Lighthouse and informer. (Charleston, S.C.) 1941-1954, October 29, 1949, Page PAGE EIGHT, Image 9

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1 ?? ? _ ?i ? rs-r "? " ' ' t 1 1"" - ' " ' - - y ' VAGE EIGHT r BLOCK ~~Mf ' OUST BEN NEW YOR& - <ANP) A move lav to oust New York City's only Ne- cpi gro representative from the City coi Council was blocked last week, thi when a jreaoluti&n to impeach ce Benjamin J. Davis, Jr., one o? 11 ] convicted American Communist pa tekdcro, failed to get an unan- aU ilTlOUA votft. - - *- ^ lllft ? fIHypp ryvtlr,, . ? The ouster resolution, lntrod- an uccd by Councilman Hugh Quinn, th; also set off a name-calling debate * between Republicans and Democ- G* -.. rats. One Democrat charged Re. ' publican Councilman Stanley Is* aacs with being pro-Communist, and before the verbal clash could be quelled three council mem- 1 hers, including a woman, had*ex- wi pressed themselves. 7 Davis has been elected to the _! council lor-two straight terms. In go 1945 he received more than G3, da OQ votes, second highest of any fin Manhattan candidate. be Meanwhile, in Washington, D. wi C., Attorney General Howard Mc- coi rr _xi. j i j j it . l_ urain aeciartxi rnuuy mat me an convictions do not mean that the Bu Communist party has been out- tal -? -?=5 ??? or Gueray Nelsons :m Continued From Page 1 sin building contractor, attended bo; Johnson C. Smith, Lincoln Unver- ;tn< sity, has completed work on his Yo doctorate at Ohio State. He saw an< ? _ ^6eryic^_i_n World War J. serving am as a first lieutenant in the 365 th yot Infantry. After leaving the army ev< fie was for two years director of vvil welfare work of the Aluminum c * Company of America. Incidentally, Mrs. Nelson was or the only person o^ her race at : Ohio State at the time and be- car cause she made all "A's," was exempted from taking an examination for her master's degree. She He is an honorary member of Pi she Lambda Theta National Honor a t , society of Education ana at Ohio . State became president of the In- , terracial Council. She is a member of the Delta Sigma Theta sor- ^ 1 otity.~~ ~ . ' s?r Guerney, Jr.. wa\> oom in 1933 and shortly afterwards Mrs. Nel- , c . : 6on joined her husband at Ben- ov. orlirt College, to which he had~Jla^ b^en moved." Phyllis arrived three ^ -years later and afterwards Mrs. bJu Kelson went to Livingstozv CoJ- die . lege as Head of the Department s<*1 oT English, thence back" W Co-" cor lumbia to take charge of Direct a 1 Transient Bureau and hasJ also worked for the state department. yei of education, being a vital iiv eac ytrunrent in the rural ggjpBB "^T ^ and teacher training program. oth She accepted a position in the * English Department at Benedict Fo - n 1940, the position she still ha? ACTIVE IN CLUBS sor) go But Mrs. Nelson is perhaps ^0j lBQEe,_PQPularly, known^for her dubs and other activities. She is qQ] , really a busy woman, working, keeping house and also keeping up with her social functions. During the war she was on the ex- an( : ecutive comnultee oi the USO, the NAACP, as president of he un1 Culture Club, the College Wo- 'lc men's Club, is president of the Columbia Women's Council and wa has a lot of other extra duties, in- V eluding an office in tin.