16 THU CAROLINIAN WEEK EWDTNG SATURDAY, JANUARY 17, ISR# Bang You Should foor Petya**, If WADC ' / " During the bio slavery $/// ry '*\J DEBATES AROUND !533 / TVUS ANTI-SLAVERY SENATOR FROM OH, ° ®OLOLY DEFIED THOSE ‘ MF 3TATgs THAT threatened to 1 I jWUJ*- Z< secede/ ACCORDINO, MANY 11 I * WERE FORCED TO BACK DOWN/ I , ; v .a* M'C’/O TA L. f Vdf J > , t wiw«AW'«>ff*"»jf r—mwvwnmum, , ! Open To Negroes: CAREER OPPORTUNITIES nr nt \ri avritfr farm rm oit nomimstra IION Th# Fgrm Ocdit Administ: n• 1 | ACME REALTY CO m Rea! Estate - Rentals - Surety Bonds Fire and Automobile Insurance I WE BUILD AND REPAIR HOUSES 1 . Dial TE 2-0956 I 129 K. Hargett SI. Raleigh, N. C. | WHITE OIL CO., INC. Mobilheat FUEL OU, & KEROSENE WE GIVE S&H Green Stamps DIAL IT. 3-4474 1115 W. LENOIR ST, RAI.EtGH, N. L mSYRISSIS MmA nmfcvV** \ • bridge fWMteiiS/7 «CONCRETE PIPE f4*flini 72") / / « CONCRETE BLOCK AND BRICK ■ * » CONCRETE STEPPING STONES J/ ™ RALEIGH—DIAL TE 4-2557 DURHAM—DiaI 2-6491 • KINSTON—DiaI 2514 i 5° 5 300 ■ Vp,,licaUwn VtU ' |lt< '' l Qxlk- By Phone | If You Want Money Fast, See Us ti r aWV Iff jrliVJLj c O M PAN Y 18 W. Hargett St Phone TE 4-6288 j ' ' " ~~'— ■ II IIM II Mil Mill |'| 111 I 111 II I lln II i County and City Tax Department TAX NOTICE ! i 1 l ist Your 1959 Raleigh Township and City of Raleigh Taxes--*- Beginning January 2nd Monday Thru Friday 8:20 A.M. to 5:15 P.M. ! JO! West Davie Street (County Office Building) Corner West Davie and South McDowell Street. All other Townships will he listed with the list taker in j your respective Township. Lis! your Rea! Estate, all Personal Property including nu j toroobiks and dogs. All Male Persons between the Ages of j 21 and 50 years of Agf required to List. Poll Tax. The Law requires that Taxes be listed in the Month of |! January. A Penalty of 10% will be added for failure to List. I m addition to Violation Reported to Grand jury—List Now and avoid Penalty. - It lot; supervises, examines and co ordinates ai'livites of the coopc-a- j live Farm and Credit, system. This i agricultural financig system is do- : signed to provide both long-term and short-term credit to individual farmers and to their marketing, pure basing, and service coopera tives. This self-supported system is to a large extent owned and controlled by the farmer', and cooperatives it serve. Ms goal is to provide credit especially adapted to the individual need basis at the lowest possible cost, of its borrowers on a sound Most of its lending funds are obtained from investors through the sale of securities without any government guarantee Employees of the Aadmtnistra ; Hon hold positions in the eompeti | live civil service, many of which | offer Opportunity for travel with | in continental United Sstates. Po | rations of farm credit examiner at i tract iieeountasnts with eonrpre j hensjvc education nr experience in I commercial-type accounting arid a working knowledge of bank practi ces Positions of hind bank apprai ser call for formal education in an agricultural college of agricultural en-dit. Some Appraisal posit ions r-. - ! quire the combination background of hydraulic engineer and agricul tural land appraiser. In addition to the above field positions, in (be headquarter;, of the supervisory agency at Washington, there are a limit ed number of positions which are of interest to financial an al y Ist*, Investment specialists, economists, and agricultural e conomists; also secretarial po sitions of more than usual in terest. For detailed information, wviir to Personnel Division, Farm Ci o di't. Administration, Washington 25, U IV. Slate College Hints t--istant Director Hume koiwiniii s. N < Agricultural Extension Service COED WEATHER T I M K FOR ; CA RBOHYDRATES -Is cold wen- j tiier hard to take? Research shows that carbohydrate food;; are cold j Weather protectors. Best known : are: Fruit s, most vegetables, breads, cereals, miik. Be sure ce- ! real and bread are enriched or j whole grain. SOMETHING