WEEK ENDING SATURDAY. APRIL 27, 1957 BY MBS (LYDIA MAE HILL ““ " ” ' - “ - “ FAYETTEVILLE - Using the theme "I Am An American” the Fayetteville Branch NAACP will launch its 1957 membership drive which was increased by the mem bers from a goal of 500 to one thousand. The ‘'kick-off’' will be at a mass meeting at historical Evans Metropolitan AME Zion Church Sunday, May sth. 4 p. m. and will last for one month. State College's HINTS TO HOMEMAKER'S IMMEDIATE ACTION NEEDED- Don't waste one minute in wiping up spiled water on a waxed or non-ivaxed floor. It, can cause a fall with a broken hip or leg and hospital bill - - not to mention permanent injury Any liquid spill ed on the foe; . - especially grease, should have immediate attention. POISONS - Don't say, "It can’t happen to me or my family.” Safety first is important when put ting away - - on a high shelf or locked up - - all chemical sprays 1 that have been used on vegetables. In homes where there are child rn - - farm, home and community safety habits training should be come s pari of their growing up. Then they will be shared with other families. DID YOU? Did you read that speed limit sign" It read 25 miles per hour - - 35 rr.iies per hour - - 50-55 miles per hour. Did you slow | down? Do parents realize the kind ; of example they are giving to young people 11 Is it training by pre cept? MANY WAYS WITH CHEESE - Cheese is a boon to casseroles. Ca lorie-watchers find that a small GARDEN TIME m.e. gerdner n.c. state college The weather has been most un coopcraiive this spring as far as working in the soil is concerned. However, we have had one of the best seasons for pollination and fruit setting in the Piedmont and Eastern Carolina. T hope our moun tain friends will be equally as for tunate. Perhaps some timely reminders will be in order; Keep a keen eye open for insects -spider mites, lace bugs and bark scale on azalea; leaf scale on camellia; spider mites on boxwood; soft brown scale and ap hids on gardenia; cottony cushion scale on pittosporum. All of these insects can be controlled by care ful and thorough spraying with malathion. I have suggested that you can purchase “all-purpose” sprays for peaches, apples, pears and roses. Use according to instructions. The fruit crops are the ones most like ly to be neglected and yet are mort important for fresh use, canning and preserving. If you want to take a chance with such warm season crops as toma toes and peppers, put them under hot caps. It is very important that ventilation be provided because the plants can be injured, or killed, by too high temperaturers under the caps. Make two small slits with a razor blade near the top of. the! cap. If your African Violets are be coming crowded, they may be di vided. Sometimes it is possible to get four or five divisions from one plant. I hope you have found time to fertilize your lawn with a complete fertilizer, such as an 8-8-8. It is not too late. Watch your lawns and top dress with quickly available ni trogen, such as nitrate of soda, as often as needed to keep the grass rreen and growing Mow regular- ; ty and don’t cut too short. [tire RECAPPING With . . . B. F. GOODRICH Cold Rubber I EASY PAY PLAN TODD’S Tire Service Dial 3 130.1 444 W. BUSSELL j Day Phone Night Phone I 1*034 3-3897 I CAROLINA MOTORS New and Used Automobiles j 4509 Bragg Blvd. At Bonnie Doone—Fayeaaevillc Also Dealers in TRAILER HOMES ' I ED FLEISHMAN & BROS. THE BEST IN MEN’S WEAR SOCIETY BRAND “BOTANY 500 NUNN BUSH STACY ADAMS STETSON RESISTOL ARROW MANHATTAN 107 Hay Street Dial 2-6181 Fayetteville, N. C. : i The guest speaker will be Mrs. 1 1 Ruby Hurley, dynamic