No r Pi-'pr in hiMovy has had • niiinv ‘if-., with ill. United Stater, Pop-* f-iijM XU: Ilf v > tbr first mar. tu become P.’••lu' i-,. d ever visited the U nitrd states. He jpuointod more than half of tiie U. s hierarchy, including five rei'dinat during his reign and re ceived more American: at the Va- I inert til-':*', ;tnv of his predecessors. ftp appointed the late Samuel furdinal Sir it oh to the highest po sit inn wer attained by an A inert* •an in l!v Roman Curia, govern* * 1 n c agem's i's thr f '., ‘J !i (. C htirch i h 1 9 16 } ip- •'f*d the f»?• *« TJ c > c;< i/Pfi V3i“cd to Mother * < ft hr. H 11 ; fit. \ n Ch i rago in J 317, Mi? §;.r;»n*l ?hr;:’'?]lent was df- nt so Ha* problem* ?nd pro'iffes-? of th * Church }r» fh c United Statr; AJthousft. fhr SMte awd VaCrsjti tiPvpi' exchanged for mal diPl?TTi3f.ir envervs dnrlns? p»ssem Pontiff'?. reign, President Frsnklit. Pcosevctt had -* personal re'crcsente.tbe at the Vatlcem at d’d President Harry Truman for a fmnr tr*ar& thifin* hb tour us Ihe thiH&f stales fti Ortober. 1933 Cardt «a1 ftatfeflfo PappHl th*? frit «rr r«>ptr followed an Itinf ntilfV, fr«r other writ wtrald car*' to fry. Hr wad? • « jyJVWKmjUf ff?Bjhf (o CaM and rptum with pvt«nd *f* at Hpfid. CMca j* S< P-ant. F>3.wr!%4« St. arid Ciwphssiatt vi.stfed focal bishop.? SOS'ftches. vr«d honors* y d r groes from universities, and >0 Sait TPrSLUCiSCO tile fiev»*!y-cotn pleted Oakland Bay Bridge T.; orn oeDdqusrterg <n Nov York, the energetic prolate also visited . Bostor?. Philadelphia, Baltimore < and Washington In the course of j on* day in the nsfion's cap’tal, Cardinal Parelli spoke at the tholir X University of America. Georgetown. University s-nd at. a luncheon at the National Peers C‘hjb; t oto.red to George Washing ton's nome at Mount Vernon; visited the headquarters of the Na tional Catholic Welfare Confer* . nre and was conducted on a tou r of the l ibrary of Congress. i Shortly before departing for ' Pome* it)® Cardinal was the lunch- j con guest of President Hoosevelt at 1 h»s home In Hyde Park, where he j • ongratufated the President on his for the American people. fn later year?! the Pope *** • at fed hi. visit to the United States ' and spoke of his special affection j for the American People The second encyclical of his reign 1 r«o N 1 I 1030 rvas addressed to the Caikolio Church in the United tgtes In' it the Pope commended -lit prog - rss of Hi* Church, He also • •xpressetl ’> special paternal af* 'crtiosi for the and said that “I** the field of religion and ; QUALITY M|&Ns MORE fOR YOUR MONEY IV Wt*t»ir»o«V M*- 1- ’ 7I ,# »>.argil *' »* Jf> f*»f * P 1 1 "r« a f Ai» v/^t* •vU U«*<SroTAv P f o<*sli *OOO.OO LiSS SIUViCf; HEADACHES Yft«itb hendcrHfted hori chaggis iises No Printed Circuit for l*#s •ernce headarhee with Tt-I'H fUWSHINE PICTURI TUW Xpjr2saaa»«Me=»3«wi^^ TT EXTRA VALUE *■ j FEATURES i * 18,000 volt* of picture po*er ; • Cinetens* picture j glass • Spot Lite dial j • FuU-push/on-ofT I L® Tone oontio! I j ''SEE YOUR LO(" A! ZENITH DEALER* t'Hs.lrihijhif’d Pr NASH . BrrEEbE8 r rEEbE 4 WARREN, INC. 2&. ? tien ft'ofio Ayc i t_. < i BFFORF \NP AFTER *— Mr. and Mrs. Samite! Mitchell of Caslalfa in Nash County had consider- ; rd building an»« home Id replice this Iwo-room log cabin in top photo sot three years before the Form snd Home Development Program, and Pa.it Thompson, assistant Negr*. County Agent, came j alone to help them on their way. Bottom photo shows their new frame house with four rooms and a, hath, standing almost ready for occupancy. Thompson encourages Negro families, in his work with ( the development program, to do such things as building or improving homes and increasing crop produetion. education we know that need j special care snd comfort and are j very deserving of it.” The American hierarchy in s loioi statement in 1942 recalled the Pontiff’s words. The follow - ing ye,n Hie Bishops said that one of the essentials of a good peace Is “equality" for the Negro, "not nnlv political equa lity, hut also fair economic and educational opporiunitiea." I Puri"?;-' Pope P]l’J Xlr*' reign •since the Church in the Unit ed Staief. grew rapidly. At the ttnic of hie election there were 112 die roses and archdioceses in the Unit ed States By 1958, 38 more dio ceses hod been added. The num ber of American Roman Catholics likewise grew. The population ex ! tianded from 31,4 million in 1989 i lo 34.5 million m 1957. an increase | of more tnan 37 per cent. | Five American cardinals were 1 appoint** by Pope Pius. He ele j rated Edward Cardinal Mooney of 1 Detroit, Samuel Cardinal Stritch of | Chicago. John Cardinal Glennon of |St Lou,';-' and Francis Cardinal j Spellman of New York at Hie 1948 consistory Cardinal Glennon died shortly after his appointment. James Cardinal Mclntyre of Los Arirelei was created a cardinal in 1935. fine of ihe Pope’s lest visitors before his stroke was Cardinal Spellman The New York prelate stopped at th* Vatican on his way home from a pilgrimage to Lourdes. France In the 19305, Mssr Spell man worked in the papal Secre tariat of state under Kuaenio Cardinal Pacelli, who became Pope Pini XTT Tlie two were close fi Cndr In March. 1853 Pope Pius named Cardinal Stritch Pro-Prefect of the Sacred C mar elation for the Prop j agation of the Faith, an important j Vatican port having executive iu- I nsdiction over the Church’s fnr j flung mission areas The Cardinal ; died on May 27. shortly after ho arrived In Rome to assume his new duties “ft is e]rv,r." Cardinal Stritch had . aid when appointed,, “that His Holiness, in honoring me, nrinri pally ,13d in mind honoring the Church in ihe United Slates.'* fra Old yields in North Carolina have jumped from 959 pounds per acre in 1915 to 1870 pounds pc ac>r ip 1957 Castrate pigs at three weeks of i I 9 SO WHNi !au»»»s»sv» am AwwteMi W *««<■ €Uitfl Mf »MUfM ofi 1^ Calvert RESERVE American Whiskey «*% a,HIM DfIUSAI SPIRITS • OUMOtD WHIIHtf j ryir TT? i ; FEMININE FRONT By Rosalie Williams Th* ears of many Raleighites must have burned Last. Sunday from the verbal spanking they re ceived from national ard state per scnalitie* for Raleighs apparent lack of ipteiest in the work of the N.aACP They indicated that, on j ly a handful of Raleigh folks were | there to hear Roy Wilkins, Nation* : ;■! Executive Secretary of the NA ACP, on the school integration sit uation. The question has hern often asked: 'Why is Raleigh, the Capital City, always behind in maters civic and political?” And last week the burning question was "Why don’t more Ralrigh people attend NAACP gatherings?" Also overheard was this question: “Why has only one sehool integration suit been filed from a section which a crammed bus load of children paas several .schools daily and travel across town to reach a segregated school?” When » call for a show of hands of representative* from the Ral eigh area was asked for, the Ral eigh number seemed fairly good to me But one still wonders why every scat in that auditorium was not filled la.*! Sunday just, as rea dily as it can be tilled by a rock and roll show, 1 did not bear a financial report , but it should be said that some re marks indicated that the Raleigh community does measure up well in the number of financial mem berships reported this year. That Is something to he thankful for. QLETTER TO MEET Queltes w ill meet at the home of Mrs James Blount. 708 Tower St., I Sunday at 6 p. m Mrs. Willie C. High, president, announces that nlons for the annual Christmas pro ject of the club will He made. This project involves sponsoring a con to.xt and offering prizes for the mnvt attractively decorated homer, at Christmas. This activity creat ed a lost of interest last year and resulted m increased attractiveness > of many communities. Mso at the Sunday meeting I am srhedyied to give an illustrated talk on my trip to Colombia. South America, this summer, and Mrs. Blanche Rivers will tell of some of her experiences on her travels through several states of the U. S. UNITED FUND WORKERS Approximately forty volunteer w orkers were present, at the train- 1 John Wallace Tsibee .