SECOND SECTION FARM FAMILY SHOWS VALUE OF TEAMWORK PHOTO MOTHER The farm wife and mother is often the most im portant and the busiest person on the tarns. Typical is .Mrs. Leslie Scott., who in addition to rearing eight children has found time to operate a comfortable home and to assist her husband, sons and KDKDKDK THIS IS THE HOT V ART OK IT After Use farmer has nurs- \ ed his seedlings along, set them out tattled the insects, needs ami weather to get a good crop, the job is only partially com pleted. Working with the great- ĐĐĐ ITS NOT ALL WORK Al though opera .ing a fram offici al/ lv takes a lot of work, on the part of all member*, of the fami ly, there are moments for relaxa ■ - V : Sv ■ • MOBI'RN FARM HOT. 1 St Far reirsoveil from the old con ception of .he farmhouse as a sprawltrv, dilapidated shack I thls trim and modern dwelling which b occupied by the Scoft Family, Refrigeration, electric lights, modern furni ure and oth er household epuipment make it more comfortable and attractive then many home to he found in the cities, Preacher Disappears, So Docs Offering P»Oi Ai>».LPIHA (ANF) -- Despite .lie facts that Rev. John H. Williams has been ■missing from i tann ing, the best crops, the best nsar ki s. means of purchasing oper ating and maintainenee of farm machinery, maintaining the pro per balance between table and cash crops arid a thousand and one other details make it as oom IT'S \ FAMIIA !<»*? Here Helen, Mildred Joyce, Leslie, Jr.; Mr. and Mrs. Scott, Norvell. Council Mabel. Minnie Lee arid ! Joseph, . | Dr. Lattimore spoke agains: the ; : | regional plan during a pane i dis;; cum ion on the topic, and intro- j ] Educed a resolution against region ;a! medical schools The hoard of < trustees is scheduled to vote on tb< i ■subject. 1 Doctors favoring ilie plan said ] | that these schools would tast* racial! t i tension and would increase op- | | portunlties tor training colored j i i physicians. The NMA prtsidlßSl pointed out i that, this solution would be uts- | c dt-m.i:: am. The aid should be to! | make facilities available on a non- j ‘ I racial basis. Negroes, as fax pay i * | i«K American citizens fttje en itljed i! 'to lull use us public facilities, be j t said, i j plex as any other business ven ture, Mr. Scott, head of the Sco t Family and one of the county’s leading farmers, gives unstinted praise to the State Agricultural Extension Service and its agents for the help which they have of fered. ‘•New ideas, new methods, they certainly make it a tot eas ier and a lot more profitable." ITS A FAMILY .1015 Here Mabel, Helen. Mildred Joyce arid Mrs, Leslie Scott are shown sort ing. tying and sticking the tobac co (car es prior to put ing them in the bains for curing. The phase of the tobacco raising operation between (ringing it in from the fields and hanging it in the barn is one which calls for the greatest dispatch and speed of execution. As a result the whole family i pitches in and gets he job done. Police and Firemen Examination To Be Held Here On September I Examinations for policemen and firemen have been sched uled to be held here on Wed nesday, September 1, city of ficials Slave announced. Both men and women are eligible for the examinations, but applicants must have been a residen. of Raleigh at least one year and a resident, of the state of North Carolina two years and must have completed at least one year in an accred i ed high school or must have the equivalent of that amount of education Age limits for tin Ore de partment openings are 21 to 32, while applicants for em ployment by police department must be from 21 to 38 years of age, LIBERIAN AIRWAY i DEDICATION HELD MONROVIA, Liberia (ANP) President William V. S Tubman made the dedicatory address as the Liberian Interna ional Airways was formally opened Augurs 12 Three LI A "Starlines." the Afrl- ; can Star, the Liberian Star and the j Provinces Star, were officially in ; spected. and took their maiden ! flights for the company. The pres- j idem and high officials made tied)- i cation flights to Bensonfield, Free-I ♦own, Conakry, Bathurst and : Dakar. The program in Monrovia in- ! eluded inspec ion of the airplanes, j music, prayer by the Rev J. J. i Mends Cole, christening of the; planes bv Mis, Estelle Greenfield, | th; dedicatory address by President! Tubman, and response toy H, Mat i Adams president, LIA. The use of television as a means ‘ of bringing to farm and city peo pic the benefits of agricultural and ; home economics research will be ! ♦he subject of an exploratory study j under the Research and Marketing i ■ Act, < i j ENTIRE FAMILY PITCHES IN TO HARVEST CROPS The cash return from 18.9 acres : of first-c’oss tobacco represents a lot of folding money, but getting if out of Die ground is something i else ngai”. According to Leslie Scott, one of the outstanding farmers of the I Fuquay Springs area, that “some- j i thing else" Is hard work, and \ | lots of it, | Asked about how many months ;it took to raise and market a 1 i good crop ot tobacco, Mr. Scott , j replied “About 13 - you see you j work one of them at night.’’ At any rate when we arrived j at Scott’s 100-acre farm, a few \ ■ miles from the- town of Fuquay j | Springs, we found the entire . Scott family hard at work a*. i “barning” the tobacco. In the Field | The? 57-year-old head of the familly and his two oldest sons, Leslie, Jr, 21, and Joseph, 19, 'were in the field loading the to j baeeo leaves on two mule-drawn sledges which hauled it to the i barn which they were preparing j to load. Th shod in front of the barn | was likewise the scene of inten ! sive activity. Here Mrs. Scott anu j her four daughters who ranged in I age from approximately seven teen tinued on page 5- AFRICANS ASK PROBE OF RIOTS IN LIVERPOOL LIVERPOOL, England (ANP) Investigation of she recent attack? upon the African citizens of this :ci y by white hoodlum-- was de • mended by.leaders of the Pan-Afri j can federation this wetk in letters I not only to the mayor of Liverpool | and police leaders, but le ters to ! British officials and church leaders.' T. R. Makonnen. a Pan-African leader, asked Africans throughout the nation to write to their gov ernment and church leaders to do ; something about the intimidation ' against colored people in Liverpool j The recen riot, which occurred August 1-3, was a repetition of the 1939 mob violence which followed the first World War. STEPS URGED Four steps were li- cd by the Pan ! African federation as necessary to j | insure better race relations In Liv- j jerpool: : 1. A full and impartial mvestiga- j j Lon be made into the recent out-; ; breaks of violence. 2. Full compensation be given to | the Africans tor injuries to them-j .wives and damage to their proper-; : ty. 3 Individuals responsible for the i I r iots should be brought to trial. | 4. African men and women should j become members of the city police I i force as a means of preventing ! both from private individuals and j | the government, for the education j ! foundation." i j Liberia, almost a Ward of the i (United States which was responsi- ' f — —..^^ I j MIWDHS GREETS HOPEPUI.S | Midshipman Wesley A. Browr,, senior (First Classman) Class of IMS, U. S, NavaJ Academy, «t 130* <* Street.. N. w. Washington, D. C., meets two prospective nsidchipmeo «f the VUm 'of fSS*. to right, ore:. Midshipman Wesley Brown, C'hsiHei, mul Stem* ,blt lor her founding, has been ; treated like a stepchild- As Dr. Te | bias pointed out to the Presided*, Liberia because of her ties has fol* | i lowed the United States info two j iwars. She turned her territory! I over to us during the last world j war and we built there one of the j largest airfields in that part of the world. During the early part of the war, ! the United States found Liberia i the only friendly point where she i could be certain of sending plane#, | soldiers, and supplies for use in j j Ihe Mediterranean theatre of war. I ; Had black Gov. Eboue of French | Equatorial Africa not gone over ito Free France, width caused ! Daker to permit the allies to land (Continued on page 5) i vSa S«Jwb, ««ns of I.Mtnuu j Dcnnk D. Srlrntt, Ntrvy | »*ni CJwite Mid Dentls hieteoa, ; AS, CSN*. reside it Jgj9 iW.se- I dale Street, Worth Vast aarf are ; freshmen and sojibnurere gta~ i *t OowwW 'tifttivewtty, i fVa.Khtin'km, D. C. ] V, 8, NJkVf HHOTC HELP BETTER RACE RELATIONS - MAKE '.IP DEMOCRACY WORM. ISMS REELECT I DR. JOHNSON AS NATIONAL PREXY LOS ANGELES (AffP) At its 34th annual conclave held her* August 11-14, the Phi Bata Sigma ‘fraternity reelected a# president ! Or. ft. O. Johnson! " Washington, | D. C. j The fraternity voted to hold j next year's meeting in the nation's | capital, Washington, As this meeting ; several reports were "heard, resolu ! lions were made, • sit'd .several not i ed speakers appeared Various fra j teertity awards Wh£Lalse made. Speakers heard «n various pro i grams included Dr. Ambrose Cah = ver on The Essentials of Leader* ; idp;” Mayor JRpcther Brown of ! Los Angeles; 8. O Miller, presi j dent, Los Angeles Chamber of i Commerce. The Sigmas passed resolutions to j support a civil lights program and i also to fight inflation.- The fraternity also went on re | cord as endorsing the national pro j gram of Junior Achievement, to , teach youth the principles of bus ! iness through '.’practical applica | tion. j E’er outstanding service to the fraternity a' period of 10 i years a* wili’As continued service ; to thetr eopanur.ities, Dr. George | W and Horace E. ■ Johnson II received distinguished ‘ Continued on page 88 AT SOUTHWIDE 4 H ENCAMPMENT AT SOUTHERN U, The first South.Wide 4-H club far ' rural colored boys and girls open led Tuesday. August 24. at South ! ern University. Baton Rouge, La. The encampment, will continue • through’-'Aug. 30. Eighty-eight del • egates from ]g States are in at -1 tendance, representing the Nation's ' 300,000. colored 4-H club members ] The delegates are accompanied by j 29 extension leaders. Program of the camp consists of ia series of addresses by white and i colored leaders, group discussions ;by the 4-H'ers sightseeing tours of : New Orleans, Baton Rouge, the I Louisiana agricultural experiment ; station and an oil refinery near the | capital city. ; Other recreational activities will (include a boat ride on the Nfissis ; sippi River, and calisthenics and games on the campus at Southern. T. Tv' Ckm-pbell and John W Mitcb | ell. Extension Service field agents, are in charge of the encampment ; which is sponsored jointly by Fed esal and Slate Extensiop Service, Principal encampment Speaker , will be Dr. Marshall L. Shepard, recorder of deeds for thb Distinct of Columbia. In line with the tamp theme '.‘Creating: better homes today for a more responsible citi (Continued on ' page M 138 Graduate in Dethune