6
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WEEK ENDING MTTftPAy. APRIL It. t9B*
Hip You SbonM inm
M BOY/.
... So« Os A SISAL PLANT*- Jl|
TION WORKER, LAROCUrSELF-
EDUCATED, ME BECAME OENERAL \M\ JF
SECRETARY OF THE KENYA FEDERATION P >L*.«
OP LABOR IN 1959/ NOW ELECTED TO Tit'
LIOISLATfve COUNCIL,REPftESENTIE3 • 1 I
4rr / Af&jp Z 4 r
Gristmill And Varied Farm Enterprises
Keep One Family As Busy As Any In Dixie
PEMBROKE. Oa. Probably no
farm family in the South is busier
than the Lucius H. Garrisons of
Pembroke, Ga , says A S. Bacon,
slate agent in charge of Negro agri
cultural extension work in Georgia.
The Garrisons are busy from
•arly morning unii! well into
♦he night, says Mr, Bacon, opr
rating their gristmill. rutting
firewood for sale in town, bar
vesting naval stores from 15
acres of pines, milking five
com«. raising t| bead of beet
rattle and 53 bogs, and growing
cotton, corn, and tobacco.
Income from their gristmill and
:•!;< enterprises has helped pay for
. 140-ncre farm, a modern 8-room
homo, a tractor, the gristmill, a
n suited power saw,and the educa
tion of their nine children, two of
v ham have gone to college.
si* nsn* nll sll si % $
a GET CASH •»
TOMORROW “
: *) MODEHH FINANCE CORP.’S "
/ (y>
mm Conveniently Located Offices
it* HO W. Martin St. % 330 S. Salisbury St.
Phone TE 2-5826 Phone TE 2-7547
% Better Service . In Raleigh For Over 25 Years m
-V? ______
m
Cash lou Receive Monthly Payments
m. 103.26 13.00 m
219,22 .............. 20.00 »
32082 .24.00
415.14 , _ . 30.00
4* 509.16 ..36,00 m
m ABOVt. PAVMCNTS INCLUDES ALL CHARGES. m
I MODERN FINANCE CORP. :
M Supervised By The State Banking Commission.
$ $ $ nss s_s s_s $ s_s $j s_s $ $j
YOUR CREDIT
' IS GOOD
AT QUINN’S
Freshen Up Your Horne For Spring*
From Distinctive Furniture
R. E. Quinn Furniture Co.
108 E. Martin St Your Capita! City TeL TE 2*4471
Mr. Garrison started, farming
more than 40 years ago on 44 acres,
largely woodland, he scrimped and
raved to buy during World War !
But by the time he had cleared a
patch big enough for a few acres
of cotton, the Army called him,
A tier the war, he cleared more
land, built a little house, and mar
led. He and his wife operated their
sms’! farm until 3941 when it ’was
purchased along with scores of ot
her farms for a military camp site.
Then they moved to an ad-
NEW & USED CLOTHING
Cut Rate Prices
ODOM CUT RATE
CLOTHING.
130 E. MARTIN ST.
joining county, began buying
their HO acres, and started all
over again, clearing woods,
concerting an old shack into
a nrodem home, and becoming
reestablished
As in the past. Mrs Garison and
their daughters continued to make
articles of clothing for the family,
raise chickens, keep cows, and
grow a garden from which they
Repairs to Any TV,
Radio Phono, Hi-Fi
or Small Appliance*
IrHiriEßTicir
TAYLOR
RADIO & TV
SERVICE
“The House Service But If
CALL TE. 2-3950
224 E. MARTIN ST.
RALEIGH
BUILDING
BLOCKS
Solite
Solite » Concrete
Cinder Blocks
When in need of blocks for
building, cal! us for
immediate delivery.
STANDARD
CINDER BLOCK
COMPANY
TE 2-2168
N. McDowell St * Raleigh
foSyoufT
LAWN
31-KLNTUCKY
FESCUE
Mixed Lawn Grass
MIKRO PELLES
FERTILIZER
ROBERTSON’S
PELLES
FERTILIZER
WOOD’S TESTED
GARDEN SEED
S.M. YOUNG
Hardware
130 E. MARTIN ST,
Dial TBnaple 2-717!
esaaed hundreds of j*rs as vege
tables for winter eating.
Ik recent years they have been
shown improved methods of food
preservation ard home sewing by
their home demonstration agent.
Leona B. homey. Now they
not only make more attractive gar
ments for members of the family,
but also make slip covers for their j
furniture.
