■U . Tm CAJKH4lfA TllfE^ lATUKlMlT. MAY ftA. 1M« PACi S»ttS NM»t—Tom QuimvN Viu. ■■ AiinriM* "fuB” m Tim ttuHK Sv b "hhrntt . . . lead oaly lit for my mrw AnrnoMn tMMM k taon XUt CiukT u4 neiiTt by m«ra tniQ ■ canildMtM Imw ti trm Adwk$ iig }} Qwtlopi prhritdy. Siga row faU Mm% etim^ ami MhMim t» ■I kcMn, «a4 piMM tociudt ■ tttmpti mTtfop* for rear |t(lfi fra/ S ItHtrt Hi AJUe WALlAOt. rtrt •/ Tilf CAXOUNA TIMBS, f. Q Bm ^ DVKHAM. IV. CAROVNA. KCii —Answer rtie lollawiog 9»Mtion in the CAROLINA TiifBS soon. Ani:—A* you both get uldi't jroa ar* you to have parted two ytftra ago h« love* you 4ind I ftm •ura that you love him, ao go to him and patch this uifillir up. Gtt back together and live happ ily GC —Will 1 make the trip thia ■ummer that I have made the past tWo_ lummeriT Ana: Yea but you won’t comc back ^ bachelor. There wre foing to Im many changea made in your life before you return home, but you will be very very happy man, ao don’t worry. ' MTJ—^1 ^Ave been married b»t I am with my mother now. 1 don’t love my husband at all •r4 I wiali to know if 1 am going t« aucceed And lie happy? Ana; —^Talcing «are_ of your aeU and your two Littis Girls it Citiiig to be a rather difficult Utik for you but you will aucceed fbd gat by rather nicely. 'It is ms impreaaion that a person b««ruig th« initials qf L. P. will ki^ig iiappineas and love into your life ||gain you are acquaint *d with him at the present time. (XIr—Will my sister overcome her sickness under the care of M medical doctors? I wish to get an Astrology Reading, Ans: The only possible wfiiy tliat jrour .sisters- will regain her health is ^ place her under the CJffful watch of fi) good medical doetar. If she does this, theu ^he may expect to get better. You may send for an Astrology Kead- iug abd Lucky Day Chart if you like. Send a quarter, with your full name, correct addresa and l^rthdate dnd you will hear from AA—1 feel that Someone is trying to hinder me and wish to know if it is true or not? ,1 am taking a course iu be^Uty cul ture and failed in niy first ex amination dLid wish to know what was the tiouble? jfldLL Ifeyi Ai)B: You niuy iis wtil facta you didn’t study yo»r cour- sfe, but you are depending on the Work that you do *>» modela ’8 heads to ])Msb you. The ‘course yt>u have chosen has to be mas tered you books *nd assign ments tl^t have to be passed be fore you can complete this course so get bujsy and study. No one is hindering you..you are to blame for not passing, but I predict better results for you next time. ABA—This boy that I j!lm going with says he loves me and 1 want to know if he means it or not? with saye —iebci t I.trr -ael Should I overlook things thfit make me aore occasionally? Ans: No, you are wise in rea* iiaing th* fact that he doesn’t love you, but likes your com ity. At this very time he is trying his best to date your best “girl friend” and she isn’t going to turn him down. I would sug- geat that you make other dates too. June 16, 1910: My uncle died Isbt year in September ^d we all belived that he had money put away sInd we aren’t able to locate it. Tell ua if we wil come into money thru this source? Ans: No child, you won^ be rich ilm w*y. Your uncle lived a normal life, not gromg in want, but he didn’t h^e a vast sum of money hidden sway at the time of his de«th. Don’t ti^ubl« your little head about it anymore, me shortly. ISAAAC mntftlY IN PIQWAM^i Remember Isa^ Murphy, four times winner of the Kentucky Derby and one of the foremost jockeys in history? His exploit* will be the sub ject of the diorama pictured albove on whicH Joseph C. Pettiford is working for display at the Americfin Nej;ro Exposition i;i Chicago, July 4 to Sept.2. For those who have never seen a diorama, it is a