Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / April 23, 1955, edition 1 / Page 10
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PAGE TEN toirowAk & viiwMii t «* - imh^ v ...•*; M>'.." W . J • •,• *’j -■'•,<"•* '»•’■. •r »■ s; . • ►•. ~, *. f„.-. • Notable Victory One nf the best pic.-"?; of news to b.;t; l be headline* i;: these days when most ci' the hews seems to he either ba i or indifferent was the an nouncement that the Salk po lio vaccine has hi ■ n p,iv n the S-U-elrar signal aftei n ye.-ii of rigid testing and observe tjon. and will bo inode avail able throughout the nation for genera! use. Trits -tern to show more or les? conclusive ly-that not only is t!u ose of •the vaccine safe, but also >.i is predicted to be 80 to 90 per cent effective in protecting a gai nts. poiiotnyeliti« More than « million and three-quarter children took part in the tests of the Salk vaccine last. year, of which 330,000 were actually vacci- Strikers And Sabotage Why striking workmen would think that vabot up a gemst the property of the company with which they s:c having a dispute would im prove the chanci s of the un ion’s obtaining its obbctive is hard to un-itersteind. Naim:- ally such nsible Iv. havior, involving also unme essary expense tu«- v.T o’- er if nothing worv ••c.-t.imly does not dispose the ran-.- to any favorable cm '.d - bon of the unions' ■■■<■' ■.i; On the cord rary the r. reaction of the « ronlo'. ».-r very only f-om i»r-jw ■ t disgust or re.-.. - In the corn nt. (a? :h• : me) teif.phone strike mg s good deal of th- $•- nth Walter Lippman On Yalta Walter Ly prrwr uu languished political oi-uvu tornnvni-Ktor an- - u. had sonif w.se v.c r is * - it. concerning the "rs v* !.-r<t >lls'* brought or. ■ v. d G- red are r-f tb- Yalta pap<rs K . mly hr wiotc. “.. ,In the ru -- ght *-f ten years, the student ' 1: ■ ■-< papers w:il find tbit v.-hu? * f nongh to y wh**- ' wishes bad happen* d Y 11 efitly in Eastern F, ■:. ;>■ ,nd the Far Ear.* .t is ■■■■ clear and cm Jam eve n now how a differrrv. '-suit couH hsvf hn en f^rou^. 1 * e?fc)out ' When w( sit in judgment now. we mast tear ;r mi ’• the overridi tg c■> d ; - n which was el- risivf for Pi < dent Roosevelt and r A: lean advisers. Tins . . . v as the military situation at the bme of Yalta The Rf '1 Ar»*.v was across the Oder r ve-r and was wi’h>r. :{ > nt! •>» Berlin. Eisenhower was me. yet across the Rhir.t japan was in occupation of Man churls. Korea m whole ro ast of China all c . South east Asia and of Indonesia The combined, that is to say the British and American. Chiefs of Staff had reported to Roosevelt and Chur dub that they must plan for IK months of war against Jtmc “There were dissenters ;n the Navy and the Air Fom : who believed Japan could he. defeated by sea and a:r pow er. But the consensu of itary opinion was trtat Rus sian intervention was. nt - • *ary if the enormous casual ties of a landing in Japan were to be avoided. Th- par amount idea in the minds of most Americans was how to end the war quickly- cheap ly, and victoriously, and not how to win the best position for a good politic al settlement after the war was over ’ The heading of the article in the newspaper from wt ■ n the above extract from Mr. Lippman’s syndicated col umn is qutoed was “Stalm was on top of the totem pol io Yalta.” That is a very im- THE CAROLINIAN Published by tKe Carolinian Publishing Company, 518 E. Martin Street, Raleigh, N. C. Entered a# Second C1a.,3 Matter, April 6, 1940, at the Post Office at Raleigh, North Carolina, under the Act of March 1879. Subscription Botes: Si* Months $2.75 One Year $4-50 Payable in Advance—Address all communications and make all checks and money or ders payable to THE CAROLINIAN. Interstate United Newspapers, Inc, m Filth Avenue. N t. It, M.I. National Advertising Represen tative- YW< newspaper is not responsible for the return of unsolicited news, pictures, or advertising copy unless necessary postage accompanies the uopy. P. JR. jfERVAY, Publisher Alwemder Barnes . .Advertising & Promotion Chas. Jones News & Circulation E. R. Swain ... e....................................... Plant Superintendent J. C. Washington ............... Foreman, Mechanical Department Mrs. A- M. Hinton • • # .Office Manager Qpialmw expressed In hy-columns publisned in this newspaper are net necessarily these of the pafc- BtsiiM. itated and '2OO 00*1 got dum my shots. The rest got noth ing -it all. The idea was to v c how many of each group get fh*. disease. The results f-t- m to be. that immunity of tin vser'-nated was almost guaranteed. Tb- vaccine can be avail iiblv in quantity, and it is - i-cpectfcd that practically all the: children in the country ;• iv immunised within a r«’!