Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / July 28, 1956, edition 1 / Page 5
Part of The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
WEEK ENDING SATURDAY, JULY 28, 1956 Wedding Bells Editor”# Snif Marrtase I>- e p nses wrre issued b> the Wake County Register of Heeds I<* the following person* from July 16 lo July 25: July ift Charlie T ce. Jr. IK. Route 2, Wake Forest; and tvia Manning. 14, Route 5. Knightdale julv id Benjamin A. Smith, Jr. 24, Route 2 Wake Forest, and Charity Mae Montague 19. Route 2 Wake Forest. July 16 William Tyson, 13,'6, Le' Street: arid Emma Ruth £?.- zr!l. !“. 826 F, Martin St j,.i v on - Airis Walker. 26, Rmu, .1. Burlington: and Almcna •\v,m u= 22. Route 1. Hotly Soring?. j x ~.V no .... Robert Neat. 31 619 s "r Ami St: and R’.ra Mae Sten cil. 24. pa Irish. j u ’v 20 Joseph A Barbour. <*3 - Lenoir S'.: and Co-a Mae navi* 21. 613 E Cabarrus St July 25 -- Samuel W. Jones 22. F Cabarrus St.: and Fcmmie T ur.abeth Taylor. 22. Franklinton. Teacher Weds D.C.Man RALEIGH - - Mr. and Mrs. Per >v Hinton of 1015 South Wilmiug ton Street, announce the marriage! of their daughter. Dezola Frances, | on May 2fi. to Mr. Luciie Johnson, of Washington, D. C. M> s Johnson was formerly em-: Ployed tn the Harnett. County, School at Shaw town. She is aj graduate of Elizabeth City State. Teachers’ Oollc\it. She is now rtxi- \ ployed an special reading teacher in Bov s Village. Cheltenham, Mu. Aftnv six v. ooks of suiruTiOi work Sentence Sermons (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 41 8. My’ what an awful mis take most, individuals make who stay away from this Holy Shore, who so trailing off for m./w u,l gains while God pleads and en treats “come and dine. 9. But this is the case today, perhaps more evident than c\- pr before, since man through wealth and invention has every convenience at h's riooi and false pride and a ■ - >',ce dr.v«* him far beyond himself, and for Filer, matters as faith and mo:- : Vie finds a r ace upon a shelf. 10 Then out of ishnezs. avarice and creed his soul finds no satisfying grim pastures in which to feed; then lining lip others who think alike with him. they start out to study wai and fail deep,- r into sin. !!. O’ if ail men could ibis ore thing beii. vr, that God in }us infinite mercy will never fifceii -•••■? that It? compas sic.r. is past finding pa’, and tiv -ugh endle--- aims will bring th* best things shout ’2. DO YOU BELIEVE this He will do. and every God fearing creature He will carry clear through: then life to you will he no m.vst.c.>y and death s gi.n and not loss for our vic y was undev-.-ntien by r r . .*? « death upon the cross. f ' ■ de.-.tr, Sf. FASHION-FAMOUS UNI FOR MS | Nursing Journals. ' sT / J *j | la combed poplin. Sizes 5 fjjj? |4 I || t» 16. 10 to 20. If f| | I \ | Short and three quarter » >-f | v t. § V m yft $ | :% | *i *j |i * Uniforms—Second Floor y X-omlortahly Air Conditmmd j i I MRS. LUTIBIFI.A MIALS | .Funeral services for Mrs Lutri- j | ci.a Mia Is of 412 Montague Lane, i I wbe died at Saint Agnes Hospital j j Monday of last week, were con- j t ducted from the Gethsemane Sev- j ! enth Day Adventist Church Thtirs- ■ l day at 4;p m. Burial followed in i i Hillcrt-s! Cemetery. MRS ADA HAILEY , Funeral services for Mrs, Ada ; Hailey of Route 6. Jeffreys Grove. vvho died at Saint Agnes Hospital i Saturday, July 16. were held, at | i the Bethlehem Church. Interment \ followed in the church cemetery. I MRS. SALLIK WATSON i Mrs. Sallie Watson of 1117 f> i ; state Slroet. who died at Saint ; A grief: Hi.spi.tat last Tuesday v.-ns , t : sum ralised at the Maple Temple ; Christian Church Sunday at, I:p.m. , The'paster, the Rev. M. F. Buokm. officiated and interment followed Jin Mount Hope Cemetery. MRS. MARY LEACH Funeral services for Mrs. Mary ; ■! j,eaeh of Route 5, Box 128-A. Ra- j ],. u -h. who died at her home Tues- at, Howard University they will be at home at 1831 Second Street,: N. E„ Washington, D. C. MISS DEZOLA HINTON'S marriage to I.udie Johnson of Washington, D. C., on May 26. was recently revealed h.v her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Perry Hinton of 1015 S. Wilmington Street. She is now employed as a special reading teacher in Boy's tillage, Maryland. Dlt PLAYER PANEL MEMBER GREENSBORO Dr. Willa B P!svc. president of Bennett Coi : lege, i•• one of the members of a panel which will discuss Tcc h - : niquvs of Institutional Self-Study” riui-ing mo 121 H Institute of Higher !