The Savannah tribune. (Savannah [Ga.]) 1876-1960, October 18, 1945, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4

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SAVANNAH TRIBUNE Established 1875 By J. H. DEVEAUX BQL. C. JOHNSON........ Editor and Publisher t. H. BUTLER ....................Asso. Editor less WILLA M. AVERS, Asst, to Pub. 61 Manager Published Every Thursday 1009 WEST BROAD STREET Telephone, Dial 5838 •*> Subscription Rate in Advance J*® One Year-------------------- $2.50 - Sue Month s__________________ 31-50 ^Remittance must be made by Express, Post Office Money Order or Registered Mail. 3fctered at the Post Office at Savannah, Ua. wffeeonti class Matter. THEY ALSO SERVE The Savannah Chatham Health Depart- roufet is sponsoring a survey on Syphilis an#* 5 Tuberculosis, The only way to ac¬ cusal ely find SyphiMte, they tell us, is by thjjjblood ir.#*Tubere test.. 1< is is The is by only the means X-Ray. of The u health department is making available evrtv citizen in our community an tuaty t'< ■ absolutely izen of35")urge. They tell should us that if these every tests, cit- in Savannah take the city could be made the healthiest place in the whole United States. Icatis. Syphilis last vear killed 100,000 Amer- Tuberculosis killed 60,000. phillitic heart disease totalling 160,000 are found each year. Afore than 21,000,000 man days are lost each year because of ■Syphilis. Syphilis strikes one out of four people, crippling, deforming, killing, It strikes without symptoms many times, There is no pain, no sign of disease. It is>in the blood, and only a blood test can let one know that one lias it. Tuberculosis is another outstanding cause of death. Eighty-five cases out of a hundred are found too late to be helped because they waited too long for an X-Ray. Most of these cases die. But of those who get 1 X-Rays early, as a regular part of an annual physical check-up, seventy-five out of every hundred are diagnosed when the disease is ju^t beginning. Most of these cases are cured and restored to a useful life. We appreciate the interest of our health department in the health of all people, That is their job, serving the community, and they are doing it well. ■Sfam. • We too have a service to render. We to do our job well, in life, whatever £hat self. job T.j may dp be. job No well, man lives fill for place him- our to our J^ell ibust in our-society we must science keep well. giv-i We • In use all of the w eapons has jfcst/ us, including the X-Ray and the blood £ We compliment our health officer on fihese healUi sendees offered us, but let us also remember *»They Also Serve” Accept these services. Get a blood test ■nd X-Ray today. ” OVER-DONE MILITANCY * jkognize 4 ' Many thoughtful people North and South that tensions are so delicate that (Sven the most normal controversies must be carried on with the utmost caution. This time for 1 alienating our friends, or even causing them embarrassment by ill- cqjfgidored words or deeds. We concede m discrimination is a disgustingly un- Hi—, icratic i thing, but wo also recognize tt4H it is so deeply intrenched in American lfWHthat it will take time, education, and mmm Ca the pr(xess ot leprlslatl 10 . tyw cate .?t T °n , • un * 01 Linate latest instance ol it has ^iked much $ comment, u un tulled some ior. ot it unwise - '' uuu : ,,■ <fi girt Constitution ^ intemperate. Hall to I he Miss denial Hazel of the Scott, use a itionally -acclaimed artist, was an act of Sscrimination, and was undemocratic, and ■jje £ee! that both the President and Mrs. wruitian, in the circumstances, responded i Aidd W a satisfactory hardly have manner. said The to show President his j Attitude in the matter. more Mrs. Truman’s | I 41 ■Wj°n Mis. Roosevelt is . somewhat in different’ B'-.p, but from Mrs. that Fru- ; s : if;in*deplomi regTetLtbl'e the ruling of the I). A. R. It ■ that Congressman Powell ould have said of Mrs. , tje Truman, “she is Last Lady from now on. • Such incidents always furnished the *ut|i vith an opportunity to play in char- ,, o segregation iUKl^iHiimii on i hscu>sed. Persons who Jppposed to segregation and discrimina-!j ia ‘ a ‘ d agitators. 