The palmetto leader. (Columbia, S.C.) 1925-196?, February 12, 1955, Page Page Four, Image 4
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palmetto Itaber
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Saturday, February t|^1955
FARM NEWS
GOOD CROPS GUIDE
FOR: FEBRUARY USE ~
That a good start1" is important
r >3, stressed. by_ County Agents in
teir February farm calendar of
suggestions for farmers.
Agronomy
1. Manure is one of our best
fertilizer treatment and have your
soil tested. Use recomenterl a
mounts of fertilizer and lime. 3.
Turn under cover crops in plenty
of time to permit decomposition
before seeding. 4. Plant more forage
cover crops and pastures
this year to supply ample feed
for livestock. 5. Fertilize permanent
pastouros wth 500 pounds
3-12-12 or 4-12?12 per acre in
February. 6. Start a Coastal Bermuda
nursery patch with Foundation,
Registered, o r Certified
rootstock. 7. Order fertlizer now
if you want to be sure to get what
you want. 8. Rotate grazing don't
overgr&xe. 0. Plan your farm.
Make every acfe do its part in
1965. 1|0. Use small grains for
making plenty of good hay and
silage this spring.
Horticulture
1. Plant strawberries, dewbtrries,
blackberries. 2. Set out grape
vines and fruit trees, 3. Apply
fertilizer to home and commercial
oHhards. Apply dormant sprays
on home and commercial orchards.
4. Plant asparagus and Irish potatoes
in costal counties; transplant
cabbage plants in central
upper counties, 5. Plant turnips,
mustard, spinach, lettuce, kale
peas, radishes, onions. 6. Plant
in hotbeds: Tomato, pepper, eggplant.
7. (Remember that gardens
are just as important now as during
the war. 8. If interested in
pecans, get Extension Circular
301, Pecan Production and Marketing
in South Carolina^
...... Insects and Diseases
1, Tobacco and vegetable growers
and gardeners: See County
P 1
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-Ilk
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Between the lines
?ft:<
| Dean Gordon BrHan^cfc1
LOWERING WAR-CLOUDS
American -" patriots would -: be
poorly a devised if they took j
lightly, or ignored, the current j
wircuwi ox war situation about j
Formosa. The latest move by
President Eisenhower is but notic
served on Red China, that'
fighting is imminent and it is
fUrtrhef notice served on this couri.j
try that the cold war is about ?to
get hot, for better or worse.
Americans may as well get
themselves for war and the evils
thereof, and it will be useless to
'further indulge in'wickful thinking
and watchful waiting. The
show down is,at hand; and the
most that we can hope for is
that we are ready for the devisvievsteps
we have taken. There,
was little, or fitf choice for Eisenhower
but t o throw down the j
guage of battle tto the aggres
sive and on rushing reds, who "
are entrenching themselvesthroughout
Asia.
just who did what wrongly; it
we are going on or?going back; it
is not the time to call our
country to account for the mistakes
of its statemen; it is time
| and our mistortunes to the great "
cauOe of democracy, we have espoused
these nearly 200 years.
The time flt VinnH for TOflerli.
j cation of our all to the_jmifurnishj
ed realization that we are facd
to face with the World War III,
with heaviness of heart a? we
contemplated the .horors o f atomic
warfare and destructoin.
If it . had to come it had to come.
America Is ours whether i n
peace or in war; it is ours to enjoy
and it must be ours to defend!
It is about time for u s
once more to declare that in
spite of its faultts and foiblea
and failures, we love our native
land above all earthly possessions;
,
Of course, thcie will be the sec-'
ond guessers who .will conjure
up ways and means by which the
current crisis would have been
averted; but this is no time for
second-guessers, with their might
have-beens- in plenty
This is a time for patroits who
are for their country -right -- or
wrongs It is fervently to b d
hoped that th6 Russians and Red
Ohinese .are as hitterly opposed
I A u.' a t" a a ura o rn f Vl f thow rn
sincerely in earnest in their
Somebody's bluff is being vigorously
called and, what we are about
to see is proof whereof.
