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It's Permanent Headquarters
: September 20, 1930: The Columbia Clinic Association: This Institution Offers Medical Inspection and Free Vaccination to All Negro Children of this City
: September 20, 1930: Dr. Matilda Evans Interviewed
: October 18, 1930: The Columbia Clinic Preparing to Meet All Demands
: November 8, 1930: The Columbia Clinic Enlarges Its Scope of Its Endeavor
: November 15, 1930: The Columbia Clinic Association (editorial) 
: October 31, 1931: Evans Clinic News and Announcement Extraordinary
:February 27, 1932: Evans Clinic Notes
: May 7, 1932: Evans Clinic To Be Renovated
: November 23, 1935: Dr. Matilda Evans Passes: Noted Succumbs After More Than 37 Years Of Notable Service
_ 7. The State, Columbia, S.C.: Clinic Doing Good Work Among Negroes of City: Institutions on Harden Street Comes Into Being When Need Made Evident by Great Outpouring of Children-Doctor Evans Moving Spirit in Venture October 29, 1931
8. The Charlotte Observer, Charlotte, N.C.: Maintains Home For Recreation: Operates Evans Clinic in Columbia, S.C., Recognized As Leader of Her Group. November 20, 1932
9. The State of South Carolina, Executive Department Certificate of Incorporation by the Secretary of State, Evans Clinic Association of Columbia. S.C., July 27, 1931
10. Trapp, Willie M.: Dr Matilda Arabelle Evans. (Unpublished document), April 25, 1975
11. Bodie, Idella: South Carolina Women. Sandlapper Publishing, Inc. Orangeburg, South Carolina, 1991, pp.56-58
12. Johnson, Thomas L. and Dunn, Philip C.: A True Likeness: The Black South of Richard Samuel Roberts. 1920-1936. Bruccoli Clark, Columbia, S.C. and Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, N.C., 1986, 
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