§ united hogging of farmer - dlynx
TRANSCRIPT
KKK MemberMaxton Riot
maximum penal*, in prison • and Á;
was arrested last'
□Leader Calls
SOK
ANTI-NAACP
READ THENEWS
WHILE IT IS NEWS
FIRSTIN YOUR
MEMPHIS WORLD
VOLUME 27. NUMBER 54
t AME 1 C A*S ST A W PAK.D
MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE, SATURDAY, JANUARY 25, 1958
They are: left-right: seated: Pete Sims, Jr., =........ ............... ....... __ Elks state president; Lt. Lee, Standing: F. A.
is discussing plans of the $100,0001 Young, Sr„ state treasurer, Lewis K'Nuckles, 1' » 1 ■ ».t Vll _ ____________— — -a*« «.A LIa».*,, i" Inmar nnrl Aitrirsiir
DISCUSSING SCHOLARSHIP PLANS*. Lt. George W. Lee, the Elks' grand commissioner of education i scholarship drive with Elks representatives from Little Rock, Pine Bluff and EL Dorado, Ark., "who are anxious to help."
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PRICE SIX CENTS
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state secretar^,. Henry C. James and Aurthur Lee Brown.
(See Story Below) - *
§ United Voters• . .- - ' . -K-i- -
For Action By Citizens
Many cf Memphis’ racial problems would not exist if Negroes would register and vote In proporton to ihelr total percentage 6f the population, said Dr. J. M. Nabil of Wash- Inst’Jon when he was addressing an estimated 400 attending the kick ff meeting of the "Crusade rot
Citizenships” at Metropolitan Bap- tet church. Monday evening.Dr.' Nabrlt an attorney tc’.d the
udlence which braved a cold, driving rain to attend, "you must tlijnlt In terms of registration and vothts "nit ns a Job, a burden, but as n civic duty". He’continued, "We arc removing toe legal barriers to freedom. But unless people iri the Martovs communities take a personal Interest in freedom we will not Olymous", the J-U-G-S fourth annual Pre- U « A 1*1 _ " a — — 11.« ^4.«-— ( ♦ .. * rvf
J-U-G-S GET INVITATION IN ORDER: Compiling •> are Miss Velma. Lois Jones (left) and Mrs.
the master invitation list for "Promenade To
be able to enjoy the dignity^ 01 e ch ß |( b he|d Feb l.4th.first class citizenship. If ever a , __ ___ ■'___________ ______
Harold Lewis (right). Memphians look'forward every year to the Charity Ball where a liberal contribution is' made to charity with a "Living
1" theme.
To Unseat Incumbent DemocratsWASHINGTON—(ANP) - Negroes of the North Were urged
last week to help replace incumbent Democrat Senators and Congressmen with Republicans rights legislation.
This request was made by Meade Alcorn, Chairman of the Republican National Committee In an address to members of toe Capital Press Club and of, the National Newspaper Publishers’ Association,' Alcorn, insisted that "this must be done/- even in instances where the ' civil ■ rights
if they hoped for further civil
voting records of are. good.’*
• He pointed Paul Douglas plirey is a
the incumbents
that a vote for a Hubert. Hum-
outor _ ___ ________
,____ ... _ vote for continued[Democrat control of the Senate' [and the prolongation of Senator Eastland's reign as Chairman ot
| the Judiciary Coimhittee. .
A $100.000 campaign to provide scholarship awards for toe nine Negro student' at Little Rock's Central high school will be _ launched in Philadelphia, Pa., during a,‘banquet scheduled for Friday, Jan. 31, announced Lt, George: W. Lee, this week. r
The banquet, “National Education for Citizenship", will be sponsored by National Elks Lodge’s department of education of which Lt. Lee is grand commissioner.
Lt. Lee said of toe “Little Rook Nine” even the bitter winds of race hate could not put.out the light of their hope and faith, that all people wish to be. free and. would struggle against odds -to win freedom." ■
speaker will te TheodoreGuest sr____ ..... __ _______velt McKeldln, governor of Md„ Ed Sullivan of radio and television- tame will be the master* of cere- lhonly.
Several outstanding persons will be given certificates of merit during the banquet, They are Mrs. Daisy Bates' of Little Rock. Alex WUson, editor of toe Tri-State Defender who was attacked, while covering the Little .Rock.Story, and Paul Welch,’a -Life Magazine reporter who was also .attached.
Lionel Hampton, the famous band leader will be named chalr-
[ man of the scholarship campaign. - Other Individuals cf business and professional representatives of lod-
I (Continued On Page Two)
RESPONSIBLE FOR WEAKNESSThe Republican Chairman charg
ed the “self-styled Democrat liberals" with running out on the Negroes of America. This group was greatly responsible for the “watering down of the President’s civil rights bill," he said.
It was “such Democrat Senators as Kennedy?-Morse, Magnuson, Mansfield, O'Mahoney and Murry who voted to send the House-passed civil rights bill to a gas chamber death in Senator Eastland’s Judiciary Committee," recalled the GOP spokesman.
Later five ot these same six voted for a restrictive jury trial amendment which literally ripped the heart out of toe measure, he continued. A weird assortment of people who through the years had shed tears in publio about civil rights—now came riding over toe hill shouting that toe Senate' hill, with its self-dpfeating jury trial amendment, was a great step forward- and ought to be adopted without further fight or delay.SOLID PROGRESS CLAIMED
The group of nearly 100 news- (Continued on Page Eight)
tewn needs meetings it Ls Memphis" , he added.
The speaker, one of the lawyers Instrumental In the May 17. 1945 desegregated school decision of the U. S Supreme court, blasted pro- segregatlonLst Judge George Wallace . cf Clayton, Ala., for a recent statement- accredited to him about- “closing his court records to federal offtolals investigation as “tomtemp- tors."
He referred to Atlanta, Georgia as "my home town, but a bad place which ls rapidly changing because Negro- voters ore directly lnslrto
'.mental in Mlayor William Harts; - field being returned. to office.
However, he said that Negroes 1« every south state must, register and vote to save toe people of the south from “the Henman Talmadge, and toe James Estland of Mississippi.
iDr. Nabrlt who Ls also the secretary and public relations director for Howard university in Washington became philosophical and said "as a man toinketli lh his heart, so is he.” . ■
He explained how man for many ages has honored heroes by chiseling their Image in marble and molding it in brass/ "But toey have failed to honor many heroic deeds and efforts.'Tfo momument has been built to the ingrledents which m’ake-up freedom.
Dr. Nabrit singled out Lt. George W. Lee, who later spoke briefly, and said “No people can construct a momument to symbolize the years Lee Was spent here in the interest of fresdom for Negroes."
The speaker continued. “Freedom must burn, grow and move from within.-Many of you with..a job, a house and - car think. that’ ls freedom. Many Of you are enslaved with those • possession. You must
(Continued On Page Two)
By EDDIE WILLIAMSATLANTA. Ga.. — (SNS) — Bishop W.. E. Fuller, Sr., founder-
of toe Fire Baptized -Holiness ■Ciiurch nf God of .toe. Americas' died of a heart nttaok In a local hospital at abottt 3 Fi[M. Monday. He was 82 years,old..The senior bisviop or 800 churches
es In the United states, the British West indies, lite Virgin Islands arid England, had been coriflneTI to his home at 556 Houston St.. NE, for the past six months. He came to Atlanta In the early 1920's.
During the past few months he reportedly suffered several “minor strokes" and was attended dally by . his third wife, Mrs. Pauline Blr- mlngham Fuller, and several, nurses.
Tlie bishop, a native of Mount- vile, S. C„ founded the Fire Baptized Holihes Church In 1898 in Abbeville, S. c. The church us now located in 19 districts each of which- has a presiding elder. Its total membership is said to be “In the
(Continued On Page Two)
Services For Victim OfRailroad Switch EngineServices for toe seven-year-old
girl who was fatally injured by a switch engine Sunday, will be held at 3:30 p. m. Friday, at Greenwood Methodist Church, 1068 Bellevue with Rev. J. E. Hobinson officiating. Interment will be in Mt-.. Carmel cemetery under direction of the Southern Funeral home.
The child, Iletta Laura Teil, .foster daughter of Mr. arid Mrs. Car? Bell of 951; Melrose St., was killed Instantly when she was struck by a Rock.-..Island- Railroad diesel about Hl a. nil Sunday- -
Police reported that toe child was being chased by a small boy in a playful manner near toe crossing when she was struck.' The engineer, M. F. Stephens, 61 of Little Rock, said the saw the child, blew the whistle and applied brake's but he could not prevent striking the.
■ child.A member of the' family said toe
child - was -not wearing a serai as
statedThe
gated.Iletta was pronounced dead at
John Gaston hospital.Tlie child foster mother, Mrs.
Sara Bell said, Letta came to live with them about five years' ago and “sorta of adopted herself” “First she would come to visit me and my husband daily and finally one day she ask could she stay with us always.” . 1
When she “adopted herself” to_ the Belik,, she was living next door with an aunt.
Bell-.whp Is -blind said “she was my eyes". She lead him whenever • he left toe house.
Aside from her foster parents, survivors include -her mother, Mrs. Lula Tell who lives in Orange Mound, and her father, Samuel Toil of Chicago and other relatives.
•jr—
in another newspaper.' case is still being investi -
Gov. Coleman Says Whites, Negroes At Peace In Miss.
SUMNER, Miss.—(ANP) It’s apparently Gov. J. P. Coleman's belief that Negroes and whites within the state “remain at peace with each other while others elsewhere have been beset by strife and unhappiness.”
He made this observation last Wednesday during dedicatory services for toe West District high school for Negroes, built at a cost of almost a half million, dollars.
Holding that "this peace is a great accomplishment,” he added that toe new structure was a monument to "the highest ideals and mutual faith of all the people °f Mississippi, both white and Negro.”
He. also said that “education Is toe one answer to the problems which beset Mississippi.”
'Rochester' Father
WORLD1. Join The YMCA,
2. Register to Vote.
BISHOP W. E. FULLER
3. Give To The March of Dimes.
IT’S A DREAM—I MEAN A CARThe "fanciest” auto to the South
was deliveied to Bishop A. B. McEwen, PHD, LLP, DD. of the Church of God In Christ, on toe day after New Year’s when special customizing .was. completed.
It is a Mark in Lincoln Continental four-door sedan with , the Bishop's own private touches applied to 11. Tli.ey Include gold-palnl- ed roof area and gold hubcaps, and a. gold cowl ventilator-. His nameplate on each side is in 14-knrat gold.
■The Bishop also used certain parts which were stock on Park Lane Mercury models and Lincoln Premiere, models to further Improve the Mark III Continental These included the long, flowing Park Lane tall light, and the Premiere ehrome strips.
The result was so pleasing that some, ot toe officials of the Lin- coln-Mercury division of Ford Motor Co went specially,'-to-'Corbitt Motor Co.. 2'17 Union, to .see how well toe ear locked. It was truly distinctive and -has made a fine impression on all who have seeh It.
Bishop McEwen, who reputation for tine cars Ls well known in these parts, turned In on -the deal a 1057 Chrysler Imperial LeBaroil with only 9000 miles on it. He paid tlie difference for the new car. one of the most luxr. lcus and expensive on the A'm.wan market today, with his personal check.
"It was a renl pleasure to be able to handle this deal for a man
Leader Asks CloserTies With Africa
When Metropolitan Baptist church observes Annual Men’s Day, Sunday, Jan. 26, guest speaker for the all-day celebration will be Rev. Ralph David Abernathy, vice president of the Montgomery Improvement Association in Alabama.
The celebration, planned by the Brotherhood of Metropolitan, ls scheduled to start with morning service at 11 a.m. Dinner will be served starting at 1 p. m. Rov. Abernathy will deliver his first siieech at 3 pm. An open forum will be conducted at 7:30 pm. And Rev. Abernathy will speak again at 8 p.m. '
Rev. Abernathy, second leader in toe successful Montgomery Bus boycott, which got universal attention, will discuss political, economic and social problems of Negroes in toe soutlh.
HOLLYWOOD — (INS) — Eddie Anderson, "Rochester" of the Jack Benny radio and television programs, -became a father for the second time Tuesday.
His wife, Eva, gave birthto a 7 pound, 14 ounce son, Eddie, Jr., in Cedars of Labanon Hospital. - „ .
The two have a daughter, Evan- i He discuss toe legal struggle gela, 17 months. I (Continued on Page Eight)
it-
Bev. Ralph David Abernathy
LUMBERTON, N. Cl— (INS) A KKK-mcmber was convicted and' given a G0-day suspended road sentence Wednesday for drunkjtesa and carrying a concealed weapon at a Klan rally near Maxton, N."Cly which was shot up by 1,000 Lumbee- Indians .I,umberton Recorder’s Court Judge
Lacy Manor, an Indian, found James Martin, of Reidsville, N. Ct? guilty of both charges and suspend'-‘ ed the road term, upon payment ot" $60 and cost.-:. ’
Martin faced a ty of two years $300 fine.
The Klansman Saturday night when a group of armed Indians busted up a “hath' tategnrtion.'.’ .rally, staged by —the KKK., The Rev. James Cole, of Marlon.
S. C. allegedly leader of -the dq-. monstration, fled the scene but has •since been chaiged with "inciting, to riot." Robeson County authoriy. ties .who preferred toe charges, Tuesday asked the FBI for assistance In bringing Cole to cus-
RULED VOIDRICHMOND. Va.—Three of Vir
ginia's antl-NAACP laws were ruted . unconstitutional Tuesday by a special three Judge federal court. The decision was split 2-1.
This decision knocked down laws that require such organizations as tlie NAACP which collect funds for racial litigation to register with toe stale and disclose their member-* ship lists and the source of monies- collected. •■- <■
Another law, a part of toe group' of laws passed -by the special antj- integration session of Virginia's General Assembly, relating to stirring up litigation In which the party has no direct Interest, was alse ruled uncciisUtublonaJ.
_________________ . "*) •■ a.- ■ J*^;'
Postal Auxükry- •■tel»
whose taste is so discriminating,” said Rufus W. Jones, who handled the sale. "It is not often that a man walks Into our showroom knowing exactly what he wants, what he wants to do with it, and is prepared to handle the - deal right then and there.”
Bishop McEwen is bishop of the Dioces,, of Western Tennessee and Foreign Fields; '.president of toe
(Continued on Page Eight)
HoldsTlie Memphis Auxiliary of tSe
National Alliance of Postal Employees met on Saturday, January
.18, at top home of the president; Mrs. Marvel Cotton, an Hn-St.lpgw St. Mi,-tin business of the evening, was the election of officers tor 1958. It was with regrettoatitte- group learned that Mrs. Cotton, Organizer of this branch and presi- ' dent, for too post three years, would not serve In 1958. Mni. Cotton was recently elected vice-president of toe Auxiliary of District
(Continued on Page Eight)
Hogging Of FarmerGREENVILLE. S. C—Four white mob of white men came in too
men, accused of flogging a Negro front, and another mob' in too back. .’....... were convicted Wednes- -One man held a gun six ar «*tgM*farmer, 1 .......................day night by an all-white jury which deliberated about four hours. Judge James M. Brailsford Jr. was to sentence ’ them Thursday. Innocent verdicts were returned for two men and the judge earlier had dismissed charges against five others In the case.
Farmer " Claude Cruell testified that 11 white men beat him-----almost to death—for looking after seven while children- whose father had taken his wife to a hospital.
Claude Cruell told an all-white male jury picked as toe trial, got under way in Greenville today, that the men had beaten him severely. threatened to kill him and then dragged off his wile.’ He testified:
“I was in the Kitchen when a
Inches - from my ohist . . to^y then, kicked me and beab -me with chains and clubbed me until X couldn’t see,
"They beat me until I fell, then they kicked me and told me to He there until I died. I saw them fat? my wife Fanny away.”
The beating was allegedly administered because Cruell had agreed to care for a white man's seven children, Wr
Tlie white men, many of whom are reported affiliated with KU Klux Klan Organizations, did riot feel it was proper for. a Negro ..to look after toe children,
The oldest girl, Marie Turner, jj,’. who with the other children Witnessed the flogging, dramatically
(Continued on Page Eight) :'
ATLANTA, GEORGIA— (SNS) Charles Howard, hois with toe
Moral . Re-Armament group, told toe Frontiers Tuesday that Negroes and .whites here should develop a closer ’ economic tie with too people of Africa.
Mr. Howard referred to the vast amount of resources on the African continent. It was pointed out that 97 per cent of toe diamonds come from Africa. I'.................closer economic ties would also bring about better understanding and more genuine human relations.
The talk took place during toe regular^ -weekly meeting of Frontiers held nt Joe’s on Auburn- Avenue.
William- Bennett. nmdP a report on literature and reading materinl taken, to the patients at the hospital in -Milledgeville. Mr. Bennett is chairman of a special committee . set up by the Frontiers concerned with making reading material availably for the patients in Milledgeville.
Jesse O. Thomas is ('¡resident ofI the. local. Frontiers.
Loeb Favors Ordinance ToInvestigate Organizations s
Commissioner Henry Loeb said Wednesday he favors ordinance
[proposed last week by Willi’s E. ¡Ayres, Jr., of 220 Buena Vista, which would require “certain orga-
u r i nlzatlons" to file all pertinent in-■ fuels that formation of its activities with the xc rti/vsslH oIca , > •city officials.
When a reporter from the Memphis World asked . Loeb did he. suspect some subversive organization was operating in Memphis presently, lie .said, “no.” He went on to say “my reason is straight and simple. I like answers to questions. I' think when" an" organization is questioned about its activities it should give answers.
The reporter asked Loeb if' he thought the proposed ordinance violated the principles of the Bill
3of Rights, particularly the “freedom.of assembly.”
Loeb retorted, “no.” You asked the question. I gave you my an-
swer. He continued idealistically, “this is a pretty good country, X like it, and I am going to help keep it that way. I like answers to questions."
Ayres suggested ordinance seeks to have: "any organization operating or functioning within toa City of Memphis, Including but 061 limited to civic, fraternal, political, mutual benefit, legal, medlcgiV trade or other .organization. Upon tlie request of the mayor, Cifcf commissioners, city tax collector or city attorney the following Tn-
' formation within IS days at^et such request is submitted: i
(1) 'name of organization, office, (3) officers, agents or W« presentatives, salaries paid ' thM (4) purpose, of organization..' I? financial statement, contributtfinik dues, fees, contributors, total tM Income. (6) an affidavit by t$ig
(Continued On Pago Two)
l>
I
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ASSIGNMENT Elected President OfL e M 0 Y N E iCotton Makers' Jubilee
■pora tors
i
meeting of ! During the !
dent of the Memphis. Cotton Makers’ Jubilee by its board ofinbor-
BY- MELVIN GREER
Nabors, Sam.lral .Court X Greenville, S: C., a' I IoctpH' fVtParrihp Fir
Es Andrews, L.McDaniel, Law- Sidney Collier, Jones. Gormer j
according tot VA E- Fu b.i;,- J r., ot -82 Circle, NW., life ’ j&id “rhe- poiiey-makijjg'i' "the chmeii will 'Ipfect 'a ’ ’
i ler. , ”.; .Rev. Fuller denied the allegations
' in-th? suit and; said three ’.high • class’ lau7ers. had been retained to i------ ---------------------- .————
■xí...'¡t.memphís Wôrlô • Saturday. January 25,
OMEGA PSI PHI FRATERNITY'S 1958 wmas held last Wednesday.meeting members of Epsilon Phi- chapter held memorial services for deceased members of thé
' chapter; appointed committees and approved the 1958 budget. ' . ~,
; ■ 'Aftef the business session a b-uffet dinner ‘‘ w as served. Hostesses at the -dinner were Mrs. Hattie Shield and Misses Beverly and . Sandra . McDaniel;
Above 'S’re:
SEATED, left io right, Herbert Robinson, Jr., Clarence Pope, Lee A. Thigpen, Ashton Hayes, B. G. Olive. Jr., R. D. Shields, Sammye Lucas, Oliver L. Johnson, Van J. Malone, Henry Clorke Nabrit, D. Cunninghom, W. F. Helm.
Standing, Willard Bell. Alvin .Gammon, Hermon Sweet, J. A. rence- Westley, C. C. Sowyet, Luke J. "Weathers, Jr., Peter Currie, and John C. Porker.
handle the litigation for him and his father. The attorneys-had 6Q days to prepare to face the charges.
Rev.'Fuller said Monday a hearing, tn the case in expected ’’soon.’’ ~TIe charged fev. Petty with .be- ihg “disgruntled because {he bishop
"sent him to a church in Tennessee, and he did not want to go.”
o : The suit claimed that Bishop Fu’- \’i ler owned' property, in Atlanta val- ;.‘l iied af more than $2 million. IL ac
cused Rev. puller of “aiding in de- fmuding the denonrinatibn and, for
-the’, past, three vearsr acting illegal- iy” as a bishop in the church.” .
The church owns property throughout the country, including a churc^ school which it operates at Greenvi 1?.- s. C. Tit ere are about 75 Baptized Holiness Churches , in
.* r t Georgia, several of which are in Ar-member” of the Mitche.1 Chapel.
,“BOY WONDER” BARRY . and M. €. “Slick’• A well-known seemingly compia- ■
cent- campii character is actually i the1, most active and ambitious- guy : on the LeMoyne campus. He is ■ Marion Shepilovk Berry, the' “Boy Wonder of the-senior class. . .
