McLEOD DOING NOTHING ABOUT AIKEN LYNCHING(Continued from page 1)and courteous citizens in the town of Aiken. We think they have been grossly misrepresented, but up to this writing they have made no sign ofof Aiken declared themselves in no uncertain terms, it is ten dollars to a peanut Brown’s letter would not have been written. A lawyer pledged to the support of the law would not have dared to ignore the law or consent to its being held in contempt protest. Had the people of the townhome.Further developments in the Aiken lynching situation, include receipt by any passion-ruled mob had he sensed an honest public opinion near of a letter by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, from a white citizen of SouthCarolina, declaring that in the two years preceding the lynching a number of Negroes had been whipped in that locality and there were even ru-, mors that Negroes had been killed and buried. The letter also says the local Negroes ridiculed the Klan parade on Thanksgiving night.