lie Canlin Tiies lit 8. St. «k D«1i>w, OMTollm* Smy ■iUardfty by , nil 0AMUH4 XSaSS PUBUfBBlKG 00 , !»«> J-Wl I- B. AUSm KDITOH " Ralk I. K«v*«w E«l«r Tntr-* A^varlbbif ' suB9caimoM hatms T“ HM Pw Yw hi A*r«ie»j $IM P«r SU Moatt* 1m Adnwa; Me Fnr l%n« lloM«« ia A4i^aM} OtiMV |8.00 MittOT »t tk« DariMa fttagteig —dw act t*. 18TI. Ifcwe Mitot iafmutliii eoBMroiaf aatiowl •ivHtMac ntm, adinM aU e««»»te«UoM W OAAOUMA Tsms. DaiHmm, N. C- Kellev iller Writes... SATURDAY MAY 2S. If37 r , R£n^ENTATKH« NEED^ I. , , MfWMtion hM eoBte %o m that a laamber of the B»rd of MMatioa TiiitMl ^ colored aduMd at Dtiriuua lavt week tiuit 1m buuIc'Um oxpi'wiOB that be 4i*^ know such a de* flanUo eenditioB oxiated te a Nbool ia Daiium Connty, The atatmMDt ef ^ edacation official brings oot definitely. dBB wt imf* contended, that it it imposBftle for Neiroe* . t* whmt to. richtfnlly theln without having repreeenUtion MU iflie roTnmiftTiriii commiwloni, coflneilSf hoards and other crvofa whieli haTs to do wtth allothig the money. The emUtioB irfa*4»y i^t the Dniham school is not the only disgnceful OM ^iwniiy Ni«roes in Durham. Practically every Ne- gra sdM^d in Dorham is minns wltat tt ought to have on account of tM ft*ct that those vh-o are in jehai^ of such work are un^ aware vi their aecdii i Thm are hundreds of fair ninded white people in Durham citieB w)m are de^as of seeixig that Justice is don^ tgn, hat heeause Certain conditions ex^ not known to they wre apparently not interested in doin^ wfaat is right by tlMfe colored fellow citisens. Wkewise there are hundred of fidr minded white peofde want to do th» rii^t thing when thay an told i^ot Uieae conditions, but who are aift»id to take tiM had la rach matten, for fear of being eriticised by menbers «f tbur own group. They'oould very ea^y take the lead in giv- !■( sapport to tbe effort on the part of some one else to remedy tha e^pidittons without causing unpleasantness to themselves. Sm M Negroes hiave no representation on important faoairda always be given ithe crumbs in education and o^er bentiHts. The suneStion that a separate board t>f educa- I fee appointed, composctd entireliy of Negroes, is unadvisable, tapraetkahle, and we beliteve, unlawful. Such a board would aat he a body pleni|>otentiary, but would be subject to the will eC tbe white body,^ and w^nld only hftve secondhand knowledge of what to goh^ on behladi th« Mouw: Ike Carolina Times f«ela that it is vitally necessary for Ne groes hi Durfaam and jNitfipne to begin seeking representation «■ all bMffds that have. |b ido with the spending of public funds. ui^dEBass ofi wi^ot restresentstion*’ should be liy M^ ibefdii. eyes of faft mind^ whitie peopTe^^ Tha havM 'iiAfah such a qrstem is playing with the race riiould be h^ la mind by Ne«Toes. The race «an not hope to «M«t tha teaands made on it without beinf able to share fully ia tt* fceseltts i^ieh accrue from the es^nditure of public A LOST GENEIIATIOH OF NEGKO YOUTH , • ^ The-generatioi^ of youth since' World War faces the futare with uncertain prospect and dim med outk)ok. Woodrow Wilson’f Idisdty proclaimed "War Ti De mocracy’’ has served to frustrate the Democratic spirit tlirou|rhout the world, A generation of youth has all but lost the democratic in centive and^ the spirit of ruar^d individuality has given away to social regiaventation and the to talitarian state. Religion as a social force, no longer Influences tfie conduct of the nations of the? earth, and the youth «f all lands have lost the inspiration and gruiding light of supematnrsl character. Tht world is engulfed, ^n u sea 11 spiritual unierta^Jty. Yout \ no longBt lootik to tt« faith of the fathers for the light that shiueth from above. Socialism, whicht is godless at heart, is one or the other of its forms of manifestation, has