•-, ilVfdy short time. Plans are already afoot for the im mediate use of all the vaccina available and more as fast as k becomes available, against th* usual summer upsurge of the disease. It is not easy to think of a glee;ter gift to the nation than tha made by Dr, Salk <• -tbh ■<-. have been cut in sev e;al localities The result has hr. ri to interrupt service, which naturally has irritated the subscribers, in addition to the effect it has had on the vCiCp i*O l \C COuipiiii'iy, In the strike involving two railways in the South there has also been sabotage, ore instant e resulting in the de railing of several coaches of « passenger train. Fortunate ly there were no serious in juries but there could have --■m fatalities. The tracks on - curve had dearly been tam p/r/, with. This kind of thing is not only criminal, as cut •v tdephciif cables is. but .: i wtJl be murderous. n-rbiri fart We know now ' ■ •' • rris position was not d as it seemed then, but :•. a good position to vs; :• had all the facts been •«vas r an excellent so In view of ■ - » r-il overestimation of power arid will to k< f p on The people wanted : < and quickest wa> who -Mii re all , rc- of those days. Tin -own reactions, can r» •' rstsnd Stalin’s o position at Yalta : :... this Mr Lippman ohst rves i A- r recall the mood of O. ngnss and of puolic op-n --ion the time, the sacrifice nf \rncrican lives for the v;k- < a postwar settlement v> uci have been regarded as verging .-n betrayal of the vi tal -st of the American j-e :pir in saving the lives of li-fir sons Churchill and fame to Yalta with rht ir ( - fixed on the post - . s- rtitment and each was piepared to take, military risk-- --rid to pay a military price Not so the Americans, beginning with Roosevelt and including almost all the rest of us. 'W, know. now that the mustniy leaders had overes timated Japan's resistance. The Japanese war could have been won. and in fact v won. without the assis ianre of the Red army It is. therefore, true to say that Roosevelt was overanxious to buy Stalin’? intervention in the Far East . , This, how ever. leaves open the ques tion of what the United Stat er would have done, had Stal in intervened anyway, seiz ing what he wanted. In February 1945 in the European theatre there was no margin for the gambling as theoretically at least might have been done in the Far East. Had the Red army sat down, or worse still, made a defacto truce with elements of the German army, the and his associates. They have earned the gratitude of the parents of the nation and of the nation itself for conquer mg the dread menace to childhood which has affect ed also many adults. It is fit ting that the announcement of this historic milestone in the light against disease should come so near the an niversary of the death of a great man who though cruel ly maimed oy polio himself never gave in to it personally and who was naturally sod intensely interested in seeing it wiped out. Just ten years after Franklin D, Roosevelt j died, the great announcement j was made. It was a remark ably short time, ** such 1 things go. The sympathy of the pub lic cannot be enlisted on the side of the unions by such tactics. Quite the contrary The public has not taken kindly to either strike from the beginning, since in each i.Hse the issue seems relative ly trivia! when stacked up against the actual or poten rial inconvenience at the least, or danger at: the worst, to which it has been subject ed. Union officials usually 'de cry” the sabotage and usually seem to give the impression that they do not believe any of their members had any thing to do with the sabotage This is a little hard to swal low. danger to Eisenhower would have been enormous. The overriding fact was that the Western democracies had be come grossly dependent for their security upon the power of the Red army. In February 1945 they had not yet be come able to make them selves secure without, mu h less against, the Red army This is the key to Yalta Those are the considered words of a man who is nei ther a Republican trying to prove that a Democratic pres ident was either a knave or a fool, if not both, nor a Ro osevelt partisan who feel* that FDR could do no wrong. He refreshes our memories further ■ “ . . , At Yalta the West paid the political price, for having fatted to deter Hit - ter in the ‘3o’s, for having faded to unite and to rearm against burs. The domination of the Yalta conference by Stalin was founded upon the weakness of the democratic West in the years before Yal ta. From the day Hitter at tacked Russia in June 1941 six months before Pearl Har bor—until the middle of 1944 the defense of what remained of Western Europe, and the prospect of mounting an in vasion to liberate Western Europe and Scandinavia, dr pended on the fact that Rus sia was absorbing the force of Hi Iter’s blows . . The errors, apart from the verbal indis cretions, of the Westerners at Yalta reflected the experi ence. the wishful thinking, and the rationalizations of men who during long agoniz mg years had had to depend upon the fighting power of the Red. army. **W hen Roosevelt and Churchill went to Yalta, Stal in already held in the grip of the Red army viritually all the lands that lie now behind the Iron Curtain, They went to Yalta compelled to deal with what was an. accom plished military fact.” THE CAROLINIAN “The Real Enemies Os Peace” vT- 4 I KAI ik C D. Halliburton’* ' Newspaper rerxir t* of the ar guaierkts presented by attorneys for some oi the south' m states, includmc lawyer? meal- :ns V ru spates winch wore pa tuct, to the original suits before the Supreme Court cf the United States and those present as “friends of the court,’’ r eT,- very interesting reading Some of what was. said m.f.ht well have been nvi-irded as humor ous except for the seriousness of the matter they were talk ing aboi One recurring therm which historians if not, the .-cn« u-mporaics of the attorney! ivi.il regard as odd. ■-a;-, somc thintr Tike this "It imn’t, be done so please give us time to do it. ’ In examining the reports of the arguments, one finds also that there bar been a lack, Miner of understanding about, or acceptance of, the clearly rew approach to the 14th A xnendmeiit by the present Su preme Court as compared U; that of the Court at the time of the Plessy vs. Ferguson de cision in 1896. The present Court has taken the position that the 14fl: A niendment has a.- its purpose the protection of tiic individ ual against- the encroachment of the State government, in the same way as the Bill of Rights, or th«- first ten amendments, protects the individual from —STRAIGHT AHEAD — With Olive A. Ada nrs NEW YORK <Global' Th' hearings now being conduct i d on the implementation of the May 17 Supreme Court- decision outlawing segregation m the nation’s schools, provide an in teresting opportunity for the country at large lo get. a good look at bigotry at. it- biggest and best. This revellation of the childishness of tire bigot is one of the best argument: that could ever br presented in favor of the now famous de cision. For many year? some peo ple have said that their section of the country simply wasn't ready for the experience of mixing the races They would work it out. they said, in their own good time, and as a mat ter of fact, everything was just fine,and dandy and the two races got, along well together. This, of course, was a delay ing technique of the sort every child uses who doesn’t, want to go to bed just yet. He's been terribly busy, he claims, and is getting ready for bed just as fast as be can. Both he and hi? mother see through that one just as clearly as we all can see through this present stall on the part of some Southern “spokesmen.” The plea to “let us work things out” is actually a plea for the maintenance of the status quo. Left alone, they would never work it out. and a statement that reveals this most clearly is one made by one S. E, Rogers, lawyer for Clarendon County School Dis trict 22, in South Carolina. He said, "I don’t think the white people will send their children to a Negro school.” This cer tainly doesn’t sound as if any body had been busy trying to work anything out, but away to keep things just as they are. These boys have been getting away with this kind of thing for years and it’s liice finally to hear them challenged. When Rogers said he didn't believe the "attitude" of his commu nity is ready for integrated "■ < •mcroachnsents -' f the F«* *■; i government. The languau* is .similar Both arc looking out for the individual Both r.-- .-.-tri-' ihe powers of the Mv.-ein - fne.;. trv w r Federal, the other the State Nonctl'clcss r>*e attorney rep resenting Viiginla oil Med evi dence to Show that there were proportions tel? more bright children m Virginia than might Negro chi!dr< n, and con vtrsely, flrat there are more dull Negro children tVv-m <ioii white children, proportionate,.'.'