AME Zion Church Rewais New Plan To Raise Funds Eor Work 01 The Denonwiation lir Africa NEW YORK Due to the deep interest that the AM£ Zion Church has in expanding the Christian reU- gion in Africa, Bishop W. J. Walls, who presided over the 135th session of the New York Conference, ^hich closed at First Church, Brooklyn, here recently, introduced a unique system in aiding the African work. The prelate has asked all members of the denomination who attend funerals and show their sympathy by buying flowers to contribute to a Me morial Bank Fund. There will be banks at all funerals Where those who attend will be per mitted to deposit money, in lieu of flowers, which will be used to further freedom and Chris tianity in Africa. . In introducing the tw oAfri can delegates, who attended the Conference, Revs. C. L. Acolatae and P.D. Ofo^uhense, the pre late expressed grave concern and had the following to say. "The solution to all the evils that attend races is the Chris tian religion. Ctiristlan brother hood, not segregation, is th« one element that will bring about racial understanding." He had reference to the fact that there is a growing tide to divide the non whites from the whites in Africa. He continued by saying that what progress, toward freedom, that had been made in Africa and among colonial peoples, had come from the Christian ized territories. He said this was especially true of Africit. He deplored those who would di vide the non whites against the B antu (native Africans) peo ple*. He called on every pro-, fessed Christian to use his in fluence to bring hope to Afrii^ through the proper implemen tation of the Christian religion. Bishoii H. T. Medford, who is chairman of the Foreign Mission Board, Washington, D. C., hailed the liberality of the Con ference, toward Africa, as a spark that should bum until Christianity is established throughout Africa. The other prelates who attended the Con ference were; C. C. Coleman, Mobile, Ala: W. C. Brown, Brooklyn, New York and D. C. Pope, who has charge of the African work. Here's How To Keep Vacation Dream From Becoming Nightmare RALEIGH “Don’t turn your vacation dream into a nightmare.” Major Dave T. Lambert, exe cutive officer of the State High way Patrol gave this warning to Tar Heel motorists this week in outlining the goals of the vaca tion safe driving program being sponsored by the Department of Motor Vehicles. “A dream of a vacation can become a nightmare in just a matter of seconds for the driver who sets out to cover too much territory in too little time,’’ the major said. He pointed out that the mo torist who is trying to drive an unwise schedule is too prone to take chances, to set aside cau tion and press down on the ac celerator without regard for prevailing traffic, weather, roadway or even his own fati gued physical condition. He advised vacationers to start early in the day and to stop in time in the evening for a good night’s rest before be« ginning the next lap of their Journey. “It’s also wise,” Major Lam bert said, “to pcovide time for frequent rest stops along the route—periodic coffee breaks or a walk in the open air to relax taut nerves and tired muscles.” Motorists were urged to take a tip from safety-minded com mercial trucking companies, which insist that their drivers stop occassionally for coffee, and, if sleepy, for a brisk walk around the truck before con tinuing. The patrol executive also em phasized the following rules: 1. Before starting out, be sure your car is in perfect mechani cal condition. 2. Space driving with ade quate rest periods—always be alert at the wheel. 