g THE CAROLINIAN -
Week Ending Saturday, January 25, 1958
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. . AND STILL DEATH Hancuffed after n raid in a wooded section near Atlanta, Cia., this al*»
leced moonshiner can’t bear to watch as a revenue agent puts the last smash into the still with an as,
Another suspect was nabbed in the raid on the outdoor distillery, which bad a capacity of 40ft gallons,
fUNITED PRESS PHOTO).
8
Ultra -Spoiled Wives Treat Husbands
As Second-Rate Citizens, Declares
Author Os ‘‘Woman: The Dominant Sex’*
NEW YORK CITY - ‘Compared
with tods v s womt n, modern Amer
ican ram arc physical weaklings.
The resnit is that we have a verit
ebli- army of henpecked husbands
who not only are treated as sec
ondary citizens, hut are kicked a
rcund by uitra-spoiled wives.” So
writi ■ Hentrik De Loeuw in "Wo
man: The Dominant: Sex,” one of
the year's most, disturbing and con
troversial book.-'. It. is published by
SAVE FUEL
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WEATHER STRIP
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S. I*. YOUNG
Hardware
130 E. Martin St.
Dial TEmplr 2-7121
t/%/ 1
7^7
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-"•V. /
most •■•:; xpenijv® < &il
way lhiP6 jr, ta se««j -■#**”*
. . te#wC,
FIR3T-CITIZENS BANK I
AND TRUST COMPANY
| Thomas Yoselofl. In«., New York ;
j (Dec. 5, $3,95).
I* * a i>
It is woman who rules the
family, home, and children and
governs the nation’s taste, mor- j
ats, and culture so that our at
titude toward love has been
neurotically debased, writes
family man de Loeuw who, in
cidentally, has been happily
married for 27 years. The t new
book is also attracting wide at
tention abroad.
* * * *
The "self-sufficient, overbearing,
and often masculinized women”
have mot only turned the United
States into a patriarchate that has
j uprooted the normal patterns of
| famiiy living, but have also ac
i quired a firm hold on our economy.
' making it increasingly difficult for
i ~
‘The Crowning Experience’
! Highlights MRA Assembly
i MACKINAC ISLAND. Mich—“ The
j Crowning Experience”, a new mu
! sical play, was ‘he highlight of the
| Moral Re-Armament Assembly
: which brought to Mackinac Island.
Michigan. 800 people from all parts
; of America and Canada during the
I past Yuietide season.
* * * *
This play was inspired by the
life of the great educator, .Mrs.
Mary McLeod Itethune. the
daughter of slave parents, who j
rose to be advisor to presidents j
and one of the most honored of
j her ruce.
* * * *
| When Mrs. Bethuna was 80 years
; old, she came to a Moral Re-Ar
mament Assert’’’v. There she cp
i ened h .... io a new commit
! ment, saving .“To be a part of this
! great uniting force of our age ia
men to retain their individud-krtyv
and traditional sevual status,
* * * *
Many of today’s major con
cerns may, the author charges,
be traced to this woman-dom
inated culture. “Owing to bad
upbringing, discipline and re
spect for elders have become,
forgotten words in our vocabu
lary . , . the whirlwind of crime
we are reaping now may also
be partly due to an almost
! complete lack of orderly con
duct in home and school.”
* * * *
The husband, “demanding less,
and giving women more in a ma
terial sense than do husbands in
other lands has been turned into
something characterized often as s
‘Jtggs,’ a ‘Walter Mitty,’ a 'Caspar
I Milquetoast’.”
tbu crowning of my isfe.*
Delegates and visitors were call
by Dr. Frank Dutchman's National
Call to America in which he said,
“America's truest export is not
just a bigger better materialism,
but the crowning experience of the
rebirth of our faith in the hearts
of the people.
** « *
On January 4 the new enusro*
I al opened in Detroit at the
j Henry and Edsel Ford Audi
torium for four special per
formances. prior to beginning
its world premiere on January
1 II in Atlanta, Georgia.
« » » *
Cast members in the musical play
include: Muriel Smith, Ami Buck
les, Susie Cabanero of the Philip
pines and Louis Byles of Jamaica.
Hometown
\ Newspaper
| Cites Gore
TALLAHASSEE—FIorida A. and
' M. University President, George W.
Gore, -Jr., was recently cited edi
torially by his hometown newspa
• per The Nashville Glob* and In
dependent—for his educational pro
wess and industry which led to
Famu’s recently received full mem
bership in the Southern Asosciation
of Colleges arid Secondary Schools.
» >■ « »
“The Afro for December 14.
had an’ article which throws
additional light upon the ac
creditation of colored colleges
and high schools by the South
ern Association of Colleges and
High Schools.
* * » *
What ■will Impress and virtual- j
ly amaze many Nashvillians will j
be the undoubted prowess and in- j
dusiry of Dr. George W. Gore, j
president of Florida Agricultural !
and Mechanical University,
m’ft ft pftp that people can't
tichangr problems. Evciyone
knows how to solve the other
fellow’s."
