Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / Nov. 26, 1938, edition 1 / Page 5
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NOTE:—rOCTJ? quegtion will be Magwertd FREE ia tkiM cotama ONLY wbm you lacludt » dipping of tbit columa ••rf tigayour tull namt, birthdmtt, and correct addrna to your letter. For a "Private Kepjy'... s«sd oaty (25c) and a teU-addteawed, atamped envelope tor my Btw ASTROLOGY READING aM receive by return mail FREE ADVICE on (3) Queationa. Sand all Utt.ri to: ABBE WALLACE, car* of THE CARO LINA TlUta. 117 P«ibo4y 8tr««t. Durham. N. CaroliiM. C. L.—I ,wUh to know if with the tx^rience 1 hava had', call 1 make it through nursing achr^ol in ona year and b« tucctit/ui in a job aftarwarda or what ik beat ler me to do? AntRagardlaia of h o* w mu«h you kav* it will be naceaaary for‘you to apend the limited time in study if you plan to taka up a course in nurt ing. If you finish the course, you will get employment. W. P.—Will this girl that I h a V e in mind get me into trouble and oes she mean me any good? Ans:—The young lady means you no harm, but she Isn’t in love with you. It would be well for you to choose someone your own age fq^ a friend as she is much t»0 young to^ take you aeriously. Ko trouble will arise from your associating with each other. J. W.—My boy friend ami I get along terrible. He Itays out. all hours of the night and never aays where an^ when Ite out ai^d if I go out a while In fhe d&y, he gets angry. TuH me if I should stay here and take this stuff or go home? Ans; Go out and leave him flat. Find you a good pay.nu. job and get a boarding place by yourself aSjjyou would be'bet*ee, off. Make a visit heme if yo" will be able *o make a bettev salary right where you are now. In a few i^onths you will yoUr Ideal lAate. your city and ask their help 'n helping you secure the peniio i. Thj|^ matter wUl be handled through the War Pej»«rtment Washington. Y. Z.-—Please tell me does roy husband still love me ahd when -willihe change and be affeeclun ti %nd take me into his con nfe as before? What am 1 about tills matter. fidenf t6 do Ans:~lie loyes you but at this time he is experienc n.j; soihe difficulty from a financ’.l angle which has him worried and upset. Ha^ patience and in the meantime make it » piuint to ta|ce more interest i.i your general appeaV^nce and he will eventually change hla wnulj attitude. ab )Ut S. E.—Do you think that L. care anything a b o u t me an will he marry me? How P. B.? Under no circumstanc-*# should you marry L. C. as you are well acquainted with h*s habit of gambling and it jlist won’t mix with matrimony. F. does love you, but he tsn’t gtnr.K to marry anytime soon. Wiiy don’t you make some other friends. Fnil’sBoiik- (CMUteued fr«a» iMg* ^ ^sfAred him for greater things itr the future. When iJncle . Sam declartd war on Germany, Ford like many Negroes was caught by the spirit of the times “Johnny” get your gun.” In 1937 he got hit gun and marched across the seas to help Uncle Sam settle ac counts with the Germans. £ut there, too^ he met with discrl criminlation. As a non commissioned officer and radio engineer, he let his men in protest against the ds eriminatory practices of the white officers. After his retnra from the war. h« was honoraMy iischaged and received an av> pointment in the post office at Chicago.. Triiced in its logical sequcnc^ here /was a man rising above the p^^ibed position *of his down trodden peoiple. It was an up ward stru|irgle, ^nd Ford wax determined never to go uti'ler. In 1926 he joined the Commun ist Party and since that time hns become one of its outitandinj? leaders. He concludes his book on i note of High hope and confidence of the future, and who ha7«* « forgring of the democratic front against fascism and the exten sion of that front until it reac'i esfthe goal of true democi-&cv I which is Socialism.” mhi. Pickwis Raps Attack 01 Jews Ikeir^ittiyt «i Tiberciltsis Brtif Prizes It CoapetitjM Anoig 100,000 Stitets B. W.