Lighthouse and informer. (Charleston, S.C.) 1941-1954, May 03, 1952, Image 3
Spelling Bee
Judges Named
For Finals
LIGHTHOUSE and 1NFOKMEK, CULl Jiiil \. ■>,. C
Saturday, May 3, 1952—3
Miss Elizabeth O’Dell of the
faculty of the University of
South Carolina and C. Wallace
Martin of Columbia radio sta
tion WMSC will be the judge in
the State Spelling B to be held
here Saturday, May 3, it has been
announced b->’ D. Leon McCor-
mac of the State Department of
Education.
The Bee, an annual event in
South Carolina since 1947, will j
be held this year at Columbia
College. Miss Isla Ellerbe, al
so a faculty member of USC,
and Mackie Quave of the staff
of Columbia radio station WIS,
will be the pronouncers.
Participants in the bee will bej
winners in the 43 country contests]
which were held last week.!-™™ ™liege
Seventeen of the counties have! NAACP Branch
Yale Students
Rev. William McKinley Bow
Pallbearers bearing the casket
and the late Rev. C. A. Zeigler _
: man, pastor of Second Nazareth
of Bamberg, are shown leaving Baptist Church of Columbia, di
the church where final rites were rec t 0 r of public relations for th»
conducted two weeks ago. Rev. „ ..
. . ,. stale Baptist Convention.
Mr. Zeigler was an outstanding
already sent in the names of j " citizen of Bamberg county and regation in this country. You car
their winners. OlfheTs are ex-1 new HAVEN —'Following an the state> an( j one 0 f South Car- help materially ... by workinf
pect'ed to report their champion] address by Herbert L. Wright. 0 i jna - s f or emost leaders in the through an NAACP college
spellers this week.
Scripps-Howard
I youth secretary of the NAACP,
Newspapers ( before a student body conference
Baptist Church.
: chaplet to eliminate whatever
; discrimination and segregation
may exist on your own campus.’
Shown above are some of the president: L. C. Jenkins, secre-
leaders of the State Baptist Con. t arv . j l. Brooks, assistant sec-
vention. Taken at a previous retary . w p W jj|i amSi treasur
convention, they are. left to ^ w D stewart district
right: Reverends G. G. Daniels,
president; W. L. Wilson, vice missionary; W. M. Bowman, di
rector of public relations; J. A. Trustees of Morris College; J- c -
a 4 • Dunbar, president State Sunday
Bacoats .president of Benedict ^
School and BTU Convention;
College; O. R. Reuben, president
j of Morris College; J. W. Boykin
All participants will be
guests of the newspaper at a
luncheon immediately follow
ing the contest. In addition
each contestant will be given a j
sohool dictionary.
The state winner will receive ;
a week’s trip to Washington, D.
C. and a chance to enter the na- j
tional contest scheduled for May j
22. The winner and the runner- J
up will each be given a set of !
encyclopedias.
By W. M. BOWMAN The Spelling Bee is scheduled
Th- o ' | ,° f the Nati °nal Baptist Convent-i *o begin at 10:30 May 3 in the
. u h Carolina State Bap- on America, who will speak | auditorium of Columbia College.
1 Mr. McCormac has announced the
- - - |
are the national sponsors for the sponsored by the Yale University
nation-wide spelling bee activi- Political Union and the Yale '^ as n€Ver employed, a Negro,
tie- and the Anderson Daily Mail ( Dixwell Interracial Group, fifty Robert Weinberg, chairfrnan of HARRY MOORE gave his life—
and Independent Newspapers Yale students this week joined Dixwell group, was elected will you give vour NAACP
sponsor the contest in South Car- the NAACP and entered into temporary chairman of the chap- Membership?
olina with the State Department formal organization of a chap- *-er.
of Education making all ar- 1 ter j In his address, Mr. Wright told!
rangements and conducting the] The ^ ^ assigne<J the Yale students “that young]
^ 'itself the task of attempting to Hke J our f lves as -;
. sume a greater share of the re-
have qua ified Negro instructors sponsibility.in fighting racial and'
placed on the Yale faculty which religious discrimination and seg- j
give your NAACP
i?
NATURAL HAIR
AHACHMENTS
A. Zeigler (deceased), dist r ' ct
missionary and O. St. Cl alr
(deceased) chairman of Board of Franklin, statistician.