•: buntieri i.«, be held m Nashville, 'Pen,, ,t..jly 30 to August 1. The institute is sponsored jointly by ihe Board of Education of the Methodist Church and Scarritt Col j lege, Pulpwood sale? in Western No ih r.y. :ma • : Mr were up IP,POO cords from 1954 Proved sire bred hiefer sales will b* neid at Greensboro. Statesville, i and Asheville in August, I jay of last. week, were conducted ! = from the Juniper Level Church ( Sunday. July 22. and burial fol- j r lowed in the church cemetery. i AIR JOHNNY MILLS Funeral services for Johnny Aa- 11 ron Mills of Route 1. Box 230. ;! Wake Forest, who died at Saint | j Agnes Hospital Tuesday, July 17, i t were conducted from the Baptist j : Grove Church Thursday at 3:p.m. Burial followed in the church com- , etery. Surviving are his parents Mr. and Mrs. William Mills; 2 sisters Misses Alease and Gloria J. Mills, j both of the home. I brother Wil- ■' ham T. Mills, of the home; I grand : mother. Mrs. Cynthia Mills, Cary; : 2 uncles. George Mills and Zepenii Mills; 2 aunts. Miss Janet Bryant. New York and Mrs. Rnsina Leath ers, Raleigh. At 105, He’s Seen A Lot, Likes To Talk LITTLE ROCK, Ark. f ANP> "Why. I used to knock my mule down with my fist, but now I talk easy and gentle to him. I'm scared not to. I can't hold him anymore That's the way Percy .Johnson puts it. If he lives until Nov ft. i he will be 106 years old. Bom in slavery in Alabama, in 1850, Johnson saw the Civil War come and go. He saw the slaves freed, he saw five com ets. a total eclipse, Presidents Lincoln, MeKinley and Cleve land. in addition to confederate president Jefferson Davis, and he is still working for a liv : ing j After leaving Montgomery Ala i barna, Johnson worked in Missis- I sippi before he came to Arkansas, j He began farming about 40 year? | ago. His fondest subject, is talking ?- i bout, the multitude of things, he s | seen. ‘‘Jeff Davis used to live ; n Mont i gomery up on Lee street, in a hous, | that took up a whole block I know | him as good as if he was kin to | me ” Amo mans eat 45 pounds of cit rus fruit per person a year. ii the HE A T jpMMWjWW—w wuidj-iiiw | i( | w'w^ with a m\ MATHES : 1-TON Bpst ;■ v| ei |U LINE AIR QOIDITIQNER OTHER AIR CONDITIONER OXL\ BUYS! 3 /4*Ton Air Cond Boner SIUL9S K l ! /2«Ton Universal Air Mft SJ| & Conditioner ~. . $199,95 M'M, 2-Ton Air Conditioner $279.95 tfl M Compare at S4OO ** CLOSING OUT ALL £ POWER MOWERS * fir ,h * s Season! -. JgfH'.Wj' i is” -$44 95 22” Self Propelled $99 95 OPEN FRIDAY & MONDAY ’TIL 9 P.M. THE CAROLINIAN Quiz Show Profits Bring African Teacher To U. S. NEW YORK ' ANl’ -- QlllS : show profits rung up by Ameri can undergraduate? has enabled| an African girl to come to the; United St,at..e? for study next, year ; A young teacher from Tanga-ti-« ytka is traveling to Mount Hoi- ■ yoke College in South Hendlay, | Ma.-r. on money raised by the j school's successful quiz team on! radio's “College Quiz Bowl'', last] year They are using SIOOO of their winnings to pay travel expenses Wake Home Improvements ] Seen On Community Tour RALEIGH The Shiloh Com munity of Wake County held its j annual community four last week showing home improvements made I during the past year j The tour was designed to show accomplishments tna.de and to on- ; courage others to follow recom- ; mended practices of the Extension ; i Srrvie carried out by this group. : Homos -'Soi'd and improvements . i shown were: ; Mr. and Mrs. William?. Jones, re- i I modeled kitchen, water system; Mr. j ; and Mrs. James Crow, clothing i ! storage; Mr and Mrs. Walter ; ' Mayo, remodeled home; Mr. and ! I Mrs. Luther Green, water system, t I kitchen cabinet?; Mr. and Mrs. , i Clem Pennington, clothing storage, j j Mr. and Mr? Nathaniel Mayo, j ! clothing storage. j The homemakers also pointed ; with pride to new screens freshly j ] painted walls, new steps and porch- : j j Mrs Margaret Greer, is president i of the local Home Demonstration ■ ! Club and Nathaniel Mayo is presi- ■ j dent of the Young Men and Women j < Y.M.W t Chth. I The group was accompanied b? j W. C. Davenport and Mrs. Natalie • : P. Wunberky. Negro farm and l home agent? of Wake County, SEAT PRIVILEGES SOUGHT FOR WHITE WOMEN IN VL.