PAGE EIGHT THE CAROLINA TIMES SATURDAY, MARCH 25, 1950 I Miss Billie Holiday wias more friends and fans. Photo “Lady laurels and admiration from Day” being decorated with Hawaiian Lei, a toast of^ friend ship and affection from Jack Kawano, President of the Hawaiian Longshoremen’s Un-1 ion. Miss Holiday was guest of I honor at the testimonial dinner of the prexy of the Union at the Fairmount Hotel, Nob Hill, the swankiest hostelry of the gold coast. La Holiday sang for her fans amid unanimous applause and ardent felecitation. — Photo Courtesy Floyd Snelson. Franklin— (Continued from Page One) the kind of objective history which Dr. Franklin said is char acteristic of the third group of historians. Contf“niporary liistorians wor- Ihey of the name, the speaker indicated, are busily engaged “rederssing the teaching of his tory” in such a way as to paint the true picture of America and its development. This group helj.i.Mays special attention to the his tiiiru«ribution of the Negro and ing “Ha ethnic groups in the pop- Jajnes evej_^ cream, c Othe*- Historians, Dr. Franklin stat- 10- ed, havjj long consitlered tlieni- selves servants of tlie people. The collective demand of the American people for all of the facts surrounding America’s liistory is thus responsible for the progri'ss being made in an ♦ xpainliiitr practical democracy apj)lifal)!e fo all of our jjeople, Concinding, Dr. Franklin as serted: “The prospect for a more vital ilemocracy in the I'nited States will become brigiitcr as our historians write the history of our country in terms of tlie persistent move ment toward equality and justice and as our institutions such as the public schools and the libraries do tlieir pai| in pro moting the study of the tr\ie his- torv of the nation.” N. F. A., Carthage, and Dr. B. E. Honey, Chairman of the Hoard of Directors; Supt. T. A. llamme will preside over the program. Music for the occasion will be furnished by the Or|)han- age Choir. Supervisor Sinnnons is ex pecting 12(X) N. F. 4- mendiers, their advisors, and chapter mothers on hand for the Ninth Annual Program. New— (Continued from Pag»> f)ne) will make the pres'ntation ad- ,dres.s. Tlie .speaker was (,'liaplain of Tuskegee Institute where he was perhonidiy a.s.sociafed witli Dr. Carver. Others appearing on the j)rograin will be Heverend J. W. Wiley, Principal of Swift Vocational. Seluxd. Xash Coun- t\'; .Mrs. AV. E. Iticks of Kings Mountain will represent X. F. A. mothers on the program. J. Warren Smith, Director of \ ocational I^ducation, Ualeigli. W P. House. State President of Classified AN EXPERIENCED WIN- DOW WASHING MAN. Floor Waxing and Washing Wood work. Call for Walter McCloud at RHODES’ CLEANERS. Phone J-3893. One house for sale, 607 Alston Avenue. One House and Store, 508 Alston Avenue. Call R. L. FRAZIER, J-0621 or 9-1859. Six and seven room houses on Alston Avenue for sale, with bath. Call 5-9873, Classified De partment, or write Box 59, Dur ham, N. C. Tempest— (Continued from Page One) The highlight of the second general session in ilemorial Auditorium, Friday evening will be an addresK by (lovernor W. Kerr Scott. Speaking also Fti- day evening will be Dr. R. P. Daniel, forJner president of Shaw and recentlj" elected j)resi- dent of Virginia State College. The Washington High S.'hool Hand and Chorus and the Fayetteville Teachers’ College Chorus will rurnisli special mu sic Friday evening. Following the ge\ieral sossion at .Memorial Auditorium, an in formal social occasion at the Washington High School Audi- toj'ium will be i)rovided for the teachers. The thii'd general ses.sioii will go back to Grt>enleaf Anditor- inrn, Shaw T'niversity, Satur day morning at ten o’clock. This im K illi- rtnn\llll bllr. ni'^> -.r,,!!;!! and will I'i-atnrt' reimri . of o! Iiii'is. -4itndin^ I'liiiiiiiittei's, iind L;iiiu|i'. enjiii;.ii‘d in >|ieciiil pnt- lltr! lulls III tile i(r»VM'lllt iiill |il’ii LM'aiii Tiiis will be tin- liisl del- . utili ,i s-ihl)l> ill tlie hi-.toiy of the a- iiciiitiiiii and will be ni nn UNlial illti !'i "'t III Vi teliill llielll hers \\I|*I lia\f fulliiweil ii|i past eull\elil iiills. 