seiz ed upon our day and generation. In Russia tV.ey call it Sovietism in Italy Facism; in Germany Na zism; in America the _ the New Deal. In England, France Spain and other parts of iEurope, -wl'.ile it may yet have assumed a de finite name, its underlying spirit and purpose arc c’ tn present f»nd persistent. " with availaUe occnp«tions suited to their talente aad attain- ments. Those wh^ we gov ernment 9»j rolls are fegfaaent- ed In preat industriid pvojects at wages little above the Hviag re* quirements. I^or this generation, l^as^, the ambition of the youtl) n€ the land must content Iteelf wl^ the woric of raplacemeni iuid. carry ing on the word already laid out, more or leas in accordance with pre-conoeived ^ttema . ' Industrial and eeonomle froni tiers h|t^e been well nigh ei^us- tel. There are no more mattrial worlds to conquer. Tlbere'lkze no new lands to be discovered, no new farms to be developed, no new cities to be built TWe aum- ber of millionaires cannot be 1^1- tiplied and our billionaires mu^t cease to be. There is m limit be yond which ru^red IndivldnaMty ceases to ge a virtue. The John D. Rockfellera, Henry Fords ar.d Andrew Mellons belong to a past regime and soon w91 be "gone with the wind” The land that once knew them will no them no more. I am not indulging in the pess imism of age, which always tl-rows a halo of sacred tradition around things that are ’ ancient. The older generation Is always nclined to say “there were giants on the earth in ttose days.” I know " that ^0' progress of ItT'the line of indu.-trial and l-uman race must go ever on- economic enterprise' one ' -might ward and upmrd, but, it can be dispose’d to say fat there are never move on forever in ine no more worlds to conquer. New direction. H»e Tower of Babel constingeiits have been devdop- must ever end in confusion and ed and exploited. Viii^ Isl^ds' frustration, else men would reac been bought tmder tillage and the skys and, become as gods. . A Trip To The Repirialic OfVHaiti By Cm C, Spaulding Negro Fannsrs Discuss Federal S o il Program (CeatiaMd trmm U«t w*«k) CkNMer II thcli fertility exhausted. Science and inventive genius have made a trial of their power and have indeed produced a^B'raakenstein which tiireatens to tarn again, The prog^ress of tte humah r%ce henceforth must be Alfled from material to spiritual ends. During tfie Industrial Revolution the quest has been for piling and rend its maker. Railroads never ending materia) pros- have been built, telegraphs wires perity. The quest of gold has con- strangv^the seven seas have been gtituted tl-,^ consuming thirst of covered ^th steamshlpi^'the the T^uth of all lands. ifilled with flying crafty We I From'-a purely woridly point of have manufactured more auto- this seems to be a pessimis- aiobiles than our streets* will tic picture of the outlook, but we -oOo- THB UOCA^ BRANCH (M? THE N. A. & P. ibr the Advancement of Colored ^ Fnr more than a decad tte Natioaa Assoctouoa Fe^e. Ualike the parent otgtfisation the Durham branch \sIm aewer doae aayihing worthy of the fhte record made by t& A.C.P., ia other citto* aad nationally. On the contrary the local MS bfsea satisfied with fitting supinely by while all a- . It ethf^r io^ ot^^izat^ns sad people of the race wore aad| strugi^iBg to (Ataln a morsel of freedom. ^ IBm Cacol^ nmes dom not attempt to explain this apparent iMk «f mmcm interest tn racial affairs on the part of the tte Ipcal feranQfci of the *N. A. A. 0. btit it does feel that the part! of the organization ought, to get busy, and. let its be felt or it d^uld disbuid. Should it pursue the lat- wsjfeel that i^re a)|re persona in Durhkm interest- «t eaMii^ ia the future oX^th§.nce to reorganise tiie N. A. Mi dll9_sm|nBtiiing Wortli*f^e. {f we ai« mistaken in our ccw; teattiiM tbn