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WEEK ENDING SATURDAY. JANUARY 4, 1958
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RALEIGH NEWLYWEDS Mrs. Arietha Fields announces the
Marriage of her daughter Valerie to William Shaw, Jr, The wedding
took place December 14 at the bride's home, 1801 Oakwood Avenue,
Raleigh. The couple is shown above immediately after the ceremony,
performed by the Rev. P. 11. Johnson. The bride is a Raleigh native
»»d a graduate of Washington High School .usd Saint Augustine’s
College. She is presently employed at the \. G. Richardson School,
Blackstone, Va. she groom is a native of Conway, S. C. He is the son
of the late Mr. and Mrs. William G. Shaw.
Morgan Students Among “Who’s Who”
BALTIMORE, Md. Twelve
Morgan State College student lead
ers have been selected to represent
-.ho school in the 1957-53 edition of
“Who’s Who Among Students in
American Universities and Col
leges:’
pfll^^^BOTTE|i
?ASH!OHS
JANUARY SPECIALS
Nylon Tricot Slips
2 for
f t Reg. 2,98 to 3.98 2,65 Singly
Lace and permanent pleating. In white and colors.
Sizes 32 to 44
Nylon Briefs reg. $1 now 2 for $1
white. Sizes 5 to io. 59c Singly
Famous Name Bras
Cotton and Satin £ \ & ■/**
in all sizes. 'Mf V "
Rej?. 1.50 to 5.95 jp
Nylon Nose
2 p, for 99
Full fashioned or seamless. In the
popular fashion shades. 51-guage,
15-denier. Sizes BV2 to 11.
Laey Knit Stoles
100% Nylon in
white only.
Reg. 3.98 to 5,98
Beautiful Umbrellas
2 for 4* P*
Reg. 4,00 to 6.00
Fashion umW'iias in a ft S
beautiful assortment of stripes.
solids ar.d plaids.
n nr- ri • . i...
6.W0 DUlglJ'
i Students are nominated and se
j lected for the honor on the basis
of academic achievement and de
j rnonstration of leadership ability.
Six of the Morgan students se
j lected are seniors, and six are jun
-1 iors. '
IN RALEIGH. IT S
INSURANCE BUILDING
n
Zion Youth Activity
Grows On W. Coast
SAN FRANCISCO—The young
people of the AME Zion Church,
who are members of the Bay
Area, have adopted a very unique
system of keeping the work be
fore the people. Each church has
appointed a reporter and their
happenings are sent to Mrs. J.
Mayo Roberts, Director of Youth.
At, Sacremento, Sandra Cl.
West is the reporter for Kyles
Temple AME Zion Church and
Rev. Morgan W. Tann is the
pastor. The officers of the
youth choir are: Pres. Benny
Wafer. Vice Pres. John Lowe,
Sec. Sandra West, Treasurer,
Wanda Hayes.
The young women’s club offi
cers are: Pres. Sharon Lowe, Vice'
Mrs. Daisy Bates Is Honored
By Omegas At 44th Conclave
ST. LOUIS, Mo. Mrs. Daisy
Bates who spear headed the drive
to keep the nine Negro children
in Central High School, at Little
Rock, Arkansas, was honored by
the Omega Psi Phi Fraternity, at
its 44th annual Conclave, in a very
unique ceremony, held nt Kings
way Hotel Sunday, 7:30 to 10 p.m.
The award was made to Mrs
Bates and the nine children “As
Citizens of The Year,” who stood
up under the strain and stife that
existed at, the once all-white high
school, vhen they were admitted,
Dr. Matthew J. Whitehead, chair
man of the Achievement Week
Committee, which made the selec
tion lauded Mrs. Bates and con
gratulated the children for the for-
Ptude, bravery and courage that
they displayed in the time of so
great a crisis. The Conclave cheer
ed loud and long when the award
was made.
In accepting the award. Mrs.
Bates displayed the same calm,
serenity and humbleness, along
Lamm Baker Sad:
Singer Mourns Agent
Who Made Her A Star
NEW YORK When A1 Green
died last week in his N Y hotei
room, singer Lavern Baker told
friends through tear-stained eyes
that she lost more than a manager.
