THE CAROLINA' TIIiIeS ^ fA«t 4«>-*THK TItUTH UNSRIOLfeir SAT^ JAN. 14, 1H1 (IRZt WINNERS IN NASSAU t^A waek'f trip to Nassau, Ba- WM th« priM won by fftr.'thd Mr%. Nafhinlet Meada, N. Y., at National Coun- fH M Nogro Woman's Inter- HatiMial Dcbuiante Bail in New ^^•rk CHv lat« last fall. Above art shown at the H>wiu Beach Hotel where they ' itSfcd during their NCNW-spon- lered visit to the Bahamas. yity-Hir— lovely young ladies fr»m ail parts of the world were present at ball wher* Matdki . were awarded Nassau' trip^ A regional district diractM* for NCNW, Mrs. M«kd«Ut principal of the Li;tle Brown S^ool In Bronx. The Council ^ promoting a series of debutant* balls in conection witK it* campaign to erect a U. S. Congress-approved statue and Educational Center In Washing ton, D. C.> as mewM’iais NCNW founder, Mrs., Mary Mc Leod Bethuna., (Bahamas Naws Bureau Photo by D«nald Small) inisters Wives hte Husband^ , ItBIDSVILLE, — The beautiful new itructon^ of Zion Baptist Chifiich, Rev. E. L. Kirby. Pastor, irn the scene of a very deli^litful iSlmax to the Holiday Festivities the Wives of the Ministers gf the City entertained their hus- liiliids at a Social Evcnin;;. * 'Mrs. M. L. Logap directeti the lilijring of {!ame in tiie spacious (ad Recreation Room of the btiurcb. Prizes wire give to tl|e successful winners of various iames. ' The Banquet-Styic dinner was Mrved in the perfectly appointed ^nlns room by the Entertainment C|nimittee of the Ciiiirch which llwludad ^esdames Veria Russell, Idaben Dill, Beatrice Harrison, U|de Settle, Alice Ncal. Chair- lota of the Entertainment Com- of the Ministers’ Wives Ctilb, Mrs. F. T. Bird assisted ^h^ng the dinner. Remarics were by Rev. M. L. Lambert, Tretident of the Ministerial Al liance, Rfv. G. Haven Caldwell, Vice President of the Alliance; VN. E. L. Kirby, President of the Alliance; Mrs. E. L. Kirby, ftfesident of the Ministers’ Wives C9ub, Mrs. F. T. Bird assisted (he Church; Rev. E. Jeffries, ev. W. T. Lomax. Rex. G. H. Following the dinner, the group was given a tour through the new Church plant, find all remarked on the beautiful, modernly equip pcd edifice. , , Present to enjoy the occasion, were: Rev. and Mrs. E. L. Kirby, Rev and Mrs. M. L. Lambert, Rev. andl Mrs. F. T. Byrd,, Rev. and Mrs. G Haven Caldwell, Rev. E. Jeffries, Rev. and Mrs. W. T. Lomax. Rev. and Mrs. A. D. Owens, Rev. an Mrs. M. L. Lo^an, Rev, and Mrs R. F. Howard, Rev. and Mrs. G. H Pass, Mrs. I. D. Bynum, Mis| De Ibrcs Bynum, Rev. and Mrs. W. V Corbett. ': O PROFS PLAY IS PUBLISHED RALEIGH — Guilbert A. Daley, assistant professor of English and~ director of Drama and Speech at Shaw University has wrttten a play which has been published in the December issue of “Carolina Quarterly.” A one-act farce come dy, ’‘Kiss tfie Book” is a play treating the voting rights of Ne groes in the South in General, and Nor,th Carolina in particular. “Kiss'^the Book” was written as a ^las6 project when Mr. Daley was on a Carolina Playmakers scholarship at Chapel Hill last Traffic Experts Sees 100 Million Cars on U.S. Highways By 1970 By BILL CROWELL . the traffic toll. Paul Jones isn’t a prcacher but j' ' 'More and more,” he comment- he preached a sermon r'Kicntly. e I,” it seems to l>e the sophisticat- He wondered what things will l>e like out on .the nation’s hi'^h- ways in another ten years. Will there be room to park your car, much less to drive it? How fast and how far will you drive. And 'vhat about the traffic toll? Mr. Jones had some pretty good answers since he is the recently retired chief of public informa tion for the National Safety Coun cil. He visualized a swarm of 100 million cars, trucks, buses and ■Jdiat not ttironging the hight^ays m 1970—half again as many as ire out there now. They will be driven a trillion miles a year by 120 million driv ers. Placed end to end, they would 'orm a solid line of traffic 385, WO miles long—IS times the dis- ‘ance around the world and equi- 'alent to a traffic jam along US '^6, for example, of 190 cars ibreast every foot of the way from Chicago to Los Angeles. Mr. Jqnes' sermon continued: ■‘And what is the price in-human 'ife and cold cash that we may lave to pay for all this? “Well unless we do better in t*ie next 10 years than we are dpin" now, there will b? a traffic toll in 1970 of 55,000 deaths and two million injuries- And the cost will he' about nine billion dolfars. “It is obvious, therefore, that he traffic situation is one of the Teat unsolved social problems of "ir times. And we either go a Mng way in solving it in the next "n /years or we had better take ‘0 the hills in self-defense.” Mr. Jones pointed out that pay ola, rigging and the fix that seem to prevail in many areas of mod- "vn life have invaded the safety Field, impeding efforts to reduce cd procedure to clip a five dollar bill'to your driver’s license when you are ^topped by a traffic of ficer. “More and more it seems to be a point of pride for the head of the family to ,brag to his chil dren that to outtoarted a traffic officer who ^^ped him for speeding. And