Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / Sept. 10, 1938, edition 1 / Page 1
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Mailing EDITION a Cl I? £lN?Ri^e g!% DURHAM^ N. C. WEEK ENDING SATURDAY, SEPT. tOth 193& VOLUME la S CEHT^ iji NQriin CaEwa-iNA 44th Annua! Sessi^on Of United Holy Church^ Convenes Sept, 18-25 ^ Mis. Minefva Womack Dies Th« 44th annual nstion «z th« “nit*i Holy Ghitfch of 'America (Southern di«trkt), of wljith ■hop H. L'. Fisher of DuiWm nd Now York is president, will e h«ld in RaUigh, N. C. Sept. 18th «nd 25,th iRcluilve at th« Bletgh Memorhil A-adttorio» 'th th* pro^dsnce United Holy arch. Other oiBcer* of the United oJy Church are; Bishop Cf. J., Branch, Vice PresidentSev, Mrs. E. E. Craig. Secretary; J. E. Parks. Assistant ecretary, and Mrs. Bessie E. eott, Financial Secretary. Tlie session will get under way Sunday raornmg Sept 18, t 9:80 with Church Bible achool which will be followed at lliSO y fellowship greetinga and a eason of United prayers |r vlnp -ijuW “»•«■ thrnuiihout the ««8Sion. e dielivertd at 8:00 P. 14,.^ l\loaday be d*y on and oon atssion will be tfie uvinesi session. At 7:S0 P. H- he opening w(H tak« pjsce ip ^ orm of Citixen’s night at which ime tUeie’ will !>•. greetings lom the various organiBftion the city, Tuesday, the subject for the fy 'wUl be Gospel of the oly Spirit” and at the twoflj- ng session ■ihere will be devot- onal' services. At 1 lOO P- M- ishop Fisher- will deliver h 1 s nual nwssage .and in the Venltig J:herW will be ano^h«r "^ngelistV^ message. WedhesHay’s subject will be ‘the Goapel of Healing" as this ill be missionary day' most of he moiming will be devoted to epovta from the sectetary of ‘ssionary and a report from he secretary of Missions and report from the president of he Home and Foreign Mission TO JTUDY PA39E9 AT HER HOWE ISAOORE BOYD OGLESBY A special message wllit, J!onai»r imiiractDr la eo«[iinerce i|t the HiUsi4e Park High U&iv|o«ity of ‘iowa" re m 4^. education and financial maMlC*- ment. the -article, ‘‘ASm Se condary and Collegiate gchoola of business Forgefting the Lit|:l« Man. jji} thtf Comer,’- ^as won hiti) the peri^iitieif -eont^Hat a cpmplefe c^rse, ^ jit^dy for, Neiy?o sihopjB^oJering senpier- d«} Work in Morfb Carolina. fFouchee • Pr«S9 gerv|ee) Ilf*- Ifiper?* Wequck 43, d|e^ at her home on Grant St. day morning Sept. I| after d lingering {lliiess of about twelve monthp. Mrs. Wontack was born in South Lowell, N. (2. to iifr. and Mrs. Peter Synaker. She has a resident of Grant St. for fibout fdrty.fiv# years. Mrs. Womack was the founder ,i»d preaident of . ,G r a « t StreiC Hisaionary Society. She was active in all' clu^s and or- «#iSh she was • Mrs. Womack pos- iiaew tmr. S)|e to u^ou^si h • f a hofbaqd, Oi^ar Wopjacjt, fiy» d§}ffbpe^, pfesdapies Essif Trnc| Pea^ice Jfo^l, Elniiie ^oBft^ _ gou^frland and Arnet- ^0 sons ^essts e|eve|i grati(|ckildren ^nd a host of rela^ves aijd fr}en4s5 fhe fujjeral services _ over to reports from |he y«rl#9s'hel4 a^ |he White Hock Ipaptist boards of th^ cpmmitteea and Church Wednesday aftprtifrfu ;^t PRESIDENT White Daily Raps Harsh TreatmentOf Negroes On Chickamaug^a Dam M 0. Isabel HOME DEMONSTRATION ilS^CiP B. p. will parest^ ever •etfreeatidiijn^J’lfoft RALEIGH, Sept. 9—T h e First Bapt. Church of Raleigh was the scene oL a charming wedding ceremony on Saturday evening. Sept; *' 3rd, when Miss Carrie Isabell Yeargin became the bride of Ernest Preston Broome. The vows were spok en in a setting of rare charm and beautiful simplicity with altar decorations of Palms which form ed the background for the four fall Candelabra containing white cathedral candles and tall vases of Easter lilies and asters. I I The Eev. Wendell C. Somer- i viUe, GeneraJ"'Secretary of the Bkptist Gozur£ntio|i. of N o 1 t h »Ifi»Ka .Wht».