Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / July 20, 1940, edition 1 / Page 5
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Honor Roll TV ekkdUiA july m*k, iMt OTTIf STARS 2 St/^bbe UJaflace ^hb—Mtr Mc*ctfat»T Om *H«WON4j^, II— A H ^ |Ti**->YowL Qumtwii Vu Wm Amfwmm *«aB* m Tmm Otumm ■« » «9MMte MHy • • • 2l« far «r MW Amaun liiiwi • iMife XUf Obmt mJ nniv* br mI • mbMmiU kcHf if Aw l«(h** k« tkfM (}) QMMioM frivaMly. M|b jmt Ml mh% •Mra^ mA UhMm l| dl Immm. mi rimm iaclaJ* t wif iJJuml titmptd Imkp* faf M W df ABBr VAU.ACM. rm at THM CAMOUMA Tmm h A ta MM DVKHAU. N. CAROUNA. MIC—Will mr IimUW f«t • IkattMT Job? Am; Ym. Whila on hi« viica- Uon tbia aummer he will cont*ct •nothar Job and ba better ntia^ j, I KMC—1 laft koma ba w!th Um. Stcyad witk Um fo«r dajra mmI wkaa 1 want to work Om ■tormiac 1 aakad for tka kay and ka r«r«»aid. Wkan 1 eaaaa ia ki« liffkt waa oB knt 1 coaMn’t (at >•> Ik* ko««a. Tka lan«ll«dy waaa't tkaaa aitkar. I faread aay way is ikra • wiadow and wa kad a kif fvaa. 1 Mkad forgivaiiaaa. Did 1 da ritktr An>: Yon did the rifht thing wbaa you went back home. Stay •wmy frara him and anyone elae unlaaa you are legally married. There wb aomething mighty auuicioua going on in his room and ha didn’t want you to come in he knew you were out there knocking before you entered. He doean’t love you aa deeply aa ba lahna. ^ I, DLH—Not long «fo 1 mat a »laf kaodtoma bay mad I lova kla> Wa kava baaa trying to Haat atkar bat kaTa not aaeaaadad. Will wa avar maat agaiar Ana: Yea and very soon. He fell tpv ou too but he realizes that you aren’t in a position to reeeive company and he is a/- fnld that hia coming around might cause you some trouble. In time he will present himself for the approval of your family. MSS—U it wiia for naa to soak tka kalp of a man tkat 1 aoa tklaking of in tryinj to aacuro kalp in getting me a job? Ans: By all me.^ns do so. Con tact everyone that you can think of that might be at>la to help you get employment for THIS WAiAt. I see you being very auecesaful, HJL—My wifa |aad 1 qaarrai to tka axtaat tkat it is aacallad for. Wa don’t gat along at alL.* Wkat is tka bast tking for ma ta do andar tka eircamstancasT Ans: Neither of you are un- deret^ding and living up to the vo^ you took when you married. An agree^le companionship cculd be worked out but not while you both are young and “but headed.” Talk it over w»U) h«r and aak her what ahe wants to do. I think a chinge of cities would do you both good. KAUXGH— Forty atadenta representing twelve atataa f^pear on the honor roll of St. Augustina’a College for the aecond aemester. The complete honor roll follows: Charlea Atkins, New York Johnetta Atkina, Philadelphia BeMe Banner. Winchester Joseph Bennett, Edenton, Mary Boley, Cambridge, Maaa. lyy Burnside, East Orange, New Jersey Muriel CjS«ler, Philadelphia Clara Clarke, Orlando, Fla. . Robert Clarke, OrDtndo, Fla. Vanya Cuffee, Springfield, Maaa. M^lurice Curtis, Raleigh Gladys Delphy, Dayton, Ohio Hannah Diggs, Winston-Salem Marion Dupree, Farmville, Violetta Edwards, Pottsville, Pennslyvania Ine* Greenles4 Rochester, New TO CONOUCr JtEVlVAL MMN—Will krotkars and aiatar k« akio to gat tka land tkat was laft tkam? Wkat is tka kaat tkiag to do? Ana: Before giving the case to any li^yer go to tiie man that you have in mind right 40W and talk the matter over with him. Let him advise • lawyer for. you. There is going to- be some settlement made,*but I fejlr that it will be rather small. tsIO^—I have been in love with a fellow for almost a year and he aJys loves me. He never offers to take me any where and doesn’t come ito see me ever at night. When he comes he always vtks to borrow some n-.oney. Is he trueT Ans: No, he isn’t true. He doesn’t love you eitiier. Make some friends and stop trying o go with this fellow. Any m^n that comes to the girl he is sup posed to be in love with and borrows money to go ouA with someone else isn’t what he should