Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / Dec. 21, 1940, edition 2 / Page 2
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• 1SS8 ra«r BpMd aS4 to GrMt jHwri rout RadskiM 71 to 0 Britain. |»alK>w who la bait ia pro Ibot- world. V A. A. U. doclinM to subtti* t«te y»rd«c« ^ metm «cal«. Hoover’s plan to feed vietimi of Hitler opposed by women. • Hitler Mys there will be no starvation in Europe thii win- Ouf ship program begun in ter. No help needed. lMmiiB>Maarti»aa«»aaaaaaaaw SEASONS GREETINGS SILVER^S 5c to $1.00 West Main St. MERRY XMAS Service Tailor Shop Hig^hest Quality Workmanship We Gall For and Deliver . Fayatteville St^ Phone J-7393 4^WjO>UJU BEAury.-' SrONSnKI D BM LAkIIIM BI-LTM DURIAIJ Tfi« lori»Mi> Moviy lurMw w«« thihWml by lit* CodWroy Manufaduriiig C«mpmy te tlwdy maHioit of pr*M4^f woaMi't notaral bsouty, and to moIM Um rMuto of Mt r«M^ ayaSoM* to th« publk. ..Season’s Best Wishes ^For Xmas and The New Year |Ray’s Service Station- § Pine and Pettigrew St. S>.“jar Tf yoti have never leen a peacock with its gajrplumaKe and amhslngly ugly feet, I am sure you have aeen its counterpart every day upon the sidewalks of your oWn city. Maybe you have been emulating this beau- tlful-non-beautlful bird—In fa?t, I am afraid too many of us have been dressing onrselTes, arraying our bodies with little attept^n to the appearatic* of our f^t. Color ful effects In dress and hats, flat tering makeup and artlaUc mani cure-all are to no BTnfl if th* whole effect is polled by poorly- shod feet. It Is not necessary to affect ex pensive shoes, nor is it even wise to adopt too extreme styles in shoes. However, in order to make the most of your costume whether it be for morning wear, or sports wear, or for formal evening wear, it is al ways best to don shoes whose style fits into your general scheiye. Strive for unity In your costume— by that I mean brogues or the popu lar saddle oxfords (spectator ties, Included) are proper for use with sweaters.and skirts. Galj^ colored sports attire Is now Jn ngoe • bet open-toed slippers are very unsuit able except, for eveainf w0ar. 141^^ wise, you' 'Wouldn’t attend a tortnal dance wearing walking shoes with a lovely even&g dress. The poor peacock, unfcurtunately, cannot change his shoes as we can. Moreover, every day is Sunday for him because he wears his very best every day—and with it the saiue old ugly feet. He cannot hide his ugli ness, nor can he make over his defects. How lucky are we to be able to 'Kiange our costumes, to cover up blemishes, to be beautiful m well as comfoi’table. Keep harmony In your dressing; ■remember color blending and con trast; attire yourself suitably for the occasion; and above all look al your feet and see to it that they, too, are an attractiv* part of your ensemble. Don’t let their unbeconi- Ing appearance detract trom your well-planued costume. Let them be complimentary to you, as well as serviceable. SpeaMng of comfort afid service ability, did you know ttet most foot troubles come from wearing too small shoes T It seema to be a cusr tom to squeeze the feet Into shoes an inch or two too short What good is the appearance of little feet, if the possessor must suffer agooiea in order to maintain It? Modem shoe manufacturers have the interest of the waarer at heart and are, therefore, striving to make all shoes, whatever tbeir siie, at tractive—as well MM comfortable. Let your feet have room in their sho^s to relax. Pinching la the first warning signal that all is not wtfl underfoot. Heed it an^ if your shoes are too short or too narro%, remember to fit yoorsetf properly the next time. Most women endeavor to alte^ nate the height of th^r heels In order to make use of the various muscles in their lega. This is in excellent practice because It helps to keep the legs and thighs shapely and supple, and wards off dangen such as brt^en arches and flat feet;! Youll never be sorry if you make care of your feet an important fac tor in your beauty routine—they’ll repay you a thousand-fold. Wfkit ttrt your bttttty problems? Write: Marie Downing, Larieute Beauty Bureau, 3509 Undell Blvd., St. Louis, Mo., and she will be glad to amsver them. Be sure to enclose 0 self-addressed, stamped envelope. Meteyiy Medical College, Nashville, Seete To Raise $2,300,000 Fund »> % V: i"! REGAL THEATER MERRY CHMSTMAS %ednesda3T h « . ^ /if*- jTt' ; 4 «.;3 iiiiJ TBU¥Sm:9-^mMNpA^ 5c & '10c Double Feature iand Shbri Show .Opens lA.t 1:00 o’clock FRIDAY and SATURDAY Wm. BOYD in • “THE SHOWDOWN” ipCBrr or UIVDUNjeSS AND HOSmTAUTT TltAT TODAY GMxma wrraiM vt Aix rmo even gkeater expression 30ME AKP SEASONS GO TmtOVCHOCT TOC YEAB5. 