displaji^ in miniature of 4 scene. The small diorama at the left is the working model con structed from a drJiwing, Any mistakes made on the Working model are corrected on the final diorama. NAACP Cites Three g”» Lynchings During Year NEW YORK — Refuting the statement released Thursday, May 9, by the Association of Southern Women for the Pre vention of Lynching, that the peiiod frojn Mi^y 8, 1939 to mid- nigrht, May 8, 1940, may be re- gapded as a “Lynchlesa Year,” the Nation,JfI Association for the Advancement of Colored People pointed to three lynchings, all of which took pace in Georgia dur ing the month of M^alch, 1940 At evidence that this period was by no means barren of this Clime. The story at these lynchings appealed in the April 6, 1940 issue of the Naition Magazine. Irate Ky. Citizens Fight Barkley, ^ Cliandler LOUISVILLE, Inccns- «d at whaA they regard ab trai torous conduct on the part of the part of two Kentucky sena tors who are contributing much to knifing the fede^ anti-lynch- in|^ bill, Negro citizens attending a large NAACP sponsored mass iMeting held at Quinn Chapel kere Friday, dfyly 4, have aunch- ed a campaign againat Senator A.' B. (I^adppy) Chandler and fletate Majority Leader, Alben W. Barkley. Chandler was one of the three memiberB of the Senaite Judicitlry Committee who voted against re porting the bjU out favorably. Barkley has been Reused of us- iDK hia infliience as Senate Ma- Joiity Leader to keep the bill from being called up to ^ vote on th* floor. The meeting voted to sehd a telegram immediately to State Highway Commissioner J. Lyter Donaldson, mentioned ^ a possi ble opponent to Chandler in the forthcoming primaries, notifying former of their intention to fight C^bfAd^r. Members of the meet ing acted after heuing ft speech by Tbtfrgood Marahall, special counsel for the Nation^fl As- ■oeiation for the Advancement of Ctjored People say: “We muat show any Sensttor the criminal folly of voting Against the exii^qeBsed interests 0-: a l^ge block of his voting conatituenbs. This organization (NAACP) hopes that Kentucky Negroes will vote solidly against Seiiator Ciylndler whenever his nt.me is on a ballot—even if he shculd ran for municipal dog- catcher.” ' Pointing out that r^ctionary elements in the South have used the threat of lynching to crush the NAACP’s program of fight- ii'g for civil and economic righAs, Marshall ^d these elements have now added to the ranks of I Presidential tl'.elr enemies organized labor 11940 national elections. witii which ^iegToes fSi-e now allied in an effort to obtain ^Cdn omic equality. “It often h^Hj>pei>s now,” he said “that when they beaA up a Negro, they don’t just beat him up as a Negro but as a “^or agitator’ a Communist. Even whit* ^kC>or leaders have been subjected to niob violence in dozens of cases.” Marshall said ih»t Barkley is the key man in the Sen^4te hold ing up action on the anti-lynch ing bill, despite the fact ^hat seventy senators have j^^reed to vote for it if they are given the opportunity. With plans for blanketing the state with cards to ‘be sent to B^Ckley protesting his continual he.msltringing of the anti-lynch- iig bill under way, the meeting distributed hundreds of such cards following Marshall’s speech. It is understood that forth right fiction will be brought to bear against Barkley’s political aspirations not only by Negro citizens of Kentucky, but throughout the country, when ^id if he decides to run as a candidj^Ce in the The list includes 1 womati and two men (^1 white). All were faiaten to death by nfoiba, domina tel by or made up of members of the Ku Klux Klan. All the lynchings took place in or ne«>%' Atlanta, Ga. The list of the ®ates when the lynching occurr ed follow: Sa(|ali