THE CAROLINE''.4 WEEft. ENDING SATURDAY AUGUST "5. 1853 CONGRATULATIONS! —Dr. Booker T. White, Jeff, director of the Seizure and Mathematics Train* Program for Secondary School Students conducted at A&T College this summer congratulates three enrollees, Jacqueline Henderson, Winston-Salem; Arthur R Eller, North Wilkeshoro. and Marian An drew*, Stokes. N. C They were among a group of 36-high school graduates and rising seniois who received certificates at *he commencement exercises climaxing four weeks of intensive study. John H. Johnson To Be Cited For His Reie In 11. S, Civil Liberties CHICAGO '.AMP- - John Ha rold Johnson, the fad from Arkan sas «'ho rot* from, punching a ; time card as an insurance- clerk to | become head of a milion-dollar enterprise, has been selected by j the Independent. Benevolent and j Protective Order of Elks of the World to receiv- the 1959 Elijah Loveioy award for hi? work in aid ing and bettering the world of the ; b *gi-o The award, distinctive in the field of civil libet::• . is named after the youthful newspaper edi tor slain during the Civil wav era ”'hi!* waging a r "r. -man battle a gainst racial discrimination. .The. Elks have presented it tv» nianv notables Including the i 3 i•. o Ma ~y McLeod Bethun*. Blanch Rirk e - Dr Ralph J Bunche and A Philip Randr.jph i ,, PRESmSfIQ mi\ * bridge *ff* .p| /h 9 CONCRETE WPP « CONCRETE BLOCK AND BRICK / ® CONCRETE STEPPING STONES W~"%r RALSUGH—DIAL Ti d-2557 DURHAM —But 2.64V1 • KINSTON —ONI ZSM OPEN FOR BUSINESS *. MTOBBUnYSHOP j Upholstering and Painting Gas • Oil ft STANLEY r B ALLY STINE. Mgr. K See STAIN for Free Estimate,? on Your Car Need: H Holly Springs Road Raleigh, N, c, g | ■ mu § I fMJM BV, J K.U l SI i : LoeiTN - tjw RiCORDj f'rt*" 33 Million American lamifies \^/ pkddv CookL<<£. Tw3 cut cf every thres hemsmaksrs prefer Gas because 't s faster, clearer, the meet csntrsllsfcls and dependable cf all fuels, Costs less, too. You’re right when you cook with Gas! FUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY of NORTH CAROLINA, Inc. 318 Hillsboro St. • TE 2-3761 * Raleigh FA\ ED PARKING LOT IN REAR OF BUILDING THE LADY lOTJ HEAR OVER THE RADIO Gifted Palmist and Psychic Medium FeLte you any and everything you with to know without ask ing any questions gi-p& you names of enemies, and friends Gives true and never failing advice on ali affairs of life. If wor ried. troubled c: m doubt consult this psychic reader at once Madam F artel will help you. on business, love, marriage, wills, deeds mortgages, lost ana stolen articles, and speculations of all kinds. Your Lucky Days &■ Your Lucky Numbers Don't be discouraged if others have faUeu to help you. Madam Parrel docs what others claim to do One visit, will convince you this Medium and Divine healer it superior to any reader you save consulted Private and Confidential Readings Daily and Sunday tor White and 'Colored. Hours 9:00. AiM.— B:oo P.M You must be satisfied or no charge. Closed ail day Wednesday. Madam Farrel v. located on* mile North of Goldsboro on the Wilson Highway lust one block from Hobbs Stockyard. Golds oero. N. C Look for the Brick Home and the Neon Sign with the name “Madam Farrel*” 'And you can ce sure you &r* at, the right place. _» TOES LUCKY DATS AND TOUR LUCKY NUMBER £ Selected fo> the *t|«al hen "r hv 9. group headed bv Judge H»b?on E- Reynolds. Elks £Usnd dhertov of civil Hbtriie?. Johnson will receive the award during the 61st annua! con mention of the fraternal organt ration, in session, this week at Atlantic City. N .1. LIRE PREDECESSOR Johnson, like Lovejoy is a youthful crusader with 'printer's: ink in his blood. He is presideni of Johnson Publication, which pub lishes Ebony, Jet. Tan and Hue ma g-runes—successful offshoots of hi;. original venture. The Negro Di gest His susees stow t-. unpi ecedont - cd in the publishing field h, less than 14 sears, he has built up a business from an original s'->OO