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fiEPnOIBER 27(h, 1941
THE CAROLINA TIMES
PBOK SEVEN
DEFENSE 80NoT^§^^„
The U. S. Army
QUIZ
Q. Do the retail
iny fe« or percen
lale of Stamps?
A. No. The retail stoers are
jfferins: their facilities as a pS*
riotic service, , just as )banlcs,
Mvinffs and loan associntions,
ind others are giving their help
Ui the sale of Defense, Boonds.
Q. Hiow can I form the tfirift
labit necessary for me to bvfy
nany Defense Bonds now, to
lelp the Government?
A. The easiest way is to in
struct your employer or banker
>0 hold back a small fraction
if your salary, ro other income.
Svcn 10 cents a day and a dol-
nr on your birthday will mount
up in one year to $37.50, the
purchase price of a $50 Defense
iond. Bigger savings buy big
ger bonds.
Note: To buy Defense Bonds
ftnd Stamps, go to the nearest
K)8t office, bank, or savings &
oan association; or write to the
Prcasurer of the United States,
i^’ashington, D. C. Also Stamps
now are on sale at retail stores.
Sale Defense
^vings S^ps
Increases 30Perc«it
Washington, D. C.Sale of
$'l,4S3,Ti;48 in Defense . Savings,
Stamps during August showed
an increase of 30 percent over
sales for Ju^^,the Treasury De
partment has announced. ^
•Total sales for ftyix months
sihce the Program began on 1st
or May were:
May $a, 475,070
June 2,802,345
July 3,288,283
August 4,468,748
BreakdoMm of the August to
tal shows $466,571.50 Mras in 10c
stamps; $2,532,72^73 in 25c de- ^
nominations; $610,369.50 in 50c L^j^jYiiggioned seven months a-
stamps; $765,225.00 in $1.00 and ]>jQad of schedule. The keel of
total,,S |OgandZO ..,sW nowiSf^j^g Massachusetts was laid in
$278,860.00 in $5.00 sizes. July, 1939.
New York—A Btihging edito
rial scoring race prejudice in
the army appears in the Cwin-
monwea^^weekly magazine, for
September 19. Outlining' the
friction at Port Bragg, N. C.,
and at Camp llobinson, IJ. S.
Army conditions which, in the
last war, led to the lamentable
outbreak a t Houston, Texas,
when enraged colored troops
seized arms and ammunition
and invaded that city. . . ”
‘The greatest problem of all,’
it continnea, “is that of Hegre-
gation. The draft army is sup
posed to be the citizen army of
a democracy; those who are be
ing trained are not volunteers.
They have had no choice. They
have been drafted, and they
must make the best of it.
“Segregation produces a liost
of evils. It makes impossible
that three-musketeei’s sort of
solidarity which can act as a
great protection against minor
manisfestations of race preju
dice. It automatically encour
ages the giving of better quar
ters and facilities to white out
fits. It encourages the fear of
‘arming the Negroes,’ and^’there-
by makes them helpl,p^^ ^ pro
tect themselves shcwi^C^ti^teur-
rection and'd^ertion.
“The^Wal* jpepartment is said
to have eliminated segregation
completely and rigorously from
its own office personnel in
Washington; it could do as
much in the Army, and Me
wouW then hear no more talk
of Itouston martyrs’ or Negroes
ashamed to wear the uniform of
their comitry. V
BATTLESHIPS
The launching of the Battle-
a!hip Massachusetts, the fourth
of the 35,000-ton (jlreadnaughts,
on Tuesd^ britjgs thft, predic
tion that- the warship will be
DO DROP IN
to
THE HOLLYWOOD INN
“If Not Satisfied... Don’t Tell
Others... Tell Us”
118 S. ManifUin St. Prop. Mrs. Hayswood
'••••■•••••••■•••■••■■■■••••■•••■•••a
Save Timeand Money
By Relaxing in the
BUS
Livingstone CoU^e
Opnis 60th Session
ihe GOth., Annual session of
Livingstone College got under
way September ITih., when
Qouncilman U. Ray Miller of
Salisbury' delivered wonts of
welcome to the facuUy and stu
dent boily on behalf' of the city.
The principal addres)#>was deli
vered by Bishop B. G. Shaw of
Birmingham, Ala. He is now the
presiding bishop of this area.
President W. J. Trent in pre
senting tl’is prelate spoke of the
wonderful work he has done dur
ing his many years in the mini
stry. Other speakers were Dr. .1.
E. Mason, and Ehler W. IL Ho
ward of the West Central North
Carolina Conference. Among the
General Offieei’s present were
llev. W. R. Ix)vell. Editor of the
Sunday School Literature, and
Mrs. M. A. Houser, Vice-Presi
dent of the Women’s Home and
Foreign Missionarj' Society of
the A. M. E. Zion Church.