| wj^l^helrfg seasioM te the jRalei^i! »P**st Caut«ntio*- 05 QMS Church of Ameri , which iftf throu^ Sept.'j25tl} IStfi an^ ewnttn'o- NEGRO MAN VICTIM OF HlT-AND-RUf* unions of Vo9 Convocation. In the afternoau there will be a cesa and an outlnf and at night a L«ym»nV memorial «ervlc» will take plaee. The convocation will reach its climax on Sunday Sept. 25th, Ilhere will b« a special sunrise service at five A. M. and the church school will begin at U;30. A gospel message wiir be heard at noon and later ..in the after- 9 P, M.‘ with Revs Avapt offici«H»’; N. C. Sept. 8—Lin-1 Corner J^elvin McLean who wcf4 P^ipcf,“"?l‘' year 1 investigate'd the accident held i^r Harnette County man was found jthfet the man diej “as the result dW^ .Reside the Dunn-RalcigL j.of injuries sustained by » hit- ^igjiway l^e Taesday eveping,. and ruij driver, whose name is §ep| 6, the victim of a hit-and-! unkpown." fun c|fiyer.^' His body vf a s foupd by a pasping motorist ly- ii|g beside the hiifhway in a pool of blopd. j Prince wa« Harnett County's nifrth automobile victim of 1938 j^and the «econ?J within a ten day ) period. f _ „ , , ... . I noon the devottal .Jwrvices will Thursday’s there will be “The. . . „ . - . J. ^ „ 1 be* iir charge of tHk missionary oapel of the Lord’s Coming," - hile on Friday it will be “The * ' ospel fcjr Young People.” young f young people’s helinets •roes of faith will be diacuaaed association will meet at 6t80”pT nd there will be special prayers M. and at 8 p. M. the great and or youth. (final gospel m'enage vHlI b* de* Saturday morning ^1 be givep livered. N. C JUIuiu^eatf Pleads For Teachers Anil Cliililf 811 ■ ^- BY C. C. SPAULDING I self seems to be confronting a iU the public schools ypen jn| crucial test, every parent, teach Ur community, w« want to take.4ar, and student is faced with a i$ method of welcoming., the achers to our city^ We re»H*e at they are not being paid 'aries commensflrate with the rvice they are rendering. WhUe is is a recognized 'fact, our gge^tion woul(j be for them to nder such valuable servicp in school toom through the «v eloping of batter tizens of our youth, that th County and State olHcials, ill recognize their contribution , community and State and e to it; that tl&elr salaries are ore in keeping ,wlth ;their ser- ces. We welcome the teach- s to our community, and in- te them to visit our business ftWshmentt, our churches and r hotn^s- -thaae times when the sobriety, and ole world seem» ,to be tmder- ■ aeriee of soeto>l upbaav* when even CbrfiitiKni^ it' _}rave challenge. The‘ thing which is uppermost in ouir mind however, kiid the thing which &QUId be uppermost in the mind of every citizen, is the question of saving the children. On ihem- rests the future ’of the Race. The Idnd of traiiJng a child 4hould receive should be given serldut consideration The faet that ninety per cent of the young men and women who graduate from collegev today are earning their living with their handa should be evidence sufficient that more vocational tjai»»nf. in our schools is a prime neoaasity. Aside 'fk-om the flnret "Ss”, students should be taimiit the hirtJlts of- r^fiit Hving, * hoB«ty, 1. - t . ... • ■t.- t y j 1 1.1-' SttCI ' --i- ilvrz " ing that will tench tkem how to 4^ aomathisg. Oia raoa ea~ yiease tIMn t» jMgc f> MANT^O, N. C. More than three thc;^!>un,i- ers and students 1 September 1st pilgi i n ■ ^a&teo to be present .1 ; «4 ||ro'*#i of tjie.jsirthi. a t fh ceUbration 351ft ani^iversary of th..^ i of the first English - Amerifis;^ ts participate £ducadoti Pay-'S^onaored Iprr Education division of Tht W Progresa Administration, and witopss Paul Green’s' J .p.. Drama, “The Lost Colonyf . j ‘The Port Raleigh Reserv.u' - 7 at Manteo hae. been rebuilt . u» or near the * same spot wbei j Sir Walter Raleigh’s f i r ^ j coieniea were founded n-)'n I than three and one half centtar ies ago by Captains Phil Amadas and Aruthur BailoA .c The reconstructed city of t h f ' Lost Colony is surrounded by a ! stockade of . pointed logs. l^j has a charming chapel, solid Iok ! houses *ftd grinf stockade**’* t>i - pine loga, a huge museum o; priceleaa 16th century telics, ami j an immense open air theater or. { the edge of the water which ' is'' equipped with every cenceivable piece of theatrical equipment to help bdng to vivid life the peo ple of the eolohy on ,the actual site of their battles and suffer ings. All technical eqalpmeot .eencealed. ering i^^its at each nd« which lisiguised as tall .