Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / Jan. 1, 1938, edition 1 / Page 6
Part of The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
SIX THl CAl^PUWtA TIHBS SATURDAY JANUARY 1, Itt* ildat th* ii4p mindT NOTE ojrtr vnrrtt aasttioa will b* aasw*r*i FREE in tUg coJamm t clipping ot tbiS’Cmlttnut ^ $ign^at fa// MM. MrtMaf. ^ fjjl , aslt-addrwd, ttunpH Off'll- ^ ^ W ApWreSTrrChientom. mind ’d^finH^Iy. Yott Aould not JBH—Would it be wise for haity In ra«3kinff up your me to keep th; bunine^ up tb«t jj,g other thing y»u ! am in or rert op for « whllf, ,- not »PP«Hr tfl Al»o h*ve I been aeceived by the bcitlbutiniM v«ntttff. iriri that I •«! in love *iU>? Am: Yo» d« ri|bt BOW it not try to K«t it' basiaat*. No— y*« 4ec«iTMi b7 ••d 4 rad'bat , tiw* le entten* wltk tbi* b*e« girl yo« are that 1 1mt« In : T«»—*nd tbinft will turn out jMt u ffo«>d or better than you BOW exp*ct You hwr* nocit- inc whatever to fear. CL— What do WUlie mttn actbiC like h« has lataly? What •hould I do now? jkM: You ahonld >top writing to him—for h# ia trying to *how you that ho ian’t the leaat bit eoneemed about your affair* any ion«az.. WilUa ia soin|^ 4o- anjoy lift for th« MJrt f*w yaara and do«a not want to b« tired down to anyone. WR— Have been reading your celumn Md thoroufWy enjoy it. Will I ft #lther of the jobs. I have in mind? Ana: CrO right after the job that yon inquired about tome three or four Weeka ago—^for ft aeems to me that tbit U th> one NAACP Joins Protest On N. Y. Hospital Head ^tli—^^oii will find! iKit ottt in • short tim«. KrW— ShOultl i quit the job that I am on and do as I have fn mind and would I be successful? •>jAn9: Wait weeks before OD—Do I love Jthta old Ji^e l man I have been going laraund with? Ahs: Abeolutely not—and you just don’t reallie what good you will get and be more pleased times you are miasing by aaeo- with, ciating with hfftt. You scars the single boys off wjhen you run with married .nteil. Thia party, does not cara anything ior you and it would be to your advan* tage to give bint up altogether. just a few making up moTt) yoar FW—Will I bo gucceaafal in Ride LSF—la it for me to go north and 1 would likai^to know if luy aide will gat bettar? Ana; Remain in the aouth thia winter — you counldn’t posaibly do f|>y twtter in Uie north than you are doing Hight ^w. See a doctor albput tiie pain you are having inunadiately. PWC—I |tm planning to Uke the county:, examination an d wondar if I n*ed woirf aa*ioHily ■boot paaainv? Ana: No— You ahoifldn’t al- tiiough you must realiaei that it ia going to ibe *‘»ther cat?liy.” If you have "mastered Borah Would Cut H^rl From Anli-Lyiicliing Bill NBJW YORK, Dec. 24.^—Pro tests are flooding Mayor LuOuar- dia from numerous organixationi and individuals in Harlem who have been infuriated by the Btatementa of Dr. S. & G^d* 3rate>r •ommiasioiier hoapitah,- which imply that all JMfegro doc' tora, intemea and nutaaa are ln ferior to whites. Dr. Goldwater’s atatementa Were made in testimony before a comniisaion authorised fay the state itssembly to inve.%tigate ur ban conditions among the colored population of the state. In his testimony on' December IS, Goldwater as9erted that Ne gro medical people came mostly from inferior schools and, there-, fore, were not accepted on the any rac^ or color same basis as white students. I - I also declared that Nagrro niraes wert less eompetant than white nur«es» and that it took more of them to man a given hoapital than H did white nurses or a mixed group of nursek that most of Dr. Goldwater’s atatementa are untrue, or only partially true, that they were made del.lberately to disparage Negro profession^ men and wo- . *G( men, that Dr. zoldwater has FRESHMEN LEAD DEANS LIST AT FAYETTEVILLE STATE NORMAL The following studenta have ... . _ for the first quarter of the atubburnly maintained a ’Bai’ Bchool year 19^87-M at the Fay- against the adifiission of Negro intemsi and nurses tt n'ost of the N. Y. city ho^pit&la, and that