Durham will not Iwve «jc}» an o^taikization, wk^jwosld be far better tfcan hating the one it now has. are some institutions a|K>ut wfaii|& it suy be said that to better than none at all. Such a statement can tnthlNUy made i^ut a poor and indolent brandv of the A. C. P. Sudb Ml jotgimization merdly blocks the path of whp nii^ do somethii^ tang&le. It is neither hot nor edd; aa4 i&a driiddng water of this sort, is subject to make one iidk^ stmnarh when trying to act in the capacity of a protec tor 4^ th# r^ts of tbe rMe.' , ' t ' i The GM^Uaa ftaiM ei^pects the asu^^ ba«)cfli« from otCficers ^d. Slectrie equipment, the ephone «td- the frigidaire been installed in every house hold. Fw new great enterprUw* are under contemplation for the simple reason that the market is over-stocked, l^pid linprovement in technociacy ,swiftly outruns any new enterpriis that may be devised or projected.' l^e auto- mobQe,^ the moving picture, the radio and ifrigpdaire have sprung up daring the present centun^, but Iwive already reach- the point of saturation. The en terprise of the future needs to concern its«llf withi replacement rather thw ougmentation. One- fourth of jihe working- energy re mains unemployed because it can* adt bo absorbed in 'Texisting or iinrojected enterprise.^] L Our surplus youth, must siiek outlet in CCO Gamps and on Fe deral relief rolls. Out schools and i»i- »I colleges are grinding out gradu- , C., u Ates by the tens of 'thousands a«t k t N. i, i of the W A; A. C. P. We ex- of the believ- '4^ lo^ peet te hear halr-nishig faM^ dwhi tite accomplii^ents bCaoi^liigiae 9f. these ihi^^ will move us from. tt* ,«gpMibwMoa nothing to reliei^if^dlffi soffer- ' Negroes ^ this city. , ^ v4. ■ ^ -P^‘ r are merely pasidsg. ti'Jrough «n hard material substantialiiy to one of moral ideals, when a n»an*3 worth is determined by what, he is and not. by what he Ifca. In the field of charity, s^-‘ isip, philanthropy aad humaalty, the youth today are coafronted with ev« enlangnig vtotas. In f ve^ tr^e and sense eaU^^i^ en?d yout& of the fafeire may. proclaim "my kingdom to not of this world.” With thto ^iritullz- ed view of the larger opportunity whichi confronts maal^d the higher enei^es of yonth will he released for the building up and betterment of the huaian race. I find that I have exhausted my allotted time and qpace in laying the foundation. I shall de vote my next releases to a speci fic treatment my announced subject "A LOST GENERA'nON OF NEGRO YOUTH." EMiLY MILLER Tte SPLENDID HOHS. to mf of the beet managed hotels in Port>au-MeSk Being interested In trusinesses managed by bla«k people, and especially in hotels, naturally we were impressed with the business-like manner in whi^i this hotel was supervised. The buflding and grounds are situated near th« mountain side, cover- btg about two acres of ground. The shrubbery and lawns are well kept The extra biDtel. f^m the kitchen to the .reception room; Is immeaculately clean TI'W dining room of th# Hotel is on the front porch of tiie building, which is about feet long. It is sur rounded vAlh! beautiful fragrant flowery which • bloom the year round. In the apacious livln^r room of the hotel, is a radio. We listened in the evenings to the Nationat Broadcasting prognms from Nbw York, and idso receiv ed the daily news. Upon vtoiting this hotel one is impressed with the fact that blade people can successfully operate a hotel when business principals are exhibited. I failed to m«itk>n in the ttnt chapter of incident on this trip titat daring the voyage to Haiti, we were able to keep ii\, touch with news from all over the the world through the Radlognm Daily Nevw Service. A newspaper printed over night, was placed under our cabin doors each mor ning. We could send and receivg radiograms at wHl. We were greatly iter^rted in th6 health! condittlons of the Is land. On© One of the first placess we visited was the office of the Director General (HfealtJi> Direc tor) to receive infOMaation con cerning the health cond|tiona of the Island. The National Health Service and Public Asslstence Department functions under the direction of a Director Cenetal, who is named by tiie President of the* Republic. The present Di .