Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / March 12, 1955, edition 1 / Page 3
Part of The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
'■fi: LTDBDAT. MAMCB 11. lUl THE CAMQUNA mOS NEGROES IN DRIVE TO EREG WORLD’S LARGEST CRi tUfHhiK w WJIQrQV ioemN PHiuApewtiA JN eza-, $TARreP9CH00U WH»N H6 VVA5 ^BVBN.HAPTO QU/r A YEAR. LATER TO HEUP HI? 9uiuee ANP IN(2r TO CAiUf^lA, H£ A PAemee IN A Tw02 ANP tflW^imJBiaZS OF |»SSSLg?^gglSg®Sfc-i!^ » A roeaiHg A-^A AieaCHAflt'JM 1066 H& ipj^ fIB eW^PtATEP RaOV\ OSIgeuN'5 tAW PBfWZTJMEMT AMP lVi [)RIK)N BKrks^ ACe PHOICerRAPHER WON FIP^T K)$BWALP FEUUCWJHIP AV^IMaW IN PH0TO6BAPHY/^2. PHOTOG- CORReSPQNPeKT F0RaWf/43-i»5; POCUVVENTARY PHOro©* RXtfAKIW «O)BrrYA^INI$na^TI0N;4l-'^,Ai^ swma>ai^ca;^-'^. tausw at oica6o akt C»nSi.ON$IWOFUFEMASiA»NE.$IMCE 1944 Hi$ PHOTON HAVE 9&H MOUPEP IN ANNU^'BE^T W^OerR^PH^$a£CTEP^U$.^;W^ MU^IC ANP WHlt^AHWFOe'UPB' HAP m . 4\WWNY imWUCePI/CONPUCTDRPEANPIXOK^ A WORD ABOUT SCOUTING By HENRY G. GILLIS parent relation- the Unit Leader. He mtiy be come a member of the Troop Committee. This is not a tlnfe- consuming job, but without a strong committee the Troop cannot thrive. Your boy’s Troop is led by your neighbors, just as your Pack was. These folks need your help and encourage ment. Visit Troop meetings ocpa- sionally, take advantage of Boy Scouting as a means of continu ing the boy-dad relationship de- While the ship is different in Boy Scout ing, your son’s successful ex perience still greatly depends upon your Interest and encour agement. This is after your son has graduated into Boy Scout ing from Cub Scouting. He needs you, but in a different way. Try to understand this change in his make-up, and fit into it in the best way you can. You can help and en- ,courage him in his Boy Scout Advancement. While he can be a Scout without advancing, he will miss much of the value of the new experience if he does not. This is the basic change from Cubbing to Scouting. You can see that he attends his Unit meetings regularly, and that he wears and cares for his uniform. You can encourage him to take advantage of his new opportunity to go camp- ing. ^ Dad can offer his service to veloped in Cub Scouting. There will be occasional special meet ing for parents, and Court of Honor, when yoxir boy will re ceive Ills advancement awards. You should be there to see him move forward. Next week we will have, an other word about Scouting in this same column, be on hand. Volunteer Training Courses began Wednesday March 9th at the Hillsiae High School All Durham Divisional Person- nell were present Thurs day night at the S. L. Warren Library on Fayetteville St. at 7:30. A picture was made. OJ FOB THE BEST BAKED FOOD IN TOWN VISIT Or CaU 7-4131. DAVIS BAKING CO. Op«n All Day On Sinmdajn, 9:00 A. VL Until 9:30 P. H. 2022 CHAPEL mLI. BOAD Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whisky $^.30 /5 QT. PINT S6 Pml EAlltY TIMES DISTILLERY COMPANY LouisviIl« V Kentucky *L* I V . ■.! r; Miss Beverly Aim WrighI Wins Spring Clean-Up Belly Crocker Homemaker Award The Betty Crocker Home maker of Tomorrow in our school is Miss Beverly Ann Wright, amember of the senior class of Hillside High School. She is the daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Howard Wrijfht of 009 Du pree Street. She received the highest score in a written examination wliich tested the homemaking knowledge and attitudes of the senior girls in the graduating class. She will be entered in competition to name North Carolina’s candidate for the title of All-American Home maker of Tomorrow. She will also receive a golden award pin, cook books for herself and the school. The national winner in this search conducted among 187, ODD yotmg women in 8,000 of the nation’s public, private, and parochial high schools will be named April 21 at an American table fete in Philadelphia. General Mills is the sponsor of this program designed to as sist schools in building in young women a deeper appreciation and understanding of the A- m^trican home and the personal qualities necessary to success ful homemaking. A scholarship of $1,500 will be a'^arded each state winner, and she will receive a trip with her school advisor to Washing ton, D. C., colonial Williama- burg, Va., and Philadelphia. Her school will receive a sat of Encyclopedia Brltannica. The scholarship of the young woman named All-American Homemaker of Tomorrow will be increased to $5,000. The SO-mlnute written exami nation designed and judged by Science Research Associates of Chicago, which was given to all participants in this national search, consisted of multiple choice and subjective questions wiiich tested Uie students' at titude and knowledge in the major areas of homemaking. Each girl