- btatv fed- -PH: eration of women's' rlnho A WORD ON THE DEAN Looking over we noted that the dean had dropped his paper, rested his pipe and had lapsed inio ort a nap. , brc He was sleeping so peacefully I t it was a shame to disturb him dis but we got out qf him confirm i- t_hr ? Gon~of a few things we had ,hr ?heard. Among them i* the bUle the known fact that it was hc who the organized the Benedict-Allen thc Summer School in 1930, of which the he has been director" since. He gai also organized?the? extension?p school at Benedict and is largely wa responsible for courses Converse mu (white) college is offering our pot teachers via extension courses. cus The dean is treasurer of the stil state fair association, a member^ ha< - Boy, IV, Kills Sell H ' . Su| After Worshipping of HOUSTON, Miss. - (ANP) For As Some inexplicable reason, M. C. ica Douglass, 17, committed suicide So* before his mother's horrified eyes or$ after returning from church ser ??Vices hare lkSt week. uaig ms morner, the 1 , youth hnd tako^ 2lis father's. r tol to the Ross Hill Church. When services were over, he rode back ( to his home with the preacher. ^ai When he reached his house, he m* called tor his mother to open the 1X1 f door. As she .did hb, he pressed ^a. the muzzle of the gun against his - left- breast and -sfrtft himeslf. ^ ] [ Sun. thru Wed. g ^ John Wayne "* ' g g / Oale Russell fi {oi |<HKHCH5KH??<re?ooooddoJ f<>r ' s , i t-? ?1- 4 -r-~ 7 * * tv ' v..':" ''....vv,- ' ? ... C -T - ^ . . . . f . -???> : . ^c''|!- '-^ " )VE TO~ i DAVIS ved. He said it only means the iviction of "these 11 men" for aspiring to advocate the over- ? row of the government by for- i and violence. '"IT \* McGrath said the* Communist i rty is still free to run candid- ^ wspapera, ok! mass meeting- -< d seek" to convince-the-public,, i at is ideology is the best. 1 ossip As The v HAG WALKS Hag is just broke out all over ' th news this week, but for lark ^ space will tell only a little. When it hits you, you just t to holler. Yes, indeed! Mon- * y night when mama couldn't ( id papa' any place he oughta ( en, she ambled on down to \ tere he roosts. Although she -t uldn't get in, she really turned ( the heat and lit up the dumo. \ it she never got her lamps on ^ 1, fat slow-talking papa. Was he was he not in there with an j mful of you kndw who, and 1 (ring, "Baby, its Tiot outside." , Upstate guy ain't a-tail wellf* irp the rut is eoine thr snirr V y's way. Well, bupper, singing t i praying won't help you now. e u may as well save your gas a i tires. Your goose is cooked \ i.yjcwr.train's. done.gone.. But ? li still got them plenty jumpy, t m.-tf- you are out in~the cold \ th a gang more. __p Somebody thought they heard * lfttle old hen cackling a day t two ago. So she must be back f her own henhouse. Maybe she ne back to throw on dog at the ; r. Well, there is a lot more at s fair ground^than the fair, and V nny 'she won't feel so forty tf c ? flutters around and looks in c certain direction.-? ? 1 Yell, mama still knows how to k ck that pea-shooter as well as k pa knows how to pop it. But 1 ne unlucky, mama is going to r when she ought to_ zag. Then S tre will be slow walking' and f v talking, and "Don't she look I: chul, rlnngh?" ??-4 Certain smooth, sweet "man in a 1 te suit has two stonewall buds wondering .if ^ach is toting tare with the other' when it * gypsy to tell all about them s, and Hag ain't seen the gypsy But Hag does know that n one warns to set tne wona j fift, and does not want "the' j; i^r to outeii it. ( fag-hears that a certain Ward 1 ur Arsenal Hill hair cooker s lost her speech, or something ( e that, since" ascertain Tupe I ne weeks ago. Well, girl it is-.I1 bad to have to give up a good t 3by like broiling your friends c i others alive over hot coals 'T me up for air and get another 3by. p tag likes to see people in love v 1 noticed at the game the very F cct gentleman couldn't?wrrtt?p til that one was over. He said . n had a nicer game to play him- n