be. ■ y koakaad, kk 1 ^ » Rosa Hall, Winston Salem Thelnta Hlsmilton, .Lawrence-) ville, Virginia Dora Hawkins, Henderson Chsrles Howell, Brooklyn Ellis Johnson, Mobile, Ala. Httry Johnson, Avon, N. Y. Laynthia Johnson, Wilson Dorothy Jones, Raleigh Joseph LeCompte, Haddon- field, New Jersey Edith Matthew*, New York Frances Mayo, Newark, N. J. Helen McClaude, Marietta Velma Mc£wen, Jackson Sadie Newkirk, Wlimington Carmelita Perkins, Dendron Grace Raines, Bi;a|ddock, Pa. Miriam Roberts, Columbia Ada Simpkins, Pineville.1. Percy Smith, Raleigh Pearl Wilder, Wilmington Ella Williams, Raleigh Gilbert Wilson, Elkton, Md. Dorothy Young, Rochester Leonard McCarthy, Phil^el- phia. Pa. 0 OW- TO BE YOUR WN DECORATOR /• - f-j; r.* By Dhtftor, Good Honiekttfhn SluJio Gay Summer Pottery & Linens fa apeaking of summer decorating, I have been rather stareaslng th# at outdoor living on porch and terrace and the use of inezpenaivv • MMN KOIMS •aarf Hto—k—plmg Studia gay pottery, for a change from your usual china. Juat SB yon take down heavy curtains and replace them with I muslins and take up wool rugs and put down an attraetiva Jost scatter rugs for the summer, it is a good plan to put away, nice china, glass and linen, as well as, silver ■SSffiH pitchers, dishes and possibly a tea and c^ee set, aiifl substitute yellow, blue, or Agured pottery, or MM glasa, an ice tea set which may come in i( convenient, tray holder, and the effective tin trays #hich ara to b« found pretty generally in shops everywhere. With this pottery and colored glass, colored table cloths, doilies, and napkins may be used and come ta all sorts of^ materials: paper, straw mata, waahabM pyroxylin, cellophane, cotton, linen—“noveltiea” they are often called but by an^ name they are beguilinc and worthy of your attention. As in china ana glaasii there's something attractive to suit your pocketDbak. What yoD want to consider in purchasing new thinn or in putting together what yon have, ta the right combinations. Have a definite color scheme. Lots of , have Early American furniture of maple, or other light wood, others wa walnut or mahogany Ubles. For place mats remember that with tha yellow tone-in the maple, bluea and greens, in light tonea look well, but in yellow the tone must be strong for pleasant contrast, and that out and out red is better than pale pink. Pink arid >iaple are not good toMther. The dark woods take any color be« comingly—Just aa beige plaea mats go anywhere. If you use plaia colored mata let your pottery ba figured. The pretty foragn wares show figurea. flowera and fmita aa decorations and the plain mata as a base to set them off. If, on ua other hand, you have figured mats* oae plain colored china or even eream or white china. Don’t let youc table be disay with pattern. Balanea it carefully. Also be sure that tha glass you choose fits the type of china or pottery In color aM In form. And perhaps most important of all la to urge that, while ydu may be gay and mvolous, do not over* crowd. Set each plac^ aa it should ba set and have an amusing or a lovely centerpiece (which often may be both), but o^anise your table so that you keep maases together. That ia, let your centerpiece be a unit with the bare table between it and tha ands of the table, and each place a tmit. Don’t have an odd lot small candy dishes or too many salt and peppera. Table setting ia an art TCally and requires a little thought and with tairta many Uiarmi^ schemes may be avolvedi With poi- tarr platas there ara pottery figures wUdi at hmch may replace eandla- stidca on each aids of a bowl oA lUxrera or of fruit. ' Qreensboro • w Arnhem nrmw REV. H. H. HART will begin the annual revival at the Saint Matthew Colored Methodist Epis copal Church, Cobb and Mat thew SU., this Sunday night, July 21st. Rev. Haart will preach each week day night except Saturday. He is one of tlie best evangelists and gospel preachers in the state. All ministers and