Readies Tlie Mass I)!. Headers MAIUNG EDITION A^OLUME 17 No. 3« THE. CAJIOUfiA TIMES SATURpAY AUGUST 21, 1937 MICE FIVE CCNTS DENTAL ASS’N CLOSES 24T WM. BURGHAKl » ri succ Iowa University Star To Coach At North Carolina ■ Col legfe For Negroes ETOerginir from a conference during which several applicants were considered. The North Caro lina,. State ^College Athletic Coun cil selected for its athletic coach last week William Frankiar Burg- hart, of Greenfield 111. Burghart who is expected to re port for duty Sept. 1 will succeed Coach Ektward Adams who re*ent- ly resigned at N. 3. State, to ac cept la posit’on on the coaching staff at Tuskeegee. Burghart, who recently comple ted hia masters degree in physi cal education at the .University of Iowa, achieved a splended record In athletics while a student at Eureka College, Eureka, 111. where he ^tarred in PootbalJ, ba^«ti»ll, track, boxing, biioball, rnnd swim- ing. t A record ttudent of distinctions while Eureka College,, rC' a ttulent it veals that, he was varsity football player for Your years, voted most valuable map on team 1932, el ected co-captain 1933, picked on all, conference '■“Little 19” Teams 19.11, 32, 33. ■ - He holds an A. B. in Economics and 'Social His^tory from Eureka College (White) A.J^. S. in Etta- EAGLE’S NEW MENTOR William ^rankim Burghart cation from West Va. State Col lege, And Masters degree in Phy sical Education from the Univer sity of Iowa, In av-oir-pois he rates 190. Sbands 6 ft. 1 in. i^ 25 years of age, and to whom it may concern—he is unmarried. A»oie IfiggiDS BrowD Id Sod§ Kecital The North Carolina College pre sented-Anne Wiggins Brown, in voice recital on Wednesday even ing, August 18. Miss (Brown was one of the leading characters in the late George Gershwin's Negro ■opera'"Porgy and 3eM.” The beautifully plaintive and dramatic quality of her voice and -he^-^—flowless—ftrtieul»tion—leave THE SCOTTSBeWO BOYS AND tWO OF TH£ MOTHlStS Hundreds Meet In Washington From 25 States small wonder in the minds of her listeners as to why she was chosen to handle so important a role. 'Miss Brown was accompanied at the piano by her sister Miss May- me Brown. She was also accom panied on her trip to '.Durham, by her father, Rr. Brown, a promin- ient physician of Baltimore, Md, Her grandmother, Annie Brown, was a great Evangelist, who was well known throughout Durham. The Rev. Dr. Thomas S. Harten is shaking hands’ with Mrs. Viola Montgomery of Atlanta, Ga. Just back of her is Miss Mary Alice Montgomery. On the other side of Dr. Harten stands- Mrs. Ada Wright o Chattanooga, Tenn. She is thehno her of 'Roy Wright who was released and Alan iWright who was sentenced to ninety-nine years in prison. Standing left to right axe: Roy Wright, Chattanooga, Tenn.; Willie Robinson, Atlanta, Ga.; Eugene Williams, Chattanooga, Tenn; and Olen Montgomery, At lanta, Ga. ^ Washington—(CNS)—The Na» tional Dental Association in its -Twenty-fourth Annual Convention here August 10-13, drew repre sentative members to the numebr of 336, from 25 states, the West Indes Islands and two Sonstitu- ents Societies, the Lincoln Dental Society of Chicago and the Alaba ma )N. 8. Dental Association. 'Fully f'Dental Organizatia|i con scious” laTid incorporated under the title “National Dental,Association” the association will celebrate its • twenty-fifth (Silver) Anniversary -next August in Chicago, llliopois. After a four day rn^eting with niany very interesting instruction clinics and lecteures and most har monious business sjessions the twenty-toxxrth annual meeting clo sed with the annual dance. On the recreational side. Dr, J. B. iLoveail, of Philadelphia took Tennis honors and the trophy. The social program was moSt enjoya:ble conducted undet the aponaorship of the Ladies Auxiliaries both Na tional ani^Jocal, Mrs. Blake B. Young of the Local and Mrs. A. M. Markel of the National. |Re- ceptiopi* c*trd imrties, picnic, lawn party a^id get-together nieelings. The