f afterwards and that his date K; s "the sweetest girl this side of i 1; aven". Wasn't that a nice com-! ment? _ jpreme Court jl Continued From Page 1 lers have been denials of eases } t jught before the court." I \ <Vmcmg the dismissal orders 2 charged last Monday were the "of Arthfn- \Tr'irirr> i n 1 State of Miasiasippi, another, u ; case of Leroy Miller against r . same state, and the third was t i case, of William W. Price a 1 nst that state. r doore, a ia-yonr-okr~NVgro boyT \ s indicted and convicted lor irder inadmissibility of a pur- t -ted confession where the ac- t ;ed was not advised <>f his con- utional rights . until after he i made the confession. The < usion was made in the Mississn Supreme court en June J3, 1 the case was filed with the J preme Court on Sept. 9. the Omega Psi Phi fraternity, ^ the Palmetto State Teachers' r sociation, NEA. ATA, Amer- < n Association of Political and 1 cial Sciences, numerous other 5 (anizations. s HIS WIPE'S VIEWS This affable pair, after 25 years, j s nothing but praise fnr nnrh ler. Mrs. Nelson brags about r ? ability of her husband to ornize and he about her homeiking, being the world's best ' >mer, a fine cook and the finer t rt of their partnership. Mrs. Nelson says htrr husband ^ tokes a pipe, cigar and eigaret\ dislikes fixing things' aruund ~ e house; likes -o sleep in his y sy chair, doesn't like-Movies and ows here because he doesn't ;e segregation, is easy to feed j d not hard to please. 1 But h doe? have one very bad < ilt/ so far as she is concerned, t i'lf bbrrow money from her and 1 get to pay it back. 4 But* tfiTT TTlTsoffs are a typical s mly, and human in every res- t ct, a Bit busier than the aver1- 1 e but a definite part of what i s made our city and state tick 1 20 years i e ' . ' i ' - - - - \ ^ . J , ' T1 Dr. E.B. Burroughs A Hits Claflin Rumor r0 The Editor: Rumors are rampant that the w appreciation and gratitude for the th fery fine work done by President T.J. Seabrook of Claflin College n a period of less than five years .vill be cut in the appropiatiqh of "en Conference for the next yehr, a :ut from $50,000 or Jess, there be- th ing a minority ~groOp that~piaTr ia to,, advance an all out effort to de make an even larger cut. Certain- in ly thanks for a very splendid ef- kr fort. . ? to All pther groups, conferences, ar all interested in maintaining re- fo ligious education for our young di people are increasing their appropriation while there are some bi people here in South Carolina li? uvho are making efforts to "cut ca ?ur little bit"-such to-nte is hi jisgraceful. It is my opinion that aymen who support the church cit ind graduates and former.'stu- an ients of Claflin band themselves Sh :ogether and rid Claflin of this M; 'early discouraging movement. If these rumors are eorrect--as wt aymen in the Methodist Church | a uMx muiai -amy 10 supporti^-11 ivqlences, Pastor's Salary, etc., 1{'? >ut we should meet in Orange- se' )urg during?the Annual Confernoe and have a showdown. We re. for Christian education, we I> vill not sit idly and silently by tnd let our Alma Mater con- C inously threatened. Why buy jonds if by a decrease in appro- ?) iri.ati.on-wo are oertain to-lose our ? A" rating. Money will always >e needed to efficiently run a Ba food college. At Personalities, dislikes for indiv- ; sci duals should have no place in Mi haping Claflin's future, as lay-1 str ne'n let us meet in Orangeburg i fot luring th Conference and find it} >ut our enemies and_oiUL_Iriends^aw iack ouF College, fight for Out do. >eloved Claflin, but bonds to the ] imit of.your ability and let all of .of