Newspapers / The Charlotte Post (Charlotte, … / March 16, 1978, edition 1 / Page 8
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REV. SAMUEL BILLY KYLES : ...Mayfield Memorial speaker | Rev. Kyles Will Lead Revival Here Rev. Samuel Billy Kyles, •pastor of Monumental Baptist * Church, Memphis, Tennessee, • will be the guest speaker for (: the Annual Spring Revival to ■ be held during Holy Week at • Mayfield Memorial Baptist jEastside Club j-Meets With Mrs. iCarinne Sealy ; Mrs. Carinne Sealy was hos • tess for the February meeting | of the Eastside Literary : Club.The theme of the mee •ting was “Brotherhood : Month’’ and a beautiful poem '.about Sojourner Truth was ;read by the president, Mrs. :Rose Incram ; Plans for a trip to the ; mountains later this yeai . ' were also discussed. • Others present at the mee ting were Mrs. Lutisher Cure •ton, vice-president: Mrs. Ola ■Jenkins, Secretary: Mrs. Le •mue Turner, assistant se vere try and the following mem .bers: Mesdames Mary Flow : nory, Otis Ellis, Minnie Garri •ty, Mary McClaine, Minnie jHeathignton, Aldriche Ross, :Cornelia Snow, Annie Young •blood, Essie Chambers, Ge raldine Brown and Essie Da Ividson. Mrs. Eloise Rorie was •a guest. • Refreshments were served ■by the hostess following the ^meeting. :Fish Fry • The Committee to Elect Vi vian Galloway, Sheriff, will Sponsor a fish fry Friday, March 17, from 6-11 p.m. and Saturday, March 18, from 12 boon to li p.m. at 142 South Smallwood St. • Ms.Galloway is a democra tic candidate for sheriff of Mecklenburg County. Church. The revival will be held nightly, beginning March 20, with prayer service open ing at 7:30 p.m. each evening. Rev. Kyles is a member of the Progressive National Bap tist Convention (PNBC) and , serves as National Director of Publicity, is an instructor i|i the National Congress of Christian Education in the PNBC, and is a member of the Literature Committee of PNBC. He is also a member of the World Baptist Alliance, a nat ional evangelist, and member of the Board of Directors of Morehouse School of Religion. Educated in the public schools of Chicago, Illinois, Dr. Kyles is a graduate of the Northern Baptist Theologoical Semi nary _ «w pi voiuvm ML A l IUV Homes, Inc.; Chairman, State . Advisory Commission to the U S. Commission on Civil Rights; member, Board of Directors of People United To Save Humanity (PUSH); Ex ecutive director, PUSH-Mem phis; member Board of Trus tees, Memphis and Shelby County Hospital; member, Young Democrats; member. National Committee for Sup port of Public Schools; mem ber, America Civil Liberties Union; member, Housing Committee, NAACP. Dr. Kyles has received nu merous awards and recogni tions for service to his com munity and to mankind, in cluding NAACP Merit Award, 1963; Men’s Fellowship Award of Second Congregational Church, 1967; Afro-American Police Association Award, 1973; PUSH Satellite Award, 1974; and PUSH For Excellen ce Award, 1974. Mayfield Memorial pastor, Rev. H.S. Diggs, extends a very cordial invitation on be half of his members to every one to join in this week of inspirational sermons. Black Press To Enshrine Five Distinguished Publishers Washington (NNPA) Five distinguished black news* paper publishers, whose jour nals were lanched during the 1866-97 era, will be enshrined here in the Black Press Ar chives and Gallery at Howard University by the National Newspaper Publishers Asso ciation (NNPA) on Friday. March 17. The ceremony enshrining the distinguished publishers will be held in the National Press Club Ballroom during a Black Press luncheon. The speaker will be William O. Salker. editor and publisher of the Cleveland Call and Post and dean of the Black Press. During the ceremony at the National Press Club, NNPA