officers elect^ included; Dr. R. E. Beamon, Cuicinnati, O. president; iDr. S. C. Hamilton, Chicago, 111., l()?B8i4ent ^ele!t; iDr. Wi J. Howard, Houston, Texas, I vice pres d;.ny, iPr. Charlottesville, VaU aecretary- tpeaaurer; iDr. Sylve^r iBL.Smith, Philadelphia, Penn., assistant se cretary; Dr. E. L. ^arper^^_Jt^. Louis, Mo., jW/ Frank jrSykea Decatur, Ala^, Dr. Springer. iCiO' cinnati, O.j Dr. P. W. Hilf. Clark- PASTDR WEDS hat Message has The Youth of Europe For Negro Youth? By Dean H. M. Smith Crop Switdand iPor some three months now I have been living in the midst of lowship in all'Europe. I mean that small but determined group of youn^p people ^ be found in every great city and center of Europe who feel thsat our wodd today is not what it ought to be ^— and, what is more important, are anxi ously seeking a way to put their thoughts into aiition. Two months ago Tstood'in Hyde Park in the heart of London and saw more than 10,000 English boys and girls in their late teens and eorly twenties march in a si lent protest against mr and fas cism. finally within a stone's throw of Buckingham Palace these serioug-faced yo^^sters vowed never to bear arms for King or country. A month later in the Palace de la Concorde in Paris on July 14th —the iiay when all ai 'Prance cele-1 brates the Fall of the’ Bastille and Wrth of modem French ,freedom-r- I saw in that famous square black boys from the French coloniw in A. Jack^'^|MP^‘ Weijtfield, N. J., secretary; ^Africa, young Jewish lads who bad Reverand J. H. Thomas, iMstor of the Mt. Vernon Baptist Church who repeated the marriage vdws in Detroit, Mich., on July 18, to Misa Mary iArmstead of city. sRev. and Mrs. Thonias were glv- £n a surprise (reception at their residence on , Dunbar Street on Monday, evening, by members and frienfis of their church. dale, Mississippi; and Dr, J. M. Tmsley, Richmond, Va., regional vice preside^; Executive Board, Dr. E. WrHraggart, Birmingham, Ala., president; iDr. W. H. Thomp' tor. Jj,LeiJtoy £axter. Orange, lU. J Dr. A. Cyril Absolan, N. Y. City, Dr. A. 6. Coopwr, Atlanta, 3a., M. D. IWiseman, Washington, r. F. S. Ppshur, Philadel- phiar Pr.'^ A. Dixon, ;^S^hington, D. C. and ih!» .D^J^'Tu^inJ Naah ville, Tenn. come to (France to escape" the &ntl- Jewiah hate, of eaatero Europe, blue-eyed,, bloiid boya froin Brit tany and Normandy—^yet as they stood aigning the MarseHliaise^^^ uncoivered heads there was no doubt that in spirit they were all Prenchmen. For bf iome miracle genius iPtance is willing and able to accept all that she attracts. In six other* great cities of Eu rope I have talked to thousands of these eager-eyed ypung people.' Hundreds of them have talked to me. What are they saying and thinking? Have they any mes- sajre for—the Young Negro of America ? First of all—these young people ar e asking'laestions about their world. For ejoample even in Ger many of Herr Hitler I found a deep and earnest interest in l^egro Youth. A small but? significant group of Germian young people seek understanding and fellowship wth Black Folk. This tin spite of the fact that Germany teaches her youth all non-Nordic people are degencrat nacesv t- ' ■ Again, these young people are thinking ior themselves. Thi fact that althrough all of Europe is aiming,with a fury and speed that tleaves one breathless—yet in the midst of it all 10,000 British boys and girls, >almost in the shadow of the King’s palace, puhlicily pledg ed themselves as ^lR»sfed’'1»‘war and unwilling to bear arms under any circumstances. iFinally—the great fientral in- terest of these youh people is So- cial Justice. I was surprised of example when in a meetifcg^ at Ge- newa in Switzerland a young Swiss asked me a question concerning the Scottsboro boys. In Zurich at the World Congress of Baptist Yiuth economic problems share the cen ter of interest with questions of a more religious nature. The slums of London, the share-«ropper of the United J. States, the wage