'I’lie final session will elose with the report of the elections eanviivsing coniinittee jiniloiincing officers elected ill llii' halliitili” on the ila\ before. .Ml iiieiiilici-s attending the North Carolina 'I’cacliers' As.so- eiiition ( on\‘iitloll will be i‘ii titled to vote oil otticel'S liallol in;i will lieuin at IHMH) ,\1. I'i'ida,\, -Mall'll ‘tl, iiini continue until (i:0() I’. .\1. Tile election niacliitiiM'N o1 the association pro\ ides two ciiiiilidates for each office in which there is a va- ciiney. The candidates »rc as follows: I'or I’rcsidcni, A. 11. Anderson, I’riiieipid, Kinihcrly Park School, Winston Siilein and Dr. I'\ h. Atl^ins, I’resideiit, Win ston Sidcni 'reachers’ ('ollege. 1'(M' vicc president, ('. L. ISlake, Piinei|»al, West Charlotte High .School and .Mrs. \V. 15. Wicker, Classroom tejieher, of Sanford. Koi' reciyding secretary. Miss Willie M. .lefferies. Supervisor, Northampton County Schools and Miss Henlah Moore, Prin- cipal, Isabelle W’yche School, Charlotte. For treasurer, II. S. Davis, Princij)al, i\lary Potter Sch(M)l, Oxford, and Dr N. H. Harris, Proffessor of Educa tion, Shaw I'niversity. P’or two vacancies on the E.xecutive Com mittee, W. (I. Byers, Principal, Pairview School, (Miarlotte, Mrs. .\da .M. .larnigan, Shaw Univer sity, W. I. Morris, Principal, Pleasant drove High School, ■Mebane, and M. L. Wilson. Prin- cij)al, Harrison IHgli Seh(K)l, Selma. Twenty-eight Division, I>e- partmoit, and Section meetings dealing with all phases of the professional program will be iield throughout the day on Fri- ilay. Al! of these groups will meet on Shaw I'niversity cam pus Friday morning. A special se.ssion of the elementary teach ers department will be held at the Lucille Hunter School from 2:f)0 to p. m. .Many prominent educators will be speakers at department and section meetings. Miss Zona Livengood, President, North Carolina Elucation Asso ciation (’la.ssroom Teachers’ will addre.ss the division of classroom tea('hers Friday afternoon. Dr. Clyde .\. Erwin, State Super intendent of Pid)lic liiNtruction, will address the Division of Ad ministrators and Supervisors al 4-.(M) P. M. Friday. C. F. l\.iike- sti’aw, \'oeational Consiiltant. r. S. Ortiee of Education, will addre.ss the Division of S|)(*cial Education Friday afternoon. Dr. Edgar Dale, liurean of Edu cational ll'search, Ciirriculiun Division, Ohio State I'niversity, will address elementary teach ers’ meeting at Crosby-Garfii'ld Auditorium. A ppraring on d*partment and secrion progranii will be Dr. S. E. Dnneiui. State High Heluiol .Siipciv isor, Dr. Theodore H, Sjieigncr, Dr. H. Inez Dixon and Dr. .1. .\. Pittman, North (.'aroliiia College; Dr. Henry A. Shannon and Dr. N. C. Newbokl, Stale Depaitment df Public In struction; Dr. .John W. Cell, .N’orth Carolina State (’ollege and Professor (leorge A. Hall, Winston Salem TeacherH’ Col lege. Aside from the general ses- sions and the professional dis cussions there will b«‘ two out standing features of special iu- teresi to elas-srooni teachers. l''ollowing the inldress by Miss Livengood, the newly created division of clasjiroom teachers w ill hold a business session to set up (trganizalion machinery for its future promotion. A dinner meeting of presi- d(“iits and other officers of local associations will b‘ held at the Crosby (Jarfield ('afeteria at ():.‘i(> I*. M. Friday. This meeting of local leaders should he at tended by all local unit presi- get tickets for the 110 available dents and as many irthers as can plates. Tickets will be available at Uegistration Headquarters and will not be over $1.25 each. Mrs. S. Lash Simms, President, Wiriston-SHlem Classroom Teach ers, will preside at the meeting and present guest speakers. News From St. Augustine Boys' Club— ((’ontinued from I’age One) night the senior basketball team of the local Club will play the Wilmington (’luh in a game of basketball. Some of the many National l{,fidio Programs that will give special salutes and features to the Boys’ Club Movement throughout the entire w:eek are as follows: Naticmal Farm and Home Hour, Charlie McCarthy Show, Lassie, Arthur Godfrey Show, Jack Benny Show, We, The People, Boh Hope, Bing Crosby, Red Skelton, Joe Di- ^laggio, Breakfast Club, Fibber McGee and Molly, People Are Funny and Give and Take. The address of the John Avery Boys’ Club is 508 Fayetteville Street and the general public is cordially invited to visit the ('Inb anti encourage the boys’ in their many activities. 