lovers of good preaching ^e in vited to worship with ma in this- soul saving campsing. In addi tion to tha preaching of Rev. Hart, the senior Choir qI the CME Church and Unity Prayer Band will furnish the mueic for these services. Rev. H^irt will arrive in town this Sunday night according to announcement by the pastor. Rev. N. H. Humph reys. It is expected that he will open the campaign this Sunday nicht with his famous sermon, ‘ No Trouble At The Wt/ter.” A large crowd is expected to be on h&iid for his first sermon Sunday night. NAMED ADVISORS TO WENDELL WILLKIE The Greensboro Ushers Coun cil held its regular monthly meet ing Tnesday July 9 at,the home of Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Smith at 1«1 N. Dadley St. with 0. R. Craig presiding. Wedding bells rang out when Field Agent D. W. Reynolds was married to Miss Madeline Isely recently. They are now boney^ mooning in New York. The Sympathetic Club held its regular m.eetincr Friday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Gfiloway on Armstrong Street with Mrs. Alcora Riggsbee presiding. Mem bers present were: Mrs. Bessie Richmond, Chineeda Madkins, Mary Mclver, Rosia Burnett, Virginia Lee, Viola Winchester, Myrtle Maxwell, E^ie Maxwell, jRache Allen, L. A. Foster, Annie Willj^tnson and George Crosby. Visitors were Miss Cora Hill, Mrs. Mamie Gunn, Mrs. Fannie Adams and Mrs. Clara Taylor. Dacoratfva pctitrf ADDilESSES YOUTH- Continued from Paga Pour that are worthy of the term here at the Booker T. W>aUiington high school last week. The distinguished high church ing bill at this gress. session of Con- Left to right: William E. King, of Qiicago, Illinois, and T. Gillis Nutter, of Charleston, West Virginia, members of Republican Campaign Advisory Committee. They are members of ■« Committee of 22, representing every section of the country, who are to work in close cooperation with the Republicain National Committee and Mr. Willkie*g campaign mmagers. man declared among other things that: ••• “The world into which Jesus came was not unlike the world of todify. Jesus came into a world that was dominated by a materialistic view of life. Jesus lived in a world in which the pleasure conditioned beh(BVior. •Kiat is true as regards the be havior of many people, far too many people of the present da^ generation. Jesus came into and lived in a world that was distort ed and disordered by imperiali»- tic greed, wielding implements of violenca.” Complete Building Service Catholics Urge .• Continued from Paga Four (yuebing bill by the' Senate at the present session of Congress, v; 2 There is no need for • tfopular referendum with regard to tha enactment of a fedei;^ i(nti lynching law. Thrf^an be '^o doubt that public sentiment, in repeatedly expressed Ey lead ers of #U1 races and groups in all )«Tts of tha coantry, and as in- Aeatsd by tha editorial stand of the daily papers of the North aa well lb the South, has plainly in- incated that the American peo ple desire the enactment of a strong federal law to abolish this barb^K ic crimt. 8 Since actions speak louder than words, tlie platform com mittee should recommend to tiie present that tie publicly endoraa and urge the immediate enact* neat of tha present jfciti lynsb- ••••REMODELINC ••••NEW CONSTRUCTION ••••ROOTING SERVICE • •••building SUPPLIES Ectiaialaa Giady Farniakacl For Painting Papering and Decorating we use ROGERS PRODUCTS. SMALL PROFIT. LARGE VOLUME ALL WORK GUARANTEED We Use Lonk,-Lifa 1XK}AN* LONO ASPBALT ROOFING EXCI^IVELY. SERVICE You will find Our SERVICE compUte to the smallest da- tail. Ouf years of experilnca enable n* to antici|ijBM your ^aad and therefore serve you bettor. Thonghtful Attention tO Even Tha Smallest DoUil. Amey’s Fimeral Home 401 Pine St. 24 Hour Service Dial J-2971 ' ‘ * You must have pockets this seasoti. This ^im Ikie prineeas frock made of a soft CSiartreuse Sharkskin htb a heart shaped necklisa, that is moet flattering. The saucy, rufTed pockets are eye oatchiac and topped with a U»ge summer ktraw bonnet, you will draw gssps of admiration from passeraby. A full length sipper fastener tends to give sn[iooth lines to the Wront closing and two deep soft ptasls give plenty of room for Milady’s mode of walking.