1 lie South d#esn t want these things talked about, but iCwill net do anything about them. Its| position seems to i.e; just it ! things alone; - i( segregation and discrimination have ex- * or a long time, so do not bother ^fem ' ens Uu racial situation to a dg so. We could agree heartily with the concluding paragraph of the Morning News e®torial comment on the Constitution Hall incident, if it had included Southern whites among those who “need to do some clear HJJnking about the racial problem. One wwv to avoid overdoing militancy is to set up inter-racial committees. MACON DECISION .Judge Davis’ decision in the case (if v«jously I’Jjmus King interpreted of Columbus, b.v lawyers Georgia and is being lay- ! mjpi, most of whom seem to feel that gen- ihH e**lly the decision does not break down barriers which prevent Negroes from wSite vdjtiug. The will interesting thing lengths is that do-1 men go to such to prf"? Negro dHz' tr of rights that the ( s#u(ion of the United States sal’s they j should have. ol “Even wllea uurts say Negroes t should have the right to vote, white struggle to find ways of nullifying court’s decision. It is therefore ing to find a man who is willing to candid and fair. Mr. Kravitch the commendation of fairminded for his letter to the Forum, entitled Negro and The Primary. The last graph of his letter is especially cant to us. We quote: “Since it must be clear to many of us that the day of the exclusion of the Negro fdom political participation in the government where he lives is on the way out, it strikes me that a far lietter solution of the problem would be to try to work it out in the light of tolerance and mutual understanding, instead of blind adherence to the forces of bigotry, intolerance and class hatred. It must be clear to all think¬ ing men that a nation cannot be half free and half slave, and this applies to the field of political science as well as to other fields of human endeavors, and this has no reference to social equality, the bugaboo of all discus¬ sions." Representative Clare Boothe Luce a sentiment which more and more Amertoans are expressing. The National Education Association expressed the thought a few days ago. Mr. Kravitch is in agreement with them. Representative Luce is proud of her in the Daughters of the Revolution the purpose of which is to vere the memory of the heroes of war of independence, and she says, “But 1 1 have not forgotten why our cestors fought. They fought to be from the humiliation and oppression political inequality. . And when they won their liberty, they found in name a nation dedicated to the principle that all men are equal in the of our government as they are in the of God. This was the spirit of the men of the Revolution and of the men wrote our constitution. This spirit be eternally at war with racial and discrimination." - Out* leaders must not slacken in effort to get ten thousand Negroes to ister. The confusion of our white as to the limitation of the recent Macon decision might possibly act as a deterrent upon some of our people, 'there are signs that Negroes will eventually exercise right of voting without restriction. fore it is their first duty as citizens to prepared to do so. >. • —--* L There are signs that our old friend is coming tp life again. The officers of law and right thinking citizens must j n crease their Vigilance to the end that “bo- iedo” does not again get a strangle hold 011 hapless and improvident in our com- munity. A WISE MINORITY We are almost at the point of agreeing the minority members of the five man instructors’ committee who sent a to Atlanta to request an investi- ol' conditions at the Georgia The fact that the suggestion minority members was not accepted is the reason why they backed out committee. They were willing to op¬ on the basis of the law of the jungle: or be eaten. They were not in agree- with'the mild measures, the employ- of which probably accounts, in part least, for the fact that not one of the m , e members of the committee are now lhp C()]lege f acu i ty . O ur information is j 1at minority members wanted to use n f orm ation more serious and inescapable lan requisitioning girls, or writing allur- letters to thorn, the type of' things even the failure to use $5,100 qJ- money cannot offset. YOUR WORK j» v h Taylor How do you work? Do you finish what start to do? Do you have to do things er? Do you work because you have or to fill up time? It was Carlyle who wrote “Genius