who took the test received a 24-page homemaking guide which will assist her in pursuing the career of home- making. Campaigns To Promote Safety NEW YC«K T^ughout America each year, a period usually a week, is devoted to Spring Clean-Up. Some communities conduct campaign in March, others may prefer to do so in April, But whatever the time, the cam paigns result in greater fire safety and better looking and healthier communities. According to the National Board of Fire .Underwriters, these campaigns do much more than promote fire safety. For instance, they helf/ foster com munity spirit. Streets are clean ed, homes are beautified and repaired, and accumulated waste and rubbish (a cause of fire) disposed of. In addition, public buildings often are re novated and vacant grounds im proved. ITIoicj ..A’JSDPY- CLEANERS SIS WA8HINOTON ST. Ill FOSTU STBSrr PHONB 1171 CM? Get Pep, Vim Feel Fnfl of Vi{on Yean Yoanger UEN,WOMEN tq.fshftafted.Tftkta«w»hlch«^t«ney Octrex Tontc TftbUCs. OfUa uMdad aflv 40^ hj bodr old, nin-down Jiwt bec»tm Uddat Iran: IncrftMW Tim, tIcot, Tlullty. Thousands feel full of pep, rears youosv. Quit being old. '‘Oet’^iCQUSlnted” rise fO^ At all drugslecs. A fund drive aimed at rac ing $3,000,000 and supported by the General Federation of Woroea’a Club*, of which Mr*. Theodore S^Cbapman, Jersey- vUle, UUrSa, is President, was initiated^ Washington on the first of March to provide for the construction of a mammoth, 50—foot cross, the world’s lar gest, dedicated to greater unity of Christian thought and effort^ atop Bald Knob mountain in southern Illinois near the popu- latioq heart of America. THE CROSS is a project of the Bald Knob Christian Foundation, Inc., Makanda, Illinois, a state-ciiartered, -non- profit, non - denominational group whose sole purpose is to create better understanding and greater tolerance between dif ferent religious and racial groups. It will be erected on a 187-acre site now marked by a fifty-foot neon cross in the Shawnee National Forest. In it will be a central chapel, medi tation rooms, di^lay rooms for religioua articles and docu ments, and an observation tow er for visitors. Illuminated at night, THE CROSS will be visi ble over a 7,500 square-mile area. Among thos* participating is a negro group headed by James Deal, "The Village Blacksmith” of Murphysboro, Illinois, a member of the Board of Gover nors of the Foundation. A gra duate of Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute, Deal is well known tbroogh tli« mmt. He estabUiriMd hi« !buitne» la Murphy»t>oro In 1922. hi* interest in the projTt dates back to 1991 wtaaa to recognized that the FooodB- tion’s primary aim wm to bring about a better r«i«ttoi»' stiip between religious and ra- cial groups, and to drvektp brotherlux)d and fellowship among all men. He personaUy contributed $100 towards thia symbol of r^gioua faUh, and devoted himaelf to wiHsting support from peraonal friends and associates, an effort that iiaa brou^t contributions to taling more than $1,500. Dcoa- tiozu ranged from, fifty cents from a domestic to $50.00 from a business man. Deal and his wtCa, the for mer Ida Joaie Dunn, are mem bers of the Missionary Baptist Church of Murphysboro where he Is deacon, Sunday School superintendent and choir mem ber. For almost two decades tlui Foundation has been holding Easter sunrise services on Bald Knob, and attendance in recent years has been running in ex cess of 10,000. It is expected that tills year’s service, being a tiiglilight of the fund drive, will establish a new attendance record. BCts. Chapman has urged that all who have no affiliation with the women’s clubs mail their contributions direct to: THE CROSS, Cairo, Illinois. I UKE THE WAY lUCKIES TASTE! rr **Fve been smoking Luckies for years,** says C. C. Dejoie, Jr., **hecause I like the way they taste. They taste bettej^lt*s easy to understand why Luckies t^te better. First of all, Lucky Strike means fine tobacco. Then, that tobacco is toasted to taste better. **Ifs Toasted**—iihet famous Lucky Strike process—tones up Luckies’ light, mild, good-tasting tobacco to make it taste even better ... cleaner, fresher, smoother. So, whenever it’s ligh^up time, light up the better-tasting cigarette . . . Lucky Strike. T> ■*li iiPilii® »il C. C DUOII, JR., is editer of ’The Louisiana Weekly, one d the South’s most respected news papers. A graduate of the Uni versity of Michigan, he is Vu»* Chairman of the New CMeaxw Urban League and a member of the New Orleans Community Chest Board. /- c / G T T UlCKlES TAS1E BETTER —Cleaner, Fresher, Smooiherl OA.T.Co>. fOBPt OF *ismieA>s UM»MW manota
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 12, 1955, edition 1
3
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75