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prv - . -ff? pair* FOW - iJElir Palmetto trailer PUBLISHED WEEKLY * 1310 Assembly St., Columbia, S. C ^ Entered at the Po&: Office at Co ^ luinbia, S. C., as second class lt matter by an Act of Congress 111 -ri SUBSCRIPTIONS One Year |2.00 pi Six Months 1.25 l'hree Months .7t Single Copy .01 tl n NOTICE TO ALL SUBSCR1 BEKS Date of expiration of your subscription is stamped 0n your address wrapper each week. This it is for the purpose of giving you ~nl constant notice of the date your subscription expires. Postal Regulutions itequire Payment in , Advance of AU Subscriptions. -11 Your paper will be discontinued 4f after expiration date. ,f FOREIGN ADVERTISING AGENCY n W. B. ZIPF CO., 608 S. Dearborn St., Chicago, 111. Official Adver- o tisements at the rate allowed bj law. ine Leaner win puuusu unu am rational lettera-oir subjects - -at Ji general interest when they are It accompanied by the names anc t addresses of the authors and . i are not of a defamatory nature ? Anonymous communications will not be noticed. Rejected man#- ot scripts will not be returned. (l ~Tf GJ?0. H. HAMPTON Publisher >1 E. PmUP^TXLlS, Field XgTru e L. G. BOWMAN, Circulation Mgr. n r ] li REMITTANCES Checks, Drafts and Postal or Ex?\??4ioi5 \( Anoir O )wln olinnLl l-w> it picoo iUViJVJ V4UW*a OUVU?U made pavable - to? thtr-order?of f] The Palmetto Leader. Communications intended for the Si current issue must be very brief i< and should reach the editorial ? desk not later than Tuesday of each week. City news, locals. ' Wednesday. Telephone 452d IV Saturday, September 6, 1941 " w COLUMBIA'S ..MUNICIPAL w ELECTIO N Columbia Negroes need spokesmen who can intercede for them ^ before the next city election. Co- L lumbia will elect a ma jor and fo tr g cooncilriier. to serve the citizens of Columbia, white and colored. We believe all tax payers and . free holders should be given full 11 opportunity to vote for the city * fathers, and we believe the council. wotfld regulate a plan whereby |j property owning Negroes in Columbia may vote in the next city election. Anyway, it wouldn't be 1 a bad .idea if our civic league u would make some intercession for ? colored citizens of Columbia along thif? line. 1 LET S NOT BE TOUCHY 1 By Kuth Taylor In the lu-at of crisis, strain and FTCitemi'nr - 11 >' v?i'v?va which we are ail living today, tempers are becom- ^ ing frayed and nerves jangled. '' We are getting touchy and upset, quick to take offense, unreason- ^ ing in our reactions to the simp- * lest things, seeing personal af- 1 fronts and prejudices where none c exist?ill short, we go ground ' looking for trouble. Today I saw evidence of this in ^ the hotel in which I-live. One si) woman who has been there for v years has begun to feel that each 11 time there is a trivial delay in \ mail or in the elevator service, it is because one of the men is Ger- '1 man and another Italian. She Y just knows they don't like her ? because she wears all of the Al- * lied buttons she can crowd on her a| expansive" blouse. She haR com- ,J pletely lost her sense of propor linn fliifi is hnrnminr nnrh n hnrp ? that everyone dodges her?with a the result sfie sees the entire > place as a habitation of spies, it My friend, the German, is get- w ting touchy. He is becoming sdl- a len and uncooperative because he ti feels he is a suspect. He doesn't o think it fair, when, after all, he > has been a good citizen for twen- _tj ty years and is just (is anti-Nazi as anyone else. But because he y feels people doubt him, he won't p say where ne srartmr arm yets ts gloomier and mors diaaprreeable a each day. p The little Italian elevator hoy a is completely bewildered?and " therefore surly. TTe has never fj thou (flit of himself as iafi Italian, b and certainly bis particular brand u of New Yorka?a-bears^rwr traee ti - of any origin more foreign thlan ti Green point. Up to now his only J interest in the newspaper 8 has 'n 'if ;* MAYBE SO AN (By W. II H I'M AN NA There are millions of people in lis old world. Everyone o f lose teeming