PAGE TWENTY I BURLINGTON I MimiWU •M l J'HI"'l*W?*Mri»|i | »IWMl«IWWJ ■* ———— -■■ " "TriTH ll.llli ■! IUIIUI ll—U BY urns M. M BROWN SOI APPLE STREET BURLINGTON Mrs. Hallie Wilson of Rt, 1, Graham, returned Saturday to Philadelphia, Pa., where she will soon complete her course in Practical Nurse Training at the Philadelphia School of Prac tical Nursing. Congratulations! Attends Clinic Mr. J. R. B.ryant of Hargett and Bryant Funeral Home attended the Embalmers Clinic held in Char lotte Wednesday and Thmsday of last week. tie Women,'* in the Jordan Sel lars Senior High School, under the direction of Mrs, M. G. London, wilj present a three-act. play, “Lit tle Women,' in hte Jordan Sel lars Junior High School, auditor ium Wednesday night, beginning at 8 o'clock. Romance, tragedy, comedy and drama are all to be found in this adaptation by Arthur Jennie, fa mous plsyv right, from Ihr cele brated novel by Louisa M Alcott. This play is ideal tor high school presentation. Tickets arc now on sale by mem ber? of the senior class. Birth Announcement Mr. and Mrs. .Tames Edvard Evans. Mebane. announce the ar- ] rival of a daughter on April 17 a' I Alamance County Hospital. Musical Win Honors Students f*om Jordan Sellar? and Graham Nee <> INgh Schools won e number <>( honor? in the Bur lington tksv'ir* Music Contest held recent!v at Charles Drew High School in Madison fir hoi? participating, in addition to those >n Burlington and Gra ham v-re follows: Douglass High of Leaks-- ill*- Dr die v High of Orccnr-boro Washington High of Reid?' die ar. I the high schools of F,-own Summit end St'dalia Participants were judged on solo Bumbors ’I ensemble? and larp-.- ens-l-.lrs, The ratings were as follow Solo?’ Madison ? unchanged voice and Hi- id?.utie’s tenm received rating? of one irnnm Small en sembles: Greensboro ? oris’ trio ! and mixed quartet received two I minus; Burlington's boys’ quartet recri'-cd one- tonus. In largo on sc’-.bhs, gild;' ••)'. clubs of Reids viile, twit iiiini.s: Burlington, one minu*. Boy.-' pi- - dubs of Madi son. Reids’. '!- itid Burlington, two plus; mix'd chorus of Graham, ’ : ”‘o >• Rr-idsvillo. and I •’ iksvii’ . fv.o p\ Brown Sum* t~ 1 and ?>h-:dison, t'-vo; Gr-cnshoro Those rcivmfi a rating of one j gib!* to at end the -dato festival V rfi ?to he held in Durham at I Howard University Professor: •*.:'-WWlta - CJt-WSsHSft». 1W- —<■*««■■ II mm UMiy IMHIHIIIWIIMIIIIIHIHMIBI»I Crib Oeads Physical An thronolosists ANN ABHOR MICH. Dr. W. Montr.gu* Cobh, professor and head ’o f She Dppa> tmoni of Anatomy in i AfeSor M Mountain i ; F) * J 8S PROOF 5 YEARS OtD JMQQO Straight 25 BOURBON **"“ pint Whiskey $ *355 */« QUART tJLSQftERHAM A WOHTS t LTD,,, PEORIA, ILL. UNIVERSAL ROOM AIR CONDITIONER The Universal Air Conditioners are sup plied the lifetime electrostatic (eiec fliter cleans the air of dust, dirt, pollen and i sooty particles as small as 1-25,000 of an j .. » * They also state that continuous air biecfr ca movement maintains the positive and neg ative electrostatic charges on the woven Wholesalers Plastic surfaces and that the charged dust r r ,., 0! , ~< vj r ; anrJ dirt particles are attracted to the op ' «."*! K positely charged plastic surface and held j raleigh, n. c. there just as a magnet attracts iron fit i'LAL I'Emple S-5588 lingS. North Carolina College. High Rating The Burlington District Music- Contest was held at the Charles Drew High School in Madison re cently, with schools participating from Leakesville. Greensboro Mad ison. Rtidrville, Burlington. Brown Summit. Graham, and Spdalia. Parficpants were judged on solo numbers, small ensembles and large ensembles. The judge for the contest was Miss Eva Wise innn, supervisor of music in the and mixed chorus 1 Jordan Sellars Senior High School received the following rat ings: Boys’ quartet 1-; Girls' glee e’uh 1-: Boys’ glee club 72 phis; and mixed chorus 1-; Directors for