-4‘^aiper- . wati’h towers for the 3. Even the control room imiitense switchboards , ‘he lights and where the own telephone syetem Je, has been tran3farme“ .1 . lint colonist’s log cabin >iT Tt-gre atmosphere to the ■' 1i? 'S. l+i«*^*tti tifui chapel is cn a ..I iiiti. r-u;. , s IKK’ W part from the cen- f-iiii jxj. . .!is of the colony i*eu where on August, c rred the first ad- protestant sa- t.- new* worldr..i the Li friendly Indian eek later the in- laie was cliris- it Colony Thea^ n phonic drama, f ‘ , " opened its •sentaition on ontinued with -lesday, Fri. lay evenings -pt. y. ■ i t Ct] 1- r K:l, mation ga* nd guides iservntion, "ides' have Dare’s >rs since, St colon late luiip create the baavtiihri lli^ting «ffaeti, (t Me- ai“l of Iwiiit 'til? astoni^ngl? Uaor:.^J S'-'vn^ an County erectej another mile of onugfes' fioMi i'l&gs itead to the "lsl-axi(i wans it acceHsible to tour ist#. Tne liew aoqessibility of Roanojte tslan^j gave rise to plans lor .a larger celebration, com plete with a pageant of scenes from tiie lives of the colonists. Th« first pageant gave- inspira tion to the great American Play- can. PEaywilght Paul Green fro; whose genius sprang the present Drama. Hwgi'o Adalt Education Program The program in observance of Negro Education day began at seven p. M. and it consisted of welcome messages ^ fi'0|f^ WPA othciais, and ’-beautiful music. Especially outstanding was the singing of Mrs. Nell Huzitei cf Durham iitttlOMlly acdaimfed so prano and Choral Director of t^ Federal Music' Project for Negroes in Nsjrth Carolina, who_ sang: “Thus Saith The Lord*' from Elija and l®d t^o spirituals in which the entirB audience d{ the outdoor theat^* took part. Mrs. Hunter sai|g with an 'fo)r- unforgettable sweetness and sh« received request after reqaast to more spirituals. The blen^iSg of the thousands of Negro voieea in singi'iig Swing Low Swe«t Chariot was touching, to say very least, af ^tfir tones echoed over the watw. ris. State Director S Preceding th# ceremony, a nu«i£»l. j»nigraw o(. rare, «xcell- ence was rendered w.th John twrrett of New York City at the organ, His special organ splec- tions were: “1 Love Vou TTuly” and "Ave” rendering as the pro- cesaioiial, Lohengrin's Wedding March and Mendelsohn’s Wedd ing March as the recessional. Miss Margaret Rice, sopran^}, of Durham, sang “My Heart At Thy Sweet Voice” and ‘Because.’ Miss Rice wore Peach lace with mat&hing accessories and a cors age of roses and swainsonia. Mr. Harold White, tenor, of Raleigh, sang ^'JWThere-ere You VValk’* and 'You Ask Me Do 1 Love You,” Mis. Louise Biggs Simmons was fandle lighter and wore yellow lace over taffeta with gold accessories. •' ► . -J. MISS KUW FI3HER • Home Den^d'S^ration Agei^ in Avoyelles an^ ^. Landry Parishes with headqua libers at tBunkie, Louisiana, who spent her vacat ion in Chicago as house guest of Miss Xouisa M. Fisher, .“JB? East 69th Street. During th#^.4nnual 4-H Encamp ment held at Southern University in July 4-H Club girls from her pjjrjshes won first prize in com- petitve skills. Miss. Fisher is a graduate^ in home economics from Southern University. ANP. CHATTAN03GA, Tena. S«pt 8—Terming the chargci at crimination and bri^l tre»tiB«at of Negro wtnrkcn employetl bjr Tennessee Vallay Authority, at the hands cf TV A torvnm atJ walking bosses '“series.” t h • Chattanooga Times c^is apas the Jcint C>agrfcS$:cnii Cora- mittee naw investigatiE^ the Authority m public hearings at Knoxville, to explore theae ctar- tea thcroughly . with a view to ^iminating any type of ^iecri- mination against these workers. The charges were made by the National