is, loyal and church loviny lay- th( ncn, graduates, fonder students tol ;o to Orangeburg during the Con- hir erence in November for "As you ins >ay you rule" and I am certain dd he laymen pays- the major por- pa: ion of all .church assessments? wa Jamaica's Second Big Election To Take Plac KINGSTON. Jamaica - (ANP) -i h*< amaica's second big general e- ur( ection will roll off Dec. 20 by 3ovt John Huggins announced p' ast week. Th^' two major political parties ...?. the Jamaica pei majority) Labour party led Jby 4sJustamante, and the People's *or Jational ^(minority) party led >y Norman Manley, " will both ,l ^ nntncJ mrh rvf 99 '3f* louse of Representatives. ' Ho The polling will settle the long art >olitical tussle between the soc- j alists PNP and the conservative | JLJ. So dangerous lias been thej n(>l oiiucal campaigning during past j months, that the governor ban-.'1'' ied alf public meetings. It is exlected that the ban will be lifted. ater.this year. | Bustamante's party is strugg- { "u iug?to-'wm another majority ia ( ho government, and to maintain sul he power which it wreste from rui he old Crown colony system of'"1' .overnnunt in the first general j 'a' lection in 1944, The five-year''<>;i rial per.od will come to an end:*"' vith Nomination day on Nov-. ' ^ i). f U" On tin other hand. Mauley ? JN'P is confident of victory? As '''l i matter of fact, ihepart vys now ! r'' >n the ogre;.five mdo, haviKg bucn v' lamed after an inauirv. chaired ls! >y the Chief Justice, Hector; ? riearne, the instigator of a : * ccent major political violence in.: ,. vhich one man was killed. ~jXt Meantime, political gropers are | rying to feel their way into the government. Two other parties i John Hale Society >h Meets At Union de The John Hale Surgical Society vil! hold i's fall meeting Wed- thi tesday, November 9 at the Union an Community Hospital, Union Dr. N* J.H. Weathers, F A C S., I C S. of tot 5t. Louis, Mo. will be the guest H; lurgeon. The Surgical Clinic will stc jegin at - ft A.M. ar^l-elest-^ti-1 to 3.M. Luncheon will be served L< 'rom 1 to 2 P.M. The scientific \u psslOn Win De neld in the after- Pe ibon until 4:30. Dr. Weathers will present a pi: ^aper on Cancer of the Lower af 3owel. Following the close of :he program the members' and juesis win De entertained .at the Tl Union Comfnunity Center begin-ting at 5 P.M. EDGEFIELD INDIANS ro. -T- re EDGEFIELD - In an ejcciting th, ?ame from start to finish* the sif Ninety-Six Blue Devils finally th ame out the victor "on Friday af- j mi ernoon in Edgefield. The Blue op Devils mf'^ fr f*rs? score >n ! in< .ho first quarter. ThQ_Indians ac-! ornpTishnrl thair Iir?*t-tmjchdOWTt * <*d hrough a tuss from Morgan to Tv Dawkins. The game ended 18-13 i< t n the Blur- P< vils fnvor. Coach an Pearson is now drilling for his th. aext gam thews, gnu | ? +? 4 ^ "*. TT-"*.- IE LIGHTHOUSE and loted Along: REPORi Garnell Hall, Lighthouse! riter, returned to the city .< e week announcing that h en visitinjg an uncle in Ci Mrs. Wessel Buchanan ol ce, wife of ?Tohn_ B. Bucl e tailor, ahd in her own r; amstress extraordinaire, e Lighthouse editor the ~ sting Tocoan ut layer?ca (dares he's ever smacked to. What Mrs. Buchanan d tow is that taste went a a few others, all of whon e on the verge of highball r the City of Florence ar liner table of Mrs. Buchai James E. Owens celebrt rthday Monday and fr^enc jhted in making it a gala sion for the affable "^md ced citizen. Mrs. Pearl Green Shirer < y of Charleston, spent M< d part of Tuesday in Colu ic was the house guest" of yrtle Jones, 2025 Taylor st Early Wcdnesday there w uu ui u