millions is fundientully similai bu{ incidentally fferent. People know so little about peo e. We study every subject on irth except people, despite the ict that we have to livv with ich other. As artilu we think everybody is itirely alike. In many cases we al with everybody in the same d way.?It cannot be successilly done. Human mtiav, uomdden behind human natur,. are idividual characteristics which ten obviate our limited knowilge bTnanything. Very few of us are students of iman nature. We know so htp?of?other?people?because low very litcl" or ourselves. Our colleges ami universities ?en the account of what the rooklyn DoctgeTs did or did not ). nut ne is now uuiiujiik up " seiilment and an atoofness thnt ill bear bad fruit. What applies? to these three ?ople applies to groups all over lis?country-,?Whether?minority class, they are getting?more iuchy. Aral becuuse of this feel ig, they are congregating into roups?which is a dangerous ling for national unity. "Today we need "to be one peop+c -to be united on the t'hings in hich We all believe. Our person duty IS plain?first to give to 1 others the same consideration mt we expect for ourselves, and ?cond, not to look for trouble. 3t to take everything personally, r to take offense without due i use. Let us, therefore, not*be touchy -but let us meet oui fellow Aiericans half way in a spiiit of ellowsbip and - cooperation, ork with them for the defense ot ur country and of the liberties 'hich it bestows. upon AIL its tizens. HE REALI/.ATIO.V OF THE > I) >> hLI-I.M. M'll(l I y~ Bev. -l? WL_AV'illlams. AB..BD The good news Christ brought lto the world was. and always 'ill be fundamentally t his, that reryone of us shares in the very fe and spirit of God. This i? ie revelation that shone out lot few years in the Person of Jeas Christ, so mani^^^gehunum ;> certainly devine . ran we set Itat Christ saw? In every soul le capacity for good, for tin ighest good, for the saintly, fut le God-like? He called to that macitv. that consciousness of ca acity, in 'the fish men on the laki F?Gulilee. lie calLd?to?it It [atfhew at his business; in N'icoi; 111 us in his secret search foi uth; and in all is responded Then they saw Jesus they felt le kinship between his nature nd their own etc. It was tin $ing brotherliness of Christ ami is Apostles, the consequences of vis sense of fundamental unity ir od's family, that won the crowd? nd founded the church. That dt ine life is still in men today al! round us with its vast potontiall es even where we least suspeel And the war 'has " open bui /es to see .sumo fragtnent 'of if es it has ben a revelation: it lifts* rought out miracles of eomnul& hip, fidelity, courage humanity nd a sense of God's nearness tc R. It Itfts broken barriers natural, social and even religious. _Ih?_lifc of God within us is nol complimentary description of ur own goodness or cleverness is dinstiroct from anything thai re possess of our own. it is no1 reality w'hich demands reco'/n on of itself by the mind, nol ur thought labout God, but Go< ressing Himself upon >o u i lought. The idea of knowing God foi ourself is a vital element in al rophetic religion. The real issu< t rrof that of belief in revelat 01 s sudh but faith in (a living am ersonal God.. For pantheim foi 11 abstract idealisms and for tha pan nomism" whost. Gbd is sim Ty the cosmic order, tTiero oar e no balk of revelation. The niverse in each case is sim pi3 he- whob? wbic4t man. the part, h rying to umlerstarrd God. Knowing God is much the sarrn h knowing the atom or the galac - niirii T J) MAYBK NOT Shackleford) IT RE STrI)IKS would ,iio well to ofl'er a required course in practical hrnu.n nature studies. Often we are puzzled when v.e observe how unusually successful some individual is in some tieM. We wonder how Mr. A who novel went to college, who has r.o triiiniiK' vwe generally recognize, is on top. - ~ The' secret ~nf Mi- A's success .may bt. his knowledge of plain. common evcy-day fo'ks without regard to rank or station. We forget that both thr ~rrrar~t:r the White House and the man in the c| bin are essentially alike, yet ndfvldtially di ffcT'en t. So what'.' Study people going ind coming. Study people going long as general propositions. but coming to you as individual prob ?lems. ??1 i t Rights Reserved). .it system ><i' Kin-u mian. uur-i' mcnsio . .'