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THE JACKSON ADVOCATE l25Vi N. F»rish Street—Phone 33181 Published Weekly at Jackson, Mississippi Member of the Seott Newspaper Syndicate rERCl GREENE . . Editor and General Manager DAN REED .. Circulation Manager BEATRICE THORNTON ... . Society Editor SUBSCRIPTION RATES All Subscriptions Pue and Payable in Advance ”'T»e Copy 5c; One Year $2.25; Six Months $1,25; 3 Months 65c Make all checks payable to the Jackson Advocate We shall prosper in proportion as we learn to glorify and dig nify labor, and put brains and skill into the common occupations of life—Booker T. Washington. In ell things that are purely social ue can be as separate as the fingers, but in all things that affect our mutual progress and de velopment v.e can be together as ihe hand.—Booker T. Washington. Labor, Backbone Of Nation’s Defense ALL OVER THE UNITED STATES last Monday we saw the observance of another Labor Day, and at no time in the history of the United States has the observance of Labor Day been of such great significance. With the nation en gaged in a vast program of National Defense, the very back bone of which is the disposition and morale of Labor, the oc casion brought forth an address to the nation by the Presi dent of the United States and other outstanding American leaders. On the position of organized labor in the United States, there are many e’ements which have been of much concern in recent months to the American public. Particularly the large number of strikes and the continued number of threats to strike in those industries of vital importance to the suc cess of the National Defense effort. Since organized labor became a large influence in American political life there has been an increasing amount of the re sponsibility for American unity placed at its doors. Existing because of our strong foundation and belief in the democratic ideal, and in the right of every man to have a share in the work and wealth of the nation, the Negro workers have seen organized labor in too many instances where he sought to pursue the right of every man to share in the work and wealth of the nation as the only stumbling block in his path way, and today with millions of workers being caked, Negro workers are being denied the right to work in these fields of greatest usefulness because they are being denied mem bership in the labor organizations, which because of their great political influence are controllling the employment of workers. , It is perhaps true, since the issuance of the famous ex ecutive order by the President of the United States that there has been a largeg increase in the employment of Negro work ers over the number employed before the order was issued, but the number of Negro workers employed is still far be low the number warranted by their proportion to the whole, and the number of available Negro workers. In its great position in the industrial life of the nation labor has a great share in the responsibility for the success of our national defense effort, which can only be achieved in the end by the use of every available worker black and white, and despite the order of the President there still exists widespread discrimination against Negro workers in the ranks of laborer. According to informed sources there is a growing short age of workers in cur industries, which is having an ad verse effect on the National Defense effort. The letting down of the bars against Negro workers would serve to cut down this shortage of workers to a large extent. In denying the opportunity of membership to Negro workers, organized labor is not on’y hurting the NATIONAL DEFENSE effort, but is at the same time hurting our claims to the great fundamental principles of American Democracy. The Peoples Undertaking Co. AND The Peoples Burial Association DELUXE AMBULANCE SERVICE DAY & NIGHT DIAL 3-2576 and i-3801 886 N. Farish Street Jacksfl*, Miss. Exclusive Subdivision! j HOMESTEAD I Approved For FHA Financing 1. FHA insured loans at 4 % rate . . . low as $14.86 per month payments. 2. Modern . city sewage, water, gas lights . . . graveled streets . tele phone. 3. Each house has built in features, bath-tub, kitchen cabinets, chimes at front door, con crete walk to St. 4. A radio goes with each house. 5. Mimimum down payment .... sold to home-owners, noj rental property. HEIGHTS See Modern Home Open Sunday for Inspection * The most outstanding residential development in Mississippi .... the first to be approved, and re stricted, meeting the standards required by the Federal Housing Administration .... Just north of the Woodrow Wilson Bridge . . .... close to the bus line! See it today .... and be among the first to buy. REID-McGEE MEDICAL BLDG. PHONE 4-6681 Jackson, Miss. i White Southern Youth Rescues Colored Boy CHURCH ROAD, Va. — <A. N. P.)