* Editor Os Ghana’s ' S®s Ffc A»l«l ll fmm a & nisi uaiij visas CHICAGO <ANF»~ John Wal lace Tsibee, publisher of the Ash - I ant' Pioneer, tiir first dally pub lished in what is now Ghana but was Gold Coast when the paper ! vvbs established, was a visitor in I Chicago las* week sir Tsihee, whose paper is rofeifehed In Knmnsl to (hr Ashanti rtrr't «f Ghana. repr r *»(.( wh«.i might he known rfl* Irtl In l(tp Pn« i relation renpiei i m «..* ucmdou i ms meeting of United Fund work ers in the Negro Residential Divi sion last Thursday night at First Baptist Church. Sister Mable Gary i was there to offer prayer and also ! announce that she will work with j the United Fund this year. Others I who participated in the training I program were Mrs. L. Y Ballon* | tine, vice-president of the United ; Fund of Raleigh: Mrs. Earl Brian, j i Colonel of the overall Residential ; I Division; Mrs. J. M. Jenrette. Jr„ | Major with Mrs. Brian; John Pox, Executive Director of the U. F.j I and Mrs. Betty Gabriel, Adminis trative Assistant in the U.F office. A report meeting of all workers i has been scheduled for Thursday night, October 18, at the Sojourner Truth YMCA on East Davie St. All volunteer workers are urged to be present and on time as attrac tive door prises will be awarded. Hour of the meeting is 3 p. m. PERSONALS Word has reached Raleigh that Mrs. Virginia K. Newell, Ligon math tearhpr. i* settling down to serious study under a fellowship at Chicago Univer sity. The W. H. Watson* of Gary, Indiana, met her on her arrival in Chicago last week, honored her at a dinner party, and helped her to get settled at I Chicago 1 nternationa) House where she will reside during the year of her studies, Mrs. Newell was the recipient of many bcm voyage gestures during the last few days prior to her leav ing Raleigh One of them was a buffet dinner hosted by Dr. and ’ Mrs. N. L. Perry at their home on S. Person Street Many of Mrs Newell's co-workers from the Ral eigh Public Schools System and other friends were present To wish : her well. Miss Maggie 'Dicker of East I ■|,n oir Street is in Saint. Agnes Ho? pitat for treatment. Along with her many friends, I wish her speedy recovery. She anticipates being in . St. Agnes for about a month. JINKS IN DURHAM Nearly all of the members of Hie Raleigh Chapter of the Link* jour neyed to Durham las' Saturday evening to be present as the format ceremonies installing the Durham ! Chapter. Congratulation. to the newly established chapter. Many of the Raleigh group stay • r-d for the party which followed the installation ceremonies Hr Prime Minister Wkftittiah The Ashanti area Hi the rich est. section of Ghana. most of • In* corns, mahogany ami Gold mining from that a,rea Mr. Tsibee visited a number of plants in Cl .ice go being interested in printing and newspaper estab lishments. educational institu tions. libraries ad Industrial e» I abiishments. Hr plans to go by Piterto r'w Ham end femafee St Augustine’s Students j Now Doing Cadet Teaching Twenty-nine seniors at St. Aug ustinee College have begun cadet teaching in the various schools of North Carolina, announced Dr. P. R Robinson, dean of the college. At Hawley High. Creedmore ere: Gladys lord, music; Catherine Ar- Jine, sociai studies; George Sanders, commerce; Madeline Garrison, commerce: and Myrtle Winstead, fourth grade. Franklin County Training School, I.ouisburg' Pocahontas Jones, com merce; William C. Woods, mathe matics; Jimmie Hooker, physical education: Martha Dunn, second grade: and Algaray Henderson, biology, Johnston