Shown in this picture is a croBP of students who nsher durinr Lyeenvt Progrmnis, Be- iifions Services, and other im portant meetinfs held on flie campus at Livingstone CoUefe. They are left to ritht: Neilitf" Massey, Junior. Waxliaw: Mar- iyn Dillard, freshman, Greens boro; Marie Horton, Junior,! Aberdeen; Elwood Massey, Senior, Bed Springs: Bdna Summey, Junior, Henderson ville; Barbara Jamison, fresh man, Charlotte; Buth Dixon, senior, Jacksonville, Florida; and Smith Turner, freahman, Bochester, New Tork. THE COUNTRY BOY BT E. COOOIN BBIDOES Q. I. FARMER LOANS TO VETEBANS I spent last week getting in formation on how veterans may obtain farm loans. 1 am hoping to be abla to give you con crete informa' tion on this sub ject within thei next two weeks.: On Tuesday, I ■ talked with head of the partment of the! Guarantee Div-i ision of Veteran®- Coggin Bridgs Loans at Winston-Salem. V On Thursday I talked to Jolm- son and Son, of the Johnson Cot ton Company in North and South Carolina, in Dunn. Friday, I went to Winston-Sa lem again, accompanied by a representative of the Johnson Cotton Company. The outcome of these trips and conferences wU'disclosed within the next fS^^eeks . .. SALUTE TO THE CPCHVBOH GBADCATE BAgKETBALL TEAM The persons who organized and played on the Upchurch Graduate Basketball Team de serve a 15-gun salute. It is this type of action that shows that you no only want the rights of citizenship but tha you are will- ittfl to ttw 8 zen. It is this spirit of co-opera tion that makes life worth living and builds progressive communi ties. The scores of the game will be forgotten before the week la gone, and the amount of money raised will likewise be forgot ten. But the spirit of coMipera- tion and the desire to do are liv ing intangible assets. .. Plans are almost complete for getting the weekly news and pictures for yon from Baeford, Fayetteville, Hope BliUs, Saint Paul, Pembroke, Maxton, Bed Spri^, Laurlnburg, Aker- deen. Southern PinM. Plne- hurst, Vaaa and other pUaas nearby . . . NEWS FBOM BABrOBD The Upchurch High School Eagles proved to the Rasford City Bears that the mlgttty Eagle still soars . . . The Bears include Lacey McIntyre, Mar shall Sinclair, Carroll Trleraon, RRussell McAllister, W. O. 'Mo- AUister, ^Richard McPhatter, Robert Cline, Huey Jones, Jun ior Ratliff, W. T. McAllister and Clyde McPhatter .... The NAACP held Its meeting January 23, in Wagram. Watch the CAROLINA TIMBS for the next meeting tline and place ... I have a reader who wouM like to know the difference be tween a ‘wlilte lady* and a ‘colored woman’ ... It soema aa though a Wilmington De partment Store has two tlgni, MM reading, ‘'White Ladlea” and the other reading “Colored Women” ... If job shonU know the difference or oaa ax- plain this to my reader, write, THE COUNTBT BOT, ear* K. Coggin Bridgaa, Boute 1, Box t, Baeford, N. O. . . . It your letter ia published in my eol- unm yon will reeelve one dol lar (ll.M) ... Until next :week, 1 remain..'. THB COUNTBT BOT TIMES Man Given GOP Position WASHINGTON Alexander Barnes, veteran newspaperman of Durham and Washington, was appointed to head the public relatlona de partment of the newly formed National Conference of Be- publican leaders here Monday, by P. G. Porter the general chairman. RainjM hl« nnwpnpor career with the CABOLINA TIMES in 1926 and has served it in some capacity ever since. His most outstanding achieve ment for the TIMES waa his coverage of the Harry T. Moore l>ombing and funeral la Florida last year. He has served aa promotion manager for the Afro-Ameri can Newspapers. General Man ager of the Washington Tri bune. Special promotion man for the Pittsburgh Courier and the Chicago Defender.. On returning to Washington he was the general manager of of the Capital Times which played such an important part in turning the state of Mary land Bepablican