'I'lie Chib is a lied Feather Agency of the Durham (’om- munitv Chest. Boulware— (Continued from Page One) tee on Negro Affairs, Boulware is also superintendent of the college Sunday School. For his doctoral dissertation, Boulware has written on “The Emerging Concejit of Mental .\ rithmetic.” President Trigg Cited Dr. Harohl L. Trigg, presi dent of St. Augu.stine’s College, has been awarded a National I'rbun Ijeague Certificate of Recognition in cognizance of his appointment by Governor Kerr Scott last year to tlie Board of Education of th^ State of North (’arolina. The awards are made, according to the letter of cita tion sent Dr. Trigg by the Na tional Urban League’s Commit tee on Awards, “to American Negro citizens everywh;'re who, in the course of the year have contributed to the rich heritage of our nation.” Dr. Triggs, the only Negro t)c- ciiping such a position in the South, is an active memb*r of the State Board of Education, wrving on several of its commit tees, including the ljuilding (^)mmittee, which is charged witli the resjxmsibility of ap proving plans and allocating of State fuiuls for the comprehen sive pn>gram of building and enlarging public school plants, white as well as Negro. * * * St. Augustine’s Student Wins French Prize Albert C. Henry, a member of the freshman class at St. Augus tine’s College, won first j)rize in' a contest conducted by “La \'ie,” a newspaper published by iianks, Upshaw and Co. of Dal las, Texas, in the French lan- 'uage, for students,. The prize was awarded for finding errors in i.ssues of the paper over a cer tain period time, and began as a .esult of the paper’s ubiishing ill Easter song in its Christmas (lumber. Henry, an honor student, is from Port-of-Sain, Trinidad, B. W. I., and is enrolled in the class in Intermediate French taught by Mrs. Ernestine Saund ers, of the college foreign lan guage department. The prize is .m English-French dictionary. ♦ ♦ ♦ Choral Club At Fayetteville The Choral Club of Saint Augustine’s College was present ed in concert in the auditorium of State College, Fayetteville, under the auspices of the Men’s Club of St. Joseph’s Episcopal Church Sunday evening, March 19. The Rev. Charles M. John son, a 1937 graduate of Saint Augustine’s and a former mem ber himself of the Choral Club, is rector of the Church. The chorus was directed by Mrs. Romaine Simmons Lambert of the (!ollege music faculty. Ac companists were Malvina Dem- by, Cornelia Perry, Alma Rob erson and Cecil Sharpe, students in the music department. Miss Demby was featured as pianb soloist, with Miss Mary Perry, soprano and Albert Henry, bass- bai*ftone. Also featured was the women’s double trio, consisting SCARBOROUGH & HARGETT X—3^. FUNERAL DIRECTORS 522 E. Pettigrew St. Ill—ill ilBQlDW 24 Hour Ambulance Service Phone J-372J MRS. ELIZABETH BELTON Mrs. Elizabeth Belton, age 33, died March 11 in Washington, D. C. Burial was in Laws Cemetery in Durham on March 18. MRS. ANNIE BULLOCK Mrs. Annie Bullock of 301 West Enterprise Street died Monday, March 20. Mrs. Bullock was born in Granville County. She was 72 years of age, and the widow of John Bullock. Funeral services will be held Friday. FULLER BRUSH PRO DUCTS FOR SALE. Lots of wonderful buys. Call MISS F. B. ROSSER, 5C»4 Dupree Street, WAN T e"d Man or woman to serve our eiutomers. Car useful. Hustler will make good income. Bond required. Write the FULLER BRUSH CO., Greensboro, N. C. particulars. BANNEKER RADIO INSTITUTE (Incorporated) Durham, North Carolina Educational Offerings: if HOUSE WIRING ^ RADIO REPAIR MORNING AND AFTERNOON CLASSES New Registration Up To April 1 For Further Information Write REGISTRAR A. C. BOWLING, Director MRS. T. F. SMITH, Registrar BANNEKER RADIO INSTITUTE (Incorporated) P. O. BOX 1481 — DURHAM, N. C. Amey's Funeral Home 401 PINE STREET 24 HOUR S ER VI CE —J-297 1 AMBULAITCE SERVICE FUNERAL DIRECTORS “Respect For The Living And Reverence For The Dead” MISS JULIA HARRIS Miss Julia Harris, 613 Ramsey Street, died March 16. Funeral services were held at the Chris tian Church on Proctor Street on Sunday. Burial was also on Sunday, March 19 at Moncure, N. C. MR. HOSIE AVERY Mr. Hosie Avery, 709 Fowler Avenue, died Sat urday, March 18. Funeral services and burial were in Morganton on Monday, March 20. MRS. CINIA JOHNSON Mrs. Cinia Johnson, 215 East End Avenue, died Sunday, March 19. Final rites were conducted at the Red Mountain Church in Rougemont on Wed nesday, March 22. ^ MR. BEN WIGGINS Mr. Ben Wiggins died Tuesday, March 21. neral arrangements are incomplete-. Fu- ;0f .Mai',\ I’eiry, .