POLIO—A GROWING SHADOW .
CASK REPORTED SINCE 1936
SHOWN IN 3-YEAR PERIODS
* Including 1950 •rfimoto o# 30,000 com*.
Purim rtM rtw-y—r poriod 1943-1950 *
*51,000.000 in March of DW fund*
nun*
I9M-3I NII-IM 1M7-IM4 1145-1947
mi-wso
The chart above reveala pollo'a ever-lncreaalng threat to tho American
people and the enormoua coat of patient care borne by the National
Foundation for Infantile Paralyaia. Thla year, the forward march of
polio preaenta an eapeclaIly urgent problem to the March of Olmee:
the purehaaing value of the dollar haa ahrunk to 98 eenta In comparl*
•on with pre-war daya, while polio caaea have nearly quadrupled.
BUTTERCUP !CE CREAM CO.
Manufacturers of
BUTTERCUP ICE CREAM
"The Good Health Refreshment"
HAMLET, N. C.
HOTEL MALBOURNE
DURHAM, NORTH CAROLLINA
Fire Proof Hotels — Rates $1.75 to $2.75
A HOTEL OF APPRECIATIVE OPERATORS
“We Are Not Satisfied Unless You Are”
HOTEL WILMINGTON
Wilmington, N. C.
IJUGG HOTELS
WINSTON-SALEM JOURNAL
(Morning)
TWIN CITY SENTINEL
(Evening)
JOURNAL and SENTINEL
(Sunday)
WSJS — WSJS-FM
WINSTON-SALEM, N. C.
What is if worth to You . . .
WHEN YOU
WANT TOs
Ml m doctor
'« « • -C C -
Owl Wim •■■^oWwoo®
mcH tomoono in • Hurry
The true value of your telephone can be matured only
hi the May different ways it aervee you—in the con*
venienre and pleasure it adde to daily Mfe.
Tour telephone aervice ia increasing in value day by
day aa the number of friends and relatives you can call
keeps growing larger, and service becosnes faster and
better.
Yet the coat is low. Low in comparison to most other
things you buy. Low in comparison to our costs of
supplying service. Your telephone is at your service
twenty-four hours every day—for only, a few cents a
day.
When you think how much it does for you, at the
price you pay, telephone service stands out as one of
today’s biggest bargains.
Carolina Telephone
and Telegraph
Company
EXECUTIVE OFFICES
TARBORO, NORTH CAROLINA
i
MEANY ASKS THAT
TV CHANNELS BE
GIVEN TO EDUCATION
(Continued Prom Page 1)
“A better educated worker is a
more productive one. He learns
more in a short time, performs
his tasks better and fulfills a wid
er role in the general community.
Furthermore, in time of national
emergency when skilled laborers
are at a premium, it is import
ant that a high educational level
be maintained so that a full sup
ply of skilled workers is avail
able.
’ “Through the development of
radio and television, the possi
bilities for providing educational
services and information for mil
lions of people have been tremen
dously expanded. Through their
more efficient utilization, infor
mation can be taken, directly in
to the homes of shut-ins, into
schools and colleges, to the young,
to the old, to the housewives and
to the many millions who, in the
ordinary course of events, would
not be able to take advantage
of the facilities offered by our
educational institutions.
we relieve it to be essential
at this time, to insure the most
effective use of television by the
public. The initiative and re
sourcefulness that commercial or
ganizations have demonstratd in
developing television merit gen
eral approval. However, we feel
that commercial interests, as well
as public interests, will be further
served if outlets are reserved for
non-commercial purposes.
“Insofar aa existing television
frequencies are concerned, it
seems to us that the commission
has an obligation to insure in
creased utilisation of frequencies
for the public good. Certainly,
up to this point, the use of tele
vision for general educational and
community programs has been, to
say the least, rather limited.
“It is important for memben
of labor organizations to obtain
information regarding the prob
lems, conditions of work and view
point of farmers, businessmen
housewives and governmental and
professional leaders. It is nc
less important that members of
such groups should have the op
portunity to learn of the exper
iences, problems and conditions
of work and aspirations of the
16 million members of organised
labor.
“The interests of labor and the
interests of the broader commu
nity are for the most part identi
cal. It is essential in these days
and in the days ahead that our
common interests should be em
phasized and the basts of our dif
ferences be understood.
“Radio and television have
made some contribution to estab
lishing a~ common basis of under
standing.
“The history of the last 2*»
years, however, has shown that
radio has not played the great
role educationally that was ex
pected of it. Television offers
even broader areas of appeal and
possibilities of utilization m de
veloping educational programs.
Indeed, there is is the real pos
sibility that radio and television
may be used to supplement each
other for educational purposes
It is that hope that impels us to
urge, that the maximum possible
provision for the use of televi
sion in education be made by
your commission.”