«eetor General is M. Bulx t^on. oSe“ 'of ffie :,"Rspobltc*s Meadinr scientists. We l^med that the work of ttie Health Service is divided into Mnitary districts numbering ten- TPfce mof^ ^Important ones are cund in the principal cities. Each district has modem hospital, the capacity of which varies in accor dance with the region in which! it is located. The most important of thes3 lospitals Is the one found at Port -Au-Prince, which we had the pleasure of visiting. It ha# a ca pacity of 31i8 beds. The He^th Servic, also has. 184 diqpensaries throughout the rural sections ef the country Md i^mpts are made to carry to tibe |»easant« such) medical services as they are found to be ia need of. Haiti atoo has eeailere loeat^'d at Port-au-IMace and at Cape Haitian. There are twe asylums situated in the district of Port-au rl^n«e. On«^ belongs to the Com* mun^^>partA, iHitehi pays all expenses and remvee liOO in mate (old peraoitt). Hie ether to an ai^lum for mental »see. I^- tients are'admitted on demand of their parents, tiie request of tte law, or of the |>iiblic. The local Health Service o|m> rates under the direetion of'tte Sehools of Medictee, Pharmacy, 0HitMa-y. and Obetetries. The colnsfs ,lo tiiese schooto by prof essors, who for the mMt part have studied in the United States or Europe under the generpsity of the RoekfeHer Foundation. We learned that out of 3t,ff00 bfrdts in the RepubHc of 8,000,* dOO. inhabitants during 1M5, 11,- 000 deatiis occured. *I%e most as tonishing fact was that only 1,800 received license to marry during*, the year. We understand that a- bout- 90 per cent of the peastmt %ildren are bom out of wedlock. Statistics showed that tvi>ei%ialo- sto leads the Itot in the cause ot deatlis, and that most of the deaths occur between the ages of SO snd S9. ^ Statisties ^^wd, also that all otiber diseases which are -pveva.' lent in America are prevalent the Republie of Haiti, especially venei*eal disease, heart trouble, and cancer. During 1935 only 16 people died from ^^oid fever, notwitl standing the extremely hot and d^qr climate during the months of : JQone^ July, August, and Septen^r. T^ peasant tppoup coiiisUtnte approidina^y 90 per cent of the entire popula tion, yet tiie health conditions of the Repubik are conndered good. This to due to President Vincent’s ^esgfsm^ impro^Nr ffie g»«Hr living conditions among the na tives. I would say it to due atoo to the fact tl'at tbe inhabitants do not overrtax their stomachs with food. Many of thfu peasantii are said to sit around the fruit trees, which grow in abundance, and wait fbt tiie fruit to fall. Some also eit ndar the railroad ears. In other words, it seems as if H tikes very litUe to satisfy thme peasant^ either in food or in clothes, (Te Be CoatfameaQ W. T. AimstroBg Slat* Deiwrtsieat Ifea^ OiMSW New CwpileelMi In WMeb Grm4‘ Mtee Wn Get Cvtde "A” C«rtl4l«a^ MILL&DG'EYIX^LiE, Ga., May 90, 1^37—In an address which urged better ftum methods, bet ter home life and active partici pation in the Ctovemment’sAAA SoU' Conservation Program, Ma yor Geoige Gatpentar welcomed several hundred Negro farmers and thair wives who gathered here today in the auditorium of the Gi^ BalL The meeting was arranged by C. O. Brown, Negro County A- gent, to hear reports on Soil ConMrvatfoa activities from ti>e fkrmers of Hancock and adjoin ing: counties, and to discuss th* necessity of leeeping cotton acra- age during 1987 in line with prospective demand. W.M. Baker, N^o farmer who lives near Batonton >is{d: 'In 1919, I had over a thousand acres of Isnd and thought I was a big farmer, but the boll weevil came along and put us in the mud." Baker then turned t^ dairying ajjd was just begimitoj to jpr^q^r ai^dn when the dc« prsesion of 192« gave him snoth- ei; setbaefc. “la thJe l«rt thre« yeu« a*y wertdy ehedc for, milk and* ereaia increased from |2.Si to aiora th»n a hundred dollars. (|M0.