ca pital to a million dollar concern 13 Cited by tbs C S Insist Chamber rt Cotnaseree is 1351 j« one «♦ sh» 10 outstanding vnung wen of the year ‘ —the first Negro businessman so i honored —Johnson was praised for making available, for tb® first time, a current history of the Negro people in America " Spotlighted by President Eisen hower in 1955, who invited him to i a businessmen stag dinner at the While House, Johnson accompani ed Vice-President Richard M. Nix on on a goodwill trip to Africa, in 1967. Less than a month ago. the publisher and his wife, Eunice, were, again companions of the Vire-President on a similai trip to Russia ' ' : Wm ’ 'Nfte ■■<&&s£■ i te< ’ ' j " « LO U-H.MINGTON dela- M \RF Mrs Maude V Evans 1 354 N Tar boro St has taught evers! years v ifh the North arohna behoof System. Mrs 1 'aos graduated trom Winsten- Veaehers f r-llege and ohan t nil. SKr received her '?• A. degree fiom ( olumbia Uni eisitv Sjnee that time jh‘ has ’one further graduate work at lunici College 3iirl f'oliimhia ’nufr'lfv in a more specialised >vn.v i'll'.. Frans if, non empfoT - H n ii!i the iViimingißn Dels nave Fiiblic cSrhools as a teach er for retarded children. NEW ASSIGNMENT Sher man Earl Miles. 18, has recently hr-en appointed by the. North Carolina United Christian Youth Movement as a Commission Chairman, while attending a Training Conference at Cllmsx, j N. C T his is the first time that a Negro has had the opportunity to serve on the executive cossn i! of this organization. Sherman i? now serving as vice-president of the Raleigh Council. lie is a ! student at Shaw University and a member of the Fayetteville St, i’ Baptist Church. Man Who Killed | Wife, Sell Was “Scottsboro Boy" NEW YORK (ANPi Arthur Leroy Wright, 42-year-old mer chant seaman who killed his wif* j and then committed suicide re cently. has been identified as one Ij of the Scottsboro boys," who es ! | caped death in the electric chair ! in the '3o's. i Wright killed his 38-year-old I wife. Kathleen Whff) h® H. h* floured ! j te the sensational ScetUbore i case « burst forth Into headline* in March. 193E when > 1 two whit* gfris charged the’ - i • were vlclira* of a gang assault Highlander . Folk School -I Hearing Set | MONTEAGLE, Tenn, (ATTP> i Circuit Judge Chester C Chattir, | last iveek postponed the hearing of the padlocking petition Lied by District Atty, Gen. A. F. Sloan a gainst the Highlander Folk School The hearing was originally sched uled for August 22. In announcing the posfponmert. for which no later date was given. Mrs. Septima P Clark, director of education at Highlander, said that applications for the Labor Day weekend workshop on "The Citi zenship Schol" idea are being pro cessed as fast as she c?n get 'o them. She said: "Newspaper cov erage of the July 31 raids on I the school and the petition to padlock it as a public nuis anc*. has brought publicity which ha* helped to gain us new friends. More than ever, people all over the nation and especially the South are hear ing- of our work is adult edu 'This years, as in former years we will b* host to s participant in the foreign leaders program, of the Internationa! Exchange service. U S Department of State ” The participant is Mrs Florence Eudera Ricks-Bing, head teacher, elementary division, Sinoe Govern ment school in Liberia, who will j attend the school to study our methods and techniques in adult educataion ' ! ’ Garden wp 9 lima ST M. E. GARDNER Are you getting the benefits from your vegetable garden that you should*’ If we assume that a garden is desirable from the stand point of economy and nutritional value, are you using recommended varieties, fertilizer and cultural practices? Let's see what a recent survey in a western county re veal? Seventy families were interview ed and asked questions about ten vegetables « hich are considered to the most popular for home gar j dens This is the story Only 44 of the 70 families had