- Two Held For Ins. Slaying DUNN, N. C., (ANP) — Two men are bein^ held in Jail here in connectioti with- the alleged i.isurancc slaying of two child- reinwho v^ere burned to death at Krwin laf>t week. auspacts, 'John ITolden and . O’Dell Mc Neill, were held ;4fter an exten sive investigation led police to believe that foul play had accur; ed in the fatal fire. The victims, EMdie Stokes, Jr.,~'a»i(l Charles, his brother, 3, were burned when their bad- clothinj; caught fire. Their sis ter, liois, 9, was critic,ly burn ed and is in a hospital. Their mother, Frances'^tokes, also was burned in trying to .extingniah the flamea. Investigation revealed that e#|jh of Stokes children was '»■ sured for $100 in effect sines June 17. I The ^jhilJren wcra burned when a kerosene lamp was knocked off ^ table and drenched their clothing^ with oil, which became ignited. No satis factory explanation hA been given as to how the lamp was knocked off. The cbikt»ai» wsps sleeping on a pallet on the flaor. Their father, Melvin, ia serving a term in prison. THIS COMPANY OPERATES ON A VOLUME BASIS Home Modernization And Suppy Co. •14 I>iyattavlll« St., Diurkam, N. C. PkoBO J-4821 GOLDEN^GLO BEAUTY ESSENTIALS MAILED DIRECT TO YOU A Mr box aontalnlac w«n faeUl Mc«MiU«a tho Vlll •Mil •« •«§»« fiawt insradiant* uul wtlcMi over two pounds now enlr fS#, pliM poatacai Yod will adore tb« MMMlb t«» tan of tiMM SoU«a.GU prodoela. They alT* tliat >pp««l which ii tha alllBat* la fitatna hMinty and tha aabtla intrlcaa of pmrtaet —ilrTnr ■ G«Mm.43U’a luompa^la coaaHtia whiaitlua >4 MT«a iBvalnaUa alda to biaatr. Saw* HERE IS WHAT YOU SET-AU mi SiZfi fS.N valaa bra a( T CaWa» da twlj aM* Koaabup retail p- '4 r t*« Claaaaiaa Cmai ... VaatehlHC Cna« ... Faaadatlaa Craaai Faea Powdw “Taa" lilpatlck Bair Oi Otaii ..*M .SM — all tha raonlaitM (or ooawUto cniakHa bMotr tmk BMot that waold apat roa SS.M It boaiAit tadlTidaallr, Onr Spaeial OCar briaca |POa thi* aatin aat at t OOU>r ~ GIX> COSMSTtCS tor oMr t§4 piM Soatac» -fSND.OOOrOM- aotsBN.au> riuHtycTB. bw. f > ISS Saat 41at SUoot. Ma* Tack. W. T. Sand Su yon QoMta Clo btaaty has caatatnlaa t fnl ■iaa Oaldia Cla XodaaSi. Whm Mimral bv Pootmaa t , wOl wv hfaa Sa^ pha poataa*. or | aa> lolaofan Sl.K BOMS «■*» wkk^ oovm aU dtarcaa tat Mhrar* to aa) t 4 Cool Summer -aa»p»a« RAILWAY SYSTEM. Modara A» Conditioned Coackaa, PnR- ■yMM and Dining Cara on all Tkro«gk Trains ovar tka antiro System. Batwaaa GOLDSBORO—RALEICH—DURHAM AND GREENSBORO TRAINS 13-14 Air eonditionad coackaa botwaan GoMakoM and Graanaboro. Pnllmana botwaaa Ralaigk-Darkaaa and New York. TRAINS 15-lfl Air Coaditioaad eoiack** batwoaa Ralaigk and Graanakora. TRAINS 21-22 Air Conditioaod coacka» and Pnllataaa kat- waan GoldaborO and Cincinnati via AakaviHa. Attractive Ono Way And Roaad Trip Faaraa Everywhere. '! Consult yonr local Ticket Agaat^ or coBannieato witk Southern Railway ;; J. S. BLOODWORTH, D. P. A RALEIGH N C I l l l 'I M-l-4--t -i 'l l- l 'l l l -l- t-l l' l-^l I 1 I IM PAKUN6. yOUKHAIKIS BtAUTirUL I (I WOMOn WHAT SHE W® ^ I Believe it or aoc,tkis charodag yniiag lady’s k^v How did she conceal it?—yoa'd Mrpcisa«tt Jaat a of GODEFROY*S LARIEUSI HAIM COLORING I LARlEU^yoo. tooicaa hava bsandiaUy colacad it is gray.or has becoaiestnafcy ocaff^afcrftaaalka t GODmoY^ LAmnus* la aa aiii. mmr to aaviy Uaat faBaa tiaasla pacha*aX Chelsaaf ISaalaa^ tarinili^ Jat-Hack. kta* i GUAmANTIBDas mssptly lafaad ram daajM* doaaal Was -1 srfsaa%*l»j|d iUf wa Mf Boasw) dkscs m GODIffiM^llM. dO, Ssie^uvi rr,.sT. iQuiSk k9i ■Mi
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 20, 1940, edition 1
5
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