President Carlton B. Goodlett editor-publisher, San Francis co Sun Reporter, and First Vice President Jerrel W. Jones, Milwaukee Courier, will present for enshrinement plaques of the honorees to Dr. ^lichae^^^Winston^irecto^ jf the Moorland-Sprinsarn Re search Center at Howard where the archives have been established. Frank Aukofer of the Milwaukee Journal, pre sident of Howard University, will bring greetings, Follo wing the ceremony at the Press Club, a reception will be held, 3-5 p.m. at the archives. The five elected by the NNPA membership for en shrinement this year are: Mrs. Ida B. Wells Barnett, publisher of the Memphis Free Speech whose plant was burned by a white mob in 1892 becaulse she protested the unjust treatment of blacks. She barely escaped with her life and joined T. Thomas Fortune, Editor-Publisher of the New York Age. She was a Chicago journalist and acti vist against lynching during the last 30 years of her life which ended in 1931. She was born in Holly Springs, Miss., in 1869. Timothy Thomas Fortune, outstanding printer and jour nalist, joined the New York Age in 1892 and developed it into a major voice for blacks throughout America. Pre viously, he had worked for the New York Evening Sun both as a printer and a journalist And had also been part owner of several black weeklies, in cluding the Rumor, the Globe, and the New York Freeman. After selling the Age to Fred R. Moore in 1905, he joined the staff of Booker T. Washing ton's Natinal Business Lea gue at Tuskegee where he remained until his death in 1928. He was born in Mari anna, Fla., in 1856. John Mitchell, Jr. was edi ' tor-publisher of the Richmond Planet which he took over in 1884 and made into a powerful force in the southeastern part of the United States. Although threatened many times, he crusaded vigorously against lynching. He was vice presi dent of the National Black 1 V Press Association and was elected to the Richmond City Council in 1888. His paper merged with the Richmond Afro-American in 1938. He was born near Richmond in 1863. John H. Murphy, Sr., bought a Sunday School journal with a $200 loan from his wife in 1892 and converted it into the Bal timore Afro-American which has developed a chain that dominates the Atlantic Sea board from New Jersey to the Carolinas. Even during his lifetime, the Afro became the major black newspaper east of the Applachain and had a staff of 138. He was bom a slave in 1840 and died in 1922 Christopher J. Perry, Sr., created the oldest continously published commercial black newspaper in America, the Philadelphia Tribune, which he founded in 1884 and served as its editor-publisher until his death in 1921. the _94-year-old_Tribune continues to be one of the mo6t widely circulated black newspapers in the East, and is one of six black semi-weeklies in the country. Perry was born in Baltimore in 1854. "Last year the first five publishers were enshrined in the Black Press Gallery for the 1827-65 era. They were: The ftev Samuel E. Cornish an^Jot^r^^lusswurm^re^ dom's journal, the first black Newspaper in the U. S.; Phil lip A. Bell, the Colored Ame rican; Dr. Martin T. Delany, the Pittsburgh Mystery ; and Frederick Douglas, the North Star. Next year’s election to the gallerj will be for publishers who launched their papers between) 1897 and 1920. -I 1 Why worry 1 I about I ■ ^ mD,elr information >» » ■ 1H°"" 1 ! 1»**r ;™c3 s 1 ; 1 ss-s?za&s— I ^ ® POR FULL ANSWERS ■ ' I*OR” ,,i.-cTinN8( ■ ■ to YOUR QUESTION ■ 1 -^sn I Engineering Enterprises 326 Syivania Avenue Charlotte. 