the groups arc Miss Gwendolyn Gidney and Mr? Helen Banks. Golden I.ions in 11-6 Win Over Suminerflelil j SUMM ER El ELD Graham Ne gro High's baseball team defeated Summe’-field by an 11 *o R score here yesterday afternoon Walter Jones, a freshman, pitch ed the victory for the Golden i Lions. Ervin Burnet, Ervin Core I and Jackie Parish shared hitting • honors with two safeties each. Graham now ha.? a 4-0 record on the season, and the Golnen l ion? will play host to Yaneeyville at Graham Athletic Park tomorrow afternoon at 8 o'clock Grady Per kin? will hr the mound choice for Graham Visits Parents Mrs Ereeda Bivins, Thomas Haze! Normal Hazel Walter Hazel and Sammue! Hazel, all of New York City, visited their parents. Mr. and Mr? Charlie Hazel of Glencoe Road, over the weekend. Their father. Charlie Hazel, has been on the sick list Visit? Mr. c, W Schultz of Louisville. Ky„ visited his. mother. Mrs. Browning, and relatives recently. Birthday Party Mr and'Mrs. Wade Gattis enter ; t wined their daughter, Mllissa Eon tin. with a party on her birthday April 7. Guests were as follows: El vaster and Donna Alston Mary and Harold Henry. Stelle. Linda and R-'bert Watlington, Linda and Helen Pendergraph, Ida. Gene and Janie Johnson, Bonnie and Monroe Harris. Mickey and Norman Jef frie.?. Connell Pinnix. Debra Scott, Marilyn Neely. Diana Pinnix. -T. I Bigelow. Rorris Foust. Car! Yar j brough, Oteen Concler Wanda Gaf i tis. F u.vdeap Martin and Mesdamcs i Clarence Alston. William Hurdle, i the Howard University School of | Medicine, was unanimously elect i rd president of the American As- j Phillip Yarbrough. Allen Bigelow, Charles Foust Donnell Pinnix Onislo Watlington. Thomas Martin, Sara Williams, Calvin Williams, Theodore Alston, Lacy Jeffries. Jack Johnson and Nancy Oliver. Mrs. Mary Lea of Pert Chester, N. Y. was an Easter vvisitor this week as guest of M’’ W. I. I .fill She worshipped at First Baptist Church Among other guests during the holidays v,-eie Mrs. Elizabeth Tay lor of Fayetteville, mother of Mr William Taylor of 705 Rauhut St Mrs. J. F. Gunn and daughter. Miss Wilhemenia Gunn of New ; York City. Rev, Samuel? of Boston. Mass.! who is now a student at Slia-.v Uni versity. Raleigh, N. C He is the nephew of Dr W R Perry on Rosen wa I d St ret Group 7 will he the guest or Mr?. Lossio Reaves on Tuesday evening at 8 P. M Mrs. J. T. Moore is pres ident. Mrs. Myrtle Reaves is st-ere tary Zone 8 will meet Tuesday ever, ing of this wok in Dr. S. B, Thom- j as’ office' on Rauhut Street at 8:G0 P. M. Mrs. R. M. Earl, president, j Mr? Nellie Walker, secretary. Local Churches First Baptist Church choi 1 with an Easter cantata, began promptly ! at 6:00 A M., with Mrs Helen j Banks at the organ. The choir was | at its best, and the large audience i enjoyed every moment of the beau- ! tiful Easter Music. At the close the j pastor, his guests and audience ! marched downstairs to the base- ! merit dining room for breakfast, j prepared and served by the Mis sionary Union. The 1:00 hour wa? again filled ! with an overflowing audience. The j weather was lovely and the Easter ! Parade was on Rev, H. J Cobb. ’ the pastor, used for his theme; “All j Hail." Joy opened the hearts of j souls, which had endured screw : pain and tribulation throughout the year Mr. Leßoy Vincents’ solo. Not A I Word. ’ war a special feature so” j the day and was enjoyed by all I present. “He is Risen." was the theme ; used by Rev. W. M Lake of Ebr-ni - | zer Christian Church where the j Easter Parade was still mat ching j and in Jorge number? The favorite choir and its Easter 1 Music brouhgt tears to weary eyes. ! The Miricle Flower Club presented ! spring flower arrangements under j the direction of Mrs. Green Little and a tea that was as delicious a: the flowers were beautiful The members looked especially beauti ful m their Easter afire sji o ' j sociation of Physical Anthropolo-j i