jju^UIC s>pcu mg v e of Willie Tolbert, Jr cenwoocL county^ schedal ? in the electric chair for tl [Cd rape of a young whiti /eral weeks ago. His attc irold R. Boulware of Colu ible Student, weetheart Founc ead At Church NASHVILLE - (ANP) 1 ines, 23-year-old student i ri^rican Baptist Theok minary, and his sweetl ss Willi Belle Hopkins, nngrapher at the school and dead on the steps of r Episcopal church here ?According to police tth were a murder and su Police say that^Baines, a r Miami, shot Miss flopki ? temple with a -38 ealibn and then turned the gu rtsclf. Death in both case: itantaneous. The bodies covered?try^TT-city- stree rtmcnt employe. Miss Ho| s from Murphysboro, 111. General :e Dec. 20 ^e been formed lately..? ? the Agricultural ' Influ rty, led by a secessionist stamante's party, Edward rt Dudley Evans. And -the United Party of Jar med last week by James < famaican businessman and manufacturer anH an exp? now steps into the pol ;na when tile fight is inte c. So far. third partie t have anv noticeable in ice m tile eyes of the elc therefore, the elections fought between the PNP J LP. \n interesting feature is stamante has abandoned rrrni KlllgStOTTTOnSTTtUCIK' ithern Clarendon where he [i. His opponents arc f. rosford arTVf ICO. "Terrier, ter is exported t<? \vith< tvhng the FN F <v.ndiatet> Ii d. In western Kingston, meelot ShcnroT, Buslarru t->n assistant general <cer? 11 liftiu Iw+v-lPrHr'FNO m Norman Manley will r >!< rn Sr.- A nfdrew againsl ird Henry Fagan. thpchir who flogged him in 194"ine Man Who He iTn On Ministers SPRINtJFIELD, 111 - (AN staurarvt, operator was 00 here, for forcing thret o ministers from his ea e point of a gun. In the eountv court ilm enry Harmon, white, pi .rdly weapon. tu r> o ** ? - - x ue o- iviarion Kile> e Rov. T.J. Griffin of Chr d the Rov. Charles Gold w York, all Methodist r rs brought the charges ai irmon. The ministers saic ipped in the cafe on theii ?a church "convention i >uis, and H&rmon ordered laauft, "I tUin't m eve Cr ople." Harmon, they said, pulled stol and forced them to ler they refused to leave. IANKSG1VING RALLY FLORENCE - Spraying if iptist brotherhood of Sout lina Rev. A.W. Hill, driv ctor of Morris College at there are many encour ;ns of progress being ma e college, but there is still >re to be done; as the ct crating the school has gi 'teased. Thoy h?v<> -set fifty thou Trs as ' *h r gool fori.anksg ,r.ng rally. They ?v~g 'M pastors to parti< d donate as they see fit t^ir churches and the variot iza'n-v* *n the church. ? ->r l /*> . - . ; : ' r- = \ ' 1 I INFORMER, COLUMBIA, &C;?. Sports said some time ago that , because during there no funds, his case "had to go e had out window. Rev. T. H. Addison of the Allen -University printing shop was-a Flor- rn<>ng AME church leaders here isnsn off for annual conference IIight a nion, leaving the city Tuesday. sent Mrs. Vina Ferry, ' linotypist at finest the Lighthouse and Inlormer, was ke hf> confined at home,early this week teeth with illness. oesn't If Mrs. J. C. Artemus knew it round her mischevious and devilish husi now band wouldn't be going around Ling it trying to make newspaper foT?t id the think she would go to bat for him tan. everytime his meddling folk gets3 ited a him in hot water. Incidentally, he is de- beat a certain man out of a founoc tain pen several years ago, bragwell gcd about it and then popped "up this week with the said story of }f the having lost it. jnday Wonder who is going to win the mbia. big game next Saturday, Allen Mrs. or Benedict? We don't know and reet. are strictly neutral but you can as-nrr-g^t plenty bets, and plenty tnoru >f the hot arguments all over the state. ?