Association for th? Ad- ’mneement of Colored People, which has been investii^ating the_ matter since 1934, in the testi mony of Charles H Hcuaton, who appeared! be^fore th« Ccm'- mittee Angust IR. N. C. COLLIXIE ENBOLLUENT REACHES NEW HIGH —The bride was given in marri age by her father, J, W, Year- gin , She wore a gown of White Dutchess Satin made in priiYcess style with a long sweeping train, and trimmed with real lace, or ange SioKsonta and lilies of the vailey. Her long veil of iUusr. ion madsk m halo atyla face,veil was caught up with orange blossoms and seed pearls. The l;ride carried a showered bou- qu^ of liUes and swainsonia, and bride’a roses tied with satin. The Maid of ~ Honor-^ was her sister, Miw Effle Ifeargin Who e«r^rtaff»te 'gown -jf aqua- maftne and matching a cessories. She carried an arm bouquet of briar cliff roses mixed with asters and fall flowers^ tied with satin ribbon of a contrasting color. The Bride's Maidtr were also sisters of the bride. Miss Mamie Yeargin wore a taffe£a gown_ of saumon pink with matching .ac cessories. She carried an arm bouquet of taisluan roses, asters ai^ fall flowers ties with aatin ribbon of a contrasting color. Miss Yfargin wore a gro^vn of maize yellow taffeta mth mateh— ing asc|s30ries color, ' She carried an arm bouquet of briar cli^ roses mixed with fall flowers an^ astfn tied with sa tin ribbon also of, contrasting color. ^ . The bridegroom was attended by Mr. Earl E. GoUe of Florenca, S. C. The ushara wfre C. Nicho^ Lightner, head ysher of Raleigh; Godfr^ Herndon, boA of Dor* taan; J. 1; Cooper and Bari t« page •) NORTH CAROLINA MASONS TO GATHER AT WHITAKER A Masonic' Comraunication of the ninth Masonic district of N. C. will be held at Re^ Hill church Friday Sept. 16. Tlie hosts will be King Eklwarj Lodge No. 355. Chidley Hall, The old frame dormitory at North Carolimi College which vms expected to be abanded for the 1933-S9 school year,' will be called upm to help house the large number of youn^ women, students wbo :Jia,Y9 already se»T"^their applica tions to President Shcjmrd. Ac cording to applications the re gular dorpiitory for women as well as the senior home will be crowded and Chidley Hall, which will be pressed into service, wiU be well filled. Indications are that this year’s enrollment at the fbUeg* will set an ill time T«jiuTd- I h e laiyest number of atndentg aver to attend the instituticn wiU en roll Sept. .M- STANDARD OIL CD., TO Giyt,iXTRAPRIZmN TIMES $5,000 CONTEST Throunh lb# courtesy of THE STANDARD 0.|L COMPAWTT, of N. J. Marketar* «f ESSO PiWact* it ha« Mde pewAU the fhni m»d sccond' prtsa wma«r« i« the CAROLINA TIMES ct^ cwiation cMfiattn to drive their'heaittiful hr>ad «*w 1S39 c»rt, the BUICK 4 door isdaa «Bi| th* PLYMOUTH 2 dAoi fax many happy and. carefraa mile* without a e«nt o4 cHt. Th« wMaa- •r* wtti each r«c*iv« a $lft.00 coBpoa book good a»y of l|Mik known and dopondaU* ESSO' PRODUCTS >t any E 9l>.& O STATIOI^ Y«»--»t*» tamo, r>a4 it far yonrso'f in th« c«nr of; the lette# bol#w ad4ruiM^''%;§4ho Catapaign ftlaaacar. STANDARD OIL iTOilPANY OF NEW JERSEY RUY AT THE, E S S O S I G N Dnrikaaa. N. C. 5^tT 3rd 1»3S . Coi^aet-C^'olenat T>a*««. CAMPAIGN MANAGER Carolina Times Publishing Co. Inc, 117 Ea^^Peahodr St. . Durham, North ^roliba ^ Daaor Siri’- ’ -at—S » With irefaranca to oUr rMmt comrersii^a^«bov« s[A|*efC. I am authorizad to say tiiat th* STNDABD OIL COMFAIilX ^ ^ J. will giva a prize to each of th« winners at ^ aatoaoUts ing ipvan by the CJtHOUNA TlinES. “ TheM prixaa inU baja eosp^ boo^ whi^ can te used to purchaW any 1^0 P&OQOI^'n at any ES^ aMlMi. We think thia wtU be more satii&elOT; titan havipy th* patronize any certain station. Ton Aooldi advlsa Mr. Haimaatt prehl»^ af th« (o ^t pmta can ba ferwi^d«i. - Yonra trq)|y, STAM&ARD OIL COH9ANV A f. T; BWSH4 ESSOLEMS OMBANim tMQOflUi
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 10, 1938, edition 1
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