3. Know what to expect. Leam the driving regulations of the states you’ll be driving through before you start your trip. 4. Load your car carefully. Be sure baggage and equipment is loaded so that it cannot shift dangerously, or obstruct vision in any way. “And,’’ said Major Lambert, "we hope that all our drivers will keep their real goal in mind-to arrive back home again alive.” Twenty Tabbed As Tops hi Field At Four-H hfeet GREENSBORO Twenty-odd farm youth, at tending the 26th annual 4-H Club Week celebration held here at A&T College June 25-30 were presented awards as State champions for outstanding achievement made in several varied projects sponsored by the organization. The presentations were made by Dr. W. E. Reed, School of Agriculture at A&T College, who delivered one of the princi pal addresses of the five-day meet in Friday morning. The State champions and their awards induct; Achl- evemMit—Richard Adam Jack son, Rowan County and Ernes tine Scott, Northampton Coun ty, pen and pencil sets; Bread- making (Individual) — Della White, Bertie County and B«r- tha Jordan, Bertie County, $25 Bond, each; Canning—^Laura Ellen Williams, Wayne County, $50 Bond; Cloth^—Shirley Field, Pitt County, $50 Bond; Dairy Achievement—Morton P. Gerald, Robeson Coiuity, $50 GORDON’S GIN 94.4 PROOF I Mnw Mffi Mmui nw MMM • iNMn NT M M.. in., umn. E L Bond; Dairy Food Demonstra tion—Delphine Bryant, Duplin County, 19-Jewel Wrist Watch; Dress Crops—Cottrell H. Glo ver, Edgecombe County, Elgin Wrist Watch; Food Preparation, Bmestine Suggs, Pitt County, $60 Bond; Forestry—^Linwood Leary, Pitt County, Gold Filled Medal; Frozen Foods—Barbara A. Robinson, Nash County, $50 Bo|id; Garden—EUlna R. Freer, Nash County, $50 Bond; Health, Betty P. Perkins, Pitt County, $25 Bond; Home Improvement, Betty Jean Gerald, Robeson County, $S0 Bond; Leadership (Boy)—Bobby H. Hardy, Pitt County, Pen and Pencil Set; Leadership (Girl) Selma. MISS DAISY LEE SMira « Warsaw Lass Wins Scholarship Daisy Lee Smith, 17 year old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Smith, Route 1, Warsaw, has won a flm tuition “scholarsHp to North Carolina College for a prize-winning essay on “Youth and the Right to Know.” North Carolina College’s award winning newspaper, “The Ompu Echo”, awarded the cash tuition grant to the 1956 graduate of Warsaw's Douglas High School following a contest that grew out of the paper’s first Publications conference. A farm girl and one of her parents’ eight children. Miss Six of tlie directors of sp«cUl activities in Nortli Carolina College’s current smmner tram are pictured here ^th Dr. Joseph H. Tay lor, center seated, summer school director. At Dr. Tay lor’s right is Mrs. Ida J. Gads den, dkector of Health Edu cation Workshop and at his left is Dr. Evelyn Joimson, director ol social science workshop. Standing left to right are Dr. J. C. Finney, Principals’ Workshop; Dr. J. S. Him«i, ,Family Relations; B. T. Mc- Millon, Alcoholic Education; and J. E. Parker, Audio-Vis ual Materials director. Better Teaching To Be Talked At NCC Meeting Of Principals The 7th annual North Caro lina Principals-Supervisors Con ference virUl' meet at North Carolina College here August 15-17. “Educational Leadership and the Improvement of Instruction is this year's theme. Dean Alonzo Davis of Tuske- gee Institute School of Educa tion and Dr. Craig Wilson of the Alabama Polytechnic Insti tute are the principal consul tants this year. Dr. Davis will discuss “Improving the Quality of Instruction.” The subject ai^: nounced for Dr. Wilson is “Im proving the Mental Health of School Youth.” As in former years the con ference this year will be jointly sponsored by the Principals-Su pervisors Sections of North Carolina Teachers Association and the North Carolina CoUege Summer School. Dr. Joseph Taylor, director of the NCC Summer School and the following principals and su pervisors comprise the planning committee: Mrs. Geneva Bowe, Supervisor, Hertford County Schools, Murfreesboro; James A. Clark, Principal, R. A. Cle ment School, Cleveland; Dr. Spencer E. Durante, Principal, G. W. Carver