Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / Aug. 31, 1957, edition 1 / Page 17
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WEEK ENDING SATURDAY. AUGUST 31, 1957 picther CORA !. FATSO' , .1 |-M ( lub member at Hi* Sampson Train ieg gt'luiel plans in r l-. n K-so « "jfIJSHB p--- y.. . -# - • ; ~ : : • . ~b * MRS. HEDY MCAKTHTH of the Hilly Braitcli section place* the finishing touches on the Raise a. Square Meal around Kama JTojrr;< in. Hers r ite Is sis - tasting the lid on her pressure •'•' ■ ~:• r ... • Ws . V'T - .., . • • I ■%::,■■ . k. C" " ■ l§pp^ BgKfc-.- vU ♦ «& ..... ' v, ' v ' "tF'.'i.' .jR% ""gf Ip; : ,g »S ! . CvWj # *.. * IMfc.jhv- fßf.-aK-! (SSISt: Vt. ...« . -.¥'=■ %»“ ■<'■. J ST-P'? "U:, I' .1 ■ - r-. #>|fw .••:> 43 fr & ;«c' .'r’wJSitflT V; ! ig? , W'*T : i£aw TO LOOK AT MB FRLOKH'K COOPER fn his tobacco Odd you wouldn't infttk he was S’l t’. He said soil samples sure joy off, tie has a better {jts.AUy «i to'h.u-- c» and used leas fertlHwr than he has been using. Bis corn, cot ton, potatoes, and peanuts art equally as good as his lobareo. r-Btanar iv nr-— m v vti' «w nnaw vmm* MSURAKCE TIPS j hy Yfi*Pxi l&mtmtas Mono#tn? ] A*sf,<ktHai> <ir 2 Bow htStfipitte Fcitmi Are Sc-t Insurance rates for » particular puto coverage vary sll over the lot A New York businessman (to take an extreme case) may pay $45 for a single insurance, cover age that costs a Pennsylvania farmer only sl6. At that, the New Yorker may be getting a bargain. ‘ How are such nio raw s set? They arc act hy the risks you run. Using a kit of tables, charts and Rtatistirs the. rate-makers put a price tag or. your risk?,—consider nvg three things mainly; the price of "your i»r, the territory you live in, and whether or not you have a "youthful driver” ir the family. If yon drive a Cadillac., your fenders will cost more to repair than Ford fenders. This mo*ns ytmr rates for collision and com preheosive insurance mast be feghcr. „ L r- itrnjrmM WHEN IN CLINTON •«w»**wwivinmr—mf HHIHW wm mwHWMMiBMi ■ nmmißin SHOP urmn—winmiim COMPANY “Clintons Leading’ Dept. Store’* We Carry A Complete Stock For The Entire Family “ YOtJ K ON E-STOP STORE IN CLINTON” •wlt.ud ivarhrobe as she completes r t Kohl •; pi-.-jert. <’or.j makes most of her clothes for school. i-t-i-Xrr full of vejfe.iables from her home garden. Mrs. McArthur is ..i ieader in her community .!;•!? die proves it by growing and « oMservjng the family food sup » ply. ! Attention ; Farmers i BUY NOW j PAY LATER We Can Outfit The Entire Family j ON OUR .„ * i EASY CREDIT PLAN lL ;• I^4, Clothiers CLINTON —and— WALLACE I; Support Civil Rights Bill: ! 11,500 Attend Elks’ ! Memorial Services By J. ft. HABJREN ii PHILADELPHIA More than I j 1500 Bills and Daughters o£ the I i Improved Benevolent Protectr e II Order of Elks of the World I ! TBPOJSW gathered in spacious I ; auditorium of the South Phiiadel p | phia High School. Sunday morning | j forthe annual Memorial Service to | ! the departed members o? the Or* i tier. BEE'S EAST SERMON (?) The Rev K It. Collins Bee. j grunt! chaplain of (BPOEW, i preached what he said “might he nsy last sermon in the capa | j city of grand chaplain.” In his message which was taken from the subject: “New Men i or This New World.” the Rev. Mr. lee warned that ‘‘there V *must he a. new thinking tor a new world bv new men. ‘‘There mu«t be men. whom the spoils of office cannot buv; men, who | : will no; lie; men >vho will lift | I men out of the quagmire of | the present.” Chaplain Lee continued. ‘‘Wo * don’t need Armies. Navies nor Air-Forcer, but men and wom en who have been touched by the ; ! hand of God. because no man lead ; a people to peace unless he has been touched by the Spirit of God l and is a Christian.” *‘A society | butterfly”, hr concluded "cannot I lead in God's Church, nor has any * business in the choir nor on the trustee board. 