In Green, who discovered her
eight years ago and built her into
stardom, she said she had lost a
true friend and didn’t consider
him just an agent interested in ten
percent of her salary.
In town from the Motor Ci
ty to set up a recording ses
sion that she was due to make
for Atlantic, Green suddenly
collapsed, the victim of a heart
attack. When news of his pas
sing was relayed to her, Miss
Baker became prostrate with
grief and a registered nurse
hovered over her tor several
days.
Most managers, she later told re
porters, don’t take the interest in
an artist's welfare that Green did.
She praised him highly for teach
ing her the value of a dollar and
-he pointed to a bankbook that dis
closed an account well over $75,000
that he had persuaded her to save
and not squander away on foolish
things.
When he first spied her sing
ing at the Haute Show liar in
Detroit where he owned the
checkroom concession, she was
making SSO weekly. When he
deceased she had climbed in
to a $3500-5000 bracket as a
top-ranking rhythm and blue*
artist. »
Due to fulfill a Christmas holi
day engagement at the sam - Flame
aiMGWORM-DAM9RUPfI>
SUFIFESIEIS
!F YOU HAVE DRY BRITTLE HAIR, DANDRUFF,
TFT TER, ECZEMA, RINGWORM,OR OTHER SKIM
OR SCAU* IRRITATIONS, PXRSULAM WILL AT*
FORD TRANSITORY fi F.L.JEF OF THE SCALt.NO
AND ITCHING, ASK YOUR DOCTOR. DRUGGIST,
BEAUTICIAN OR BARBER ABOUT FERSULAN.,,
“Pirsulan-sm
g Hair Condition!!* from th«* 3r*lp UP ***-' ** ***
-wuKi uMurstun, »*■;„ imii a, jah»» 4. *««*•«
UNION
SKATES
DAISY
AIR RIFLES
GUN
SHELLS
RIFLE
Cartridges
FIRE PLACE
GOODS
$. M. YOUNG
H S's! lil f 5
ii a b u yv <b 1 t s
130 E. Martin St.
Dial TE 2-6668
Pres. Maxy Freeman, Sec. Dan
nette McMurty, Asst. Sec. Sandra
West, Treasurer, Vel Marie Mc
murty.
The First Church in Son Jose
has Robert Anderson as the re
porter and Rev. H. H. Shepard
is the pastor. The officers are as
follows: Robert Anderson, Presi
dent. Frances Anderson, Vice
President. Doris Nevels, Secretary,
Reginia McMahan, Treasurer.
The Rev. J. Mayo Roberts is
the pastor at Vallejo and Howard
Brown is the reporter. The Chris
tian Endeavor Officers are: Pres.
James Shank.'in, Vice President
Delphine Taylor, Secretary, Doris
Williams Asst. Sec. Mary Lou Dan
iels, Treasurer, Shirley Daniels,
' Chaplain, Helen Neal.
with an exuding Christian at
titude, .that she .has shown
throughout the . odeal. She
thanked the fraternity for its
consideration and felt that the
giving of the award for ren
dering that type of service
would serve to inspire others
to take up the torch and hold
it high in the fight .for full citi-
zenship.
Attorney Oliver W. Hill, Rich
mond, Vn. lawyer, w. 1 has carried
the brunt of the fight for euqal op
portunity for all the citizens of
Virginia, was given the “Omega
Man of the Year” award. Many of
the injustices which have been per
petrated upon Negroes in the “Old
Dominion” state have been chal
lenged by Hill and his associated
lie also led the fight to abolish
the poll-tax, as prerequisite to vot
ing in the state.
The selecting of the winners was
one of the several jobs done by the
Achievement Week Committee.
case she at first wanted to cancel
it because it would bring back
memories of their first meeting.
But after consulting Tim Gale,
head of the agency that handles
her bookings, she decided to go cn
with the date because as she put
its ‘‘Ai would vvuni it that way.
Fisk Choir
Salutes 2
New Colleges
NEW YORK The Fisk Uni
versity Choir salutes the two new
est members of the United Negro
College Fund over the American
Broadcasting Network January 5.
As a charter member of the
Fund, Fisk University, Nashville,
Tenn„ welcomes Barber-Scotia
College, Concord, N. C. and St.
Paul’s College, Lawrence ville, va.