1\.C. Remodeling - Additions - Concrete Work Bars And Recreation Rooms U. M. Ford377-9037 yjgj ^ ^ Enjoy FI# ida Feelin' A&PS ClJ|fOOMC£MlfQC for sale at B^B ^B^B Mg BB B| OfllmB BIB , or below the advertised price in each A&P \ Store, except as specifically noted in this ad. PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT.. MARCH II AT AAP IN CHARLOTTE ” / . _ _ , . . \ ITEMS OFFEREO FOR SALE NOT AVAILABLE TO OTHER RETAIL DEALERS OR WHOLESALERS i A&P is 8 butcher Shop J BM# A&P ia a poultry shop - -^ quality heavy western beef ' ; HHMHj H WHOLE BEEF RIBS l oTsr?l^r|1 A^ERAae® C|39 <Vroasts ^ / LB. ■ / AAP QUALTIY HEAVY WESTERN ORAIN-FED BEEF BONELESS TOP OTC #1 I# ROUND dIBMIV OR BONELESS BOTTOM ^B ROUND STEAK Mjgg 1 GRAND PRIZE L TRIP Includes Trip lor two to Busch Gordons Including round trip air lars, hotal accommodations lor aavan nights, ground transportation whits m Florida, and unUmltsd admlsalona to ths Dark Cork Inant Busch Oardans. Tampa. Florida Budget (B> Sheraton-Si. Pete . ,,w| * c*' MARIN* t TENNIS CLUB J e.ii AAP QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN-FED BEEF BONELESS TOPlIAA CT ROUND KUM>I OR BONELESS BOTTOM ROUND MA ■ ROAST ■ LB. ■ •LICID BOMLUI BEEF LIVER « 69c RIB STEAKS u. *1" picks the best groceries **«•* KRY1R COMBINATION PACK A Of FRCSH PWYtR ^ CHOICE PARTS 79c BOX-O-CHICKEN c 39e AAP la a country farm pork (hop J monno PORK CHOPS -ZH29 IONIUII RIB PORTION •.■i/Vi. PORK ROAST u *179 PORK CHOPS « *149 N€ ATT POKK *. O MTV N CUT RIB OR UN N BACK RIBS „ *179 PORK CHOPS *1*9 5 Busch Gardens Is 300 acres of wNd animals in thek natural surroundings, plus rides and other atkactlone. The area Is covered by train, monorail, and boat It is second to Disney Wbrtd In Florida atkactlons with a 2,500,000 attendance' ** y*,r v.lflhr A&P it a sausage shop RATH BRAND MILD BREAKFAST SAUSAGE & 79c sLTcedbacon as *1,# hot "dogs'"" vx 99e UP BMAMO BOCCO WAPBR UP BMAND BY TMB PtlCC THIN MEATS 49c LIVER SAUSAGE lb 69e *MOW“AT M *^ PORK & BEANS 4 $100 NABISCO SPECIAL FREE MILK REFUND OFFER WITH OREO COOKIES ’Mf 89c iwunTuis nuLii --__ _____ J , ENTRY BLANK Florida Foalin’ Swoopatakoa WIN A TRIP FOR 2 TO FLORIDA'S BUSCH I GARDENS OR ONE OF MANY OTHER I * PRIZES | J NAME I 1 STREET ADDRESS ___I CITY-STATE_I TELEPHONE_ZIP CODE_ I ENTER OFTEN—NO | <- --J t • • _ . _._ (AAP picks the boat frozen tcxxU) , TROPHY STRAWBERRIES 13 as $100 AAP QUALITY ™ HANDI-WHIP OWMHTTOIWMO 'bowl 63° ■omOHMf.rvMUTtMCMCMB »O»T0« ! ?SS&T POT PIES 3AS 89* DINNERS K'/tlo.. AS 59* ENTREES A'SV, AS *11* CHICKEN 2 A*. *1" notion ***LOU motion anno HONEY BUNS AS *100 DONUTS AS 59* PtYNfTI Ami ITAAWMANT ON IABRBWBT MONTON PtACM P« ON COBBLERS AS *1M APPLE PIE AS 89* ICECREAM H<SS 99* FUDGE BARS AS 99* axzrrxf" a>.°. moo -r?-Oao> Qfte ( A&P picks the best dairy j MRS. FILBERTS MARGARINE QUARTERS AAR MOMCATYLC Off BUTTERMILK BISCUITS 4 &S *1°° FLORIDA PRODUCE SALE! Jjja fiTJ m. Mh^isk L«J kf b4 H ■ w\"J m Bwy Sic BUTANE LIGHTERS 59° SI KUH’S HF.ER COCA COLA CARTON or t A1 Q CTNOT ( . / r 12 *3 6^-1' UOZ CANS W BOTT1-KS ■ DEP0 ^^^^^OTFElUjOOOONLIMNjCHARUym^^^^^ LOOK FOA TMC ACTION FA 1C I SION—TNNOUQHOVT k YOUA AAA §TOAf WIab AAA bvyara mafca ■ apMMM. K. cllaa#«Ulai»»»artca. WIN a An AA Ny—, TAI [= •«*•' prtca la in action prtca And »aaaAc«an Artcaa ara ir AMMIaA la aur manay aavtng araafcty a»aclala LEMON JUICE Am, 59* OUAKfft - DM« MMTMl r*OT*N DVTCft 'ft INSTANT GRITS V.” 43* V APPLE PIE ^ tTO«f LT MAftVAftO. TINT Oft IKIO LAYS TWUt PftCft ft PICKLED BEETS39* * POTATO CHIPS «n.79* ^ KftArr iNftfOOfO IM.AA CMIOOAP Cv CTCLB CAMMO ¥ CHEESE ia 69* vlg DOG FOOD 3aS 1“ jksH outers 11 I mayonnaise!; ! LNSTT OUt SfTTH — — . « I COUPON AMO ■ ADOmoMM ouant MMV 11 7 MOMMA JAM V9 fl _ LNSTT ONS COUPON ^ ■ ! I 021 ®000 TTNtU ML MAN. IS AT| I I
The Charlotte Post (Charlotte, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 16, 1978, edition 1
8
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