tHl CAROLINA TIMES SATURDAY MAY 11, IMV iRMePiir Shows 56 HffabtoTaAnti-LyflcI) Bill NEW MODEKNtr EQUlPnED SCHOHL lUILDlHC LOCAW AT THOMASVILLi. N. C, fcy hf*raMtlMi Sfrtc* 47 VatM. WHk • M«*« FaTwrtec M«M«r«i Omlr ae Lieiei M D^laitdly OppeeW WASHIK€TON, D. C., M*y M —A poll oT til* S«Mtc bn the of wh«Ui«T or not «n«-; ten fft'v>or«d ^ G«TRff*n ant^- IfDchiOf bill hu that 56 MMton~7 mon thmi • full mR- }arity-- *re in favbr of tlia in#«- ■ir*. Of th«ce S6 TOtet, 47 pooS* tiTely certain for the bill, w^Me 9 are for It with certain re»«rva- tiona. Only to Totei are listed as de- finitely opposed to the bill. Nine teen senators arc listed as un- ceitUn. The poll wm# an independrri? on* coodncted by one of th« seve ral leading bifomati on aervire^ operating here. Thes^ informa tion aanrietet collect . informatior on legtelatkOn and release it to Bobacribers. From tiraa to time, ti-»y conduct polla on bnportant peadinip legislation. Supporters of wti-ynchinr ' lecislation had nothiai' whatsoever to do with the and, thierefore, the “result* have dotftlie significance sinca ' they can not l»e interpreted a« in- ■pirational propraganda. In the notion accompanying the tiA>nlation, the information bulletin says "The indicates thiat this bfll on lynching can |>as8 the Se nate if it should come to a vote Bow> l%fl bv issue concerning the bill appears to b« 'w^lether or not it will be brought to A vo'ta. Indications are that it ^will not. The Ubulation above is'^a reflect ion of sentiment as of noon Fri day, May 7. Maay “UacarUin*’ Seaater* FriMidly Of the 19 senators listed as "uncertain” On the Gavailfan anti- lync^if bill, 16 have at one time or another indicated that they are friendly to legislation, NAA- CP officials nid here today. Tha NAACP has received per- . misaioQ to . nuike the poll public, bat the association is witholding the names ^d claasaffcations of th: senators until it can receive' •a anaewer from the 16 senators in th« uncertain group, whom it believes lere favorable to the bill- T%e NAACF^is confident tinri; at the very least, 8 of these 16 will declftse £ro iBsking total of 64 or 65 votes for th9 TREASURKft • . -• iHOMAS EDWARDS, Treasurer of the Passaic Crescent Athletic Jub, 278 Summet street, Passaic N. J. Mr. Edwards lives at Belle ville, N. J. Charter members of the club, which was organiaed 1^ /ears ago are, Robert Allen, Wm. jdiller, Jefferson West, Frank N. iyles, Bill Slappery and Tom Edwards. (CS). measurjB in the Senate—an over whelming majority. - “This poll by CongresMonal In- tc'liiKence is simpiy one more pr.icf of our assertion f’lat there are more »-nough votjs to pass the anti-lynching bill in the Senate if it can be got to thie floor," said Walter White, NAA CP wcretary. “The poll by the Institute of Public Opinion in DecenTber showing 70- per cent of the people in this country in favor of an anti-lynching bill plus these polls in the House and Senate showing overwhelming majorities-in Washington for the bill indicate plairtly that the ma jor taslc now before all support ers of this legislation is to exert the utmost fressure upon the leadership in the Senate to get it to bring the bill up fw a vote. “Messages shiould be sent to H. F. Ashurst, chairman of the Se nate judiciary committee, to Se nator Joseph H. Robinsdn, ma jority leader, to Vice-President J. N. Gamer and to Senator Frede-' rick Van "Nuys ,and Robert F. Wagner, urging' them to take steps to see tKat thie bill is brou^^it up for a vote. The ad- -S'|4Fes8- for^ all soB^togs Is4 ‘Senate Office Building, Washington. The new, modemly equipped. Fraternity. |li6l),000 which was informally opened to the public at a recent dedicatorjal service by officials of the County arid City School Boards 'IT^omasviHe, N.