The Dean Was Frank
One day an Eastern university
professor visited the expanding
(campus of the University of Cal
| ifornia at Los Angles. He
watched construction work on
half a dozen new buildings; he
inspected new laboratories and
attended summer classes in mod
ern study rooms; he walked
across miles of eucalyptus-lined
j lawns and athletic fields with one
: of the deans. He was impressed.
“My," he said “just how many
students do you have here?”
“Let me see,” the dean answer
ed thoughtfully. “I’d say about
one in a hundred."
GREETINGS
North Chorlotto
Cleaners
We Improve tour Looks
From Head to Foot
3112 N. Caldwell St.
Tal. 9443
CHARLOTTE, N. C.
GREETINGS
North State
Laundry
716 So. Brevard
Tel. 3-3135
CHARLOTTE, N. C.
GREETINGS
BAKER’S SHOE SERVICE
“Rack Hill’s
Food Comfort Center”
Dial 4841 128 Caldwell
ROCK HILL, N. C.
r -■ • ■■■»
i SATES UPHOLSTER!
W« Have Move4 ta
Chralatte Highway
Phone 2747
ROCK HILL, N. C.
Customer: “Or.'- mouse trap,
please, in a hurry — I have to
catch a bus.”
Clerk: "Sorry, sir, our traps
don’t come that bif.”
GREETINGS
Neel Brothers
Dixie Rood
1 Tel. County 1202
CHARLOTTE, N. C.
MOORE'S
New Home, Sew Gem, Singer
and Necchi, Davis Rotary
and other makes of Sewing
Mochines. Button Hole At
tachments, and Lights.
Service and Repairs
634 E. 4th St. Tel. 4-4805
CHARLOTTE, N. C.
GREETINGS
Chas. Moody Co.
WHOLESALE GROCERS
2101 Thrift Rood
Phone 2-6139
Charlotte. N. C.
GREETINGS
ROCK HILL FEED &
SUPPLY CO.
Hatchery, Poultry Supplies
Complete line of Feed,
Seeds, Farm Supplies
732 East White St.
Telephone 2459
ROCK HILL, S. C.
GREETINGS
TO ALL
RAYLASS DEPARTMENT
STORE
ROCK HILL, N. C.
PRINTING AND OFFICE
SUPPLIES
Upper South Carolina’s
Most Complete Hant
Phone 3139
RECORD PRINTING &
OFFICE SUPPLY CO.
ROCK HILL. N. C.
Letter-Press
Printing
Letter press printing in the graphic arts
means the direct application of inked type
and engravings or other type material to
paper.
It is the simplest of all graphic methods
of reproduction and at the same time the
most lasting. It was the method employed
by the medieval craftsmen who first ap
plied type to paper and it has persisted
throughout the centuries over all innova
tions, until today, when the best of crafts
manship is sought in a Job, there is no al
ternative to letter press printing, along
with high grade paper and typographic
good taste.
We suggest that if you have some print
ing in view that you want well done, you
consult us. Simply telephone 6-1776 or
else call at the office, 118 East Sixth St..
Charlotte, N. C.
H. A, Stalls Printing Co.
PRINTERS AND PUBLISHERS
* \
40 YEARS EXPERIENCE AT YOUR DISPOSAL
P. O. Box 1061 CHARLOTTE, N. C
VICK PAINT CO.
PAINTS ANO WALL PAPE*
OIL — VARNISHES
ARTIST ANO SIGN WRITER SUPPLIES
129 West Fifth Street
WINSTON-SALEM, N. C.
Southern Furniture Company
COMPLETE HOME FURNISHINGS
G. E. REFRIGERATORS AND RANGES
Phone 2-2589 Twelfth and Liberty Sts.
WINSTON-SALEM, N. C.
HINE-BAGBY CO., Inc.
"TOUR STORE"'
Clothiers and Furnishers
Mione 2-3145 412 Trwfe Str««*
WINSTON-SALEM, N. C.
7-UP BQTTUN6 COMPANY
. \
Winston-Salem, N. C.
VOGLER SERVICE
FUNERAL DIRECTORS — AMBULANCE SERVICE
DIAL 6101
WINSTON-SALEM. N. C.
DIZE AWNING and TENT CO.
I
★
Manufacturers
AWNINGS, TENTS, FLAGS
CANVAS WINDOW SHADES, CANVAS BAGS
VENETIAN BLINDS
WAGON AND TRUCK COVERS,, TARPAULINS
FURNITURE PADS
★
1512 South Main Street
WINSTON-SALEM, N. C.
HANES
Hosiery Mills Co.
Manufacturers of
LADIES' CIRCULAR
/ , <*-• .i
KNIT HOSIERY
Winston-Salem, N. C.