WEEK ENDING SA TURD AY, JUNE 1937 Adlai Stevenson In Ghana, Liberia n «“'sssaaca | i? OXS Ofl O REIDS VILLE \ Mwwtcftati «s^^rrr*-4~r.52 , anarnneaßttßSEnenKisaianaaHn HOXBOFO —Mrs Pearl Brad shaw Farris, 54, succumbed at, the Person County Memorial hos pital June V? at 2:30 a.m Mrs, Farris war the daughter of Mr. and Mr- Tee and Lulee Brad ;'rr nf the Union Grove Com munity. She was prominent in church and civic circles and whs a key worker m the Bend Moth trs Club ‘ ? rm:> * ' 7 *t < j l I ; ||- ; | r "vb * % v S:.U\ %. V 3 . ' H *l - ' I V, , i mEmJL* Jm r* V| T »*£ y , - ••• | ? * ini ? . i i * 1 '| , ) | ! ' v r!?,J l '-|f i L S’ I 'A>Jf r i / At j A fel : U V %\ IN >(V * M % U V- & Vu PI % f . r , 1 j CYCLING THE GLOBE —Dr. end Mrs."jcrrnss W. Go!don of Mmysir Term., board «t Pan Am Clippar at International Air prrt. ?'■• V, enro'ote to London and the start of o three-month trip . around the world. Dr. Golden will visit rrr --'.on stations, colleges and churches to promote the formation of a World Prayer League, feenrored by th» Nat'l. Fraternal Council oi Churches. (News «j*yes3 Photo). ; - - • v-w- , ? v ••* • ,s- <#“* -m '> W£ MEi.y' «? : ' ' &■' ■ ■■■'■ ■■} : ; 'h %/ ■ \ #;W b- | j | v J I ADMIRATION Now Yorkere turned out in record numbers j last week for the world premiere of Darryl F. Zarmck’s ‘ Island in ■ the Sun," one of Ihe most daring films to come out of Hollywood. ; C-'-sicaTed in ihe movie are famed actress Joan Fontaine emd t- k rnaer Harr/ Befafonte, who essayed the role of a Lady arid « Inner loader attracted to each other. (Newcpress Photo). MADEof POL VETHYLENE CA NBE /f Nf > wjkssyys&f "BOUNCED* ON A SIDEWALK WITHOUT WAKING YOU Pi %kssS) j HOUSEHOLD -or-1 h* NEIGH BDRS /• xnK> TV carssrs’.ssr.— jv jlv n. I '* '' ¥7-■ — —w \I/ “ i?& i/W A SYMPHONY VIOLINIST HAS NOW j ■ *L Wired ’ THE SOUND DANCE cf MMCtUtX/* TOW" b v WASHING HIS OLD * / 'DOLE BOW USING i k ; M IT WITHOUT ih P . USUAL RESIN. * | «ry-r^.v?«xg!gT^ rri~ziz'/zD f '‘/ 7' Cp* h V.v■ 'WOKECAN $f ' -V-r 'v y- ':r' wjceosv txsKum an ' rfrrn ACOurnCH Hit Cflim fy Tl I Mill I (f '|| T: rr/Nti (£.)."Mr MOUNTINGS jC-: j ol ,~R WEE ITERATORS a- /7!AT, ” | I lc: L;u' u b ! •■■• •• ■ r-WVihK»<• I)!SHn.'CKD T i~~u * • < • " r c ~rn /\ >ncmatepjais* | \t y * '*■ )• j|| ’**»■,..-.Ci « oaargrfMtMgg-.-vw ji N A NCN YORK CONSTRUCTION \ '■■V',-o-r i coK&NYf/tWf mrßUlf.om I : .r. :■ 1 i i V' u a>i 4W/.G? CAVMfKnmyh #-.- nnM •••*•, '.'.' A- jy /V (BON GlfißUt iVOPH - Yu' PAWED THAN THE SLOWER ; 5 nL->: ; | ' *v/i>r fuvermethod.* I j;, r\ I [ ~ j _.JEI . • i t i She is survived lay her .father , | and mother, Mr. and Mrs. Lee . Bradsher. nine brothers, four sis -1 ters, eight, daughters and one | son, Tire daughters are: Miss Pe- I cola Farris. Philadelphia, Pa . Mrs. Zelme Johnson. Washington, D. C . Mrs, Mary Brown, Mebanr, jN. C„ Mrs. F!odelia Spruill, Greensboro. Mrs Barbara Ann 1 Greene, New York. Miss Green Farris, Eastern Carolina Home ; Agent. Mr:. Marvelene Sparrow, ] Mi:- Drmctns ol the home and I Mr Floyd Farris of Detroit. Fun- 1 eral services were held Sunday at ' the Union Grove Baptist Church.; and final rites were administered in the Union Grove cemetery. •VIKs Patsy Phelps, the dnugh-j ter of Mrs Mable Phelps of 220! ; Johnson St who is an instructor j • at Maryland State Teachers Col- j ! iece is scheduled to study in France tin- summer Last, sum | inn Miss Phelps studied in Max- 1 ! ic-0. The Master’s decree was con-' j ierred upon Mia Phelps b.v lowa ! University in 1956. Miss Mable Ph< !ps is spend ing the summer in New Jersey. Mi .