Rawls, March 2; Benton Ford, March 2; Ike Gaston a white barber, March 7. Miss it;.t.vls and Ford were taken from their parked automobile in a Lovers Lane and charged with iminorfiUity. Gaston was charged with drinkinjc too much. Association officials also point ed out that the P'ederal Bureau of Investii^:^ion and the Fulton Save Time Aim Money By Relaxing In The BUS ect the period fnom Mjdy 8, 193® to 9, 1940 represents a “lynchless year.” “Lynching is not dying out,” the lawyer said, "Lynchers have merely flJopted the subcom mittee technique. Instead of a laige, noisy mob, a small group of five or six persons now kidr nao the victim |&lid maim or kill him. If it is a killing party, the body is sunk in water with hbuvy weights. Those kind are rot reported ^ilnd so they tell us tl'at lynching 13 dying out.” Marshall was referring to a re port published in Janv^ali7 of this year„^ entitled “Lynching Goes Underground,” which re veals a southern white NAACP County, Georgia grand jury had | investigator’s story of how revealed that some ^thirty per- ijfnch victim are done fJjv&y wiUl sons in this area ^iJ/e been ' quietly'Ijy 8,. few persons instead beaten by mobs and the Ku Klux [ of by large mo''be. '' Klan during the past twelve years. Unpublicised Lynchinc* The nuJlnner in which lynching statistics may be distorted to I give aid and comfort to southern I reactionaries who "scream of • stiitee rigifalts,” ~ and tell us that I “lynching is dying out,” was re-1 vealed byL Thurgood Marshall, j special counsel for the National I Association for the Advancement o' Colored in a speech before a mt£s meeting held in Louisville, Kentucky, Friday, May 4, four di»ys prior to the announcement made by the Association of Southern Women for the Pre- von'tion of Lynching to the ef- Governor Attempts 1 o hide Opposition To Lynching Bill Candidaie NEWARK, N. J. — Mrs, Grate B. Fenderson, prominent in the civic! Bife of Newark, New Jer sey, and} ^ menrjbe|ti of the na- tion^'j board of directors of the National Association for the Ad vancement of Colored People, is running as a candidiJle on the regular Republican ticket for the New Jersey Assembly from Essex County, Durham Academy Of Medicine PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY NKW YORK — The true story of how Governor Ilomt'f A. Holt of West Virginia, expressed his o]>iiusition to the Federal Anti- Lynching bill in letter to Sena to*’ Kenneth McKcUer, of Tenn. airh for of the bill, but sought ta hide'this fact /rom, the voter*' ill his state, is contained in a memorandum sent nut April 29 t)y the NAACP to all its Went VLrgini. branehe.q, and made pu);lic here today. I The letter, which the Governor wrote to McKeller in response to jSl request which the Tenn. senator sent out to ten Southern Governors last February 9, ask- inp them to state their position 01! the Jbill, says in pa.rt; “The statistics, including those which you sent me, would seem to indicate that anti lynching sentiment has almost solved the problem. It occurs to me that to create federal rtspon'eibility in such matters might encourage local laxity and do mojre harm than good.” “My particul^r interest hi this connection relates to the general proposition of the unnecessary extension of fede.ral powerl I am much more interested in some other manifest,£>.ion of this tendency than il am in this particular bill.” On March 12 Senator McKell- ev put into the record of the b.ll, all the letters he received from the Governors, except that of Governor Holt. All the letteifg opposed passage of the bill. The reason for his leaving opposed passage of the bill. The reason for his leaving out Holt’s letter is made plain in the followin" piragr|aiph, which Governor Holt wrote: “Where it appears to me that there is some reasonable op portunity of my p^Hicipation in tli?S«. matters being helpful, I have no'^ i^^esitancy' about ex* pressing ray views ' publicly, but, in this instance I cannot see atry wfcjy by which any public express ion by me could be helpffil, and, e I do not ha' e an oppor- to gt'e full to my views on this eontroveriial matt- • I pi'.fer to tak n*. pn.t in i Askt’d whetht-' the 1« U-i bf n lirft out of the r.'r-rd by niintaki', Senator M.