GOING TO CHURCH WITH NED DAVB A twO-d*y conference, held at the HenryviUe Chapel AME Church la Belmont, came to a succeMful close Thursday, Sept. 30. The Kev. M. M. Leek, pastor of the Weeping Willow AME Church, delivered the opening sermon and the Rev. W. H. Lenoir, pastor of the Mt. Cal vary Church brought the an nual message at the night ses sion. Following the sermon, wel come exercises were conduct ed by the pastor. Rev. J. D. Armstrong. He was assisted by j. W. Discon, chairman of the trustee board, and Rev. Boyd of the Mt. Pleasant Baptist Church, Belmont. MOsic rendered by the Mt. Calvary choir. The activities of the closing day included devotions by the W. H. and F. M. Society, a mes sage by the Rev. B. S. Stinson, pastor of the Steel Creek AME Zion Church, reports from the delegates of the ninetew churches represented. The ses sion was conducted by Rev. J. D. Gladden, presiding elder of the Lincolnton district. Highlighting the reports of the delegates were the mutual requests of the nineteen pastors and churches represented that there be ho change of ministers. Other activities of the closing day included a sermon by Dr. F. E. Churchill, of the Grace AME Zion church, Charlotte, and a tr|j)ute to Presiding Elder, ter, as a leader, given by the Rev. F. R. Blakey of Clin ton. The conference wUl meet ne^t year at Morris’ Sanctuary AME Zion church. of tr^i ist Ijjin' 'US the 11 Area Resource Conferences Set For October And November Eleven area Resource-Use Education Conferences will be held during the months of October and November in va rious sections of North Caro lina, according to an announce ment made recently by Dr. Theodore R. Speigner, Direc tor of the Division of Resource- Use Education, North CaroUna College at Durham. Area Steering Committees have been hard at work in 'planning for the area confer ences, since April of thta year, when a Leadership Training Workshop, was held at North Carolina College at Durham for officers and members of the program committees of Area Resource-Use Conferences. The first conference is sche- -duled to be held at Artosia High School, Whiteville, October 14. The Four-County conference, which comprises Franklin, Nash, Vance and Warren Coun ties, will be held at Nash County Training School, Nash ville, October 19. -Wffi ALAMANCE-DURHAM ORANGE-WAKE RESOURCE- USE EDUCATION dONFER- ENC£ will be held at Merrick- Moore High School, Durham. THE EDGECOMBE-PITTS- WILSON RESOURCE-USE ED UCATION CONFERENCE will convene at Speight School, Wil son County on October 23. THE C AS WELL-GR AN VIL L E-PERSON CONFER ENCE will be held at Person County High School Roxboro. THI^ CHATHAM-HARNETT- LEE-MOORE CONFERENCE is scheduled to be held at Lee County Elementary School, Jonesboro Heights, Sanford, October 28, from 2:00 p.m. through 5:30 p.m. .THE HOKE-R O B E S O N-- SCOTLAND CONFERbNCE is to be held at Red Spring High School, Red Spring. Dr. Harold Trigg, President of St. Augustine’s College, will be guest speaker. Special in terest clinics will be held in connection with the general ac tivities. The theme of the Con ference is:‘.‘THE USE OF NA TURAL RESOURCES TO MEET CHILDREN’S NEEDS.” The Five-County Resource- Use Education Conference which comprises Carbarrus, Da vie, Davidson, Rowan and SAVE ON Atm • SUn4ird "MtOM th« protMtlMi ■OMIMtUblt. • Six nonth mtoiMtIc r*n«wat. • Prompt (rittidly n«tl«n-wkl( cltlm mrriei. • 0«tr ■ inMllsn driviri Inwrad. • low, "MlMtod rlili" ritn. WHY PAY MOM? Woi» you buy or rtn.w-«*«ek, nm^anl -Mom, writ* drop bi loday DORSEY WOODLBEF 1300 Shepard St. 7-€il07 BALDWIN PIANOS AND BLBOTKIO OBOAN8 We For Oaih Or On TemtM ¥o Salt Castoncr Mana-Hutto Plano Co. “The Hmm Of Baldwin” 111 N. Chareh St-DIal >-tMS Mecklinburg Counties, will be held in Salisbury, during the second week in November. Dates, places and time for Duplin, Green, Lenoir, Waj^e R^source-Use Conference, For syth, Guilford, Rockingham Re source-Use Conference and the Bertie, Halifax, Northampton Resource-Use Conference, will be announced later. Durham Ushers To Meet Sunday James W. Carrington will ad dress the Ushers, Sunday, Oct., 10, at 3:15 P. M., at the Mt. Zoar Baptist Church located on the Fish Dam road opposite the Merrick-Moore School. There will be other features