is the I capacity for taking pains. And is that ability, that willingness of spirit is even more important than man- a ] dexteritv or mental skills. AU wor k j s as seeds sown: it grows and like the ripples from a stone thrown a pool. We do not know against a t bank it may spend itself, or whom | w hat it may affect. Slipshod work hurts first the doer. First having to redo—for redoing work is stay- in a rut, is not progressing or learning. in the weakening of ability to do job right. Carelessness is a habit-form- drug, insidious in its sapping of morale, deadly in its effects. The work that each of us do, the work is before us, is our job, to Ik? done bv We must prove that we do it better anyone else. But there is another thing to be remem- Dr. Stelzle brought it out in an once years ago: “The day’s work for a socialized effort, which has possible only because others in the have contributed their share to our To these we owe a debt of grali- There is only one way in which we pay this debt we owe them—we have privilege of building upon the founda- laid by our forefathers, so that other may he blessed because of our j liboro. D* “This may seem idealistic, but the progress demands this of us, unless we coutciit to bccuiuu.parasites, living from I TEE SAVANNAH TEDSCVE RATION STAMPS GOOD JULY AUG. SEPT. OCT. NOV DEC. JAN. RED STAMPS RETAILERS RAY 4 POINTS A POUND FOR USEO HOU$EHOLO FAT* ALB 111{ill CID E THRU OCT.31 1 I THRU NOV. 30 £ LIMN P!Q 1 I 1 1 111 THRU DEC3I s BM THRU JAN. 3! •u § N«xt stomp* b*com« good Nov. I ! I I I SUGAR STAMPS ! THRU DEC. 3I •2 SHOE STAMPS book no 3 1 | 2|3 (4 GOOD indefinitely it opa CLIP THIS CHART FOR FUTURE REFERENCE the labors of others. In a sense, every man is a parasite, who is willing to receive the benefits which have accrued as the re¬ I sult of others’ labors, without contributing his share to the common good." 1 his is as true today as it was when it 1 was written. The way to get ahead—both materially and spiritually—no matter what | task confronts you, is to do the day’s work as though it were the only job in the world J —the one thing by which you would be judged. “With good will doing service, as j i to the Lord, and not unto men" so wrote Paul. . --- A Ln()< r lilt; pi%£ i III Ld I til id 1 1 LV/wnl 1 Oil l 1 l By George Edmund Haynes An \i„g.;., Interracial i Experiment t.-„—:—. Station (Observations of the writer returned from a recent Pacific Coast Trip) Northern California is a vast interracial experiment station. The San Francisco Bay area is the largest unit hut Fresno to the south of that city and Sacramento j 10 * the north C hiiw*e ^of it Cau 0 y r < ' asKM \ a ,1(J t! w.- se <4 otjiev, . exl ?Wl 10ns - , . ■ ; , j athgrs is ^^nsejous, WM waractejj.pl its, population. Dvr- aml fdnee World War II, hqvvr ever, the mjpibers of Negroes < -. i ‘“ oas l ttns ™ ni the houth ? es|)e ‘ “ a \ 10,11 n ' a "" na •' ans ? s x)U,Ma|U «" ; 1 - i(lipqssjble ly increased. to’get It is,‘cliffieu^t exact' population if not figures, hut visits 'inti)’ to' tfie ppincmal neighborhoods whigh the ju¬ niority racial groups" h'Ave been $e- jgregated and the attention their presence is receiving from elder 1residents of leave racial no relations doubt that new de- are veloping. j In Fresno which include the minority return- racial groups, some ed Japanese - Americans live “across the railroad tracks, and come to the other side of the city s to work and trade. The Council of Churches has an interracial commission under th e zealous leadership of Rev. H. A. Chak- makjian, Pastor of the Pilgrim Armenian Congregational Church ' antl himself a member of one of tt,e minorities that experiences | handicaps of prejudice. This Com- .'mission is drawing attention of the groups of the community t» the vital necessity of facing the prob¬ of housing, employment and matters involved in their relations' to their neighbors. Their most difficult interracial problem seems to be in the attitude of white workers toward Negro and Japanese-American workers. In verified cases employers are will¬ ing to hire, hut objections from white fellow workers make the em- ✓' THANKSGIVING FOR ALL— GEOftGIA, CHATHAM To tlin SnjM>rior Court of County aud To HON. DAVID S. ATKINSON, Judge thereof: The I'MlHon of tbr Grand of I hr Order of tfa.