School, Mt. Olive, Chairman; L. S. Gillard, Princi pal, Merrick-Moore School, Durhjim; R. E. McIntyre, Prin cipal, J. F. Gunn, Elementary School, Burlington; J. W. Mask, Jr.r Prineipali Monroe Avenue School, Hamlet; W. M. Rein hardt, Principal, Central High School, Goldsboro; Mrs. Mary Smith, Supervisor, Bladen Smith plans to enter NCC next Fall to major in commerce. Twin City Shoe Shop ■BBVICB AND QUALITY IS ITS IH>TrO Phone 8-S69S in 1A8T THOU) STREET EAST SIDE DRY CLEANERS ED|^ Qiudity Service WB PBES8 WHILB YOU WAIT IMl BAST TBNTH ST. PHONE 3-3322 MOBB TIME FOR WOBK OB PI^T ~ SAVB BT MAIL Just a trip to the nearest mailbox. Ifb fuadng to get the no stopping In the middle of some usk to children ready Drop in to our conimtlently located ivelo: pick up some handy save-by mall envelopea (or write or phone us). You can opei riwd your account by mail idrawals entirely by mail. make a n>eclal trip, office and pick up t write or phone us), aqd make your additions and wi Each savM^s funds axe insured up to $10,000 by a govern ment agency. Mutual Savings And Loan Ass'ii. County Schools, Elizabethtown; and G. T. Swinson, Principal, Shawtown High School, Lilling- ton. Two Schools Reveal Receipt Of Ford Money St. Paul’s Polytechnic Insti tute of Virginia and Florida Normal and Industrial of St. Augustine’s both announced re ceipt this week of their shares of the half billion dollar Ford Foundation grant to private col leges. Dr. Earl H. McClenny, presi dent of St. Paul’s revealed that the Virginia institution received last week a check for $55,000, representing the first install ment payment on the grant made to the institutions to help raise faculty salaries. Florida Normal announced through its public relations of fice this week that it received $25,000, half of the grant made to it by the Foundation. The to tal grant will be completed within a year. President R. W. Puryear of Florida Normal said the money ts expected to producff^an nual income of $10,000 to be used for faculty salaries. PRINCE ALBERT Dressmaking, Alterations and Repairs Suits Made To Order 312 East Fourth Street SATUBDAY, JULY 14, IfM THE CABOLINA TIMES PACS THm Decorum Of "Rock And Roll" Fans Impress N. Y. Onlookers NEW YORK If anyone tells New Yorkers in the vicinity of 52nd Street and Madison Avenue tliat rock n' roll enthusiasts are different th^ii other youngsters, they’re in lor an argument. Some 750 teenagers gave a demonstration of politeness and patience recently that strongly contradicted the prevalent opin ion that r. ‘n’ r. fans are over- exbuberated and rowdy The youngsters started queu ing up at 3:00 PM to participate in the transcribing of CBS Ra dio’s “Rock ‘n’ Roll Dance Par ty.” Two hours later, they were standing two abreast in a line that would around the block and overflowed into 53rd Street. It’s been a long time since I saw a line like that waiting for anything,” observed a cab dri ver who uses the hack stand outside CBS Radio’s New York headquarters. ‘Are they rock ‘n’ roll en thusiasts?” asked a middle- aged man. “They don’t look any different than any other, kids to me,” he said. As the program host-emcee Alan Freed introduced the pro gram to th^CBS Radio audi ence, with his friendly ‘'Hi y’all? Put on your dancing shoes and welcome to the “Rock ‘n’ Roll Dance Party!”, a delighted cheer went up from the young sters seated in every available space in the studio. Sedate married folk in their late ‘thirties and early ‘forties sighed as they stopped to ob serve the eager carefree yoimg- sters: “Its like Sinatra days all over again.” will take part in the 1930 Get- Out-The-Vote Campaign, joint ly sponsored by the Boy Scouts of America and the Freedoms Foundation, Inc., of Valley Forge. The campaigi) will t>e strict^ nonpartisan in its concept and execution, Dr. Arthur A. Schuck, the Chief Scout Execu tive said. "As