<• Shirle;. and Miss Julia 1 Oliver recent, graduates of Person OouTity l*:gh Stthoc-l v,ai.■ .iiu ".heel; ' in the social circle of j the t-T-nrise uronp are contemplat ing entering Winston-Salem Tra -1 chore College this tall. Mt-a Sylvia Outlaw left Satur day nutht. for Brooklyn. N. Y. NATIONAL WARNING System, or NAIVAS, of the Federal Cirii Pefrrir-e *,dniin : -tratirn is activated ut the control center in the Con- j tinental Air Oefense Command headquarters at Colorado Springs as c :,i. Earle E. Partridge (above), CON AD commander, the new 2X ■ -Kt-roile net for the first time on May I. From this control center, or one of two sim-i ir centers on the East apt! Wp*t Coasts, informa tion mi an impending attack ran he voiced directly to 200 warning potnt - throughout the nation. From these points, local warning nrts wotrid tr.i-e over. By a sh’-ple swtU-hiny proee'- . State civil defense | diici tors can also use the net tocMly to transmit detailed warning ar.o survival data to CD forces in the field. hj, s. Air Force Photoi __ i f a tr> r-’ .-y- vs r--w r» fr* gfg*A m 9 9 C<«»V - . ' . ,G,l/ • iS „»M i# -M if '* ' s f s.:i roads ; | |%:-? ’ i | Ir • •‘i f\. 7jMk i 1 M-K i*% ttfe am t KWKSmS. i . w Prainage pipe is poised through pipe underground without disturbing traffic on the surface , fOITOB'S NOTE This t -mother; i* # sortos of vfieJe* explaining <Jr vflapmcpfi th?f will r» into th* national and I<kh! jjovorn rrw«nt highway pros tr*m with «♦« VOQ Hitiion «xpimcii*wNi and %»5t improvrnir nU , ! One of the secrets of why to day's highways are superior to t.ho:?e of the past lies unseen tn the roadbeds. Hidden is the vast drainage ■system that underlies each new j super-mad A model of modern ;highway construction, the Penn sylvania Turnpike, contains up ; to Ur. ee miles of concrete pipe | for each mile of thoroughfare. Adequate drainage at each aide jof the pavement and in the 'median strip assures long-term I stability for the highway. The familiar round shapes of ' concrete drainage pipe remain '■ basic, though engineering sci ence has come to the fore with now designs. Today, one hears th.> words flat-base, elliptical, or oval. Both old and new types of at,eel reinforced concrete pipe are produced by Anv.u-Scfln-.Mamttft Company in 50 of its plants. They and other manufacturers havr their work cut out In the years eh-ad, for each billion dollars of superhighway expen diture moans the purchase of 11.000 miles of concrete drainage pine. And the 304,600 bridge struc tures, coiled for in the 13-year blueprint oi roads to be built, repve.-isnt only crossings of 20 feet ..)•■ nw'o, For many of the smaller overps «s<»s. sc. able rire.t>)ai;e pipe a re now avail ab'e xvfthbut t|-n expense of bt’odihg culverts. on the site. Round cohere 5 s shapes ere trilor-d to .ohm varied dis "*w wk-*»ff»*rwnrn-yjagyarntT! ■gasfgtadßfMiawwnanaatmAzia-wm'awiat ; where she will spend the sum- j mer. Miss Outlaw is a May gradu ! ate of the Person County High | ] School. Mi and Mrs. Ted Gentry at-1 I tended the wedding of their neice.; Miss Vivian Florence that took; t place in Washington, D. C. last | j week. Believe it, or not Mr. Manuel i i Wallace the erstwhile owner of j the Hoxboro Bees has brought » j new innovation in baseball. In 1 the ,ine T -ler-Bees came last Sat- j | urday Mr. Wallace made substi ml ions by pulling players off the ; field by blowing his basketball whistle to attract the attention; of the player that be wanted to ■ replace , . Joe Toler won 9-2. Roger 'Turkey” Blackwell is j that way about a very nice young I lady that, accepted a very impor- j . tent position in Eastern Carolina | : last week. Our sympathy goes out j for Turkey. Contact Samuel Elliott for The J CAROLINIAN -the South's Lrtrg- | est weekly. •* r— Y"—*~- —-| ■ 1 Fa-ctory-madf flat-base culvert* foi pedestrians and livestock meter.