slaves of Eur»pe- and the underpaid, over-* worked natives of Asia and —these are the burning social cen ters around which the minds and hearts of young .Europe,are turn ing. 1 Durham Plays Host To Thirteenth Annual ^ ’ Ushers Gathering Miss Ruth Gwendolyn Smith, pro fessor of Freiich at North Caro lina College for .Negroes annou nces a French Tuition Schlor- ship of Fifty Dollars to be aw arded annually. Miss Ruth Gwendolyn Smith, professor of Frefich at North Cor- olina College for Negroes has an nounced that in keeping with the splendid gj^wth and progressive expansion'^f greater North Caro lina for Negroes—the under grad uate unit of the future graduate unit of to-morrow’s liorth Oaro'^ lina University for Negroes w’ith graduate schools in the' Arts SJrd Sciences and (Professiorial schools of ijredicine, Pharmacy, D*nfc»fry, eti. she fs dl9^tinoin]| the French prise of five dollars Bith- ertofore awawied annually to the mott ouUitamWiig aeiiioir gtUdeiit in French and that begrinnig with the commecement exercises June 1838 she will offer ia2inual|p[ the Ruth Gwendolyn Smith French Scholar ship for excellency in French. This scholarship which will be a tutition scholarship of fifty dol lars, will be awarded annually to art'outstanding member of the Junior Clasa-^^ollege of Liberal Arts—a student of worth and abi lity to 'be recommended by Dr. J. E. Shepard, president of North Carolina College for Negroes. The student, besides having a general average of B. must be a major in ANNOUNCES FRENCH SCHOLARSHIP Barchrach Mi«s Ruth Gwendolyn Smith Pi'ofessor of the French Depart ment, (Professor Holmes and Hen- hingburg), has given the best evi dences of mastery of the French Language and fluency in speaking of same. Thfe Ruth Gwendolyr Spiith French Scholarship which will be awarded for the first time at the June -Commencement ’1938, will be credited each June to teh scholarship awardM for tuition for the beginning of his senior year French and who according to the at North Carolina College. HUGE COLORED CHORUS TO SING WITH RUBINOFF fWhat does this tnean to our Ne gro youth? As young Europeans take stock of the world in which they live, with clear heads and high courage condemning much that this old world has treasured^ and retained and seeking to butld j val at Soldier’s into the world pattern much that voice- choir led RubmofiF One thousajid eolored . -singers will be felitured in a “Cotton Picking’’ -pageant called “Planta tion Days,” to be presented Sat urday night, August 21, at the eighth Chicagoland* Music ' Fcsti- Field. A 30i0 by j. Wesley Mihahily for 1937 yevs has re- Jones, well known colored con- jected. If youth. in Europe with ^ ductor, will sing from the Festi- centuries culture and civiliza- ,val platform at the north end of ♦fa>n it daras do this much | h» field, and 700 mea and wo* can Blaqk Youch in America af- nen will be in the cast in th^ ford t^do less than this ? arena.. Millions of radio listener /ill' he^F this feature as their OFriCUL BEiOB-re DRAWING FOR FIRST SALE OF DURHAM TOBACCO WARE HOUSES OPENING BER SEPtEM- 16, AS FOLLOWS; Ljharty Warehouae B First Sale Uberty Warehouse A Second Sale ItoyerolftB Warehouse A First Sale Hoycrofts Warehouse B Second .' Sal* ' The Boll First Sale Stiir Warehouse Second S«le dcasting system and 4he National Broadcasting Company networksr Appearing with them will be Rabinoff and his Violin, Marion Claire, _wh6 recently returned from'Hollywood after a picturt, 'Make A Wish”; Homer Rode- hicsvcr,—intmnyMonally—kiiow» community song leader; Fran^ Jiuc, Swiss flag thrower, and massed choruses uid iband^ the pro«rmm closing in ai burst of fireworks. More than eople an axiiected to attend A gaest of hoqor for the evt- NARRATIVE REPORT Negro -Farmers -af Durham County are improving their met hods of com growing, and trying to improve their soil. This week while visiting farmers and ins pecting corn demonstrations in va rious communities it was