* iir a wasningion Has ae-ai ^ :r?gey! Music On Buses mbiar ? ? ^ By Dclores Calvin " WASHINGTON _(CNS) ? Tlve Capital city certainly hasn't much on us New Yorkers they have got music in their buses and cops to stop jaywalkers lOthe wc re convinced there's no igical town with the Tpeed of Manhataeart, tan. and that's a point not to be 22 a argued. wer& Trin- Here, where Negroes cannot go t to a downtown theatre or eat in the I icide. o'owntown restaurants, other than I lative cafeterias' for government work- ! ns in ers> t{ie fjrst thing you see from ! ? pisln Pennsylvania Station is a fjur- I in on s^was geous view of the Capital-itself,]. up liki a mi rage arid looking] pkins' 1 itl! world like the thought of its oasis, truth and justice. But as soon a-s yo\i get a few blocks uptown, the Scene rhang. c II begfris to net, sordid and loud, and crowded the opposite of Washington's wide and h.n.itjfwi _ ------y JiYCiiues?such?as?Goiutituiiui., si rial 'i_ . - Independence and Pennsylvania ~ _ That's unlike New~ York You there musf 66 blocks before you hit natoa the colored section, and then you jore, are more than likely to come out I cig- on Seventh Avenue (like Chica^'ij's South 1'arkway) fill.>3 itical with Negro ' businesses and pr.impe gressive people s do The bars close at tvrrlvi' opi i >ctti."-* night and a guy wo didn't-get-a jwill :>. ttle of beer is just out of luck u!U* unless he'll pay double at the | [ scattered "aftvr hour" joints oi i his 'he area This is unlike New i y far y ,rk too Out bar- close at 1 a. m. and the best ehiektn tin 1 i Tilt- steak hou-es stay open all nig!v.. Ir.iw, This" is. unlike Washington whet..-teles you must go bljuks an i blocks! ?ftmirttg :r~p"t.T<'T; to eat - and then the food is terrible.: Tars-, nrtid" And there are no drive-ins lit:'. | un in Ih'ward Johnson's) At the Zani.i- , t Ed- bar, a white-owned Chinese and! opoj- American food h< use in the No- J 1 gTo -OL'lfon;?supposed ta be one , of the best, we had an odd shap-IQ ed, tough steak with nothing ::.ncy but tin pi ice yx i i ? * ?-w itu1 vjki nusi' liar, wiucli was a fP) A 1'avorite of all show people," being fiU'.d just around from the vaudeville1 1 N( house, hits closed down and Her'o at | ocrt Saunders, its owner, has : pe/it many thousands orr a 'f; | beautiful neW Static Door Bar, eaded .. . ,, , I opposite the Howard Theatre oh i T Street The Bar, at which and v"u may every celebrity in ticago town for.the week, is modernen of i-tic, even to the public tolcninis phones Upstairs, over the bar, tjainst I Saunders, agan iihough still I they shrcwdin business, has built a n^y beautiful hotel?to- accomodate ., ' showpeople. The rooms are small thein . , , .lw. o-1 ?neat,?h<.uiu..hkt<?and lip pi very clean Saunders himself out a keeps quiet, prhaps beTfTuse it's leave rumored that he has a $37,000 tax bill on him I The Howard Theatre, far prettfer inside than our Apolle in New York, has a convenient first^ ^ lloor ladies powder room with ,e real space but the Apollo states~^<,u'^ show them a thing or two aging about marquees and bill boards de at Downtown again, we were surmuch prised at the many Negroes in >st of government service. All elevator really ofwrtrtor jol>s arp taken by Negrtv bouse-wives Secretarial eapacisax^^ TTeT areTiTied with Negro girls.. And they are in many top posinpate tif)ns to?