in 1950. He has served as vice-presi dent of the NNPA and also on the executive committee. He directed the public relations for the AME Zion Church for a number of years. ' Bishops Urge Prayer For High Court BALTIMORE, Md. The four active colored bis hops of The Methodist Church, through Bishop Edgar A. Love, of the Baltimore Area, have issued a call to ministers and laymen of the Central Jurisdic tion of the denomination for a special week of prayer. The bishops urge members of the churches to pray for the United States Supreme Court, that they may ‘‘have divine guidance in th^ir de- cision on the segregation issue now in their hands.” February 8-15 has been desig nated as the week for the special Boy Scouts To Celebrate 43ni Anniversary Feb. M3; Emphasis On "The kout Family" SATVBDAT, JAM. tl, IMI The Boy Scouts of America, with its memliersliip at an all- time high in excess of 3,250,000 Cub Scouts, Boy Scouts, Explor ers and adult leaders, will ob- 3Pi ve the 43 rd birthday of thi organization during Boy Scout Week. Feb. 7 to 13. ♦ The theme of the celebration which will l)e observed by 84,- 300 Cub Packs, Boy Scout Troops and Explorer Units throughout the United States, its territories and wherever Ameri can families live abroad, is “Forward on Liberty’s Team.” This is the name of the Scouts’ Three Year Program which seeks to produce a greater func tioning manpower and provide a higher quality program for its «ver-increasing boy member ship. ' Boy Scout Week celebrations this year will stress “The Scout Family” depicting how parents and others of the family have a relationship to the Scout Pro gram. At “Open House” evening meetings Scouts will introduce memljers of their family to their fellow Scouts. At these meetings tribute will be paid to the A- merican home, and its influence on the lives of boys and its place in a free society. The actual birthday, Feb. 8, will be observed in countless churches of all faiths as “Boy Scout Sunday.” Spouts and lea ders will attend services in uni form. Members of many Scout Units will have their parents and other members of their families sit with them during the ser vices. Since its inception in this country in 1910, the Boy Scouts of America, and its individual memisers have always taken a strong position in respect to the place of organized religion in the nation’s life. The 12th point of the Scout Law to which more than 20,200- 000 Ijoys and men have sub scribed since 1910, reads: “A Scout is Reverent. He is reverent toward God. He is faithful in his religious duties and respects the convictions of others in matters of custom and religion.” During Boy Scout Week, Scouts and leaders will express zations and institutif>ns whose their appreciation to the organi- sponsorship makes possible their Units’ existence. These in clude the religious bodies which account for almost half of the nation's Scouting Units, the na tional or state civic groups, school organizations and local civic groups. In its latest report to Con gress the Boy Scouts of America said that 58,934 institutions are sponsors for the nation’s Scout ing Units. Of this number 18,739 operate two or more Scout pro grams such as Cub Scouting for boys 8, 9 and 10 years of age. Boy Scouting for boys 11 through 13 and Exploring for those 14 years old and i^pward. The Whole Scout Family, all three programs, are sponsored by 3,446 institutions, maldng it possible for a boy to enjoy the three Scouting programs under the same sponsorship for a ten year span, from age eight to eighteen. TMM CABOLOCA mOf prayer observance. he four bishop are. Bishop Rol)ert N. Brooks, New Orleans; Bishop J. W. E. Bowen, Atlanta; Bishop Matthew W. Clair, Jr. Saint Louis, and Bishop Love. The other active colored bis hop of The Methodist Church is Bishop Willis J. King, serving in Liberia, Africa. Retired bis- Jiopa