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$50,000 SUIT AGAINST COTTON STATES LEAGUE Patronize Our Advertis* ■ A V ers — Their Advertising I I I ■ j^rri Jackson Advocate YOLUMK XII—NUMBER 38_JACKSON, MISSISSIPPI, SATURDAY, JULY 18, 1953 “ -- PRICE TEN CENT9 NAME NEGKO MUNICIPAL JUDGE DAYTON, O. INSTITUTE OF RACE RELATIONS CONDEMNS CHURCH-SOERS IN VAN OF AMERICAN RACE HATE Charles S. Johnson Cites Conflict Between Opposing Cultures African Missionary Tells Of Chaos In Homeland NASHVILLE, Tenn., July 13.— Church-goers, immaturity and ra cial hate are among the chief boosters of prejudice and are hurt ing the cause of democracy speak ers declared here last week at the 10th Annual Race Relations Insti tute at Fisk University. Some 30 consultants and 100 community leaders from 20 states are attending the famed Race Re lations Institute which opened June 2 and is now in progress. In America, people who go to church regularly are more biased than non-church-goers, Dr. Gordon W. Allport, noted phvchologist and professor at Harvard Univers ity, declared. He explained, how ever, that a person with true faith in God experiences “a sharp re duction in whatever race and cul tural prejudices” he had before. Dr. t'harles S. Johnson, president of Fisk and a noted sociologist, told the Institute that although Americans have accepted the con (Continued on Page Two) Central African Federation Stirs Racial Troubles JOHANNESBURG, S. A., July 13 — Britain’s attempt to create a Central Africa federation by joining Southern and Northern Rhodesia with Nyasaland is already meeting with racial trouble. It is believable by experts, this crisis may duplicate the racial struggles ot the Union of South Africa and Kenya. Whites in Southern Rhodesia, which is the dominant partner of the federation, have formed a new political party to “ins'ure” the status of whites in Central A fried* and press for “territorial” segre gation of whites and Negroes. Meanwhile an inflamable prob lem is developing in Nyasaland, and to some extent in Northern (Continued on Page Four) DOCTOR OF MUSIC: The above picture is that of Mrs. Aurelia N. Young, of Jackson, who was a warded the honorary degree of Doctor of Music at the recent com mencement of Campbell College here. She is a gradutae of Wil berforce University and instructor in music theory at Jackson Col lege. She is the wife of Attorney Jack H. Young. Charge Florida Police Chief With Murder ALACHUA, Fla., July 13 — The local chief of police here last week was arrested and charged with murdering a Negro. He is Robert P. Owens, held for the murder of Frank Johnson, 43. whose beaten body was found near a night club. It was first believed that John son had been shot, but an autopsy showed that blunt and sharp in struments inflicted the deadly (Continued on Page Two) Memphis Negroes Seek Aid Of Mayor In Halting Bombings In City’s Residential Districts Blast Victims Determined To Stand Ground MEMPHIS, July 13 — In the wake of a bombing of a Negro’s home here recently, a delegation of colored people last week with Frank T. Tobey, mayor of the city, in an attempt to iron out dif ficulties arising when whites op pose integrated neighborhoods. The meeting took place as local police conxinued to investigate the bombing of the home of Wren Williams and his family of five, located in a formerly all-white sec News Guild Passes Resolution To Drop Race Tags BOSTON, July 13.—Racial and religious tags about persons in news stories should be dropped. A resolution to this effect was passed here last week by the American Newspaper Guild-CIO at its 20th annual convention. Some 250 delegates representing 27,000 newsmen and women throughout the nation passed the resolution for a cause which Ne (Continued on Page Four) tion. A homemade bomb shattered windows and lossened shingle boards in the home. No one was in jured, however. The house is ore of seven recently sold to colored families. Prior to the bombing, a delega iton of white residents visited the (Continued on Page Four) -o-— Negro Outstanding Washington Pupil WASHINGTON, July 13 — Ed ward David Crockett Jr. last week had the distinct honor of being selected the most outstanding jun ior pupil in Washington’s public and private high schools. Crockett, a 15-year-old Dunhar high school pupil, was selected by the Washington Post of the Vet erans of Foreign Wars. The VFW certificate of merit and an engraved gold wrist watch was given to Crockett at the an nual encampment of the district department of the VFW in the commerce department auditorium. Crockett is the son of Dr. and Mrs. Edward David Crockett. ♦-— State Baptist 5onv. To Hold 35th Session In Cleveland Convention Sets $79,000 Goal HR. J. H. JACKSON OF CHICAGO GUF.ST SPEAKER