- How ever, it's annoyfrom ^^iat close daily at us oV- 2 P- nx. while New York banks stay, open til 3 and 4:30 p. m. .1 f < . r-' ' Fanning In A JS Changing World Fi By Joseph J. Mitchell - M COLLETON COUNTY ?A NEGRO AGRICULTURE tie < AGENT i a K We all agree that when we fail free to get along with the things, we gro do, thefe is a great need for changing so we'll get along bet- wl" ter. We don't go into battle nowa- Anj day without having the thingsjwo ^ need to fight with. That's placing preparation at the top of the list. ^ In order to keep in ' pace witn stat the new things about farming, a Une good farmer will Viave to pay ^ee more attention to the radio, news- an(j paper, letters sent out by the va- ^ rious agencies and attend more meetings if we are to find a place , for our farms nowadays. ? WEIGHT OF FEED HOGS sug, How heavy should a hog bc to . r make the most money when it's sent to market? That's some- tur: thing every farmer has to figure woi out for himself. And the answer sta) next. But here is a rough guide hog that should make the figuring hog easier. It is based on a study utr sur] United State Department of Agri- 200 culture. This guide fits the ave- cari rage farm over several years but ^ fi you may have to adjust it some rnoi to fit your needs. Suppose you ma> are wondering whether to put an extra in) pounds gam onto one-of your hogs, and it will take a G month to do it. Then your prob- divi Tom is to figure out how much the and ^xtra 50 pound> of living hog will rick worth; and how much the price foot of hogs is Likely to change in a 1. rfionth. the Well, here is a general guide: Per It takes about 4.5 bushels of corn 2. -rrr-tht equal in other feeds tn fat- *"r{ ten a <300-pound hog up to 250- Pou pounds. It takct around 4.6* bush- f??1 els of corn or its equal in other]--* feed to put 50 pounds of live gain i corr onto a 225-pound hog, 4.8 bushels Krai on a 250-podnd hog, and 4.9 bush- ' r els to put 50 pound gain on a 275-1 l?t;1 pound hog, fattening it up to 325 < c'xtt pouiitls". Feed?i_??usually?ahnut. j four fifth :of the total cost of fat-, Car toning hogs,'you would just ab?>ut break even if you got a re- ?7^ SIDNEY WILLIAMS TO RK || IN URBAN' LEAGUE' MEET | NEAR YEAR IN 1). C." CHICAGO - TANP) Sidney Wu- g nams, executive secretary of thcT o Chicago Urban League, last week 8 was named delegate to the 1950 5 White House confernce by Illinois' 5 Governor Adla E. Stevenson. ?'?4C In his letter of appointment, chsq Gov. Stevenson wrote; "I 'would like for you to serve as a member of the Governor's Commission on I ttv Midcentury White House con ference. As a member of this I commission you will be invited t to attend the formal meetings at { *the White House, as well?as-j- ? meetings of working groups dur- j urg the three-day conference.? A White House conference on children is held each 10 years.1 The first was called by President jTheT?dore Roosevelt tn 1909, the latest in 1940 concerned Children j Tn a Democracy. JhPI LEADEIi Or. Perry L. follaa | Recently made headline news * with his important discovery | of a method by which the amazing new treatment for arthritis, Cortisone, may lie produced from soy beans. * Dr. Julian Is Director of "Re- | search and Manager of Fine o n i v ucmujuiti. ouya. rrooucw Division, the Glidden Company, Chicago. He is holder of 30 U. S. patents; author of many scientific articles and books; member of numerous 2 scientific societies. He is former Professor^ of Chem- Z is try at Finlt, Hownnl and DePauw Universities, and | ^West ^ghn;^ ;U| I.EADER fJV fTS Ft EE ^Here's America's biggest Cola value? Pepsi-Cola! No finer cola at any price?yet you get two full glasses in the big, BIG t welve-Punee bottle! Think of it ?that 's twelve full glasses you . get in a six-bottle carton of delicious Pepsi-Cola! So ttfke home a carton today! * NO FINER CO LA AT ANY PRICil \ . . ' ' \ ' " v" i i5 & * /' I*' X - * -T ; ,' 7\ SATU iterate Is eed By Court C EW ORLEANS, LA, ?