- lengths, and strength*. Where space is limited or special conditions exist, there are newly developed designs. Placed upright, ova! shapes save on trench width and result m greater self-cleansing velo cities when dry breather has re duced flows. Placed on its side, oval pipe requires « shallower excavation. A meric an- M a rie 1 1 a’e Tunnel mer an oval pipe with special dimensions, can be laid below ground without disturbing sur face traffic. A tunnel car on temporary tracks bring* in each succeeding length and carries out excavated earth. Sections are hauled lengthwise, so they peas through those previously placed. The car's operator pull* « lover Rt the placement, point, and a. machine twists the ova! pipe upright, firrolv positioning it Livestock crossings are built, with quick precision through us" of flat-base concrete, pipe. Other flat base typos nerve s - j pedestrian underpasses. , THE CAHOLIMAK here in Ghana next week. Mr. Stevenson was here several years Newest, necessity for the well ago and a number of citizens here equipped rook is an all-purpose who have met the former gov* can punch designed to open evap erinor of Illinois will be glad to i orated milk and juice cans with greet him again. equal ease. Mr Stevenson Is expected to' Compact and sturdy, the 5- )r,n C call upon Prime Minister N'kru- : - f eel opener qcr c' ! ! . h mah but has stressed the fact! rocnt which retches under the rim ; that there is no noli ties involved | ri ' J the evaporated milk can. pm in his visit, to Ghana, He will han-| Vldl7l * -'ff-cient Iwern*- f the die some business for of his! l,Rrr ° can vub « mini- j lerai clients mnm nf pressure. Reverse pute r From Ghana Mr. Stevenson will! "f clearly marked for j go to Liberia for a stay of two I V se * punches * wedge-shapen days. After a. trip through Europe ! ■»"•!!? isf-sE. ■* " from Oxford University in Lon-' To'obtain the opener, s ,„d M don he has touched several points 5p st amp« e r coin 'to i in Africa and expected to include Chicago 7, Illinois a visit to Dr Schweitzer at Lam- 1 ■'SMALL BUSINESS” I By C WILSON HARDER | Senate Small Business Commit tee, headed by Sen. John Spark man (D , A!a.) has released a study on a current monopoly sit uation destined to play large part in pending business legislation. * * * The report is entitled “The j ftight to Buy and Its Denial rection hv nr.£flHp)& Vernon ?,lundi f and thorough C. VV. Harder •study, T»r. Mund found ‘‘domi nant, sellers openly boast that they can decline to sell to some persons because they do not like their ties, or the color of their hair, or for no reason at all “ * * * Old court decisions have so far established the right for the sell er to choose his customers, hut it is now believed this is an out- j moded doctrine. * * * For now the situation is such that in many lines che production is concentrated in Ihe hands of a very few, thus small business is often without freedom of choice in selecting suppliers. * * * Many incidents of throttling smaM business have turned