we make preparations for this participation,” he said in a message to the nation's 538 local Boy Scout councils, 'We recall the outstanding successes we experienced in our last similar campaign. Many people have called it our most signifi cant contribution to the nation. SCOUTS TO PUT ON VOTE DRIVE AGAIN RALEIGH A major activity of the Boy Scouts of America’s Four-Year Program, “Onward for God and My Country”, will be a nation wide campaign to urge citizens to register and vote in the elec tions this fall, according to W. W. Noel, President of the Occo- neechee Council. He said that a record membership of over 4, 175,000 Cub Scouts, Boy Scouts, Explorers, and adult leaders il^ATSON^S FLORIST FLOWERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS PHONE 5-9542 NIGHT - 5-7714 923 N. Highland Ave. Ill PABBiap BIBUX DUBHAM, N. 0. FULLER PRODUCTS COMPANY Agents Wanted ^ FULL OR PART TIME Earn Easy Cash During Spare Time 116 East Third Street Phone 5-5414 CLASSIF UNION ELECTRIC COMPANY, INC. electrical APrUANCES ELECTBICAL SUFPLIM LIGHTINO yiXTUBBS ELECTRICAL CONmACTING Day Phone 6-CCM or 9-MSl Night 5-MM 12M FAYETnVILLB VS. BOYKIN AND SONS CONTRACTORS 104 E. Umatead Street PHONE 4-7SS1 Before you trade let us ^ve you a FKEE ESTIMATIC^ cm your job. Building and Remodeling. AU Work Guaranteed . . NO JOB TOO SMALL 10 Shirts rag. packed - - $1.75 1 or 2 Shirts • - - - • ee. 29c 3 or more ..... ea. 18c Ddnze packed shirts, ea. 20c (Cyiopliane) SANITARY LAUNDERERS AND CLEANERS DIAL 2-48S1 Conker Ploe Street And Lakewood ATwrae ED ADS Don’t let those stopped up gutters and drains, or scuffed floors fret yop. . . . CaU . . . Vereen House Cleaning And Lawn Service PHONB 2-2063 Specializing In WINDOW AND FLOOR CLEANING INLAID LfNOLKUML ASPHALT BDBBUa AND WALL TILS —Pree Esttmstoi— Hunt Linoleum And TUe Company, lac. PheaM S-ISSS—Nicht 4-S27S ssas BOXBOBO BOAD COAL ‘K>. K. IN EVEBT WEIGH" McGHEE COAL CO. trading as M. H. HEAD AND SON CALL 3-1141 9 Senrice Garagee SPEIGHT’S AUTO Institute On Probation Ends At N. C. College Seventeen representatives of juvenile and domestic agencies from foiu: states attended North Carolina College’s 3rd annual Institute for Juvenile Probation Officers and Workers. The Institute was directed by NCC sociologist Dr, Charles E. King. It was sponsored by the Na tional Probation and Parole Association and the Mary Rey nolds Babcock Foundation. Consultants were Walter C. Benson, Domestic Relations Court, Charlotte; Jackson S. Hoyle, Supervisor of Child Car ing Institutions, North Carolina Department of Public Welfare, Haleigh; Dr. Carol C. Bowie, I NCC psychologist; Dr. J.^S. Himes, NCC sociologist; and TuUy Hoarse, fMd eoBMdUmt for the WPP A. R«preaenUUirw attending tm- fkma included Julius P. Kaigbt, Durham; Mr*. Martha Manli, Nashville, Tenn.; Mn. CSirts- tlne BrerMm, Wssiiyflls Teen.; James W. Pergueon, H$ttnrt33*. Tenn.; Mrs. Orev* Ony, Louis ville, Wr; Arnold RoWnson, Louisville, Kj.; Bernard L. Bol- lins, Roanoke, Vs.; John 8. Win stead, Newport News, Vs.; Cla rence O. Williamson, Greens boro; C. A. Rogers, Durtuun; WiUiam T. Childs, ‘Wilminston; Harold Worth Pope, Bsleigh; Robert I. AIe3canter, Greens boro; Hosea Brower, Hofbnan; J. M. Thompson, Morrison Tt. School; Miss GUdyi McGeehee, Nashville, Tenn; and Jackson S. Hoyle, Nashville, Tenn. FARMSONON FLORIDA STAFF TALLAHASSEE, Fla. Dr. W. Eklward F^urison, chairman of the English depart ment at North Carolina College, was among 30 visiting faculty members appointed for the summer term here, it was an nounced here thus week by Floriday A and M President George W. Gore. Farrison is a graduate of Lincoln University (Pa.) and Ohio State. NEW METHOD LAUNDRY And Dry "Cleaners Quality - Scrvice 405 Roxboro Sl DIAL 6959 Calvert "WW CALVBRT DISTWXINO CO' SERVICE Baad Serrlse... 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