< imi\erse. " Hul :s soon as you believe in a person Vt1 mrd a i+vii7g (?od, - Hit-?w4+ole situation changes. The universe is yo longer a system awaiting jut study. There is a redemptive - rtsed-f?to??Pnmv?U??a?doi.lili' . search.?thai- of man tor (jod and 'jod for man. . It is at this point, we sense a spirit that is seeking us, a voire that is calling. ~ ritlKN ITSTT1F A7 M. K. Clll'Ut h Kev. II. \\ . Walker. I'aslor l .in.oTi la- TvTu m i vices~ will >ogin at Friendship A.MK riiurrn juiiday September 7th. A cordial nvitation is extended tiu- people >f the community. 'Sumlp.y was pleasant throttgh>ut tlie day and services Were largely attended beginning with the Sunday school. Supt. Alexander pieselited I'rof ('. <i, (ia.rrett who l'uvi- a review of tin lesson. Rev. Walker preached two ,mt1 mons that were an. inspiration To all listeners. Foi^.llm. nioriuiv^'s message text found St. Luke 10: H*-2t? suhjeet-God and Gold. The pastor"said in the outset the poor u-me-i-. C...I !.',() tin- I li'h nan represei ted the yold. He <iis . ussed tour reasons why the rich 'man went to hell. First was covetousnoss: second selfishness; .bird. misconception;- fourth, fail to repeiif. For the niyht ser\ ic 's he disH:S?T*<*> the I'm r Mat,. A. C. K. Lea-tue ( pencil at 7 :uu oelock with the President M:-. li I Mairgic Minis jn charyo. The Missionary? socio t v hehl their regular monthly mcetiny. Much needed information v.t s received from tlie delegates repot t s Hebron Baptist Church u Kev.?A. A. Sims, Pit-Hor Sunday sc'ilopl opened at the Us ual hour with a veJ \ w'OOll iit t t'f I 'iuiK't*. Teacher* and officers were ;it their post uf duly. 1 lie lesson was well disclosed. Alter winch diss Hull) (iiHi'hiii.l) del eate. to ' :1k- .Sunday School conve ; u riade a Very poind rejiort. r Friends of Mrs. Jessie \) Irhv will be yhal to know t'i|.t she is onvalescini!" at h< I home here al' ei being a patient ill'tin- l.aur1 -lis hospital. Mrs. Camilla lr Ih-lgardo reurned to her home iir Tampa, I-'ln i Iter spending three w.eln here 1 with her brothers and sLitei-Inaw .Mi; and .Mrs. William Dillard tfid Mr. Ma.es Dillanf ' Miss Ehrleon I). Parks of Aid more, Pa. has returned after Throe weeks visit with her aunt Mrs . Carrie It Rollins. Little.. Jean Elizabeth and Barr Sum 5 11 h T .ritne > *? i \ . i V? i\i % - homo in Now York City aftei ^ speeding somotimo hero with 1 thoir hunt Mrs. Julia Taylor ani ^ grandmother Mrs. I.izzic. I. Key? ' and other relatives.? 1 Prof, and Mrsi. John ft .Mara _ ble op JEIendersonidlle hate i eturi od after a few days visit wilt 1 Mrs. Marables parents Mr. anr Mrs. Thompson Reader. i -Mrfe?Uftisy Vt- Moore of Ashe 1 ville N. C. spent Sunday with thru >' sister Mrs. Thompson Reader arw t brother Mr. J. H. Yountr. Mrs. Lizzie Keys has it* 1 turned after spending two weeks ^ in Boston, Mass. She was aeeon / partied home by her dauglitei s- Miss Sarah Lewis. ? ? ? Mr. Joseph?F: tfmrtersnn?m e Fort Rra^K spent Sunday with his - parents Mrs. Hattie White. V * '- ' ?-I HE PALMETTO LEADER IVOORHEES I Denmark, S & - A CO.EDUCATK A J Jl'NIOR COLLEGE, HI< ALL OPEN SI A X Largest-Enrollment i X j. Courses Offered: X A High School?16 unit X " -X Trade and Vocational i X Junior College?Offer Teacher Training y n " !|! i-susiness Agricuiti X X Eor information, address: j5 -i* THE PK y x> ooo ooaaaoo oo 0.0 oo.aoo.ao 8 Friendship J "I? Kockltrtl,^ 0 Thorough training is often | Agrfculti Home Ee Arts and "ItetigionTeacher 1 s Terminal -2 ^-N?VCCHI Dl'i'Ll) 11KJ11 0 IN (ON MOTION WIT I O o o i'e^ist raon 1 or (Ia\ punii 3 '{egist rat ion lor new l>oai O o Ueo'ist ration tor lornier I) o ( lass work will begin Sep o o X l or further informatjor V v V v v> v v OvOO.CK' v v v OOvvv Ov.O I MORRIS I SUMT! I '{ ""IWllonument of ? | the Pride of _ ? ! I , ^ .High Schot X 4* L'. U ? 