—Many things happen in the south which seem paradox ical to folk in other sections who seem not to realize that mistreatment can be the excep tion rather than the rule in most places. For example, last Wednesday a number of boys w'ere swimming in Hobb’s pond, the best swimming hole in the vicinity. There were both color ed and white boys cooling off in the pond, most of them be tween the ages of nine and 15. Bossie Peace, 15, a colored boy who lived in the nearby community of Wilson, stepped into a hole and went down. It was late afternoon and most of the boys had gone, but the spot was dangerous and those boys who remained watched rather fearfully. Suddenly Bobbie Springston, a nine-year-old white boy whose parents are prominent in Dinwiddie county flashed through the water and caught Bossie as he was going down the third time. The col ored boy was too large for Bob bie to handle easily but he struggled with him until he got close enough to the bank for the others to grab him and give first aid. “Gosh! I had to do it,” Bob bie said when praised. "Nobody else would even try, it looked like.” Southern School (Continued from Page l)/ cial relations; “5. That school libraries seek to provide the books and sup plementary materials neces sary for such study; “6. That teachers’ colleges es pecially should make every ef fort to prepare \ teachers in training for wise and effective work along these lines with the millions of future citizens who will be committed to their charge.” The final meeting was taken up with reports and discussion of methods by which these objectives could be carried out. Those giving reports included Miss Pauline B. Knobbs, of State Teachers' college, Kirksville, Mo.; Miss Sadie Engle berg. of John Marshall High school, Richmond, Va.; Dr. Maude Carmi chael, of State Teachers’ College, Conway, Ark. ; The reports dealt with studies of the race problem being conducted by students in these institutions. Teachers reported that the students were interested, and the results were satisfactory. Emphasis was laid on the fact that these courses are taught from a factual rather than a propaganda standpoint, the ; facts being gotten from reading and from personal investigation of local i conditions. f Speakers heard during the week included R. B. Eleazar, of Atlanta, director; Dr. Arthur Raper, of At lanta, sociologist and author; Dr. W. C. Jackson, dean of the Wo man’s college of the University of North Caroilna, and Dr. Rufus Clement, of Atlanta, president of : Atlanta university. Complaints In (Continued from Page 1) structed to prepare these cases for i action by the committee. Sec. Cramer’s desk is piled high s with correspondence and com i plaints which yet have not been j gone ipto. His secretady is busy with the details of the committee, j having to reply to all letters', those ! seeking positions with the com mitee, of which there are quite a j numbei and other complaints Several newspaper men have ap plied to the committee, it is re ported, for positions, investigation, etc., and after discussing the ap plications in conference, they are referred to Mr. Cramer’s office for reply. Buy Defense Stamps From Your Merchants RETAILERS-FOR-DEFENSE WEEK September 15 to 20, '1941 _ United States defense Savings Stamps provide an easy, convenient method for Americans to save money to buy a United States Defense Savings Bond. The Stamps can be bought for a dime, a quarter, a half-dollar, a dollar, or 5 dollars. Al bums are given with the purchase of your first Stamp. When your album is filled, you can ex change it readily for a Defense Bond. A Stamp album containing 75 of the 25-cent j Stamps has a total value of $18.75 and buys a Bond worth $25 in 10 years. An album filled with 75 of the 50-cent Defense Stamps represents $37.50 and buys a Bond worth $50 in 10 years. | Albums containing 75 of the $1 Stamps or 15 of ! the $5 Stamps represent $75 and buy a Bond worth ' $100 in 10 years. Astounding Progress In Aviation Army And CAA Courses Prove Youth Air-Minded WASHINGTON (ANP)— Negro | trainees in the civilian aeronautics | courses are making good in further ! studies in aviation and also mnk i ing excellent progress in aviation i according to the director of the information and statistics service, Roscoe Wright. At Tuskegee Institute, the only j colored college where Negro stu dents are taking advanced work, many students from other colleges I have been registered. However, of pilots in the 99th Pursuit squardron who are training I at Tuskegee, there are only two J in the present reception class which 1 began July 19, who had the initial | work in CAA courses at Negro col i leges. They are George Spencer ; Roberts who is from West Virginia j State State college, and Frederick Henry Moore, who took the pri | vate pilote's course at Tuskegee. MANY GRADS APPLY However. 