^ C. P'of. E. I*. Peterson (shownleft) of Heatl«ii4a*>i^4l'll is Principal. I*rof. Peterson, who has been Assistant Principal at Dtmbar High School, Lexington, N. 0., and who now holds the distfnction of beifig the youngest Principal in this N. C. District, has been re-elected for the year 1937-3P. He la a graduate of A. & T. Col- 3ege, Oreensbopo, fN. C. - and a member of the Alpha Phi Alpha Prof. J. H. BrOckett (shown right) of Yonkers, N. Y. has been assistinGT Prof. Peterson in hie juties. Pr^f. Brockett, who came to Thomas^lle , the first of t^e year, is also head of the Depart ment of Mathematics and ScttWW and Dirftctor of Athletics. In 19^ he was given a place of distinction in* “Who’s Who A- mong Students In Colleges and Universities of America.” He is a * graduate of Uvingstone Ool« lege, Salisbury, N. C. and a mem ber of the Phi Beta Sigma Frat ernity. Ital^ Celebrates . ‘Empire Day’' y London- SOCIAL SECURITY ACT TO AID DEPENDENT CHILDREN (Calvin Servica)— Aa Italy celebrated “fimptrs ^y” on May 9, gloaming over ths con quest of Ethiopfa, th» New Times and Ethiopia News here revealsd more details of th» frirKtful mas sacre in Addis Abaiba foHowini; the bomb{ng of Marshal Crazinl. during wldch most of the educa ted Ethiopians we-a brutally slain. Th# story, aa told by, pn eye-witneas, and trandated into English by (Ethiopian officiiUs of the London legation, in which th« ^real reasons why - Graaia^ii, wa» I was bombed and wounded" 160 , • times are given, continues as fol lows: “The noiw of abarp *»nd hollow blows resounded, they rapidly multiplied, incerrnpted from time to time by oth** yet stronger blows. « "Terrified men, wom«n and children ran in turmoil all di rections, Only to by wroaps of ten, twenty, fifty and I hundrtd Italian milit^-mtn j blackshirts, j “Soon the,streets ware strewn ' vi^h dead bodies-~No one dared I venture oat. From that time be gan a method which was followed out thoroughly durinir t&e three long* days—Hie method consisted of setting fire to the houses, and waiting for the inhabitants to be driven out by the fire and tnas- over it they set fire to tl. T&* walls are still standing, bat interior of tha eharch anttrc- ly desfaroy«d. deidda't Taka Up DaaJ ' "No one among th» faw Ethio pian snnrivors had tha light t» tak« up tha dead body of hia own relative, no one was allowed t» weep and Mment over Ids or htsr loved ones, Qndsr penalty of b«- ing shot, imprisoned or bani^rd. Only the Fascists iQ9i))d gmther the corpses In lorries and bum them in GuMe (the western part of Addis AbaiMi) ... “No More MarlMU" “There Jtore no more m^ceta, no more victuals, and famin« a* waits Mussolini’s army. Tha p >pi- lation of the 'enviHns has beea invited, by leaflets scattered over th> eount^-side from aaroplans, to bring provisions of cereak an4 cattle for the army." But non* dare venture into thi» city which and has been turned' into a city of death from whence spreada tha leigend, strengtljened by the dla- embowelling^enes, tt'Bt thera are 'MancMters' there. This re» fusal was sufficient to urge tha Italians to let loose anew bomba and mi|St«rd gas Oq tiie onfortu* Date peasants. "The reprisals spread Tery ra* pidly to distant re^ons whiera tha sacring th'em_without distinction, itajlaits have eneamped. I |aar* BALEIGH, May 20—One of the inost most humane articles of legislation ever to be adopted by any Commonwealth will go into effect in North Carolina on July 1 of this year. v It will be the Aid to Dependent 3hildren Act, which became a law* through action of the 1937 Gene ral Assembly. No more will ,the spec^fi. pf. hardship and suffering face sT be reaved widow and fatherless children, left t othe meries of the , world without income sufficient-1 which they are entitled, ly adequate to care for them in even the most modest manner. The various orphanages scat tered thoughout the atat« have done splendid work during the past, but there hS^e been thou sands of instances where childien were not eligible for entrance in to these havens of refuge for the ren Act not only will take care of children left without a father— it also will emibrace those who, for any good reason, are not re ceiving the proper care and train ing because of a lack of money. Children under-16 years of age, liviag. with either their father, mother, grandmother, grandfath er, brother, sister, or other rela- tivea^ wUl be cared for^ it is sh own that those charged with Sheir keeping are not situated so as to l^ve them "the advantages’to The Aid to Dependent Child- m Beware Of The SPRING COLD A- ll ka* Keliably eatlikiated that foar out ef of every five penons la this eeniitry at sold a jTMr. White tlv* death rate from cold* aiid Inflnanw is comparatiTelj low, they ea«*a discomrfort, Iom of tiaM from work, and eftea de^^op serious complieatioae. thaea tidt eeuld he yeOWited i| the feltowfag greeawtieas were takeni 1. COLD* AM CONTAGIOUS. ttWH