Berry wants to be a research ‘ 'chemist so he chn get in on this ;
business of Suptnik& Muttniks, Whainiks; àrjj: othen.related rNiks’ -j It is all logical, then -htat hé is| majoring in chesistry — a field which he intends to continue in at.
some reputable graduate school.■ Chemistry is No. 1 with Shepi-
Imfc, as à obvious by his conriniio-_ j usly high average, in the course. , However, he does find time lor | participation in an unusual num- ; ber of extra-curricuUr activities . . He is presideur cf the National As-
ijsodation for th^ Advancement otCoHored 'inopie (NAACP. vice- . president of powerful Alpha Phi Alpha. Fraternity (Beta- XI-Chap- I ter), holds membership, in the i Student Activity Committee, ana Ì is the most active member in the 'i Student, council.. Ari excellent athl- ,
■ cte, he has been on the. track team ‘ for two years and is a former mem- | ber óf'.the basketball team. He is : a pari of the Naval Air Reserve ■ where he srves as- PHA-3. . i “DO VNTO OTHERS . . . '
“I believe in doing what’s right,” j says Sheppy. “My motto is do un- | ■tp others as you would have others •
. do ùnto you” He is an aeuve mem- :■ber- of Martin Men^òriàl c. M. È. ■ Church where he sings in ’ the i
‘ Junior choir.• ’Marion, son of Air. and Mrs. 'Prince Jones of 922 Latham Street., • has always bull this philosophical foundation p h construct!vene s sarid objectiveness a diligent- community.worker, he is a Scout- master and wasrecently cited as one of the three Negro Eagle Scouts in thc city.“I consider this a high honor.” he
(Continued From Page One)thousands.", " ' . '
Workmg immediately, umier Erih--, op Fuller Tver? two junlri’- bishops: lislropTpCi. Gary was in.'.enarge of
the Northern Diocese of the church, am! Bishop C. CP'C'ililes was bvcrl. the. Southern Diocese
Tha senior bishop'g-yacaney is ex-' p.ecteil'to be fiWtun' Jiine ,gl the| General Conference of tlie Chhin Jacksonville. Fla.' the Rev.Leathers son... Hr. board of' bishop."
Bishop Faher died without knjw ing of a $5 million suit filed against r him and Rev. Fuller. Jr., last November by the R^v. J. p. Petty, af “meihher” of M’tehe«! chapel Church in Spartanburg, S. C.. Rev.! Fu ler said. All news of the suit was; intentionally withheld from him.
The suit which was filed in Fede- ja!-!
I leged itiau Xliey .defrauded the Fire,- ! Baptized church of more than S2j ¡.million over a.period of 20.years. It i aLso asked $5 million in damages
and called, for an accounting of all. money- turned over’to Bishop Pul-
the
Bishop Fuller's second wife, the Lite Mi'S- Emma C. Fidler, was noted for her outstanding work in the Fire Baptized Holiness Church. She died in 1955.
The, bishop is survived by his wife and eight children. They are?Mrs. Betty Taj'loY, Miss S. J. Fuller, :,
.Eldridge Fuller, the-Rev. W. E-- Fu ler, Jr., Henry B. Fuller, all of Atlanta; Mrs. Ruth Lewter of New I York city. Mrs. Mattle Westbroo’ks I of Gainesville, Ga.. and Douglass (
‘ Fuller of New York cityElks In Scholarship(Continued from Page One)
ges and temples will be given recognition. Lee said.
‘ Our objectives are to help remove all barriers in'education, thought, the development.of a hugescholarship fund for the purpose’oT extending aid to children of al!
-races.—who—suffer—‘from—race—¿rad i- _tiom-povervy,_Ia—a-dow-likc is highly important that youngAmericans, who are eager and w.ill-
i ing to learn, be recognized and rewarded. ’I
He continued "Today.. we know that human talents essential to the advancement of man are not restricted to race' or country. In even’ race tlieie are young men and women of great ability who
• \\hen given the opportunity for education can help further the ad-
i vancement of knowledge and contribute to the progress oi our great country.”. “Young men and women whether they be Jews,. Negroes. Catholics. Irish. English or Italians haw within themselves the potentalities to rise from the dust of the day’s long road to the pinnacle of a laughing star”. Explained Lee.
The country' faces a severe short- j age of .engineers and- technically f trained personnel while . 'on the. i other hand it -is predicted that in | : the decade”from 1959 to I960, the ’■ Soviet. Union will graduate one two hundred, thousarid■ scientists compared to nine hun- 1 dred thousand in the United Stat- i es. Unless we remove all barriers
' i in education Russian scientific man | power might well out number ours
‘vin-many key areas. We can not af- ' j ford at this time to set up barriers
j that will discourage young people ‘ who might become scientists ’ when■ Russia is extoling the scholars and j the scientist and devoting its fin- i uncial Strength for scholarship aid. . Thc genius children of. our comù-nity must not be lost as casualties
«in Uie battle oi race and’ tradition or in the blight of poverty. Said Lee.
i ■ —---------- :--------------, Half of the Fed er*. 1 Government’s ; tliree-year project for modernizing
___ __ ___ _ „.-thé nation’s medical laboratories privilege and special ; should be under way this year.
Carter, handled j* his’ side of the proceedings beauti-1‘ fully., as did Robert Phamplet. pro- : secuting attorney; the lawyer for : the losers. • :
THE TOP ELEVEN BOARD OF ; VOTERS, headed by Chairman 4 Annie Bell Price, has . “the mosi- ! controversial.. ratings since • Nikita
Klu-usc-iiev was selected "Man 'oi j rhe year” by the Association Press’ iThesha:
11 -Coedb; CCEDS:* Young;: Theresai Dorothy j Daniel f I Mirgi i gett;
‘ TOP .11 COLLEAGUES — No. 1—Raymond Lee; 2J Ezekial Owens:
j 3,'JM. G. Garter; 4) Robert^Phamplet i 5» James Bishop; 6» Marion Berry; ’ 7) Freddie Carter; 8) Jess? Jones;.
9» Marvin Rayford; 10' Eddie Ward. | million hell; 11) Frank Lockhart — Rossie! j Braden etie j ’ I
TIME IS NEARING for "Romeo' J and Juliet”, Shakespeare's famous I force which will be presented here | at LeMoyne by Players Incorporat- •
eQ Saturday. February 1.! - - —•--------:----------—.Loeb Favors Ordinance
i
:k will com? after the Top ratings are read TOP 11 1> Gloria Wade: 2. Eliza
■3> Arnettà Finley;" 4> Cox; 5i Grace Austin; 6i -Stiles; 7i Beverly Mc-8i teneva Bishop: 9'
ie Bogan: 10i Wilhemipa Dogli, Mary Cole.
i TAYLOR C. D. HAYES
Taylor C. D. Hayes, manager of the T. H. Hayes & Sons Funeral Home, was elected the 1958 • presi-
Tn? new president is vice president and manager of the funeral company which was established by his father T. H. Hayes, Sr., a Negro pioneer in funeral business. Today the Hayes funeral-home is the oldest business owned _nnd operated by Negroes in Memphis.
President Hayes, a graduhte oi Wilberforce College in Xenia. Ohio., is trustee of the Second Congre- gational church, ycasuier of the church’s building, association, past president of the National Funeral Diiector’s Association, board member of Tri-State bank, local Camp Site Committee for Girl ScoutS and . the Urban League, grand stale' publicity director of. Prince Hall Masons and is. currently heading the Boy’ Scout drive."
A' Pre-Jubilee program "Jubi-- fleet”' is scll.iduled for Friday, March 21 tfor -Ellis auditorium.
The Cotton Makers’ Jubilee will be celebrated May 12-17.
Burge And Badge» Exchange Vows Dec. 28; 500 At EventKNOXVILLE, Tenn. — Miss Bet
ty Joe Burge, daughter of Rev. and! Mrs. T. IL Burge 2121 Major Ave. i and Army Sergeant Kenneth; Wr
i Badgett, son of Mr. and Mrs. Mel- i vin. C. Williams. 117 Mohican Street.were wed. Dec. 2F< -at 7:30 p. in.,
j at Rogers Memorial Baptist Chtfrch. I The -Rev. :L. A. Alexander, pastor, i conducted the double ring ceremony ¡attended by more than 500 per-’ I sons in the one-year-old edifice.
S. BEKK1'MARION
Mr.,Berry like most other college kids, digs progrt .“What's my main hobby, and I like all kindsWHAT’!—NO SKELETONS? ? ? ' Socialite Shtpllcvk says that he is ari Jfeligible bachelor" "But leave the womenfolks ou' of this." he said ■I don’t want to ar-t in'any kind
of- trouble.- Beside, you won’t find any .skeletons in my closet.
That’s strange - - A report; presumably erroneous came in the other day that some unfprtunate- $cul opened Berry’s closet and was crush under a ton of clavicles, «a>uii, phalange, metacarpals. man- ; liblsz, and conksd 'on the head by a flying band of ' car; teai and taribar vertebrae-.
But, presumably erroneous.HERE, TIIERE, AND AROUND teMQYNE ‘ :
THE CASE in . Student Court •’¿uesiiiy, Lee' and Carter versus the | SCu^anl Council, was i
1 h . •thingi to. observe. • Ezefcia 1 1ferise- • attorney; for- -Raymond . Lee •
-■ ■ •'
■jazz the m
(Continued From Page One)president or other' officating officers, stating whether the orga-
j nization. is subordinate to a parent i organization, if so name. | Ayres, accused in his proposed ' ordinance. “many organizations i within Memphis have been claiming immunity from the terms of
: Article 23. I ' license taexs. sections 777-787 , • governing the payment of occu- ' __ . .
1, pation licenses levied for the privi- , __,r„ 7 V'' lege “of doing business within the thp' races wHI^he
‘ city:"--""’y .It was stated • in - several quatj
ters including a. lawyer that the ordinance is “clearly amied at the Memphis Chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. However, the ordinance made no reference to , racial, groups.
On source who requested that his name be withheld told the O1 tnj Memphis World. “Ayres’ proposed’ ablg ordinance is similar to the ordi- . * nance proposed in many other Southern cities. It does not specify the NAACP but is thc pr.me target. Where other organizations are concerned such ordinance, will not be invoked."
Ayres' petition also accused ‘many such organizations operating with occupation license exempt. Xion are mere subterfuges for business being operated for profit. . .
The. - proposed ord inance would also provide lor a maximum fine of S50 each day for any person or organization violating it. - The city would also be given power to seek -injunction r^ief.''
•The, propo? ■*<’_ ordinance was immediately opposed by Atty. James F. Estes with/ o'lirr.s at 860 Vance Ave., and head of the Veterans Benefits. Inc.
Atty. Estes'- petition of ‘objections stated the Ayres' "proposal attacks !hr* "nod Will of excel-
tioh as existing in the
: city of Memphis. The relaxed. • calm and peaceful co-existence of j
, J. .,"1 „e in turmoil by a ;' city wide, epidemic of ’stress, strain 1 and high tension.’’ $
He went oh to state, “a dangers i pjas trend and precedent will be I established by an ill-advised and t uncautioned proposal. The pro- I posal is designed to disturb hearts. ‘
, It will not serve for the common good of all nor the best public interest and welfare of the citizens of this city. The motive is question-
Leader Galls For(Continued from Page One)
think free to be free.He said it was discovered! that
Negro students in the. Washington public schools were .behind the aver-, age white simply because die segregated schools denied Negro students adequate 'learning conditions. "I have hestitate say how Mississippi students, Negro white, are behind students other states.
Dr. Nabrit told his audience ” the -first step to freedom is vision of how to abtain it/’ .
He blamed racial segregation as .the cause of Russia beating America in launching a satellte. He said
. the Kegro wants equal job and educational, opportunities and treat-
! merit —free- of ■ police brutuality. I ‘‘Nothing short < ’ that' will - be i' satisfactory.”
“Memphis will be a different town the day 100.000 Negro register and vote,” predicted the speaker.
In. conclusion Dr. Nabrit, brother of Rev. H. G. Nabrit, pastor of First Baptist church on Lauler- dale. said “Let Us build our momu- ments in .the hearts and minds of oar children. Let us be free our-
.and provide freedom for our
far .and from
a
■ fn rhe deep southern states. The i project was started by the Southern
Christian .Leadership Conference of which Dr. Martin Luther, Jr., ot i Montgomery,Ala.. is president. . I
Dr. J. E. Walker, chairman of Universal Life Insurance-Company., was master of' ceremonies.
Other speaking" briefly included. Dr. J. W, Golden, Rev. W. C. Holmes. Dr., s. A. Owens, president of the Interdemoninational Minis-
I teral Alliance, a sponsor of the ; meeting. Rev. Henry' C. Bunton
president of the Ministers " and■ Citizens, League, another sponsor:
Rev. E. W. Williamson, Attorney H.andT, Lockhái-d. Atty. James Estes
Rev. W. L.- Varnado.
The 22-year-old bride, given in marriage by her father,. wore a
.chapel length dress of chantilly lace with square neckline. She carried N. Y. They wore mint, green satin, ballerina length’ dresses with round necklines, carrying the green and
: white color scheme. The bride’s ! mother wore beige lace, and the groom’s mother chose champagne
|
te.Ushers were Charles Benn. Floyd
.Mason, J. R. Crump. Joe Cramp. William Davis, Jr., all of Knoxville, and Walter Bradley, New":Jersey.. Guests were received at a . reep- tion in the church's dinfiiR room, ■following the marital rites. Mes- dames Arnette "Wright. Lillian Bradley. Irene -Bradley, Emily Smith and Hattie Sharp assisted at the reception.
The pride’s-parents entertained with d rehearsal dinner preceding the wedding. Also honoring the bride, groom, and guests with dinners were Mr. and Mrs. Williams, groom's parents. Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Bradley. Sr., Mr. and .Mrs. Willie Lenoir, and . Mr. and Mrs. Von McClendon.
The former Miss Barge attended Knoxville College where she Worked in the businass office four years.
Virginia Solons Divided On Public School Issue
She was also. secretarial Oak Ridge's Elementary iSciü’boröL Thirty-year-old Sergeant Badgett is. a career soldier now stationed in Baltimore, Mid., where the local Austin high school graduate .and his wife will make their home.
clerk at school
Out-of-town nuests included Mr. and Mrs. James Devoir, New Brunswick, N. J.: Mr. and Mrs. Deaderick Bradley and M-.utird N. Bradley,
I Cleveland. Ohio; Miss Betty Brad- I ley and Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Wright, Brooklyn. N>- Y.: Edward
I Bailey. Dayton, Ohio; Miss Louise i Burye. Washington, D. C.; cousin; I Mrs. Erma Twitiy, Coltunbus, Ohio, i bride's cousin: Mrs. Geraldine Jenks , and Miss Gail Twitty, groom’s cou- ; sin. Cleveland, Ohio.
I Alaska airlines planning service I to Siberia.
61 loan Activity ¡Slumps To New low | WASHINGTON — GI loan ac- l livity during- December-slumped to
a record low. Veterans Administration announced Wednesday.
. VA received .8.508 home loan ap- . plications during the month, a dip
oi 23.7. percent from November’s 11.157.
Appraisal request’s for proposed structures droppe.d "6.6-percent to
| 3,501 for December, coinpared with. i 3,748 for November.I Appraisal requests for existing i structures fell ter 1.536 in, Deceip- j her. off 27.9 percent from November's 2,131. •
GI housing starts declined" 27.6 percent during December to 4.638, compared with 6. 409 in November.
BY VICTOR CALVERTON" RICHMOND. Vn. — (ANP) — Some Virginia legislators and educational leaders are becoming weary of Virginia's massive re-
■ sistance to school desegregation as I espoused by' former Gov. Thomas i B. Stanley and favored by Gov. -L.Lindsay Almond, Jr. Not all 'Vir-
j binians are willing to have thc i schools closed - rather than have I a single Negro attend a school with■ white children.; With the Byrd forces riding high- ; in the state and the White Citizens I Cuncils waging a bitter campaign I against school desegregation, most
thoughtless and prejudiced Virginians will most certainly go along with Governor Almond’s new proposal that rather than have integration with the help of federal troops it would be better not to have any schools. I
State Senator Armistoad Boothe of Alexandria is one of the/few members of the Virginia General Assembly who do not subscribe to the Byrd Machine views of race relations in Virginia or the schemes which that machine is using to circumvent the desegregation decision
Con-of the U. S. Supreme Court, Cerning Governor Almond’s plan to ask for legislation to empower the governor tri close any school where desegrgation is attempted with the. use of federal, troops, Mr.' Boothe said: ; . "“I find myself in respectful disagreement with the .governor on one issue. I- cannot vote to c-|,ose the public schools in many areas of the state unless the people in that area themselves have first voted to close their schools*
Eighteen Elected To NA AGP Board
NEW YORK CITY — (ANP) — Three new members were ^elected to the NAAOP Board of Directors this week while 15 other members were reelected.
The new Board Members are Jackie Robinson, the former baseball player, C. R. Darden of Meridian,-Miss., an NAACP officer in Mississippi, and W. Robert. Ming of Chicago, a member of the Association's . national legal committee. ;
Alfred Baker Lewis of Greenwich, Conn., a businessman, was elected Association treasurer, replacing Dr. Allan Knight Chalmers of Bos-
ton, who resigned. Arthur B. Spingam of New York», an attorney, was reelected NAACP president,and Roy Wilkins .was reelected executive secretary.
I.ade'for Citizenship” meet- ere held m 19 other south-
s Monday as the first in .a to register voters
Honoring Founders Of Insurance Co.
MEMORIAL STUDIO889 UNION AVENUE
Designers, Builders bi Erector, of Monuments. Outstanding many years for courteous service and reasonable prices.
PHONE J A. 6-5466
FANCIEST CAR—Pretty expensive, too. Keys to man; while the bishop's daughter, Miss Lula a $10,000 Mark III arebeing handed to Bishop Mae McEwen witnesses the cosh sale her dadA. B. MjEwen (left) by ..Rufus W. Jones sales- just completed.
X*»» . '• . ...... - w.....-»-J«,-:-
Mr. Boothe's stand on this matter is incidentally..and significantly in line w-ith the principle behind state sovereignty or local option. Geo- ernor Almond and his crowd have continually objected to what they call "foreign” meddling in race relations in the South, but they are unwilling to let even a local school board decide what school children should 'attend. They favor outside interference only when it suits their plans to maintain separation of the races re
gardless of the superiority of . the U. S. Supreme Court, in deciding the matter.
j
lit 48-hour tapes beneath plaque at the moment of unveiling. -,
Monday s ceremony is the beginning of a tradition at Chicago Metropolitan. A résolution passed the death of any director in the future his name shall be included on the plaque .
Robert A. Cole who was a former president of the •* company, was | chairman of the board at ths time | ci his death in 1956. Lewing. one ; Of the first directors, diéd-in 1945. !
CHICAGO — (ANP) — A bronz plaque honoring the memory Of. Robert A. Cole, founder, • arid Fred W. Lewing, director of Chicago Metropolitan Mutual. Assurance Company, was dedicated in the firm’s home office Monday, Jan. 20. .
T. P. Harris,- president, unveiled the plaque following a litany service conducted by the Rev. Richard C. Keller, company chaplain. The plaque is mounted in the building lobby at 4455 South Parkway.
Memorial services for the two pioneers of the multimillion dollar" firm followed the’ annual meeting at which' Harris was reelected. Geeorge S. Harris, assistant secre-i
i tary, was ^master of ceremonies. I Horace. G. H&l secretary, and Md- J Vin, director..;jof Public Relations,
■ Tax loss selling floods the stock ! market.
TASTES LIKE A
BUT COSTS ONLY PENNIES
■■;
local ALPHA ¡kappa alpha WOMEN. OBSERVE SOTTI
BY JEWEL GENTRY
Bÿnson Sucis E. Verry, • Jewel Bethel Leola <Bond, Joan Bramlett,
. -Dç-uayu »-uvis li. .. Vciry, -Jewel AMXY»’£™Xoor‘nj Bethel’Leola *Bond. Joan’Bromic:t.
™»SARi' 'SORORITY ' AVillye Branclic, Dr. Ckir Brawner.MRS EDNA OVER'GRAY CAMPBELL, SPEAKS FOR CELEBRATION '
Alpha. Ka^pa ' Alpha women all' • over the nation aie celebration tlie ¡
• 50th. Anniversary of the organiza- ¡ . tion with programs that gò back I
to the .Howard University campus j ÍI11S08 ...... In Memphis Sunday j local AKA women’ presented toUhc'
x Trij-Çtatè area a prominent inem- bcr of the organization, Mrs. Edna
. Over Gray Campbeil, a past Supreme Basileus of Alpha Kappa Alpha : first president ’ of che Arnerican ; Council on Human
• Rights and a high school'principal of Baltimore, Alary land who spoke
. at a public program on "Democracy in - America.”" The vibrant
• speaker placed emphasis on co-, opration between tlie groups.
/ first to speak Sunday^ wasMrs. Ametta Wallace, currently serving as Supreme-Basileus of wÀ. K. A. who stopped off in Memphis Sunday enroute from, her home in Chicago to’ points South. The president of the oldest Negro Greek Organization for women brought greetings from Other parts of the? country ......... Both Mrs. Camp-:
■= benn and Mrs. Wallace paid tribute to founders ol the organization who aré Mrs. Beulah Burke, Mrs. Margaret’Flagg Holmes, Mrs.