1 • PASCHALL BAKERY • ' 121 Duke St. Fhone Fancy Ice Creams SANTA' C3LAUS Center Piet® Use as a center piece diurinv meaL Serves 8 to 12 people. ^Rht red coat. White ivMsken. Bfade of vanilla ice cream, decorated with wMnied creanu Stands 14 inchea hich.^ $1^ Packed and Delivered XMAS BELL CENTER BRICK ^ BDtire’s a popnMr priced favorite that’s easy to mm, sure to pleaMt. VaoilU ice cream with red Christauw bell center of iHStachio. 50c quart, 10c packing and delivery INDIVIDUAL MOLDS Take your choice of seven colorful h^Uday molds. ZSc eadh*-$34N) do2;en^$5.00 2 dozen le Gift of jriic Year ftlE NEW r.... fv ‘ f1 Ex^lutiv« FMfurM Ibllt SPttpLXinC COBONAS tiu outitsndisg fciguilli la ttfa Mteic fiaU oi tjpnnitiH. ? Silent ., $64.SO t sterling ^59.50 ^ Cprotu Standard |49.5o jpvm-iuaior $39.50 Zepliyr J^29.75 mmnMT nsM» ^ ' ilX^UWING CO. ■ .-.V' > Order 48 hou» in advance. i I -T ^RBE CENTER BRICK Sli^ in 6 cNr 8 portjkms. Vanilla ice creaai irttk ^g)^«|9^t3iHstmas tree center of pistachio. ^(Ic^Srt; 10c packing & delivery; '.'V^ . Durham Dairy DURHAM L-955 . CHAPEL HILL 7766 HOLIiDAY GREETINGS S. E. ROCHELLE Radio & Bicycle Shop 05N. Mangum St. Spoeial to the TIMES Nashville, Tenn. — Meharry Medioal Crflefe of Naahvills, will open the new year with a nation wide campaogn to nua« 18,300,000 a* Ml addition to its General En- donniMot, it was announced here today by Charles Nelson, Presi dent of the Nashville Truet Com pany and also of Meharry’s Board of Troetees. * Dr. Abraham Flexner of New York, formerly aaaooiated with the Camejgrie ^nd Rookfefeller Foundations, and recently retired head of the Institute of Advance Study at Princeton, New Jersey, is national clMunnan of the En dowment profram. I Of th« fands to be raised, $1, 500,000 will go to meet the condi tions of a Qeneral Board Qrant of $3,500,000 tonrard an initial addi tion of $6,000,000 to Meharry'g present endowment of nearly $808,000. The additional $800,000 will go to match an equal an^unt raised to briny the total endow ment to an eventual figure of $6, 000,000. The conditions attached to the Board’s Grant require that the money be pledge prior to July 1, 1941. At prwent, Meharry has en rolled 214 students in its School of^Medicine; 41 in its Sciiool of Dentistry, and 37 in its School of Nursing. A course fior Dental Hygienists, temporarily discon- tiriued this year because of lack of applicants, will be resumed during the Mhool year of 1941-42. Living graduates of Meharry, actively engaged in professional practice, number 2,771 and are to found in 37 states of the Union. Meharry is unique among Anieri can Medical Schools, not only be cause it enrolls well over half of Negro medical students, but also on account of the fact that it is the only grade “A” medical coll^re in, the country devoting itsetf e^usively to the training of NegrMs. Tlie cresent president of the oolite «. Dr. Edward L. Turner, whc!*.