- 00},'* he sMtf, adding that hm nmw Jwmey eews aii4 operates'irtl£ acre jam. Mrs. Ludie Johiwoa, who, a! thoul^ a graadmpttier, operates a small farm lieir Milledgevtlie, told of how shte llas made money by grofHng and selling flowers. Sydney Butte, Negro ffunk tea* ter laid: ‘*1 got in* bad te 19jt, but throuih the New Deal, 1 saa- getting on my feet I take part) ia the Government’s program, aud dnce the plow-up caaipi^, I have mad* all the way from I12SXM to ysoo.od a year oa pets aloNe.” Brief talks were made by Ju., P. Davto aad A. I* Holsey of tta AAA Field Statf; P. H. Stone). A. Hunt, and f Mias Camilla Weems of the Geor^ Extension Staff; and GeoiV9 S'. King, Sditor of Ki^s Agricaltural Di>^ fest. C in tbe wkiole town Chisago • Ceage ChicagO'cats who have no real appneeiation for , the ^ hot mvcis aritsts in their midst wUl be sur- {Hsed to iMltrn ti^retteg give.t diBia by Itammond, one of the world’s foremost authorities on swing—He says that Albert Ammonds, now plunking * ttie awthboK at the-ItrQub, I Johnnie Nit, who weat tflHEag^aatl Yonng f^oneo’s CWao Mati«ii ^t north CALVIN SERVfdE^UltVEYS CATHOLIC AMT14LYNCHINGV „ » MyWUmdi,€^Mm SpeeW F^aiNwe IVrfter) no Young,Women’s Christian Association is one of the, most active oi^nizations on the North Carolina College cainpus. This year has been an especially active^ year with the **Y". The outstanding social ^ acUvl- ties have been the ■ customary hike in September, a HaUowesn party, the annual thiuilagi(v{nc breakfast, with an original Thansgiving aJdt and an eidiibit of donations for the sh^urecrop- YOSK- ■^ISdttorifl e^aioa in Catholic throughout kd 4Mytes to eedUatomly to fa?or of tbe passage >f an «CCMtiva aali^'Bditoi’ law ty iiio present (ingress, aeeordiag ^ itikt •onwiM by tbe GMboUc Iat«mif iAl Couaeil of New ;^~ilHtto4ialiag la a caofaiga laaachedlty the ^tetiaeial Ee- W. itad. *reet, peNtofced by the latmacisl Council, tan lane aawenas editorials mipporttng la addtHsa tb^ ba«e friated s^«al toi^rtaat . JiirtM thto lagfciatiDa. ad^ d^sreiss mat old l»y rtk Weltee N^ jltrvke^^Rto s«rvjtee goer aU ever the Uaftoi ilMae 0^4 to leadag pub*' 4MMM^'battaUe review M the wA, Mid K. HaaMv auHMwrhif editotv. a^ vlpteiceJ' aVa led ' y tail If ^ view Hut **}]»#- pers, and the annual,‘^jt Home^'4^ the preseint social or^r, SpecliJ emphasto vriis givm te ^in April. “Charm School” was conduct ed in the Winter. This 'together with l^ons in bridge and tennis, an amateur glee club,, a Talen; Night** tdid a tone act play, lur- M«d wholesome activities for' many of tte girli^ Social service projects have eim- slsted of the following; 1. Dinners to three needy fami- lie'S at Thanksgivnig, 2. Garments and “Goodies” to -9. For Mher ehil^|ren at Eait-' te* T^e, thr^ t ; ^nnenls and' fveen dwiln 'ieig|rfl|yed a^d Uddea for an egg^ haat, 4. A coat to a needy citizen. 5. More than one hundi^ gar ments and a collection of scrap hoo^ to the share-croppers in Alabama, '8T DSKSQbns of f ISS.