—-1 am trying hard to get. compensatien from my hus band’s death find wonder what I must do? Ans:—Get in touch with the local American Legion office In A. A. H.—^Should I step aside and let my brother go with this gill? Ans;—to do so would be the means of you both finding out which one of you brothers she really likes best. Your “heart beat” is aa yet to come into your life. L. T.—Will we start to hou.se keeping as I am tired of living with my husband’s folks? Ans—N(|t until you get work and save enouglT money to niov- ?d. Your husbanj .■leems coiilan- ed enough rifjht where he i». and is golr^ to make no attemj t to get out until yon get the place and establish yourself in it. Then he will follow, i 1939 Astrology Rmadinga NOWBEMDY! NiBW YORK, flov. Mth-^Thn colored people of tiie United States should expreaa thelr^in terest emphatically to the e m^b a r g o againat democratic Spain lifted.*' This was £h« atatement issue'd thia weak by Dean William Picken^ director of ^Banches' ijf National Aaaoci«tf|^ the Advmncement of Colortid People.- This embargo,” the s t s I t ment said, "preventa the Spa.Ush peopla from geting arnie pd good to defend themseivei against the attacks made upon Germans and Italians who are backing the Spniah t-ei»el, Gen eral General Franco. “Whatever happena tb tear down the liberties of the Spin ish people threatna the Neg% minority in America, and other minorities seeking , demi cratic freedom, just aa truly t-s what i* happning to the Jewl in Germany threatens the s«cu;* ity of such mioeritiea every where.” ASKS THAT U. S. SEVER DIPLOMATIC RELATIONS WITH GERMANY eiO Urged T6 Support Anti- Lynch Measure Pe.,1. » . .C I....' ; by tabor in AMrtam towarJ I^ exundin. the demoemtle id**l j Or In American Mr.” g.n.«tK,« (for««ly th* C— ^ _ ABBE' WALLACS h«l ^ fll» p»M • I, jny n*m INI Aslrol- «qy BMdla^i carariav tout ewa blrfli- «* sdTtoe Dicladad with Mch order. NEW YORK, Nov. 2(Jth— Senator WilUam H. King (D.) Utah, who Mked that the Unit sd States sever diplomatic reltions with Germany's Nazi govoiii ment as a protest against, the Jewish persecutions' in a rec->nt radio address, was asked to translate the same sentiment, which motivated his maic-ni this* speech into an active sup port of the federal tanti lynch ing legislation duHnW the next sessioa of Congress, | The senator from. Utah on two occasions gav« active sup port to southern reaction w^o led the filibuster which kill'H the Wagner Van Nuys Gavagan anti lynching bill; once on N:>v. 17, 1937, when he talked about conditions in t ^ e Tennessee HEY FELIASS GET IN 1 he Carol ina 7 imes i- CONTEST WIN A BIKE FOR’CHRISTMaS Nov. Sth 1 ff r' Ends Dec. 25th First Prize :..r r Elgin Bicycle - Equipped Second Prize Wri^l Watch ,Thir^ Prize A Pirir (M SK ATESp WRITING on "Why I Should Know About Ti^rculosls and What 1 Should Know,” Esther Jleed (upper left) ol'jHorida A ft M College, rallahassae, and Charles Copher (upper right); ot Gammon Seminar) Atlanta, Ga., each received a first prise for outstaadtng essays anilbnK Segro college students. Among high school students Odessa Redmau (lower left) of the North Fork (W. Va.) High School won first pntc. Second prlzr.vent to Gertrude M. Coutrler (lower rii^t) of the Girls' High School, Brooklyn, N. Y, The essay contest waa conducted h.y the National TuberculosU Association and Its afflUated or^ganixatlous. Nomiii'ated Board * f Qf Directors 'Die reeoluiion was pMMd hf the convention after two ao«*,‘i em detefBtes had told tlM body that tabor org»nisatioB esnnct go torwvd w&ottt the Mdff support of the Nefro. T a e resolution favored the reeeind in^ of all poll tax taw» and luv tng the fMetal foveniment to deny federal funde to emaamnrJ ties or sutes which •Irtuma^roe i th* rtyht to vote “by virtu# i f race or economic condition.” mittee for lBiu*triai OrfssiXii tloA), which is hblding tte /tret conveatlos h«re this week, wa •eked to • "pern a r^l ition reaftrmtng tta vt fedei^l