up. In some lines, the manufacturer virtually control the retailer and/or wholesaler, by curtailing his supplies, or shutting them ofr wholly for no reason other than some vague policy matter. * * * And probably the field where the greatest abuses have been discovered is where a manufac turer sets up his own retail or wholesale outlets in competition with his long established inde pendent outlets. j fc) National Federation of TnrtgpßM-nl ftuslr»B> You Need Not Leave Howe i For Peace And Quiet £ In grandpa's ! /gTyJ day the ticking I of the hall dock I could bp hoard . , J around the silent bou s e. Novc a • days, at a dis tance of only a few feet, the LJI familiar Mc k - fork w o tj 1 d b»■ || [| drowned out by hy the hubbub of ‘ ===rl modern living. Day—-and unfortunately— night we are constantly at tacked by thousands of danc ing decibels of sound which bounce and ricochet off hard surfaces on floor, walls, ceil ings, modern furniture, cabi nets, refrigerator and stove in ». hail of overlapping echoes. hr,CM: te ;?r Ay yprjgjj Aside from man-made clat ter and the anonymous noise of th? outdoors the sounds come from the hum and buss of electric mixers, dish-wash ers, vacuum cleaners, ex haust fans, furnace blowers or air conditioners, radio, ■ television or hi-fi music ~system* A 1 j . Then, If he finds his own op erations cannot compete against the independent handlers of his products, he shuts off their sup plies. This has happened to some extent in the tire Industry, for one example. *• * * The Senate Small Business Committee report, finds the situs- : tion especially bod in the steel, aluminum and copper industries where an independent fabrica tor of these metals is cut eff from supplies to benefit a port, or wholly owned subsidiary. * * * Undoubtedly. this practice ar counts, at least in part, for the steady deelirie in the sharp of defense contracts secured by small business. * * tr With a great dee! of fire, Sen. George Smothers has re.:: d a protest, on this situation to De fense Secretary Chari-s Wilson, * * * Sen. Stnathers sav* he is shocked that for the .luly-Dcrem hrr 1956 period the small busi ness share of defense contracts i dropped to Ifi.UT as compared I to 10.fiD in fiscal inr.fi. 31..1D. in fiscal 1955 and 25.3 Din 1954. « * * This is a situation over which the National Federation of Inde- I pendent Business has long been j protesting. It now appears re ports released by Sen, Sparkman and Sen. Smathcrs have a strong relation to each other. * r * Obviously, in defense con tracts calling for the use of met als, independent business needs * free supply of these materials. But If lhe suppliers of mcials are also through subsidiary op erations engaged in fabricating metals, and are competing for government contracts, it is quite simple to see how a. great deal of hanky-panky can enter picture There are explosive elements here which could he very embar j rassing to Mefense Department, 1 ■J,, But the H" I docs not need to ) / drive you away A S*. yl ( from h omt hi 7 X/' tearch of prat <• "' N and quiet. Scien tific progress has come to the aid of the home-maker with acoustical materials which can help break up the chain of r ever he rating sound. Acoustical tiles made of ca rious materials with many different kinds oi decorative stjrfaces installed on the ceilings of normally noisy rooms will absorb about 85 per cent of the sound that strikes them j r, r* n U Mi 1. Sou mi-absorptive mater i a I a used on the ceilings or walls will not. only make the kitch en a more comfortable place for the home-maker hut they will stop the disturbing noise spreading to othei rooms. You can do the same for the children’*- 1 playroom, bath rooms, father's work?lmp, utility rooms. TV rooms or other noisy place? in the house, The acoustical tile comes in attractive patterns of fissured, perforated, stiff | a led, etc., squares which can be painted to mutch the room decor. . vV:- ; i‘v;v | * “ « ' t *,* .