Greenville, Miss., July 14th — Special)—The General Missionary Japtist State Convention of Mis issippi will open its 65th annual session with the Baptist Churches )i Cleveland, Miss., July 21-24 1953, President H. H. Hume stated here this week. The Baptist Convention has foi ls fixed eroal $79,000.00 to be used or the expansion, maintenance and teachers’ salaries at Natche?. Tunior Colleg-e. All Baptists are isked to represent through person continued on Patre Two) AMEZ Bishops To Meet In Cleveland, Ohio CLEVELAND, O., July 13 — j Some 12 AME Zion Church bishops and hundreds of church leaders will attend the Connectional Council and Bishops Meeting, at St. Paul’s AME Zion church here, July 28 to Aug. 2. Besides the bishops, general of ficers, college presidents, denomi national editors, presiding elders, pastors, missionary leaders and laymen will participate in the meeting. Bishop Stephen Gill Spottswood, chairman of the board of bishops, and Bishop James Clair Taylor, secretary of the hoard of bishops, will preside over sessions of the confab. During the five-day meeting, re (Continued on Page Eight) Prophet Jones’ Rally In Cleveland Flops DETROIT, July 13 — Prophet James F. Jones, Dominion Ruler of thQ Church of the Universal Tri umph, the Dominion of God rented the Cleveland Arena, Cleveland. Ohio, June 14 for a mammoth rally. The admission charges was $1.50 per person. Th..1 doors of the huge arena were opened at 5 p. m. At 8:30 p. m. (Continued on Page Eight) -o Magnolia State Marching Club Meets Here The Magnolia State Marching Club, an affiliate of the Missis sippi State Association of Elks held it’s most important meeting of the year here Sunday at the new Elks Rest, located in the Williams building on North Farish Street, with a large attendance of Bills and Daughters representing lodges and temples from all over the state. The purpose of the meeting was (Continued on Page Four) ---o-— West Point Citizens Extend Warm Welcome To Al Allen j WEST POINT, Miss., July 11— The citizens of West Point extend j ed a warm welcome to Al Allen, ! Chairman of the Boxing Commit | tee of the 18th District of the Am erican Legion and State Represen | tative of the Jackson Advocate, l (Continued on Page Four) I Siac Arbiter fatally Shot In Birmingham H. L. “Hog” Mosely Victim In Clandestine Affair BIRMINGHAM, Ala., July 13 —H. Lovell (Hog) Mosely, 42 yea’ old railway mail clerk and wideh known FI AC official, was fatalh shot her around 7:50 Tuesday night in the Tuxedo Junction area Mrs. Jessica McClain, 30, wa being held in city jail in connec tion writh the shooting. Police said that the tragedy re (Continued on Page Eight) Prof. Alexander To Serve As Boys Counselor For Conn. Tobacco Co. Most Teachers Of Brookhaven School Attending Leading Universities BROOKHAVEN, Miss., July 14 (Special)—Prof. A. A. Alexander of Brookhaven has been invited by the Wetstone Tobacco Co., of Springfield, Mass, and Hartford, Conn., to come there and spend several days as Counselor for boys, who go there during Summer mon ths for employment. Prof. Alex ander left the state July 10, and will return July 18. with all ex penses paid, and a lucrative stip ! end. Mr. Alexander is doing a lot of visitation this summer with offi cials of State Dept, of Education "o Summer schools, and work shops. These visits are carrying him in and out of the state of Misssispipi. He will visit some of the mid-Western, and Eastern (Continued on Page Eight) Rev. Obannion itrongly Denies Mishandling Of funds Of Local Property Owner Cites Long Record In Handling Property Of Many Local Clients The widely known local Preacher, <nd Real Estate Agent, Rev. Cleve and L. Obannion, in a statement to he Jackson Advocate, strongly de lies mishandling of funds arising >ut of his handling of property ales and accounts of Mr. Louie E. j Jrame larger Jackson real estate I ealer and property owner. In mak ng his statement to the Jackson Advocate Rev. Obannion cited a ong list of clients for whom he has acted as agent through the v’ear, &11 of whose accounts has >een handled in the legal and >roper manner.* Rev. Obannion made his state (Continued on Page Four) -o Union Organizers Who Killed Negro Gets 20 Years MIAMI, Fla., July 13.