Legend: The above picture of
the members of the Faculty of
Livingstone College : First row :
Profs. W. Q. Welch, C. W.
Wright, W. R. Harrison, Pres.
W. J. Trent, Profs, Alonzo Bo-
hann(m. Vincent Byas, and Dean
J. H. Satterwhite of the Hood
Theological Seminary. Second
row: Profs. J. A. Clement, Thel
ma Ijash, Lucile C. Charlotte M.
Hunter, Spellman Lane, Mrs.
Josephine Butler, Mrs. J. L.
Burnside, Mrs. Narva P. 'White,
and Prop. C. H. Faulkner. Third
row: Prof. Anne Swanson-Drev',
Miss Julia D. Duncan, Profs.
Lottie M. Lyons, ,Tosephine
Sliorrill, Dr. W. H. Hannum,
Dean F. D. Drew, Profs. Ben
jamin HargraveTand Harold T.
Pinkett. Not present in the pict
ure are Prof. T. H. Miller, and
Mrs. Mabel Graves,
j^in his band at a dance.
Jimmie Lunceford
Hurt In Air Crash
Jimnlie Lunceford, famous
band leader, met with an acci
dent and narrowly escaped be
ing seriously injured when his
private plane went into a nose
dive and crashed at Terry Fork.
Ohio last Tuesday night. Lunce
ford was fortunate in that he
Spwks At N. C. C.
British Air Group DURHAM SOCIALS CONTINUED
Guilty Of Race Bias,
NAACP Plans Halt
IIELUVED TtALlii.lt
aLt' I ilbJS
WHITE KtK.K Uvr-l'KI.
nd at hrr
birth.i:i
ii-r parent :;n i
"iit »i'.h «
Liy
■ 'in L.
New York “All applaan^,^^^,^j^^^ uul\>
must be of the white race,
sti-
The UoMpel • horu^ Wliitu
tes the last poin in the list of i^
minimum requirements for pi-'***^^ Baptwt l.hurch gave a., re
lots and co-pilots issued by thej®*^^‘°" ursday night, . cptdubur
Royal Air Force Ferry Com-'^^ **» ^
and most lyal members, Mri-. M.
The National Assoeiatiun for Ooins- The gtoup met in the ba.
tJte Advancement of {’olorel nicnt of the chun b whcr,* fc li
People is in possession of j)h»t( -; family brought a b.r.kft of deli-
static copies of the list of ro- eioas food from homt* plus what
quirements for American flyers' was ”cooked in the churrh kitchen,
to ferry planes to IJritain and aiThe seats were arranged in a r>enii-
letter from J. D. Mugford. a circle wth a lar%e table laden wth
captain in the RAF Ferry Com- foods in the center which w:i.-( dee-
man.d, Washington, D. C. to with beautitul flowers. Jlr’^.
Charles M. Ashe, 274 Division I „eatod at the h.-:ul of
Avenue. Washington, which arelt^p table where sh»> couid be
admis.sions that the British Air'
Commission turned down his ap-1
Ml- . Aruiie Tate fi, i>_r r* iili r.t
f I>«rh.i;n wh now ri . d; ^ in Ws*>a-
in^on, D. u •p*’nJinir
tin.t;*! h- f rel.'*- an* frMvid*
Hhc i -t of her
Mrs. L. B«i &w-
Mrs. l.arrie bixoa Barh^e of
Waahin^ton, I>. ( . i:. vi»itiu^ her
uiotber and re!at ’ vi?f hi-re. She *nd
h«'r children ar* st uping with her
jiliter on Oleon ‘'t.
plication for service with tiie R
AF as ferry piolt BECATSE
HE IS A NEGRO.
Ashe’s letter to tlio XAACP
gives the facts.
“Since the Royal Air Force
has been requesting American , • u
pilots for service in Montreal Atlantic Beach
viewed hy theontire group.
The chords was oryanizcd by
Rev. Fisher, seven years ago. 3Irs.
Goins was one th tVirst nicmbera
of the eht)rns. The f;roup is con»-
osed of 50 mcnil)pr;i.
Mu Mattie Mae VN'iCtUiaa i^
■ipenuing Portion ot her vkeatioa
in Baitiuiure. She will aliiu vwit
Gruen:iboru and Ualeig^i.
Miss Euniea Seorlock ia bue'.c
R. L. Lindsay, president of the Durham Chamber of Com
merce and beloved citizen of Durham who was one of the main
speakers at the formal opening exercises at the North Carolina
College this week.
GOING TO AND FRO^^ work can a pleasure if you
ride the bus. You vet home earlier.
Durham Public
Service Co.
suffered iio other injuries
yond a cut over his eye.
