Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / June 17, 1939, edition 1 / Page 3
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THE CAR0LHI4 TllttS MTUIVAY. JW||[ ITI^ IMi rsm Wf KOTB:—TOUK tpfgtiom Witt b» «a«ir«r«d FREE M tU» ^oli^pa ONLY whru you mclud0 m'dipping o/ fA/s cQluma uad tigm jota tuU Bam»/birtbdmt0, aad cvreet mdir%*M to your For « "Prirttt mptf" ... Mod only (35c) amf « fH-midnaaod. $t»mpod •av0lopt for my n*w j^TiCLO0y READINQ ud r^etirt by r0turm mail FREE ADVtCE on (S) QaoftiooM. • # • Send all Uttcrt to: ABBE WALLACE, car* of THS CARO LINA TIMSI, 117 PMbo7 Street. Darham, N. Carolina. PWE—I bought a nic piace of property and had jmt about atartcd building when *he Jutfap- ed up and left. Should I go ahead and build and wlih for her return? Am. No—give up th^ ide^ for the time being. Concentra tion reveals that thi* voung lady will nol be the mtidam of jfour new home to be. A very charming young lady frill en ter your life later on tfcia year who will make you exceedingly, happy. Build to auit her idaaa. PT—^Did my friend do the things that she was accused of doing? I am In a predicament and don’t know which way to turn and I fear that I will make , the wrong step. Ma;r 'write privately? An»: -—Eivldence might point against yonr friend, but she isn’t guilty. This you probably have found out. She is just as sweet and innocent as you have” pictured her to be. Ye% write me if you ike. Send a quarter for my Aatrology Readini;. In clude your full name, ^irthdate, correct address and three ques- tkns which I will give you my my free opinions on same. RE—^Doea this person whom I think I am c^esperately in love with love me enough to come back? Why did he break iiway? Ans: He felt that he had to make a change—}ie could ot marry you without money enough to live on and he knew if he remained near you that he would, io. Keep your trust in him, bat I don’t "think he will return whan ho promised he would PS—Is' my only son guilty of what this girl tells me about?. Ans: Emphatically yes, and how well you know it to bo the truth, D>n*T*influence ‘ your son against her, as you would legret it lattr on in life. JAB—Being a conltant raad- er of your section of th« Minis try Work? What ia thara Rha*d for me? Ana; A vary vary successful career as a Ministers ia bofora you. You are young and hava your own whole Ufa before you —study and you will turaly make a name for younal/. A very imj>ortant feature ahead for you is a HAPPT MARRIAG(E —^oose your mata carefully. JM—Teil ' me what to do rigiit away as I am desperate and d* not know which way to turn, I must have help im.nedi- ately? tAns; Apply at the welfare for temporary relief—and in t b a meantime geit out and search deligently for work. You will be aible to ,a make a luccesaful con tact in a few weeks if you con- Unue to try as hard as I think }^u are ffoing. LRI#—Will my husband ^ ever stop going wiBi thia womali. I have Th'Huhd to give her a good whipping if I ever catch them together 'as I atn fed up. Would she stop then? Xns:—^Pon’t blftma tha woman altogetfier Tor-she doesn’t force him to take up' time with hei* The affair is . ooling -off—atop aggravating him albout her and in time he will give her up. i In the meantime worft^Dur owti ap pearance and clothes—fix your self up to fee attractive to his eyes. He does afipreciate beauty. LP—Will the people I work for pay, me „while they are gon^ on tti^ir vacation so I will have the jo(b when they get back? Ans; Not full pay*—the thing for you to do ia get odd }6ba to do until they return. You can get your job back when they re turn, I ^TRAISIP BY mSIDEirr 3. MMES FLEHING, Editor letter of congratulation fro* in chief of the Kappa Journal, President Franklin D. Roosevelt official organ of the Kappa Alpha on the rec*nt 26th anniversary of Psl Fraternity, who received a the Journal, Mrs. Ee Simms A Suicide Race Big Factor In Entertaining King And Queen NEW YORK,—Coroner Amos [ Squires • announced a verdict of suicide following the inquest into the death of Mrs. Constance 'Willis Campbell, 3 2 and glamorous wife of the famous .Bsquire magazine cartocnist, E. Sunms Campbell, who shot herself to death in the* library f her palatial Worthington. N. Y. home. The body was .found Ify her maid early Wednesday morning, her brains blown out with 1)2 gauge shotgun lying near her. The mansion is on Sow Mill River road^ near Elms- ford, N. Y. She had given birl^h last March to her