Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / Aug. 3, 1957, edition 1 / Page 16
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PAGE SIXTEEN Tiling* You Should Know Colonsl ]i 'iiSSit Benjamin q | PAV,S> **-• | ” 1-IEUTENAWr-COLO.NEi. 04</|s, AS : COM«A»Olhf« 99TH PMRSUIT ® /If * SQUADRON *N EUROPE/ WAS ALSO ORGANIZER OF the 33210. R6HTER GROUP DURING WORLD t wwul/they flew more than sooo mission ; OVER gJftOPC/ DESTROYING A TOTAL OF NEARLY I ''• 300 fcitfcwT rUM*fcS/ft¥ THE kmD OF THE mti? I COL. DAVIS>AND EIGHTY-SEVEN QP B?S MEN, HAD EACH WON A DtSTINGOISHEO FLYING CROSS / I * _/ 'Hanky Tonker’BillDoggett Biases Rock W Roll Critics NEW YORK (A\P> K,-..- , id roil lies been burned as the j use e. r r-’.v.vv»h ; .ng f-orsi rare n- ! s and automobile ncidentr, to ju- 1 ■rule riehngut rv-y arid forest ! cr. ’ r. eeltirr d jazz organ)?} Hill i a;' in , :< ■■-n 1 mtei vie w Tee pop .•! ■,. Kin:.: recording star I •d H time for pol- j Fantastic / DISPENSER WHCEU Cfflf|Mßß)n|l|pMPH|nß y nb>'l| ?.vobl« ~~ * : • ;•/ v,nd nf note wo»*» ♦ - ( . Y' o V Fw j * swp*r~Rir**# v «« Y«U 5 purifying rint. • ‘.-'/•'"U/ 1 '"9 oc+ '° f »* *°» loosen, woshogt, nnd ;s&~ a) \ Conner do»nei. • f| ut h owoy everything from fight lint jJ , ■’’•■■w A |\sk for Your Fes-e ; to heovy *ond‘ « >W 0 < Colqon — t ; Mo Obligotioni : • Puthbutfon Control A gh™ w i. P ° p ' ro, | •"«*«>* « bolidoy out of *v M'oshdoy! KiNG-sm rajims—iow mmr s l“owh q ;, e », JL 2 VcftßS TO PAY F | NAN Q| NG OPEN FRIDAY TILL 9 TIRE SALES & SERVICE me GOODYEAR PLACE I 101 Hillsboro St Dial TM 2-7571 ■J. ataa*SOOM=iii;i:j3i:isa- ' - l~'lllll11 lHiririll«»H«l—l Hi 11IIIIIIHI— IIH ■«— I■■ II <lll • iticians. teachers, preachers ar-.ri • i the police to letup and give the | rock and rollers a break. The kids j : aren't nearly as bad as folks would I have them bp. I've traveled more ! 1 than 100,000 miles-a-year for the 1 past five years, appearing ai Han es. th--atrr-s and clubs, and I've 1 , found that the youngsters are in : most cases better behoved than the ! adults we play for.”' Rock and roll music, which has been steadily booming In popularity despite the reports that it is on the decline, was cited by the famous Hammond organ stylist as "the one type of music that can serve as an jFunera! Directors Meet ; !In St. Louis, Mo. Aug. 5 j' | ST. LOUIS-- The 20th Annual j Convention of the National Negro j Funeral Directors Association con* I venes August sth through Sth, | 1957, at, the Kiel Auditorium, St. j Louis, Missouri, according to an! i announcement made t oday by I Robert H Miller, General Secre- j tary. This organisation which is com- j posed oi Funeral Directors throughout the nation has set as its goal the tail participation, rep resentation and integration of its members in every phase of the funeral profession including, lo cal, state and national depart-! rnents regulating the profession. [ Delegates will be arriving on Sun j day, August 4th, from all over I the United States. I Memorial Services will be on that night at the Union Memorial j Methodist Church. Dr. J. J. Hicks. | pastor, in mernoiy of all deceased ! r embers. Coining to the conven . scion aaou v, ill be the V. omen s ~u xilinry from all States. About a half-million dollars worth of exhibits will be shown. Some of the highlights of this year’s confab will be the Annual Awards Banquet, Tuesday, August Kill, at the Hotel Kingsway, with T. M. Alexander, nationally known orator and businessman of Atlanta, Georgia as the prin cipal speaker. Achievement awards will be presented by the National Funderal Direc tor A Embalmer, official jour nal of the Association, lo Mrs. Virginia State Music Prof. Receives Ed. D. At Mich. PETERSBURG. Va.