This writer has never been greatly
impressed with the > "peaceful
co-existance" possibilites enunciated
so strongly by would-be-conqueror,
Russia, and recently men
| tioned by our great President
Eisenhower.
In the final analysis, this will
be a world of democracy or wirld
-\
agent for information on nema|
tode control by soil fumigation.
, 2. Study latest nformation on insecticides,
fungicides, weed and
J rat killers, and equiptment; placo
I order when" convienced of need
| 3. Treaat all cotton seed with approved
chemicals. 4. Spray peach
-trees wth limesulfur or oil emulsion
and bordeaux to control
scale insects and diseases before
the buds begin to swell. 5. Spray
apple trees with lime-sulfur or
oil control scale.. 6. Disinfect
sweet potato seed. See county agent
for instructions. 7. Treat equiptment
and get ready for the
spring honey flow.
Agricultural Engineering
1. Check o*ver farm machinery and
order needed repairs new. 2,
Plan terraces to make them wid
er to facilitate operation of machinery.
3. Grade yards or lots to
provide better drainage away
from bulidintfs,5. Make needed repairs
to farm buildings, such ns
leaky roofs and poor foundation*
5. Farmers planning to irrigate
should begin to get equiptment.v
^ *'
^KiSS^V ? *'
?By Reverertd G. A. Chick, Sr.
Th<t Economic Child V
T / . ! 1 * _ J ~j
in my proiessionai-courses in ea 7
ucation'during my da^'ajin under- 1
graduate school as well as in gra- *
dilate school,1 I learned that the
child was composed of "many f
parts' and that the "whole child" 1
came to school, not just One of his r
many parts. Moreover,4 I was r
taught that I would be expected to ^
teach the whole child. But appar- a
ently I would be expected to teach 8
the many parts of a child, one at v
a time. I also learned, or rather v
was taught, that the child had ^
many ages, such as his mental and
his chronological age. There again 1
I was informed that I would be ex- 8
pec ted to teach all these ages, ap- ^
parently dictinct and separately.
After many years of teaching I
have reached the firm' conclusion
that 1 cannot teach anything but
the whole child. And, I am also con
vinced that I cannat teach him thr- ?
ough but one of his thousand and ~
one parts, namely his mind. I can '
reach hjs hands, head, feet, etc.'
only through his mind,, and no
other way!
Moreover, I was taught that I
would be expected to teach the
child hmore than "books.' I later
realized that apparently it meant
teach him a smatterling amount
of everything except how to use
the printed pa"ge. I was informed 1
that-I should teach the child all the "
"social cracoc ' in,l t 1
?- ' *??U| vv? (.atiiijr A J
must teach him the laws of health. During
the time I have been
teaching and attending a multi- ^
tude of. professional meetings, 11constantly
hear again, and that is |
about all I hear, the many parts of)
the child, and that all the parts i i
must be taught. It is certainly not 1
the purpose of this article to j
speak slightly of the foregoing ,
topics in professional courses in .
educational meetings. However, I
am talcing the libetty to list ano- "
ther part of the .child, namely, the
"Economic Child."
I do not recall of seeing in print
of hearing very much said-in my
professional courses in education,
nor at the professional meetings I
attend about the economic child.
of communism Democracy and
Communism as we now know
them, are mutually exclusive and
the sooner we look this fact
squarely in the face, the sooner
"we wttt bF prepared for tho
grave eventualities about to bo
visited upon us. Unfortunately
both communism and democracy
are ways of life, unrelated to
Warfare upon the battle field.
Both are ideologies that atomwarfare
will do little to altar.? But
the die has been cast and
it is Russia's move! What this
country has clone, had to be ftontr *
and what it has said, had to bd
said, and what this contry is proposing
to do, must be done, i f
the mighty case of human freedomis
to be saved for the generations
to come.