. Os course the lawyer» from Vir ginia that is, those represent ing the State-—blandly ignor ed the effects of 300 years of Virginia’s discrimination gainst Negroes as a possible causative factor in this alleged situation. Virginia, through it' counsel, went- on to cite also the higher rate of contagious disease and of illegitimacy a» moiip Negroes than among whites. But what was really cry with the argument wa;- •„t it delt in statistics while the 1.41 liAmendment is concerned with individuals. Certainly it must be known it is tacitly admitted that there f-p-f a good many individual Negro children who are brighter than a good many individual white children. Even granted which we certainly do not—that one Negro child out of every five in Virginia is’ “illegimate,' schools now, Chief Justice War ren reminded him: “It's not a question of conforming to an attitude, but of conforming to a decree.” This, was a very . ;m plr-v direct and effective wa\ of raying that it is. no longer possible for any of us in nm -a our own peculiar little whim:-: that all of us have right* that aie to be respected. The enemies of any kind of civil rights legislation nave al SENTENCE SERMONS By REV. FRANK CLARENCE LOWRY For ANP Giving God A Signed Blank Check 1 This kind of a practice with friends, few men would dare to attempt, because the arrangement might prove most disastrous by ending in gross contempt. 2. Money matters among men have always caused much fric tion. because so many individ uals just won't do right and live above suspicion. 3. Ananias and Sapphira were pretty fair examples of what human beings can drift into when snuffing out their moral candies, and shutting God out of view. 4. They move around and use up all of God's precious gifts, but, are the last to be found when struggling neighbors need helpful lifts. 5 Instead of serving God most, by serving man kpst, they are always on the recieving end to take in more than the rest *>. But the righteous man. though surrounded with besetting sins and hard ships, finds away to hon orably serve find arid man without apology for unnec essary run-arounds and skips. 7. He means to do right and then four out of every five are not iliealfcimete. If the State of Virginia were offering a proposal to cia-sif? children and assign them to s schools on the oastt. of intelli gence. te?.t result;, regardless of race, that- would be something oi.ir ai\ c <in. But T arcije; ; 1 because tire IQ level on the a*.. erase may bp lower tor ah Ne i sro children taken toger-her than for all white children tn k en together, then al ! .cave chil : dren from bright 10 moron are properly educated together, and e:' Negro children iro;-: blight to moron,c are properly educated together. If there were a proposal to educated togeth er all children born out of wedlock and separately from i those born in wstsloek. v r e • think it would he an. or nappy > proposal Bu: that is not the ; case. Bee;-,use there ere more Negro children in one category r and more whites in another. the thought is that ALL white r children are propertiy educated together and ail Negro child; ; o • the same. 1 The U. S, Constitution, which , the Supreme Court is interpret ' mg. specifically provides that no State shall "deny to auv i PERSON within ut .jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws ” Last. May. as it has in i crrciUi.’cly within the pa;,;, dec ade. the Supreme Court took ■ cognizance of the language of the Constitution ways claimed the» you can't legislate lave. It is import-ant now, that every i ioci.v realize that equal opportunity has nothing whatever to do with love or sentiment. It. is purely a matter of rights, and the hardboiled business of being prepared to make a living Nothing could be more funda mental, and it is nice to .hear this fact reiterated with the force-of the Supreme Court be hind di- does nothing for effect, but faces his Lord and Master squarely, presenting Him gra ciously with a "SIGNED BLANK CHECK' 8. Furthermore, he trusts his God for the rest of the way, for he knows his heavenly Father is faithful to remember and never denies His children manifold pay 9. It is only those persons who short-change God who want to be seen and heard above the crowd, but God alone only knows their fate, for they find so much comfort via the Nickle Plate. 10. The "Blank Check” folks who live by the Golden Rule, are very easy to get along with, but hard to fool , . . because they don't, live bv their wits end, but Truth and Righteous ness try to defend. 