S. C. State Baptist Convention
Holds 1952 Session At Mullins
! contest is open to th? public.
Says
Rev. James M. Hinton, out
standing minister and civic lead-
the NAACP Mndy
of branches,] r
er, president of
State Conference
are 3 feet deep, as is the foundation.
wo*l resting on a footing. The ground is
-B. S., Rocky Hill, Conn.
will also address the convention this^ob^houJ t rs and an overall membership mit'tee 7 J P Faison chief usher
-t Baptists tturinp it, a, ! ot 365,000 per.otts. Th Boa , « tC'Us
Mullins.
timbers through that small opening, and carry ,
out tons of earth, both virtually impossible.
Rev. Holman
Still !
In Race
BEAUFOBT—Ri?v. Julius Hol
man, Veteran A.ME church pas- . . . . , other of i ,4n<1 “P at Will they eventually settle
tor here said Monday that he Pmm out that only one otn down, or must something be done wnn them?
was still’ very much in the rcae the ^candidates from this state -j. s.. Broik.on, Mass,
for bishoorie honors when the receivecJ mre votes than he at- answer; New shingles, being flexible, can
IOr 01 en thf> crpnpral pnnfrpnoe be raised s^S^tly by wind action. Eventually
Greater AME Church holds its ^t of <> na
quadrennial in Chicago this
month. jj e j s a j so no ted as an butstan-:
Supporters of the pastor, who ing orator and scholar.
fist ( onvention w iJ] meet in Mul- on ridav
Zt^ V ct~ 9 p ^ Mt ‘ ° liVS ° thcr speakers are: Dr. G. G
Brooke n!r Ch ‘ CV ' JaSPer L ' Daniels > P^sident of the State)
7 '' ° r ' Convention; Dr. W. H. Neal °f RobinSOn
An interesting program has Columbia; President Odell R ^
wilTber 311 ^' SP?ak?rS ReUben 0f Morris Colleg , Sum-' MenaCC For
IIl' Dr ‘- J ‘ H ' Jackson °f Chicago, Benedict Collej J'; or. Charges H. NL PitcherS
..vice president of the Nation- Brown of Benedict College- Dr
al Baptist Convention of Ameri- H. E. PHILADELPHIA, Pa. (CHS)-
ca, Inc., to speak on Tues-iay and Dr. B J Whin r nv, S As lf Ja ckle has not corned the
night; Dr. G. L. Prince, president leston, and others PPer ° ha ' ' National League pitchers enough,
l o, ^ rrs, ,ii ;r. ,h ^s
Tho co„.„„„ n r Eof jjipce he's bMP tn»w3 L™
So r; r 7».so r ,„ era r,. ir z
fn- rtnn ^rt ii 3 50 gives ai<3 in g °n getting on base. And he
' e 1C . 0 a - Colum-] has reached base safely 26 of
bia; Friendship Junior College his 38 tries.
of Rock Hill, Mather Sohnni a ■
• i . r. ^ t -n 4.4 ■ n ° o1 fori Another way of looking at
girls at Beaufort, Bettis AnatW ront’c j • . i_ > u
Acaae- jacks record is that h&s been
my at Tr nto n and Bethlehem! on base better than three times
high school of Barnwell. ; per game Jackie explains ^
A goal of over $50,000 has ; new success this way: “I kinda
be:n s t to be raised in the ses- like batting third. You don’t feel
sions of the convention for the! as Plough you have to swing for
support of the objectives 0 f the that long ball, all the time. I
organization. The. The eonven-! can bunt more often, or wait
tion is composed of 82 Associat-! ^ or a walk more often and then
ions, 1,500 churches, 2,000 minis-, !et a SUy lika Campy get me in”
The Thanks We Receive *
'lo Ail tae lamilies and friends who have compli
mented us on a beautiful service we in turn would
like to express our own thanks. We honestly try to in
terpret and -arry out the wishes of each family—to
make no decision contrary to their desire—but vre
are not the -'Inal judges. Our best reward comes with
the knowledge that we have been truly helpful.