: Lavinia Norman, Mrs. -Joûnna B. ... ..Shields, Áírs. Mús;Ie/AVoplfoik Tay-
. : ' logramT M^s?Harriett Terry; y. :/:.Deceased members are,Mrs. Lillian Burke, Mrs. Marjorie Hill, Mrs, Éthel Hedge Lyle in whose honor a scholarship fund has been' founded and to which Mrs. JohnGta Walkr Kelso recently contributed $25.GO from the local chapter;’ Mrs. Sara Mcriwea.tlier Nutter, Mrs. Lucy D. Sl'owe fur whom a building at Howard university haât .been named and. Alls. Ann Brown.
Mrs. Callie ’Stevens, president of the local graduate chapter., spoke after-she had thanked the audience and paid high tribute to her guest speaker and na'tianal president and introducing Mrs. Kathryn perry who served us général .cliairman of the Founders Day program. Mrs. Stevens also (Toquenfty introduced Mrs. Campbell :::: Mrs. Wallace ■was presented' by Mrs. Ruth Beauchamp, member of the Memphis chapter and long time friend to Mrs. Wallace
It was Mra- Akujoric 1. Ulen, member of the local chapter wjio gave a salute to Greekdóm and presented past présidents of the Mm- phis Graduate Chapter of AKA who were Mrs. Ethel J. Perkins. Mrs. Marion John's, Mrs. Jolmetta
. Kelso, Airs. Karheryn P. Tliomas, Mrs. Ruth Beaqchamp, Mis. Helen Hayes and Mrs. Georgia V. Haiwey .... ..Past presidents who still reside in Memphis- are Mrs. Emma T. Johnson, unable to attend; and Mrs. A’ma R Booth who was at-
* tending tlie Vice-President's- Conference in Washington .... Past Basilei of the Meipphis Chapter
’ who now reside in- ether cities are Afra. Emma Washington Bradi ord. dietitian at Bellevue Hospital in New York: Mrs. Mildred Ray noi
> Davis, a Chicago school teacher: Mi’s. Louise Gloster, instructor at Hampton Insltiiute in ^/Hampton, Virginia and Mrs. Minnie Redmond Bowles; Librarian at Hampton In-
. stitute in Virginia.Others on prqgiam were., Airs.
Helen West, a prelude: Miss Gertrude Walker, meditatlpns; Rev. H. C. Bunton, paülpr . of Olive Ca-
- thedral where ih? program was held at 4 Sunday, who giive the Benediction and Mrs. Katheryn Thomas who gave the occasion .-... Mrs Hut tie Brittenum Swearengen, another member, sang after the’well trained AKA -Ensemble made up of Omega Hayes. Georgia Quinn, pianist: Eddie.Rideout,.Alary Horne Porter, .He’en West. Martha Anderson, Sheridan -Hicks. Helen Shelby and Ruby Spight.RECEPTION FOLLOWS
A huge crowd, over-flowed tlie attractively* arranged reception room in the basement where many of th guests met the two VirbranV speakers and nationally known personalities .... Beautiful candelabra on either end ot the Table with glowing çandlgs cast-a -¿oft. light over the room.
In case you arc wondering other Alpha Kappa Alpha women around Memphis .......... I-shallname them ....... And they are Ann
-ing and excitement ol' -being “sweet 1G ’ were Hazel Abrom B. Sherrod. ; Jenatha Seaberry, Mary Vanzaiit,;= Jackie ’Heath’,.Calmierine Kuykendo’.; i Donald Horton., Orbome -Moore, j James S. Simpson, John Simpson/- Freddie. Simpson, \ Carol Bìedsoe, - Cwt in Mil cheli. Charles Moore,F reddie’’ Anderson, Wiliiaih Culaie, • Tuni Scott, Cl.ifi on OJNcal Rozcllc Blanchard; Waymoiid l.ee, J’rank .Carr and’Sy’-vcsier -Ford. ’
Adults who went were the cute j little honoree’s^ parents Mr. and j. Mrs. McKinniiv/Mrs. Sgllie. Stevens, ’•
.Miss R\ith ¿Waller, Mrs., Ruth Spaulding’- White? Miss' 'Georgia Rose/ Sylyeis, Mrs: Marion Son-
■ l ord a nd ¡ Mrs. Bernice Abron -----Cther members" . ./Of Georgette’s family .attending- were her aunt/ Miss Willie Alina McW'illiaiiis; \?n uncle, Mr. Rosttoe /McWEhams;- Mr. James T., Walker and. her. i.we*
. younger sisters. ' Mattalyn : and Celeste MéKiniiey. . ‘ .
Georgette wore a beautiful white jeweled sweater and“ a white felt skirt decked off at thè .waist-line
zby a white orchid sent by her aunt: Miss/McWilliams. ’
hMeilfk Briscoe. .Hattie Britt enum. i Barbara AnnBrown,. Geraldine ’ Brown,.. Rachel' Garter, Augusta Cash, Estelle ,Cash. Sarah Coleman, Billie CimVfbrd, Lilian i .Crowder, Mae . Davenport, Julia.1 Doggett
¡Frances Duvall,Merits Jones Ewell ,j and Bebe Fingal. j.i .: Thefesa^Trankim,; Leoda. Gam-’ ' mon. Jewel -_Gen.iD’» - Cynthia y
GreenCj Ernestine Guy, Lois Hargraves, Viola’ Haybert, Clara Hobson, Catliryn' Johnson Frances
TJbhnson, Velma Lois -Jones,- -Wiljie T. Jones, Jennie V. Kirby, Sadie Malone,. Ernestine' ’ Martin-, Dorothy ; McDaniel, ■ Hester Miller, Ida Moore, Rose Murphy, Reo Rita piive, Walterine '.Outlaw, s Faye Parker,. Maydella i&eves, Margaret Rivers, Allie Mae Roberts, Ivy Roddy. and Jeraldine Sanderlih. .
Elma Shaw,. Helen Shelby, Gertrude Smith, Adrienne; Simpkins who recently moved'to Cincinnati: Jewel Speight. Rubye ’ Spight, Sucy Sutilles, Ediia Swingler, Ethel
•L. Thompon, Dora Todd. Gloria H. Tuggle, Addie Jones Turner, Al- •legra Turner, Juanita Turner, Ann
‘ Reba Twigg, Ida- Mae Walker,- . Laverne Weathers, Claiibelle Wea-.
yer, Ruth Weed, Helen West, Matilda wiihium; GloriA White. Grace Williams, Cecelia Willis, Grace Young,. Juanita . Young-
Julia Atkins. Hazel Bass, Helen . ...............■Holmes Batts; Bettye Bland-, jacksoil. Mildred .Grace' and- Lon-
''HAPPY BIRTHDAY'' GREETINGS were in order | niversary at a party. Standing in front are: when guests gathered at the home of Mr. and
ALSO CELEBRATING' a birth- day over the week-end was LaTTLE VETA' ZOE BRIDGES. ■ younj; daughter, of. Mr. and. Mrs^.An-.. dtsrson ■ Bridges Kiddies attending were "Star'’ Harvey, Brenda Butties, doiui O'Neil. Jacqueline.
MArrT bIKinDAT UKttliNUb were in order | niversary ar a parry, oranaing in rronr are: ...... _____________ ’ ____ 1.‘ ...... _ J I Mr. and Mrs. Robinson. Left fo right are: Smith
Mrs. Sherman W. Robinson of South Montgom- | Fleming, Sam Brown, Mr.- and Mrs. A. G. ery Street to help him observe his birthday, an-. I Shields.
Abe Scharff YMCA Starts1958 Membership Drive
YMCA SUNDAY TO BE OBSERVED
Abe Sharff Branch YMCA .observe-YMCA Sunday, .Jan;4 :p. m., with. a public program to be staged raj the YMCA. 251, So.
MEMPHIS WORLD ft
Church News -ST. STEPHEN BAPTIST CHURCH 508 N. 3RI» STREET. r ,
'REV. O. C. CRIVEN, MliASTER i Sunday ' Januai'y. 26,- i^SUhdiiy ’School opens at 9:15 a. m/witli in-. ‘ spiralional singing; B. T. Lewis superintendent in charge of Sun-
.-day .school activities. At, 11:00 à. .m.,- i tlw regular form of -worship music [by the Junior choir. Sermon by-the pastor. At- 6:00 p. m. The Baptist
’. Trainingr^ Union of which ’ Joseph F. Wilson is director. [ 7:45 p. : m>àçvotion services. ’i The inlKSion-ministers...wives'
¿.cle inet: tot- the residence .of Mr.¡-Mrs?. -James t^aither., 990 N. Moiit-
! ’ geniery {•ecentl'y. The,, meeting was ; -•-opened .. by the chaplniii, Airs. W. ■ ¡Nichols.; Plans were made bv the president-.' The lir-ele was highly' elated over our Honored guest, Mrs Mildred Head’» a deyptyd chirç-tian -
■. i crunch w orker of several Christian ' -itoeciaL-chlbs. :Sh’e. gavé lin address; • ; “Sixty Christian Wornèn at Work.”
Th*? hostess introduced, the guest after, the b[rlef . business æsidon.
?■ The meeting was tÿ^ed over to the hostess, who/served a luncheon,.
Th? honored guest were Mi\ W. Carn, Mr. Heard, Mrs. Mildred Heard. Mr^.*’; Mattie Hurt. .Fred Leatherwood Jr. Mèhibers attending as follows Mrs. Amanda Broxton; Minnie Cherry, Alberta Nichols, Mary Qaither, .Mrs. Éstella P- Campbell, supervisor, Mis, Hortense Crivcns, président, Mrs. Luci'le Roseman secretary, Mrs. Marquette McCall, Mrs. Victory. Fally. Mrs.' .Bessie Cor uni, Mrs. Lullic Jackson,
1 Mrs. Pearl Yates, Mrs^ Alexander,
Observe First1 Birthday. Anniversary Jan. 19th
CALLIE CASSANDRA SMITH 1Callie iCassanura • Smith./ one-
year-old fcughter of Mr. and Mrs: James SnvPtJ.i -of ? 1293 ..Kennedy St., celebrated hcr/tfirst?. birthday anniversary -Jam 19.’ Smith’*»/ only child.
gifts fromMr.
Callie is thb.;' Sir? was pre-' her maternai' and Nirs. Wilf;
seatedgrandparents’,Riley of 1'292 Kennedy. She is alsoTlie granddaughter, of Mrs.. Janie...Smith/ .’■
will
reporter.
Bowden, Gladys . Brodnax-? Mar- gardt Bush, Ethel Cartel-, ' Vera Clark, Betty Dixon, Dprethä Edwards, Lucinda Edwards, Elizabth Elrod Josie Flbwers,/Doi'othy Gra- hain. Victoria Hancock, Marie Harris, Andrewnetta Hawkins, Earlins Hohnes, Hermine Howard. Sue Isii, Catherine. Johnson, Delores Lewis, Sadie Long Mary McWilliams, Alberta Mickens, Gladys Hose Miller. Gwendolyn Nash. Margaret Neal arid'Wjlma Nelson.
Juanita Nesbittt, David Etta Phillips, -Harriett Pippin, Celesta, Porter, Ceneta Quails, Vivian Robin-; son. Annie Bell Saunders. Cloteal Shackleford,./ Elizabeth Simon, Julia Springer. Georgia Rose Silvers, Martell Tigg, Jesse Vcnston, Al’.ura Wade, Lucille Warren, Lils lian Watkins, Lula. Watson, Bennie Gray Williams and Phyiliß wrighf.
.netto JMÌey ¿ipd Fdwinòr Pnrter. " ’ ATTENDINNG the TENNESSEE DELEGATE ASSEMBLY in Nashville last week-end were. MISS AVILLA ALMA MCWILLIAMS and AIRS ELDORA* AMCSi both teachers at Manassas High Schob’; All's. Beulah Williams, from Booker -Wàshington high: Mr. Westley Scott from Washington and Mrs. Mary Robinson from Douglas High School.. ....The meeting was presided over by Mrs. Arnettia Wa’lace .-... and according to Miss McWilliams who says that she always clashes with Mrs. Wallace ......... And I Quote-I have never -seen a more, sf fipient person than Mrs. Wallace nor have I ever seen a person preside as smoothly as she does. The meeting was top’s. — And we are getting some where. .
Club NewsThe Busy\Bee Clpb of the nil’s
Jwlfap-L BaptistoChurcli met at t-1.m?u home of'Mr; Sh-d Mrs. Wi BaritottT2354 • Marble. • recently.
Thé meeting was called to. ordci by the chaplain who read the scripture and prayer. '
New officers were elected’ anti some old officers were re’ected.. J Mrs. Matiedy Ficl.ds. president.. Mrs : -A. Webb, vice president, Mr. W. j ■Barnett, second vice president.. Mrs. ■ E.- Oven&Lrett, treasurer. Mr. J. Davis, chaplain, Mrs. Rosio Timmin. quizz director, Mrs/Rosie. Barnett, assistant quizz director, Mrs? Anna Finlvv. secretary. Rev. E. T. Slay, pastor. The next meeting will be held at-the home of Mrs, Kate Pârtett. 2404 Hunter Ave., Sunday Jan. 2G. at 6 p.m. All members arc. urged .to be present.
_The' kick-oil’ dinner ibx» tlx- A’6e vSchurll YMCA annual hu’inber-
Lsldp drive will be .held rat 7:30 today (FriJ.at the YMpA. 254 S. Lauderdale st.; All vplrmteef cam- paigh.‘workers are expected To at-
NATIONAL, SORORITY MEETS AT »INNER MEETING
Members ctf- Beta Eta Chapter of the .National Sorority, of- Phi Delta Kappa met At Tonys Saturday to map out plans for the .1958 year... Dinner was the other highlight of the evening ... .. Members who attended were Miss Harry Mae Simons, Basileus; Mrs, Ann Hall, Anti-Basileus: ‘Mrs.- Mauddean Seward. Grammaiteus-Tomias; Miss Lucile. Hansborough. Chairman ol the Program -Committee made up of Mrs. Mab’e Hudson. Mrs. Mildred Peace Horne, Mrs.Bodye. Mrs. Cleo Jones, and Yvonne Hawkins.
Carlee MiSs
MRS. HERMAN COLEMAN ENTERTAINS COTILLIONS
It )Was~ Mrs. Herman Coleman who was hostess at an elaborate meeting to members of the Cotillions’ Bridge C’ub at their first meeting of-the year on last Saturday evening ......... Mrs. Coleman’slovely Walker Avenue home wa£| festb’e with winter ■ flowers .... A cocktail hour was followed by dinner served at-.. Three rounds oi bridge was p’ayed with Mrs. Taylor Ward. Mrs. Henry Jackson ai.m Mrs, Cora Blackmon winning first, second' and third prizes ... Other members, who stayed until lute were Mrs Larccniii Cain, Mrs Clarence Hamler. Mrs. Eugen? Hitler. Mrs. Julia Gordon. Mrs Charles S. Johnson. Mrs. Fannie Johnson, Mrs. Beatrice Matlock. Mrs. Henry Neals and Mrs. A. L Plaxico.
Public Relations Firm Retained By Malco Theatre
Arnold and Associates, a public relations firm with an office at- 236 S. Wellington St., has bevn retained by flic .Malco tlwntj;c ;i’or a promotional job in a special market, announced by Johnny -'Arnold, Jr., owner of the public relations company.
Arnold said plans call ipr promoting attendance4^11 the theatre by beaming advertisement, -into this “special market” by newspapers, radios, direct mailing and working witli teenage groups tor cn masec attendance at Malco.
He uointed out .Uiat recently the theatre was completely .redecorated witli .cation of the balcony within oito flight of steps from the street entrance.
A Negro staff has been lured to offer service to Negro patrons.
Arnold and Associates, one \ (A the most unique promotional organizations in -the city, has represented a number of accounts.
Hyde Park-Hollywood Civic Club Meet Tues.
| Hyde. Park-Hollj’v.ood Civic club r is siill eiigaged in a membership |d,rive. Rev. M. Winfield, the presi- ' dent, urges, ¿‘persons in’.erc.Ated I the welfare ol the ■ community ' help enroll members. This is ¡chance for civic minded persons help." He wuni. on to say that "I
strength of any community 1 in titions.’
The club will hold installation services of its 19p8 vJlicers during
lit meeting scheduled for Feb. 11 ¡at. Hyde Pirk School.! The nesf v. giffar meeting is j scheduled for 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, i Jan. 28,. at the Macedonia Baptist ¡ church, 2159 Griggs. Ave. •**
Europeans await British moves on free trade.
- o--Analysis’ ol West Gemiuiiy s need
in planes.
in (o
; to the lies
strength of it> organiza -
DINNER PARTY. Air: and M.sr. Henry Gault, Capital1 Ave., entertained i friends- with a recent dinner party Guests included: Airs. Ruth Kelly, Air.. Twitord Atoyweather, Mrs. Eni- nia Hursluy;, Mrs. Philis Green Mrs. Aladie Thomas. Airs. Gora Phillips. Mrs. Ola C. Gooden. Mr. and Mrs. F. Gigene. Mr. and Mrs. Rosa Gant. Mrs. Julia Roberts, Mrs. Ada Montgomery, Mrs. Ethel Williamson, Mrs.’ Limaie Dixon, Airs. Minnie Exam, Mrs. Mollie J. Alexander. Mr W. J. Blue. Mrs. Lucile Clark. Mrs. Tucker.
. 1Ü98many
tend.Workers kits will- be given and
prospect cards assigned. Other information pertaining, to the campaign will also bv sluiced.
Each .person in the dpve is urged -to call the YMCA <fa. 6-2523 by ïie-on Friday- and make his reservation for the clinner.
Tlie following persons• have volunteered to work in the campaign; Sections. Lenders: Bishop J. O. Patterson, and tlie Rev, C, F, WÏ1- liums. Division Managers: A, B. Bland, E. L. Waslibuin, H. T. Cash, F. ?M. Campbell. A. C. Williams;. Pref. Joseph’ Fulls, Mrs. llosa B. Hayiies, RCv/H. C Bunton Team Captains : Omar R. Robinson, Jr., Mis. Laura. R. Tyus, Dr. J. A. Watson, Jr., Marvin Tarpley. Felten Earls, Prof. J, D. Springer. Eddie Canter, Pen.-y Norris v. Michael Lamy, Gladys B. Wèbb. Lewis Twigg Jr.. Dr. N. M, Watson, Joseph . WUherson, 'Alls. Ruby Donoho, Roderick Diggs, Mrs. Lillian Junes, Robert. Russ, Frank .Lewis. Melvin Qonleu. Edwin Jones, R. B. Thompson, Mrs. Flora Coch- ,r:inr. R. J. Roody. Rev, A. L. Mc- Cargu, Kirs. A..M, James, Mrs. A. B. Bart let t. Ally C. O. Uor.ton Jr., Mr. ' Richard Cole, -Prof. Harold Goodrich, pitol. Frank Phillips, Rev. R. L. ’ones. Prof. Prescott Fisher, Pi of Maty Davis. Mr
Team Captains bring a li 't- of the names of their team. nu’ir,Leis to the office make certain to bring their’ workers to th- dinner meeting Friday. An attendance prize will be given
• to Hie switiun with the largest number -of workers present.
The 1958 membership goal Is 1000 new and renewed members« the drive is from.January 24 to.Fety"^ ary 21. The Rev. J. W. Golden is general chaiiman o’f tlie effort. .
Prut.’ones,
Searcy Harris, Esther Vinson.
are asked to
and
Eauderdnlc’St; •The event will be in. connection
with National YMCA Week whlcto “began/Jitn. 19. by the Young .Mens Ctñ'ÍStiiui . AssbciiUioiis over v the
- ^country?----- .Associations in each community
Will bring tp the ivt't.cntion of the people, in one form or the. other, the services’ rendered by the. YMCA. .
The Rkv. J. W. Golden .will be. the principal speaker Tor the an- núií.l occasion. Rev. Golden returned recently from a trip around >t¡he world/.where lie visited Laüd .aiyd nuüiy ether and saw the YMCA at cause of his training, and world travels,- R-.?v. well prepared to bring a messa (hat will be inspirational, challó: ing and of educational value.
Otbc.r interesting program lu. iures will be witnessed including musical numbers.. Members and friends’of the “Y^ are urged to attend the event whicli is scheduled for one hour-1;'.’ginning at 4 p. in.
Many ol the lo.-.iJ c-h lire lies will use bulletihs furnished by the YMCA lor the order ol their service Suiitlay,
Rust College ChoirThe Rev. Charles W. Guy, Am-
.bassodbi‘-'of ■ tlig.-Baptist JniTS^rinl^ College and Seminary in Hernando,. Miss..: jvill_ present_iL_benufi .t_p.ro— gram for the College featuring the famous, Rusf College Acappello «Choir at F Progressive Baptist Church, 394 Vanbe Avenue. Sunday,v
2 at 3 P. ni. ' ' ' ’ 1The Union Baptist Church Choir
will also participate in th program. Fruit will be given to ill- less fortunate and friends during the program alter which ret regiments will bo served. Rev O Collins Is host minister.