\aiiey Petliel. Eloi.s‘ Bowser, Malvina l>eii;hy, (iliifia Banks and .Icrelyii Terry. The performance was for the benefit of St. .lo.seph\ Church. YWCA— (Contiiined from Page Five) Thursday, March 23 1 :(M) p. m. Elucation Com mittee. ;{;()() p. m. Co-Ed Club (Y- Teen). ts lK) p. ni B. and P, Club. Friday, March 24 2:()0p. 111. Burton Recreation al Club. Saturday, March 25 a. 111. Dancing Cla.ss 8:IH) p. III. Saturday Nite So cial. 1500- (('oiiliiiiied from Page One) and .N'ational .Vdvisory Board .Member. Sin* will s[)eak on “What Do The \H,\ Purposes .Mean To You?” Dr. Inez Di.xoii, Professor of Home Ecnnoniics at Xorth Carolina College at Dur ham will speak on the subject, “What Are Your Best (’olors?” Mrs. .losie M. Pittman of Xorth (’arolina College at l)»ir- ham, is State Club .Adviser of Xew Homemakers of America. Meharry Professor Speaks t At Johnson C. Smith Univ. 'I’he third student faculty forum ti> be held at .Tohnson C. Smith I'niversity for the cur rent school term took place in tlie auditorium of Biddle Mem orial Hall on Friday, .March 24 at iS P. M. under the auspices of the Division of Mathematics and Sciences. The speaker for the occasion was Dr. Thomas A. IjaSaine, who is Director sof the student health center and pro- fes.sor of Preventive Medicine at' Meharry iledical College, Nash ville, Tennessee. Dr. LaSaine used as subject “Some Aspects of the Physieian-Putient Rela tionship.” Dr. IjaSaine graduated from the College of Liberal Arts of Johnson C. Smith University in 1931. He received the M. D. de- greefro m Meharry Medical Col lege in 1935, and in 1938 he earned the D. P. H. from the University of Toronto. Chaplain Theodore Owens Speaks To Shawtown High School Students Support The RED CROSS Campaign The first Negro Chaplain to become a paratnMiper in the United States .\rmy. Chaplain Tl^eodore R. Owens recently gav(> a talk to the student of Shawtown High S‘hool, Lilling- ton, North (Carolina, during their “(’areer Day” program. The “Career Day” program was the combined efforts of business and professional men of Lillington, North Carolina and .surrounding areas. This idea was to present to the stu dents of Shawtown High School the necessary background in formation concerning different vocations and the requirements of each. Chaplain Owens talked to the students and informed them of the advantages and the necesHi- ties for entering into religious work as a career. Battalion Chaplain for the 3rd Battalion 505 Airbone In fantry Regiment, Chaplain Owens has ^en in the United States Army for seven years and during the war years served in the European Theater of opera tions and the Pacific Theater of operations. A graduate of Shaw Univer sity, Raleigh, North Carolina, Chaplain Owens is married and and has two children, Ernestine, age 14 and Theolore Jr. age 11. HOMES OF DISTINCTION FOR PARTICULAR PEOPLE in GLENN VIEW East Side Of Alston Ave. Opposite N. C. College You will like these modern newly built homes with hardwood floors, heat, and all other conveniences, built in a wholesome homeowners community on a pa^d street. Don’t wait until they are all gone. ACT NOW! Phone Us For Appointments, Prices And Terms At J-6521 Union Insurance & Realty Company 814 FAYETTEVILLE STREET DIAL J-6521 Sell The Best For Less^^ BEECHNUT Chewing Gum pk. 3c Potted Meat can 5c JONES ALL MEAT Franks 49c lb. CAMPBELL’S Tomato Soup lOc can % Hamburger G>o o d Ground Beef lb.49 Sugar 5 Pound Bag A3 CHICKEN NOODLE PINEAPPLE Soup Juice Sc can NO. 2 CAN 10c THRIFTY DUKES Bacon lb. 39c Mayonnaise pt. 29c Dillard’s Self Service V FREE DELIVERY 1212 FAYETTEVILLE ST. PHONE J.2585

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