(ANP) IE news report carrying a Seat- * date line, last, week told hpw ing county superior court A d a 29-year old Louisiana Ne- k George Bob Perkins, charged \ the murder of his wife, Mrs, pi [eline Perkins, 32. The killer sc tried self-defense. ' "gi efense counsel in his pica ed that the accused was an nr ducated Louisianian, who had n deprived of an education consequently was without re gment. at he jury attached this note to S*1 verdict: . ? " ?* Ihe jury recommends and m gests that the defendant, un- re his own free will and jftitia- ar i of about $1.25 for each $1.00 ^ th of feed put into them. To ^ r on the safe side and not _ ^1. ...UU TlT : 1 ~ Ol lyic wmi me un s if a farmer hrs sufficient "i s for home use qr market his cu plus feed, it is more econo- or al to market his hogs around Hi to 225 pounds rather than re *y them to larger weights. In th ew cases it heavfcr meat or e lard is wanted, heavier hogs ' be grown out. I WINTER GRAZING j reen crops pays of with big .deads in providing green feed preventing pig pellagra and W ;ets. Plan to plant some green de i for your hogs this year. he Oats, planted in October at m rate of 3 to 4 bushels of seed Ql acre. P2 Rape, planted October jugh February, 15- to 20 ndslper acre, drilled in two- M t roWs. r ... Crimson clover? planted in ? ibination with - other small ?' n also give good results. _ tn or future derails visit your de 1 extension office and ask for ^ ;nsion circular 234 entitled lne~ Management For South olina. "lOHNSONl0"! "TONERAlr-| HOME fj ?i?*<mt mi. SymprtMBf r ESTABLISHED 1919 ? ||< Telephone 1119 )1 Park St Columbia, flk C.S [|l HALLOWEE! Savoy Club 9:00 1st, 2nd, a Prizes given to the one Vdmission-Chicken, Due j tN HIS A ?? nvrtctous . v ' b f -T.O 1 ^ -V./ . 4 . ;. /.. vsi* ' ^ ' v-' * ' 'C&S&fi . RPAY, OCTOBER African Medic J Offers To Swap 1 or Library I WASHINGTON - (AMP) IfcJ teaander OtI|owiT, dun nf I ampala, Uganda, medical school, is dreamed up ? pretty original an to secure books for ths. hod's -medical library?offerng raffe liver tissues and monkey ains for books. That he is making the idea ork is evidenced by the fact at last week he added Dr. Warn Andrs. profeesor of anatomy George Washington univst ty medical school, to the list ' persons who will send him v_ edical journals and books ' in turrt for speciments of African limal anatomy. '-'~i Dr. Galloway supervises the edition of 30 .East Africans at akerere College o f Medicine. . ] neofhis main problms is now to I lild a medical library and seire current periodical 1 iterative i a budget of 300 pounds a year. e came to this county to do 8om< search in medical education aV e University of CftfeAgb diuv j g the first term. ?x'. -I j CORPORAL BOLDEN ON >UTY IN JAPAN GIPU, JAPAN - Corporal Jacob . Bolden, son of Mrs. Anne Boln, - of Ridgeland, S.C., a mexn;r of the 24th Infantry Regient, is squad leader in headlarters and headquarters comiqy of the eighth army here. Cpl. Bolden is presently on ?ld maneuvers at the base of t. Fuji, .Japan's famed mounin.V He entered the army" in March ? 1943 and received his basic lining at Camp Gordon, Ga. He ?parted for overseas duty in .1 ecember of 1943. ' I re, attend night school to learn I >w to read and write". : : ARNS &sD0ZiEltl Golf Dnlen SasdiM, Oil, Washing, ftllh 1 ng, Greasing a lid'111 e KtyiiJ . Gulf Urea and Aeaasortoe (131 Taylor Si. I October 31, JS49 P.M. nd 3rd -'v most tackly dressed k, or Turkey dinners VIELM: ' ? ?- ?