11. What a world of joy this old world would be, if all would serve their God with conscious free and avert what might be an impending world wreck., by each one giving God a “SIGN ED BLANK CHECK”. 12. Anything less is tanta mount to saving at the spigot and losing at the bunghole . . . and for sensible people a very poor role; but ah what a bless ing to enjoy God’s highest re- WEEK ENDING SATUPEAV •'.PIrH,. El, 1053 Got c jn Hancock s jg% *■*s]*» B a *«F#**ft I # H | *a sw.v% RFI frn i rs£o SU".* Si 'u 1 I»&sb,s 1 4*kt w*» LauSiii The High Cest of £va«inn What, is left of Un Old South is determined i« defy to the h itci' end the mandates of the Hupitane Courl declaring v veganxi schools ilieitnl. 'i re uul South -•imply cannot to he it. forget! i.'i’f V 111; T the VJ. b nrotv, vg •; ; at years. Os the original snip. l .- -a. states which i 1 lot :r,<’ Confer, racy, o i it are 1< r h commit).eel to defying; the Su prone Court's denis i-> :!>c bitter end; these iro Louisiana, Mississippi. Oroigl" and Womb Carolina. gfcvcrri of thr border dates are setting to the task of ij 'tegration, and v.'ivai is more, it jk r.ofc rulv ««blui on apace but .■■.utcussiuiiy iuM k. i isiuctorily. There is varied vacillation on the part of the other southern states with various device? of evasion m the offing, dust how <;■>; , oi ; ;ohir mao ago to dely the New South, the nation and the world is not at present apparent; and it is fcpb stubborn fact that- js cuixen ".v vexing the segregation: Ms ~,i the Old South These scions .•»?' ■he Old. South are wont to project the price that it must p;<> for integration; but it fads to project the price it roust pay for not integrating so eternally evade the moral responsibilities that go with inirgtat.fon w out A. rn ost certsinly u»oi.u: y bankrupt the Old South and make it the t-.-rtiwh s moral prniilem Number One What is more, there is al ready bunt' 'ora- what sonv, cannot be done. Wherever in tegration lias been honew.r !ri?d, it he -; A‘i'O ,i.,rv.. . - fully. There, lies before ,r-- >n this v .Hn.ii t paaipnii-.t >•> titled ‘Tntgiratio® in the Arm ed Service;' bicues by the oft* iof the /y sir-*.L Secret; ry Os Defer..,,-. J; jorth ;.e great detail how intoeif-e". in the rtrvleos j;, heir.. effected satisfactorily. In summary ilv pamphlet cone h-idcr • ‘That the. Negro in the Arin<*d Fere.'’-. »i,.<v. ui ■ fd on. the basis of o-divid ual merit and praficier*, > in meeting she r.i eds of |t Services: that tin iwr, , the Army. Navy, Air Voree and Marine Corps, fully n. tegrated units have replat vri .W --which, tnjiii - formed the only ,0,- , of military w «or Vi tro oriir-.'ees <- ■ mq<;s Coloniai I ism-: ; the haft.Se-fK-i.j wm,.- in date Jtldb ,1 iti .fkrn Sts- IN This uSI DAY By C- A. Chick Sr* FOOD H*ii '■ HI*SIGHT For t-iii;. w-cck.'.-, column I roi i'ost.&un.u or aumraafizuig almost verbatim two anieh'- ; i recently read So m n war I impressed vk:. >hr- nuc 1 - that with the risk of a'jsjpo.iring little egotisne I &m pa.sei.ng them on to my many readers. One of the articles was releas ed by Mem I err:'a Pierce F imer and' Beane the world's largest brokers- house • i* the Financial \Vy; id for April 6, 1955 The fore.;:.*ing article t the story «f an I; Mini boy, railed frank, wen had heard much of the oppor tunities in tl>» United States. As a hoy be dream ed of a ii, inn 1 to ri.'ujo to ibis country So in 1915, at bli- aftf ill ;V, e.;- ill had enough money to book pas;--agt It;< the. Ime .a States. His first job in the- country was one that required ten to twelve hours work pet day, to days per week at, a track la borer on a railroad for $1.70 prr day- He goi married in uij.9 on a salary of SSO per week. In 1921 he bought ,i small busi ness, mostly with borrowed money, and began raising a family which finally numbered four It was 1939 when be first decided to invest in securi ties be tag able to purchase only a few share;, of < moo stock a! r.ha* Gw. He ha 3 been investing ever since, only in .small amounts and only in good companies. Bat two years ago when be sold his busi ness, he Jia;! stocks and cash worth sonic *99,000. I am positive that n; v readers will agree that Frank did well lor himself. Mm-u-y I led that Frank's advice is food for 1 thought. The article quotes him as saying. "Everyone should spent, and then for Hr- h-vm-t lul goodness give Him a "SIGN ED BLANK CHECK", For, behold, the day cometh that shall burn as an oven; and all the proud, .yea, and all that do wickedly, shall be stubble and the day that cometh shall burn them up——(Malachi 4,1.) This present day and hour is our individual and personal day of judgment if we live pride fully, wickedly-—for. without the love and goodness of God within us, our souls are shrivelled, and we cannot know peace and kindness and con tentment ereaj.e if) overall (") ,b;lt ef fectfs ;:ess through iir <- • gratjon: tl-at ee«iu«n.