C.
the Holy countries
work. Be- experience Golden is
ge1
Honored By Crime Commission For Capturing Bandit
BY IL C. FISHER
Harvard Offers $3,000 Prize For Book On Religion
,—CAMBRIDGE,-Mass.- Fresi-.cient Nathaji M-;. Fusey -of Harvard has announced that a $3,000 prize will be' awarded to the author ol „the .bfesi book on the history of - re, ig i6fr acccpted-uby-Harvard - Uni- ■ ’ ; versity Press” during the next fquf 1 years. The winning book will be ( published by the Press.
-This is the first of a series of S3.OOJ prize contests to be held e»ej-y four years tor authors of outstanding books in Ilio fields of ’ the natural anti social sciences.
Funds for (he. prizes and tor‘1 publication of thè booki; were provided by Dr. Martyn Paine of New York who; nt his death in 1877, left the biilk of his estalto;-4ti:< trust * lor Harvard. '• ” H1-'.-?
Mass.-.
Chorus Rehearsal■ ftehearsai for singers participate. ing in the Lincoln League mammoth musical program, is scheduled to be held at. Bloomfield Baptist. church. 123 8. Parkway W., announced Dr. W. H Brewster. Sr. director. It will start at 8 p.m
JOHNNIE L. JEFFERSON' :
.1
| Atomic Medical Test For Anemia Patients
i WASHINGTON — A new atomic imedical test is helping 'pi-ovidu bet-’ ' '.r treatment lov patients with
nemia and stomach disorders in- • New Age Federal Savings and laarn | Veteran.:, Adniinistration hospitals/.' Asociatiuii. was honored Just week VA. said Friday.by the St. Louis.Crime Commission * Dr. W. Edward Gbumtvrlahi, - as u man ‘‘whose persona/lierolsni ¡chief, /»f the VA’ uttuniu.’iinedicinc”1 and dedication to civil duty resulted program in Washington, D. C ’ in .the solution of a scries of crimes j said doses of radio-active vitamin and who is deserving of public gratitude and recognition ’’25 YEARS. IN-PRISON
Through Fugtn’s clitoris, a hc1'’- up man, white, was arrested last October and subsequently .sentenced to 25 years in prison.
A series of holdups started bust January wlicn ah- armed robber walkedvinto Fagens office at -127!, W. Easton Avenue, and ran out witli $268. In April, the same white bandit appeared again. This lime lie lock $569.
ST. LOUIS --->ÀNPì —^Robert tor E. Fagen, Secretary-treasure of t.h<‘ a New Age .Federal Savings and Lown |’.’
DAISY
who
MISS GEORGETTE McKINNEY IS COMPLIMENTED ON 16TI1 BIRTHDAY
A large group of te?n*agers enjoyed the food, dancing and tlie party atmosphere when Mr. and ................... McKinney com-
young daughter. ISth. birthday
Tlie party and all
As- thc vbung Manukas High
in f.n, oving the even-
.Mrs. Matthew plimunted their Georgette cm her Frida y even mt- was Gcurgcro * Hr?- dance of her ciose fir mN -tot ended, listing the veune School Juriict
Starts Sunday!January 26
3—Big Day$-3.
PRAYER CHANGES THINGS BY ROSIE WEBB
A program from the headquarter, Youth tor Christ “Whats going on,” on Beale Street (or rather get acquainted program» add nioito friends- Io our lint, names us fol* lows-. Mrs. Reynold. Nates,. G land. Dr. Dr. J. J.ra son.
A group of. youth from Footes home met Sunday Jan. 1-, and of- 1 jeers elected were ' Miss Rithn Bolton Vice sect, stcy surer ris.
Miss Willie hue Walls leader ol the Junior grouj).
Miss Johnnie Louis? Jefferson, from Dixie home was m tjiv headquarters taking her part as usual
M C sum heard their on the Dorsey
president looking’ tormenting Jan. 26.
Mrs. E. J.
i in th? headquarter5 year*. Tr also around and Mrs.
T M. Dobb. Mi. W Mrs. U. Jones, Mr. J. F.W Gray. Mrs. lru Rag- Watson. Robert F Jones, Ware. I. Cohen. A. Bar
ami Dr. Porler
met Sunday Jan. were
, ... pres. -James Nolan -? pres. Mbs Willie Sue WjUls -Miss Virgo Grayer. -- Asst Martha Ann Foster trea-
. and Miss Rubric Mau Hur-
uilh Un*, group, cn- . a inch thrilled them
voices being tape recorded, pinnir*., Jessie
Starts Wednesday! 3 Big Days 3! park Hudson * TARNISHED ANGELSDOROTHY MALONE IHlUIIUIIhu HUMkhV
A DOUBLE BIRTHDAY ANNIVERSARY CELEBRA- | TION—Miss Dorothy Poole, 17, and her brother, Charles, 15, are seen lighting candles on their birthday cake during a party at their home on Raynier St. However, Miss Po’ofe; a junior at Manassas High School, and her br^her, a sophomore at Hamilton, I " / different months..
At the right of the honorees are: Tony Poole, Jr., and Pearlie Mae. On the left, Robert Earl and Melvin Edward Poole.
I Among guests attending the party/ given
I by Mr. and Mrs. Tony Poole, Sr., were:,Henri Sanders, Mattie Crutchett, Annette In
gram, Audrey Davis, Willie Mae Davis, Dorothy Darner, Earnestine Corner, Betty Garner,
•Shirley Hill, Dorothy Hill, Iris Atkins/ Benn Freeman, Jrx Thomas Price, Sylvester Ford, Joe
birthdays occurred TrU.Young, Gov’erqor Johnson, Thurman Hughes, ’ Arvester Hughes, Albert Greer, John Simpson, I and Carol Bledsoe. ___ 1
The house was decorated in festive colors * and delicious food was served.. i
as angaged inas tir y recorded
MarsBrooks. Jrward to his be.4 p. m and his hssiWellington whose* name h: familial atout 5Broun :
Rev.consecration hourstn. daily, They arc the 1:
'•leave but. we areJf there was -a man that answered the call.
Il any man would come after me let him first deny himself and
| oick up a cross and follow me daily : ’hat is our leader. May God bless ■ hem,
| Many sjck are added to oui- list, i and with the powerful prayers from j him that ar brought to yum- homes from the tope recording we know.
will soon be on the1 road to. re-• covery *
been for
1 a:iiit. David i6 years.Earl Harmon’s starts a.t G k.
at: ones to :itisfj»‘d to know
■ But the third time, last ’October j 28, Fagen w a,* ready tor him. His ' car was pul back and as soon as | the robber left, F&geir ran to the I automobile and started to -track him ' down. He continued the pursuit through North St. Louis’ crowded streeLs. he kept his eye on the getaway car until he saw It crash into a building. The holdup man then fled on foot and for a few moments Fagen'lost, the trial. He picked it up again when lie learned 'from a passerby that th armed robber lmd hailed a passing taxicab.
| B-12 are administered to patients \ I mid traced to find whether the- vitamin is absorbed by tlie body. >
The procedure is useful in distinguishing pernicious anenia fronj.c? cither anemia and in planning»- - (routmunt lor patients who haver . had stomach surgery,, he said.
•Dr. Chamberlain s;.dd tracing is done >wit h an instiiunent called a < scintillation counter, which detects... •» racioiact.ivity and is similar to e Geiger count or.
Because ol tlie severity of perni- < iuus anemia, doctors * sometimes
( begin tiuatment for -the disease on ¡.tire basis of symptoms without ex- ' tensive diagnostic tests, Dr. Cham-,..I bur-lain explained.
? 7. yl IH11 »1H DOUBLE ACTION .
>?rr:’K4
COLORS GRAY HAIR81KK CESSES HAIR IN PIACE
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^1
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U. S. ‘Canal pilot charges Egyptians expelled him.
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^¿ATLANTA, Gw — The GalenolCompany, manufacturers for 75 ___________ .years of Dr. FRED Palmer’s Skin Lindsay . Almond. Jr..
■ Whitener, today announced their new gG.v...«*,
^7
J..
Virginias New Governor
Idea! OfficialsWASHINGTON. !>. ' C.—(NNPA)
.-— .President Eisenhower told .his news conference .Wednesday 'that he will remove the Arkansas. . National Guard from duty at ' Central High School in Little Rock as soon as . local officials, believe thev can maintain peace . and dor. • . ■
Th^ rnipstinn came nn when . , Eisenhower - was asked what
. thought was “the wisest next step in1 the Little Rock school situation/’ and- -how soon would he expect to take it. " ■."
‘‘Well. E would hope that the ' local officials in Little Rock could soon express their, confident in-
.. tomtion of . lnainfaining^'or.der and place in their town,’! the President repfied,.. adding:'>|'That having been expressed, I
pf.no reason that — for keeping any of «the National Guard."
“Then does that mean you' are waiting for- word from Gov. (Orval
. E. •)Fanbus®” the reporter asked..“NoZ’J replied _ Mr._ Elsenhower.’ _
’ “I’.ia he has . . the reporter began another question.. “No, no,” interrupted the Presi-
' dent^^vdoi^t tnink that the state5’ _—I -know, in the
local ■ situation—I don’t know that. the state office is the one that is
’”responsible for the police duties ’ and peace and order in that city.I think it probably belongs to the locality.”
Dr.. Fred Palmer's To Introduce Fortified” Skin Whitener Formula
• "MEMPHIS WORLD • Saturday. January 25, 1958 Trent Notes 1! ’ ■ 1‘ Ii8i; » 1 K »blli
CALEB! FROM GHANA — President Eisenhower chats with Wilson Clark Flake, the United States Ambassador io Ghana, during the Tatter's recent courtesy call at the White House. If marked the-first time that Flake had seen the President since his appointment as envoy to Africa's newest Republic one year ago. (iiewspress Photo).
RICHMOND. Va. — (ANP)—J. pledge of flexibility in fighting ______ __ Virginia’s racial mixing in the schools,-but
yy^v^vA, ...____ ___ —governor, took the oath of of- his blunt warning of no compro-Intention* to fortify their formula fipe at, the state capitol January mise or change in his predecessor’s with F.A.7' meaning “Fast Acting . . . 7 days . . . their name for Zlnce Phenolsulonate. In addition, they announced that henceforth all Dr. FRED Palmer’s Skm Whit- ennor will be double strength and" more effestive, faster ever before.
¿Dr. tnED Palmer's encr is a delightful . o_____ _ ,_______mula^used and recommended by never to compromise on opposing.! fasti'diQUs ladies, -and girls for • •many generations. Intended to uu, ™ ....lighten and clear the skin, the on the issue and called forGalenol Co. guarantee users they the support of must be satisfied in 7 days or re- utrn for money back. Now forti- j fied with "F.A.7”, Dr. FRED Pal- , mer’s Skin Whitener, also is claim- ■ ed to refine, enlarged pores, soften blackheads for easier removal., re-!lieve the discomfort of an ’^hjng provjding for the close of any pubskin, and help make the skin look ]jc school in the-state where the younger. ■ admittance of. Negro pupils to a
Dr. FRED Palmer's Skin Whit- .¿hlte school is brought about un- ener, Dr. Fred Palmer's Skin De- dcr the protection of federal light Soap and Dr. Fred Palmer's . troops. ' \
■ Vanishing Cream are »all consistently advertised in “name of pa-
asthma
massive ' resistance program 'left j this campaign statement without, any meaning. Taking up the role played by Thomas B. Stanley whose administration expired Jan.
, lif Almond aims to take over the leadership of the South in its
Almond; who carried the ball, for 'fjgLt against the t government of lhe United states’ on the school
/desegregation issue.1 Former Governors William M. i Tuck, now a member of the House ' of Representatives; and John S. Battle had warm words of praise for. the new governor, but former
: Colgate W. Darden, Jr., who has been critical of the massive resistance program of the Virginia
11 promising to uphold, the constitution of the United States in one breath and in the next spoke in utter defiance of the desegregation decision of the U. S. Supreme Court.
1 Virginia's total and massive resistance to the court decision as state attorney general, promised ; nor-or tr> Anmnrnrriisn nn nnnnsinP" J
‘ the high court -on school desegregation. He pledged a fight to the
other southernstates.
I If Almond’s plan is accepted by '.the General Assembly now in. session’ here, there can be no Little
. Rock situation because the new governor will for Legislation
'FLEXIBILITY PLEDGE• Almond repeated his campaign
Use Dr. Guild's Green Mountain
CIGARETTES ORCO MPOUND
1
I
NEW YORK — A grand t?’al cf $1,934 407 was received by the United Negro College. Fund, during 1957 for its meiriter institutions, W. j. Trent, Jr., executive director, announced today. Tills total includes' contributions for current operating expenses, capital funds and gifts from legacies. '' Contributions to tile Fund’s an nual nation-wide appeal.- to its member colleges meet' c:;’i operating budgets, totalled $1, 620.
Final, gifts, for th? organization s recently concluded capital funds 'eàm^i^i-v to cover ’ building c-.s!s 1 otalled $13,1.1-53. This fIgu -e brt.v ■the grand total raised for caplt funds, since'the start of this sppe •til in 1951; .to $”7.7V onn;
Contributions, from unrestricted legacies and. bequests zOtaL.ed 528,634 in 1957, bringing to $240,- 258 the total amount held in this category to date.. Ln. October 1956, the Fund’s board, of directors voted to place all unrestricted bequest’s in reserve to.?hr?lp insure the economic-stability- ÓT- the-member ' colleges. Whenever necessary these re-
••servS7mpy-u.be .iised-to supplement appropriations to ‘them.'-INCOME AlDg^EXPÉÑSES
At the pfa&éh't time, income from these invested legacies helps
; defray expenses of .the Fund’s' annual appeal.
Commenting • on the figones for 1957, Mr. Trent said:
“There has been a significant increase’in the number, of contributions from individuals throughout the countrÿ;~repr39enting a healthy broadening of the base of our appeal. The total number of contributors in. 19.57. wps 42,659 or ap-. proximately.' 4,500 mpte '"than 1956.
“Gifts from alumnLof UNCF collèges and from Negroes’ throughout 1 the country have contributed substantially to che increase," Mr. Trent said. “Alumni and Negro support has grown both in the amounts donated, and in the -number of contributors.
“In-1957 it is estimated that Negroes contributed $190,000 to the Fund’s campaign, or 11 per cent of the total amount raised," Mr. Trent said. “This represents 22 p:>r cent of the total number of gifts made
j by individuals, cluVs^frateroal. and. other organizations, as distinct from contributions by corporations and foundations.”
leaders, only commented that Alf mond’s speech was ’“interesting.”
Hew Delicious Condensed Food Tablet flakes Underweight Fill Out Fast
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BY NELSON JOSEPHEvery place you turn these days
Mrs. Harold E. Robbins, Under Secretary of Labor J. Ernest Wilkins and William Thompson
Secretary of Labor Janies P. Mitchell and Dr. Will* Player
500 LEADERS ATTEND ANTI-BIAS CONFERENCE - Five hundred ’ member of the newly-creoted Civil Rights' Commission. He is leaders of business, civic, fraternal, professional and social or-. also a member of the President's Committee on Government ganizations were in Washington January 15 when the Presi-T Employment Policy.dent's Committee on Government Contracts held a one-day : ln boftom photo, right,' Vice President Richard Nixon, Chairmeeting to mobilize community support in the National Equal man of ,he President's Committee on Government Contracts, who.
> presided at the sessions greets Hobson Reynolds, Philadelphia.
In bottom photo, right, Vice President Richard Nixon, Chair-
Job Opportunity program.In the top photo, Under Secretary of labor J. Ernest Wil
kins, center, points’aut to Attorney William Thompson, president of the National Bar Association and Kansas City civic and businesswoman, Mrs. Harold E. Robbins one of the exhibits on display at the Willard Hotel session. Mr. Wilkins is a former member of the President’s Cbmmittee and • recently was named a ~C. (lower left:).
civic leader.and an official of the Elks fraternal group.
Secretary of Labor James P. Mitchell,. Vice Chairman of the Committee, discusses some of the issues of ?the conference with Dr. Willa Player, president of Bennett College, Greensboro, N.
I duce but few, • indeed, _ are they i who ’give advice on how to gain.Lot of girls are of the thin type
. and constantly have trouble keep- ’ ing weight up. If you are one of .these underweights and if you-do i not like overeating, you will be glad-to hear of a wonderful delicious condensed food tablet call-
1958 Will Be A Good Year To Build, Magazine SaysNEW YORK — This year of be a shade mnder the high level were very hard to get, even when tions that it is vmually out of the
1958 will be a good year to build .................. ""i that house you’ve been planning¡for these reasons:
I
Wate-On Tablets are scientifically compounded of specially prepared Mono and Di Glycerides in pure thparpeutlc U.S.P. pharma-
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i the borrower was willing to pay picture, what used to’ be looked on as a high rate of interest. In 1958, mortgage-lending institutions will be in a better position to piake» home loans. This will be true of both FftA-insurcd and' non-insUr- ed mortgages."
I Don’t expect tp get a veteran's ' guaranteed loan. As the statute now stands, the legal availability of this kind of financing will end in June lor veterans 01 World War TI. While the program remains in existence for Korean War veterans
. until 1965. it lvs been so hedged ! aboyt with interest rate restric-
reached in 1957.All this, accora ni jr to an arti-
ile in the February issue of HouseBeaTitiful magazine, adds up Io
the best: package that lias been available in some time. It may be better than you can expect a year troni now..
1. Where the first colonial(U. S ) settlement started?
2. On what date and in wha: year was it founded9
What is the namr of the ianr.ist. lake in the etale of Florida?
. When did the first General ■ Assembly of the, United Nations open, and where’’
i. How many copies of the Gettysburg address in Lincoln’s hand are. extant9
6. What is the .. name capital of Turkey1?
7. Who said: "Just praise- a debt, , but flattery is
sent.”8. What is the name of the high
est mountain in North America. .
9. What is its height?1.0. Where Is the Petrified Forest
to be found?(Continued on, Page 5, Col. 8)
SKINNY?
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Are yon faclnc difflcnlt problems? Poor ■ Health? Money or Job Troubles? Vnliap- ; nines«? Drink? Love or Family Troubles? I Would yon like more Happiness, Success i and “Good Foxlune” tn Life? If you have any of these Problems, or others like ■
• friend,-then here Is wonder- lNEWS of a remarkable NEW WAY of
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L Prices of building on the whole will tin lower
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1957
2. Any rise in labor cost is ly to be much more
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3. Builders, and subcontractors will be bidding more closely.
4. MvrCgagc money v.ui be more plentiful and interest rates may
arc just $3.00, and are sold in the guarantee of success or money back.
•STIFF COMPETITIONj Basically, the reason lor this is that the s.lill competition offered by commercial and industrial Construction during the la.Mt few years lor materials, men, and money will be lessened. Home building will have a freer field than it has had — at least since 1954.
| During 1957, . mortgage loans
Boating-Safety UrgedThe National Safe Boating Con-
tercncp has. ended a session with recommend« tiOri lor a nationwide campaign lo_promote safety in recreational- bating.
The conference suggested that the American Red Cross, National Safety Council, United states coast Guard and other interested groups oombine their efforts to . provide standardized basic course on boat ing safety.
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Amber 25^ White 50^. Be sure to.try it!
HAIRDRESSING
0
StatusResponds To Charges 6 Civil Rights
indictment Effort Off
3
T
C?un-
the“I can’t be sure,, but this is
<ge. in:i Mo :d Marrlia’l,
of Appeals insix cases Wp
i L- •5 L:-d
BeardOHy 1 vs D.'tiTh'rrgo:sei of the Legal Defenre Fund argued the first four cases on Wednesday, January 15; the other two were argued the ’ following day by A. p. Tureaud of New Orleans.
T. GCTS A_I-rrTLE2*°^“Smger 1x5107 White' 23' 011,3 Jlei' wedding calm with thehelp of bndogroom, Sammy Davis, Jr.,, following their nuptials al the Sands Hotel in Las Vegas. Standing by to aid Sammy if he needs sq.rnc help am: Donald O'Connor. Harry Bolaionte (best man) Joe E. Lewis (loft to right) and Jack Er.trattcr (right), producer oi the Davis show. (Nows* press rnotoj.
ME
Check Into Powell'sMEMPHIS WORLD • Saturday, January 25, 1958
WASHINGTON — (NNPA) — President Eisenhower indicated Wednesday that he will have a member of the White House staff check with the Justice Department to find out the status of any tax matters involving Representative Adam Clayton Pow- ell, Democrat, of New York.
I ’ ‘ 'Right-wing hate sheets have tlon copied.
The Federal troops were not removed lintll after the November elections. Then Mr. Eisenhower became ill. Neither the southern Republicans nor Mr. Powell seen'the President. .-
been charging that1 the Justice Department dropped efforts to get. an indictment against Nir. Powell in the Ne\y York Federal court district for alleged income tax violations because he switched his
■support to Mr. Eisenhower -in the 1956: Presidential campaign.
At-his news conference’Wednesday Mr.; Eisenhower was asked
■ whether^therc ’Ias any connection between hjs delay. in seeing Mr. Powell and ‘‘the fact, that the Jus-
. tice Department was still investl- • gating- Mr. Powell’s ; income tax
case.” A ■-■•’“I will have to look this one up.”
Mr. Eisenhower replied. “I haven’t heard one word of this since — I dp remember that there was some
_i, attempt made, and I -think a tentative agreement that I was to
- see him.CHICAGO (ANP) Bishops of the African Methócíist Épis- which is in need of a million, per- copol.Church and members of The Brotherhood of that denomi-'‘llaPs-fl million and á half dollars.