first child, Edizabath A«», fH»d ill health following confinement was given as reason for the suicide. Screams of ithe'"mifd awaken ed Mr. Campbell who was lii his bedroom when the tragedy took place. He called * 'doctor and police Captain McQuillan o f Greenlburgh, who came to t h e scene with other police. Scatter- id ibuckshH in the ceiling satis ii^ the authoritiea that suicide was tiie only answer. The tody was taken to the Lavy-Delany Funeral home on Seventh Ave nue in Harlem. ESecause of the-^ circumstances under which Mrs. Campbell kill ed herself, mystery surrounded the^ca»e„at ^e onset, but it wa«! teter cleared' up when ballistic ej^erts and medical experts and examiners re-enneted t h • on|y possible way for the gla- ^Air young matron to commit suicide. She had shot herself in the back of the head, it was said The gun, used for hunting pur poses having been propped be hind her fn such a way that sihe could trip the trigger. Mrs. Wiitona Calloway, wife of Cab, the orchestra leader, and many other close friends of the socially prominent Campbell family rushed to the house When apprized of the tragedy. In spile of reports that Mrs. Campbell was ITr' ill health, friends of the family wera at a loss to explain the suicide since her husband haJ^ laviahod all kinds of luxury upon her from Wf income csttmated at t?0,t)00 annually. CampA>ell was busy with his drawings until 3 a. m. Wednesday, sources close to th^ family statei^. His wife had arisen very early, prepared her own breakfast and then went into the wojrk room which is tha library to read the morning paper. The tragedy occured shortly after. MARIAM ANDERSON ON MUSIC PROGRAM AND WHITE HOUSE ALL-NEGRO CULINARY STAFF COOKS AND SERVES DINNER FOR ROYAL VISlt»S WASHIMITON, D, C.—Artis tic and culinary history for the Negro raca | was written here last Thursday at the state dinner in the White house given by the United States and Mrs. Roosevelt, « n d honoring Bri tain’s King George and Queen Elizabeth. Featured soloiat on the all- American music program arratig ed for entertaining the royal viai tors was famed Marian Ander son, contralt^, w h 6 ' fscently gained world prominence when Southern bigotory twice raised the color bar against her tippearance in recital in the DAR and public school audi toriums. , Ignoring the narrow-minded- ness which prompted the d'scri- mination. Miss Anderson ■ rose to new heights on lastt Easter Sunday when she appeared here in a free outdoor concert that attracted 76,000 persons of high and low estate and of both races DURHAM REPRESENTED Co-starring on the house program Thursday with Miss Apdenon were the North Caro lina Negro spiritual singers, whose “Ham!ble yours.elf” and “Waid in de Water,” thrilled the royal visitors and distinguished guests attending the president’ dinner. Tlv;^^ sogers were train ed iby Mrs. Nell Hunter, who selected 13 musiciaiis from WiRA community singing groups in Durham and Winston-Salem, N. C. and carefully coached them for the White house appearance. Culinary history was made a| the state dinner, because all the food e«rfen from President Roosevelt’s personality designed $9,000, set of china was pjepar^ ed, cooked and served by color ed masters of the catering art. The men^ was selected by a na tionally famous colored woman dietician and cooked under her supervision Butlers, "waiters and other attendants, both men and women who dispensed the ' food and drinks, _w«e all colored. The dinner menu was as follows: Clam Cocktail, Calf’s Head Souf), Terrapin, Corn Sticks ■Ebned Capon Cranlberry Sauce Peas, Buttered Beets, iS w e e "t Potato Cones; Frozen Cl.eese, and Cress Salad, Maple and Almond Ice Cream; Wliite Pound Cake Coftee. SeiMti^ts Develop Chiiip 1*aint For Rural homes WcrW’sfaiiTQlla»e~ Colored Denlisis’Jlay by a. W. CURTW I4AB0RAT0RY ASSISTAJ^TT' 'TO DOCTOR G. W. CARVER TUSKBG-EB Ala.