that wiU be worth coming out to hear including museic by the Male Chorus of that church. The public is cordially in- Lumberton Host TotlthHAACP Meet Oct. 15-17 LUMBERTON The tlth aniiual convention of the North Carolina Confer ence of the National Assn. for the Advancement of ■ Colored People will hold Its sessions here at the First Baptist Church, West 5th Street and Fairmont Road, October 15-17. ’The conference, which is headed by Kelly M. Alexander, who has beeiT*president for six years, will open Friday morning (15th) with registration and assignment to homes of the delegates from the 60-odd branches over the state. During the afternoon & memorial ser vice will be held in honor of departed manlbers, following which the convention wiU be or- gani^^ and President. Alexan der will deliver his annual ad dress. Charles A. McLean, Winston-Salem, asst, field sec retary, will also report his acti vities. THURGOOD MARSHALL The Rev. E. Bums Turner, pastor of the host church, who Is also secretary of the N. 0.' NAACP and chairman of the local steering committee, is ex pecting one thousand people -to fill to overflowing the First Baptist Church on Friday night to hear Thurgood S. Marshall, the noted civil rights lawyer, who is chief counsel for the na tional NAACP; the man who headed the battery of ISO at torneys of all races who planned the strategy which resulted in the May 17th anti-segregation victory before the U. S. Su preme Court. MAYOR HEDGEPETH A local welcome program wili feature talks by Hon. R. A. Hedgepeth, Mayor of Lumber ton; Branch president, O. C. Jones, Rev. J. J. Johnson, Dr A. J. Robinson, Mr«. Margaret Bennett and Rev. (Miss) Jolse Fritz. WORKSHOPS ON SATURDAY Saturday will be filled with business sessions and workshops on fund-raising and Developing Community Actioif Programs to vited and ushers are urged to attend. KENTUCKY BOURBON I ecuo Now 0 years L16 vears "•tunt tln» ‘2" PWT 4/SQT. ti rioor • Etm iriiitt issisyiiiE, kekucky) Science peaturea. Now bruas For High Mood Prossuro Several drugs developed in the past few years give the 16,000,000 high Mo^ pressure (hyperten sion) victims in the United States a better chance of living with a condition which, if allowed to go unchecked,can lead to severe hea^rt, brain and kidney damage and even to death. Two of the new drugs have proven particularly valuable in the control of this disease. One is a refinement known as reserpine from a crude root used for centu ries in India for a score of ailments. The second drug is hexamethon- lum chloride, a compound discov ered in Europe which was admin istered only by injection until an American pharmaceutical firm succeeded in producing it in tablet form. Ueserplne is believed to lower bipod'pressure by Its calming effect u^on the central nervous system. It.slowly lowers mildly elevated blood pressure. The drug has few side efTects and it has been useful In mild cases or as the initial treat* ment In severe cases—largely be cause of its tranquilizing effect upon the patient. Hexamethonium chloride, the single most potent drug av^able now, operates on the "roadblock" concept by prevent^g the trans* mission of pressure-raising im pulses across key nerve centers. It lowers blood pressure quickly in most cases and often i^i^ee many of the disturbing symptoms associated with advanced high blood pressure. Host promising .results for the patient are now being reported by physicians using the two drugs together. It appeals that the calm ing effects of reserpine make it possible to obtain the marked re ductions in blood pressure brought about by hexamethonium with low doses, of the latter drug. Physi cians report that this new method minimize side factions and per mits greater comfort for the pa tient. Although the primary cause of high Mood pressure is unknown in 90 per cent of cases, when the di sease is diagnosed early, the pa tient can often be helped by a gen eral slowing down of activity and perhaps by diet. In severe cases, surgery, in which certain nerves are cut, has helped some patients. Drag treatment, however, is the most widely accepted methi^ once the physician considers the condi tion a serious medical problem. N>t only ia this method effective, but it is leas disruptiv* to the pa