. .Unfortunately, the average citizen
only sees democracy as ~
something to be enjoyed, but sel
dom as something to be defended
even at the cost of sweat and
tears and blood. Few ever stop
to think that everything we love
and hold^dear is tear-dreno.iedblood:stained
and sweat-smeared.
Such is the price others have
paid for our lovely land, our
glories liberties and our benign
institutions. - ?
And if it comes our time to
suffer for the things we love
we prcve ourselves traitors and
unworthy if we fail to acquit
-ourselves like men before the
challenge t.hat these grave circumstances
have hurled into the
path of our upward progress.
The situation immediately beforq
us will test our oft-mounted professon
of faith in democracy, and
the concomitants thereof. It ij*
noft too early to account oncq
more the cost of the democracy,
have been wanting to pfRtsa,
? PAiin
Certainly we talk about, of rather
five lip services- to such expreslions
as economic sccurity,~or economic
well-being. But that is about
is far as we go. We apparently
put forth no effort to teach the
:hild how to acquire economic se:urity.
I recently heard a person
tvho is well infortned in maters
lertaining to personal insurance,
luch as life, accident, sickness,
*tc., say that not over five people
nut of every hundred know how to
secure the proper type of personal
insurance. He further pointed out
that it is not taught in our public
school but he thinks it should be.
L concur with him most heartily.
We spend a great deal of time,
for example, in teaching the child
the proper piece if silver to use
for this or that food, forgetting
that in many pases there is no
:hoice for the child to make, for
their is. only one piece of silver.
We teach him all about the laws
>f health, the proper diet, that he
should see Jibe family medical
loctor and dentist at least oije.per
,'ear. We apparently forget that
t takes money to do the " foregoing.
It is my sincere belief that we
ihould spend more time in devis-1
ng ways and means hy which we
nay develop a more ccdnoipicninded
Negro - ways hy which Nerroes
may increase their income
ts well as spending their present
md future income wisely, far more
visely than presently. Thus, while
t'p a'rp snnn/tmof n nr^oot dool nf
inic and energy education the var
ous parts of the child, I heg of
is, implore us, not to forget, and
lways he mindful of the ECONOMIC
CHILD.
?r-T
By J. E. Eleazer, Clemson Exten[RRIOATION
FACTS
Our main need about irrigation.
Tacts. (?
We 'are getting them, from
x>th experiment aand experience.
But we don't have nearly all of
em yet.
At Clemson last year irrigat
ion treatmments on cotton yield*
/arying from 1,300 to 2,163
pounds of seed cotton against 660
pounds where it isn't irrigated.
And on corn the irrigation treatments
made from 69 to 91 bushels
per acre, while that not irrigated
didn't make anything. Soy
beans irrigated made 32,7 bushels
against 7.3 not irrigated. Common
bermuda grass made only .6 of a
ton without water and from 3 to
5 tohs of good hay with irrigatfdn.
And peaches irrigated made
from 4.7 to 6 bushels of large
peaches to the tree. Those right
by these not irrigated made 3.7
bushels of smaller fruit.
?F<?r^~the? past 4 years our Herman
Lynn has placed one of the
portable Camp irrigation outfits
with County agents in the tobacco
section for demonstrations
with this crop. From 1951 to 1951
inclusive, these demonstrations on
farms of that area averaged 1.182
pounds of tobacco per acre on tha
parts of the field not~ irrigated.
The .irrigated narts have averaged
1,557 pounds. This is an average
increase of 365 pounds per acre.
But that does not tell the whole
story of irrigation there. The irrigated
tobacco has also averaged
9.06 cents a pound more. Thus
we have an average increase value
of $280.68 per acre from irrigation
on tobacco for these 4 years.