young lead l! er of the Southeastern division 1 of Branches of NAACP which we • can easily ’abcl the trouble spot ■ of the South She will be mtro ■ duced by Mrs. Jessye Vick. i Also appearing on the program i will be State President of North . Carolina Branches of NAACP 1 Kelly Alexander, who ha s en serving of cheese has a lot of stay ing power, and that low-calorie cottage cheese, creamd or uncram ed, is one of their chief blessings! Cheese can be used in a wide var ieyt of ways. STORING CHEESE -- Sr ore per ishable soft cheese as carefully as you do milk - ■ in the refrigerator in a tightly covered container Soft cheese should be bought in the amounts to be used in a short time. Other cheeses keep v. ell in a cold place light, ly wrapped so that air is kept from it. Wrap unpackaged cheese tightly in ivaxed paper, laminated foil, or similar wrap pings. If mold forms, scrape off - - it docs not hurt the cheese. Should chc-ese dry and become hard, grate it and keep in covered container. It is used in casserole | dishes and sauces. One half to : three-fourths cup grated cheese to one cup of medium cream sauce makes a good cheese sauce. This sauce is tasty poured over sliced hard cooked eggs and servetd on ’oast garnished with chopped pars ley. Ibis is a good luncheon dish In the past ten days I have visit el both Eastern and Western North Carolina. I saw many home gar dens in the East with cabbage, peas and lettuce up and growing In the West, the grass is green and jonquils blooming but signs of win ter are still in evidence. Remember that, approximately every 1,000 feet of rise in elevation accounts for a delay of one week to ten days in the seasons. Daffodils and tulips give n- i much pleasure in early spring and j are to be found in most of our j gardens. The question is; should they be taken up every year, every I second year, or every third year? i It is not necessary to lift daf'fo- j diJr every year but it is highly ; desirable that the bulbs be dug, j divided, and replanted every third ! year. This will give them a better j j chance to grow and reproduce. If yours need to be moved, wait : I until the leaves begin to turn vel- j i low before digging While the leaves are still green they are man ufacturing food and storing it. in the bulbs for next year's flowers. They may be dug, divided, and re planted immediately or they may be dried and stored in a cool place and held for fall planting. The tulip is somewhat differ • ent. Tulip bulbs should be tak- j en up and replanted every sec ond year The bulbs may de teriorate rather rapidly and for this reason it is sometimes best j i<> buy fresh bulbs every year R large flowers are desired. If bulbs are to be replanted, do not dig them until the leaves turn yellow as was the ease with daffodils. Bearded (German iris) is bloom- ! ing now in our neighborhood and ! will be ready to divide and trans plant in about a month. However plants may be divided and trans- i planted any time during the sum- I mer and early fall. A good division ! | consists of a new rhizome, or thic- j I kened underground stem with a i j cluster, or fan, of leaves After the I I division has been made the rhi- I j zome should be planted so that | the top of it will be even with the | soil, Deep piuntmg , s no t desir . able Bearded iris do best, in well drained soils which dry up rathe quickly. Cool weather in the spring fre quently interferes with fruit setting on tomato plants This is particu larly true of the first two or three flower clusters (hat are formed. Hormones, or plant regulators, ap plied to these first clusters may | give you earlier tomatoes