1 Hobson R. Reynolds presided ov k er the Lodge of Sorrow ’ which 1 paid tribute to the 491 departed Bills and 407 deceased Daughter- Elks. who were briefly eulogized by grand secretary W. C. Hurston and secretary of DaAughter-Elks. Mrs. Buena V. Kelly. Dt. Ruler Nettie Carter Jackson also paid j tribute to the, dead. Ms : Florence ! r j Blango, grand organist, presided } over the music. TAR HEELS PRESENT Among the Bills and Daugh- | “T Compliments Os McLEAN ; SUPPLY 1 COMPANY $ ROYSTER FI ELD TESTE D FERTILIZERS ; # CROP PRODUCTION CREDIT CLINTON, N. C. W. T. McLean, Mgr. j j Organized 1933 | Good Farm Equipment | Makes A Good Farmer ! A Better Farmer INTERNATIONAL I TRUCKS I FARMALLTRACTORS FARM IMPLEMENTS ; | OF ALL KINDS j - SEE US FOB— i PARTS AND ; ! SERVICE CLINTON TRUCK ; and Tractor Co. ! Phones 2033 and 3019 Clinton, North Carolina THE CAROLINIAN lets here from Tarheelia were tins following for the opening services Sunday: State presi dent K. P. Battle, Mrs. Battle, Mrs. Nora Bailey, J. B. Bar ren, Rocky Mount; Mrs. Janie Petway and Mrs. Carrie Down ing, Tarboro. Julius Haywood and Mrs. Bessie Chavis, Ra- j i lelght airs. Letitla Smith. Stale Daughter president. Hickory; Mrs- Evelvn Adams, Gastonia, Mrs. Lenora Whitesides, Ashe rilic, Henry Atwater, Chapel lSiil, James T. Hawkins, Dur ham. Mrs. Ma-udie Dickerson MargarettsviUe, and Mrs. Bes sie Walker, Will. ITSGT-: RIGHTS BILL Dr. Robert H, Johnson, of this fil\. c. rinJ. r-xaltcd ruler, said on the eve of the sßth Grand Lodge Convention of this fraternal organ ization of more than 1,000,000 mem i,t -,. Jjiat ice eouvt'iUioii woujd ; concentrate on the urging need to i have the Senate - nd the House to i pass a strong Civil Rights Bill si- | ro.ilar to the bill requested by the Administration The Elks wh ?h opened its na tional convention, today, with an anticipated 50.0O 1 ) attendonco. >.« meeting at the South Philadelphia High School. Dr. Johnson said: “Conditions of suppression, seg regation and discrimination direc ted against color,ed people can no longer be tagged as a racial prob lem confined to the southern uni ted. States. “It is largely this factor which retards American world leadership” Dr. Johnson add ed; “we mtisi, ever he mindful of the fart that 4-sth of the world's population consist of non-whites, and it is difficult for the world to,accept Amer ica as an arsenal of democracy, a champion of liberty and free dom when our own house is not In order. picther DOROTHY"cOLBRETH, a 15 year-old 4-H Club member of Mt. j* Pleasant community, After car rying « dairy project for five years, has earned nearly S2OO In Elm City Youth Among 50 ! At Polio Confab In N. Y. NEW YORK Marvin Roun tree of Eir: City, N. C. was one of 50 teenage leaders from ail parts of the country who attended » Youth Conference .on I\jj£o' Vscu- I nation in New York, August 25-23 j it was announced today by Basil \ O'Connor, president of the Nation - j a! Foundation of Infantile Para* ENNIS BASS! | Cadillac-Olds | ! V. S. Highway 701 iCadljiac l CLINTON. N. C. vtuetmtsta***'. im' f wwi umii in* imrtrrm wwami>■ ■ iwihwummiumihiu -.usus —i*BW*B«w«i—. .. M'xwMnms4jsiiiMibWA , zMijmiu«o'i*>* 10PCAJSIN! MSs^ • SOFA BED n | I y * MATCHING ROCKER 11 * OTTOMAN • 2 END TABLES 1 || %# ! coTee'table si 8.00 DELIVERS Phone 2423 jJmnS . ' premium money for showing her animals and has increased her herd this year by th« birth of a heifer. lysis. Young Rountree i* (he son of Herbert Rountree of Route 3, Elm City. The conference:, the first of its kind, was called to obtain new >- : deas for encouraging polio vaccina -1 tion among teenagers. Mr, O’Con ner said. U. S. Publics Health Set- wowimwwiwi ww <■■»»>«» ~rt****»*i~+>~.**~*z:* a»as mutrniomi/Kx-jts&uO!* Congratulations . - „ Sampson County «SL S&- Farmers BUY AND SELL IN CLINTON Senator Henry L Vann clinton: north Carolina vice figures show that only 20 per cent of the nation’s teens have had three shot-: of Salk vaccine, the number necessary for maximum protection. The primary purpose of the con ference was to determine the vari j ons reasons why young people are SALES & SERVICE of CLINTON, INC. PHONE 2543 - CLINTON, N. C. Customer Satisfaction Guaranteed! HOT POINT APPLIANCES AID TELEVISIONS i JMOTT*r<v^j-tt«wwr»*T^.nsas\i*w--urMii‘«aoi wx? ■ was:«wa* ~ - ■ • ~v®«~nxm»r#w v:*i*"**~ PAGE SEVENTEEN • not geting vaccinated as rapidly at is desirable, and to find out what can be done about it. Active in civic affairs young Rountree is national president of New Farmers of America. A gra duate of Frederick Douglass High School, he was president
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
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Aug. 31, 1957, edition 1
17
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