—Two De troit union organizers were found i guilty in Miami Wednesday of as sault with intent to murder a Ne gro man they had taken for a one way ride to the edge of the Ever glades. Sollie Isaac and Dave Kaminski alias Kaye, were sentenced to 20 i years each. It was the second conviction for j both union men, who were granted a new trial by the state supreme i court on a legal technicality. The Detroiters were charged with taking Holton J. Nebold to a desolate area west of Miami, fir ing five bullets into his head, bash, i (Continued on Page Three) COTTON STATES LEAGUE FACES S50.00C.00 DAMAGE SUIT FOR REFUSING RIGHT OF NEGROES TO PLAY BASEBALL SUIT FILED BY JIM TUGERSON HOT SPRINGS, Ark., July 13— Jim C. Tugerson, Negro pitcher accused members of the Cotton States baseball league of refusing to allow him to pitch for the Hot i Springs club “because he is a Negro” and demanded $50,000 in damages in a suit filed in U. S. District Court here. Tugerson was hired by the | Arkansas club of the 8 team loop | early this spring and optioned to Knoxville of the Class D Moun tain States League following pro tests from other members of the Mississippi - Arkansas - Louisiana class C circuit. Tugerson named as defendants: A1 Haraway of Helena, Ark., both as an individual and as presi dent of the league; the Cotton States League itself; the Hot Sprines, Pine Bluff, FlDorado. (Continued on Page Four) From $1.50 Per Day To $5,000.00 Per Year Is Success Story Of Mississippi Negro Farm Family It took 12 years of tenant-farm 1 ing and day laboring at $1.50 a day for Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Johnson of Port Gibson, Miss., to get start ed, but now they own a $9,000 diversified farm and gross nearly $5,000 a year. The story of their hard-won suc cess is contained in a report receiv ed by the U. S. Department of Agriculture recently from State Leader W. E. Ammons of the Mis sissippi Extension Service. The Johnsons, who were given a lift by the Farmers Home Admin istration, grow a variety of cash crops and most of their .own food on their 84-acre farm. Their cash crops include "10, acres of cotton, 10 of corn, 10 of soybeans, and 36 acres of pasture and hay crops I for their 28 head of beef cattle and 65 hogs. Besides, they sell fryers, turkeys, eggs, and milk. Also they have two acres of millet, two of sugarcane, and a one-acre home garden out of which they sell vegetables year round. “I thought we would never get started1’ says Mr. Johnson, who dropped out of Alcorn college’s high school department to take a job at a $1.50 a day keeping up the plows and hoes and other equip ment on a cotton plantation. He was still working by the day when he married in 1929, and it took several years more before he was able to save up enough to buy a mule and become a tenant on (Continued on Page Eight) Perry Howard i Tells Miss. Negro To Get The Vote Large Crowd Attends | Mound Bayou founders Day Celebration PAUL CRUMP GETS ANNUAL AWARD MOUND BAVOU. Miss.. JuW 12 —Perry W. Howard, lono1 time Negro Republican National Com mitteeman from Mississippi told the Mississippi Negro here Sunday to “Get the vote and you can have anvthing you want.” Howard was speaking to one of the largest crowds to attend the (Continued on Page Eight) -o Greensboro Man Is Ordained First Negro Priest In State GREENSBORO, N. C.. Julv 13. —The first North Carolina Negro to become a priest in the Roman Catholic Church was ordained last week. The new prelate is Rev. Vance Z. Thorne whose 13 years of post high school work in preparation for his priesthood was completed last week. He was ordained at St. Augustine’s Seminary at Bay St. Louis, Miss. Father Thorne is the son of Mrs. Mary Thorne of 915 Logan St., and (Continued on Page Seven) Clarendon County SavsSchools Equal SUMMERTON, S. C.. July 13.— The school district of Clarendon county where one of the school suits scheduled for further argu ments before the U. S. Supreme Court had its origin, now boasts of having equal facilities fo Ne gro and white pupils. Some $700,000 has been spent tn Complete the Scott’s Branch and South Bend grammar schools ^nd the Spring high school for Ne groes, H. B. Betchman, district superintendent, said. Parents of Negro pupils in the Summerton school district filed suit more than two years ago, de claring that facilities for their children were unequal to those pro vided for white punils i- *■’- - -lis (Continued on Page Eight) ————o State Cleaners Association In Greenville Meet Greenville, Miss., July 14— (Special)—The Cleaners, Tailors and Laundry Association of Mis sissippi, convened here Sunday and Monday in its annual meeting at tended by a large delegation from every section of the state. The meeting Sunday was largely devoted to the registration of mem bers and delegates followed by a program at the First Baptist (Continued on Page Seven) -o Lone Negro Delegate Attends American Legion Convention CORDOVA, Alaska, July 13.