appeal to instinct is more T
quickly affected than appeal to
reason. At such intellectual lev-!
els revivals have been ?f great
'service to the call of morality^ and I
religion. But its influence wanes
with increasing appreciation of intellectual
and moral values.
There is no dierenco between
the races in thin regard.?The ap
peal to the unconverted was calculated
to fr^ghtcin them from the
awful?-punishment .of- a burning
hell.
As a boy on the farm in South
Carolina, I recall the revivalistic
effect of the terrifying appeal
when, thd stars in the elements
are falling, and the moon drips away
into blood.- When the seas
begin to roll and the rocks betrin
to melt, "Oh! sinner where will
you stand."
Science and invention have served
to spread more rapidly hysteria'
among the people. 1 tc ratlin
pbanjsini caught the American peo
pie unaware. For the moment, the
intellectual margin between the
American public Sunday October
30 and the plantation Negro in
1833 was not ven'y great.
Kelly Miller.
meeting were thfcn rend, receive I
arid adopted. |
The president- then offered a,.
few suggestions, to the members
as to means of raising some money
for the clut It was suggest
ed that the club give a party on
Thanksgiving night. The time of
the party would be from 7 to 11
at the home of Mrs. Lillic Mae
Gladney. The admission,.is. only
ten cents. Visitors are welcome.
I We were glad-to have as many
as 35 present at our second meet-j
| ing. Come out and help us grow.'
The school under the direction
I of Mjss Lucille Kennedy and Miss j
TiTag^ie Watkins Is" progressing
very nicely. The children are at-1
tending school very nicely. The . =
school has on a campaign to raise
money to improve certain conditions
around" it. 'We hope that
I the campaign planned for this en
going year will be a great gucceas.
______
*>AY UP YOUR
SUB0CRIPTION "
. .
? Sf
* " *! -|(r V/T!^!
a College?Prcsi dents, Deans and Hi
5, 1938. In the front row on the s
;s, Benedict Col- lose, builder of the
een, S. C. State College, newly e)o'
is_ President Mi Hit?EL?Wl.iltaker,
NYiite Stores Feature c
CI
Harlem Doctor's J)
Book on Women 1*
?
New York, Nov. 7?(C)?Three a
Aft white book stores, Brentano's, P
'utnam's and Wanamaker's, have w
aken a consignment of the new
>ook, "The Glory of Woman-'
lood," by Dr. Joseph Wellington,
.921 Seventh avenue. The book- ^
et, the text of which was first do- j(
rrered as an address before the
Cmpire State Federation of Wo-j g
nen's clubs, was sponsored by the
looklovers?club?of New?York, p
urs. Nannie C. Burden, president. ?
Shortly after the original ad- ^
Iress before the clubwomen, Dr.
Vellington was given a banquet 0
n Harlem at whicn "he was toasted- ^
or the lofty trrbutH to women ^
ontainod in the address. He was
o inspired-" by this pnbHc-ai7prcT~d
iation that he had the work pubished
in book form. a
Dr.. Wellington first studied for u
he ministry at Gammon Theolo- d
ical Seminary, Atlanta, Ga.;; but U
hanged to medicine at tho Univer- o
ity of ^Vermont,?takmg-the-Al.D.Pfrrec
there in '20. He has been ?
ractrcing in Harlem for 17 years. ^
B lTTLER-HIG)H- SCHOOL Ly
Hartsville, S. C.?In the_
tfornod - auditorium the?Armistice
>ay program was held Nov. 11. y
atriotic songs, a paper on the
ause of the World's War was
;ad.?Prof H. C. Brewer gave an
ripressive talk from hrs Personal .
xperiences in the War. At' 11 'i!
clock the whole body stood silent ?
s bells and whistles sounded |
KrtV* in f I
-.v.* ?.i vv4iiiuviiiuiau?MI W1 cue
gning of the Armistice.
At 3:30 o'clock the clash began
;tween the Butler "Timers" and
ie Coulter eleven from Chcraw. _
he Coulter abrogation surpass1
the_'j igers in age and training
nd were therefore expected to
hip the Tigers by 2 or more
>uchdowns. The T'gers came
Jt fighting and from the begining
to-the ending -heW-the-t3mrt=>r
boys on the defensive. The
igers, in the first half stayed
;ep in Coulter's territory. The
CANVASSERS ? Write me this v
DREAM NUMBER toilet articles pu
selling plan. Low Price3. Genen
with your customers. Write for t
Abb*' Waling* Cosmetics. L
r^mgmmaamHw
i'lNOKNEY'S FU1
UNDUKTAKER ANIL4JUE;
SOUTH CAROLINA
^ ^ ^_ .__ ^ ^ Pu
IW6 WASHINGTON ST.
iturday, November 26, 1938.
? ? ? -
MHeiWHHV .
tops of Starks Library, beginning
new library; next with hand butcted
pvesulent of the .association ""
rowd was held m suspense beause
it seemed that in every plffy ?
tie ball would go over for the Tiers
but the Coulter line held and .?
he game went up 0-0. Though
utclasged by Coulter in training
nd -experience?4he?'Tigers-mado
beautiful showing. They outlayed
Coulter from the starting
thistle to the finish.
- ST. ALU AN TK. SCHOOL
The school is now beginning the
bird-week of work with a very
arge number of students. The
icture show last week was very
ood and largely attended.
The basketball teams are be- '
hilling to practice and expect to *
e in good shape by the first of
be sason. . >
I'rof. and Mrs. Sitton and the
ther members of the faculty of
Ir. Carmel school, spent quite an
njoyablc evening with Prof, and
Irs. Dendv and faculty on Sunay:
?
A large number, attended the
griculture meeting Thursday nite
nder the direction of Prof. Deny.
Mi-ss Cromer is expecting a
irge crowd at the adult homtr eenims
meeting, this _week.
.Missed DoriF* Williams." Maud?.
tine Clinkscales and Ola Moragne " ?
pent the week-end with parents.
The Arnivstice Day prop:.mi arid
fdnTrmon ? iVetitnT^odrraTii in the 1 ~
hapel were very * interesting.
fiss Lillian Johnson recited "A
is!on' of Armistice Day" and
[isr, Catherine Weir "Let There ?
e Peace".?MSsses Jessie Arnold
id Selena Giaden had a telehone
conversation: "Mrs. Ignornee
and Mr. Education".
Be Successful!
Btudy Law - Political Science - Negro
History AT HOME. Men and
women trained in these subjects
win higher positions and bigger
?ln hnsiness and public life.
They command respect and attain
?teftflcrsrnp. ?
MORE ABILITY - MORE PRESTIGE
- MORE MONEY can be
yours. Start now I Read "NEGROES
AND THE LAW".
Send tor tree prospectus booklet.
Write
THE LANGSTON CIVIC CLUB OF
AMERICA, 2200 W. Columbia Ay?.,
Phlla., c
1*1 J. Aw
* *
reek. New line of fast selling
it up by Abbe' Wallace. New
ous profits. Sure to be a hit
erritory today.
>ept.T Atlanta, Georgia
VERAL HOME
NSED EMBA1JV1KK OF
AND GEORGIA 4
ineral Cars and Funeral
Equipment
GOOD AS THE BEST
d Better Than the. Rest 1
And Prices Less
Office Phone 2-3357
Residenct Phone 7765
??? fCOURTESY
^ AND
SERVICE
COLUMBIA, ft. C.