competent Negro applicants with the aame or better qualifications and preparations as white stud* ants have 4>een Bystematically dc- njied opportuttlty by Ur. Gold- water's policy. The protests maintain that in a nmatropolitan city sucli as New York, the head of a great depart ment of the city government should itit be prejudiced against Several of the protests have cited the fact that Negro grad> uatea of some of the medica> achools which Dr. - Goldwater calls inferior have passed with the highest marks in some aub- etteville State Teachers CoBege^ niia. acholartlHi|> rece»rd givej them the distinction of having their Viamaa placed on the DMm’s Honor List. Freshmen; Katie DeilU Bullard, Rosebei^>Charles Marvin Cherry, Greenville; Ka%ie Belle Clark?, Erwin; Latina Letitia Coppage, F^etteville; Gaiiieva Headcn, Castl^-Ma|B^ Isabelle Frances Htekf^ Ojfford; Eda Belle Love, TinHberland (“A" average); Lo- venia Vaahti Oliver, Washington, D. C.; Mary Washington Scc>tt, Fayetteville; I. e o 1 a Ernestine Smith, AutryviUe; Mae France* Sp ncer, Wade^oro; ..Jle(ba Ren- netta Taylor, Cummock; Lula Walker, Linden “A” jiverage). Sophomores^ Ewel Debrew Al- Demands for the ousting of wir ni|(iicsi> inarKS in suiiit? auw i , ^ /• ”*' •« _ _ , _ . Jecta In taking tjie state medical examination. ■f ■ Dr. Goldwater as homital com- „ missioner bav. been i^ing un«n Numereus pou^ were repre- ' sented m a delegation which pro- Mayor LaGuaVdia on tha ground course throughly you won’t iiave anything to fear. You wUl get during the year, of 1'9S6. I Wish My R«ad«r» And Priaitd* I I A Very Happy Holiday S«a*«B T Aad A Pk'vAitaiwas Nv^Yasir— tested personaHy to Mayor La- I Guardia December 22, The NAA CP was represented by Thurgood Marshall, assistant special coun sel, but when Mayor LaGuardia in a sharp exchange with the de- i legration gav a .plain indication by his remarks that he “wowld talk the matter over with Walter White,” Mr. White,.immediately dispatched a telegram I to the Ma yor backing up the protest wilh- out reservation and calling f^r the ousting of Commissioner Goldwater. Lee Covington, Ailgier; Inez H, Douglass, Hamlist; Annie Ruth Lee, Hamlet; E^lmeatine Nixon, Wilmington; Elizabeth S. Smith,! Elisabethtown; Gladyif Trcad-j well, Fayetteville; Robert Scottf Watson, Fayetteville; Allegra M. Westbrooks, Fayetteville; Yvon ne Blaine Yarboro, Rocky Mount. Juniors; Mozetla Lambert, Goldston; Anna Freelove McMil- laPr-Fayetteville; Lula Mae Ollie McMillan, Fayetteville; WiAlSHINGTONv Da«. 24. The latest development in the fight for enactment of the anti-iyncb- ing bil^ ia an amandement intro duced by Senatora William E. Idaho, propoaing j to strike oud tha entixa aactlon S o: the Gava|fan-Wagnar-Van Nuya anti-lynchlng bill, H. R. iBf/f, Section 6 la the heart of tho bHi, without which it. will be o# no vi^ue. Section S providei for damages of from $2,000 to IIO,- OOO to be recovered from- a county in which a lynching oc- cura by the wurviving kin of the . victim of tbe mob. Under the ( section, auit may ba brougi t in the fedanl court to recover ^ theaa lia/bilitjr damages. I. In taking the lead to atrikj out thia section and thereby I eonKpletflly anMaculata tfia anti- I lynching bill. Senator Borah is ' maintaining hU perfect record of I figfiting anti-lynching legialation. Senator Borah a^lrays has oppos ed the anti-lynchiq0 bill and gave hiis asaistwica in each of the fili busters as^inat it. •Section I of tha bill, the so- called penalty elauae against the county, ia regarded'aa being the only guarantee in ihe bill that countiei and eommunitlea will be spurred to act to prevent lynch- ings and panidt lynchera. With out thia section, lynchinga. may well continue on the same scale “I wish to endorse without the protest of the the telegram stated. *1 advise that I reservation committed,” ‘Through- Norris, Greenville; Willie V.illines, Hurdle Mills. Lee Mamie^^ at pr«a«irfr-%ltJi the -ao-^y^led--gnd xjemand higher wage*.