\. MONROEVILLE. Ala. tANP) Pointing out that the most de licate threat from integrated j seating would be the prospect of 1 a colored man beside a white wo ! man, State Rep. Nick S. Haro has ; drafted a bill permitting a wo man to hold the entire seat, she occupies on a public conveyance. for art exchange student, Miss ! Bertha. Akim 25. who arrived m | New York City last week for ? i vear of U.S. study in the field of ; child guidance. i The young woman, who now j reaches at, Lelcz girls’ school mi ! Bhoya has received an award | ; from the Van Leer and. Atlanta ' Foundations to cover all her ex- j ! penses in the United States. Her I ] scholarship will be administered ;by the Institute of International 1 Education, New York City. Exhibit Os j Juvenile Books Set At NCC DURHAM, N. C. Some 550 new and recent library books on j ; juvenile subjects will be exhibited i : at North Carolina College July 31- August 2. Dean r> E. Moore of the School of Library Science is in charge of the. exhibit. It. will be available daily from 9:00 • 12:00 a.m. and from 2 00 to i 4.00 p.m. Tim project is sponsored by Rook- on Exhibit, a ciftperative service of leading U. S. Publishers. The sponsor exhibits the. books to provide schools and libraries with representative collections of junior books to permit authorities to select books which meet the needs of their particular children's needs. The students in the Library Schorl's Book Selection Class arc cooperating with Dean Moore in the planning. Student planning committee members arc Miss Miri am F Cowan; Mrs M, F. Bethel: Mrs A. R. Connor; Miss Dorothy Haith. Miss Mildred Mallette; Miss Mai ; Weaver: Miss Jean Rober son: M.-s. Lois C. Wooten; Miss Er t.ie M Fenner. Mrs. L. P Ferguson is instructor of the class. sdg au-riiwww». 'soa' -fwn •"*•••* Teachers Study Selves During Week At FAitJ TALLAHASSEE Several hun j dred in - service teachers wet e : | brought together in a study of j themselves and those whose moral i | and spiritual development they are ! concerned about, m the public j school during Religion in Life | Week at Florida A and M Univer- j sity. Many searching questions were asked and answers are still being i CARNATION, I Ailß “health; ! k. I Alicia Celeste Jones. Houston, Texas. First Prize Winner in in? Carnation Hometown Healthy Baby Contest Mg GENERATIONS, Carnation has "My doctor recommended it." Am been the milk of healthy babies! It your own doctor about Carnation, is the brand known far and wide by He will tell you no other form of parents and by doctors, too. Eight milk is so safe for baby’s bottle, so out of 10 mothers who feed their nourishing and digestible. Yes, babies a Carnation formula say; mother...you can trust Carnation. | COOKING AN DmCOFFEeJtOO! i 'b r tafia-/? “from ContmnM Cows " --Z&S cl " s today I I ■■ ’ ; . ■ ‘ j l World’s Leading Brand of Evaporated Milk i sought for some of the problems | of today ? youth Summarizing th* week's activi i ties. Dr. James Hudson. Chap!am. ; j Floods A and M University. S3id i 'The Week of emphasis on mor-b land spiritual values gave a!! who I shared in the expei mnee a deeper ; orientation in the really pro : found things of life PAGE FIVE CORNERSTONE I,A TING AT OBE RUN CHURCH Members of Raleigh’s three Masonic lodges were ip charge Sunday as the cornerstone was laid at the re* ecntly completed Obcrlin Bap tist Church. The pastor. Dr. Gra dy D. Davis is pictured nearest j the cornerstone on the right, v hiU H. C Mi ;h hr,, Master of Excelsior Lodge, No 21, is shown standing In front of Or. Davis f I SitedvieU, chairman .if the rhomb's deacon board, is p rtured third from front on the left, Purdie Anders, second from front on the left, was chairman of the program committee, Oth er lodges .joining in the observ ance were the Widow Son Lodge and Mentor Lodge Vo -V
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 28, 1956, edition 1
5
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75