AltE CAUGHf FROM OTHER FER- •QNI. AVOID CONTAC;^ WITH ANYONE WHO HAS A COLD. 1. WlAS SUFFICIENT CLOTHING TO KEE^ WARM. , S. AVOID WET FEET, DAMP CLOTH INC AND DRAFTS ^EN PERSPIRING. EXPOSURE TO eOL» 7 4. CET PLENTY OF FRESH AIR, NO MATTEII HOW COLD THE WEATHER. A HBATto ROHI SHOULD INVARIABLY HAVE A CIRCULATION OF FRESH ADL 5. TAJCB PLENTY OF EXERCISE. f •. AVOID OVER-EATING^ AND OVER-INDULGENCE IN ALCOHOLIC DRINKS A WUX BALANCED, DIET IS ESSENT iXL TO HEALTH. f. KEEP YOUR NOSE AND THOAT IN A HEALTHY CON^iON. HAVE THEIR BEGINNING IN COLDS THE NOSE AND THROAT. a. CHILDREN WITH ADENOIDS AND DISEASED TONSILS SHOULD HAVE THEM UOMOVED WITHOUT DELAY. •. AND FINALLY, IF YOU CATCH A COU> WHICH DOES NOT RESPOND TO TREATMENT, GO TO BSD AND CALL'A DOCTOR. - OOO i Nortti Carolma Klatual Mfe liisuranee Company North Carolina' ^ ' C C. SPAULDING, l>^e$ldent ' 110 HOMrXOMPLEI^ WITHOUT NORTH CAROLINA MUTUAL POLICIES'' The Act provides that children eligible for benefits shall either havg been bom or resided within North Carolina for at leMt on« year,prior to the filing of an ap plication for assistance, or that the mother of the applicant also has be^ a resident of the state for 4 similar period, and that «he ISis not the meai» for a decent livelihood for ^erself ari^, her children. Applications for aid are to be made to agencies which will be established In each of the lOa counties of the state. The ttiAximum amount any one child may receive under provis ions of the Act is $18 per month, with each additional child of the same family allowed $12, provided the total does not ex ceed $66 per month. One-third of the cost of administering the Aid to Dependent Children Act will be borne by the counties, with the state and federal gover nments ^Iso ‘absorbing one-third Qach. TV e Act provides, however, that in order that no injustice may be caused, more than $65 may be laid "in extraordinary circumstances in which it appeal’s to the satisfaction of the State Board that a total of $65 per month would be insufficient to secure U^e purpose above set forth.” ^ *fThe Social Security Act, in providing aid to dependent child ren, gives evidence of long range pla4}ning for the future," recen tly said Mrs. W. T. Bost, Com missioner of Charities and Pub- ITr Welfare. "It standlyout asTHr egreateSt opportunity for* con structive work with children tliat has ever been available’to the nation. This aid is based on the fundamental conception that the family life is the best enviroment for the growth and of children into future citizens. “We have long since come to realize that, for any cause, the O O. ddi e.e OU ItAOli i WAKin, haT a" WJTINCTIVl IHAl MANY IKS TO * T U viHMW . I H nviifi, f M WAf ONCt m lui IvOUtH rKAllktN ** aATTANOOGA,llHN. fti MAU IM>aiONATOiv,WAI HAKWO W TKt f!EW VOUK. uaA':£i ciuiP-c. • roK'3'n.L ' 'breaking up of a home in which there are children is a delicate social-surgical operation at best, but to break up a home for pov- 'erty alone is nothing short of a crime. “The Act recognizes the simple fact that where the wage earner has been removed from a family because ' of death, desertion oi- sickness, the remaining parent is frequently unable to give proper care to minor children anJ at the same «time earn a living for themi’f. '“In North Carolina, after J^y I,” Mrs. Bost continued '^passage of the Aci means that instead of aiding only a^>0 mothers «|d Jan& ^eance, s^et^ised In cutting llie with daggers,' bayonets, lhand grenades, cudgels, stones anS| at times with guns. “One could see groups of Fas cists chaining the poor men td lorries and amusing themselves- by dragging them along from ona part of the town to the other un til their bodies fell to pieces. “Others entertained themselves by scourging naked women to death under the eyes of their husbands or brothers«^ho yr^re, ofcourse, first rendered -Impo tent. f ) “Still others derived devilv^h pleasure out of crushingr the little ones maSe orphans a few minwtsa previously with their enormous heavy boots (fodasMs>. “The Lyfbians, whtose sarage instinct was exalted by the ex ample of thir masters, who ex cited them the more by saying ttat it was their day of grreat ven- lies a year—as we have been do ing the past few years—we will be able, to aid. more than 7,750 families involving' approximately 21,700 children. “Where the