-When \Mijr W bolh«nid op outomoMla m-ytftf hen* (iiwntgww avsry it It ti H llayt H wrry about porfcing ipoe««. ln§ 1w Ifnf. brok«r burr^ort anil dtn m mmf-Hr* l DurhamPuhlk DON’T FLY TOO HIGH Tiavel\1on^ Flying ioo Mgh . . . puWnq a mortgag* on your future with IMSTALLMENT jobts . , . wiR be turo .your MONEY The Fayetteville State Teach ers College begins this year to n\ove up to a four-year institu tion. At| a consequence, ther.il will not be a senior class un*ilj the year ’38-’39. The first grradu- ating class under the four-year' ^ ....... curriculum is. expected to come out his administration as com- missioner of hospitals, and m • number of students which all our de^mgs courage -nd.with duitincUy disparaging-attitude I ^ evidence that the sf.udenta appreciate the opportun- its of the better preparation to t»aJ to « CRASH when your gas , . . gives oUu • • ^ I Y«,^$uy and enjoy life . . . but RRST havi the inoney"ahd be sure you can AFFORD il. START SAVING REGULARLY NOW . ' W el-C_o in 9 You r B a n k itt^ B u s i n e s s a toward Negroes generally and ^ Negro doctors and nurses’in par ticular. For these reasons, we are convinced that his re-ap pointment as hospital commis sioner would Ibe a grievous mis take.’^ The NAACP points put that it has ibeen opposing Commissioner Goldwater’s policy of discrimina tion and exclusion for many ■years and that it has handled many cases of protest from air- plicants, nurses, doctors and in ternes who have tried to secure their rights in the municipal hospital system h6re.' On one oc casion, the J|AAiCP reports, a a four-year institution give*. certain hospital refused to accapt a colored girl in its nurses train ing school on the ground that white girls in tho school who came here from smthem states would be offended®lf the colored girl were admitted. The offi:; of Commissioner G »'riwAter prefer- 'd to .-iater to the prejudices of the out of state southern student nursea rather tliah give opooi- tunity to '■ui -rfd Nr-^- Y'orkerA wl.c* are helping to pay taxes ic I fctI up the 1 v.Hpituls. ► Burbam ^eigh XIMVBODY Can : fford To BuUd! Beca«a« aaaditiM* cm tkare'a afcaoielaly mm r« lewnatag tba piaaalfcg, kMM baT« laoa wfcy yoa eafli^ (ira. Uadbr Fa4«rd_plaM jm aw witk tha ■■rtiiiiH tf full ownerabip win ba jl# W M yMM. Am4 T*OBr iBitiai InvMtBBmt a«ad hm aaly SO ear mm a« ll» «*Ri ymr prapartyl Tkb saw aalhod af *“.Tr**|g b aMiaV. WMa MM* i . vaatart aad m«ra aaimwitaaL. Taka advawtaga a# lUa gaMaa aartaatty mom. ■ | COME IN NOW Pmt ALL INFORMATION ABOUT FEDERAL LOANS AND HCME FINAMCUfC PtAlCI "good cltisena” of the county un concerned aft>out enforcement of the law because non-enforcement will not affect d»am one way or thoNOther. With the penalty clauBe", the reaponsible citizana of the com munity will beatlr themselvea to see that law cnforeaoiant officers perform their dutiM fud prevent possible liability auita against the county. , This amandbnent offered by Senator Borah constitutes the greatest menaca to affective an- tilynchlng legialation. It must ba opposed vigoroody, and all citi zens are urged to write their senators prior to JaAuary 4 urg ing them to rwtet any attempt to amend the anti-lynching bill. After a short but sharp dis cussion in the Senate on Docom- iber 20, unanimous consent was given to Senator Barkley’s re^ 'q^est tha tthe anti-lynchij^ bill' be called up IA the Senate on Thursday, January 6. Senator Tom Connally of Texaa made ras- t)ing. rstmr^ and objections, complaining that Jia had not been consulted ftn, tte setting of the date. Senator Connally stated: “We realise that vwe cannot postpone action on the antl-l^nching bill forever^” but in the next breatii he intimated very strongly that he intended to filibuster against the bill by sayinjr: “We shall be fa .Tnrmmv >nd may be here a good long while in Jan., too.!’ Senator Connally said that he was supposed to go on a mission to’ Putrto Rico with a sub-com- i^ittee of the Senate and he had i^t expected to„return until tho tmth of January, but he would change his plans and certainly return by January 8. MISS. BOSS SOLVES LABOR PROBLEMS BY WHIPPING >*, ORGANIZERS JACKSON, Miss. Dec. 24 Jack Beasley, presi^.ent^-and 48l? owner of the Jackson- Packuig Company fere, which employs many Negroes at low wages, has invented l|is own personal ays- tem of keeping the workers from oiilranizing for better hours ar.d p«y. His system is to “take a cluib and beat the hell out of a couple of Negroes.” The Beaaley system is reported as follows: “Several attempts have b3cn made by groups, mostly NegrocH, to organize common lalb^or union.i such an occasion arises, Mr. Bea sley said, ‘I take a club and beat the hell out of a couple of Ne groes and «H>nditions immediately settle back to normal.’ He stated that these incidents occur about every two months. His method of . affecting a settlement, al though not "conciliatory by na ture, is quite effective. He has some Negro workers who act as spies among the ptanf personnel, and who are consctantly on tha lookout for some attempt among the workers to organiza- in order to raise the wage rate. When one of these men puts the "Bee’ on a so-called organizer— Presto, Mr. Beasley gives him the works. He boasted of the .Ift.ct that not one of them has ever ireen on relief. He thinks that all labor unions and strike organ isers, white or calored, should be run out of town, and from his general attitude, I think that he would always ibe volunteer No. 1 to see that such measures were carried out..^’ “God is ready and willing to work, if we are ready and willing to let Him, and to be used by Him.” —D. L. Moody. SCiRBQReUGH HARCETT niMiua. ^SCTORS ^ - niwftTir-**- Sarvica ' ^ •AT i'372l — NIGHT J-3722 ■in iMv raifwww m. DURHAM, N. Wa Odd Whiten your skin —with this famous bleach l|A« Mwatt fiwr (ka lUtljpaaHj Icimwn DUPONT TOHTiiC WMHAllaiE SHADE CLOTH- Car MnUIV W*nI«W Call J-9931 ^ — Ubar? AUowmic. For Old Ralfrr. Durham Shade Works Spectallsts In' f “ ^ ItMntals - Iterf Estate-C: Property, Afanageineiit • Antcmnbile «rd All ^ I KjEiidsiM. insurance. j n ’ i • vf n, M. MICMAUX, Manager DNirtmn, N. C. raoae ■4 J4531 kONT fool around with ’ strange bleaches^ aen- SEIe. Use Nadinbla Bleach- tog Cream—known for years r-the bleach that really ^bleiKi^es and purifies the skin. Nadinola Bleaching Cream can’t be duplicate forresult8 bei^Usfe the secret Na^in^ forniiUa can’t be jroitatraJ Nothmg else does so. much to listen the skm so qiiickly, so surely. Start tonight with NadinoJa Bleaching Cream and watch how your complexion growik Ugjiter in'tone, smoother and softer ih texture. ^ AUdruggistscarryNadinola m rqpi^ size at ^ and ex> tra l^ge money saVing^stze at $1,00, Fall directions and nwn^'back niarantee with eiJfery jat. If your druggist can’t supply, take no suHti- tute, send money and we will mail to you postpaid with book of treasure b^ty secrets. HADlUCa.A, Boa 144. Park. Tain. mm ACCIDENT HOSPITJ^ INSURANCe ^ S1C1CME99 ' .FIDELITY BAIL SURETY BONDS SOOTBERN FiDEUTY HDTUAL INSURANCE GOMPAN! iMir.Biit B0WB0wittyiaeiB«HQwrl"«64t*b, nancitlBa cfMAm. Km h*lr f*4*d and lM*m«kad. 0«« a toU k*t il I OiiJafcw'i U»ltan INliCalariaa. J to laaka • iafc tar*c*p> tan bttformar cbam. Hm laccMS^dtow* io ti>« coa«MM tiM’i Bwfctaa Mwy dw. And All peieavso She Discovered .«.60I>EFR0Y'S LARIEUSt Juit tpplr Luieuse in the colot you wiol, It'wiu make your luic « ticli, enn ihide of iti black, black, dark, medium or lighl brown, or blonde... kiving it tbe aofineis and ibeen tbat CTCtyooc admires, your bair -wog'l look dtffd-~.it wni^'t h« «tirkT or imally. Don't deUi'-Tiso to your dealer lb* day and a>k for a bonie of Godtfror’i Larieaea. Satiafaction cuaraDteed Of dealer will refund your ttooeir. It, iea4 $1.39 dlf*c« ta aJtieu^ HAIR COLOR 11)1 G,„ iyiifuiT • ano ouvisi; • sr.iouiMiO'
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 1, 1938, edition 1
6
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75