. nation composed tof ministers held meetings on adjoining days 'XT need^movide for the ««t time I have heard of the here this week. The Council of Bishop during-hs session. he!d at ^ext C/ ’ “ 7 Copping Chapel, met with the Joint 'Commission composed of , teachers nine bishops and nine-members from the General Board f ___ ..........
The next day. the bishops at at Grant' Memorial Church as the ...some of. the bishops, who have no tended The Brotherhood meeting guests* and out of the welter of. ófficial 'líóme. •
' i speeches"fTinerged
This bid harmony build it it ever- has enjoyed:
! Senior, Bishop Sherman L.1 Greene said he felt the meeting was salutory and had cleared away many misconceptions. A number of important problems are now on their way to solution, he said. ’ •
¡MAY CHANGE QUADRENNIAL MEETING PLACE
j The bishops were concerned said he. felt the meetings were both i about the working of the budget very, healthy. “We got to the • adopted by the General Confer.?- place,” said Bishop Wright, '“wlxere ! ence in Miami two- years ago. It ‘ we can discuss matters frankly
The report should bé sent has ' not. provided enough money without restraint or fear,” he told ,:Unr..^th^„,Qperatioii.i?of .the ^churelx -the^GOO fmeiub^ J
EDITOR’S NOTE: Veterans and tlieir families are asking ihousr 1 ands of questions concerning ■ the | benefits their . Government provides i for them through Veterans Administration. Below are some representative queries. .Fuller information nlay be obtained at any VA office.
Q— I have to take to. physical examination to . reinstate my GI j insurance. Is, there a time limit on ■ sending the examination répoii- to ■ VA? '•■r ' ’ -
’ A— .In iminedlalely..,^Ifian five days, you must submit a statement that you are ' in - as? good health as you were 'when examined. If you delay mare than 31 days, the report'will not be acceptable; you will have to take an-* other examination.
Q— Are “peacetime” veterans entitled to VA hospital, care?
A— Yes, but only if they were discharged for a line-of-dutyk disability or if they are receiving compensation for a service-connected disability.
Q— I am eligible for a VA grant for a “wheelchair house,” brt I already -have purchased a home of my own. Could I use this grant to Pay off my mortgage?
A— Yes. A ^wheelchair housing” grant may bé used to pay off the indebtedness of a home which you already have acquired.
Q— I have a service-connected disability rated-W'’jo per cent. Would- I be entitled tc. extra, ccm-
Mother- Give Your Child AspirinHa"Just As The Doctor Orders'
next Quadrennial Conference,' pay wrni^e thing since- then,’*•....J.. -‘s and covex; college expen-. APPOINfMENTS R^QITESTED"'^ ses, secure .episcopal residences for
and exchange of opinions There are Other confusions a move toward solidarity, which need to be. cleared ■ up. a fair to restore peace and meeting with the ¿eneral confer
ence committee to discuss the change in place of meeting from Los Angeles to a more centrally located area for the 1960 .meeting and .the eveii more .pressing question of whether an extra session of the. general conference might be convened to handle some, of these matters which only a ’ general conference can solve’
Bishop R. R. Wright, Jr., president of the Council of Bishops,
in the connection and to greater strength than
i ** ■’' ENUG.Ur“'-Nigeria --^¿jt-ANP)Tile Premier ” of Eastern Nigeria, Dr. the Hoh. NnamdlAzIllwe?: ad-
; dressed the 27th Annual Confer- i ence of the Nigerian- Union of i Teachers a-t-the-Donnls Memorial
■! School Hal! In Onltsa on Tuesday. | The Conference considered. mat-
.JAs? relating to . the ^well-being -of1 t,eaehcrs^and examlned-vtiie-j'qucs- I tiqrf'tof'.'d'felgnation of teaching In
, -Nigeria as a .profession under the revised constitution, so' as to ensure national standards through
■ national certification -of teachers, i Also discussed was the invita
tion from the headquarters of the
Sunday School Lesson
Cases Argued In Federal Courts -,
NEW YORK — S‘x cases involving tlie constitution; 1 rights of Negroes were argutxl in federal court last week by attorneys for the N. A. A. C. P. Legal Defense and Educational Fund. Four were school cases, one involved transportation ind one recreation. All were on appeal from judgements rendered m favor of Nevrens . . hiring was xbefore the Court
United StatesOrL-aA
After Representative Joel T. Broyhill, Republican, of Virginia, requested an appointment last October for himself and .three other southern Republican Congressmen to see the' President to ask him to withdraw Federal troops from <world Confederation of Organiza- Little Rock, Mr. Powell requested . tions of the Teaching Profession an appointment, to oppose the ‘ ’ * *....................'withdrawal. * . !
At the time, a' White House source • intimated that neither the southern Republicans- nor. Mr. Powell would get to see the President-until the Little Rock sltua- |
in America to the Union to send ¡ delegates to the proposed Afro-Asian educational conference which is - to/be--held in Ceylon
¡next April- *4’ ’
I
WORTHY WAS THERE — William Worthy, Jr., a roppjlqri.gnd - correspondent for the Columbia Broadcasting System, stands in front of the city jail in Shanghai. It was in this jail that Hugh Francis Redmond oi Yonkers, N. Y. was recently visited by his mother. Worthy is one ol three American newsmen who defied the State Dept, ban on entering Red China. (Newspress Photo}.
Patron Tires Of Seeing Dirty School, Paints It
n gain st the officials State Un i v efsit-y. Louisiana Institute -Jétate College: all constitutionality of
...The State University appeals involved three separate suits filed in February J955
,.pf Louisiana .¿^lythwcsjern
ând'.'McN. ese* challenged. thia state., statut? requiring, ‘student« ^seeking admittance to. the instituions to secure a certificate of eligibility and another terminating the' employment of. any public school official who did anything which would lead to- integration in any state supported educational institution. The oases were consolidated for trial and on April 15, 1956, a federal district, court held these laws unconstitutional. The college officials appealed the decision in October 1956.
WASHINGTON. D. C.'— It was •an ayerage-..xLiy,.,.ln December . when 39-year-old Georgt’-T,-Smith walked into. Harrison E’.imienta^y School here replete with bijcki?ts;- brushes, paint and. helpers and began giving the place ,.a fare withfresh paint. ' . *
In a few days the -building was spa rkl Ing i n bright, g re on a n d buf f colors -\vibh_ neitL.^Window -• trim. Everyone was happy and np’ques-
t.u’»?d for painting until next yrar. j Said John Riecks, assistant ! school suiperintendent in .charge ,oi i buildings and grounds, “We flgur- i cd tihe Job would cost .between
$.1,000 ancl .$1,*200. It was a. good j::b, but we can’t pay for it.”- '•
W.hy did he do it? ''B?caus»j I'm crazy I guess.’.’. Smith replied. He just: couldn't stand the sdh^ol's appearance; his third grade daughter.
! is enrolled.
I U1JI Bulliv! J I num1 'eadenship available that is seldom í ■ »*««va _■ u v«««utilized in most . churches. The ■ . . ..-torganizers who organize merely for Mtfl lA/inifìF the sake of taking charge .do little, illlU vV Ulivi livVl in comparison with those who’serve !•because they feel they iire serving ’ A f 1 M" f LGod and who organize to live.and ' AI|Pf NlYAn B OlìJAli work for the Christian life day'hl J “■*'5 VvlIlQUand day out. .
To get—its—job done the^rhUrch. must have both organization and leadership. The leadership of the earliest Christians was "fiartly the leadership of . a direct relationship with Jesus and this gave thq de- ciplcs and early ■ followers a great drive and moral sense of reality.-
Today we must have well organize ed churches (and they orga.nized better than churches-) but we must
’ organized leadership church structures. The is the key and it is through leadership that church organization really derives its driving power.FAITH AND CHURCH
As our faith increases oui" service. to church and fellow men be- i comes mòre effective, And, like- Í wise, the more we go into church work and sendee, the. more we^,understand that calling and -the more we want to do. . . ,
The right combination is proper 1 . J „organization, taking advantage of peader, and Wil am Knowland, Re-
- the leaders of the Christiinmé and 'Wblican rf California. Sènate ml- that, exists within a churcli. For nority "leader.the church is the way of, God and. During their stay; the publisher^ those who believe, or ivno would j were. guest? of the Capital Press teach others to believe. ‘ are still Olub at a dinner meeting address-
- the leaders of the Christia.n lif, and ed by Meade. Alcorn, chairman, Re- thelr community, and- leaders in . publican National Committee.pié long effort to bring jesús” * **“ *teaching jilt ó every corner of the world. ■
1. Jamestown. Virginia2. May 13. 1G07.3. Okeechobee.4. January 10, 1946, m London.5. Five. ..6. Ankara,,7. Samuel .Jojihson: The Rambler» “Sept. 10; 1751. •;
8. Mount McKinley.9. 1,939319 ft.10. Arizona.
WASHINGTON — ’Editors -andpublishers or ^ome of’We mtlmVs, ^¥,.riVllv v iluu C1UUUU-U.leading weekly newspapers met in ^OpS aske^. Appearance of^a'heM'^ Everybody had praise fur. Smith’s n- , um- nv rn a nmT »»«nnnn« ss •«» uig-,-‘’*i>ecorating ’ by George' T. job. However, fols future plans exlast weekend to discuss publishing Smith, 13'09 Clifton .Street, NW.’.’. elude any more unofficial assign-ar iwo-day trade conference' Ifefb sign,"■‘’’Decorating ' by George' T. job. However, his future plans ex |nc‘ U'Ortlrnnri ♦ rx riic^llcc , 1x1 i c-la l.-icr - ... _ . ____ _ — -
(Problems and round out plans for their annual June convention to be held‘Tn Philadelphia.
William O. Walker, publisher of the Cleveland Call and Post and President of the National Newspaper Publishers Association, was chairman of the meeting.
A number of the editors. and publishers were among , the 500 or more civic, fraternal, business and social leaders from over the country who attended the one - day meeting called by Vice President Nixon to plan a National Equal Job OpTnrbnri|t'V Program.CALL ON SENATORSA committee was also named from the newspaper owners to call on
I Senators Lvndon Johnson, Democrat- of Texas, Senate majority
not an organization run from above, by one or ¿"Tew alltpowerful men who were ostensibly acting in the name of God. J • •
It is imperative in following the procedure followed by the earliest, Christians, of fellowship, demo-^ ctacy and rule from below in church organization, that some carcfuily-pkinacd system be’ followed. The church must combine unity and variety and (togetherness and individuality.
The church must bind together tho.se who believe and yet allow them enough freedom to work, for truth and work-in Jesus’ name to better the lot of1 their fellow men as best they can. But however talented its individual members are. the church must be organized efficiently or it will not accomplish, what it might.LIFE MUST HELP OTHERS'TMe can live ■‘a good life, so to speak, and not. be véry convincing
_______ _ others in the living of it -r and. and organized, in the name ol thus not contribute what,he might
' ~ have. A church can sitand for thei Christian life, and what is moral I and right, but it must be organized 1 and exert its strength and in- ¡ fluence to be wlia.t the church of j .the early Christians was.
Your church may not utilize all of tlie individual skills and talents
' that are possessed by members I wV.hin there is much
THE CHURCH ORGANIZES FOR SERVICE
International- Sunday School Lesson, for. 9Rth, 1958,MEMORY SELECTION: “Take heed to yourselves and to all the flock, in which the Ho’y Spirit has made you guardians, to 'feed the Church of the Lord which he obtained with his own blood. - iAc^ 28.)
LESSON TEXT: Acts 6:1-7 Romans 12: 3-8 Timothy 3;5: 17-22 ’ ■ ' " •
are often the early also have in these leadership
sparked inqulr.es. T^he findings: ! ments.Smith painted the. school on his i Incidentally, unofficial or not, 6wn, total cost $700. School offici-¡.pay or no pay, Smith, a Negro, als knew. nothing about it. In fact, | got a page'one picture story in a Harrison was not officially sched- I leading Washington daily.
JUVENILE DELINQUENCYDamage to Florida crops is hea
vy in recent freeze.
November’s (tola store sales 1.8 per centyabove 1056 Inveì.
By the NNPA NEWS SERVICE- influence In the field of placement A study of the efforts of private • They have assisted those ag’encle?
> ”x xx 1 zx <— I— fix.-. n ,'zxrt . ,/x,t iit*! |whose primary function is to supply the best qualified candidate
. for Jobs, extending themselves b\ I finding places for youths who may not be well qualified but are 1;
zx f .. 4 .■'■Vx i nnolxln Hmm t
Institute.Here in Liberia he was shown
About ithe woman rubber planter,,. Mrs. Ellen G. Cobper, who is widely acquainted In the United States.
agencies In the area of you employment shows that they have produced an impact upon ■ many young persons who might have failed and thereby contributed to the ■ swelling ranks of delinquent youth In the United States. , ...
A groat' deal of variation is not- ' nQ0d of -a jab to enable them ed in the nature of -the private (senagencies serving youth in the field | ‘ ~of employment. Some have been established to meet, a definite need In helping'unfortunate litdlvlrtuals ■who..find it difficult to. survive In a competitive employment system.
The Society for tlis Prevention of Crime, Inc., New York City, has iavocatlonalfoundationbureau.lt ,>>,□■, ■hasjr placement, .director who de-I MONROVIA - (ANP) - Calvir votes fuH time to counseling and | L Mc-Kissack, senior partner in th- helping delinquent youth or those firm of McKlssack- and McKassacl: who am not adjusted in' the, teen- of Nashville, Tenn., has been a rc age group. cent visitor to Libeila. The hea
^x— ...» K-x-n«. i.n—'s ,’no Hirnz-tor • of an ai*chi-.-—ctuml and contiact.iir firm expressed himself as impress
. cd with opportunities in Liberia ar. ' said he was studying the possibili' of expanding the operations of 1’
in a,_ .. mak-it is concerned with the
This is tpc fourth, lesson series on ¿lié church in the ing and organization of -the church. There
• áre two schools of thought, many shades of thinking in
^tween, on this question.There are those who think
the church shou'd be organized 1 and run from above, that is by men, by humans, and there are those who believe it should be run
I
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; Jesus,, but by and from below. By J using tlie. word below, we refer to
• j he democratic characteristics of i the church, decisions by congrega- ' tions. .elections and other demo-
GIRLS«—WOMEN 1« years to 50 years. For -the past 10 years at oar Lonr Island. New York, address. We have placed bouseworkers in and around' the New York area in positions with rood salary, , »t,- UriFood food and rooms. Transportation ad- cratlC procedui-S, 1101X1 the glOUnd vanced for those with satisfactory references, TRY. US NOW. New address:
Boulevard Employment Service 15 Campbell Building 122 F.lrhth Street Aurusta. Ga.
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roots, from the believers themselves, ' so to speak.
In Acts, 'chapter J. we see that ¡ an apostle was elected 'to take the 'place of Judas Iscariot.” ..One , hundred and twenty persons took • part in the voting.” Therefore, ■ from the beginning, the church was
These comments arc based on outlines of the International Sunday School Lessons, copyrighted by the International Council of Religious Education, and used by permission.)
. According "to Mr: Walker, the workshop was-fruibful to- most of the publishers. Several subjects under discussion were placed- on the agenda for further study during the June convention.
Two airlines to join In global routing.
Contractor Calvin Kissack visits Liberia Planter
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On the other hand, the director , of an arclii.ectural and contraCtai of vocational placement for the r‘ J ’Osborn Association, Inc., another ; New York agency, reports that, . whereas their objective is to assist released prisoners and delinquents, only five per cent of their caseload Is in dealing with thore in the juvehile-age KrnUP^ SIMILAR OBJECTIVES
The Vocational Advisory Service, Inc., also a New York agency similar objectives. I' ‘ ,.placement director, reports, that many teen-agers • arc processed through life services of that agency. - -
The Federation of Emplojineiit and Guidance Sendee, Inc., New York City, has made its facilities available in a cooperative .effort with the Stale' employment, service and the New York City school system.
This pattern of desirable cooperation with other private and all public agencies concerned with the
' problem of youth employment is typical o.r tlie.agencies which have been—cstablislied specifically to meet the needs of those who find competition difficult.
These agencies have had a vast
Moroline quickly soothes and company either to Liberia, Ghai or Nigeria.
-V 25o V .
Court bars N. M. U. picketing in interunion dispute.
60c at druggists
Í.
| LOSING NO TIME—Willis Moys, colorful Giant outfielder, - appears a bit startled asheis tied in knots by Mrs. Mays, shortly
after the couple set up housekeeping in their . Sah’Francisco home. Mrs. Mays had some very definite ideas about the chores
■; Willie will: be doing tit home from now on.» (Newspress Photo).
pensatioit- tfcbaugejtf my dspend- J cuts? ■’
A— No. The only veterans en- -—titled to additional compensation
for dependents are those with i service-connected disabilities rated af 50 n»*r rpnf rn«-«.
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¿ ' MEMPHIS WORLD • Saturday,' January, 25
' OPERATION . COMEBACK
Mrs. Gwendolyn Randolph. Gary, Ind;, was Stricken with polio September 1956. She had four children (ages 8,. 7, 4, and H-months) drill was in the sixth month of pregnancy. None of the family had Salk vaccine, thanks to the. March of Dimes, Mrs. Randolph escaped imprisonment of her iron lung. She wears leg brace to support her right leg. But she is back home now caring for her five childien, all of whom now have had Salk, vaccine. Join the Marclrof Dimes TODAY. . t
HOMEMAKER HINTS
Junior Sophisticates Collection Spring 1958
Anne Klein has been • quoted heretofore as liking the easy waistline look of. the sweater on tire’ young figure. Expressed in her Spring., collection lor Junior'.Sophisticates;. the’ liking takes shtfpe in the straight chemise, the hip-, hugging shill, and tire equally hip-hugging overblouse
The overblouse, niostiy three easy ¿ways- gives the name to woof and crepe dresses, reappears under the cardigan and boxily- buttoned jackets- of suits,-and perfects the .. all-of-a-co.lor freshness of coat customes. Outstanding is a. low-belted street. length cardigan ..coat of Shetland wool with a matcl^ skirt and silk coverblduse in' sunny '-pumpkin. ■ Plea t? ecl skirts sivish under IhiT overblouses of some dresses and other, riim dresses arc one-piece but are banded at the hiplihe for a .two- piece effect.
“Dobles* •this collection, •big bows and the sailor’s knot, of •many necklines arc differently tied.. Navy arid beiges take turns
I with bright red" j,checks, and I plaids,. and white: ccenats ar j both Starched and soft-as-silk.
Diversity, in the chemise is il i lustra ted by a couple, of charmer,s [in.particular, one in navy flannel i with a middy neckline bibbed in j [while, and. the other.".nightshirt '
-¡chemise of crisp, worsted .tweed. [ [yoked in .back. The more shapely.',’ '[shift-is introduced’ in i£d'flannel1. | as the new Junior Sophisticates ■ dress, tapering down-the figure in
i front but cocoon-bloused to the hipline’in back. Also shown in red
' flannel' is the jumper shift cos- jtume with a white blouse under
. its cardigan jacket, and, in navy . | flannel, the shift coat-dress, fast- i ,i ened low and ’ double-breated in . j brass. ’ .
¡wet.[return to mother
. .-I- Tlierei a move'a foot to bring ; mother back .into . the family ! ¡Mahy new home designs open the
1957 POLIO VICTIMS
iedin k not -conquered. Thousands of little children and a&WS”’” were stricken with polio last year. Untiball susceptible persons (people under 40) got; their Salk vaccine shots, polio will continue
are practically nil in 'to cripple. More than 30,000,000 .persons under 40 have not re- e and ecen the. airy ceivejl; any Salk vaccine.'Thc four children above were stricken.
in Atlanta, Gii. .bjCmn July 31, 1957 and August 22, 1957. Get your riolio shots ¡NOW. The 1958 March of Dimes closes Jan. 31. Giyclgcnerously. 1
Write yemr problem to ELEANOR, 210 Auburn Avenue,. N.t Atlanta, Ga. •/’ ,
If you have cr friend worth loving, • . ’Love him. Yes, and let him knowThat you love him, ere life's evening Tinge his brow with sunset glow. .Why should good words ne'er be said Of a friend—till he is dead? .If you see the hot tears falling From a brother's .weeping eyes Share them and by kindly sharing
" Own .yoyr kinship in the ..skies...... .. ...,v1 . . .. —Author Unknown,
I Sammy Davis Jr. To ' Play Lead Role In'Anna Lucasta' Film
HOLLYWOOD — (ANP) r H: Uy wo:'J, multiple - talëntecKs’am- my Davis, Jr.,‘ is' reported In Have l.'.’cn chosen to play thc lead rale in tile “Anna Lueasta". film, soon
"o be produced.San-.mj ¡will. play, tne role' of
Danny, th; part originally, played li'v the late Canada Lee In -tli^.fa- ni=’,’s ■’Bre.idv.ay play? The tema’.’ lead will b; played by Er.thn. Kitt,
■'min;; v.ill start, April 29 under spx’Darship óf Lcfesrldge
.lens.-
Living, Room With Luxurious Look '
When starting off in a- home: accumulating furniturel>iece by piece seems, to be tile rule of thumb for' the nctvly married couples;
As shown in the spring issue of .Blide anth-Home magazine, newlyweds plan their home right down to tile nick-knacks months' before lite -wedding and take great in choosing each particular that will fit into their living
I to give It a’Tuxurious look. ■ They kito'w just what they , the. mice range suited to their so- ealleit “budget” and buy •furnisli-
I ings for the future. Hotncplanning | if. fun for newlyweds . and some tenth and twenty year anniversary
¡celebrators could take some hints (from the newer bride's.decorating j schemes. A basic, rule of the new- ' ' er brides is to surround tliem- iselves with luxury? '■ ’! And carrying put this theme i Bride'and Home has phosen as its ’ spring issue high light a luxurious i looking all white living . room —
■ | wplls, ceiling and .carpets. Into |iliis. maple furniture was introduced to use a slightly off-beat tradi- t ional setting. . . . •. -
pains
FIRST LADY MODELS SPRING BONNET-Mrs. Dwight D. Eisen- bower poses in her new spring hat for the news photographers at the White House, It is made up of large yellow blossoms with a fancy, white feather trim, (International SouTidphqto)
If. housekeeping gets you down . it. Ure tlié first few weeks to' help ..a;/week • and once a •v.eei:. Take ¡ smooth and perfect the schedule of -your- time, lire reason is quite into a pattern that will - be con- likely Zack of orgánizaíion. A hap- , genial to the entire family.