1* I . ociiooi 01 n X ;j; Liberal Ar X _Jl Theological i $ \ FAT SKSSION HKOl I I Septembe ^ Reasonable ( at ** ~ . Y I oi I in Cher lhlormatio A - I .! 1 \ (lARKK'K, t '^>OOOOOOOOv 000000000000 o ? o ' I Seventy-tl Claflin I septeMBI I LIBERAL ART Majors in Chemistr Sociology, Special opportuniti* Music an ' g I OK I I KTIIKR IN'FOItr ' J. H. ~l~~ Oraiv ^ .r-'.. ~ i I. & I. SCHOOL South Carolina )NA L INSTITUTION Jill SCHOOL and GRADES SPTEMBER 16th in Some Years Expected ;s I Work . iiiiT two year courses in ; _ - are TfacleV UNCI PAL, J. E. BL^NTON oao.aao.aooaoo.aao^o^ooaoc? - 11 ? umor college outh Carolina tfd in the following divisions: i* ire | onomies Is Sciences rzziz' - | Training Courses ' . ';j SCHOOL IS MAINTAINED 1 THK Jl'NIOR COLLEGE S s September 11 rding pupils September VI carding pupils September 15 j tember 16 \ address ? The President .oc.ooooooooao^o.o.o:oor8mo^J COLLEGE er; &. c. 1 \:egro Achievement,' ] Negro Baptists "j ioc=>l . ? >\ \ Idueatiun i ts ' ) .1 * >. % t i >scnooi '] ? I r 22. 1941 j ulogue Sent Upon Request !? ii. \N rite '{ I . Acting- President | 0'c00000000000000000000-0"00< bird Session \ OF | 3 College :(iINS f r ' ij iR 10, 19411 'S CURRICULUM ji y, Education, English, | Mathematics. ij ^inJEeacher Training I d Fine Arts HATION, ADDRESS Randolph, President geburk. SAC. J s DEFENSE BOND I Q U I Z A Q. I would like to provide ~"a X regular income for myself when t I retire. Can this be done by Y buying Defense Savings Bonds? j Y A. Yes. If you purcflfhae a X Bond for $37.50 each month uach X Bond will mature in exactly 10 X years. Thus at the end of 10 X years you will have $50 payable Y 4ach month as each of your " Bonds reaches maturity. M jf Q. But I will need more than !! $50 a month. < i || STATE A. & t I Orano-phnrjy Si ? Y o " ~ ? o j ^ || | FALL SESSK I I ; SEPTEMBE > ! -x { Courses leading to Bacheloi i X Mechanic Arts, Home Ecoi Y Business Administratis i I BRi^NT-PA Ct'CTY, E ? REASONABLE X ;?! For further information, wr I TI ~ - St I Or 4-Allen Ui ! | Columbia, Soi I : X INDEK THE A j I THE AFRICAN METHODIS I | An Institution Devoted t C Y - X Leadership and IJ ? Courses Leading To Bachelo ; f Arts and Sci [ X Home Econo [ I Teacher Tra [ | Bachelor of I } Bachelor of x S .$ Fall Session Begins i r t : I l $ For Catalogue or Detailed I j | THE R] ' ? ALLEN L : i _ y j Benedidt $ ?BEGI i! > | Next Session, Wedne M ? -- -- " S|? Day Students^ Register ' | ^ Boarding Students Register j ? Classes Begin Wednes i 5 For Further < Information, W ? - Tli I 11" I ? I OOO* ! CLINTON N. AN jli Rock Htl 3|H A CO-EDUCATION> i Ji i? ?- - Conduct I I THE A. IVL E. Z1 \ J HEALTHFUL REARONAfif SELF-HELP - Or ; t Fall Session Begins 3' \ For Information, Address 5 |: PRESIDENT / Saturday, September 6, 1941 A. Then you should invest a larger amount each month. Every $76 you put into Defense <i Bond3 will pay you $100 teni ydars from now. Meanwhile our money serves your Government during this period of national emergency. Note?To "buy Defense Bonds and Stamps go to the nearest post office bank or savings and loan association; or write to the Treasurer of the United States, Washington, D. C. ? SUBSCRIBE FOR 1 THE PALMETTO LEADER m v a VAJLLEAjEJ j outh Carolina ? $ )N BEGINS | R 17, 1941 | ? r's Degree in Agriculture, lomics; Teacher Training, V >n, Arts and Sciences *j! XXJELLENT FACILITIES X? EXPENSES. I ite y IE PRESIDENT J i ate~A+^^rl^legej angeburg, S. C. | liversity ~r~ ith Carolina * L'SPICES OF t ;t episcopal church $ ( \ o Christian Education, X [nselfish Service ? 1 r's Degrees In: 51 ences ' _ 51 ^ . >mics V .ining I? 1 L__J ? 9 Theology ;; Divinity :: September 15, 1941 n formation, Write \\ EGISTRAR ; NIVEHSITY I i A, SOUTH CAROLINA ;; 4 ^ . , v r College NS? :: 1 f 6 4 t < sday, Sept. 17, 1941 ;; ^ ? *7 i Monday, September 15 J; Tuesday, September 16 i> t 5 day, September 17 \\ rite ?? te President Benedict College?;; Columbia, S. C. ;; j ID 1. COLLEGE f w, s. c. j ? ih INSTITUTION ed by \ ION CHURCH LOCATION RATES PORTUNITY September 8, 1941 _j . E. WARNER BRICE