are. Bi.shop A. P. Shaw,. Baltimore; E. W. Kelly, De troit, and Robert E. Jones, Waveland, Mississippi. niiTn Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whisky $4.15 4/5 QT. $2-60 PINT 86PrMf EARLY TIMES DISTILLERY COMPANY Louisvdl* V KMihidcy Newsmen Hold Annual Meet January 30-31 NEW YORK Dr. Charles L. Allen, assis tant dean and director of re search of the Medill School of Journalism of Northwestern University, wili be one of the principal speakers at the annual Mid-Winter Workshop of the National Newspaper Publishers Association, it was announced Tuesday by NNPA president Louis Martin. ’The Workshop will be held at Dillard University in New Or leans on January 30 and 31, 1953. The program will also feature four major panel dis cussions led by authorities in More than 100 flower lovers in the Greensboro area enroll ed for the Flower Clinic being held at A. and T. College. Sponsored by the Horticulnre department at the college, the clinic will hold two more ses sions in the series on February 19 and March 19. Interested enrollers Who stay behind to get some additional pointers on flower care fire from left to right: Miss Willielmena Laws, Mrs. Bessie Brewer mmd Mias Edith Lee. A. C. Madry (right) head of the college's horticul ture department is conducting the clinic. publishing and related fields. ■ Clarence Holte of Batten, Barton, Durstine and Osljom, Inc.; Joseph LaCour of Associa ted Publishers, Inc.; Joseph V. Baker of Joseph V. Baker As sociates, Inc. and Charles Browning of the Defender Publi cations will lead discussfdns on “Merchandising the Negro Mar ket”. C. A. Scott of the Atlanta Daily world; Louis Lautier of NNPA News Service; Charles Loeb of the Cleveland Call and Post and,William Nunn of the Pittsburgh Courier will discuss the topic “Meeting the Challenge of News Competition”. John Kirkpatrick of the East St. Louis Crusader; Russell Jackson of the Ohio Sentinel; T. C. Jervay of the Wilmingtqn Journal and Emory Jackson of the Birmingham World will speak on “Current Problems of M&J FINANCE COBP. 0 AOTO LOANS 0 420 NOBTH MANGUM PHONE 3-5271 BABY PICTURES IN YOUR HOME • Phone 4-3171 STANBACK STUDIO Small Newspapers”. Harry Alexander of the Cleve land Call and Post; James Mur phy of the Afro-American News papers; Henry DeJoie of the Louisiana Weekly and A. D. Gaither of the Pittsburgh Cou rier will Discuss “Circulation Building and Promotion.” C. C. DeJoie of the Louisiana Weekly is the host publisher for the NNPA Workshop which is expected to attract over 100 Ne gro Newspaper executives from all sections of the country. .gacaeataeaeffiaeapcaEtBEacaeacartftt; DILLARD’S SELF-SERVICE • Market And Grocery • - “WE SELL THE BEST FOB LESS” FAYETTEVILLE STBEET TELEPHONE 3-2585 BOYKIN AND SONS GENERAL CONTRACTORS SPECIALIZING IN New Construction • Sheet Rock Finishing * House Designing HERMAN V. BOYKIN, Oumer Graduate, Tuskegee Institute 104 UMSTEAD STREET PHONE 4-7651 VOll ONLY NEED gOC AUD AN APPETITE DAILY SPECIALS THE DO-NUT SHOP MONDAr COUNTBY STYLE STEAK, BUTTEBED POTATOES , AND STBING BEANS. TUESDAY POBK CHOPS, LIMA BEANS AND TUBNIP GBEKNS. WEDISESDAY BBOILED CHICKEN WITH BICE, STBING BEANS AND GABDEN PEAS. THVRSDAY CHOPPED STEAK. FBENCH FBIBS AND SLAW. FRIDAY SPABE BIBS, SLAW AND FBBNCH FBIBS. SATURDAY BEEF STEW, TAMS AND CABBAQf. • For Party And Meal Reserratioiu * “Hie Soiuth's Finest Eating EetnhHriiment** I W. O. FBABSON, n, Muwger SS BAST PBTTIGBBW STBBR DIAL t-«747 HUH UWITK THAT J COEP AND ICONT EVEN HAVINCrA 0M3XY//' 4'TOOPAP/ I rHOUtiHT. NOU 'N' XfCB WEI26 6000 FClENCxi-WEU,, I'U. mu jjpu ABOUT -IT ■meenRiA'u WOJtDN’TeO HI, PBEEZY./-eOiNer TO THE ByZTY 7DN/6Wr?"^ WHfT , RM2.TY?. ir^ MY VVOUOMT FORVCXjri 6tAD\puQXlf>a>ME i^fcHTrHElNvnw OXr^OlATETMAT ATION./1'VE JLKiT60r vEmo TlM£T06eTBEAW'' OTHER. cownHBTPM. FeAnJBK

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