Va. State’s
Honor Group
Stages Panel
PETERSBURG, Va. —The Alpha
Eta Chapter of the Alpha Kappa
Mu National Honor Society at Vir
ginia State College presented a
panel on the subject, “The Effects
of Nuclear Weapons,” (the econom
ic. political, military and biologi
cal implications) recently at the
Coliege. This was the first project
of the Society for the current
school year.
Six Films
Available
At Library
The Richard B Harrison Public
Library has the following 16 mm
films available fer adult borrow
ers through February 7,195 R:
A MENU'S CHILD —33 min
How a superstituttious African
Gold Coast tribe finds faith
through the help of a local clinic
D-DAY 27 min.
June 6, 1944, the allied forces
land successfully in Normandy. An
event which symbolizes the turn
ing point of the war and the un.ty
of America and its allies.
JOSE ITURB 1 HARPSICHORD
—lO minutes.
Iturbi at. the harpsichord Fea
tures three selections for harpsi
chord by Couperin.
LOOK INSIDE RUSSIA —22 min.
Gives an accurate account of rural
and urban conditions inside Russia
today.
LOU GEHRIGS GREATEST
DAY 27 Minutes.
July 4, 1939, Yankee Stadium, a
day of appreciation for one of
America’s greatest baseball cham
pions who faces an incurable ill
ness. Helps to illustrate the place
of sports in American life.
PAINTING CLOUDS l4 Min.
s Eliot O'Hara, famous watercolor
list explains the basic facts an ar
tists needs to know about cloud
formation and movement, and the
way in which they reflect light
and color He demonstrates some
SALE
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fOMfITA IMKZ «x. , A PORK snus » 55c I FRANKS .. . 57$
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I
Glenwood Village-111W. Morgan St. —Northside Shopping Center-Cameron Village
LAUNCHES ANTI-RAT CAMPAIGN Acting as a modern Pied
Ptper, the Rev. Hilton Perry, pastor of the Revival Temple Church
of God in Christ, New York, (at 125 W. 130th St.), begins his 12-
ntlle walk from Harlem to City Hall. Jan, 13th. The 22-year-old
cleric, who last summer walked the same distance to pray for the
Sharkey-Brown-Isaacs Bill banning discrimination in housing, was
on his way to ask Mayor Wagner to initiate “Operation Rodent
Riddance.” The clergyman said he would urge a widespread pro
gram for the extermination of the huge rats which “are infesting
many Manhattan apartments, attacking infants and adults alike ”
(UNITED PRESS PHOTO).
of his methods by painting a group ji
of cumulus clouds.
Thinning produces saw timber in I
half the time required if thinning j
i is left to nature.
* ! Around 350,000 cows have been j
t j bred artificially in North Carolina
; ' since this program began.
IS V, E . . .
ELVIS RAND
THE TAILOR
S N A K E N BURG
8 E. Martin St.. Itaieigh
2 Vo-Ag Officials Promoted
GREENSBORO— Two officials
of the North Carolina Vocational
Agriculture program in Negro
schools were recently elevated to
the new posts of district supervis
ors.
Those promoted included W. T.
Johnson, and James W. Warren,
Jr., both former assistant super
visors of Vocational Agricultural ■
Education with headquarters here
at A, and T. College.
* * * »
The promotions announced
by A. G. Bullard, Raleigh, State
supervisor of Vocational Agri
culture, were made to fill the
vacancy left by S. B. Simmons
assistant supervisor of Vn-Ag
who died last July.
Johnson will continue as diiec
lor of North Carolina New I- arm ■
ers of America and will work in
the coordination of the total State
program in Negro schools.
A native of Rock Point in Pon
der Cunty, Johnson holds, both, the
|
i BURKETT'S
SODA SHOP
-117 S. Bliodworth St.
| BREAKFAST DINNERS |
HOT DOGS BARBECUE j
HAMBURGERS SMOKES j
N. C. PRODUCTS
PERSHING ROAD RALEIGH PHONE 4-2557
OLIVE STREET KINSTON PHONE 2514
B.S. and MB. degrees from A. and
T. College and has done further
study at Purdue University. Hi?
work experience includes: Vo a •
teaching, Spring Hope, 1932-37;
farm shop teacher trainer at A.
and T., 1938-41; assistant stipends
or Vo-Ag, in charge of Defen'e
and Rural War Production Pro
gram, 1941-48 and Itinerant teacher
trainer in West Virginia, tP' : : ' '
where he organized the Vo-Ag ■ >
gram, all before he took his fo'fi 1
assignment here in Greensboro -
1952.
North Carolina fanners p' • i
25,000 acres of flue-cured and !"■ i
ley tobacco in the Soil Bank last
year.
North Carolina and Georgia la .
ing hens combined produce alioot
5 per cent, of ill eggs product cl
in the U. S.
Better Buys
Better Terms
On Better
Jewelry
1