- Thomas O Bridge, associate professor of I music at Virginia State College, recently received the Doctor of j Education degree from the Uni i versity of Michigan. The title of ! Doctor Bridge’s dissertation was r "A Study of Music and Non-Music Requirements in Music Education ' Curriculums." A former music instructor at the Lincoln University in Jeffer son City. Missouri, Bridge studied the violin under Gilbert. Ross and Anthony Whitmire at the Univer sity of Michigan. A native of Detroit, he is mar- At Bennett ; Methodists 7 j Centennial Plans Drafted GREENSBORO Members of the committee on conference sta- - tistics and history of the North Carolina Conference of the Meth odist, Church, met at Bennett Col lege last week to draft preliminary plans for the Centennial Celebra tion of the conference to be- held here in 1958. Bennet t representatives j meeting with the ministers in cluded President A V ilia B- j Player, Dr. Hobart S. Jarrett. j chairman of the division of j humanities and YV. 1. Gibson, director of public relations. The Rev. Robert Mcßae, chair- \ man. of Fayetteville, in calling | attention to the fact, that the j 100th anniversary will be held on j the Bennett campus, said that j highlights of the observance will | be a banquet and an historical j pageant portraying the origin and ; development of the conference. In ; addition, there will be suitable ex- 1 hibits of photographs, costumes j j and mementos and an illustrated I ; brochure. A committee on history, beaded by the Rev. William It. Crawford. Winston-Salem eocncilman, was appointed, with the following members: Miss 'lsabel It. Jones, Ashe ville; the Rev. G. Haven Cald well. Greensboro; the Rev. C. F, Strickland, Charlotte, and Dr. Jarrett, The Rev. J J Patterson of High Point,, was named chairman of the committee on brochure.! j and named to serve with him were : E L. Raiford. Raleigh; Clarence Gaines, Winston-Salem; Mrs- Mary . Morrison, Statesville, and Mr. I Gibson. These committees will make ! their first reports at n meeting | scheduled to be held on Septem ber 21 at the college. outlet for (hat tremendous bunch of tensions and anxie ties that plague today’s young sters " ! Hogget t. who heads one of the | most outstanding combos in the ; nation, insists that rock and roll ; music is far less sexy and slimuint ; ing then 'he dances and music lhai ' Americans enjoyed during those ! fast-moving "Roaring Twenties" j j He points out that many of the : parents of today’s teenager* and I young adults “would actually be i ashamed to perform such dance* ja* ‘The Charleston, 'The Black i Bottom,' ‘The Shimmy,' ‘Boogie- ! | Woogie’ non others—but they still | - critic;;'- the music and dance pre- I i ferences of their children, which | >iie realty tamo compared to what i was considered the thing in the ! [ twenties and thirties !_, . i | «o*h Mrmers ana gin tiers are j . required to keep accurate records of purchase? and sales of cotton. Beef c.,t,tie price* are expected ; to remain at present favorable le veL througout the remainder of i 1957, I THE CAROLINIAN i Fannif R Stone of Tampa Fia., 1956 “Woman of the Year’’. Mrs. Stone is a licensed cm-, balmer and funeral director, and j a life time member of the Board I of Directors of the National Asso ! ciation. She is also treasurer of i the Central Life Insurance Com ! panv of Florida. Other awards will | be presented by the St. Louis Un dertakers Ass’n to John Kirk patrick, editor -and publisher of the East St. Louis Crusader; Na thaniel Sweets, editor of the St. Louis American, and Mrs. Nannie Mitchell Turner, president, St. ! Louis Argus Publishing Co. i The main highlight of the con | vention will be the change of the Association name, dropping the i word “Negro”. There will be many social events given by the host j associations, who are the St. Louis ; . Undertakers Association and the ! I! Missouri State Negro Funeral Di- 1 ■ j rectors and Embalmers Assoc in - tioii, Inc, Last year this Association gave the Montgomery Improvement As | sociation $2,000.00. Jack Delaney, ! chairman of the convention com \ mittee, along with Robert H. Mill ! er were in