gists at the 26th Annual Meeting j of this society at the University of | Michigan, Ann Arbor. Michigan, on S.umlr.v W. MONTAGUE COBB The association is a proles . j sional scientific organization pf about 450, with foreign mem bers scattered throughout the i world This is the first occas ion on which a Negro scien tist has headed a national j scientific society in the United States. In 1955 Dr. Cobb was chairman of j Section II (Anthropologyi and a vice president of the American As sociation for the Advancement of j Science, a similar first. AWARDED PRIZES When j the Brownies went on in ex- I p!oration trip recently in Bur- j tington, two baskets, made by j if a JJGn BURLINGTON NEWSBOY ! Woody Walkcar, IJ-vear-old son of Mrs Fannie Walker. Apple j j St, is a Carolinian salesman in ; Burlington He is in the eighth ; grade at school and a member of j the School Glee Club, a member of the Junior Choir at Ebenczer Christian Church. Last year he "as one of the Carolinian sales men that won the trip to New I He does odd jobs after school. Dr. Cobb. 52, is a native of Washington. D. C. and a grad uate of the Dunbar High School there. He received the A. B from Amherst CoHce in 1925; the M !) from Howard Univer sity in 1929-, and the Ph. I). from Western Reserve Univer- j -it-, in 1931 n 1955 Amherst j C'ollege conferred upon him ] the honorary degree of Dortor i of Science. In that year he also received the j . Distinguished Service Medal of the I j National Medical Association, its | highest award His publications | number some 230 titles on anatom ; teal, anthropological and general | medical subjects, many of which are cited in standard medical texts. | A substantial portion of his writ | ings has dealt with the exposition j and elimination of racial discrim- i ination in health areas CAMPUS VISITORS GREENSBORO Misses Adolia Hammond and Marian J. Bowman, of Baltimore. Md.. both members of the elm? of 1956, were campus visitors at Bennett College last ! week. Miss Hammond i? an English teacher at th* Robert F. Lee Jun ior High School and Miss Bowman is teaching history at th* Garri- ; son Junior High School. w N.— _ j leader in many ways over the years j ; m the fight for freedom, came ! j thru as the biggest branch in ! j point of memberships and funds ! raised during 1956. A total of 18. ! | and $9.5,80? collected. “ | * TYPEWRITERS « ADDING MACHINES Sales & Service OFFICE S 256 W. Davis St. CA 6-2353 Burlington. N. C, •IMIWMWiww. 'roam<•!,«.. MU',! ■MMkWMHV-raMmMB T, N. BOONE Tail o r $ Ext, ism BURLINGTON', N. C. . Posner’s i:; pS@S33 \ CULTURES * STRAIGHTENS v Ray Robinson AT YO«JR FAVORITE BARKER SHOP. \ *»rwg stoirt* and THE CAROLINIAN |||p , 1 the Boone sisters, Donnetta and Galene, left ami center, ds'J ; gbters of Mr and Mrs. Walter Boone of Maple Avenue, were I awarded second prize. Karen Biography Os Rep Bolton To Be Published May 15 NEW YORK fANP) Long- , mans, Green, book publishers, an nounced here Monday, the forth coming publication of “A Long Way Forward," a biographical j : study of the life of Congresswom-! an iW-ances P. Bolton, one of thel few women in the U. S. congress.! a member of the House Foreign Affairs committee and a promi net member of the board of trus tees of Tuskegee Institute The biography, to be published j May 15. has been written by Da- ! Air Force Vet Shoots Seif In Head On ! Lawn Os Washington’s Tidal Basin WASHINGTON IANP) The scenic view of Tidal Basin was suddenly transformed into a death scene last Wednesday when a former Howard University stu dent put a bullet through his brain as Cherry Blossom visitors strolled among the budding trees. Thomas F. Blackwell, Jr., an Air Force veteran was found on Ihe grass not far from the roadway al the north side of the blossom-decorated basin with a bullet in his right tem ple and a .32 caliber revolver j laying- near hix left hand A certificate of sucide was its* j