vegetable gardens. Irish potatoes and tomatoes were the most popu lar vegetables grown; only a small percentage planted strawberries t”5 per cent.) and hma beans <5 P»r cent); mst. families did not use recommended varieties: the same was true for recommended fertiliz ers. other advised practices were not followed by a large number of the families interviewed There is no way of felling b«w typical these, results area when compared with other rum! communities, but I sus pect fhal this local situation is m?f. unique if data were avail able from other areas. To me this situation brings into sharp focus the wealth of infor mation available to rural and ur ban people, in t.h® whole field of : agricultural endeavor, and the 1 puny use that is mad® of it Have we reached the point where we pnly want to be helped and do no thing to help ourselves? Maybe so, but 1 am not ready to accept this S'i-»et potatoes ne«»d lots Os pot ash and this is generally tru® for all of the root, crops Repent tests mad* on Norfolk loamy sand r)iowed that yields per acre varied from fifty bushels on the no-potash plots to as high as three hundred and fifty on the high potash plots In addition t" (he higher yield?, the quality of the potatoes was better These tests were conducted on low potash soils The best way to determine total potash needs for sweet potatoes is to have vow soil tested State College A” ft Pi £} QUESTION: What will tfc* stfto atien be as tar farm costs dur ing the rest of 1959'’ ANSWER: Farm costs are expect ed to remain steady or rise slight ly There is little hope for a de cline in price of cest-of-produetion items QUESTION. At what rata will North Carolina s 1953 com trop be supported’ ANSWER. At $1.21 per bushel. The loans will be available from harvest time through February 29, 1960 They will mature on July 31. 1960. The program will be carried out through farm and warehouse storage loans and purchase agree ments. QUESTION: Bow can I protect my fruil from birds and squirrels? ANSWER: One of the best. ways, tor small bushes and trees, is to cover them with tobacco cloth By stretching the use of the cloth o ! ver a two-year period and using it | on several crops, it, becomes eco ! nomieal But for large fruit trees j there is little hop* of avoiding loss, Use the cloth over strawberries boysenberries. raspberries, blue berries. and grapes. In a freight train at Scetfcsbwo, Ala. Twice the Supreme court revers ed the death sentences of Wright and .the other defendants. In 1937. charges were finally dropped «- gains! Wright and four others who | had -steadfastly maintained their j innocence The other four wire sentenced to prison terms Farm families suffered 7,509 few er accidental deaths is 1987 than tin 1947. 6 BE WISE! BUI' MCTT! BE WISE! BUY MOW! Growing From A North Carolina Owned Compary wit'i Building for North Carolina Home Owners Carolina JH ONE of these HOMCo ON .YOUR OWN LOT The Admiral $219500 cash The Brook wood $1095 rash £52.00 monthly * 72 months j $37.00 monthly - 72 months j The Briar Cliff $2595, rash The General $2795.00 cash $54.00 monthly -72 months J $57.60 monthly -72 months j The O’Henrv $1875,00 rash $40.60 monthly *72 months 136.50 monthly *72 months l Farmer- We Have A Plan To Suit Your Needs See Us Today For A Home Os Your Own Compare them fine features . . . theft {feeifi.G. . I iH r ® u P al! and returtt f« IDs* Stw»«, Ism.. PO. | Bn* 2315, Raleigh. N. C. , ★ Complete Guarantee A Full Insurance Inciud- | & Inspection pd in Payments *’ j Address I ★ Aluminum Awning A Full Length AlumL i i I Windows num Screens - j j Siae cf lot county | irJalouise Doors Bracing f j _ 1| j.gg | ★ Boxed Eaves i? Truss Roof * ••t-ft-- r - , -Wi I %wmim 1 \ bxsauty wtm value wise, dollar wise,- W* £iJN I gastt sjsat a shell home by IVm S Telephone collect VA 8-5434 or write today to 3303 Fayetteville Road, Raleigh* N« €-

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