gpratify- ing to notice how peas were sown in so many of the com demonstra tions. Logan Allen ?md Eugene Jeff ries in Henderson Grove Com munity have an outstanding corn demonstration ;“land cultivated as recommended by Extension Meth ods, pe^s so-wn as a supplement or companion in com. Corn and peas were in perfect condition. The far> mer will ot only get fuller crop, of corn, but he will leave that soil in a mijch better shape ofr grain another year. There is no ques tion about it, farmers are improv ing their jmethfldsLJiffam in Dorhsm County. A. Hamme^ ^ ■ ( K:gro County Agent Th^ Thirteenth Annual 3es»ion of the Inter-Denominational Ush ers will open here Frikiy, August 20, with the morning session be ing devoted to the, presentation of J. W. E>oak, president of the? or- gmtsation by T. L. Moore, presi dent of the Durham Ushers Union, Appointment of Committees and instructipns of committees wil also take place. The aifterwKin sescion will be presided over by President' Doak with the address by Reverand J. S. Merridith, on ‘‘What The Church Expects of te Ushers,” The pobJlc gathering Friday evening will be held at », P. M. iwijhe major W. F. Carr delivering the %v*8wc B^4re% on beMi the city. Other addresses of wel come will be delivered by D, B. Martin, Prof. J. W. Davidson, Dr. A; S. Morris and Mrg. €. A. Oreew- wood. Responses will be made by Joseph P. ‘Williams, Miss A. B. Miller, Rev, W. F. Witherspoon, Miss Alma Slllars and Mrs, Rutn H. Morgan. The Saturday morning session wfll open with devotion led'tqr* Q, L. Brown and Mias Mary Wither- spooni.7^^Mrs, W. iR. Hawhtns, First, * Vice President »ill caU the session j to order, with continued eoroll- I ment -of New Churches, The afternoon session will be presided over by C* A. Langston, At this session, the election of of ficers will be made. Rev. W. F. Witherspoon will deliver the ad dress. The evening session will inalttde an Oratorical Contest, directed by Miss A. B. Miller. The Sunday afternoon services w’ill be held at St. Mafis' A. M, E. Zion Church at '2 P. M. The devo- 'l tion will be led by A. D. Clark and Miss Minnie Ford. A report on Efiand Ho-me will be given by J. H. R. Gleas. The convention this year anti cipates the largest gathering in its history end a large number of cities and towns ar6 represented The association has made much progress under the leadership of J. W, Doak. CALVIN FAMILY VISITS CITY iDiirham was foutuhate last week in having as its quests, Mr, and Msr. Floyd J. Calvin and their two very talented daughter. Mr. Calvin, who is one of the outstanding journalists of the day has visited our city on numerous occasions, but this is the first tima he has been aecompanied by his very splendid family. The child ren Delores 9, and Bernioe 12* have recently received many honors for excellence ht pUvtny the piano. sons were given the opportunity af hearing them in an informal recital at the Lome of Mr. and Mrs, A few muaically interested p«r- »ing»wiU i>e diarlea WalefieM Madman, eminent composer. wito . .will direct the 100 piece syn\- lp0,0004 ibony orchestra in his own eoni- osition, “At Dawning.” ‘ . CANP’ E. R. Merrick on the evening of August 12th. They handled such difficult compositions as Chopins Revolutionary Etude and an ar- i^gement of Mendelsohn’s Rondo Capricciso with surprising skilL Mrs. Calvin is largely r^ponalUe for ther unusual accomplishnients for while she claims no muaieal ability herself, she attends their lesson periods and sopervises their “practice hours eac^ day. The younger -one ^, Delores,, 'practiecs three lioars each we^ and Ben^ practices five hou^ . It is the hope fhat these young artists wij^retum to^ Durham in the near future and present a for mal recital. ' . FREE SCOTTSBORO SENDS THANKS TO WHO HAVE AIDED aoYS We destre to thank aB friends who have,,ai(M tat’ w%y, fumneimtfy glA- we hope they wiH^itiat tlMfc interest in the odtar M« still koMeriac ta The Scottsioc* iRfa CMtiaiMA mm-