-Jlazard—routihe is -death—i-o—the--—The^new-plan should enable the-! homemaker. ; homemaker to have' more leisure •
time for outside activities or rest. ■ If it doesn't do this, it .is not a
success. .... , •!Another important tiling to re
member i¿ that a schedule ‘ be .clastic. . *■it around the occurrences of every- : of the family activities while at- day lite. . ;• tending to her chores’..
; MUDROOM GOES TO TOWN¡ The “mudroom” — a . common > appendage to a farm home -- lias i its place in city living, too. During 1 periods of slush, snow ’or mud a
4 special .place for raincoats, i rubbers or- overshoes saves land tear-on the. rugs and ¡ nates endless mopping jobs, enclosed breezeway or back can easily be-turned into-a
•room if. the f’ I with wat erproof, : ramie tile.
• The first step is to make a.time . schedule for doing the routine,' things about the home' that must be done each • day, several times; a-week and once a week. Take your time, for this is the founda- , lion of the over-all plan. Meals ': and .their preparation are a major ,
' item. Homecleaning and laundryanother. ,■..•[
Try to have breaklast, lunch and | dinner at an appointed hour each i day if it is »at all possible. If you , are not lucky enough to .have good help,, keep the menus simple but , nourishing. There are any num- i her of.good books and articles writ- I
. ten for leading magazines-’ tha< : will help you along this line.
After you have completed schedule for yqyV.hpmc. work
aal
DEAR ELEANOR:My brother recently married a
lovely .girl and they luive come to kitchen, where mother •spends-most^lir_^$£^ow’Jl'T^0_:^v®’—-
My husband and i have a number of nice friends who have exerted themselves to entertain the young couple and seemed to' like them very much a£ first but as time. g< between friends.
I am because
; of her working, day, onto the liv- I ■ing room, family room and other J areas . of the home. Instead of I
¡“walling of” mom. these new de-' signs, which''often feature color-'j
-- -- lui easv-to-clean ceramic tile f is i.in: a schedule must I countertops' and'work centers, let
It should ue made .to I the . lady of the house be a .part I
Homemaker HintsBABY’S CLEAN ASA WHISTLE
Keeping babv clean as a whis-< tie. and squeeling happy', is a daily
■ job tor mother, but natural exu- '. berance in the bath often leads to ¡messy floors; That's why having 'loors of durable ceramic tile in
¡bathrooms is ‘important. Ceramic tile is waterproof and prevents dangerous slips while' the floor is
boots, wear
elimi- An
porch mud-
Hoors are surfaced easy-tò-clean ce-
i
I- !
I
;oes on I detect a coolness them and some of.‘our
:
of the opinion that it er my relatives are not too
dependable about little things. 11 they - accept an—-invitation and something comes up that- they would' rather do. they excuse themselves al the last minute. They are vary generous in many ways but it is usually when jt doesn’t demand a saci-illce of any kind.
Should I point out to my relatives that they arc losing friends because of this trail?
cent years) I have greatly reduced .the amount of sugar consumed by our family. This article read: as follows^—Onc-of— the important properties of.vitamin B. Thiamine, is -destroyed by eating refined white sugar. Thiamine is one of the most important vitamins ‘ for good health. It is very necessary for. proper growth, good appetite, and smooth functioning of Use digestive tract. It plays a very important part in nerve health and it is often called the “Mor^ vita min« ,:,
Our systems are robbed of thiamine by white sugar, white flqiiiv cereals, au<l
of subtle blue,, pale-down arorige and complementary greens set against.- a light chocolate background, was used for the sofa and draperies.
—rThe—brilliance ~of~ : ,a solid: ~~tan~ gerine: chair, a white milk glass lamp and brass accessories ’here and there added a dash of color and elegance to .this interesting and- inviting room.
TO CLOSE CAMP IN MOThe Army says it •. is placing
Fort Crowder, Mo... and the disciplinary barracks there on inac; live ¿tat.us by January 31.
NORTH LITTLE ROCK, Ark. — publicly stated is. aimed at•• INAACP.
(ANP) — Mir- Bird.e Williams, i immediately alter sentence, was- pYesiclent of the local NAACP chap^ I paSged •williams appealed the
ueeision to Pulaski circuit court. He was fined a similar -amount for__ a similar offense, on Dec.. 5.
Mrs.. Williams was found guilty ‘ I for not having fuihished- a list of | meiiibers and contributors. Slip Iliad furnished financial and ■ all i other data required. In her defense, she argued that the city had no
’ legal authority to demand the in-
1er, was fined $28.25 in municipal court, here last week after beingfound . guilty of violating a" city" ordinance, .patterned, after .'one authored by Atty.. Gen. Bruce Ben- • nett, which the state official has
About 625 military personnel have been stationed there and 300 civilians employed. • .................. v
The Army said the barracks arc' formation,, that to force her to do being closed' because of reduced!so would violate-her constitutional need for s.udh establishments. ' rights, . ■
1
4NSWEK:No doubt, your relatives are
people who have always done as thej pleased and rationalize that what they do is' the proper
!• thing to do..It is very easy to persuade our
selves that what we are doing' I is the right thing and it is
very easy to be generous in promising to take a job if we have no compunctiou about leaving it for someone else to •do at the last minute.
Duty should be accepted as? a. part qf one's religion and although we nrake many mistakes and arc imperfect in many ways, we should always try to do what we think is the best
_and what we truly consider as ! our duty.’ A respect for duty . j and dependability must be j
■ taught during early child hood, 'j For it is very hard for one who |
! has not learned their taliie * through the yea*s to realize i
! their importance.1 I do think that you should i j- tactfully remind your brother i j. and his wife that one does not
always go out to please ones ; self but also to please the host |
i or hostess.
such foods, as synthetic sugar,
certain prepared many other... rc-
^UncdZ-processciU foods. ’ - ‘If you eat carbohydrates in
nMural forms, you do nut suffer‘any thiamine deficiency for the simple reason that the thiamine to digest the sugar or starch is present in the natural /oods.
An example is black strap molasses which contains a great deal of natural sugar. It is also rich in thiamine and a number of other B vitamliis.
In order to handle refined whit« sugar at all, the. body , must, take thiamine from . storage places in the body such as the liver, kidney and heart. This means that if you cat »
> miich white sugar every day you are almost bound to suffer from thiamine deficiency.
If you happen to be a heart case such eating habits aFe. .cold suicide. Any doctor will
• fell you how important vitamin B is to.heart health.
: Pie is one of the most popular desserts, especially with the male members of the family. When
making pie be .sure your erust is light, and flaky: a good crust insures full appreciation for the filling and, a good pic brightens up the dullest dinner.
BANGKOK,Thailand— (INS, — The Thailand government said today Marshall Sarit .Thanarat lead er of the military grrnnt which, dlr
-port’d premier 'PibuT?Sbhggrain 'last year, would leave for' Washington on January 24. Sarit will luive. a medical checkup at Walter Reed Hospital belor,. btsmuing' a long vl; sit to tile II. S. The Mur.diull is also cspocted to lour countries in Eurolie aial Asia before returniug home.
sliced canned fresh peaches or almost any other canned or fresh fruit. Blend together 1 cup of sugar (for fresh fruit) lb. cup lor canned lruit.. Add 1 cup of thick, freshly soured cream and mix • with ■ 4 tablespoons of «flour. Pour over the fruit. Arrange strips
i of pastry ’ lattice lashion over , the pie. Sprinkle generously with su-
' gar and cinnamon. Bake in anoven 500 degrees for 15 minutes#'
■ then, reduce the.heat to 350 degrees j and continue cooking until firmand nicely browned. Gool before-
i serving.
I
Huney Peach Cobbler6 peaches’2 teaspoon cinnamonJ4 cup. of honey2 teaspoons butter . ”. ’Prepare peaches (or 'Use canned
lruit). Place in bottom of individual baking dishes, add the honey, sprinkle with cinnamon and dot with butter.
i
C.£
I
Ití-.ort
it
Sour Cream Fruit PieFill an unbaked pie crust with
I DEAR ELEANOR:I I rpad recently in a. certain health i magazine tliat refined white sugar I is not good for one’s health ¡Was actually classified. a; of drug. ’Wlml do you Lhipk ol j as a part of uur daily diet?
Mrs. R. R’.
2
• •ik dress I
help picrt-rr pouo.tco^
HAVENTrGOT ANYTH:,N&QN >
¡Security Payments ; Estimated In Pamphlet j
A new^pamphlet which explains ! how to estimate .your social secuilty |
I payments is available ,at the local ¡ social security district office here in| ' Atlanta, at 275 Peachtree Street. N. 1 E. There is nor charge for the pain-] i phlet and it may be obtained by ¡writing or phoning the local office] i and asking for pamphlet Number BO. | | The new’pamphlet has been issued t in response to. the many requests ‘ received by social security office re- ; regarding’the method of figuring i social security payments. Xnstruc- s lions are given in siinple ■ orderly I fashion and . illustrative examples
Jelly Fie2 cups milk
eggs5 tablespoons instaiit tapioca •4 teaspoons sugarS. teaspoon salt . .’••■ teaspoon vanillaJi- cup shredded cocoanutScald milk in a double boiler,
add tapioca, mixed with sugar and salt. Cook until tapioca is transparent. Remove from fire and add well beaten egg yolks. Return to double boiler and cook until mixture thickens. Add cocoanut and vanilla. Cool.. Fili baked pie shell with mixture and spread a layer of jelly about’n inch thick. Fold 2 tablespoons of sugar in well
• beaten egg whites.’ Spread over pie. Brown in oven and serve cold.
and tables are provided. An estimate of how much would 1«? payable to you and your dependents, if you.were now retirement age and retired, and also how much would be payab'c to ybur family in the event cl your death at this time can be made by use of lais pam-
ÔCT/ÇOAÀÊ^
str t THINK We'KB T -V i-FT VENDAD/') IVANNA' WOK AT <
SOMETHING? )
I ¿C*i«NWTA¿ FeATU£e<
'N' I'M COW' HCM&, r X-BREtZYZ WB'LL A^ETLirr WORKrf? R\'£, EEEEZV
'OGAT Z pm ON VEXCEPT-UMCLE UJ9J ‘-Alt? HE THE COKNEE of ) NEVER TOUGHS THE STUFF-'
■ ELM, - A’CAAY WE COIEGEL QUITE A PIT, ECEEZYN
ANSWER:What I think of it should not
matter from a view point of logic- for I :ùn no-doctor, ll.ut facts arc facts. .
I too read a similar article and ail along my rc-
THATKISS MADE ME LONG FOR ANOTHER - BUT HE^ OUT OF TOWN, NOW / "
I w«> n.itionalh kimuu uiuncn gel lugethcr to iniio- <lmi Nca Pci Instant Nonl.it lh\ Milk uiih i lashion creation ilispiii’it by Pci Milk Cbm- • pain's sp.t; klr and vitality i- hex er age
I "Uisv Pioihio dell) Pel 11»mu?.economist models a tor- mJ din-iig ind dancing, gown ■ ___ _•jcaird by .lie Morrison,: Compativ for the ¿ast five years (rif'.hii ■ N.r>,. 'i 1 4 • 1 ’ ■ - - -• les I gliOH------- ;---r
Mjs ’’ ■•’■lliii»*- emerald' giecn. with a ' ll» l)Um »A same malqmib i.la
■ skirt dips from div w:iis< front to the bent ! :
< 4goKv ’»n
h sihii sheath. <cr<kiri of. ::;e e «¡raped qver-
‘ < -4ii lhe front to the hem ,?nt • .« ih-7 back and reveals :r ••-ni;-i.:.,i lining delicately traced v. .: h hli.e chantilly lace. To add imic of»interest.. the designer has caught up the overskirt at the
' - waist with a brilliant • rhinestone pin. The velvet’ pumps arc
inlaid ui’li jcuvl-like squares ol emerald green and blue satin.
New Pvt Inslani was icvenih mhoduccd nationally and is ;> new *-spa,i Me and vitality beverage, high in pi olein and low in calories with a flavor niore ie- ■ freshing than fresh whole milk.'
Mrs Prothro ’ has been a home economist with PerMilk
1 and. received her Mastery De-1 glee trom Columbia University . She has appeared on numerous
radio -and television programs ■ukI has conducted cooking' schools- and demonstrations ior I’ci Milk Company and leading nalioual publications ihiûnghôui the count V.
Mis. Moiiison was^boin in ; Montréal and has studied with I famous French' and Italian de-
sigiicrs. Studios of Verlie Orig- I inals, Inc; are located at ? West , Sfith Street in New York
ì 4.
Melrose Sinks Hamilton, 54-35; BTW Captures Loop Win No. 57Fla. A&M Sports Leaders To Polio Still Attend 100% Wrong Jamboree
•n ^?r0e W' J3*6' Jr" °nd Coach Jake GaitherWl head the delegation from Florida A&M University which wiilconyerge in’Atlanta next week for the 23rd annual 100 Per Cent Wrong Club Jamboree. _ .Other staffers of the national
championship Rattlers expected Me Robert (Pete) Griffin, Hansel Tookes, Edward Olglesby, Macon Williams and Costa Kittles; public relations director Charles J. Smith, III, D. C. Colling'ton, sports Information director, photographer Horace Jones Jr., and team captain James, Williams. . j
Dr. Gore, Coach Gaither, the ’ reaching staff and Capt.' Williams will join in the three-day athletic ; tribute which win open Thursday ‘ evening, January 30 at 6:ob p. m., | with a screening of th<> Orange • Blossom Classic game between Florida.'A&M: and Maryland. State. The Rattlers Won that memorable encounter 27-21 and climaxed their •57 campaign with a 10-0-0 record
Notables from throughout Dixie will join the FAMU honorees here and will-be honored following the film showing with a kickoff party , at th8 Recreation Room of the Atlanta Life Insurance Comp-my at 8:30 p. m., the .evening of Jan. 30 Hosts for the occasion will be the membership of the 100 Per Cent Wrong Chib. . ..
Henry Aaron, star centerfielder of the Milwaukee Braves, and Jim Brown, rookie star of the Cleveland Browns, will head the delegation nt ‘/In persori’^Siars to be cited.
, Citations will Be made to Cleveland Conch Paul Brown and rookie qftartei-back star Milt Plum, now
~in~tlre Army. Coach Brown-wilHe-- ceive the "Pioneer Award” which honors the memory of A. F. Herndon, founder of -the Atlanta Life Insurance Company:,
j
■ FlOrida ’A&M will receive the W. A. Scott ‘ il^riMemor ial national IchampffilHIp totbalri.. -trophy, which is awarded in respect to the founder of-the Atlanta Daily World.
Wiley, College’s' -Ercd T. Lon^ is coach of the y.ear.-I¿rí Lyles. University of Louisville star, back trackman Elias Gilbert of . Winston -Salem, Althea Gibson,- global tennis queen, and Dr. Charles A. Ray, along with Ray Dumont of the National Ba .'»eball Congress will be honored.
Winners in the 100 Per- Cent Wrong .Club doping contest are:
First. . pLace,, ¡Marion Jackson, Hammonton Park; all-wool fabric suit, given by Anthony’s -Men’s Wear, 91 Peachtree. Street. ;
Second place, Joseph Daniels, Helbros 17-jewel Yellow Gold Men’s wrist watch, given by Walter R Thomas Jewelers, Atlanta.
Third .place, Joel W. Smith, sports coat made of imported fabric, tailored by Hart, Schaffner and; Marx, donated by Zackry’s, Inc., 87 Peachtree Street, N. E. .
Fourth place, Floyd McDay, a hunting outfit including Duxbak coats, pants and . wool , shirt, presented by King’s Hardware, 53 Peachtree St. N. E.
Most. correct, scores, Floyd Mc- Dtiy, Philco. 3-itube table, model radio, gray colpr .witljv. Illuminated dial and large speaker, donated by Mather Brothers’ Board and Hun- -ter-streetST—---------- 7—.
Lowest margin of error, a "Beaver 20” hat. styled by Robley, given by Robley Hat Company, 5G Walton Street,. N., W.
Threat For29 MillionTh? danger of paralytac polio at
tacks in substantial numbers will continue to ’exist so’ long as millions’ uf Americans of susceptible age fail to get. Salk sliots, spokesmen for the March of Dimes warn.
Although 80.000.009 persons have been vaccinated, 29,000.000 persons or 27 per cent of the 109,000,000 up to 40 years old had received no Salk protection near year’s end.
March of Dimes officials also, reported that only 35,000,000—or 32 per coin of polio’s most potential target—had availed themselves of the lull three-shot series that provides 90 ,pei- cent immunity.WINDING IIP CAMPAIGN •
The/ March of Dimes |s now winding up its' month-long campaign here and across the country to raisc funds needed in 1958 for the care and rehabilitation'of thousands of polio patients.
Urging all the unvaéciiiatod — and the partly vaccinated—to complete the three-riiot. series is also
; ah important part of the drive.■ "If wè had any rtsmhijaons
about/the vaccine’s, .power, the 1957 decline in new polio cases preUy wèir dispels them.’’ one spokesman said. "Thejp were about 7.500 cases last :-ycat, which compares, -with 15,400 the year before and a 32,266 yearly average between 1952-56.
"\Vs?.. can still .knock out new pp- 110 if xVe use- available- supplies, of vaccine naw' If unprotepted peo-r pie only knew of the physical suf- f.ering and personal tragedies polio might, have in store, they wouldn’t, hesitate.”
MEMPHIS WORLD
scene of Nat King Cole, portraying W. C. Handy, 'the father of the"ST. LOUIS BLUES"Ruby Dee and Juano Hernandez chatting be- I blues.—(Photo by Harry Levelte-^ANP). tween "takes'- on the Paramount lot. Cole is I
Lauderdale High School Wins Twin Cage Game
Nat King ColeTo Portray Handy
By IttlFlIS BLAIRHOLLYWOOD — Not King Coltv
wlio portrays W. C. Handy ■inT’.ira-r
- '
Warriors Too Tough
Senators Aide Reports Insult By Real Estate Clerk
the
Washington: — ianp) — Miss Ruth Dailey, member of. the staff of Senator Pat McNamara, -last week protested against the insult she., received in. the Lustine
‘Realty Company office when inquiring about renting a house.-
Miss Dailey ■ claimed ( that she called Mr. Lustine before, going to the realty office and explained that two other girls, who are employed on Capitol Hill .and herself were Interested in. renting a house. She pointed, out that "the very nature of our jobs make it not only desirable but necessary for us td have a good and. convenient home."
Lustine was quite agreeable, she said .and told her that he had about 30 such locations. He invited her (o come in and discuss it and he' would let her have the keys so she could look at. the places.
When she went to the office, ac-
companied by Miss' Carruthers from | Senator. Henning's office, they met a ban-age of insults from a woman ■ whom they presumed to be Mrs. Lostine. She said they were prohibited from seeing a salesman and .were given no advice. Site quoted the woman as saying, "All the listings are on trie board. I don't have the „lime to. go over all of them with you. and if you don’t like my attitude, there's the front door.” .
Miss Dailey pointed out that this i company advertises 'property in each of the daily papers under the marking “colored.”- In her protest to the Real Estate Commission, the Capitol employee, stated that, she did not feel' that’ “people with--this kind of attitude should be allowed to advertise for Negro trade - or any trade.”
South Improving Economic Study
CLEVELAND, Ohio. — The industrial growth of southern United States has been so spectacular during the past twelve years that today the South ranks as a market well ahead of the West, and second only to. the Notth, Recording to; a. new economic study of the metals industry made for American Society for Metals.
This growth which had its start during the recent war is such that in 1956 the South was 37.5 per cent as big as the North in the total of its manufacturing output.
The survey, published in booklet form, covers 23 southern states having 1,127,814 metalworking employees says William H. Eisenman, national secretary of the 30,000- member metals . science society which sponsored the approisal.
The report points ■ out that apr proximately 49 per cent of all United States manufacturing is confined to the metals industries. Of this figure, the South accounts
¿£?11>7.3 per "cent as much value Md^fas the North. On the saihe •scale? the West registers 111.4 per- ctnr. Survey conclusions have been determined by use of employee totals and trends.
Based on l956 Standard Industrial Classification figures of the U. S. Department of Commerce, used Widely for collecting and present* rig economic statistics, "growth Patterns for the South and West compared with the North are almost fantastic.”
