fam miuoah may »• irar POWELL AND SAVORY TRIED TO WRECK PAPER NEWARK, N. J.—(O— Th* drmmsti« headline. "Her»ld Loit In ‘D^’ To Give Jersey Field to AirtMrd^w N«w»” in bold type on the fimt p*^ of the New Jfr«ey News Last Satur day, the first issue -of the new paper started by Helvjn ,B. Johnson and Oliver W. Bkt>wn, newi o fthe w«ck and all the fa^ta shoald p* made known to the public. The New Jersey Cuardian ia lat« coming out Jtot it i« not tiQ blame for this late ness. "nie IkKrcee ithteh are to blame are; Joseph G. Merola of the Pairlawn Presa, real owner of the Newark Hwald this week died a susiden which ^eatK which Mero- fonner owners of the Newark Herald, which ceased publication,! 1^6 Amsterdam News two weeks ago when the Anuter-1 practically t«ok over Hie dam News, pc^hed by the Pow^jla’s shop,in FsirUwn, N. J., and ell-Savory corportatiion of >|ew! possibly. through no fault ,of its Yrk, Dr. C. B. Powell, president own pushed lopal papers out of and Dr. P. M. H. Savory, secre-(that shop and crated the pre- tary-treasurer, suddenly quit /the crliffii . . . Buth th«.-Herald Pentagon press in Manhattan, j and the Quardi^n have recently and twitched to a new press in I been printing in Merola e F^irlawn, N. J., near Paterson. Hhe atofiy^ in tte New Jersey News reads; "In a seemingly shop a several years feud be tween the white man and the Guardian owner- had softened^ ‘deal* to eliminate the Newark somewhatt When the Chiardian Herald as a competitor of The ! Merola’s plant to print New York Amsterdam News, with the ultimate purpose veiling control of the New Jerrc$’^]^^er in the hands of a New York Srroup. the F^iirlawn Prew, Inc., of Fairlawn, N. J., suspended publication of The Herald last week, after gaining title of .it through foneclosure prwceedings on a chattel mortgage.” “Offered 11,000 in cash by Melvin B. Johnson and Oliver W. Brown, former owners of the cpald, for a clear title to the paper and cancellaltion of fl,SOO still due on the mortgage, the eecretary-managef, Joseph Me rola (white), was supposed to have been considering the offer when, without any previous no tice, informed Johnson n SatoT- day, April 23, that the Herald bad been purchased by the Am^ sterdam News. “But n Monday, April 2®, Dr. C. B. Powell, one of the owners of the New York paper, denied to Johnson that his corporation had purchased the Herald, though admitting that it had Jl>eeh offered to them. “The report that the Herald was used in a ‘deal’ is based on tte action of the New York pa- *per etmtracting to print at the Fairlawn Press the same week that the publication of the He-j raid was suspended.” 1 Goardian Sayi “Plot Fails” talladegA stwjent the last few months we wyi ad mit we did not sense at that I time the plot behind our seem ing welcome there. We see it now. We were welcomed like the spider welcomes the fly—^to kill it. So it was not until Monday afternoon of this week that the Chiardian, thKrogh its ®wn ta- porters, learned the plan was: Ik To print the Amsterdam News In Merola’s shop. 2. To suspend the Herald. S. To catch the Guardian by surpdse and force its suspen* sion, Everything worked but the last named plan. diaries E. Hall Rellrej Er«i DJ$. DepaflnieyttaNiierc^ (By Rtoaai B. CirireUi Laaias for a Time*) The WASHINGTON, J>. C.— Hav ing reached the statutory retire- pointee, late in 19M. On June 1, 19®7, Mr. Jones resigned to return to his desk as head of the National Unt>an League in ffew York City, and 99yiufo« cuTDB «eefcv MOtmr~»f£AKEIt N ment age of thre« score years j,j, ^^re inipo»ed upon and ten, Charles E. Hall com- j|, Hallj so that If there Is no pleted thirty-%ight years of con tinuous service in the Census of the United States Department of Commerce and jretired .to private life May 9th. When Mr^ Hall b« came attached to the Census than having a colored sectloQ Bodea Paper Says latemclal ManCag«|^ '"Oecvr F««4aeM^ly’^ BOSTON— (C) — "Honestly we cannot see any xeaMn "fbf getting hot and bothered oyer aii inter-racial marriage/* 'vaid the Boston Chronicle, editorially, last week of the Steele ease. “They Itjboor frequeittly and the only news angle, in this instance, 1s that the white fiancee l« related to an ex-vice-pTMfSent.”