— The annual convention of the Alaska Department of the Amer ican Legion was held here last week. The convention was unique in that only one Negro delegate was in attendance. Drency Dudley i (Continued on Page Seven) OHIO GOVERNOR FRANK J. LAIICHE DEMOCRAT NAMES ATTY. RUSSELL L. CARTER AS DAYTON’S FIRST NEGRO MUNICIPAL COURT JUDGE High Qualifications And Character Of 34 Year Old Lawyer Cited By Governor in Making Appointment Appointee Is Son-In-Law Of Mrs. W. A. Scott, Sr., Former Long Time Jackson Resident EVANGELIST: Rev. J. C. Lowe, noted evangelist of the CME j Church, who will conduct a two- ! weeks revival beginning Sundav. | July 19, at Lynch Street (’ME j Church here. Mrs. George To Be Named To UN Post CHICAGO, July 13 — The As sociated Negro Press learned this week that Mrs. Zelma Watson George of Cleveland, Ohio, may win appointment to a United Na tions post. A Washington, D. C., source reported that a UN repre sentative contacted Mrs. George at her Cleveland home. When reached by this reporter she confirmed the telephone call, but refused to give details of the conversation. Mrs. George, an ex-Chicagoan, holds a Ph. B. from the University of Chicago; M. A., New York Uni versity; is a graduate of the Am j (Continued on Page Five) DAYTON, Ohio, July 13. — “I will do my best to render even justice to all, stated Attorney Rus sell L. Carter after learning Mon day that he had been appointed as the first Ne^ro Municipal Court judge in the history of this south ern Ohio city. The 34-year-old at torney was appointed late Tuesday by Ohio's Democrat Governor Frank J. I.ausche to fill the unev pired term of former Municipal Court Judge Robert C. McBride, who was recently named to the Common Pleas Court of Montgom ery County. Attorney Carter will hold his position until tbp Novembpr ejec tions when public vote will select the judge to serve the remainder (until Jan. 2. 1956) of Judge Mc (Continued on Page Five) Marylander Given Haiti Plum WASHINGTON, July 13.—The hopes of a number of prominent political figures who had been looking forward to a Caribbean diplomatic post as a suitable re ward for their campaign labors, received a diseouraeing shock Thursday when Roy Tasco Davis, a former member of the diplomatic corps, was nominated to be ambas sador to Haiti. Davis, 63, a former Maryland state senator, has served at var ious times as ambassador to Gau temala, Costa Rica, and Panama back in the 1920-30 era. At one time Mrs. Robert L. Vann, president of the Pittsburgh Courier, was reported as having the inside track on the Haitian post. Archibald J. Carev of Chi cago was also mentioned for the job. None of the politicians seemed (Continued on Page Eight) EISENHOWER AND TRUMAN INVITED TO NAACP FALL MEET NEW YORK — (GLOBAL) — There is a probability that Presi dent Eisenhower and former Presi dent Truman might meet on the same platform this fall in a cause of brotherhood and interracial progress, according to plans now being formulated by officials of the NAACP. This became known this week when it was revealed that the organization will soon issue a call for a mammoth non-partisan fund raising rally to take the form of a dinner, and that Mr. Eisenhower and Mr. Truman will be invited to address the gathering. Last week, Walter White, execu tive director, and Dr. Channinjr Tobiias, chairman of the Board of Directors of the NAACP, called on ex-President Truman in his Wal dorf Towers suite here and ex tended him an invitation to speak at the dinner. Just before he left aboard the Liner Liberte for Eu rope where he will attend the World alliance of the YMCA, Dr. Tobias said a formal invitation will be extended to the President. A spokesman for the NAACP denied a report that Mr. Truman (Continued on Paere Five) PROGRESS UNDER SEGREGATION THESIS HIT BY NEGRO LEADERS S. J. Phillips Assailed Fer Va. Speech ATLANTA, Ga., July 13.—.When Sidney J. Phillips, founder-presi dent of the Booker T. Washington Birthplace Memorial, Franklin County, Va., told a mixed audience last Sunday that he felt segrega tion was almost entirely respons ible for the progress of the Amer ican Negro, he opened the way For angry retorts that labeled him many things ,from an “exploiter” r>f Washington to a “traitor to human decency.” Word has been slow getting a round the nation this week that Phillips, in dedicating a Booker T. Washington Memorial Highway lear the birthplace of the famed educator, declared his opinion was ‘common to those of many Negroes who are not considered among the so-called “masses.” Personal Opinion But there are strong indications, both from Negro leaders in Vir ginia and Atlanta that Phillips was voicing a personal opinion which is deplored bv Negroes, who in the opinion of a NAACP spokes man “are in a death struggle throughout the nation and the world to erase the blight of seg regation.” Phillips had lauded Washington for his advances, but declared that “those policies, traditions, and laws which preclude good will, un derstanding and sympathetic co operation between the races will (Continued on Page Two)