Fielding’s Home For Funerals
122 Logas '»reet Telephone 5914
^arleston. South Carolina
YOU CAM HAVE YOUR HAIR
PSRFCCTIY MATCHED
BEAUFORT
CHARLESTON
COLUMBIA
FLORENCE
GREENVILLE
QUESTION: I would Hke to dig a cellar
under my frame ranch style home, working
thresh a small floor opening in a utility
dor* * The central girder rests on 4 piers,
The officers of the convention
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was a candidate four years ago, question.- ii shmgies on a new home
stand up at times, will they eventually settle
Rev. Holman has 35 years of anther from Summer h..t, .nd he fUt.
experience as a successful pastor, question: Could you ten me how to P ia,-
tt„ : on Antcfnnd- ' ter around a &uilt-in bath tub? The plaster
Hp 1C alcn nntpH ns nn hutStanJ j put in does not secm to s t ick .
—A. B. C., Rochester
ANSWER: If you are using ordinary plaster
on porcelain or metal, it will not stick. Go
over the surfaces with fine grit sand paper
to remove grease and loose particles and
lightly roughen the surface, then apply one
of the special tile patching cements now
available in hardware stores. They will stick.
QUESTION: We have been mopping around
*• f!
are:
Dr. G. G. Dantels, president;
R-v. W. L. Wilson, vice president;
Rev. L. C. Jenkins, secretary;
R:-v. J. L. Brooks, assistant sec
retary; Rev. W. P. Williams,
treasurer; R-v. O. St. Clair
Franklin, statistician; Rev. Wm.
McKinley Bowman, director 0 f
public relations; Rev. Wm. How
ard, editor; R v. E. M. Booker,
historian; Rev. B. T. Sears,
chairman of social, political and
economics committee; Rev. J. p.
Re der, chairman of the Finance
i s:on are: Enrollmsnt of, 1,000
preachers, 1,500 churches, 81
associations and 51 unions. And <
to build the Science hall needed !
at Morris College by September 1
!•
Evry association is expected
to be reporting 100 per cent.
vCKHMf{HXt-rHr' f
ATLANTIC COAST LIFE |
INSURANCE COMPANY
“The Golden Rule Company”
HOME OFFICE: — 149 WENTWORTH STREET
Charleston, South Carolina
District Offices:
HARTSV1LLE
ORANGEBURG
ROCK KILL
SPARTANBURG
SUMTER
Our Twenty-fifth year of service
to the people of South Carolina
HHKKKHKH«K'^-t.'--vD<HKHKH : H : KK H KHJIKH>PP<HKHKHKHjaOWOOO^
CLAFLIN COLLEGE
ORANGEBURG, S. C.
1869—1952
A FULLY ACCREDITED LIBERAL ARTS, PRE-PRO
FESSIONAL and TEACHER TRAINING COLLEGE.
1952—Double Session—Summer School
First Session — JUNE 5 — JULY 11
Second Session — JULY 12 — AUG. 16
PACE BOY
Thi* most useful hair piece blend*
In with your own hair and keeps
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THE HALF CLAMOUR
fastens at the crown of the bead and
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a kitchen utility closet, and when we move r* TCoa* TT
it there are rust spots on the linoleum? How 1 Cornm!tt e> K€V ' 1 ' K " a ‘ ms -
do I remove the spots, and prevent them?
-Mrs. G. J., Princeton, N. J.
ANSWER: Rust stains can be taken from
liaoleum with lemon juice, or by scrubbing
with steel wool. Set the cabinet on short
wood blocks to keep the metal base from
contact with water when mopping takes place.
chairman of the statistical com-
This column is prepared by the edi
tors of THE FAMILY HANDYMAN
MAGAZINE as a service to home
owners. If you have any questions or
problems relating to your own home,
please address a letter, stating your
prob’em to THE FAMILY HANDY
MAN, 211 East 37th Street, New
York, New York, Attention of News
Syndicate Editor. If the‘question has
wide spread appeal in the opinion of
the editors, it will be printed with the
answer in this column at a later date.
However, we cannot undertake to
enter into detailed correspondence
with everyone.
J A C K’S LUNCH
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Variety of Meats, Poultry and
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: GROCERIES :
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SPECIAL EMPHASIS ON TEACHER TRAINING
REGULAR CLASSES FOR COLLEGE STUDENTS
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Public Laws 16 and 346
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For catalog or Information write—
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BACK OF
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REGULAR SESSION
1952—1953
OPENS — SEPTEMBER 8, 1952
Courses Offered Leading to the Bachelor's Degree in:
Art
Biology
Chemistry
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History — Mathematics
DR. J. J. SEABROOK, President
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