90 percent of the grad I uates of CAA courses at Tuskegee j have made application to the army : corps for training. It is learned ! that the army is planning' to place in basic training at the 99th train | ing school a number of CAA secon | dary graduates who have been turn | ed out at Tuskegee. These stu j dents will skip the normal army primary training which precedes T1 ^■TT^T. mT^T " ~ ■ ; z\ CLEANING PRESSING MIMS CLEANERS Equipped to Render First Class Service 328 N. Mill Street Dial 4-9411 We Call For and Deliver Your Patronage Solicited CURTIS MIMS, Prop. Special to School Boys.. 15% Discount ON CLOTHES TAILORED TO YOUR MEASURE . COME AND REGISTER YOUR NAME For Information See ROGERS—Farish St. Tailor ft Cleaner k 524 N. FARISH ST. ATTENTION We have openings for 100 Mes and Women. For full or part time employment. Most attractive Agency Contract in the State. A^iply— THE SECURITY LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY 125H N. Farish Street Jackson, Miss. •B. L. PEACOCK. Mffr. “BE SECURE WITH SECURITY” basic and advanced training. j “Before a student can begin to enter aviation actively as a voca- j tion, it is reported by an officei in charge of instruction, “he must have a commercial license. Once obtaining such a license, he may then go up for primary instructor ' ing and secondary instructor rating. Prior to the present sum mer session CAA did not have suf ficent courses to carry a student to the commercial license at the Government’s expense. We are pleased to record, however, that three of o'Ur students, by buying some time of their own. have ob tained the commercial license. Two j of these students were successful in i obtaining primary instructor rat I ings to teach in the CAA private ' pilot’s course. These young men are at present employed at Tuskegee At least two more should make similar accomplishments by the beginning of the fall session.’’ CAA PILOTS AT CHANUTE Two former CAA pilots are in the group which is being trained at Chanute field, it is reported. They are Elmer D. Jones, who has fly ing cadet status and is being trained as an engineering officer for the 9fith, and Elcan E. Ward who is listed among the enlisted group pursuing technical ’nstruc tion. The enlisted personnel going through technical training at Cha nute field is made up of young men taken from the country at large. Tuskegee and Morris Brown college furnished the initial assign ment to the extent of some 50 or 60 of the enlisted personnel. Jack Watkins (Continued from Page 1) i Watkins, he is survived by two bro thers, Sam and Ebb Watkins, both I widely known here. With funeral arrangements in 1 charge of People’s Undertaking I Company, he was buried at White I Rock Cemetery, Wednesday, Sep ! tember 3rd. BACKACHE? Try Flushing Excess Poisons And ^Vcid Thru Kidneys And Stop Getting Up Nights 35 CENTS PROVES IT When your kidneys are overtaxed and your bladder is irritated and pas sage scanty and often smarts and burns, you may need Gold Medal Haarlem Oil Capsules, a fine harmless stimulant and diuretic that starts to work at once and costs but 35 cents Xt any modern drugstore. It’s one good way to put more healthful activity into kidneys and bladder — you should sleep more soundly the whole night through. But be sure to get GOLD MEDAL—it’s a genuine medicine for weak kidneys. Don’t accept a substitute. Cut-Rate Shoe Shop \11 Work Guaranteed Free Delivery Dial 4-9142 — N. Fari.h St. Jackson. Miss. Clarence Evans. Proprietor Say Native African Troops Will Fight On Either Side WASHINGTON, D. C.—(ANP) —Wandering far afield in their prognostications, Drew Pearson and Robert S. Allen explain the situation in Africa under tht caption of “Washington Merry Go Round.’’ And the story is one which attacks the splendid sol diers who carried the brunt of the war for France in previous years and who shouldered most of the responsibilities in the late French debacle. These are the Algerians, Senegalese and Mor roccan troops. “Finally, the powerful army of Gen. W7eygand,” say the news interpreters Drew and Allen, in stead of tipping the scales in favor of Britain, now is sure to be used to help Italy against the British. For an all-important thing to remember about Wey gand’s troops is that they are native—Algerian, Senegalese and Morroccan. White French troops would be different, but natives care not whether thev f'Sht against the British or the Ger mans—as long as they are cloth - ! 2d, and fed.’’ 4 ■ .— ■ - •" LITHONIA, Ga.—A big barbe cue was given at the schQol cn Labor Day for tile purpose of raising funds for the lunch room. Mrs. Lenora Guinn of Scottdale spent Sunday night with Mrs. Dell Sanders. Fender and Body Works FARISH STREET GARAGE Auto Repairing and Vulganizing 748 N. Farish St. Dial 4-9333 Luther Hill, Mgr. ~PERCY C. SLAY Licensed Contractor and Builder FREE ESTIMATES MADE DIAL 3-3456 2413 Prosperity St. S. W. MILLER I Painting and Decorating Free Estimates Furnished 1120 W. Pearl St. Dial 4-8803 UOLMSJL. LJ P 1 •' I. —1" - lir,M ' 1 H'T——— William Coldwell Contractor & Builder 145 W. Church St. Jackson, Miss. See Us for F. H. A. Loans fTTyyyffyyyyyTymyyym M. C. DOZIER Contractor & Builder gee Us Before Building your House Free Estimates Furnished. Dial 4_6278 — 733 Rose St. 1 Jackson. Miss, kAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAJ Throng Here (Continued from nage 1) retary or the General Board of Lay Activities of the Methodist Church, addressed the group on the mat ter of "Improving the Church Pro gram of Lay Leadership.” At the night general assembly, “Planning the Church Program of Home Religion” was discussed by the Rev. R. F. Harrington, pastor of Asbury, Savannah, and "Plan ning the Program of Church Wor ship Music” by Mrs. M. R. Tram mel, organist of the Haven Church, Anniston. Thursday night, seven presidents of Negro colleges are slated to participate in the exercises with the College Night theme: "The College and Christian Social Rela tions,” President J. B. Ftanclolph of Claflin College, will preside. Speakers will include ITesidents D. D. Jones, of Bennett College; W. A. Fountain, Jr., of Morris Brown College; E. C. Peters, of Paine; B. E. Mays, of Morehouse; E. G. Clement, of Atlanta University, ana Mary McLeod Bethune, of Bethune Cookman. Slated to speak during Thursday are Dr. J. W. Thomas, pastor of Warren Church, Atlanta; C. W. Caldwell, lay leader of the South Carolina Conference, Orankebv)g, S. C., and Dr. J. W. E. Bowen, of New Orleans, La. There will also be announcements of the area oratori cal contest plans for pensions and the Area Veterans Coupon Plan foi Conference Claimants. The meeting will come to a close Friday night with a Young Peoples' Symposium. Prof. J. P Burgess director of Youth Activities of the South Carolina Conference, will preside. Speakers will include Mis? Dorothy Barnet-t, of the Atlanta Conference; Miss Eleanor Roger? of the South Florida Conference; Miss Dorothy Points, of the Cen tral Alabama Conference; Miss Flizabet/h M. Tillman, of the Sa vannah Conference; Miss Corine Harper, of the Florida Conference, and Miss Maggie Jenkins, of the South Carolina Conference. Addresses during Friday will in i dude those by Dr. J. W. Golden, | secretary of the Jurisdictional Commission on Evangelism, of i Memphis, Tennessee, and the Rev | D. S. Selmore, D. S„ of the Gull i District, Florida Conference. Area Council business will include or ganization of the Methodist Youth Fellowship and dedication of ‘King scott’ Area Episcopal Residence Bishop Matthew W. Clair, of Th* | Methodist Church, is scheduled tc dedicate the residence. Stevens Barbecue (Continued from Page 1) i and being places which make ™in | cus and spirituals liquors are un lawful y found, kept or possessed. The suits filed bv the County Attorney, in the same of the St2te seeks to’suppress and abate these I places as a nuisiance and to enjoin I them from further violation of the j law, and to have them put up the $1000 Bond to be iorfieted on being found to be further violatirg the !; law. The Stevens Barbecue Inn, the most famous and beautiful p»ace of its kind in the Stats, owned and operated by and for Colored peo ple, was the only colored place on the Sheriff’s list the others being the best known Night Spots for white people. SACRAMENTO. Cal_(A N P) Ifc will be the first time during 87 vears that the state fair will have a designated “Negro Day.” The fair opens its festivities August 29 continuing for ten days. The Negro day is being planned by a group of colored citizens of Sacramento for i September 7th. $ Do You Want POWER $ Power to make you victorious in all you undertake to do? Power to make people admire you? Power to earn money? Pdsver to gain popu larity? Power to rmake any one fob low you? I will aertd you informa tion which is the result of noiei'tlfic research by one holf21®g • degree of S. 8. With this information and di rections in your posaei»»on you must become more masterful *ud exert greater influence. Tou will be able to break prevailing misconceptions I GUARANTEE TO HELP TOU IF tot; are not delighted tour MONEy IMMEDIATELY REFUND ED Just send me your name and address Pay postman on delivery only $1.98 wnen he delivers goods and written guarantee. W.lte n-'w. HARRIS. 16 COLUMBIA STREET, New York City, N. Y-. OePt. B-9. WANTED Pecans Highest Market Prices Paid Any Size—Any Quantity 109 East Hamilton St. Near N. Farish Dial 4-7237— Jackson, Miss. B-Z Watch Repair Shop Will Clean, Oil and Adjust Your Watch A* Low As $1.95 DIAL 3-3673 123 N. Farish St., Jackson. Miss. _ ^_______ MODERN CLEANERS The Tops in Dry Cleaning DIAL 4 9328 1114 Lynch St. Jackson, Miss. Mrs. Gladys Topp. Mgr. We Appreciate Your Trade Buy Your OIL AND GAS r f C* h Johnson’s Filling Station Road Service—Dial 4-9158 Farish at Oakley St. fackson, Mi’e. r Luckett Seed and Feed Store Comer Pearl and President Sts. Seed With A Growing Reputation DIAL 2-3466 Friendly Finance Co. Inc. 100 E. Pearl St. Brokers - Auto Financing - Personal And Furniture Loans MILL «c OAKLEY CAFE Fresh Pit Bar-B-Q Daily Kant Kane - Kail Dial 4-9301 Edw. Lee, Prop. 500 N. Mill Street Jackson, Miss. Washing... Lubricating Griffith Street Service Station JACKSON, MISS. FREE ROAD SERVICE Mill and Griffith Streets Jack Gregory New Dial Number 4-7036 *