^M collec ted and sent to the flood suffer ers of the Middle Wert. InterMt in cunent events has been' kept alive the regular posting of a gene^ news b'Qll^ tin. A World Fellowship ipdap h#ll met regularly to discuss problems the study of some phases of Ne^ TO iife. Thto group has kspt post* ed an interracial aews” bulleiin board. . , _ - Interest in current ev^ts has heenN kepr alive by ^ regular posting of a geneital newa bttlle- fin. * _A World FeUowsh^ group luts_ met regularly to diseasej^Nblems of the iHrasent soci^ order. Special emphasto iras i^ten to the twenty children at Chrisbnas. ^tudy of some # of Negro ^fe. *^ls group lhas Ice]^ posted an vofo^tacial aewi^' tmlletin boa]^, \ Dereghiui hi^e been sent ifcit year to '^wt confermee* ia At lanta, two in Chapel BQl, and .irne in Raleigh. Martha Stafford, Maybelle Gotten, Esther Delany nd Mrs. J. W. Harris, a faculty adviser, were ttie variuos de)?* gates. Maybelle Gotten, the in coming president together with jJ^ita and Kdna Smith will at tend the King's Mountain Confe* tence in June. The .considers II a signal honor ^t Martha Stafford, the oot-gotag president of the Association, has been a 'iaember of the Southern Women Re^owsl Conference, aad chairman of the Kings’ Mountain Conference. K In addtikn to thei re^sr monthly vesper services, the ^ sociation has brpunh^ th# follow^, Ing iQ>eskeni to the campui; Mrm’ llaybeUe WQlianui, jContract Dt* [rector of the Hariem Bnmeh ef the YWGA in New York, Miss Celestine Smith, Southern Reglo- aal Seereta^ of the YWCA, Mts. Sue BaSey Thafi^ah, formw Ro dent secretorS^%f the YWCA, who presented ar lecture and ex hibit based upon her recent trip ^ India, and Miss Sdaa Meade Colson of Virginia State College who delivered tb|p address for the Mothers’ Day Installatipn service. JOSEPHUS DANIELS TO IIVER COMiWENCEMISNT DRESS AT SHAW UWVEk? DE AD ITY Tlie commanl^ wale i^orwi was presented Jalntfy wU^ YIICA, to Jiwuarf, The linM>«i«l > iififr year ihows r#>eelpts of and dWJU««»enta, prior to the King’S^otintalh Conference, ef t6€2.93. Sources ^ iacome have been membership Ifees of twenty- five cenla, donations from alum nae ''Y" mein'bers, "ti|i«nt pri^iraai, imd ctn4y s*l«e- The cand;^ sales-i»ve funslshed the bulk ^ the year’s receipts. Thi^ulgh annoiffl.cementi, let ters, posters, aaJ nie'W*I^P«f ^ tides the pvbllci^ conwttttte* has k^ ^ members aad fti«n4s of the Aseodation labidful of its activities. May 20—The Honorable Jose phus Daniels, ambassador to Mex ico, will be the princ^ speaker at'the concluding evei^ m the ‘ievMity-secend annual eomm«\ce- ment of Sh*w Uoiveririty on Tuesday, June 1 when ai^roxime • tely 6g students will receive de* a^es.from tiie Unlver^ty. Prior to hto present appdlnt- co- fiaeit Me,^ has served as editor of the Ralei)[^ News and Observer newspaper Mid seer^ tary of the Navy duriag' the^d- ministration , of Wiodro^ WUson/ He lived for sevenrt ly in frent fl* ih»w Uaiveisity and has been m^uently referrei to as one of Shaw’s most promt' nent neigUbe^ Other eveate of the Commenoe- ment will invade the Dean of Womim's "At Home" to Senior wdmen frte S te 7 p. m. Sanday May 36; aad Mr» Dh* niel's receptitm to m«nl>ers of the gradaatlng class at eight o'clock Friday evening, May 28; baMslaureate services at S:tO p. m. Sunday," May 80; - Clase-Day exorcises at 2:3iQ p. m-| Ifpn^liyi May 81, and! ma Mag ^tSihM ree^>^ at vrhloh gi^uatlnir MQiww irtU be Mne- t^inlQ the |Ri«b Uaiywlty Al«* mnl AfisociiMpq %% e’doelt Monday evening. May most solid piaiitot ia the world” - Hammond an ^gltohman, travelled halTway aroand the worid with a worn out record of "Hbnky Tonk l^in Bluea” try ing to locate the artist, Meade Lux Lelwis, and found him in Chi cago working at a garage. Lewis who to featured at Brattan’s See- luded Rendezvous,, to lifted «8-^a superlative bluea. gcalut’^* • -Guy ^elly, N* OriliansHrampet titlay- er now riffin* with Carroll Diek- erscHi at the [England Cafe, al so rates, according to Hammond, as do Gideon Honors, piano, and Jimmy Adams, drums, with Sddie Cole at the ofay 6100 Club. . . Jimmy Noone, still one of the really great clarinetists, draws praiM for both himself and hie rhythn\ section.