We Negroes (fef Rath B«ekaaa«) We NVgroen •r«' faced with the qiip^tion, "Wh»t e«ntrlbutionii »rr“wr m*kinir in the co^munr^ in w hich we lire' Are our fffirtai drstnirtivc or constructive? 9i’c KfprSw owe . som^thjnjt to »0- fioty, the t>e*t tha tis within «* «n.i if continue tM^ th^ Will come buck to ur, If oar eon- tnHution to come from warei nf a constructive tendency, it would ibe better for sioci«'fy if we had never lived. Enerp' »pcnt in the destruc tion of the other ft'llow i.' no»ra- tive cnerjry. It brinjrs sr>lac' to none, not even'to the fi'Iluw who exerts it. Wo Kejrror.*! should do all With in our jv>*e’r to .>«trrnpthen the eoniniunitips are ffoing to do part Oppnrtunitioi are all arount' u* u-aitine to be used constrnc- tivelj. There are howevor, the in- evitsible “'biack sheep” of the pomironitiea that are poingr to do all^ in their power to. breiik down the morals of the community at 'larsre.' In the iju.Sne!fe field of the •comnTuhitj' it is better to give our Cot«p«titoi^ a pat on tH« ahoulder and a jfenial good wish, than a kick 'at the turn of his back. It 1* better to lend an encourac**** word and a pu*h to i>hove him np hill than to give him a sUb in the dark. It i« better to not men tion him or dlncuaa him, than to always have a knock on our lips. The quicker we Nefroes laam that this 1*:*, w«t1d»in wEich rer- eral have interests, lives to live parta to play, and a livelihood to >»rn. the more easily we may be come adjtiated to conditiona. .WHAT THE ELEPHANT SAYS' Woman’s World ^?t. Joseph A. M. fe Church Five .^I7»ousan4,. Ddlar Annex Drh'e, .Mr. George W. Cox, direc tor. Member^ and friends of St. JoRcph A. M. E. Church are «>n; gaire din a White ElepITant Rally to. obtain funds for the building 0^ Bti annex to be dedicated to religious education for^he youth of, Duyham. The annex will cost several thousand dollars. ®ut the five thousand dollars will be gin our work. Beginning Sunday moving 11 Ride The BUS 11 ~ f n nil iS bt bofh*r«d with on automobllt tfi ^ ft !■ ii mm 'm Ift tete dinw th« iMt «ni ,-Jm !• Qbout poH(lr^ ^ tt* Unf^ broktn bun^n diW ■■n ar Uf Hr« thi«s'tiL ServkxCa' (Bjr Ardca H. D«a«a for ANP) - BUFPrr silppBit _ Already loas their punch. Now adays friends glamour for invitations from smart hosteiMa whq «n^r^ tain with superb aimplicity. Simple entertaining with a lit tle imaination and ingenuity will cost dollars leM than »ll the fancy partiaa with the price of gold trapping. The Buffet is tlie party of the year I. First it is cheaper in t« long run to entertain a large group. There is economy in qaan tity someone said. The buffet sup per is thf most expensive—the most charmuisr Of* Da>liur back all previous “invites” and for stirring up some gooff'whole some fun. Everything bpt the food can T>e purchased fl'eM's-yM^dime atorc; Paper na|>kifit^-^^y. and picturrs cue. Paper d^Hes or oilcloth with happy Joyous drawings will serve as a cloth. If you have poftery or glass dishes use them to add i^ore eh^mu 'CUend together an effec tive color scheme ffuch as vod. and white, navy and white or burnt orange and autunjn. You will find that it won’t cost a bit more than a dulj color combina tion. Your best china does not need to be used. See that your table is well laid. Hot dishes and o’clock March 27, the pastor, Dr. Valentine will give a 5 minuter talk on “What "Ae Elephant Says”. These talks will give valu able information concerning the habits of Elephants, and why they are used symbolically.’ Heat him. platen togath«r?-»eold Mf- ™nged the same way—th« cutlei^r non confuaiag array. A few sunrested rule*—have plenty of everything. Last run rushes ^111 cost more. Careleaa planning will run up the cost ^ a party. Buy nothHl^ out of aea- son but vidt the market to nee what is cheap andi fresh. plan a different i>arty instead of cold cuts and potato salad. Try currie dsoup, carrots and onion, pickles and radish rosea, a crisp salad, cheese, cranberry and orange, gelatine desserts imd plenty of hot chffm. CteaiHWikck (rivf a dnnh to Bverythtnc^ and marks the perfect hoste^a. Use twice as much coffee and a tenth as much boiling. In other COUMT FIVE FOOLS PUU.ICi CLAIM OWENS TO BE THERE* THE OLD HOME TOWN YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio, March (By S. S. Booker for ANP) —Ha l^ronets, a local combina- tion of youthful liasketcer% put aome q>in on