Some other farmers in tho
heart of the drought area who irrigateed
had even better results
than this. County agent Jackson
of Kingstree tells me that T. 0,
Baxley got a thousand dollar per
acre difference last year. His irrigated
tobacco made 2,498 pounds
per acre and brought $1,607.32.
That not irrigated made 1,398
pounds per acre and brought
$600.36.
Ed Howie of Darlington toll
me irrigation added $600 per acre
to his tobacco in 1954.
Irrigation facts, that's what we
need. And there are cautions too.
We need to observe them. I give
them too here at times. But I
haven't room for -'em here now.
"NOTHING IS WRONG HERE"
Many of our farms and homes
are rather up to date. But director
Watkins says he doubts if any
ftrrm or .home could truthfully
nroLKAP?
hang a sgn out sayii g nothing is
wrong here.
And surely he is right.
There is always room for improvement
in ' this changing world
And often what was the very
thing today is outmoded tomorrow.
It was but last year we were
singing .the merits of Costal Bermuda
grass. And it is still as
good or better than we thought
it was. For that first-year grass
did prodigious things this past
dry summer. Yet Hugh Woodle
tells me there is a new one that
looks even better,-^-specially for
light sandy soils. It is Dr. Burt
on's new strain of Bermuda
grass called Suwanee. Clemson
has a mother patch of it at the
Pontiac Station. From this source
foundation stock is to be fouruished
farmers over the state who
want to produce certified sources
of this for general farm planting.
Yes, in. this progressive, fast
moving world, we can't ever say
"Nothing is. Wrong Here". For
there is always something new
an better; be it a variety, a method,
practice, home convenience,
or what not, Your county and
home agents try to keep you posted
on these things for farm and
HAVE YOU
Winter is fast going. The buds
of spring will soon be breakjtv.
through. Therefore, winter's ta^.
haven't long now to get done.
A few are: . i
Pruning and cleaning up the
orchard; seeding lespedeza on the
that for early grazing, spreading
cornpost on the garden; pruning
and setting . - shrubbery; cleaning
hedge rows and ditch banks, setting
our bicolor lespedeza for
birds, fixing and building fences;
hauling woods straw to stables;
building that farm pond before
"spring work starts; building need
"old ones that need it before crops
get back on the land; and on
and on this couldgo. For really
-there is never a slack season on
the up and hustling farm.
BOYS ARE THAT WAY
I liked to mesc round where
they weFe .making ? . n for the
fall. The only-?treu I was
always afraid of stepping on bees;
and yellow jackets that, swarmed
to mat piacc.
, . They usfcd rich lightwood, that
was plentiful there in the stone
hills, to fire the syrup pan. The
aroma of that syrup* a-cookin'
was delightful. I was always afraid
the pan would run over. But
the skilled cooker knew just how
heavy to punch that fire and just
how to stir it to keep it rolling
but not boil over. If it looked like
it would run over anyway, he'd
grab some raw juice, yell for us
to "scranch your bellies", and
course the foam went down. We
thought the scratching did it.
That fellow didn't have any
thing like a hydrometer to test
the syrup to know when iit was
done. He simply kept stirring and
raising his wood paddle to see
-how it would string off. At first
it wouldn't at all, just drop off
like water. But as it cooked on
and on, it would start stringing
off a bit. An when it would drop
off in strings about 8 inches long
he knew it was rea,dy.
Then the hong was pulled from
the side of the pan and the amber
syrup rplled out into waiting barrels.
Later we got o where we'd
put it into jugs an fruit jars. Seal
ed hot it kept a lot better.
Then for some weeks we sure
-made the biscuits, butter, and
syrup fly. For we had been short
of sweets. The old syiup would
often turn to sugar out next 4?pr?
