14 THE CAROLINIAN WEEK ENDING SATURDAY, MARCH 29, 1858 Durham Business College Moves To New Home It Is A ilpC Joy To Join In The Big Welcome TO THE North Carolina Teachers Association I ; ( li Enjoy Butiweiseie At Your Favorite Place Distributed in the Raleigh Area HARRIS WHOLESALERS Welcome NCTA TO McLEQD . || WATSON .^Sk ODD FELLOWS BLDG. We Cower The li Clothing The nm Dacron blend* have brought wonderful new freedom %mmW to suits. Freedom from that msmSm v -* « rumpled feeling became these MmijM jfr @Ctf ts-t T*t fITT suits are wrinkle-resistant. Free- ' & dom from that overheated feel- m MIC’IS/ IT A DDIfC tng because these suits arc Jjwf INI ti» W * /\or\.lV.O tically air-conditioned. And now • NEW COLOR * «jj~* w "' - • NEW STYLING We Carry A Complete Line Os Hart Schaffer and Marx Stetson and Dobbs Hats Botany “500” Arrow & Manhattan Clipper Craft Furnishings Sjhop This Fine Store For These Well Known Brands 4 aMaaHHMWiWWa«MW»w»wwna>aaM*M»wwawwawiaai"aawwianiiaawaaii«aaMßßii.^.awa«aiwwiii*iiiwr»'wai | wii»ar’’-*iraaaßiiMW'i>aaiiwa»ww'aaOTm>*i* l >wia*M»iiiiwiiii«M. if mu aaaaawwa waiiaawaiauOTMWMMaaaiw Rapidly-Growing School Now Located In A Former Durham School Building DURHAM The Durham Bu siness College has completed its moving to & new location. Th® Old Pearsontown school building Is the new location of the school, now located at 2635 Fayetteville treet. The school was abandoned by the County early last fall. It was revealed early this week DURHAM BUSINESS COLLEGE CP&L Plan s Belie ‘Recession 9 Talk It’3 hard to detect "recession” in SkjM» SAmomW Owtiidj, Roses, Mo«Wsod IWm-* HOtHA**.., boutpM* 04 phtts- lot «h* borne. /vStefeCtu *•*•** (lowers for sbui ins. After flowers for th* chuteb. fGSLh&fn re SEND EASTER WLOWERS-SY-WIRE ANYWHERE J. J. FALLON 205 Fayetteville St. Wa Grow The Flowers We Sell TE 2-8347 or 2-0795 that the school had negotiated a lease lor the building from the County Board of Education. The school leased the wooden frame building for one year at. a cost of SIOO per month County Schools business manager Lester Smith said. Smith pointed out that the ths planning, by Carolina Power ! & Light Company. Last Tuesday, the company j sold $20,000,000 in bonds to finance j current growth and on the same ! day announced plans for s multi- j million-dollar plant in Hartsville, I S. C. A; k“d how such plans squared i with the frequent talk of ‘‘reces- j sion,” CP&L’s president, Louis V. ] Sutton, said: “You have heard and read pes- i simistic forcasts of varying de- j grees ever since World War 11, but I our economy is too dynamic and j too healthy to be talked into an > imagined illness.” * * * * I One measure of post-war j growth. Sutton said,, i* the j 5204.000.000 the power comp- | any has invested in new fact!- j Hies during the 12 years since World War 11. The new 250,- 000-horsepower plant just an nounced for South Carolina Will involve an estimated S25;000,000, ... In order to raise such sums of expansion capital, the power com pany has issued both bonds and stocks. The $20,000,000 Issue of bonds sold Tuesday was in turn sold by the dealer the same day at a premium of $2.17 per SIOO, mak ing the interest rate approximately 4 per cent. Much of ths expansion capital needed during 1058 will go into a 235.000 * horsepower generating unit now being added at the Cape Fear plant near Moncure. 4. . - UNC Teacher Says ‘Mixing’ Will Be Slow ! WASHINGTON (ANP)-A white i southern professor, Dr. Cuy Ben- ! ton Johnson of the University of i North Carolina, told a meeting of ! civil rights advocates here last ' week that integration in the Deep ] South might take another 2S or 30 j years. Dr. Johnson, former director of the Southern Regional Coun eil, expressed the view while j addressing the 10th annual con ference of the National Civil j Liberties Clearing House. Dur- | Ing the conference, the Civil j Liberties group devoted an en tire morning session io discuss ion of “ways to acceptance »«d j coinpUance” of the Supreme Court decision on desegrcgl- j tlon. However, Dr, Johnson told the conference In his prepared speech , that some good had come from ; the Little Bock tragedy. He said ! Gov. Orvai Feubus of Arkansas j • shocked the moderates and conser vatives into sober appreciation of law and order. From a governmental standpoint Dr. Johnson suggested the Presi dent take a more direct interest in Integration. Should another Lit tle Rock crop up. he suggested that the President move resolutely and firmly, thoroughly explaining ex actly what is the issue. Sponges and drapes used in sur gery are dropped Into a wire bas ket Inside the machine and agi tated in a measured amount of water to remove the blood. Other blood lost at the site of surgery 1? slicked Into the same water through a tube. North Carolina pouitrymen grew It per cent more broilers in 1937 than the previous year. County Board of Education was not authorised to grant leases ior Durham Business College DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA INVITES YOU TO ENROLL NOW FOR BUSINESS TRAINING AT ITS NEW AND SPACIOUS ftl HOME WHERE IMPROVED Hfe AND ACCELERATED COURSES | ,|-i Are Offered.... I * SECRETARIAL SCIENCE * JUNIOR ACCOUNTING /Xoi * EXECUTIVE SECRETARIAL SCIENCE „ * BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION FREE Y|\] ★ SENIOR ACCOUNTING JOB \Wd2SSSat7 / ROOM AND BOARD ACCOMODATIONS PLACEMENT Approved For Veterans and Vocational Rehabilitation Students , “BUSINESS TRAINING IS THE FOUND A TION OF SUCCESS ’' For Free Information Write To DURHAM BUSINESS COLLEGE 2635 FAYETTEVILLE STREET DURHAM. NORTH CARO! JNA Welcome Teachers INS TAILMENT LOANS TEACHERS NO PAYMENTS ARE REQUIRED IN JUNE, JULY and AUGUST THE HOOD SYSTEM INDUSTRIAL BANK 122 Salisbury Street RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA A INSURED |H SAVINGS W periods greater than 1 year. , i Durham Business College’s new home was abandoned as a school i by the County early last fall when a new County unit was completed farther south on Fayetteville road, i It had served students in the j southern end of the county bn ■ i several years. A wooden frame structure wth complete basement, the building contains some 8 rooms with sever-! a! offices and an auditorium. I Smith said the lease also included, use of a two room building adja cent to the main structure. A spokesman for the Durham Business College indicated that some changes would be made in j the building but he did not club- j orate. Business College president L.: M. Harris, contenting nn the school’s change of location, said i "The rapid growth of the school I created a need for expansion. The administration feels that the set i ling of the building with its cam | pus will create a mucu better at mosphere and provide for a bet | ter learning situation.” The college is now in Its ten,’ year of operation. It had been u J rated at 901 Pine street since ,t j formation. It is a member of i : number of accrediting and prose ; . i sional organizations, including tie i National Association and Covin,u of Business Schools.