then he wonders why youngsters grow up with no respect for the law. “More and more it seems to be a mark of casual living .to have one for the Toad. r “If is amazing and distressing that so many* pedpft try so earn- '--.tly to beat laws that were made for their protection.” Mr. Jones suggested that a logi cal place to start restoring the country’s sagging moral and social s‘andards is behind the wheel of an automobile. “I firmly believe," he said, “that in trying to prevent traffic .accidents we are building a far more efficient society, a better way of life and a greater nation. We are, in fact, taking a step for ward toward world peace. “In overcomipg the things that cause' traffic accidents we are nv^'moming the things that, cause I'-nr—things such as greed, selflsh- I’^’ss, contempt for thri law, dis- r-'!»ard for the rights of othes, 'Tilun to share. “No'ybfrc is th* need for practi- .'•al religion greater than behind the wheel in modem traffic. No where is. man more literally his brother’s keeper. “It comes with poor grace, it to mf*. for a nation th.it nrnni'ly proolaims its concern for tt-f. «.p?r.,re of o*’’pr people to tolrr-'*' an a'-f'ident toll that is a major throat to the welfare of its own people.” 6iS RATiONED About 81,000 Tar Heel farmers grow cotton. Remember These Headlines in 1944? Well Chrysler Corp. has de veloped a car that rations its o¥oi gas. It’s a real mis er, the IMl VALIANT. Looks 4 and Drives like twice the price. Call 2-8479 for a demon stration in this truly unbe lievable automobmile. Samuel Scott SALESMAN MR. SCOTT TELEPHONES: 2-84.9 or 61S3 Science Said Key to Revival Of Fanning RALEIGH—Farnying as a profit making venture Ins steadily de clined in comparison with other facets of American commerce, N. C. Agriculture Commissioner L. Y. Ballentine said here last week. The investment per worker in agriculture is now more than twice the investment per worker in the non-farm industry, while the - farmer’s, raturns arc lass than half those on other business in vestments, Ballentine revecled. This situation was created, he ^aid, because farmers have found it necessary to increase the fio- \ncial investment in their opera- ‘ions to meet the demand for heir products and then make ev ery effort to use the resources of science for increasing yields and inits of production to justify their investments. But the agriculture experts "tointed out that Kience holds a lew promise (or reviving the .'arm egononay. Almost oi^ernight, Ballentine -^aid, the farto^j has become a business man'tnfsged in a highly ■scientific btisin^ss. He predicted that the family farm is bn thres- 'lold of a new era of prosperity' i^hrough specialization, and a> won derful adjustment to the techno logical revolution. Shaw Fraternity. Tops in Nation RALEIGH—The men of Iota Chapter of the Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity on Shaw University’s CamiHis can start off 1961 ^>e^ justly proud. For the second qon- secutive year Iota Chapter, has l?een awarded both the national and southeastern regional award for undergraduate scholarship and campus activities. The awards are made annu^ly at the national conclave by-Mfer- nities, by the National Directors of Education, Dr. Alvin J. McNeil of GrambHng Coltege, Grambling, Xa. At the 46th Anniversary Con clave held at the Park-Sheraton Hotel in New York City, Decem ber 27-30, 1960, the lota Chapter, on the basis of their annual re port with great acclaim for the second consecutive time has won the Charles E. Trout National award for outstanding scholarship and campus activities among all undergraduate chapters through out the country. The Iota Chapter also brought home the Southeast ern Region EUlucational Award for being the ouistariAng''undergrad uate chapter in scholarship and campus activities in the region which covers all of North Carolina South Carolina, and Eastern Ten nessee. In production value, tobacco is first in North Carolina agricul ture; corn second and cotton third. PCP ... Presaure Cooled Process STOP! SHOP! Equip your car witb NEW SAVE! STOP! See Aese Amasi^( Tires COMPABE! TMr leatens art NYLON TUBELESS FiSK PREMIER TIRES SHOP! After ywi see it . . . jroa' waat them m jraar carl flAVEI Tm’II save msaey wttk RIGSBEE TIRE SALES 108 LAKEWOOD AVE.^ PHONE 5I4I . CloMd Wadnesdays at 1 P.M. We Salute the BOY SCOUTS on Their 50th Anniversary Cemplete Front End /Uigament and Bak aacfaig Service. DO OU it can mean cash lor you. See instructions below. ^K^CTI A BOV ; DO i. C'NUf mn I N( Kf 1 f>Ui Ti: l.STI- INA Ml, i. ' rn HQV' Oit m If fit If ' wc 1 ’ .t- I »*u- 11? sn TO THE PIRST THREE PERSONS CORREjqTLY - IDENTy^YING" ALL THE PICTURES ABOVE. THE cAhOLINA times will I^AIL ONE pOL- LAR. FILL IN THE BLANK SPACE ^E^IOE THE NUM BER WHICH CORRESPONDS WITH THE NUM. iBER BESIDE THE PICTURE. MAIL. DO MOT BRING, AS MANY ENTRIES AS YOy LIK^ TO THE CAROLINA TIMES, P. O. BOX M7, DUR HAM) N. C. ,, \ I EARLIEST POSTMARK WILL DETERMINE TH^ WINNERS. WINNERS NAMES WILL BE LiSTED NEXT WEEK.' DECISION OF JUDGES IS FINAL. “ 4. 1V J.,