' ing before the new came n.
|
| ST. JAMES A. M. E. CHURCH
Rev. J. A. Deliaine?I*a>5tor
Service beggn at St. James A
M. E. Sunday morning with the
opening of the S. S. with Supt. Mr
^Gamble teacher and students. Wr
enjoyed the lesson, it was beautifully
taught and discussed. Class
no. 1 won the attendance banher,
no. 3 won financial banner. Our
morning service began at 11:15
a. m. with the pastor on the rostrum
along with Rev. Thomas. Sr.
choir and Gospel choir. 1st hymn
667 L. M. Prayer by Rev. Thomas,
Music by the gospel choir. Scripture
by the pastor, St. John 3-1-11,
Announcements by Mr. Hayes, Meditation
song by the Sr. Choir. Rev
DeLaine came forth and delivered
a soul stirring1 sermon taken from
St. John 3 and part of the 5th verse
using for his theme, Baptized
Of The Water And Of The Spirit.
I am sure that every true child
of God was totiched by this message.
This being the 1st Sunday, a
.Jax*e..nuxntier_look the.-Lord Supper.
Class meeting every 2nd Sunday
asking all members to please
attend.
MILLIONS GOINC
FINANCIAL EFFC
BROOKLYN ?(ANP) The Taragon
Progressive Federal Credit
Union's 14th Annual Public Meeting
gave a picture of how Negroes
throughout the nation are breaking
the hard core of America's financial
empire.Like
in many other cities in the
North and South here great mas-'
ses are competing for a livelihood,
the 250,000 Negroes of Brooklyn
have had their share. It was in
1939 during the depression that
two Brooklyn men, Clarence Medford
and Rufus Murray, bucked_up
against the many discouragements
in financial efforts facing their
ethnic group. They get their cue
from_ a factory-credit union. Sunday
at\the annual meeting at Beth
any Baptist church ~ consequences
of their courageous venture, which
as had many similar examples,
were revealed.
The Credit Union they started
wmi seven memoers ana 9z./O now
has 5,000 members and is pointing
for a goal of $2,000,000 in assets
by 1956. This year the organization
is stressing mortgages (thru
which it is enabling hundreds of
mbers to buy homes) and co
: buying. Present assets of
are more than $1,269,!
. . ij investments throughout
the country and currently paid
$37,106 in dividends. Every year of
Its existence, it has paid 3 per
cent dividend. The' concern has a
modern office iir its own building
covering half block at Brooklyn
Ave., and Pulton St.
Perhaps the most revealing evidence
of the forward march of the
group was given by the speaker the
Rev. Ralph W. Gallettee, past5r~of
'MoQiTt~Hope ATrtcatt Metfio-'
dist Episcopal Zion church oF
White Plains, N. Y..
This pastoi advocated that the I
the spiritual life of its members]
but that it also" has'an obligation
to do something about the material
welfare of the people.
Once a business man and economics
student at Columbus and
Cleveland, Ohio, after a business
failure in the capital city, he went
to Chicago in 1939 during the depression
to find three-fourths of
hie nonnlo am *?nl I1 ~ J -
. ...v> rvv/piv VII ltutt, 1IC IfVCUll'U LU
[more than 1,000 persona present.
[ He told how he studied and entered
[the ministry, meanwhile organsizing
several cooperative stores,
which are thriving. He then went
I to Pittsburgh and from there to
' Springfield, Mass., hut found the
\ real fertile soil for his ideas when
j he took a charge in White Plains.
There he found the response, which
.he said haa definite evidence of a
financial awakening among American
Negroes,
In the fwo and one half- years
he, has been in the richest country
in America, the preacher-business
man has moved the 114-year old
Mount Hope from a hack street,
small building to an imposing edifice
ond Muin St. Where there
w-erc no apartments "for Negroes,
he has led his followers in the acquiring
oftKree cooperative apartment
houses valued at $'170,000. To
help those unable to take shares in
these ventures,, he set-up a credit
union, which now has $250,000 in
assets.
The intrepid minister's congregation
raised $1500 for his expenses
to make a trip to Europe
I to study cooperative housing " in
seven countries.