the ball last week and fooled a whole moat of would •be ^ero worshiper*. Tile Olympics, a juvenile cage team of Cleveland, was to aippear on the same card as the Baroneta and having almost the same name •a J«M« Owena famous globe- trotten, the Olympians, the Ba roneta advertised that the great Jesae would be present at the game. ^ , At game time, the Y gymnasi um W!as pa^cked. Thewl^tieipaper being tipped off, prepared to as sign—Mpoctam .and nhotographors by STANLEY words Ro boiling at all. . It you will aend a loose three 'i cent , stamp m Send you several menus for buffet suppers along with re«ipas. Send your request to Arden H. Duane, Associated Negro Press, 8607 South Parkway Chicago, 111. VOCATIONAL GUlDArJcE WEEK TO BE OBSERVED IN RALEIGH During the week of March 20- 27, schools, and civic organiza tions will observe ''Vocational Opportunity Week,” a yearly pro gram of the National Urban Lea gue. Lester A. Granger, Speciali.it in Industrial Relations and Voca- tionad Guidance, who is a member of the staff of the National Urban League will come to Raleigh a? to the fray. People waited. Ko Jesses Owens came. The Olympioi can- their game and uir'cd another team was on the way. Finally a poorly outfitted Cleve land's Lane A. €. trotted out on the floor and the hometown'srs hoilored d^acrruntly all night, lihe The ffilaroneta profited. DON’T FLY TOO HIGH HaveMon^ Flying too high . . . puUinq s unortgage on your future with INSTALLMENT dobts . . . will b« to to a CRASH when yow gas . . . you*- MONEY . . . gl^so£. • ~ Ym, Buy and enjoy Bfe . . . but FIRST iiave the money ana be sure you ,can AFFORD it. START SAVING R^ULARLY NOW We'Welcome Your Banking Butlnesi NAMED CO-CAFTAIN OF CAGE TEAM* ■* YOUNiGSTOWN, Ohio, March 2i3—‘(ANP)—Jimmie Smith, di minutive guard on the Younss- town college cage team, was elec ted along with a white boy as co captain of the ISdS squad. Smith, Vei^tile and lacking nothing in the art of floor play, has perfor med sparkingly all season. I’he election was held last waek at a banquet given in honor of the cage warriors by the school officials, Tommie Robinson, an other sepian eager on the team was awarded this tlJird letter and sweater. This is the first time in the histJ)ry of the school that a Negro has been so honored and It will be a long time before the white fans forget Smith. He was 'a sender and everybody knew it. The browmskinned performer possesses a commendable scholas tic record and upon his gradua tion in June, he will be the first colored i>erson to have ever dJne so in the college of Liberal Arts. Intent on furthering his education al scope, Smith expects to enter either Western Reserve or Pitt university this coming fall. Vl*»T oue Sop-% eu UWNC44 Offtl IVE LOOKKP WHOLE PLACF AN&TMgltgS -me ONUY *TMiN& IN "me ^TOiee -THATS THE SHAPE OP A Pin.” FLASH VCNIVE'S /ars IP tggjMr-g^ CANPY d: ■ZZ SUN GLASSES IQRAfeY TTSNNIS Balls UBAVE Ybu« SBe OUR »=OR PAPtft. 2- PAW77/^& *ka-te» moHS ■"nc SINCE HERB BURDQPK MoDERNIZ-HD HIS Dieu* I STORE Hjs has HAO a L.OTi KICKS F=J^O/vi [ “THE OLC> "DME ^TONIC TAKBRS ANC? | (SULPeteS."^ I 1936 l ife w. caiCTfUM. THE KEY BUSINESS OF THE MODERN WORLD A. T. Spauldini, As«Ut«nt Secretary and Actuary Nortk C«- tt>Un* Nutuii LL^ Jniurance €5.) the guest of Shaw University, St. Augustine’s College, Washington High School, Bishop Tuttle School of Social Work„ and, the Young Peopies Civic Club of the Tuttle Community Center. He is to ad- these groups during his two days stay here oa Ma^ch 22^23. In. ionnection with this move.; ment the NYA through some of its workers and several interested Insurance is the key business of the modern wtirld and touches the lives of over 64,000,000 of the American populace directly, and other millions indirectly, it appears to me, therefore, that all of us sh^uld’^ be' interested in learning as much about it as pos sible. Life«4QSurance has been ‘-he mainspring of modern economics in a considerable numiber of its Important diviMons. With it the doors of commerce, credit, indus try, and trade are opened wide; with it the processes of produc tion and distribution are vitaliz ed. Nearly every human activity and enterprise benefits !by and depends upon it. Many of the citizens, organized a permanent Vocational Co,uncil. The group ‘reformatory branches’’of science’ plans to have Mr. Granger meet with them to^j^cuss