and more i total production. They may be pur- 1 chased from your seedsman under the trade names of “Blossom Sot" ! or “Fruitone”. If you want to ex-I periment, use one of these mate- ! rials according to accompanying j directions. Spray on the open bios- ' soms with an atomizer or fine j spray. The City Primary will be held | April 29 In the primary two can- I didates for Mayor and I t for City I Council will be nominated. The 1 city election is May 10. deared himself in the hearts of the citizens for his continued fight for first class citizenship ■ for our people. Young Laddie Bell, Jr., will be gin the program with an organ! prelude. Invocation will be by thei 1 1 Rev. C. R. Edwards, pastor of ! 1 First Baptist Church, welcome by i Rev. C. R. Coleman, the host. ! Introductory remar s from K.el-1 ly Alexander, president of N. C. j brandies of NA ‘.CP. The membership campaign per sonnel! will be presented by Miss i Grace Cox, chairman, with Rev. C. R. Edwards and Rev. Arthur i Davis, co-chairmen. The city has been divided into two sections using personalities j with the Jackie Rohmson team campaigning in the Southern; Section and Martin Luther King in the Northern. Each team has five captains with ten workers, j with a total ot one hundred workers Miss Cox and co-chair men feel certain that on the sth of June when the final total is in, that the goal will have been surpassed. Captains of the Jackie Robin- j son team are Rev. Donald Fuller. \ Mr. Fred Elliott, Mr. Cerwood ; Greer. Mr. Charlie Little and Mrs j Jessye Vick. The Martin Luther King cap tains are Rev. Owen Campbell, Mr. Olonzo Sturdivant. Mr. James Hughes, Sr., Dr. Watson Fowler, TAMELY TOPIC ' H '' L. & v ' / ! f j ' ks \ k fe- v* m i On campus or off its smart to wear a lapel watch, the latest fashion in timepieces that is sweeping college cam ! »puses from coast to coast. Manlyn Walrath,.student at i fashionable Cedar Crest Col- j lege, is shown (above) wearing ; the new T-iook Eterna-Matic I that “toils time where time j tells" and winds automatically j j on its wearer’s Jane) Wffil * m> ***BmS&** ? 4**jmfr N. ..-nil, M^T„.l -, l rr Ml - , , .THINGS YOUSHOULP; KNOW; j r - -■- „■ _ __ ]_■ ; ...Born oifr of slavery in north ! CAROLINA, BECAME ONE Os THE NATION'S | RICHEST NEGROES A SELF-EDUCATED Iffi/ ' | TAILOR/HE LEO THE FIGHT AGAINST THE ILLINOIS BLACK LAWS, (- A NEGRO ‘ COULD NOT VOTE/)R TESTIFY IN COURT-' ’ " ‘ A FRIEND OF FREDERICK DOUGLASS AND JOHN BROWN,HE WAS TWICE ELECTED COOK COUNTY COMMISSIONER-—/ IT WAS HE WHO HELPED SECURE THE LEGISLATION WHICH P T r D LOG M SCHOOL SEGREGATION / €Ze>Arr//i'&N/'-ciSc. f ß e*-r&'££ —— _ -I-- - r* - * ; COME HOME—EVERY WEEK! s North Carolina Is a great state to “be from’’ as well as to “live in ” All of us ate familiar with the statement “I’m from Geor gia”—from Georgia! (with the emphasis on the ‘from Georgia’). We feel, hovever, every North Carolinian, wherever he may be. will always cherish the opportunity to return to his home State and never say “from”. Many can, and do visit regularly because .of family ties; others periodically, but all find deal old North Carolina fore-fronting m pro gress (first credit:, in education point way back to the 20's), and education being the basis for progress in allother anas, we fee! that relatively, if not actually, the funda mental basis for future progress has been established and is growing in the right direc tion. THE CAROLINIAN, for 15 years, has striven to give a telescopic view of all that goes on in North Carolina. Since Us slogan: “North Carolina’s Leading Weekly” captions its heading, you can rest assured no news