The study, as released by the American Society for Metals, was made by Warwick 8. Carpenter, Market Analyst and Pacific Coast Manager of the Magazine_“Sales Management.”
It was undertaken to provide economic information for the Metal Society which is sponsoring a new two-million dollar Southwestern Metal Exposition, May 12- LL 1958, in Dallas. Texas.
The Metal Society is the producer, of two other major industrial shows, one the National Metal Ex- pcsition and- Congress, now iii its
Reveals40th year, - the second, the Western "Metal Show" which last March staged Us 10th exposition in Eos Angeles. ■' With the Southwestern Metal Exposition in May, the southwest wiil be the third major industrial area to be served by the Society.. Some 40.000 spectators are expected. The Society is also considering produc-
Wh'at Every Veteran Should . Know
lAnatller Economy Act is on ■way Arid Its seems trial the onlyplace tile government can find to. cuT i's the benefits to veterans
.■and. their .dependents. The Wall St. Jounral recently states.
the articles said "the president and his aides are preparing for the •Herculean task o-f trying to chi' ■back that— pclitcal "untouchable"
-known* as .veteran's benefit. .They •are fully aware the attempt -may run info stony opposition.-
The. most, significant and most controversial’proposal will deal with pensions said the article. The ad- nilnlstra-tton ■ will recommend that •the veterans’ pension program be coordinated with the Social Security
Í setup. Any Social Security payments due the ex-serviceman would be deducted from any veteran’s pension program lie.,may have coming. Now social security are not deducted from
i pensions.■, The article went on ao say "The principals certainly will touch off •a bitter fight, on Capital Hill. Veterans’ group already arc preparing, a propaganda barrage to turn loose against lift recommendations."
Thq wholc story is riot veterans pensions - - - ¡some 113,000 ex- servicemen are patients in .veterans' hospital - - - .188.000 are getting out-patient care.
“The U. S- is becoming more and (more' a nation of veterans" said the article. The Bradley Commis- ■sbln said that hi 1940 ex-servicemen and their families were Only
.11 per cent of Obe population. Now ■they equal more-th'an 45' per cent and by 1956 will total 99 million and make up 52 per cent of population. ,
The Lauderdale High School Basketball Tennis won a double header Saturday night from the Harrison High School of Blytheville Ark.
The boys scores were L. H. S. 69 to Harrison High 56. The girls scores ■were J_. H. S. 56 to. Harrison High 36. '
William Springfield led the boys ■with 21 points, Johnnie Springfield 14 points, Grover - I1WS-12-.points,. Tcmniy Roy Sanders 12 points,
' Andrew C Durham 5 points-, Charles Timplp 3 points. R. V. Andrews 2 points.
Annie Conner led the girls with 24. ppini^^fariha Robinson 7 points
Ann Gibson 8- points, Mamie Dill Eíkmi'2 points and Annie P. Bradford 2 points. .
•Th? . Lauderdale High Sriiool’si .'basketbulb team won a double header fieni Frazier High of Cov-I ingtan. Tenn., January ' 16. The
’boys’ score was L. H. S. 55, Frazier 52. The Girls score-were L. TI. S. 42 to Frazier 30. Amile Conner led
ri&ie-gii-is w-l-th-23.-Martha Robinson 18, Annie Pearl Bradford G. Ann Gibson 1. William Springfield letl the’boys .with- 27. points, Johnny Springfield. 10, Andrew Durham !k Tdmmy Ray Sanders 5. Grover iron 4 Coariies S. E. and 1. D Moore.
Cleveland Browns Lose QB To University Of
payments veterans’
the
Basketball Scores
ping n Southeastern Metal Show7 in 11960. Agan. the rigorous growth
I
1
ol' the southern metals industry lies behind this fourth possible exposition.
Mr. Carpenter reports that the South for manufacturing value added is currently the .leader over the West by 51 per cent.-despite advances made in the West, up to 1954. Values are about equally divided between the southeast and southwestern sections of the South.
It is Mr. Carpenter’s finding that the South (entire 23 state areal has some 50 per cent potential for growth for the metal industries .(han the West.
"iii almost ariysanalysis, the entire South will show a volume of total manufacturing more than twice, and sometimes nearly four times that of the West,-and in some cases more than half as much as the North. The Southwest runs almost neck and neck with the West, with sometimes one and sometimes, the othdr leading,” said Mr. carpenter.
.North - 11.229.994 employees or 100 per cent.. .-
DAIRY SURPLUS BUYINGUncle Sam is buying nearly
en per cent more 'surplus dairy produats under a firm price-sup- P^rt program this, marketing year than last-. •
An .Agriculture Department port. pu£ , total purchases of butter, cheese and dried milk since April 1, start of the current mar-, ketiiig year, at 809,000,000 pounds This compared with ’760,000,000 pounds in the like period' a year ago.
sev
ré-
SIAC SCORESFLORIDA A&Mbethune cookman 82Bluefield state beckley, w. va.
South --37.5 per cent; Southeast.f - 23.9 per cent; Southwest - 13.6 , per cent; West - 14.2 per cent.
“It’s not necessary to understand the rather technical working of the Growth Index method of comparison to note the .growing position of the South and the Southwest io the overall picture. It has great potentials that arc daly being realized,” Mr. Elsenman (jointed out. • 0.‘ The 23 states - comprising the South in this American-Society for Metals study are Delaware, Maryland. Virginia and D. C., West Virginia. North Carolina, South Carolina. Georgia, Florida Kentucky, Tennessee, Alabama, Mississippi, Arkansas Louisiana.. Oklahoma. Texas. Missouri. Nebraska,’ Kansas, Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona and Utah..
Some BOO - concerns have already reserved booth space for the Southwestern
’ By BOB GLASSCHICAGO—(INS) — Tommy O’
Connell, who led the Cleveland ¡Browns to the Eastern division profess ional footoil crowi^Jast season, announced -hjs retirement, as an active player Tuesday and accepted án assistant coaching post at Illinois. .
The ’26-year-old O’Connell, who holds. 16 passing records, said he made up his mind several .d^ys ago to go to Illinois but did. not, write Coach Paul Brown about his decision until Sunday.
■ However, Brown said in Cleveland ■that- he never heard from O’Connell but was pot surprisedt the move. Brown added:
"O-’Connel! apparently saw ’ the handwriting on the wall .because ot the caliber of quarterbacks we have coming tip this season.”' Brown added ‘ that Tommy came
up at the end of the season and expressed yoncern whether or not‘he- would be ablento make the club next year ...” -
O’Connell succeeds Cinick. Purvis who has accepted a backfield post at Baylor Universjty in Waco-,
IllkTex. O'Connell will assume his new duties on February 15. -
O’Connell said he took Jr is family l’ife into consideration iiCtrCcepting ” the Illinois ¡post, whichjwjis ofiWcii several days. ago. -f
He explained:
“I have two little b^oys and a [• third child on the way’; I -want to start spend as much time with them and film, playing pro ball would mean 1 - would be away most of the summer.”! then
O’Connell said he felt he had at composer
linois
least “three more g'OcU years" left as a player bill decided the job* at Illinois ••presented too good an opportunity.”
O’Connell said he merely VTote Brown a, letter and asked that he be retired. O’Connell said he only was exercusing his prerogative.
O’Connell signed with the Chicago Bears - after leaving Illinois bul spent two years in the Navy. When he returned froin^mdce, the Bears let hhn gn nnd me-wax- signed by Brown ill 1956.
O’Corinell said most of his duties probably, will be ‘‘rdhchipg the quarterbacks.”
Air Force Committee MakingResearch, Development Study
RY MELVIN GREER ‘Cats’ beanpole center, Lonnie But-Thd Red Devils of .Douglass Flop- ler, paced his teammates to this
ped miserably in their attempt to triumph by dumping in 24 points curtail Booker T. Washington’s while Kermit Stepter got 16 for fabulous .winning streak, and the winless Hamilton which is cur- Wariiors stretched it to 57 Prep, rtintly undergoing its worst sea- League victorious in a row Tues- son in the history of the school, lay night at Douglass. The score (On? explanation for Hamilton’s vas 79 to 58. the worst loop beat- poor showing is that its most valuing heretofore league-leading able player. K. C. Chandler, is in- Douglassllcr. have suffered this eligible to play on the team.) session. " . • ■ •
In blasting lhe Red Devils out W1’C“ Melrose goes against of their own grin, three of the Washington at Melrose, Frank Wnrriors’ players together, made Lewis will reportedly try every as- many points as the entire tlic^ In the book to derail Bill Douglass team. Charlie Fobbs hit Fowlkes’ seemingly invincible cage 26. JUihn "Pete” Gray totaled 21. ,,|ub- Tb,-'i ls Conch Lewis’ third Rick M'risqti threw in 11, and these Tear al the Orange Mound school, tallies added together equaled the and lu’ 11:,s been successful In . final score (52), made by the heating every other high school Douglass squad. ’ . .
The Red Devils, poor.devils, were ’‘posters are third of biting obyiously frightened by BTW's dust in every winning streak and didn’t^, place Warriors, but one constituent in the double figure scoring. Tlmt was Jack Gibson with 15 points. NOT SINCE 195?
The triumph gave the hustling Warriors undisputed possession of the No. 1 position in conference play with a- 4-0. record. They h:iv£. not been‘beaten in five years. Their last defeat came at the hands of Hamilton way back in 1952. Since that, tragedy,, have come along to win 57 consecutive. league victories.
White Douglass was being scattered, Frank Lewis’ Melrose Gol'd-
^en Wildcats were busily preparing for their Jan, 29 crack nt BTW's
whiles» Hamilton which is cur-
When
i but Booker Washington, roosters are third of bi
contest with
Melrose the , the
they
« « « »:«Melrose (54) Hamilton (35)F — Gunn 12 Payne .2F ~ Hussey 4 Williams 2c ■— ‘ Butler. 24 Purnell 2G — Chin Davis 5 ..... Winters 13G — Tiller 4 ... ... . Stepter 16Substitutes: Melrose — Brooks 5,Estes Julian, Flynn. ..Hamilton:Freeman, Ingram, Terrell, Booth.Warriors (79) Red »evils (58)F — Mason 11 James 8F — Oliver 5 Boyd 4G — Gray 21 C. Lowe 8G - Fobbs 26 O .Lowe 8G — 5ÍcKÍssac 6 Gibson 15
Substitutes— Warriors: Williams victory skein in- a 54-35 slaughter 8. Echols,' l’Cppers^; Douglass: -of the Hamilton Wildcats. The , Neal 10, Nason 3. Manning 2.
mount's "St. Louis Blues.” has known the famed composer for 16 years, and. oddly enough, it was nt their first mfdttog that-the two jazz exponents discussed the possibility of. a film, based on Handy’s life ’
Cole recalled that- first meeting as he tlressed for- the Hand.v role on the sound stage, ,
‘"Nothing wha t even’ cam e of t he pipppsiil was back then in 1942^ and certainly I woiddn’t have been so presumptions as to suggest myself for (lie Handy role, but liere I inn, finally doing it," he said with obvious satisfaction bordering on elation. .• "The first time I met Mr. Handy was- when we played -a?-belief it together.. I remember bringing up a movie a.bout his life, but he thought a story about a Negip wouldn't ho accepted bv-everybody.
"Then a little over a year agot. I went East for. thc testimonial dinner on his 84th birthday and we discussed it again. He surprised mé by saying- he had been a fan
..of n?ine for years and would be delighted to have me play him in the movie. You can’t imagine how proud I felt when he said that.”
Cole said, however, that by (die ¡•timr‘ he returned to Hollywood to
some action on a Handy it. .Already had been conceiv-
1 ■ ed by Producer Robert Smith’, who asked him to port ray the
as a young man, betwi-.m the ages of 20 and 40;
As .for'evoking many of Handy’s- youthful characteristics and inan- .nerisms. Cole said "I never knew | 'him as a young man. of course, so I don’t know how he moved or | acted. T’vc only known him since , lie got blind, ¿lit llm. elements of I his. life are in Ahe script and we < followed them ciosely • ¡
■T think people may be surprised at how little of Nat Cole there will be in the movie. We arc sticking, to. 8 strong story, with many of Mr. Handy’s songs coming in as an integral pari of the dramatic action, like the time he got. conned out of his first blues song for $50 by a man who went on to make a fortune from it.”
There are 17 Handy compositions . in the picture and some of them are repeated as they are sung va-
■ riously by Cole, Eariha Kitt, Pcail Bailey. Ella Fitzgerald and Mahalla
• Jackson. Other leading performers ' are Cab Calloway. Ruby Dee and ! Juana Hernandez, and instrumen- I talists Barney Bigaxd. Red Callender, Teddy Buckner. Len Young and George Washington.
Handy’s best known .song-, "St.• Louis Blues," from Which the film | gets its name, is played four timesand-gets full symphonic jmeienta- •tion in a climactic scene.
I Cole and Miss Kitt singing in | and duct
First Lady, Dr. White Named To Post For Heart Fund
Mm. Dwight. D. Eisenhower will serve-as Honorary-Chairman of the 1958 national IIenrt--Fund campaign and Dr. Paul Dudley White ot Boston will serve as Honorary Co-Chairman.’
i The appointment of the ; First Lady and the • President’s heart consultant, as campaign aides was announced today by dearies. Perry McCormick Baltimore industrialist, who is National Cariipaign Chairman for the fund chive to be conducted throughout, the nation
. by .the American Heart Association- ’ and its affiliates dm-ing the month
of February. U’he 195« Heart Fund drive with cormnnera.te- the tenth anniversary of the American Heart Association as a voluntary. health agency. . • , .■ i
Mrs. Eisenhower served as a na- 1 t ional sponsors for the lari: Heart i Fund drive and has given her sup- j iront- to the campaign on numerous occasions. In accepting his appoint- , ment as Honorary Co-Chairman to { serve with Mrs. Eisenhower, Dr. ! White, a past President, and found": er of the American Heart Associa- |
j (ion, said, said: ;j “During “• Its first décade, as -n voluntary health agency-, the American Heart. Association has forged a great, partnership of the medical
I profession, th? scientists and the I public, to help conquer diseases of ¡ ■ the heart and blood vessels, (he i i leading cause of death and dlsg- > ¡ bility in our nation today.’ Vohint- ( ary citizen actions from which the Heart Association draws its streng- ¡ th, is a particular characteristic of our democracy. Through the*
a-esearch, edu'cation and community service programs of the Heart Association, iii'illyidiuil citizens ivre glviri an opporliinity. to take posi- t.lvti action in many practical ways against, a dtseaserthat so closely affects the lives drill happiness of. every family.
"Thc .piii'tnershjp of the ntedl- cal_pi»fessibri .and''the public, and yiÉMslrçnigUi of Voluntary support. nre,„viütli for .the advancement, of scientific ’ research which during the past ten years has scored dra- niatic achievements in the prevention and treatment, of. ctirdfovas- cular diseases. It' is reasonable to prophesy that new and significant gains will be attained’In the decade ahead. Every additional resource
I that can be put into this effort, in ' terms of public, support and lri terms of scientific brainpower, will
I help speed the day of victory” —Dr. White has long been regard-
. cd as oiw o-t the'nation's outstanding cardiologists and Is President i of the; International Society of i Cardiology. A founder of the American' Hent Association in 1922, he ivmains active In its program, par-‘7 iictllitiiy in- the field of cardiac rehabilitation. In 1950, Dr. White received the. Gold Heart Award of •the Amei'cinn Hearit Association.
! He was n recipient of the Heart j Association's first Albert Lasker A- I word in 1953-He was given d H’o- I ward W lllai'.i.’slee Award by the 1 Association In 1956 for his efforts in : informing the public about diseases Inf lhe heart and-circulation.---— . - I The American Heart Association was incorporated as a professional medical society in 1924 and was reorganized as a voluntary health agency in 1948, admitting lay leaders to membership on its governing bodies for the first time.
Seek To Conquer Malaria
NEW YORK (ANP) —,The world scourge of Malaria is being attacked and eventual’y • can be. conquered according to an address delivered by Prof. _ George Macdonald director of the Ross institute ol Tropical Hygiene and professor ol tropical medicine in the University of London. Great progress in overcoming the disease during the last ten years hae been made, he said.
Malaria is present in all except j i the polar continents. The USA andi . Canada have suffered from -it al-|
hough late-y it has only been' known in the South of the USA. I Africa has suffered more, however,} than any other continent. Certain i characteristics of the prevalent an- I upholes led to extreme transmis-l ron of the disease. The African has I
, ufieied partly by direct .effects fj> rif.toied principally in the children among whom there has been a
.htoh morality. The attack against J • i ii? mosquito by digging• out their;
breeding places • and the use ot ‘ .-.vrethrum products made largely fr~m petroleum has been a brilliant , .uc-cess. in Africa it is estimated ">2 million peep e are. expected to
UAW Is Bargaining Agent For Aircraft Plant At Trenton
DETROIT—<ANP)— The United Automobile Workers • have been certified as collective bargaining agent for seme 400 employes of Flight Enterprises, near-T-renton, N. J., Leonard Woodcock, UAW Vice president and director, of the UAW’s Aircraft Department announced .Wednesday^ The aircraft installation plant is located at McGuire Air . Force Base.
The NLRB erection was ; held Tuesday. The . NLRB final tally showed: for UAW 315: Teamsters: 20; and for no Union 64.
s■lions which could lead to-increased effectiveness. Dr. Stevcr is the Associate Dean of Engineering al. the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and is also Vice Chairman of the Scientific. Advisory Board to the Chief; Of Staff of the Air Force.
Other committee members in- ? pluc]P: Mr^wK-nuet-^Arulianibault, ■ Stewart-Warner Curporallòh ■ Dr;
W. R. Lovelace^ II; Lovelace Foundation for Medical Educational Rp- sparcli; Dr. C.lifford T. Morgan.
.Priyate Consultant in Psychology; ¡.Prof. Courtland D. Perkins,, Dept.of Aeron :i utica 1 Engineering — Princeton University; ■ Mr. Perry Pratt, Pratt & Whitney Aircraft Division,, qf United Aircraft Corporation: Dean Rqlph A. Sawyer, Univèrsi!y of Michigan, School oi Graduate Studes; and Dr. T. F. Walkowkz, Laurence S. Rockefeller Associates.
An Ad Hoc Research and Development. Committee, informally known as the Slever Committee, Ls studying research and development activities within the Air Force, it was ¿announced today.
Dr.H. Guyford^ SLever, former Chief Scientist Qf_j£e U,_S_. Air, Force, will head the committed which was created in November to evaluate • Air Fore»? organization, functions, policies and procedures as- they relate to research and development and make recommenda-
Charges
Steel mills expect a quiet quarter.
Fatal Shooting
with solo
Bid For Freedom1 FREETOWN. S.eu.i Lioi.-. — (ANP)—A- territa-y which v?as.
rijiLUihi- io provide a hzmc on the J African continent for freed slaves after th-' abslition ^pf .slavery, • is
j ceJebn’line its 1 rich anniversary as i a British Crown Critr.y.i The Colony is Sierra-Leone, (he ¡capital.of which is.Free’?wn. It or- ' ;gi,n.ited in th? sal° and cession of a portion of land by “Kin?’’7 Naim* bana . and his subordinate chiefs to Captain Jplvi Ta-y’or in 1788 on behalf of the "free? community ol’ settlers, their lr?irs and successors, lately arrived from England, and , h^ve"pass'■<£ under the protection *u~ r'“s ;4ish Government.”
The set:lament w*as ricans rescued 'tom and also for AfricuJts reputriat.d
. Nr-th America. The territory
-ON-to mo biles Furniture
'ripmeni • -Signature Yr-u '.-ill like our prompt
irior-ili-, service, courteous 'rawntol o.-.d riesiro to help.
Open Thursday And c.tJ,.. Until RDM
CLOSED ALL DAY SATURDAY
The work of earlier committees, formed in 1919 by the- Scien’ifl'- Advisory Hoard and the' Ail’ Uni- serslty at the request of the Air Force, resulted in the consolidation of research and development • activities within the Air Force. At that time, Dr. Louts Ridenour headed
I lhe group oi civilian specialists
ATLANTA. GEORGIA — (SNS) A 47-yyar-old taxi ariver Tuesday'
vas formally charged with the fa- ; ,1 shooting cf a 23-year-old woman.