The addition of these two institu
tions brings to 33 the number of
private, accredited colleges sup
ported through the Fund.
This special broadcast is
one of the regular weekly scr
ies showcasing the choirs of
ihe members of the United
Negro College Fund. The prog
rams originate from New
York. WABO, Sundays. 10:35
to 11:00 a.m. They are re
broadcast at varying local
times by affiliated stations of
the American Broadcasting
Network. Check your radio
page for broadcast time in
your area.
Subsequent January programs
will feature the choir of Wiley
College, Marshall, Tex. under the
direction of Gilbert Allen, Jan. 12,
the choir of St. Augustine’s Col
lege, Raleigh, N C„ directed by
John C. Moore, Jan. 19; end the
chorus of Livingstone College,
Salisbury, N, C., under the baton
of Myra M. Thomas, Jan. 20.
Select a tobacco platitbed site
that is near a supply of water
Methyl bromide used In the fall
or winter can hc-lp eliminate the
weed problem in tobacco plant
beds.
Tobacco plantbed soil should be
loamy, well drained, and contain
ample organic matter.
Farmers in 34 Mountain and
Piedmont counties will market
aromatic tobacco this year.
Soil moisture Is a factor influen
cing seed germination.
My Neighbors
Jill
• t
“What do I want with
snake-oil—heaven knows that
»'— i —..LI-
Itu
him quiet as it is!”
THE CAROLINIAN
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AIDS DIMES DRIVE Mrs, i
Richard Weden, Lynchburg, Va..
national president of The Links.
Inc., is giving offleial and per
sonal support to the 1958 March
of Dimes. In a plea to the na
tion, she said: “Mothers, as well
as fathers, are grateful to the
National Foundation for Infan
tile Paralysis for leading the
fight to win complete victory ov
er polio. We know how much aid i
Thousands Os Polio
Patients Need Help
The theme of the 1953 March of
Dimes has been announced as
Survival Is Not Enough." ,
The National Foundation
also announced that all 3,100
of the organization's local
chapters will engage in the
program of arranging and
financing the additona! care of
thousands of polio victims
who need It to make life worth
living.
March of Dimes funds will also
be used in 3958 to continue and ex
pand important studies in the field
of virus research which may lead
to preventives of many other virus
diseases.
Another objective of the March
of Dimes is to finance the train
ina of scientists, doctors and ther-
apists indite caie of the disatiled.
Ttie organization has assisted in
the education of nearly 7.000 men
and women in the field of polio
and related studies, but the short
age of skilled hands is still acute.
30th Anniversary
Coinciding with the opening of
the 1958 fund-raising drive, the
National Foundation celebrated its
20th anniversary on January 2.
In the 20-vear period it not
only sponsored the research
Salk va: cine but also fin&nced
the care of 325,000 polio pa
tients.
“The end of the era of epidemic
polio,” said Basil O’Connor, presi
dent of the National Foundation,
“marks the beginning of an even
more important, broader, more
challenging era of achievement for
tiie March of Dimes. The rehabili-
lev. Roberts
Awarded PiiJ.
The Reverend J. Dootis Roberts,
associate professor of Philosophy
and Religion and director of Re
ligious Activities at Shaw Univer
sity, has been awarded the degree
of Doctor of Philosophy in Chris
tian Philosophy from the faculty
of Divinity of the University of
Edinburgh. The title of his doc
torial dissertation is: “The Ration
al Theology of Benjamin Which
i oto: Father of the Cambridge
Plantionists."
Dr. Roberts began his work to
ward the Ph.D degree in 1955 at
the University of Edinburgh, Scot
land. The University of Edinburgh
granted him a leave of absence to
study for one term at the Univer
sity of Cambridge. His quest for
original manuscripts carried him
to the British Museum in London
for a period.
While studying he was privi
leged to speak to numerous
youth fellowships, preached in
various parts of Scotland ar.d
served as interim pastor of the
Radnor Park Congregational
Church .in .Glasgow .for six
months.
As an undergraduate student. Dr.
Roberts attended J. C. Smith Uni
versity and received the A. B. de
gree Magna cum Laude in 1947.
He subsequently entered Shaw U
niversity and received the B. D. de
gree in ifet). His thesis was ‘‘The
Primitive Baptists of Tarboro
North Carolina and Vicinity.”