-?' . In snjitP'Wfr. mote.i-ial. .• <d money have iWfUiiiert f - pt the elimination of racially rttiphcafe-f fa« hitiiM :• .ul opeswilotv.: fb i the. i *o» gvim has ad’aneetl i ih bad he - n t'iid* red po?«i;>h< in .wima (".Wl'tl is ;m;l there 1* been no untoward sn-H* dents; "Tha l sch« inipiemeotatian of police... '.n(f idiny (or ojpvor td.n-ly amor,.; riviUßn niapioycor- Jug? far 'jahint!. as coniparetl with 'UTo.oci Ffuce.s late, at.ion. - on j! .service scbucis and traininr; program? ure open wiUiout racial restriction that po]jok:.s and promo ms cur rentJy in effeef give promise of further resinvtuf? many of the perpivxing problem?, which cen ter arovnd situations where race if, a facfair; "That. THE IMPACT, NA TIONAL AND INTERNATION AL OT ADVANCES UNDER THE PROGRAM OF INT|- O RATION O; THE AFMEII I’ORO! V. HAS BEEN DIS TINCT I Y AND FORCEFULLY IN SUPPORT OF THE POL ICY' OF THE AMERICAN government;* In other worn* wb.it is now going on. and fast- becoming an ;*c<-o;nphKbiK*m sac;. makes ail tile tnmv Immiciahle the tas-k «>f the nc-ver-av-die fearrega tioniet-s Wh at v~ more, evas ionlsm a» a pohey v/ii, call for more and more despexate means for trying U> st3.-’e off the iniwiiable. So it. is just as well fp» site rear-jraard of the Oid SouiiYs vanishing thin Une ' ■ , V.cO’int ih« Ci’C.t of not .me^rafir/g: It mesas in the firs!- ri,v>; ir. toe South *v.uh its dechne in edwtation will be m a stare of compai ■’ ! wc impoverish merd. An;;' ausiript oi the Old South. ~o finality >;i-”rt-gaiion v.ijjf so! bark the win-pis of its pnogreas ana fortunes. The al ready economies iiy handicap* pro SoutL. cnanot afford the ,‘conoane r;cUr-ock that contm s-na?~:uion will impose, 'ik.e;; again <• tabarrassment nasi bit;-'! iy by ihe lot of a sec t thsu »t'fiur.i.i ro forever " ' God .i.'k lime auri Right y ; to : k a odds With tiy Smu on ut Courts of the * ! a And Finally th.-'i ; that compunction of ftcy.yumee that ms.uf se n the 1 f : 1 : ? > iTioi i 1 ‘ depr o iry th h t i t Wili !.:>Kr- to ru a ail) fottwr h-:':'' .■: keen v> mni&mp't&ie. It th« own a piece of the capitalist!# system, if he am afford to " Tt s sec end of th< two arti cles 'published in the Fayette ville, K C. Observer, March 22, . acLvilii-.i of a Chicago school teacher whose home was in Au rora. Illnois She taught school In the Chicago school -vstem i'Oi a period of forty-one years, 1880-1930. By 1920 she had saved 512,000. It «•;:«, about that time she made her first in vestment in Aurora, liinots in a -mall taoterv. In a few years the fore g.dnc invest ment had more than trip led itself. She then started in vesting through the stock mark-d. At her death, .lan nary 1. 1955, she possessed stork market investment-* valued at an 51,900400 and a. 190-acre farm with a twelve-room brick house on it! included in her Invest ments were the stocks of »«< h well-known companies ;-v-, Vt rsHneboris • Electric* Stand «rd Gil of New .Vf-rsey, and American Telephone and Telegraph, The article;-- further points out that It ip teacher Miss Ida Mig bell, often stated that she had no patience with people who d:d not live- within their income. And. I might add neither does this wn:.;y Also, accotding to Uu article, r-m war r frugal woman who dressed plainly but well. Again I sav that I am certain my readers will agree that the Chicago school teacher as well a. Frank.. riic Itjjgjuin immi grant, did well for themselves ir: Che .seatnnes market. Go thou and do likewise, Post’s Corner CLOTHES minded ■WEAKLING <2 By WM. HENRI HUFF for ANF Correct attire affects me not By it my soul is not disturbed I want success to be my lot; Profuse attire has always curbed The hopes of some; not so of me I do not care What clothes I wear My aim is to become and be I seek no glamour and no glare, I Want a dollar laid aside To tide me over when I’m old Bo I can lift my head with pride No matter what the times unfold. If I should go headlong and spend All that 3 make upon my back I’d have to beg some one to lend Or end my days in want and lack.
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
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April 23, 1955, edition 1
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