Con n t y Training School Smllhfiold: Ann Wilson, At Durham Business College: Miss Shirley Jean Lyons is j Student Council President DURHAM Mrs. Shirley Jean j Lyons, daughter of Mrs. Margaret i E. Bridges of Johnson City, Ten* j: nessco, and major in. senior mere- j taryahip at The Southeastern Buss ; . ness College in Durham war, j elected president of the college's j Student Council #u an all-student ! meeting recently Capturing other neats were Mlss Shirley Allen of < reed moor, secretary; Miss Cottle Mae Lewis of Pinetnps, assi slant secretary; Glltnon M. Moody nf Garysburg, treasurer; Misses Ella Mae Weaver of Johnston, S. and Barbara j ■ 1 Boddie of Nashville, report ers- Henry Robert Pn of Lumber Bridge, parliament- j arian; Benjamin t. Pjper of j Chester, S. C„ business mana ger; Miss fda Hall of Charlotte, secretary to the business manx- j grr Named chairman of the social, I ! 'sick, constituting) and program ! < PRICE IS OUR BUSINESS! DIRECT FROM FACTORY TO YOU Complete Line o? Shoes few the Whole Family at . . . LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICES FAMILY SHOE STORE ] 21? SOUTH WILMINGTON ST. 1 R.,.,,,,, uTiTrn-Trrrff -n~im ~t —ititu - * * _ _ qjiuiijp»i.i m'»t-rwiMiiTTTiinn—>—<~in—i—twatriimw —minirrnn~iinn~minnmf~t-tth--■-i-mriTrira iwr rnrnri 1 " " —— _____ at ca 1 1958 FRIGIDAIRE WASHER GETS CLOTHES CLEANER than other leading washers casting up to S2OO more I ! SPECIAL CLEARANCE PRICE s<l^A9s Ig Mo Sown Payment l| | "0*" I ® With Trade! f RATED No. 1 fey U.S. Ot. Inc.* j 1 , J for-CLEANEST CLOTHES ExtloSIVO i PP||| -lint removal SuilMn' P§Sa' '% ~ DR!BT SP ‘ N SBDSWATIM iMe JML Q HNT-CHAtfR ping automatically \N sweeps away lint, dirt, soap scum. Outs Washday \ eißcuiAioa ring guards against ( osts ,^ lf !| oS{ MODi?L v J ** tangling. m KalfJ *ie «i t*d e-t *>v suiamQiie wuMu u« i | | £NtR»v BIN® energizes wafer to get eonfroHed lohamtofy raedmom Pepom **?«! ?J cloth<M ultra-clorl. T, *, May 1 ord May 10, 19SS, .Hit* NO PLUMBING NEEDED! CALL FOR FREE HOME DEMONSTRATION WE FINANCE OUR OWN WJPVj|V9I o*% rNSTAIJJHENT SALE B4L By ]J ” Cell Us For Service" sis • II VA 8-5592 102 Fajetko life Sf, J first grade and Eloise Shank, mat hematic* Berry O’Kelly High School, Method: Theodore Barnes, commerce. J. W. Ligon Junior- Senior High, Raleigh, Walter Gil ford, music; Charlotte Jenkins, physical education; Delores Rogers, English; and Thelma Becton. com merce. Washington School, Raleigh: Ca rol KoUnson, physical education, Ciosby-fjarfield School. Raleigh; Yvonne Hart, fifth grade. Lucil’e Hunter School, Raleigh: Barbara Ellis, first grade and Ahmet a Gary, fourth grade. Shawtown High School, Lilliugfton: Jeanette Swan, second Trade and ?Jurisl Swan, I third grade. Frink High School. T.j» j Grange: Delores P Callwood. phy < sicai education. commits e» were Miw Ctamontinp Morton of Creedmoor, Mis* Veols Pirlda of Laurinburg, Mias Doric Jones of Rocky Mount, and Miss Juanita Rucker of Raleigh, respec tively. Bi - monthly meetings of fh* Council, an Ist and 3rd Mondays, were set, to get under way Octo ber fi. Meanwhile the 'program committee is scheduled to submit a draft student program for the academic year 1958-59 to the exe : cutive committee next Friday. j Pinna tor a Fashion and Talent j show and for Homecoming are : already under way. At least 75 per cent of the North Carolina cotton crop is expected to ba classed by the N. C. Cotton Classing Office this year, If you live in one of the Mate's 32 commercial corn growing coun ties, vote in ths November 25th corn referendum. IRE CAMQimMM *P'>i r mmm rwow Saturday, ew3¥©ss£B t&> fgi SO9S~' OK's endhsle* copping method piut poofcoteeA sound casinoj uiv - yo*j , Fr,, »* Weetem B8«A. m Highway M®» 1 Mrtrffe ————- 11— py^d Straight $g.25 BOURBON S3JD^ W MS KC V mam mmssm * sAmmeßma, xmmxrv 11

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