—but Haiamoi>d‘s great surprise was Jimmy Strage, trumpet lilayer with Bob Tinsley at^e Cabin Inn, who to "one of the most stimulating murieians N^*e Oa A Cuff Among th« colored players sup porting Paul Robesoa and PHb*> cess Souka la the aew Briti^hi^ film, "Jericho,’* are Has Hatch, vaudeville and aigtit club star; John Payne, choral director and apostle of the spirituA in Britein; with Horence Milto and th¥ ori ginal Blackbirds, aad C%rto GQI, one of the Foar Flasht Dev& who recently decided to go on hto own. ANDY KIRK and his Uni start a 10 day tour of Texas and Loutoiana beginning May 28 with Dftn Robey and Morris Merritt of Houston hooUag th« dates. LIL RANDOLPH, double voic ed sfaiging star, has just complted a year at the Pandise Gardens in downtown Los Angelesi" tHle went to the West Coast froai De troit in anuary, i«S«, and has clicked consistently since tb«n— NOBLE ^SSLETS band epeaeit the Jefferson Beach pavilion in Detroit, Friday alght . . . PhUly to trjrtng sometiihig new witti a •e!!^ and a iialefhce n^rhtly wndiw the same roof but withi different management Gladys Bentley le star of the dusky show. The spot opened last Wednesday night. executed by C. A. MQIer single) TWS 8A1£ WTt.t, Hto ^ang Women’s Cbrtotiaa Asoctotion counts this .a saece^ ttil year imd attribute its socceM to the-ACsr^ enthusiasm, mi especial, a«4 an* Ihasisstie leMmh|p «f the ^ent, llariM Maffterd. ntikm c Amism. ^ ^ - DURHAM COUNTY TRUBin 8Ai« .Of x«Ainr UNSSS AND BY mTOB of tiie pewar aealeprcad mm the and duly reconM in the Offiee of thf Register of Deeds for Dar* ham'Counll^ in Book of Ifort- ta^'es 20S, at page havini be«i made ii£ tb» fayw«Mt of the iume, tte aadandgaed thistee wm offer far sale at pab- ne auction to the highMt bidde, for eMh,' at the Coarthease A««r tn Durham, N. C., oa THUHiDAY, MA#-8Tth,'19ST at la e’cloek Noo«. tte foUowiag deseribed kmd, te* BlilllG LOT NO. 14 wt this plat oi the P. M, Proeto# lan^ surveyed snd platted by B. C. Belvin, «urveyed on April, the SOthy 1908, whieh s4d |tet to re corded in the Offiee ^ the Be- gistlee of D«%ds of Durham County, N. 0., in Beak of Plats No, X, .page 118, to w^ldi plat rafMrence to hareby givMi as a part of thto deeeription. Lot No, 14 aa tte Nertt ride of Ifortha iU^et aad having a fron^g ot SO feet im Martha Street, Md ex tending baek |90 feet and bdbg BO feet wide in tte tome, tM- be ing the Un4 convejed' GttowidA IniR^ee Oeaipa^''' hf dMd te wMeb reforenea to hM«bv laada M« past ef ef said property and being re corded la Deed'Book if, at page Ml. Be|er«afle to hsnliy to Wi^stee Deed f^ W. H. Wltoon, Tmst»e, to 1. D. feimded la Book 89, at page 6M, Iq Of fice oi tte Rei^ster of Deeds ^ Dari-aai Gomrtfi ^ ■ «p«B far tan it) days te rae^ tawewi liMl» M provided b|r4awn- ,tWlS PSOP*R4lf to sold at , ttt ^aeit of tte 4MldCT of said - aete. Dated ttto Mth day ef April. IW, MECB^CS * FABHjeSfi bank, Trustee 0. J. GAT^SS, ^temay ~ . . leading mbRchaots op ] CITY CO^TRU|IQ[|; TC.’-MlSft HILLSIDE** CONTESTANTS The following contrfttutlons helped to mske «»e ‘Mias HilWde* popularity contest a saeceis by donating arUeles to b« prtaeatsd to tte contestants Ajring tte crowning ceremony; Haywood. Boone Dru|i W. Wool* worth! Go.f«B^ Co„ Eckerds Dm« Co., G. R. Kenedy Shoe Store., Slveir% Drew Shop, Raylaw Stot*, Na* , thM*ih lhrvld*a lSt«gf, Ihrtagt Shoe l^p, C^arrett’s Jliltiawa Store, Ball Gil* Drug C«^, United Fnmitttre Co., fatten Shoe Co., Cl:aries State, BdMas FunjIturB Co., the Yoaag Mea^ Shop, B. H. CreM iSi^ erd ^umitare Co., F^ay turf ttlrds Dept Mere, The Fav^Srs, Jiaiuu %op, IS, tteitT Co.^ Mrs: Ssyhmlea JoMBS(»,^NB.Oi^ Baaolr lAegi' Regal f^ctre, NatioMl SM Sim, Andrew’s Tafler Q. H^low«^j BaC Oiigr'Bafber. Aam -