—Traveling through tha South, one's ktten* tion is attracted to the deplur- able condttiona and tfaa absence of paint from homaa. In tha majority of eu«a It ia not in negligence, ahiftleaaneaa nor lack of intareat or prlda that ar* tha reasona why homea are not paint ed. It. ia rather tha inability of farmers to ipend money for that purpose, with tha maager in come that they earn, painting is practically impoasible. As one atated, “Tha money that could have been used to paint the house was hledad to pay the children’s expenses Ifa school.' Most rural housaa are built with unfinished lumber, . which elminatea the use .of the finer commercial or chaper grades of paint. It was not a cheaper paint adapted to use on unfinished lumber that waa wanted, but a paint that could b« prepared >y the farmer from waste material or native material that possess ed the necissary qualities—it was a preservative and beauti- fier that was needed. The work wai begun at Ti^egaa to find a cheap source df 'pKtnt mater ial for the rural hoiq^* The problem of getting t pig ment for the chap paint had been solved. For * sevaxal years clay stains of great piA-m«nencjr and varied colora, made heie -in the laboratory; have bee.i used by the art department in the staining of class projects. The task was to doTaTn a vehicle for the clay pigment, it was decided to try discarded motor oil a£ the carrier. All availad>Ie clays surrounding the institution were brought into tht labora tory—reds, yellows, gray; pur ple and white— determine ■the quantity of day that> could bf mixed with the motor oil, pos sible color comibinations, and the spreading quality of the paint. lieges Health Dept. 'IAIjEIGvH, N. C.—Tha fesigna tion of Dr, H. F, Easom'ae Diree tor of the Division of Industrial; Hygiene, State Board of Health haa been announced by Doctor Carl V| Reynolds, SUta Health Officer, Dr. Easom's resignation is eit- ective June 13, and be ha« ac cepted a position as clinic phy sician at the North Caiolina oanatorium fur the Treatment ot Tuberculosis, at Sanatorium, tirhera he was formerly located. Tiie Division of i[ndustrial Hygiene is'"cMried on i c^pera- iiVely by the State Board of rfeaith and the NoAh Carolina industrial Commission. 1 In. axfiressing his reg^-ets at ihe resignation of Dr. !£a&om, Dr. Reynolds said: "He with the support of his personnel gained nationwide recognition for North Carolina’s industrial hygiene program and I regret to see him leavk, but at the same cime, wish him the success which I am sure will be his in the new position to whicn he goes.” . EXPOSITION PROGRAM TO 14 li. FEATURE NATIONAL DENT AL ASS'N ANNUAL CONVCN- TION, AUGUST 14-lS Delegatee Tour of to Make Cor^iXted ‘Tha Greatest Show on Earth" NEW YO*K.—Gtover A. Whal •n’s 166 million dollar New York World's fair', the ‘‘great est show on earth,” has a notat ion on its official calendar sett ing aside August 17 at National Dental Association day ia hon or of 'America’s Negro dentists and to be held in conjunction with the association’s annual convention with) the association's annual conveltftn here August ‘A’ The clay was freed by separation in water MEMPHJS, Tenn.—^LeMoyne tollege climaxed an epic rise in of sand educational world thia month and when Dr. Frank Sweeney, Presi hdndred thousand Negroes. Le- Moyne, along with Fisk Univer sity, is the only institution of higher learning for colored in the state of Tennessee holding an ‘A’ rating by. the Southern Association, of Colleges and Secondary Schools—the official accrediting branch for this sec tion of the country of The Na- al Association of Colleges. Includad on th* day's fab prm gram are viaita to th* Imm Try- lo^ and PcTlspbara, Cuurt of Peaca 5,000,000 Coastitntion hall Avanoa of Patriola, Lagoon of Nationa, Fountain Lake Asa* phithaatra, the rariooa exhifcita batldinga, the Court of Statea and other wonders of tha WorM of Tomorrow. On Aug. 17, NDA World’s day, starting from convention aeadquarters in Piriilic School fl3 (St. between 7th and Sth avenues>, the dentists and their families will begin a conducted tour of the grounds. Baees will take them direct to the fai en trance, thence to the various places of interest by uniformed guides provided by NDA’i com mittee on arrangementa. After the tour, an opeii meet ing will be held fn tha fav open air»“'«nditorijim. Arrang menta have been made foi. the entire party of men, womea and children to be renred dinner at special rates in fair restauranta. Dr. Louia Faiidough, ejouven- Coatiaaed »■ page five Mural Remains In S. C. Court Despite Judge ALL BUT ONE CHAUFFEUR GET NEW 1>RE9S, ROYALTY WAlSHlNiGTON—The King’s visit .caught the whole town happing, almost for iiAart Wash ington ,.Jia^ to go out buy brand new unifoma tor their chauffe urs—in ^fact, UTe colored chau- ffeus "drivilng for various govern ment officfalB fairly dhone in their res^Ifii^enl regalia—-all but one, the driver for the FOR BEST THERE IS IN BAR9ER WdttK NEW YORK,—-T he U. S. a mulatto w^man.i? Treasury’s section of fineVrts | After several