- Eaat-n. Star tin- Stale of Georgia and reepentfully showa: 1. That your pm.tionrr was I'urporatMl uudor Haiti name as body corporate on August ltitli, »>y -• I tils 'fhat. Court uaiu_ for charter period wai of twin- a ty years from said date oil Septem- tier mil 19B4. 3. That Haiti renewal expired August ha h 1944. I hai on June 117th 1944 at a regular meeting of the members said corporal ion a resolution was adopted authorizing the hereinafter committee to take the necessary tor the renewal of petitioner s char- the change er to “ rim l’riuce Hall Grand ter of the Order of the Eastern S'ar for the .State of Georgia and Juris- t T ,,y of * aid resolution eeriby the Se<*retary . of the pe- tit loner b^iny hereto attached aa t:* xhit tjzzz : ed of sol. c. Johnson, .Mar.v i.. tlTS Xlinnie DeVaughn of Chatham ty, John Wesley Dobbs of Fulton t otiin.v aud George w. smkb of < <IU that WilEREFOKE, petiUoncr prays charter of »iid corporation be umendetl as hereinabove set f ortb, and that the same be revived and renewed for a period of thirty five idol years from August l(i, 1944, with all of the powers, rights and pm- lieges as .the said corporation now cujuys. Sul C. Johnson Mary L. Ayers Mluuie DeVaughn J. W. Dobbbs Geo. \V. Siultb WILLIAM Committee S. JACKSON BE Attorney for Focitiouer IT KESOI-VED by The »i t’JIld Chapter of the Order of the Eastern Star for the Mime of Georgia aud Jurisdiction in regular s e s s i t, n iiKseiubled at Macon, Macon, Georgia Georgia on on the J7th day of June, 11144, J-H, that ihiit the cnarter of tnU t liia eorm.rutinn corporation u-hini. which win will expire on August 10, W14 be ed and that a petition for such tv- newal should be filed in the .Vu,.e- rior Court of Chatham County, Geor- g:iu by the committee. EE IT raiTHEii RESOLVE!' ihnt thf name of this corporation shall be changed from 5t8 present name lo Tin- l'rince Hull Grand chapter of the Order of the Eastern Star for the State of Georgia and Jurisdictiou. | RE IT F CRT HE It RESOLVED irwn Unit a committee composed of Sol C. John¬ son, Mary L. Ayers, Minnie De¬ Vaughn, of Chatham County, John Wesley Dobbs of Fulton County an i Kreby^utTorized a^SlrecteTfr' take tbe necessary steps to renew the charter and change the name ol the corporation as aforesaid. Grand''('bupt^ ^of^ t^° , ( l /rdcT *of The HnBtern Star for tbe State of Georgia und Jurisdiction do hereby certify that at a regular nieetug of this cor- ijoratiou .Tune -7th hold 1944 in the Macon, foregoing Georgia on {.eso'u- tion. wuh unsiuiiuousiy adopted. Given under my official signature and 1(1 at»e U seal <*•:( 1 ef flf tins the corporation i>, hSn/ts.t t ' this , I tith (lay of Sept euibtie r, 1945 . I’UOEBE C. SIMMONS (Corporate Seal) Secretary GEORGIA, CHATHAM ‘•EXHIBIT COI .NTY: A” j IN THE SUPERIOR COURT Oi? CHATHAM COUNTY, GA. IN RE: i The Grand Chapter of the Order of otrgttnS Jurisdiction. 1 * 11 ' ^ Application to revive, renew and amend charter. ' The foregoing petition of The Grand Chapter of the Order of the Eastern Star for the State of Georgia and Jnr- isificloh to revive, renew and amend its clgirter in the particulars there¬ in spt out. ha's been read and eon- sideri'd. It appearing that the said petition Juts been made in accordance with the Jaws of the State ot Gent- k r ia, and that the requirements ot law, in such eases provided have becii fU Jt y considered, ad-1 Whereby ordered, judged and decreed that all of the prayers of said petition are hereby granted, the said charter is hereby revived and renewed fur a period of i •thirty-five (35) years from August 1944, and that the charter of said aorpontlon is hereby amended Jialil to change its name to -‘The Prince Grand Chapter of ,the Order of he Eastern Star for the State of Ueor, gia and Jurisdiction.” In open Court this 18th day of Sep¬ tember, 1945. DAVID S. ATKINSON Judge of Superior Court of Chatham County, Ga. WILLIAAI B, SCOTT Clerk S. C„ C. C. Ga. Petition and Order thereon filed i office September I9th, 1945 William B. Scott, Clerk, S. C. C. C. Ga erly used by a Japanese congrega¬ tion. Its office is open for all types of friendly service seven days a week. Dr. and Mrs. Thur¬ man have taken a house and chris¬ tened it by a “house warming” with the writer as honor guest the second Sunday evening in Septem¬ ber. The adventure of this church