-K.-lli.r gave t!i- followin; anruer it- a letter to the >fAA( P; “No, the lettiT from f.overnor Holt wa'j not iniidv -rt-'utly left out of the record. The fJovernor ; that the letter rw>t be made ^ piiblic. The only adi'ertence was j in pcrniittinsr the letter to get j into public. T?ie onl; ailvertence wa.' tri p-«-.lit:'.!!*' $h4 letter to in*. > the *rnri(f' of mrwvpsfWf rren when the other letters were il lerted in the record.” The XAACTs ni. .1 f .J.im contained cop!> j of ths flTr'’r- nor’s original tetter and Senator Me Keller's explanu-ion. Mem- b#r> )f the West Virginia) branch e' of the asnoeia't4«n w>r«-e ai^ed to bring the matter to the full attention of all ‘inpp .?t«ri of the bill in. that sUHe. Tb« man who bnya advice la rfally smarter than the nUln who it. roinpirtit diiiitiiiis Servirf •••REMODELING •••NEW CONSTRUCTION •••ROOFING SERVICE •••BUILDING SUPPLIES '■ ESTIMATES GLADLY FURNISHED Fur Ptiinting Paperinj and Deeorating we use ROGEilS PRODUCTS. H We Use Long-I.ife LOGAN- ’ LONG ASPHALT ROOFING EXCLUSIVELY. mxs liFE A ASPHALT SHiN6t£t THIS COMPANY OPERATES ON A VOLUME BASIS SMALL PROFIT, LARGE VOLUME ALL WORK GUARANTEED Home Modernization ) And Supply Co. 614 I^iyelfeville St., Durham, N. C. PUone J-4821 ~ U. M. \iEOHGE, manager' — Gcing to aad from work caa'be a pUasUre if you ride Ui« bus. Ycu gat homa •arliar. You spandl lata money ' for lran*|M>rttatloii (4 token* for 25c). Yon enjoy a Mtfe, comfortable ride. Durham Public Service LEO G. BRUCE, M. D. Physician and Surgeon 814 1-2 Fayettevillo S4- XelepfaonM Qfflce J-9222 Rea. L-^54 J. N. MILLS. M. D. PMYSICIAN AMO SURGEON Office 106 1-2 Parriah Street Si'ECLAL ATTKNTIQN TO DlSEASIi^S OF WOMEN Trained nurse io attendance DOCTOR A. S. HUNlEft DENTIST N. C. Mutual Building Office J-0891 Res. L-3681 DOCTOR M. C. KINO Telepboiiea Office 263-0 Res. 249-1 Frankdintun, N. C. DOCTOR E. P. MORRIS DENTIST 707 1-2 Fayetteville Street Hours 9—1 2~3 4 7 Telephones Office J-83^1 Rea. J-9042 k. P. RANDOLPH. M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON 812 t>o)vd Street Office Houra 9—10, S—4, 6—7 Telephones Office N-C211 ^ Rea. N-6662 I E. TURNER, M. D. INTERNIST 618 Fayetteville Stree* Telephooes Office L-82S4 Rei. 8S64 J. S. THOMPSON. M. D. PHYSICIAN 709 1-2 Fayetteville St. Telephonai Office L-2541 Rm. L-8621 ELLIS E. TONEY. M. D. SOS Hillsboro Street Oxford, Nortk Careliiut TalephoBM , Office 446 Bm. Nt MiiailfeBilll s. M. BECKFOR!», M D GENERAL SURGERY 212 Montgomery Street Henderson, N. C. R. A. BRYCE, M. D, Depot St. Ro^oro, N. C. Office Hours 9 a. m.-ll a. m'.—2 p. u.-4 p. m. Sunday Taleplionas; Office 4092 Res. 4001 W. A. CLELAND, M. D. Physician Surgeon Biltmore Hotel East Pettigrew Street Hour*: 8:3a-l0?30 l-«2 ’ 6.30-7 Office F-4021 Res. J-1634 J. W. V. CCHIDICE. M. D. General Sufgery 711 1-2 Fayetteville St. J-90S1 Telephone* L-SS71 DR. J. M. HUBBARD DENTIST N. C. Matnal Buildinij Office Hours 9-1- 2r30>6:30 Eivening ^n4 Sundaya by appointment felephona J-0&91 For Baying Building Remodeling And Refinancing Your Home lAndSFerCeDtOoSaviDgs BUILDING F. L. McCOY, CHAl RMAN OT THE BOARD C. C. SPAULDING PRESIDENT R. L. McDOUGALO. See'y.TrMe." 144 WEST PARRISH STREET PHONE J-3921 8ie EAYeXTpvlLLE STROTT niPNE JMI DURHAM, N.C.