weeks has decided that the WPA Mural by Stefan Hirsch, shall remain in the federal court *t Aiken, S. C., where U. S. District Judge BYank K. My era sits, be cause it “is regarded aa a dtstin guished example of contempor ary American wall painti ig by a most able artist.” " tiwrt March, MyevM 6¥- dered the painting covered \ip because the centriU figure "Justice,” appearsbe that of chaplain of the Senate. His order went in too late, and the chauffeur bemoan^ the fact that in all of the grand parade and procession, he alone didn’t have his new uniform in time. The stores' were too ruibed to send it out for him t^ wear. in the coucL. room with the covered mural. Judge Myers Informed the Treasury Department that he wanted the painting entire ly removed. The National Aasociation for the Advance^nfeat of Colored People, protested to the Depart ment o^ Justice over tly judge's ad ,.U. Ddiifiini; througit^a number 6f0 iieva. ^ Varying quantities of these clays; ranging from a half pound to five pounds, were added to one gallon lots of the used «iotor oil to determine the best mixture. In these ttsts it was found that ''two pounds of cay per gollow of used motor oil producesa satisfactory paint. Colors of paints possible with local clays usod wer^.. (1) two of the mural was contemplated by his office “aa..4Jhe work is #e- garded as a distinguished exam ple of contemporary American wall painting by a distinguished rtist.” dent was officially notified by the Southern Association of Colleges and Secondary S!hools that LeMoyne has now been approved by that body as a fully accredited college, and uccord'-' ing was given the Association's top unconditional rating^ “A." This standing makes LeMoyne the only fully and uncondition ally accredited college for colored within a radius of two hundred miles, an are^ in which lives ap- ^roximately^one million, f i_.v ,e shades of red, 2 thifc^,aha#(a of yellow and 3 flhiA made by the the addition of soot to gray clay. ~| \ $100.00,5 75,00, $ 5000 SL HIILHKb HI VS action, but T. D. Quinn, ministrative assistant .under S.* Attorney General Murphy, said the matter was up to Judge Myers to decide. The NAACP thereupon brought the matter to the attention of Secretary of the Treasury Morgenthau. Last fottnight Edward B. Rowan, assistant chief of e treasury department’s section of fine arts, advised the ssocia- tion that reo action for removal a t Today year ba^ operator wlU have copies'''Of th* bow, easier- lo-raad sehoduies. They show yoa tke tiiaes of arrival at MBtral points, both coming aad going, of all the roatae. Yoa will know more accurataly whea the ba* will pass yOar eomais ihas elimineting any ann*ee»»ary waiting. Get yoa* oopy from but operotor of telephone ^ F-lSl and ^ we will mail you fre, a copy of tb* aasier-lo-read schedale. “ GOOD NEWS FOR LAKEWOOD PARK-HOLLOWAY ROliTE \ Newer type base* ere nOw operated on the Lakewood Park- Holloway ^aate. Ther« is a small change in the sched^e. Ae_ ^oar baJ operator for df^ils^ . ^ , CAUCTAT THE CRYSTAL BARBER SHOP 4 MASTER BAR»£RS TO GIVE YOU 42U1CK AND COURTEOUS SERVICE WITH A SMflLE CLOSING HOURS FROM MONDAY THROUGH ' THURSDAY 8 A. M. TO 9 P. M. Friday AND {Saturday s a. m. til mim p. m. PLEASfc CALL EARLY AND GfiT YOtJR WOUtlC IT PAYS TO LOOK WSLL Crystal BarWf StRii^ “ J, s. S^palaB, TM PAYErraVILLE ST. UNHERALDEDi WILL IT WAIT AEFOftD TO PAY THE NIWI^ u?tukA Nisiji^OAy* Sm tirharn ACME REALTY COMPANY RALEIGH, NOimt^EAiKIUinr UNION INSURANCE aIiD REALTY COMPANY euiH^ woftfp aApoi4|iA AV6U> PARKING WORRlElk^SLAX IN THE BUS Better When yoa ba|f laeoraaca ywr '4 yoa can get at tka lowest possll ^lace your property ia tho bawd* -beekee-ii—ywB—west tka ^ position to seeare for yOa come from yOur iavestaseal, kith efi possible ?* ■ Oar year* of experience ia all kinds of iaearsace aad, property manefement is assaraaea tkal yOY^C^ «4t wAet yOa want. Every i^''*oa ^p£sjred ky ae ie aa six- pert in kis or her line,. ' WketkeV/ tAe b«sia«M yaa ^ace into oar Aands .^^reaf or snsell it wiB kb lo%*d after witk the same ear*. WE ARE SPECI4MT IN ‘ Fire lasaraaee—-Resitals-^fteal Esf*at»— ' Property' Msnagceseat, Plat^ .Glass aa^ Aataaaokiia • ■ .... lae«raa«a UKiSN IN 4. REALTY. COMPANY H. M. MICHAUX, Maaagar MJIitiaL 1C €. PHONE J-8S11
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
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June 17, 1939, edition 1
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