into the broad-gauge fellowship of peoples of Negro, Chinese, Japa¬ nese, Filipino, Caucasian and any other extractions is making its impact upon the community, espe¬ cially upon church' leaders for whom this is a living challenge to their past policies and practices. In Sacramento the Race Rela¬ tions Commission of the Council of Churches under the courageous leadership of Rev. Wilder V. 1m- mell, pastor of the Freeport Boule¬ vard Christian Church, and the Sacramento Council for Civic Unity, led by Dr. Henry T. Taylor, Vice-President of the Sacramento College, are making solid first steps in organizing and orienting leaders of the city to the import¬ ance of dealing with their com¬ munity racial problems while they are not so acute. The visitor to Northern Cali¬ fornia is greatly impressed by the vast agricultural production in fruits, vegetables, livestock and other eatables. The wonderful part of San Francisco with its marvel¬ ous engineering of vast bridges and tunnels across the Bay area is also striking. The West Coast people arc doing big things in a big way. Oas io even more mipre..cJ by the vast changes in population which the war and its demands ployer hesitate. In other cases i like stores and offices they fear the white public. In the San Francisco Bay area there are interracial commissions of both the San Francisco Council of Churches, with Dr. Hubert II. I.andram as Executive Secretary; the Oakland Council of Churches, with Rev. Eugene A. Hessel as Secretary; and the Northern Cali- .fOinia-Western Nevada Council of Chui'ches under the leadership of I)r. Abbott Book, who leaves no .dpubt that he means business relations. There' is also the San Fratieisfco Civic Unity Council patterned after a similar council in Los Angeles that began a few months ago as a co¬ ordinating and clearance agency for,ail the forces dealing with the complicated problems of racial re¬ lations in, their complete port city. /I]he Chinese, of course, have had for a long time their larger, all *f1he pjit complete, city within the city. pattern, hacked hv the atti¬ tude of the Chinese themselves and that of the white community, is greatly influencing the trends of segregated residence and other patterns of community adjustment Probably the outstanding event besides the open door policy of the San Francisco Y. W. C. A., which an itinerant visitor notices in the Bay Area, is The Church for the Fellowship of All Peoples—an ad¬ venture in Christian worship and service across all racial and cul¬ tural lines—-led by co-pastors, Dr. Howard Thurman, noted Negro scholar and on leave as Dean of the Chapel of Howard University, Washington, D. C.; and Professor Alfred G. Fisk. Jr., Dean of the Department of Psychology and Philosophy of the San Francisco State College. From a small group of about 35 the membership has grown in a year to more than 130 regular members and probably as many more visitors who worship as part of the congregation on Sunday mornings. It is a regular organized church—not just a wor¬ ship service fellowship. They have recently- moved to a new location in a modest church building form- H MtMtHinUMW t M l ««M» »* * * * * Masonic - Eastern Star Notes ..... »»»* . Ma-onic hold , , , i n SCfiOal ,3 ! e,ach Sunday aiternoon at the I 1 ^ em PW- , l I - , Sunday c ___ 1 Only 1., .* about fourteen were present, Ine smallest ,, attendance , . some Sundays. ' ' ~ It was more | than made up in fervor and desire utMre to 10 moke maKe improvement imnrnvpntent Fast Master Brooks directed 1 a ftpntirm ; channels, 1 et proper HI that til;: L of drill: m the Proper slgt £ and oper.'ng the It WaS found that SOme oi the recently made brothers have been delving e in wor ^ , s Of . the ,, Order , by being I able intricate to expiain parts. man y ° f the • > • The practice of virtue should ' be enf0rCed and the dut’eS Of 1 morality fully inculcated, * a * 1 It is one of the weaknesses of l mankind that mduKlna we are -more charmed with novelty than in¬ trinsic value of things. After his attendance at the United Supreme Council 33° Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite of Freemasonry for the Southern Jurisdiction of the United Slates, Illustrious J. W. W. Dobos Will return to ‘’ iurivhirtinn UIW JUrisulCblOn and ar»H delve in the work of the Blue Lodge. Report