On their new farm, Mr. Garrison \
and the boys followed the advice !
of the Soil Conservation Service in !
developing pastures, digging drain
age ditches, and establishing s
sound sysern of crop rotation.
These improvements plus bet
ter seed varieties, increased
applications of fcrillser. and
more effective insert control
have increased their cotton
yield from 360 to 500 pounds of
lint per acre, their tobacco
frosn S9O lo J.fiOO pounds, and
tbeir corn from 21 to 55 bushels
per acre.
Some of their corn is fed to their
livestock and poultry, but most of
it is milled and sold as meal or
grit*. The Garrison's gristmill, ac
quired seven years ago. is the pride
of the family.
They do custom milling for far
mers for miles around Their share
of the meal, taken in exchange for
milling, as well as the meal from
their own corn, is packaged attrac
tively in five and 10 pound bags
and sold in Pembroke and other
nearby towns.
This busy family still does alt nf
its work, except during peak culti
vation and harvest of their cotton
and tobacco However, ns the chil
dren marry and move away, the
family is turning more and more
to livestock. Os the four sons, only
■lames now remains at home to
help. He and his father are full
partners in the gristmill and farm
enterprises.
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2808 & WILMINGTON ST « CAMERON VILLAGE 0 NORTHBIDE CENTER 0 GLENWOOD VILLAGE
‘‘Miracles” Topic Os Dr. Jehus
In Address At Shaw University
Dr. Vernon Johns, dean of Maty- <
land Baptist Center, Baltimore, i
Maryland, spoke April i, at Shaw
University's Nineteenth Theologi
es! Alumni Day Observance.
Speaking on the subject "Mira* k-s,"
Dr Johns set forth two points as
his objectives for hts audience to
consider:
I, To enjoin a firm and healthy
belief in the possibility of miracles.
2. To induce the belief that miracles
can not happen in our lives and
be apart from us. Illustrating the
electric eye as a modern invention,
he stated that miracles are being
performed everyday and as on any
scale of progress, the things of lo
¥outh Institute Os
St* Paul Church To
Be Held Here Sun.
SBT MFS. LILLIE M. HODGE
The Youth institute, originally
known as the Sunday Niglu. Sun
day School of Saint. Paul A. M. E.
Church, will be held Sunday night,
April 12, at 7:00 P.M. at the church,
corner of Harrington and Edenton
Streets. The general theme is, “Liv
ing Por Jesus In The Space Age,"’
There will be six divisions: Thr
Nursery Subject, “Loving and
Pleasing God", Beginners “We
Learn About Jesus”; Primary
“The Lord Is My Shepherd"; Juni
ors “The Christian's Birth and
G rowth', 1 n t ermediate —Answer -
ing God's Call”; and Adults -
“Fruits of The Spirit”
This session promises to be "fry
interesting. There will be speakers
day must have seemed impossible
to people in the years behind them.
Referring to Abraham Lin-
Negro's freedom, ami Franklin
coir, who is responsible for (he
Qeieno Roosevelt who made It
impossible for poor people to
starve, he declared that men
who are able to make, tram
forming Impacts on human life
are performing miracles. The
worse thing a man ran do. hr
said, is to limit his potentiali
ties.
The Negro, he charged, needs the
miracle of cooperation, with the
spirit of sharing. He claimed that,
as a race, the Negro lags behind in
who will contribute a variety of
their viewpoints on the various
subjects already mentioned.
The public is cordially invited to
attend. ■
M iss R H McCauley is the su
perintendent; Dr. L S, Penn, pas
tor.
generosity and slays far ahead in
If Too Want >
j To Taka The /C y ' T
UF> am ot Life L I
Company*
rnation te coDcxusion he warned !
that, unless the Negro puts caution j
behind generosity, as Christ did, he |
would not be worthy of His bless- I
lugs
The spsker was introduced by ' 1
Dr. William R. Strassner, presi
dent of Shaw University.
Tbr Reverend C. R, Edwards
of Fayettevilie. retiring prest
dent rj the Shaw theologies!
Alumni Association announced
the election of new officers as
follows; The Reverend Charles
j furrio of Paterson, New Jer
i s «*y, president; The Reverend f.
R. Manley of Chapel Hill, vice
president; The Reverend E. 8
Turner, recording secretary; i
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mi Tb.t ftcvercnd C. Si. Teste*
of EUielfb, executive secretary
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Music was furnished by the Shaw
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the direction of Harry Oil-Sraythe,
Freedom is « gift from the past
but if is not st all certain that it
will be a legacy to the future.
If Pays To
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