events, occurences, or occasions are ommitted from its columns. In the Raleigh area particularly, where the bulk of our advertisement prevails, you can read of what the merchants are doing in sales and merchandising promotions. Yes, many of the older stores that you who are away can remember, use our columns and a host oi new business, which have developed ' and Mr. J. S Bolden. Music will be furnished bv the Girl’s Ensemble of E. E. Smith Sr. high schoool and, the Evans’ Metropolitan choir. Greetings will be received from ! Mrs. Margaret Berrien, M> - - John ! Elliott ana Mr. James Hughes as j well as from Mr. Charles A. Mc i Lean, field secretary of the N. C | State Conferences of Branches, Benediction by Father George Duyson of Saint Joseph's Episco pal Church. Mr R. H. Beatty, president of | the Fayetteville Branch NAACP. i assures you that Mrs. Hurley will I thrill you ii her address and issues an invitation to the public CHIME DOES mi PAY j RUN-DOWN SUSPECT Joseph A. Moreau (left) is led into police headquerters in Los Angeles, aifer being picked up ns a suspect in the automobile assault of two motorcycle policemen. Moreau, who had received a traffic ticket room nts before the j murder attempt, was nabbed on cr tip provided by witnesses in a Negro neighborhood. (Newspress 1 uoio). since you left, teliyou a line story ouch i week. So, If you send the CAROLINIAN to your relatives and friends, for them, it will be just like living in Raleigh. For if their families are here; if their children arc here or whatever j the relationship is. they can be assured every ; ' week of the Raleigh news by subscribing to j THE CAROLINIAN. To those out of the immediate area of of THE CAROLINIANS Home Office, let us tell you, our columns cover your community also, with whatever important news events are going on. We invite you and urge you to send in a subscription for your relative or friend who at present is in a “foreign land”, or send us < his or her name and address and we'll send a complimentary copy. The poem that says “All things come home at eventide, like birds that weary of their roaming, certainly the spirit of it must strike deeply in our hearts, about home, whether we are just roaming or whether we arc seeking better incomes and opportunities. i All of us like to ‘ come home”. Don’t be a roamer be home always with THE CAROLINIAN. Send one today! Lot us send it for you! THE CAROLINIAN 518 E. Martin Street Raleigh, North Carolina 1 THE CAROLINIAN I to be present. The Sunday School department d the First. Baptist Church save its annual Easter program Sun lay afternoon. The program consisted of reci tations, solos, duets and choruses liven by the small children. Following the young peoples program the male adult class pre • ' mied an Easter play ‘Were You ! There”? The cast included, James ; A. Raye, Colon Oliver, Sr., John ! McQueen, oscph Covington, Julius : McDonald and Richard Cogdell. Soloist was Mrs. Margaret Loc- Knrny with Mrs Susie Currie at the organ. Mrs. Lillie M. Beatty directed. , . . ~ •,- * "V « uhet bred by a nval citing ol youths. Arr -■■no 1 ~■ . ! \ - / , restrain his rii.ncraught mo!no;. v . • ■ , , - tones ana a companion were shot as thev ...i i.. , ... Davidson Hall: Hampton To Dedicate A Dormitory HAMPTON VA. .bp. , T official and forma! d. di Davidson Hall, Hampton ir newest dormitory it:' girls, which was opened :■ Or: - ber ’56 will take ptnc, e Fri April 26. at. 4 p. m. The dedicatory addr--.-.- v, el • - delivered by Dr. f.uihe; Bib. e y - ter. an HI alumnus and Os Tusk ogee Institute i: At that time, he v.-iii ai-.i p to Hampton Institute on to- . , ion of Tuskegee's 7.