He received the S.T.M. degree
from the Theological Seminary of
Ihe Hartford Seminary Founda
tion. His master’s thesis was en
titled “The Problem of Faith and
Reason as Treated in the Writings
of Pascal, Bergson and James.”
Dr. Roberts is a native of Spin
dale, North Carolina, and is mar
ried to the former Miss Elizabeth
Caldwell of Landis, North Carolina.
They are the parents of one daugh
ter, age 18 months.
Use one-fourth ounce seed per
100 square yards in seeding flue
cured tobacco beds.
Plan your tobacco plantbed
well.
Artificial breeding of daily
cows produces more milk.
March of Dimes cars of polio
patients has meant to us. Sup
port of research has been valu
able not only to the polio fight
but in solving problems in other
fields. March of Dimes aid to
polio care, helps meet a nation
al shortage of professional per
-onnel. For these reasons, and
because of my love for all man
kind, I urge your generous sup
port of the 1958 March of Dimes.”
tation of polio patients is the first
step toward the greater goal.”
SAVE AT ROSCOE GRIFFIN’S
SEMI-ANNUAL CLEARANCE
SUEDE o A I P
SHOE SALE \
/!
aORSHEIMS $1495 / Ji'A
I tmm
TWEED! ES "T&.S*"’ Now $1035 //, f|
MATURAL!ZERS FO T%Ir d Now s99s /fj
UFESTRIDES Fo sjss / Jj
LUCKY STREDES
Formerly Priced M «.’7ne /
to $10.95 Now $£S5 |
One specie! group of
genuine Lizard and
Alligator Skin
SHOES
sl 4^ s
FLORSHEIMS . . .
TWEEDIES
Outstanding
Values.
Formerly priced
to $29.90
LADIES’
BAGS
Vi Off
• Good Styles - Big: Buys
One group of Women’s Black, Brown and Red CALFSKIN
FLORSREIMS ...
formerly priced to $18.95
Now
TWEEDIES .. .
formerly piiced to $16.95
Now
Roscoe-Griffin Shoe Co.
120 FAYETTEVILLE ST,
State College
Answers
QUESTION: I want to select the
best tobacco plantbed site possible
this year. Do you have any tips?
ANSWER: Select a deep fertile
loamy soil that will warm up
quickly. Avoid heavy clay soils
that bake or crust easily, especial
ly when cyanamid, or urea and cy
anamid is used. The soil sould be
well drained, but not one that
dries out too quickly. Avoid dry
ridges. The bed should be located
near a convenient water supply A
soil high in organic matter seems
to be helpful in getting good stands
and promoting growth.
QUESTION: When using
new ground for a tobacco
plantbed don’t you have a lot
to trouble from weeds?
ANSWER: Usually, yes. But
Happy Khmer New Year.
One Group Os
SIIEBE
FLATS
$5 9 5
VVhispurrs . . .
Glamour Debs.
Formerly priced
to $8.95
c u n s: q
wll U k d
$1495
slQs>s
TWO STORES
good plants, with not too
much weed trouble, are being
produced by using methyl
bromide in the fall or winter
rate of nine pounds per 100
square yards. This chemical al
so gives good nematode con
trol. It is used as a gas and
must be kept in contact vvhh
the soil for 24 to 36 hours
with a gas-tight cover.
QUESTION: Just what seeding
rate is suggested for tobacco plant
beds.
ANSWER: The exact seeding
rate will depend on just how well
the bed is prepared and how well
it will be managed. The suggest'd
rate is one-fourth ounce per 100
square yards where average man
agement is provided. Many grow
ers are finding that they can get
good stands with as little as one
sixlh ounce per 100 square yards
it the beds are smoothed before
seeding, well managed, and water
ed at seed germination time.
One group discontinued
DANIEL GREEN
BEDROOM
SHOES
on sale at
$205
One Group of Children’s
Suedes and Patent Leather
BUSTER BROWN
SHOES
Sizes 5 to 8 $395
Sizes to 12 s4ao
Sires I2\,i to 3 s4^s
NATURALIZERS . .
formerly priced to $12.95
Now
LIFESTKIDES . ..
formerly priced to $11.95
Now
PAGE THREE
s9ss
$795
CAMERON VILLAGE