DIFFERENT IN; MENU PLANNING—For a change | of menu, switch the high pro! jit j food of the meal from the main j course to the dessert course Add i preserved ginger, chocolate chips or plump raisins to baked custard. | Tasty bread puddings are good se- ; lections, too Angel food cake or meringues, teamed with fruit oi ice cream are bargins in high qua lity protein as ore. cheese cakes and baked Alaska*. TEEN - AGRRS NEED GOOD BREAKFAST - ft';, foolhardy for high school tauden's to trade their breakfast for a little extra morn ing sleep It i« piwcticaUy hnpos sible to make up the food missed at breakfast by rating snacks or “overeating*' at other meals. Breakfast should provide at lea j one-fourth of the teen-ager's total daily food intake. That mid-room ing hunger feeling among teen- 1 .;; j ers can be stopped with a good serving of egg.-- at broakfsNl. B- - cause high protein foods are slowly digested, hunger comes Jens quick ly after eating eggs for breakfast Much of the ground work for health in later life is laid duHre; the tpen-age period. It is often im possible to compensate for nutn- | iional damage incurred during the teens. //it Old 7c'nu /r, / T' 8k & "Fewer wen have been call j i«K their w ires ibe iiitio woman’ Mince they started ' wearinsr slacks." Thousands Os Infants Are Born i Every Year With Major Defects Birth defect#; (congenital irml formations), one of the new health , goals of Ihe Nalional Foundation j (originally {.lie National Founda- i lion for Infantile Paralysisi, are described as the most important unmet, childhood medical prob lem,-;. Each year about 35,000 children ! arc born in this country with sig Yes, We All Talk By Marcus IT. Bouiwaro I \( 1 s The euMU.-r;! of ■'* spccdl, among , other thing'-, must contain facts. I They a;,' objectivi and negotiable We can ti:;v-r attiturlos toward i aid we can inlerpn I fact' but such attitudes and interpretations i do not. alter the* facts. Facts are j nested or manufactiired; they i j i-xi :l and may be discovered by J ! anyone who cares to look for them j and who knows where and how to I j look. If two or more persons dfsa -1 tire or the farts, it means J it'd i someone is m rori, that diffcrenl people are looking it j j different farts, or that they arc confusing opinions ami inter- Garden Time BY IVI I PARDMR ! f let the deadline catch me t.hp time without a prepared article for ; my "Garden Tune’' so ! am quol -! inv, one rceentl.' prepared by John I Hurrtf! tor hi- Tar line! Gardner.*' I Hope you cn.ioy it: "Why do men and women gat'd-; Jen? To satisfy their physical and J uestheilr appetite;- not uHogcth j Jed. There's a not her -untie to this i i business of gardeninc. II falls im-! | dor the heading of menu I hygiene ! or therapy. “A few years ago in EJ La both i : City i found au dent c.ndner i I who had never seen Li., garden. He j i wh.s totally blind and diet all hi; gardening through his sense oi touch. Amazingly, ins garden \v»:., i clean and even his i ows v.-.-'r fair !Jy straighk Why did he gardenV ' For the Jtesh vegetatflfc, yes. bu* ! mainly because of the self-satis faction reccr cd and the tcclmg of • j success. A few nipfits ago a lad 1 j called, full of cnilipsiam for lt>-: | new home, ana wanted a. list of ! fragrant plant-. She was Wind. “During the war I recoil giving • | first prize in a garden contest io a gardener who did alt his work 1 from a wheel chair. Tt.s the early ; morning aromas, the wafchiir for ! rain, the waiting for spring, the ! satisfaction of harvest, that make? j me click,' he explained. “Garden!nr, is a wonderful e-:- ‘ erase for a handicapped child 11. | developed his body as well as his i ; brain, ?.!y own eleven-year old sou,; j Rand (a victim of cerebral palsy),! j already knows more, about garden- j i mg than some adults. Os course, it ! isn’t always easy. It take-, time and ; j patience—they got in the way. j : make a mess of things, but the re i sutls ai r worth it. They have to; | learn and they do learn rapidly ; | Marly are the vegetables and flow- I ers that have been pulled up fori weeds, but he knows the difference : now . Right now my lawn has spot* ! jof dead gross. Ra-nd explains to j i visitors that these spots are win ce | ihe put too much fertilizer and j j laded to distribute it evenly. How j j else do you learn these things? 