* . ,*-j fteliitifiwyyyw _ ~-! n IN- 1 l.n^T HOUSE - One of the interesting new developments in mod eery living in the 1957 Merit Award winning Show-House Brookville, Long Island, is Luxtrol light control, a system that allows light; to he dimmed or brightened t#» just the right level for every seeing fa l: FAMILY “LITE INSITRANCF''* Js kept Jq thr bJ4T>r?nPiit tei thp War- Tr n household in Woct Frankfort, II!., in the form of the home shelter shown above, Brown, the cMy's civil defense director, i< >-hown with his family surrounded by equipment that Includes five masks, a eras lantern sleeping facilities for at], a seven-day supply of food and vat r, double steel doors, and an air filter system *0 keep out radioactive r rti- !es. Fallout from the St. Louis area is judged the main Cl> men or* in thr town. Zion Women Plan School SALISBURY —Mr? Abbie Cle ment. Jackson, president. Wom an's Home and Foreign Mission ary Society, AME Zion Church announced here this week that plans are complete for the first | Christian Leadership Institute i held by the body, a* Dinwiddle School. Dinwiridie, Va.. July e 12 The purpose of the institute Is to train al! persons inter ested in Christian service. The school will feature two fields of religious work—Work and Fellowship Recreation. There will be courses in Christian Stewardship and general Re ligious Education. The worship phase nf the In ; statute will feature a Morning ! Watch, where one can go for prayei and meditation This is a personal worship. Chapel will be field every day at 11:30 am., with 1 Vespers at 7 p.m Rev. Mr - Amelia i Tucker, wife of Bishop C Eu | banks Tucker, will conduct the : i Vespers. ; The Christian Leadership 1 course. taught by Prof. W. L Yates, who heads the Missions School Hood Theological Semi nary, Livingstone College. Salis bury, will feature Stewardship The Christian leader will get the full meaning of her individual ’ relationship in hoi church ana 1 1 in her community. Mrs. .laekson is general Chairman. Mrs. Aleestis (Hie lo SI.OO BTO R E i Children’s Clothes. Variety Items School Supplies y hui* fi.yjj ftojboro, N. C. MAR T H A Beauty Salon Corner TW 1 A- JOHNSON KOXBOFO, N C. LEWIS FURNITURE COMPANY Quality Furniture. Low Prices Easy Terms Call Us For An Evening Appointment 113 mCPOT ST. ROXRORO, N. C. PHONE 4ftSl j JACQUIN’S a 1 PIN mSm I g ?SO.M 09 JM t l * #s 9RftO£ 1 (KAIiCI HtGIUOt «t Cl*. Ist., PteH*., fs-, 8 ImNWNNWNB«NW* ( MW h W | * w^ PAGE THIRTEEN man, Supervisor, Tenth fipii pocal District, will serve as Urn Dean of <he Institute Mrs. Georgia Caisthen, Co-ChaJr man, win assist Mrs. Coleman, Mrs. Savannah .1 Medford is (hr Host-Supervisor, MORE PEOPLE ARE BUYING • FORDS i JR n Bum pa S Arch Jones B. & J. MOTORS, trn-. DEPOT STREET Telephone fi”li BOX BORO. N C. ”IrodsvTlle Laundry Co, - INCORPORATED San i tone Dry Cleaning REIDSVILLE. N C Phont DI 9-7044 J. A. HUMPHRIES Groceries and Meats PHONE 5513 820 Durhaw Road ROXBOF.9, S. C*

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