anti lynciny iegietation, m a telegram aeat to John L. by the National Aseoctation f^r tht Advsncement of Color>!,i People. The telegram reads as foH^'v . ”Ttope it is pOseibfa for CIO convention to paia rcsoiutinn fflrming enpport -federal ant* The convention has already I lynching f legistatioi passed > resolution | supportlr.,; r uf such action cotild the President's condehination the Cernian Government, a n ^ Tiiseliners out in connection with barbarities against' Jewn a -n c* this country’s recall of Amh«^» ^ necessity of United States stopp ador Hugh Wilson from Berli'K ing mob murder's within its owHi - - I borders as well as proteeting Read Th« Carolina Tiae* mohbism in Germany.” NEW YORK, Nov. 26th^-Six persons, prominent in b''8inea>i, political and social welfare field have accepted nominticn to the board of directors of the National Association for the Advancement of (ilolored Peop’e according to an announcimeiit made by officials of the oiganiin tppn here today. The nominations, which wi'l be voted on at the association's- annual meeting early in Ian. include. jj^ ^ Charles Poletti,. Lt. (Joverncr of New York; L. C. iBIount, jf Detroit> ; vice . president and secretary of the Great Lakes Valley Auhority; and again on February 2 and 3, 1933, when he talked on conditions in tl:s Orient. * The request to reverse this record of opposition to pasaaga of anti lynching legislation was contained in a letter from Wai ter White, secretary of the Na tional Aw’n for the Advancs ment of (Jolored People. Mutual Life-Insurance Compaiy;^ Alfred Baker Lewis, of Boston, state secretary of the Socia/it party in Mass.; Ei|ifcene Martir, of Atlanta. secreta|ry treasurer of th^ Atlanta Life Insurance Clompany; Doctor Ransome, pa? tor. First Baptist Church, Rich niond, Va.; anil Col. Theodo-e Roosevelt,, for many- years a member of the association’s Spingarn Medal Award c ,o nt mittee. CIO WOULD ABOLISH f ' PdLL TAX IN , SOUTHERN STATE.S NEW YORK, Nov. 23rd — Action by the CtO conventvo i meeting in Pittsburgh, this week in passing a resolution eallinp for the abolition of the poll tax in southern states, and govern ment action to insure voting by all citziens regardless of race or color was hailed here todav by officials of the National Ass’n for the Advancefaient of Coloi'ed D’ORSAY Beauty Salon 120 ,?I? I^NGytl STREET PHONE F-asoi y RUSH YOUR BEAUTY TROUBLES TO US WE DELIVER THE GOODS we'ARE PREPAREP TO fTANDLE'ANY RUSH ' WITH 1 Six Efficient Licensed r '■*8> Operatorfs WAITING TO SERVE YOU AT ALL TIMES. f SPECIAL PRIVATE ROOM SET ASIDE tOR Hair Dyeing; only RS. MARGARET BAILEY. 5—ci«li«t F«nc» Cnrli»f. MISS ELIZABETH BOOKER, Specialist in Maaicariac aad Pedicuciag MISS MILDRED COMPTON, Specialist In Sh*Biyo*siiig aad PreMiag MISS BEATRICE FREEMAN, Specialist la Marcal W'aviag _ MIS3^ VERA JEFFERIES, SpeCtalist la Finf^r Wavian aad 5 Faciah ' f MRS. MARTHEMA SANDERS, Specialist in Eysivrow Arefciag S aa«l Peraaaal Maka.«p» , ATNJYBODY Can Afford To Build! Because aaadllloBs concerning tha ptaantag. fibaacikg aad aetaai coastruetloa af a aew ttaase kav* aevar baaa Mere favaiwUai thero't absolutely ao reason wby yo« eaa’t kave the hM»a yaa •ire. Uailar the Federal plans yoa caa bnlld with 1^ eartaiat^ «f full omershlp ... a koaio that wtti be yocrs la 10. ar SO years. Amd y9jUr initial iavestBent aaed be oaly 20 par eeal of tka valaa af ya>ur pTMwrtyl Tbis aew mathml of fiaaaetag k easier, aeara eaa« - , .4. venUwt-' ■sore economieaL^ Taka advaataga af tkis gaWea a^ portnnity ^ ^ ' ' ^ COME^ In now FOR ALL INFORMATION ABOUT FEDERAL LOANS ANDVoME PINANCINC PLANS 7' 117 Peabody St Dial N-7121 ' ' ■ Sj>jectallsts In V Fire Insurance- Rentals • Real'Estate* i Properly Management • Automobile and All Kinds Oi Insurance. ‘ Union Insurance' & Realty H. M. IVUCHAUX, Manager Durham, N.-^C. V. Plrane
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 26, 1938, edition 1
5
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