1 "1 worry little about his getting ! Son plants he helped plant, them ! i and knows where t-hev are. Much | 'to my oinbarrassmeni. he said to; j some jn iest. recently, ‘please get on ; j the walk you’re stepping on out , : ophiopogon.' ■ls e ot i want to interest your | child In gardening, start early | (even at two or three years old', I make a :,<uno out. of if (never lei ; | it become hard work), and let him i do it himself. Kho*.v him how, t that’s good training, but, don’t, do J ii for him!” | State College Answers QUESTION Should I us-o MH-S0 I for tobocco Bocker control' 1 ANSWER: It advisable not to use the chemical until scihL-Ij am able to determine under what, conditions, if any, it can be i: ed without affecting tobacco quality ! Research has already .-.howti thtd I MH-30 im* some chemical and physical c!i mgr:; in toha-co Some | of these changes sre desirable and i some undesirable Rather than j 'lake a chance on lov’d'inc the ji quality of ilmir tobacco, farhiers | should refrain from using Mlt-:.i() * until further research on it; effect' i i is completed. QUESTION: l: tobacco usiv m the United States expected lo in crease or decrease in IfGIU ANSWER: l)on:e,’ lie n • of bolh | fluc-cured and burlej tobacco is expected io continue upward in j i»sl> as a result of increasing cigar- I e'te manufacture- Present indie,i --! lion.', point, howoi-r-r, to a decrca.-c i in flue-cured tobacco exports the ! year. QUESTION: I low did pig far- j : rowing; in the tail of 1858 compare j with farrow •nr a vear earlier'’ ANSWER: Earowings were up 11 j uer cent. This is expected to cause j hog price.-: to he weaker in the i spring cl J9AH. Hog prices arc ex pected to reach an early nen.-onsl peak tn July and trend downward j in the fall A large build-up of hog { number* is expected to come in the j j IDSO spring! pig crop This vTI! j greatly depress fall prices. Whit- i | iiog prices will fall below those of J I a year ego. the ..civ cowling rat ,o i 1 is expected to be favorable. nificant defect#;. These defects i cause the death of 34.000 infant,-, I a year, or one fourth of all infants ’ m the United Gfates who are still- 1 horn or die within the first, month; durim; an average year. I The National Foundation will J J launch research into the causes ol j ! birth defects with .some part of the ■ $05,000,000 i(, seeks during the 5959 ; pretations with facts. Thr faels ran t hi- ii nun;, hut our percrp • ''•ii "1 (hem <mi )*c drddeh myopic. \or Hor«. agreenpud person-, on rrrtain jiofut necessarily establish them a facts Consensus m.i y raise a strong presumption. hn( facts arc not determined by a nj» jority vote. Most of UK prize fad;: very high | iv. even though we frequently ",-t i without, them or disregard them j At least, most of us like to prof’ -s i io be among those who face the ■ f icts. 'l et's look at the record ’ J We cannot ignore the facts '' Act j ually, of course, all speakers have the facts- or should be speaking in j an a tempi to discover them. Since : I this is the case, d is t fair quo,- 1 ■ lion to ask J ‘Tow tlvi at decide what arr thi , ; facts and what arc not" How do wc I | know who hts. the facts. How are ! we lop ret.ognizc a fact whet) we J j meet it? it! \ni r:s For i») fire pamphlet or, croup discussion, s-nd n .-uai.ipcd, self. ! | addressed bo-ioc...- envelope to Dr \ j Mi reus H. Boulware. St. Angle j tii.e's College, Raleigh, North Ca | roilna. I Hens wdll not drink all the water i j (hey need if the water is ice cold ; ! or if they are forced to peck a hole : 1 l.lnough the ice in order to get . 