sued by Coroner A. Mast ruder t MacDonald, j Blackwell was under indictment! ! f °r the stabbii ,of his girl friend! i two months ago. According to police, the Mr Force veteran came to Wash ington in 1953 to attend How ard University. But he lefi school last- November. Two months ago he was arrested PETE’S PLACE i HALL BONDING CO. ' i 901 RAUHUT ST. Phones ™ JJJJ For The CAR | Os Your j Life Hurry I To Bill Price j ; BUICK located At BUICK BLOCK South Main St. Effl Price Buick ! BURLINGTON, N. C. — Woods, daughters of Mr. & Mrs. •I. H. , Woods, right, won first prize. Her parents are both mem bers of the Jordan Sellars School faculty. i vid Loth, well-known journalist who served as director of the Co lumbia University Bicentennial division in 1954 Loth reconstructs Mrs. Bol ton’s life from her childhood in Cleveland as a member of the city’s nldrsi, wealthiest and most politically active families, to her position today as an influential GOP mem ber of the House of Represen tatives an indefatigable worker and traveler, who just for assault with a deadly wea pon after slashing Miss Lily B- Myers, a Library of Congress clerk, or Jan. 30 He then quit his job a-s orderly at Mount Alto Hospital and returned to his family bnrne in Harris burg. Pa. He returned to Wasnincton and j in the early morning on the eve of the Cherry Blossom festival, he j called Miss Meyers at the Library On finding that she was cut. of j; the office, he told her coworker to I FOR THE BEST SEE li HELEN’S BEAUTY SALON 727 APPLE ST. Burlington, N. C, mmuimiiuuu m --n - |,|||. - - .... H ' WEEK ENDING SATURDAY. APRIL 27 1957 TWO GET STUDY GRANTS GREENSBORO Two members w of the senior class at Bennett Col lege have been notified that they have been awarded scholarships for study in the field of religion for the 1957-58 school year. Miss Julia McClain, of Grady, Alabama, has been awarded a sch olarship to the Hartford (Conn.) Theological Seminary, where she recently returned from a 23- nation tour of Africa as a member of Vice President Nix on’s goodwill delegation. The book cites Mrs. Bolton's in terest in nursing, her years of work in promoting better educa tion for nurses to meet patient needs, her contributions through the Payne fund to medical and ; educational -esearch, her early in terest in work done at Duke uni versity in parapsychology —now continuing in many other univer sities—and of her 17 years as a member of congress, a post she filled at the death of her hus band Her recent years as member of the powerful affairs com mittee of the House of Repre sentatives. her political cam paigns. the measures she has introduced in the House, her associates, family life and trips abroad are all contained and treated extensively in the book, This biographical study—in the advance of women's rights in the last half century—is the story of a humanist, philanthropist- and a ‘’C ongressman s congressman,’’ who has shunned the easy life of wealth to become one of the nation’s most respected Individ-! uals. The book, of 312 pages, is priced i 1 at $5 ! tell her 'good bye When I,hr 1 woman asked if he could call back i : later he is reported as saying j "I won't, be here later ' PHIL L I P S Bonding Co. 1203 RAUHUT ST. DIAL C' CA 3400 WELCOME TO MY LADY’S I BEAUTY SHOP 1001 RAFHUT ST. I Burlington, N. C. vill begin studying in Septembfj for the Bachelor of Divinity de gree. The one-year award which v i renewable was made by the sch olarship committee of the Wotnar board of the Seminary. Miss Ph.vilis Henry of Ode-. < Delaware, was awarded a scholai ship to the- School of Theology, hr ginning in September, she will pur sue work in the field of religion education activity. The slogan “Fight Can cer with a Checkup and a Check is a good example. Wear Winners w Shoes! mgpf. AS FEATURED ON TWF tl# -H h 4 Sorrow WP S ,-o:A, s j v 1 — ■— *> a . 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