The Fulton County ..Grand Jury indicted William H. Gilbert, of 449 Western Avenut and charged him 0[ civilian specialistswith murder. The time bill charged which recommended the creation
ithii of Deputy Chief of -------------- ........ . -'staff for Development as a mem-
Mrs. Reese was allegedly killed i,el. of ult Ab- Staff apd Hie Air a.-,'the taxi went into Capitol Square R._se.v. o'j and Development Combi doivhtcwn Atlanta: mand to coordinate Air Force re
Gilbert, who was reportedly a search.close acquaintance of Mrs. Reese. in naming the Stevcr Commit-,
._____ . was quoted-as saying Mrs. Reese tee, General Thomas D. While,support for their efforts in hdpTJwas shot during a struggle for jibs- Chief of Staff, announced that ing them give their best service in ' session of the pistol which Gilbert' they will be. studying .thoroughly connection with their duties as ware. The bullet struck- the woman ad. phases of Air Force., .research sports officials. - | in the neck, police reported. and development, visiting iiistafia-
RAYMOND H. KEMP, genial director of athletics at Tennessee A. and I. State Umversity, was ski- him u.;t shootin Mrs,.joan RM.se,.iof , ’ si nally honored, recently by members i ,,r.oon J?,_n r.nuwv 18 io. .of tiie Mid-Western Officials Assa- • or^ ^’1” fS Med
i elation, tn? citing him for his. i sportsmanship and cooperation be-■ yond all normal call of duty, the officials . expressed aieir appreciation for. his understandlnR, sympathetic and frequently, out-spoken
I
. additions by various con- ■•cessions from the native chi-.fs, and jin January 1, 1808 became a Crown I Colony.' I
Referring t this, a .message ’ toi Sierra_Leoj?.n published to-uay irom j j Mr. Alan Lennox Boyd, says: Dur- I ing the century and a haif^that ,
, the association be-jof the Bri- yle p K aJ1(j sierra Leone !
has been happy and harmonious. From the xtmt.Si r:a Leon?’which ..v.un-’d its presen4 fmm 60 yvai’s ago. was found'd oiyrine principle •T freedom from oppression
“This is a principal to be cherished as. much . to-day as ever in the past and I know,that it is cherished in Sierra Leone.
used for Af- slave ships
ions' and bases Ihrouchoui the i-onntry before completing their work.
I
FINANCE CO.152 MADISON . JA. 5-7611
HOME OWNED -HOME OPERATED .
1 I
vMjwrB MEMPHIS WORLD JÖÄÖäw 55; LWS
HE NEWSThfc South’s Oldest and Leading Colored Semi-Weekly Newspaper
“Written In The Stars”
and non-partisan, printing news unbiasedly and supporting those things by time, told of hoppy days, a brighter future and encourage- Ti Hal i Ai’fìc In . Vsa rtf I as ♦ a w V zv lie mo fl re nVsrl nntincinrr ih/iCfl iltlrsrrs? *
A dirnig «no oeiermmed Leader smp Gan Break Their Grip
it believes to be of interest to its readers and opposing those things against the interest of its readers;
It was late in the afternoon when this ordinary-looking man, accompanied by a newspaper editor, walked slowly into the office.
Instead of hardship and toil, the lines etched in his face
Entered in the Post Office at Memphis, Tenn, as second-class mail under the Act of Congress, March 1. 1870
■niADDF.US T. STOKES ........ ... ...... -__ ______ Managing EditorMBS. ROSA BROWN BRACY .. ___ - Public Relations and Advertising
' ’ • ~~ SUBSCRIPTION RATES:Year $5.00 — 6 Months $3.Of — 3 Months S1.50 (In Advance)
The MEMPHIS WORLD is an independent newspaper —• non-sectarian
Published bv MEMPHIS WORLD PUBLISHING CO.Every WEDNESDAY and SATUP.DAY at 546 BEALE — Ph. JA. G-4O3O
Member ot SCOTT NEWSPAPER SYNDICATE W. A. Scott, II. Founder: C. A. Scott, General Manager
ASSURE GROUPS
IGNORANCE
BT WILLIAM GORDO1, FEAR
nrc tnvitwt to t» present.After the completion of business,
the ladlps and titeir husbands retired to the dining room where Mrs. Cotton served a delightful buffet supper. Chief conversation topic was the unusual Imported cheese which ¡brought forth many “Oh’s and Ah’s” from all those present.
Veterans Comer
We Are Ghailengetl To Use All Our ManpowerThe recent Minority Community Resources Conference in
Washington pointed up one of the continuing sorespots of the^ ""“'niartibh’S failure to use all of its manpower in domestic and inter-
hational affairs. In his greeting to the group, called together by Vice President Nixon, affable President Eisenhower noted: "The expanding application of science is bringing new opportunities and responsibilities to our nation. The maintenance of our security and our standard of living depends upon the full use of the highest capabilities of all our people." . . i i
Speaking to the same conference. Secretary of Labor JamqsMitchell declared: . .so long as we in, this country permitourselves to ruffer prejudice, to waste the talents and facilities and ingenuity that we have, we are not<going to express the
. leadership we should-ex press.to the developing nations of the • world.-;'' Arid unless we express that leadership, we wrll find that the void that we leave will be filled by the Communists. . . More basically and more realistically, the rest of the world is challenging us on how well we express democracy, as to how well we in America can order .ourselves so that all men and women have equal opportunity in this land of ours."
As speaker after speaker pointed out in the one-day meeting, every American must face the challenge of creating a cli- i ’mate of non-discrimination where the best may be put into and exacted from all our manpower, regardless of' the color of skin,, race or religion. Otherwise, America will lose the race to more’ Sputniks and to time itself.
The Southern Christian Leadership Conference Pushes Registration Movement
Outstanding among the meritorious ëvents of thè season is the herculean registration ‘drive massed by^ thé Southern
, Christian Leaderskip Conference. Some twenty cities in ten southern states will stage public meetings on Wednesday P. M-, February 12, in cooperation with the registration and voting drive. The„.Kev. Martin Luther King, Jr., president of thq confer
ai ence,7made this announcement. ; ' ;The- movement .will stage, under the banner of "The Cru
sade for Citizenship," this emphasis meant for "The franchise of a cjtizen rights—not a privilege." ’
One of the meetings is scheduled for Atlanta and occurring on that historic .day, February 12, which has a powerful meaning in the annals of this country, it will be significant in a bountiful harvest. -■
Throügh the office here, the conference will function as a service agency to help further registration and voting, in communities where such efforts ar^ already underway.
That the racial group give as much meaning as possible to the recently enacted civil rights bill' would be the watchword of the occasion. • k
Just now we are engaged in a drive to secure the registration of those eligibles within our confines. Every day there are‘time 18-year-olds who are entitled to register. _schools, the^ industries and. the churches. They all can be easily chopping chores, reached through these agencies and the movement staged for tb’c ° ’
> the all-out enlistment of these fellow citizens will be'amply met.We are doubly proud of this movement and its fine inten
tions; its able leader Dr. M. L. King, Jr., already well and widely acclaimed as a leader without strings and a great spirit without rancor, we hope will encounter on this front no obstacle in the cause in which the masses are intensely interested.
ment.This wa? my first time to meet the famous poet and his
torian, Carl Sandburg, the outstanding authority on Abraham Lincoln. At the time, he was looking into the future with advice of what the changes will bring. '
Now, 80, he is still looking into the future. A few days ago he sat before a packed house, some 1,800 persons in the University of Illinois Auditorium reading his poems and playing his guitar. He was direct with his answers on the present emergency.
He admitted that the Reds have brought us humiliation and shame, but declared "it ought not to have happened."
He Was critical of the current crop of young Americans in our schools and colleges who take "snap courses and stay away from mathematics, chemistry and biology." He gave no special place for television and movies. For a long time, historian Sandburg has been critical of our use of such media. Actually, he believes Americans have become a population of "softies." Everybody has to have an automobile to make the distance of the next block. Too much of our education is "canned," and our entertainment is worse.
. Like most great men Carl Sandburg sees far beyond the bounds of ■ segregation.
He touched on Little Rock and warned of continuous mi- . gration of Negroes out of the South to escape segregation. As g one who has known the South, he speaks with firm authority. He is sympathetic with much of the twisted concepts of racism and is hurt like others of his level -when there are setbacks. But like all great men of his time and other-generations,-he is blessed with_g.perception that cuts through the hatred, the prejudices and artificial concepts of race, as his books on Lincoln will testify. He helps to“make his position clearer when he says:
'There will be struggles in Northern cities, but integration is written in the stars."
IQuick and easy suppers are in ' delicious tosse•. dsalad and refreshorder. ■ for -busy hoxnumakers. JYe| we want--to-feel.. they are nourish-' ing and satisfying to husky appetites.
FOlir ConVICted In I Mrs., Marvel (Irene) Cotton, former(Continued from . Page Ope) . i president.
pointed out oqq of the il defend- i. After her Installation, Mrs. WU- ants and identified him as on^ of Hams appointed several other offt- Gruell’s-a&sailahts. -She declared: cers. and committee ’chairmen in-
“That’s the one who said, ‘we came here to get the Nigger .
The; defendants are charged with conspiracy in house-breaking and in .assaulting Cruell on July 21'.
Eight state witnesses were paraded before the court Tuesday. The case, is expected to go to the jury today. None of the defendants is expected to be called on to testify.
(Frances) Bargeron; Treasurer, . Committee. Mrs. Floyd •Cawthpn.- '----’ ' —---- «-x»-- • ’* - - . I
eluding: Program Committee. Mrs. ,j 'C. A. (Ernestine) Slnunpeft; Contact Committee, Mrs. J. A. (Lee . Ethel) DeWalt; Chaplain, Mrs. J.
Summerville; and MembershipA.
ni ing. milk.-■ CALIFORNIA HASH
2 .tablespoon» salad oil1 pound ground beef1 (8 ounce) can kidney beans 1-4 cup instant minced onion cup finely-chooped raw onion2 cups cooked rice 2 teaspoons cHC: .powder .1 teaspoon .salt1-2 cup finely-chopped green
pepper .1-4 pound slices cneddar cheese Heal salad oil. in a large, skillet.
Add beef; cook until it loses its pinkness. Drain and rinse kidney
; beans. Add beans and all remaining ingredients except cheese to beef. Cook slowly 5 minutes,’ stirring occasionally. Top with cheese slices. -''.Cover, turn heat low, and let stand. 10 minutes or until cheese
__ _____ __________ melts. Serve hot from skillet. Makes with hot buttered eorn muffins, a ic servings.
This hash can be turned’ out within 20 to 25
■minutes served savory from the ■ skillet. ' Canned kidney i
beans, rice cheese and green. . pep- I pers mingle with chili powder and onion in th/s meal-in-a-skiilet
Using instantLeola Gammonminced onion
to a
and is hot and
‘directlyor
1
;
cuts preparation , , ______ minimum as
These are in? the ' you’ll have no onion-peeling and .If you want to
j this a really scrumptous meal, serve your “California Hash”
Administration than in .all of the j!!^r partyintervening years between the h‘s prov^j^t,' °r C1V^ nghts and
SURVIVAL IS NOT ENOUGH
GOP Chief Wants (Continued From Page One)
paper publishers, reporters and others engaged in the allied fields, attending.- the dinner at Phyllis Wheatley YWCA were told that
- more solid progress has been made in the field of civil rights during the five years of the Elsenhower
Emancipation Proclamation of 1863 toJ 1953.
American Negroes overwhelmingly supported th^ Republican- party from Lincoln’s time to the mid- 1930’s. declared Alcorn. During the past 20 years they have drifted toward the Democratic party but "I fipnyl believe that the Negro vote is Coming home— returning to the banner of the o ’
Montgomery, Alabama(Continued from Page One)
of local Negroes to ride public buses without segregation in light of (he Montgomery bus case.
The speaker is referred, to as the -New Negro" — born and. educated in the south, but like thousands of others of his race coming out of schools and colleges, must fight to remove the shackles that prevent them from living In their ’own hometowns in an atmosphere of dignity and -self-respect.
Rev. Abernathy, pastor of a Baptist church in Montgomery, is a member of Alpha Kappa Delta Honor fraternity and Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity, American Soclologi- , cal Society, executive board of the” Montgomery NAACP. He is a former teacher at Alabama. State College. .
Genefg! chairman of the celebration is Lewis Twigg, Jr., president, ol the Union Proftedve Assiuance company. Others of the ccrnm: include E. L. Washburn, head Lincoln School. T R. McLemore. Robert Jones, W. A Hedges. S. W. Ryans. Rev. I. A. Watson. Dr. N. M. Watson, Z. L. Guest. Charley Johnson. J. W. Powell. Jesse Turner, of Trl-State Bank, Atty. H. T. Lockard, T. J Johnson and J. R. Ruffin.
Rev. S. A. Owen is pastor of the church.
■r
Regiitered U. S. Patent Office.
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HE?E is a pleasant little game that will give you a message every f . iv' 1 ‘?.a numerical puzzle designed to spell out your fortune. Count the letters in your first name. If the number of letters is 6 or more, subtract 4. If the number is less than 6, add 3. The result is your key number. Start at the upper left-hand comer of the rec-
check ®ycr,y °ne ot your key numbers, left to right. Then read the message the letters under the checked figures give you.
tons Marie, 2 years old was stricken by polio June 6, 1957. She did not have three shots of Salk polio vaccine. In 1958 several thousand little girls and boys, and adults, will be crippled by polio unless they are protected with Salk shots. March of Dimes funds werejjsed to develop the Salk vaccine and are used to provide the best available care for polio patients without regard to age. race, creed or color. Join the March of Dimes with dollars, J n 2-3!.
Now Playing...Walt Disney’s
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Fanciest Auto In(Continued from Page One)
Corporation of Tennessee, National Finance Committee; superintendent of tile National Convocation, chairman of the National Trustee Board, the Elders Council of Tennessee, and the Special Commission, and president of the Terrell Memorial Hospital.* Wherever he goes, you will be sure to recognize the Bishop in his princely black, gold-topped Continental Mark HI.
Postal Auxiliary(Continued From Page One)
5 whicn includes Tennessee, Kentucky, and other states nearby.
•Mr. Cotton assisted in thc election of the new officers. Newly elected officers were then installed by.Mr. W. J. Bargeron. Both men are members of the Memphis Alliance. New officers are: President, Mrs, Theodore (Velve Penn) Williams; Vice -. president, Mrs. Houston (Mary Walton) Collier; Secretary, Mrs. W. L. (Leona) Jamison,; Assistant Secretary, Mrs. W.
Here are authoritative answers from the Veterans Administration to questions of interest from service men and their Emilies:
Q—I am a Korean veteran, just out of military service. What is.... my deadline for starting -training under the Korean GT Bill?
A.—You must begin your■. training within three years
from the date of your discharge or separation.
Q.—I have named the beneficiaries of .mjL GI Insurance policy, but I haven’t yet chosen a- method of payment. If I should die without designating a payment method/ how will the insurance money be paid out? ; •
A.—It will be paid to your beneficiaries in 36 equal installments. However, your first beneficiary has the right to choose payments under any other installment plan available.
.1 Q.—Who is supposed to apply forWar Orphans schooling, the prospective student or his living par-
, ent ? .
A. If the prospective student is under legal age, his parent or guardian must apply in his behalf. If he is of age, and has no known legal disability, he may apply on his own.Q.~I understand that persons
, getting VA pensions will receive • annual Income questionnaires after
the first of the year. I received a gift of money during 1957 from relatives. Do I have to report that as incoóle?
A. Yes, money gifts are considered as income for pension purposes and should be reported on the questionnaire.
Membership ‘.in the Auxiliary is open to all wives, widows, mothers, sisters, cr daughters of Postal employees. The meetings are held at 7 pm. on the'third Saturday -ol each month. The next meeting will be held on February 15 at the home of .the vice-president and reporter, Mrs Collier. 1430 Ellistor Read. All old and new members
- 0 1956. 1957, Wayne D. Overholser. From the novel published. ........... ...... by The Macmillan Co. Distnbuttd by King Features Syndicate.
■ i
-—T^^^LSER’sI naw Western thriller
ixCHAPTER I ' aiy tamer uiun t say anyuur.g. |unaer-five reel, ana 1 never imew
MY FATHER anil 1 were work-; Impatiently. Gil said. "Bess told mg on the corral gate when'™ ^e’d wait lot you.’ He mo-
nn ,.irii 'Honed toward me. The kid can (finish the gate.*’ Then ne whirled ¡his sorrel and took off foi An- ; chor.
7')te Kid can finish the gate. That was like him. 1 stood wa.tch- ing until he disappeared, blood pounding in m.v temples. Sure, 1 could stay' here and finish the gate, while he sashayed around over the country ■ trying ' 'good in front of Bess.
Gil was twenty-two.
J saw my brother Gil riding —Hero«»- the—pasture -from Bess
Nordine's ranch. 1 said. “Gil’s coming, Pa.” My father tossed his saw on the ground and straightened lip. One thing about when he was on a horse, he worth watching.
Gil was riding Tuck, his sorrel gelding. Tuck was the. fastest horse in Dillon’s Park, and Gil loved him, but loving him wrasn’t enough to keep Gil from riding tlie devil out of him. He-put the sorrel over the barbed wire fence between Nordine’s Anchor and pur Big Ten in a long, graceful.’ jump, and cmne right on. never missing a lick. A minute later he reined “ * ‘of us.
My father said, in his' mild way. [ •Tn a hurry, Gil?” ' I
"Sure am.” Gil said. "Saddle j up. A bunch of Rafter 3 cows are | coining into the park, and we’re
. .gonna run ’em back over the hill.”
“Who Ls?”“Me’n* you and Bess and her
crew.”Bess Nordine’s crew consisted
of two men, Barney Lux and Shorty Quinn. Any way you counted it, that added up to five, including Bess, who was, as Pa‘ often said, the best man in the park. My father was a good hand with a gun and everybody knew it, but even quality wasn’t enough against numbers, and Rafter 3 had numbers besides being a plenty salty outfit.
“What happens if we run into some Rafter 3 riders?” my father asked.
"We’ll blow their heads off,” Gil said.
He sat looking at Pa, his black Stetson cocked at a rakish angle. Flashy! That was the word for GiL He could do a lot of things well—almost everything except work. He nad a talent for wearing fancy clothes and he owned the most expensive pair of Justins in the park. He always car-
. ried a pearl-handled .44, and he was fast and accurate with it; but whether he could kill a man was something else.
Gil had fallen in love with Bess when we first moved to the park three years ago, and he said he was going to marry hepv If he did it would be quite a trick, be-
■ cause she was a strong-minded woman from away back. I hoped he got her. It would serve him .right.
itp in
Gil: was
bigto
1
look
was ’ nineteen. He used to whip me j regularly until I was sixteen. It f hadn’t been too tough a job. with , him three .years older than 1 } was. Then there'd been the lime in Buhl, the county_seu.t, when 1 he jumped me. I'd have>whipped j
• him it Ma hadn’t knocked me | i groggy by hitting ine bn the , •head with a frying pan He hadn't ' I tackled me since.
When Gil was home he never ’turned a hand. He was sickly. .Ma said, and him as big. as a young Shorthorn bull. Funny thing: he-couldn’t work at home, but he'd go over to Bess’s ranch and shine up to her.
1 hadn’t realized' my father had saddled up iintil he said, "Dave.” He stood a few feet from me, holding the reins of his brown
- horse. When 1 „looked at him. he said. “I’ve. felt the .same way more’n once, Dave.” He stepped into the saddle. Then he stjid, "Never mind the gate.”.
He rode off, not across the pasture the way Gil had. but down the lane to: the road. Quite
( a man, my father. Big, hard- . working, patient, Joe Munro de
served more than he’d received > from life—the way 1 saw it, any
how. He was one of the reasons . I'd stayed home. He. needed me
and he loved me, and I. loved him.I hated Gil. I’d hated him as
long as 1 could remember, and someday I’d break his neck. There were times, * too, when I hated my mother. I knew it was wrong, but I couldn’t help it.
Ma hadn’t wanted me in the first place. She had a hard time when Gil was bom. She almost died, and she told my father she wouldn’t have any more children. I don’t believe she ever neglected me—physically, I mean. But if she ever gave me a caress or a word of endearment, I couldn’t remember it.
•*Where did they go, Dave?” Ma called from the back porch.
I stood looking at her for a moment. She was a small woman,
her to weigh more than one hundred pounds. Now, at forty, she was showing her age. Her hair was gray; she had wrinkles in her cheeks and around her eyes.
Right then 1 wasn’t in any mood to listen to her fret about Gil. 1 said, “A bunch of Rafter 3 cows are headed into the park, and-they’re going to run ’em back over theiiill.” '
Now she really had something to fret about. All of us who lived in the park were under the shadow of Rafter 3 guns. The trouble had never come to a head, but it was only a question of time until it would, unless Vite Toll, Hie Rafter 3 foreman, got a dose of lead poisoning.
I went into the bam. climbed to the mpw. and lay down on the hay. I had a hunch Kitsy would be over. She was Bess's younger sister, seventeen and pretty, and the one person in the world who meant more to me than my father. We were in love and wanted to get married, but Bess threw the monkey wrench at us.•
Bess was twenty-five, and she and Kitsy had no one but each other. Their folks died when Kitsy was small and Bess had practically raised her. “Kitsy isn’t
' going to work like 1 have,” Bess , said flatly. “When she’s eighteen, i she's' going away to school. She'll > marry somebody with money, not ’ a kid like you, Dave, who doesn't I have ten cents to his name.”
Bess wasn't a woman to change her mind. She didn’t have anything against me, but she’d decided Kitsv's future, and that ended the whole business.
The only time Kitsy and I were alone tfhscrew were gone, anef Gil wasn’t at either place. Oh, we could see each other at parties or in church on Sunday morning or maybe at a school shindig, but always when. Bess was around.
1 didn’t wait long. I heard the bam door open and close, the one on the north side that Ma couldn’t see from the house. A moment later Kitsy climbed the ladder to the mow and stood there, smiling provocatively at me.
I said, “Hello. Kitsy.”She put her hands on her hips.
“Were you expecting me?” I said, “Counting on it.”I couldn’t even look at her
without getting tied up inside. Blue eyes, chestnut hair that held just a little curl, ' a slim figure more girl than woman, Kitsy Nordine was everything in the world I \yanted.
(To be continued)
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