tient thah dieting anieasSderably liist drutie than'iMpnrr which can’t be nndone it doesn’t wM4b Facilitate Desegregation. State NAACP attorney Conrad O. Pearson, Durham; N. L Gregg, Greensboro, state treasurer; and Rev. J. B. Humphrey, Char lotte, auditor, will speak on this panel along with Charles Mc Lean. Prof. W. Claude Chance, Sr., Parmele, will conduct a panel which will hear Clarence Mitchell, NAACP’s “trouble shooter” from Washington, re view the voting record of mem bers of Congress. He will also discuss legislation of interest to minority-group citizens. Meanwhile, Herbert L, Wright, national Youth Secretary, will be conducting the youth divi- son of the conference. THERE’S NO MAGIC ABOUT SAYtNG MONEY .'.il you need « firm • tion, self control, and a saving; account. Having a goal you want very much to reach also helps. You’re invited now to join the thrifty customers who save rc; ^'- larly a^this bank. Mechanics And Farmers Bank DUBHAM AND RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLDfA SATURDAY, OCT. t. 1154 THl CABOUWA HUM PACa StVBf DON'T MISS TELECASTS WTVD-DURHAM CHAmEL-ll Three Private Colleges On Air During October NEW YORK The choral groups of three of North Carolina’s outstanding private colleges, Bennett, Liv ingstone and St. Augustine’s will be heard on ABC radio du ring the month of October, They are part of the line-up announ ced for that month for the ABC's collegc choir series pre sented in cooperation with the United Negro College Fund. In addition the choir of Clark College in Atlanta wiU be fea tured on Sunday, October 3, the day on which the presidents of the 31 member colleges of the Fund meet in that city for their annual Fall Board Meeting. Tlie programs which feature the choirs of the UNCF colleges originate from New York, Sun days over WABC, 10:30 to 11:00 a.m. and are heard at lo cal broadcasting time in some 140 cities throughout the U. S., and Canada. The Octoijer schedule, was announced today by W. J. Trent, Jr., executive director of the Fund, Bennet College, Greensboro, N. C. for October 10; Livingstone Cktllege, Salis bury, N. C. for October 11; St. Augustine's College, Raleigh, N. C.' for October 24, and that of Hampton Institute, Hampton, Virginia, for October 31. NEW FILMS ANNOUNCED FOR LIBRARY THE STANFORD L. WAR REN PUBLIC LIBARRY wiU have the following films avail able for circulation during the month of October: 1. LOOK TO THE LAND: A forceful reminder of the de pendence of all our people on the resources of America's land foreata. and water. 2 MALAYA-^rrOMADiS* OF THE JUNGLE: The ereiyday Ufie of a typical nomad family. $ HE ACTS HfS AGE A survey of the typical behavior of children from the ages of 1 to 15. 4 NORTH TO HtTDSOlf BAY: The commercial and scientific activity ia the moat northeriy of major Canadian re ports. S. PAINTING TREES WITH EUOT O. Hara: A sketching trip in which different tree* in many parts of America and Hawaii are painted. 8. THE SON: A dramatic por trayal of a rural problem—the tendency of fathers’ sons to leave the land in favor of other employment. ^ Meet Your Friend* At The LEADING SHOP Where You Can Clothe The Entire Family On Easy Credit Termt. See You At Th* ^ LEADING SHOP 334 West. Main Street Phone 6-401^ B Enjoy them most on V'S>1.\'\MA T\ y with IIAlol.K.III TOUR SYLVANIA DEALER IN DURHAM MONTGOMERY & ALDRIDGE PHONE 8185 CORNER MORGAN AND RONEY STREETS (Opposite Carolina Theater) CLOSED WEDN^DAY AT 1 P. M. Come See ... Come Save During A&P’s 95th Anniversary Celebration ..YEARS’ BICGEST.. SAVINGS EVENT CRISPO FIG BARS Mb. Pkg. FRESH MILD AMERICAN CHEESE 40c Ann Page Spaghetti or ElboW MACARONI 17c Lb. 1-lb. Pkff. “Our Finest Quality” A&P Sliced PINEAPPLE 27c No. 2 Can ANNIVERSARY PRODUCE VALUES SWEET—PLUMP:::JUICY TOKAY GRAPES 3 lbs. 29t NICE CRISP STALK PASCAL CELERY 2 stalks 19c Pasco or B&W Frozen Concentrate ORANGE JUICE 2 £: 27t EXTRA SPECIAL! JANE PARKER LARGE RING ANGEL FOOD ANN PAGE CREAMY RICH MAYONNAISE ECONOMICAL AUSTEX BEEF STEW • •• DELICIOUS APPLES 2 lbs. 25c Large Cake Qt Jar 15-oz. Can SWANSON’S FROZEN CHICKEN, TURKEY or BEEF POT PIES » These Prices WUl Be Effective ’^rough Saturday, October 9th 8-oz. Pies •ach 39c 57c 25c 29c

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