family is self-res pecting and child-loving, keeping children in thir own homes de cided advantages--jinactment of this legislation means a home for every child and that love and se curity which' a home provides." OEITHS John Foster, May 13th. Elberon, ■ j. thoats of their unfortunate vic- tinfc or in disembowelling thenji in cold blood and leaving them to die slowly in terrible agony. '‘Blood Flowed In TorrMtte" “Bioo3 ~flQye3~on“ tiflpsiaes Hi torrents. Frightful scVeams of women and children mini3ed,with the diabolic concert of modern arms. “During three whole days this went on! . “‘The New Flower^ the city of mimosasi and eucalyptus trees, ■phich, with its crowds of peaceful inhabitants, always , dresMd in white, had the appearance of “fn immense park 'en fete,’ was now nothing morft than a lugubrious n Huntcir, 9^2 ISthk John St.—Ml Mrs. Adeanna Hayes, C.—May l«th. Ebony Apex, N. Zeb Joyner, May 11th. Nelson Monroe, —May 14 th. 14M Gunner St.— 1214 Cornell St. Eugene Hart, 3 OS Roney St.- Mrs. Mary -J. Lassiter," Pratt St.—May 16th. 2224 # TEDDY Hl|.L one of Amerlea’is most pop- t ^lar and bostlAressed swinif taaeetros, says **/ And Shu- Milk the ONE white »hoe ^letaur that netmdly gtvee A-I^Performtmc€^, field scattei'ed witlii corpesf In certain quarters the corpes en tirely covered the streets and the squares, m St {^eorg^ Square, already robbed of the equestrian statue of Menelik II, tiis dead bodies formed a veritable pil*. “St. George’s Cathedral itself, a temple ibuilt forty years ugo bs the Ethiopian Nation in commem oration of the victory of Adows, and dedicated to the Patron St. of the Etihiopian Army, did—not scape the fury and vandalisna of from ralidble sources that at Ka kampti, in Wollege, more thanS- clever and strong had taken to the jungle at th« approach of tba fbdiao forces oA March 8tli. “Italian 'Vendetta’ weighs «ll over the country, and I often ask myself how long the world will remain indifferent to tha agony of an Innocent people? “General Graziani’s eoadition is considered very serioua In fact no one outside the official Inner circle knows anythW what ba* c«me of Wm sice the day. when he was confined in Che clinie of' la Consolata at GulaTe. It la saM fhkf specialists were aent fw from Rome to treat him, but no one has seen them. A aceret n» nioar says that Graiianl had been ent back to Rome, dead or aUv^ with some of his unfortunat* companions. No one knsws vhat has happened behind the scenes.'* WPA ADULT EDUCATlOilAl, EXHIBIT W. P. A. Adult Education uii- ' der the supetvisiMt^ J. T. Cobh» - staged ajjj exhibit in the Audito- — rium of Hillside Piftk Sthool on May 14th. The exl>ibit diq?layed progress made by adult pupils du ring past school season. Work displayed was literary in Chara* ter, however, a little Home mak* ing was shown'.*'* _ Viewing of the exhibit by pa* trons got under way at 2 PM. at 3 PM. pupils* from the Whita Rock and St. Mary Nursery Schools performed. During the remainder of the afternoon the .exhibit was held opened to the public. A brief program was prfcsenlted at 8 PM. with addresses by W. S. Kennedy, secretary of N. C. Mutual Ofe Insurance Company E. D. Mickles, principal of W. O. /«* Pearson Elementary School, To^ conclude the program tiie e^ibit committeSe s)«ljbc|fed material*- from the local exhibit which wlU be taken to fiale^th tO|^ - jUs* ^ played along with other counties tre Wood-thirsty Italians. After (it Nortti Cwolina in a wide e*- Saving “^ SpriiiksldeKf pet«A ^ a^ibit on May 21. LOOK! BIC MONEY FOR YOU! Nera't Yow Mg dumee to Mikt QiidE IlMMy-Bs Afwt ftr SIVEET CEOMyA BiWWN Hrir Drminf, Heach CnwR, 3^ ®IWWWA BROWN Hair Incasing Pomdc, Hair Streagth, " ' “ rfiiraefL 300 Products Yol ) or Fall tlaia We Aow you hem to n«ilce up to Sdn Brightenet; oudon't need any Keuh Oeam, Face Powder, Perfiiraefc 300 l^uctk esjerience. Wwk in SpawTiiM or Fall Tlaw “ |4M0 a week or up to m « shii^e liSf, FREE SAMPLES Send Mo Mohoyl {^ , Just fai,in couipon and it I ^y to FRBK tAMPui of I r nmm m Hw Drasing, Face Ponwder and ! SasqteiiatfspSdSaoctetoAsaBM%it %«^OffertoAOlHTi.D0n’t 5 AT«« i ••wait Mali the COUPON NOWI I —| I I ■wajr. I I SWffi HOME . ► . H is on# of th* most posfMow you have. ..r ^ P[«i to buy one now. W ^ oji*. or to indb • b. wn..' SIAKT SAVING ftfiSULAKLY NOW r j Dnrhliiii Farmers Bai# Palel0li