|>ri€^f to his assumption of the i^e^ency in 1938 and serv ed for tfwo years as professor of medicine in the School of Medi cine. Prior to that Dr. Turner, a graduat* of the IJniversity of Pennsylvania Medical School, had taught anatcHny at the University of Chicago and Physiology at the American University in Beirut, Syria. Meharry was founded at the close of the first decade follow ing the Civil War, as the medical department of the Central Tenni' College in Nashville, established nine years earlier—in 1867 by the Freedman's Aid Society of the Methodkt Episcopal Church. It has enjoyed an idependent corpor ate existence since 1915. Its present plant and equip ment, valued at some $2,500,000, compare favorably with those of the best medical colleges in this country. Notable among contributors to the project financed in 1931, were the Qeneral Education Board, the Julius Rosenwald Fund, the l»te (Jeorge Eastman and Edward S. Harkness, citizens of Nashville, Meharry Faculty and alumni. A National sponsoring com mittee composed of both, whites and Negroes is now being formed to lend impetus to the Endowment program. Highway Fatalities 1940 May Exceed Previous Slaughter 'WiFe Preservers BIG HOLIDAY SALE OE PINE USED CARS Boy Now for Christmas [1939 Plymouth CoMh $495' (1939 Fiord Tu(Vftr $495 U939 Dodge Sedan $6451 |1938 Dodge Coach $4.75 i 11938 Plymouth Coupe $395 j (1938 Chei^let Twn. Sedan * $445^ [1937 Plymouth DeLuxe Sedan $375 ‘ {1937 Chevnrfet Town &dan $3751 11936 Ford Tudor___$245 j TERMS NORFLEET IMOTOR CO., Inc. W. 5th at P(^lar Dial 7151 “Qnly a reversal of past ex perience during the last two weeks of this month will prevent North Carolina’s 1040 traffic death toll from exceeding the 1939 slaughter,’’ Ronald Hocutt, director of the North Carolina Safety Division, declared this week. Accident records received by the division show that more than 900 persons were killed on North Carolina streets and highways f*^om January 1 through Decem- b.:r 16, 1940. The state's 1939 traffic toll m^mbered 943 persons, which means that an average of two fatalities a day for the re mainder of December would run; the 1940 toll aibove that of last j year. And past experience in the I state has been that December,' most dangerous month of the year, averages between three and four traffic fatalities a day. Hocutt said he hoped all North Carolina motorists 'and pedestr ians would heed Governor Hoey’s recent plea for greater caution, alertness and obedience to traffic laws during the remainder of this year. “It is true,” he said, “that there has' been an increase in trai]fic fatalities in the nation as a whole this year, and it i» also true that motor vehicle registra tions and gasoline consumption have hit new peaks in North Carolina this year, but these fac tors do not mean that there is any more excuse foi^ a bad accid ent record this year than there was last year, they only mean that there is more opportunity for accidents—and all who use our streets and highways have an alternative of rejecting that op portunity. “Let's all pull together for the remainder of this month and walk and drive in a safe mannei’, to the end that North Carolinr,'3 1940 traffic accident toll may bo I'sld below that of 1939." ytrf hat snd thnat K throu^ th« iMtMT A l«iT«r ImpIcrMDt can then bt uMd Household Hint Possibly your gas bill is ui- ; usually high because you allow food and water to boil furiously, j •Ithouch they would cook just as j fast with the bumwr turned | down, aaviag gas. Pleasant Y uletide Thoughts The Yuletide Season brings with" it pleasant thoughts of friend ships—tried, proven and cherished throughout the past. It makes us reoiike that friendly associations with our fellow men are in- ^oluabie in both public and private life and ore above things material. It Is significant of the season, then, that we pause to soy Merry Christmas and Happy New Year. And for your friend ships ond favors we are truly grateful. y.*" iCMi: aRQLiNA ‘WHAT YOU SAY JOE^* Charlotte 'Armory Carolina’s Bivgeat FLOOR SHOW, and CHRISTMAS DANCE Dec, '25, 1940 TiAuif) **S>ati‘hmn” Hot TjIPS ARMSTRONG His $1500 Trumpet Sonny Wood*, Midjre Wil liam^ Louia Russell, Red Allen • Separate Admission will be charged for the ©vents.. -FLOOR SHOW- Gol. in Balcony 8:30 Whites, 1st FI. Adra. 55c -Colored Dance- 10-2 Adv., Tickets 85c Get ’em Now at Don’t say we didn’t tell you— Adv. Sale Ends DEC. 24th IR PEISOI PrMCRted ky MOA The Stpia Swiig Seisation COUNT BASIE City Armory Monday, Pec. 30 (Aadvance Tickets 72c & $1.10 At Dooi* DOORS OPEN lat 7s30
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 21, 1940, edition 2
2
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