1 ! drink. osTWash r - FLUFF 3° DRY J OPEN 31 110 f RS. I!A> \U NIGHT j m \ktin STm*;rrs SELF SERVICE LAHNDRY 33K l Wart it! Stret-f ? ’ lit T PARKING IN BtCR i i • W’raoMßwrwi'iiaiii); v taw r, • " IW »>^ | » | ■*■*»!■ - hmwi imi i mMiup' niMn»»rmiifimrniiimmwinMwiii«iw.nuiiii' Wt' ! MBiiWli'T' " ■■■■""——»— rTTT "^ Poor Jim j 11 \ Doesn’t Save Here... r , j Jim is A Now-And-Then Saver ... On' 1 % W | MPBHrewwHi L yM But jack Saves At Mechanics & Farmers ; • • p . Where His Savings Earn Jack k a wise young man 0L |gt \C\%Vf V s on two counts? he saves ]} regularly every pay day *,, and he saves at Mechanics & Farmers Bank where LjA l \ his savings earn a full 3% guaranteed interest, \ paid quarterly, with Federally insured safety! f \j / } Vou, too, can afford more and live better when your \ 1 V> x savings earn more! Be wise, like Jack, and open a y l !\ j savings account here today! Y ~ O K'”"*d Mechanics & Farmers Bank RALEIGH - DI RHAM MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION Ln— ■»■ I. T-miMWllili I liiL..|[..ilTDHT|-| ITI-111 Hi )■ .l-rr-mr—i n--|Ti t iiu-.u -|- nr". ... - rn.-rmr ■■ -r.- . ■. W rtr> l r l r lllw .:r MWt i»4«. U . w wju .av.w:« ij-a -■ .r r I W March of Dinic.s in January. • s '>mr hirtll defects arc \v »;li ly known anc! m-ugnrtcd. V nniiiK them arc clef! lip ami Palate, hhihfoal, missing ex tremities and f'-Hdctnindcrl - ness. There and other eon ;rni tit I malformations are ctmcJi tions due to factors act ini: lie* lore birth, not injuries neeur iiiß during the act of birth. Birth detects not. only conrtituh a medical cha Henze of the first magnitude but represent a prob lem in public education as well. The need to develop healthy pa- No “narrow-gauge” ear < \§/ > lings the road list PONTiAC! ' tor Hie widest, steadiest st set m Amo icti. SP^ Road-test the only oar with Wide-Track Wheels Hi-hind the wheel of a Pontiac you enjoy a ifs !ipg ot so untv you've never known in all ywr yeast- of driving. With ih»; ~tau«.-n on Hu road and a low, iosv center of gravity, Pontine dings to the curves without lean or sv-av. Ami the same great advance gives Pontiac a decided edge over oilier cars in the way it. smooth:; the bumps and holds straight and true against erosswinds. Try it and seel America’s Number (i) Road Car! t>nn 7: IT AND YOU'LL BUY IT! '■ YOUR ! O r AOThoc- '■ a f.>ON’ IAC DLALER CONN-GOWER PONTIAC 00., 3628 Hillsboro Si. {Dealer Licence No. 2417 iwwm —-"--v ’ scr~* — --rrr— ti -—l-iiaunmßiji.n.ij rum .rnm.-» i-iiiinaur i iimc nmyji ji i i iiiaium mu I rental and community attitudes | j is especially vital. Aa soon as possible, the Nation al Pounds lion will provide for uh -1 Mi-ill aid lor children through aye ; 1H with specific kinds of birth de j leds involving Ihe central nerv ous r.vslcm Ti-i .•-> are spina bit) da, a. deformity of the spin a 1 ver tebrae; encephalocelc a deformity j similar to spina bifida except j j Unit the skull instead of the spine is open; and hydrocephalus, an! | acemmilation of excoss fluids m ; the euvtties of the brain (corn- I motily known ns "wafer on the brain' Research In birth defects is I closely allied to work already done j by National Foundation scientists i on -be nature of the livin'! cell. I Birth defects arc a major phase j of the expanded program of the i National Foundation. Other areas jof March of Dimes activity are | arthritis, the vims diseases and further work in polio. r ' if y<: keep tny command mrnts, ye sdiail abide in mv love, even as I have kept toy Father's commandments and abide in His love. fSt, John .15:10.) The way to live a good, happy, useful life is cioarly defined in the Bible. By fol lowing the commandments of Jesus, wc may have Him a? our ever present, kindly amt understanding Friend, and be strong nnd joyful its His abounding love and help. S portable Tronilstor Radio i- r*?mr*?able from glove corn puffwii* for iifif: tifi 9olf“powrr*-il portabks. (Optional at eatia coni j

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