~>th Anniv-i a sun-dial, which is to ■ on the lawn !>. ■■-. ,- t> K- DaVidson Ha'!, T:..; \. ■■ , is another in the e vhan required to perform certain jobs or operations v. Thin ~ lime limit and ••card' . (<> standard criteria Die eon!’ , tants in architecture engineer ing and building construction will be required to solve p:ob letns in drafting. Hale Woodruff. Associate P f essor of Art at New Y,vk U:,;w sity, will open the annuo! ■ • , i,■ -,i the All-College Assembly ~n Tim , j day, April 25. at 7 pm in Oy • flail, with on address on the ob ject: “Development of Modern AH". Following the assembly, the D ■ Sion will be open to the pee fa! : public and the shops ill d-s; :•> : their facilities an,’ skills On Anri! 26 rorfificat wiil ; swarded to Adult Education see ing school riudentr., followed b. dance for the contestants am 1 “mixer” for visiting t-ktehers .v.d staff, ns announced hy Mr John j Frank, head of tht Di\ of Te h : n! HI. Saturday's urogram wi'l ■ with a special m -t am .-; ; , Mi Cel!is Dttvis. HI u.a • •• wiil address the contest a tils The. «nnual Bsoauet will take 1 place at 2 pm (Sat. 127- during j which HI President Alonzo I '■ Me- ! ron will award t », prizes to the winner- of ■ n , . competition. The main ymaki r j will he Cl. volant! All, n Ha-km. , nr -'idrnt of the- H-trlan EU ■■ 1 ut C of Detroit, Mich., arid a mrud'cr of the Board of Trustees of HI. The public Is again reminded ,J the Helping Hand Sale winch v Jt take place at St. Mark's Pari h House on Saturday. April I:• ii.- ! ing for children and adult.- ud) be available. It has been estimated that ap proximately 25 per cent of the : total costs of producing crops is for fertilizer. PMM/rV' yy , I 6? -A-'i-.e Psv«iS»» ft .. m-v • v/’e-f y p A ' "T 'TTMT’- H 1 'J+y -r, ’V *" A •jy ? h! •f . *,.• ' ,x i ■ • I W ’ t ... T-i : i. j v - ■* J ! < ■ - - 7-:n i rcmcisco iootherwesght, Gil vxg h-:; trm after stopping -■ ’- r. v !. .;■■. o Moore o, M UP''held Ohio, in tha j ”-y r '- r " '■ t - o’.t at M-mu. Fla, Cadilli, ■' ■ me.i to, to krsf a unanimous decisioo m; v "\ pi m mm \ - ® : :-T y.T' S “I %: jp M ,vs m m r - J | ff % J BLENDED J *f j V ~ y V' \ S', PROOF J Vy. ■, -J t 70‘S. Crcir: Neufro! Spirits I V so.io i '4a PINT 1! • -•'< - % 1., S 4C M W* Elbrri -a A*% ■TTTTy .1 4/5 QUART i Jr si < • ,' ■ :■+ .. •/ , •, . ! jgKm•— f hfif I Ltd— ..... >* r, ..... --T v /l T - \l* *- i j i ». • With men if Ft imptmsi* j j We, Ifut, not with (TtrJ: for v, ilh tloti all 1 hir.tic mtfeiblt’. j f' (Ft. Mark 10,27.1 !■■ • Icve .'* 0, !?TtP | 'lit, j 1<» r• * “ t O IK i(/ t to. 11l d r (•» 1 tIVUb l <* 8 litV rr *.* n y y.rna'i. 'l'ia' tv]-.,: •; v,y tv'-rr -m' ; *ll H-'.;r and anxit-nv vhmi ! J ■ •*> p.■ ' 5 ■ i > TEL. 8-3801 • > • "awrHrw,tiw *«*■- :. . » . .. irrivrrlinr -. --ii nr itrtn.ir.omin'x'iimßi I;,’ ; J.-ew3 & Camera Shop ** Photo Pixush.-rs Black and White or Color @ Pbntot ■•siphic Equipment and Supplies • C.ruflpx and Graphic- Cameras 0 Motion Picture Projectors -U'r*!;>;r2V::.U OIMLLR jfott.: Letra • Boles - Zeiss • Argus Cannon - Bail .IS; OoatiU - Knd.tr - Polaroid 122 Mox-veli St. Dial 2-39*9 PAGE NINETEEN »"»*»' —jyx, ■ iM».... X'i<'*rnmvi wimtmmmtmm a—a—w FOR RENT ’■ ■ Typewriter, s6.oa pm .'i a'as rent to apply oft pur . ■ n <>n rypt co. '-I ■■■• Kn, I'.scitcvlUe, H. C. Phone 5-32JS FOR SALE t* *vj -n. tMHzrtttjwtm.'noAm - ■ r e,:;,- machines, new md rernis to suit. in■ an '■ ni’Ewnm co. ’ nivtt Fayetteville, N C, Phone 2--32? X ~ . —™.• —,. 1',,. . 'MWM.MSWNnmV ..‘■o Tin Only Furniture B«r --.,in Basement In Town. M’-W & USED ITTRN. Market Furn. Co. >f II - / St. Dial 2-3039