the proposed setjbp and offeii: suggestions and critisisms. had_ their beginnings as coroUa- ries of life insurance needs and problems. Life insurance concerns itself with anything and every thing that affects human beings in any way. * ' The modern scientific theory and conduct of census statistics resjilted from the need for de- pptiAaMA data in connection with life insurance .oalculationa and questions of comparative morta lity. Th'y whole avibjact of sanita tion and hygiene arose, mote or less, in the same way, at least in its regional and national aspects. “Public health questions, epi demics, contagious diseases, drain age, segregation of contagion, professional nursing, studies of diet In health and disease, lise of the modern hospital, care of the sick, poor, the establishment of public dispensaries, free clin ics, official medical inspection, the questions of housing, heating, ventilation, and a score of kind red reforms, aJI,’^ according to William Clendenln in hii( - Brief History of Life Insurance In the “Bible of Life Insurance,” “is sued directly and indirectly from considerations affecting life in surance.” Secondarily, and indirectly, there came about such matters child welfare, organized charitias,* asylums for the aged and infirm, public orphanages, and the like. It can easily be seen iJiat this buMhess of life ii^sux^nce i*. in terested in people’s environment their habits, their -their^ economic status, and their out look on life. No longer do *people in the United States question'the fait that money deposited in life m- suranee nenders “gi^ater servicB than in any other place it could be put; but has nbt always been so. Apart from annuity contracts, it is probable that there were not a hundred policies in fo^e in the United States on the risik of life at the beginning of the nino- teenth century, it fs a far cry from the early traces of life in surance in the Roman Collegia of A. D. Ii36 to the position of the “Key Business of the Modern World” of 193S. And it is this story that is to be told in subse quent articleti, ‘j. Every Negro Man And Woman Must ballister aKd Vote AINIVBODY Can Altord T» BalMU BecavM caadkioB* caacenijBg tfc* fiU«a^ fBialMlkc uU aelMl cowtracUen ef a mw boa* 1mt« n«rar Umm ip«n ItarvMiU*. abMlately m rMMa wbjr y»« |ym tha iMOla fvm Uaiiar ^ F*4«ral pitea y«i ^ «ltk ^jja ^ f«n ownartfcii^ . .. « wfflik r«nr> 1> 10 «• »W ialtkl wm*i h» tO ml I Thu new Biased of flauufB|| it T»3im advaat^ «f diV t«Ura ««i C^«r W|il 044 SiM* 0«r Spidtllfer. , N. C. COME IN NOW FOR ALL UH»HttCtHOW JMggF"— FEDERAX. LOANS AND HO|fE PINAflGOlG KA^S Evary Nagr* Man and Woman Mast RaSttfef^ Aad V«ta PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS Durliaiii Raleigh OCCO-NEE ^Sielf-Rising Flour Takes the Guoss out of Baking and Saves you Money !0 I our skin —with this famous bleach Have a CLEAN SHAVE WfthoHl' U«inf a Razor . . . Simply Your Bear4'^ OFF! scslence has found a way to wlthotit shaving. No seraitiing, tv) cttw, no sqap, $0 bother. Merely apply Magic Shomg Powder as directed—then ■ i|f, leaving a cl^ar, sipdoth gttt I 35c buy? a genei‘oUa etoge at ant utto try before you _ 1C MkWng-Powder Co.. Dept. 34 ^vannahi Ga., for free ttlal sample store.»If ou buy, write aAtlqaally kaowai DUPONT E SHAJDE CLOTH ^ Shadas CiOl J-9931 Ailowanca Far Old Rollrrs Durham Shade Works SHADE SPKPlALim FOR 22 YEARS US BASt ^APEL HILL ST. Specialists In Fire Insuranee - Rentals - Real Estate- Property MuljBgemciii - Autoinoblle and All Kbids Of iDMirance. & Realty Go. H, , Manager Phone J-6152 WNH OON*r fcxd aroimd st3tu)ge tdeaci^I'Be sen* Nadinela Bleacli- &i^0eanii>«4^idWii for yeto bteiCdies and purtfw tin skin. Nadinola Blead^iu Ct^eam' can’t bedudtotwliprBBidte TliafTot' caa’f be - - ao miul} to the sldn so quickly, an.anralif. Bleaching- Cream and watdi bMT your oompiexion grows U^l^bter in tenet ranoether and softer in texture. Mdrui^tscarryNadinelai in recular^ at 50e and ex trali^me^aaving,^ at SIjMK .^Flu sections and evoTf-^ijw* U-yoaf^ cfia'tmp^y,?is^n6 sul tute^ snnPmmftiy and w&'inll mall tojroupaeti^d with book 01 UlifliUrea Miu}cy eecreia. Wkif YOUR Drsams Come Tnie ... list QODEFRors mmm Start tonll^t with Nadinola nadihola. boi u*. Pwii. Teao. OODIffMn mmt If yaiir tfaawr daat aai have II, t«n4 $1.25 ' to • MMft» MAWIMCtUMM I HAIR COLORING „« • ano OLM If. • tT. fcouti, ma