-. . One of Talladega- College’s se rious students of English is Miss Sadwar Belden, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Belden of Wil mington,. Nortti Carolina. Miss Belden is working on a study of placement tests over a five year period in order to discover the chief deficiencies of students entering collet _ . ^ PLAN LAW TO SEGREGATE AFRICANS IN THEIR OWN I CONTINENT Boraaii"as a civil service em ployee in IMO the Department of Commerce had not been es tablished. .When he ended his ca reer there last week was filling a position which he had virtudly create^ himself—fiplKialjIst on Negro Statistics. . Also retiring along with Mr. Hall was his lifelong friend. T. successor to Hall there would be no colored section chief left In tbe Commerce dep«ptaiint._^ Of greater import hAwever, chief in the depaxtBient 1s tiie carrying on of “the Hall tradi tion.” In diggii^ itp the faeta and m^nif- them avaSUblet Charles E. Hal! has made a last ing ^Contribution toward estab- lishinig the potentialities of colored ipersons as definite en tities of our National economy. Only last week * it was that a colored man, palpably Governor of North- Carolina, who was the principal speaker at the Rocky Mount Civic Forum on last Sunday afternoon. Since assuming the office of chief exer cutive of the start*. Governor Hoey has done much to piove that he is the gfovernor of all the people of North Caroling He is the first governor of the state to ever appear as a guest speaker for an »U Negro audience in Eastern ^rth Carolina. datorily. Mr. F. H. Payne of Kansas City, Missouri, was nam ed) to succeed Mr. Clark, and took office May 6th. Mr. Payne hails from the State and home city of Dr. W. J. Thompkins, the lUteoidar Deeds. But will "Charlie" Hall’s vacant place be , filled or^ shall his records and be o^n to him. excepting only ^e transferred to —and always-the very top. For 4,,, archieves of the Cen- ^ —« i. . youn^ coi H. R. Clark. Mr. Clark had been prosperous, came to Washington Sewnd Deputy l^ordw «f and called upon Mr. flalL He Deeds for the Du^ict of Colunl- ^ gotten a paying post witii a bia for the last three years. His Nation-wide • business coijioratlod was a sUtutory civil , service) covincing them of the i«- post, and had to be filled man- tentialities of the "colored mar ket” for their good witti statis tics gathered and collated by the tics. Census Bureau, Depaitment of Commerce. That «ac- one of a thousand incidents. Not only did “Charlie” Hall nake statb- Onsus Bureau, Department demand for them. The carrying on of his work, in kind, is thei^ fore imperatively essential, from the standpoint of the National MARIAN ANDERSON AP PLAUDED AGAIN IN NEW YORK NEW YORK— ((?)— Marian Anderson, contralto, giving her Meantime; the week before the . fifth concert in New York this appearance of the new paper in season, and her second at Cam(- *Mewark, the New Jersey Guard- gie hall, Sunday night, iras iin, edited by Fred R. Clark, l^rljily Aipj^r^ed by Harjiom- 129 West Market streelt, came! ites, who turned out in full out with a startling front page! force, "all dolled iq)” fo rthe oc- headline-“P»per Plot Fails!”-1 casion. The New York TSines ^and a front page editorial in said; “There was lavish Applause which itsa id in part; 1 throughout the evening, and “This week’s neixmpaper situ-1 Miss Anderabn was obliged to atun in Newark is the biggest. sing several encores.” BULAWAYO, Rhodesia,' May 18—A feature of the recent foundation-stone laying ceremo nies of David Livingstone memo rial building was the principal address by the Prime Minister of Southern Rhodesia, Mr. G. Higgins, who surprised his nat ive heHfera by declaring -ftrere^ there was yet time for the coun ty to Ibe divided into separate areas for black and white. It was useless, he said, for Rhodesia or any other British or East Afri can State tp attempt to solve this problem alone. IJie problem, he said, “is com mon to us all what any of us do must affect all.” He suggested that ii}. native areas, the black man must be allowed to rise to any position lie' was capable of heading, and “every step of in dustrial and social pryamid must what can be done we ^y point and Liberia.” The Prime that the )tistics tables of a year ago ^ Torably and truly- Mmister thought were two colored chiefs j administratlTe FOR essmi^n 6th North CtrtllM District' ttests. rn.r rno Mr. Hall’s futuro l« assurftd. IMI me Mnior aammMCTauve Commerce department, 1 hj; ■—* «. sham his eoman- J™ “rr ^ be afford prot^tion from whiW iacc««led, niuch conceT^ nevertheless, eompefilion. Under plan, in ^ Jackson, Hoover ap-' ’ European areas (white), the . , . black man would be welcomed ' and offered fair wages for his services—as a laborer, providing, j "It should be on the understand-1 ing that in white areas he I should merely assist and not j compete with the white man. The policy I suggest enables the racee to live side b; sid9 to tiia benefit of both—^It will take. k>i^ year^ t& apply—bqt a start must be made at once. > •*XJnless; some policy which is similar is ^ut into practice all rCown; Colonies and Protec torates in which white settlement has been allowed and ancouraged in Africa, Wl will drift .