The orchestra leader is inten
sely interested in aviation in all
its forms and has had a license
to fly for quite a time. He stated
that he had purchased the plane
recently and this was his first
experience at night flying.
When the accident occurcd he
was flying from Pittsburg to Co
lumbus, Ohio, where he Avas to
The M(9ii En|oy
Amateur Cooking
Myriads of men are going in
for cooking for fun these,
days. All kinds of men, including
tycoons and orchestra leaders, play
wrights and printers, bankers and
cleriu.
“Cooking is comparable to being
in love (^happily, of course)," says
lies Brody, in the October issue of
Cosmopolitan Magazine. “In the
kitchen I feel important. It’s d
great thing for the ego.”
One of the recjpes he hands on
from his list of favorites is Biftek
k la Bercy and sounds pcrfect.
Biftek a la Bercy
Season the fillet of beef with a
pinch of salt and half a pinch of
pepper and fry it in butter on a hot
range. Now take the meat out of
the pan and put it on a warm plate.
To the sauce whiciPremains in the
pan add some flour and stir it until
it becomes brown. Put in also some
finely chopped shallot, a bit of chop
ped parsley, salt and pepper and
pour in a generous glassful of red
wine. Do not overcook the sauce.
While you are preparing the sauce,
fry a piece of bread in butter, put it
on a hot plate, place the fillet on it,
aouf MUC9 over, and serve. ^
((Canada), I have been apply
ing and have not been able to
get anything in black and white
showing the reason for tlie re
fusal of my application until I
received the enclosed copy from
the RAF.
‘In June, an article appeared
in American neivspaper asking
pilots with as little as 400 hours
of experience qn any type of
airplane to contact officals of
the TWA airlines, (I
2400 hours and am
pilot and instrnc
would be interestec:
additional training
prepare them for the-positfon'lh’
question..
Ashe states that TWA was
contracted by the RAF t« give
three weeks intensive training
to applicants at no cost to the
applicant. He applied, and re
ceived a favorable answer from
the training center, located at A1
buquerque, New Mexico which
referred him to Montreal.
Fbrwardi,ng his applicatioas
to the Canadian city, he went
personally to the British Air
Ministry in Washington. Offi
cials there gave him another ap
plication form and suggested
that he state he was colored, ai-
thought he says n« space was
provided for designating race,
creed or color.
‘ ‘ After several weeks, ’ ’ A.she
writes, “I again telephoned Cap
tain J. D. Mugford who immedi
ately remembered my case and
stated that Montreal had expect
ed him to notify me that I could
not be ac^cepted. ”
On September 13 Ashe wrote
Mugford asking him to confirm
his statement that the pilot was
not admitted because of his race.
Miss I. Whitfield v.as entt'rtain-
! liifiiiird 1‘atterson, Kev. and
Mrs. Kvans were vimtors at the
Mt. (iilead th“rch in t^ange Co-
Sunday.
Misri K. ScurU>ck has returned
to Va. Beaeh after spending the
weeb end at the her p»-
ents.
Pepsi-Cola is made only by Pepsi-Crfa Co., Lonf Island City, N.
Y, Bottled locally by Pepsi-Cola Bottlingr Co. of Durham, N.C.
"SERVICE WIIW A SMILE”
ARCHIE’S GRILL
601 E. FIRST STREET
Charlotte, N. C. Archie Nixon, Pn^,
GOOD FOOD
IS GOOD HEALTH
' SERVICE...
You will find our Service Complete to the smallest
Detail. Our years of experience enable us
to anticipate your need and there
fore serve you better.
GRIER and THOMPSON
FUNERAL HOME
701 E. First St.
PHONE 7019
“Thoughtful Attention To The
Smallest E^iail*’
AMBULANCE SERVIGE
Mussolini and Hitler decide to
unite Europe in one State.
SPAB calls on U. S. to tight
en belts, drop non-essential la
bor.
President vetoes bill to freze
government’s cotton, wheat.
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ARE YOU HAVING TROUBLE
BUYING ENOUGH FOOD OUT
OF YOUR WEEKLY WAGES?
• You housewives know how toug’H
it’s getting to serve tasty, healthful
meals and still stay within the bud
get. Here’s a tip which will help you.
Allow more of your weekly food mon
ey for dairy products. They do more
for the body than any other food and
do it more cheaply.
Durham Dairy Products
“QUALITY YOU CAN TASTE”
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WELCOME
Students & Faculty
NORTH CAROLINA COLLEGE
• Fifty-four years of anticipating and supplying the needs of
community gives Ellis Stone Company tho right to be Durham's
leading shpping center . . . You'll find this store a friendly
and profitable piacc to shop . . , for it costs no more to enjoy
Ellis Stone quality.
DURHAM’S BEST STORE S
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