St. Louis lasi, week com- I pteting the final plans with the | host associations. H. M. Ivey of ! Atlanta, Ga., is president and C. W. Lee of Montgomery, Alabama is chairman of the Board of Di rectors. Preceding this meeting is tiie Epsilon Nu Delta Mortuary j Fraternity who hold their meet [ ing for two days. P. H Purn<Tl of Houston, Texas is president. son of Portsmouth, Va. and is Tie father of two childrcm. He is a member of Phi Deita Kappa, Kappa Kappa Psi, Phi Mu Alpha and Kappa Aiha Psi fra ternities. HLTY CO. - Surety Bonds iie Insurance FAIR HOUSES 0956 Raleigh, N. C. _ ’iwwiiiwiMiiiwiiWiiii ww 1 »i ■iniiiiiii'iiiiiuiiifiiiiiiwiiiKi 'i ih 1 iii Get Rich In Spite Os Yourself YOU CAR MAKE $10,000.00 1 PER YEAR AND MORE Good positions and jobs are waiting” and | I can be yours. | Success Institute will help you get one j of these positions If you are honest and sincere about 1 getting ahead in life WRITE TODAY FOR DETAILS Success institute 1330 SPRUCE STREET DETROIT, MICHIGAN 1 jflMHWßßHWlßllllllilMlllliriillliillllllllM Hill il Hill i l i H IN. C. PRODUCTS! PERSHING ROAD RALEIGH PHONE 4-255? OLIVE STREET KINSTON PHONE 2514 I - ' ,1: AME Budget Committee Shows That Church Is In Sound Condition JACKSONVILLE. Fla (ANF>-~| The AMS Church 1? in better I financial condition than at any j l previous time in its history, mem- j bers of the Budget Committee of! the Church have just announced! here. The committee was original- j ly authorized at the Miami, Fla,,' General Conference in 1956. and j was directed to ‘-put the AME J Church on a sound business bas is.” That this has been accomplish ed was agreed by tire Committee following its recent meeting here. Among the announced accomp lishments was that the AME Church-supported educational in stitutions have received over the past 12 months 20 percent- more money than ever before. The Committee announced that the 54.00 annual General Conference assessment for all j I ' " WEEK ENDING SATURDAY. AUGUST ,3. 1057 j members of the AME Church passed in 1956, would adequate- ! < | ly meet the operational needs \ ] of the Church at this time, i j The $4.00 Is for General and j Connectionai purposes. Dr. R. W Mance, treasurer of j the AME Church, announced that I ! the Church has over *327.090 in j ! savings accounts. ; The Budget Committee is chair- J od by Bishop S. L. Greene and . I other members are the Revs. H. | Ralph Jackson, E. M. Johnson, R, i E. Lamb, and McCoy Ransom. Ex ; i officio members are the Rev. Rus . j sell Brown, general secretary of j the AME Church; H. Dudley and , Dr. Mance. treasurer. The committee has recently a,!- \ so been invested with interim ex- '■ ecu live authority to act on behalf Such | 0 ° A. j F00d... igi/ri | CHASE M ; Restaurant 'lff 33« E. Pettigrew St,. /( [1 Dial 2-6831 v v I 1U BHAM, N. C. ly Td interna'.*! irr>: on hi. . '^®*®eSs* r sured savings, \ | | The Hoed System Industrial f \ 122 S. Salisbury Si. / JtwaSf3sjnßfo. Raleigh, N. C, \ ! ~ v "- ;V . jl top qua lit:; [ | KRAFT RECAPPIKC ■ JoMßß®\ qaVF car, ; $ c " Tire Cost l : / \ V\\ * Mod tin Ti " / Eg t]\ . V * 8-Hour St tv t * arne R',. Terms To Suit You! H and 15 INCH TIRES RE-CAPPED I HUNT GENERAL TIRE CO. 128 s. McDowell st, phone ti > or, /1 * aOTII,U 'U-auaiH. e.U.ULIW «!■« J.J -UMI •: u_r; . OKI f, AT QUINN’S - ... ‘ y - : i lit,; Freshen Up Your Home For Spring 1 v rom Distinctive Furniture ! , j Ji x, El, Quinn Furniture Co. | 1.08 E. Martin St Your Capital City Tel. IE 2-4471 I ( * UKBm«M»»aßMwaoßifiicti>iiMWitWiagiw>ata«t.'Bnraereia«B«iWWitiß.i» fajawMajagaaMMaiCT-MM rxrzrrr.rc v-rnr % “ of the AME Church between •••••- sions of the General Board Bis hop Greene said GIVE GOD \ CHANCE! Go To Church SUNDAY! j Bin ma .ikhmi « iijiiium«ii»«wiiTT."»7 Better Buys * Better Terms 1 On Better I -Jewelry j
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 3, 1957, edition 1
16
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