-into in superable difficultes.” Three Months after ^e col lege was established the enroll ment grew so fast until it was necessary to organize a board of control, which has as its func tion, t&e handling of disciplinary problems of the students, and acts as general advisor to the college. The members of the Board of Control consist of eightr promin- eat citizens of the city with Dr. Johji .0. Plummer as president. - tixt Starldi l^auty College, yet youngest in age in this state, has grown to rank first in meet- I n the state requirements, fiince its beginning, the College haa turned out Seventy gradu ates who have sucessfully met the' requirements of thy state and are making a tremendous success in all sections of the United States. ^ As the nuniiber of Negro Beau ticians grew in this state, great er was the demand for a state organizatiqn. Mrs. Helen Phipps seeing this [demand has done no little work in making plans for this organization. Attempts have been ^de to contact every Ne gro Beautician, apprentice, and cosmetologist in this state, im pressing upon.them the need of a n organization. Stark Beauty Cftllege Holds Sad . ■ ' EVERY NEGRO MAN AND WOMAN MUST REGISTER AND VOTE Argentina is successfully ship ping fruit in refrigerator to Europe. ft-; ■\ (By Wm. C. Raines) . RAIiBiGH, N. C., The second commencement exercises of the Starks Beauty College will be held May 24-25 which time will mark the beginning' of a North Carolina State Negro Beauticians nouncements made by Mrs. wV6 -Association, according to an an nouncement made by Mrs. Helen Phipps president of the College. The sessions will Ite held both day and night at the First Bap tist Church at which time all > alumnae are asked to attend to lege here. organize an alumnae assodaiSon. The Starks- Beauty Collega was founde? in 1936 by Mis. Helet; Phipps. Coming to Raltigh, alt^r four years of successful buq^ness operation |n Atlantic City aiiid ^chmond Virginia, to respond to an invitation from several of the leading city and state officials. Seeing a demand fo ra Nejgro Beauty College ki ~Sale.«h, Mrs. Phipps disbanded her activities in Richmond to establish the Starks Beauty Col- $$$FREE $$$ m: ...HOLDf woiin MAN To Win •itJ Hold Ikt Mtn You Lovt — USE LARIEUSE lag beautr wid^one (Pplicati0a.o|Lsrim««. Color corned tvenry; jet bl*ck.>bltck, duk, mediam-of Ucfat bfown or bloiSi*, >• ron desir* il. Yoo can -LiuriMiM jOarMlfc M home, la‘1 ter mloutet. WUl not nib of or wuh off (ad wiU lut «od ItM. Yu, Larisose is .HnruUMd «o .luiifr or jfOM deaUjC will r«ay>d roiiT money. Gtt t botti* from your dealer TODAY. CV/AjroA’S mot tha man she wants. Lota yy at bar sln-frieads had to take aacood efcefe*. Hoc .'Vlada—Ihe crabbed off the ^ dia crowd—and knows bow to kite ia tka paloi ii hk hand. She ft m» umiim0 charm of soft, radiant, r'etflor^ hMr- Sba relies on Larieuse to She ^a*9k«riialrlot«l)',a4d keep her man lovins. DoU. scraakad or grer hair takn on glow^ CtODEfBOY*!^ If year daalar deas not liava h, sand $1.35 dIraO to HAIR COLORING iri lar I WIU. 60 PORT MR. RlbG^ IS THE ONLY CANDIDATE FOR CON GRESS IN THE ENTIRE «TH CONGRESSIONAL DIS TRICT OF NpRTH CAROUNAT Who HAS COME OUT ONE-HUNDRED PERXUfT FM PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT. Subject To Primary J une 4th l^ginnning today five speiial rapresentatlTes of the ^ New Durham Double-Cola Bottliiq^ Company ,wlH .. browse through the streets and soft drink Aan^ of Durham, ea^ch with^>roll of dollar bills to be.jriven U» the persons thky (tetch dt'^kihg a bottle of l^able- Cola.'^ When you visit your cafe, grocery store, fUlinnf atatien, or any j>lace selling soft drinks, order a Doublf|(^la and you may be presented with a brand new dollar bill. The I^uble-Oola representative will carry a Double- Cola badge aiid will expose it when he enters each place. Only these authorized representativeii will give tiie prises. * ; Begin today—order Doqble-Cola ’When yoq are thirsty, enjoy the energy it brings, and ^ep'your eyes peeled for the Double-Cola man. If you are enjoying a Double- Cola when he sees you—^hs will give you en*>dollar li^RiSaS. The names o|) all winnejrt wll be r«UUhed in Hie CaroUna Time* next e^tlaBt. •OMniOY MANUFACTUII»ra COMMNY • 3910 OLIVS ST, • ST. lOUM. MO DURHAM, N. C. ,, . . ' CANDIDATE FOR SOLICITOR TENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT DEMC^RAjtlC PRIMARY SATURDAY, JUNE 4, 1»38 Your Vot« And Coafld^ae* Approtlat^d ;