blanks have been sent to the lod S e s for the ren- dering of grand lodge rpnorts . Wlth uu c feeS » b y the i first Of De- C ember. Blanks for offieprs election with proper names and addresses must be sent in by Jan. 10. The di ^t deputy Will Sent Out notice for the prepar- ‘ ‘ ^ ave brought to these communi- ties. Here are more different ins of race and culture than , most other American cities are called upon to . mould. , , What T , r , happening along the Coast has al- „ , caused , reactions . the Na- over tion and in other lands, and all of us; will be directly affected by happens here in the future. I he attention and resources in per- and organization needed to a y s °l>d foundation for future un- goodwill and peaceful among these groups far what now seems in pros- 1 ______ HLLtlLIVI rtiriM J r, , ,,,r,,, $5037.14 — — — - IlT the Jul y conference Of Bethlehem Baptist church, v« cDt) n mt li Hayes ____ was granted — * to stage a ninety ^ lad „ 0 ,i, y r ___. lais'e funds - , for , the ,, This effort ended most suc¬ Sunday night, Oct. 7, the twelve women serving captains in the rally report¬ ■' i 2,816.21which together with funds raised netted the $5,037.14. An itemized report of this drive is as fpkojvs: the captains, Bertha Jackson --------- $534.84 „ , Alyce Gordon---- l: 531.78 Prudence Green 524J.0 Mamie Bennett 368.47 Naomi Hayes______ 335.00 Janie Brown______186.10 Alma Baker _____100.82 Q. Brewington ----- 77.30 Susie Green ______ 50.00 Mary Mitchell __ . 50.00 Virginia Davis____ 42 **« Rever Calhoun ______ I9 0d Total -----------$2,816.21 school 100.00 Mary Johnson ... 83.60 friends _______ 50.00 the kitchen_____ 27.00 members and friends ----------- 1,960.33 Grand total ______ 5.037.14 Rev. S A. Baker is pastor of church, which is located at and Park avenue. 1 GIRL SCOUT WEEK Oct. 38 — Nov. 3 OCT. 18, ISIS ing for the election and in«. »i j .i .<» lation of officers in December. The Shriners of Savannah are keeping in mind the Jflp to Atlanta Nov. 21. Many of them will take their female relatives with them along with other friends. •X F*t—i**F _t..p .p .p .j. .pd- d*4- Files of The Savannah Tribune FIFTY YEARS AGO oroo h October 19, 1895 AH A n The Emancipation Associa¬ tion met Monday afternoon at the Tribune office. The offi¬ cers elected were Rev. AleXail- ' der Harris, president; Rev. D. H. Porter, vice-president; Dr E. K. Love, treasurer; Sob c. Johnson, secretary; Capt. L. M. Pleasant, marshal. Prof. 6. B. Morse, Rev. J. M. Sinyns,. members of the executive committee. The Afro-American Press As¬ sociation will meet in Atlanta November HI. Col. John , -H. Deveaux will represent The Tribune. T. Thomas Forf^uu, Stewart* president; ffm, H. secretary. Fifty dollars were subscribed for the organizing of Sunday s-hool on Wilmington island The Missionary and Educa¬ tional Convention will meet in C< Iambus Octobe? 24. H I nD I JjpfJDV BROWN UiX * PliTFrk O* LiU * FORT VALLEY—Fort ValL# College Center was the seen* nighf, (£ much gaiety Monday Oct. lege 8. community, when 25 led by Pro j cof{ e s - men of the lege center, led by Professors Bywaters and Beasley, staged a surprise birthday stag tor Father J. Henry Brown, direct¬ or of the college center. Dr, Brown is completing jfjvfe institution years of work and at the this unique abt stag was only a surprise birthday party but a testimonial of apprecia¬ tion for the outstanding work accomplished during that pe¬ riod. Addresses were made by DT. J. V. Troup, newly elected presi dent of the Fort Valley State college, and Prof. Alva Tabor, state supervisor of vocational agriculture. A sumptuous repast was s^y by Mesdames L. R. Bywatofi, \M R. H. Beasley, L. J. Moore, L. Brown and Miss Margaret Ur Hrovn was the recipient many j ;ts noc oalv from adrrim-s but f.-jm MacQQ, Griffin, Atlanta, Savannah,“Hus and New York. Among those present were C. Troup, l. R Bywaters, R. Beasley, Alva Tabor, H. Stal- E. H. Pierce, T. G. O'¬ M. E. Mosley. Josephus J. w. Freeman, H. E. W. L, Donley, R ch.nW Benj. Anderson, L. Rev. v. A. Edward, G. N. Woodward, t. and W M, Alfred Boyd. B. T. Jj r ,f- Ellis, T. R. Ro¬ George Nixon. Willie Du*- and H. A. Hunt, Jr. > AND TO VOTE Get every member of your ami ly Oj years and older to Get eveyy member von;- outA orgar>iv a jjoil to. mgis- al rt No balk taxos k- 1 ..