Besides the cooperative housing,
Rev, Gullette has also organized a
cooperative health center and a cooperative
youth center which serve
all alike.
! !v problem of slum clearance
t ?t of much evil," he said.
' >. to live in the surroundni?o
mat many people arc forced
; to use for abode, I might even bcj
come a criminal in such environments.
Form cooperatives and put
up cooperative housing," he urged.
Another approach to financial
freedom he recommended was for
large groups to invest in the stocks
^ ? ?
ui jaiKt companies and corporations
and to vote their shares in
blocks to*-,bring favorable employment
response from their factories
and stores.
The Rev. Thomas A. Goodal,
host pastor for the meeting presented
evidence that other churches
are doing real financial building.
Bethany, he disclosed, owns
church property valued at $750,000,
including several apartment
building and residences. Atty. William
Staves, officer of the Concord
Baptist Church Credit stated that
it was growing rapidly numerically
and financially.
^ Principal officers of the Paragen
Union arc Dr. St,.Clair Critch
lew, successful dentist, President
Louis J, Warner, churchman, real
; INTO
IRTS OF RACE
. A
ter and Republican Leader of the
6th Assembly District, V. I'.; F.
Levi Lord, an economics major,
Treasurer-Mgr.; Atty. Charles Kel
lar, Rudolph Artlfur and Melvin J.
Sutherland, directors; William Ince,
Credit Comm. Chr.; Atty. Wil1
liam H 'Wiltshire, Superv, Comm.
Chr., and Pagel G Jackson, former
| YMCA business secretary, Pres. of
, the Paragon Progressive Community
Association, Inc., parent
body. CENTERVILLE
A. M. E.
CHURCH
Rev. W. E. Gainey?Pastor
Hartsville?Today was very
rainy and not niany people are out
for service,"Ar short prayer?serv
vice was held by Rev. Frazier. After
this, the pastor stood singing,
"A Charge To Keep I Have." The
pastor lined the 1st hvmn "Am I-A
Soldier Of The Cross," etc. The
scripture was taken from Job 1
second hymn was "My Soul Be On
| Thy Guard." Our pastor's text was
I taken from Job 1-7 "And The
Lord said unto Devil Werice,
Comest Thou?" and the Devil answered
the Lord and said, from
going to and fro in the earth and
from walking up and down in it."
His subject was "The Devil On The
March." Our pastor said the Devil
I will march right along with the
! Christians in the church, to the ofI
fering table, to the Communion
table. He has marched with people
ta the marriage alter, but if Christians
will march in rightousness,
the devil will be detected and
pointed out. It was a masterful
sermon. The spirit was high all
over the church. At the irtvitation,
"0lTfi''jtyhT?d^6ur~^'ufcH' from the M.
Church. Collection was taken
by the Stewards. Communion was
served. The pastor urged us to fin
der's Day Drtfe on the 21st of Feb.
Quarterly "Conference on the 4th
Sunday Feb. at Mt. Calvary.
. . Annie M. McQueen, Rpt.
I MT.~ZION~A.~MrF:. CHURCHRev.
Middleton?Pastor
> Little Mountain?Sunday School
was conducted, with the Supt., Mrs.
Tabe and her worker. Due to the
weather, the group was smalt
Miss Constance White( student at
Allen-University) taught the lessl
on. "The Grace Of God." .Revr Mid
dleton reviewed the lesson.
Following the Sunday School
morning worship began with Miss
White at the piano. Call to worship
by the pastor. 1st hymn No,
34 "Am I A Soldier Of The Cross.'
- Prayer, Seloetion by Misa White
Scripture, St. Mark 14:16:-26. The
Decalogue, Missionary offering
hymn 255 was sung. Yes My Name
1 Is Written There. Rev. Middleton
spoke from the. subject: "The YalI
ley Of Decision." (1) You choose
(2) You will choose, (3) You car
i .choose. Our baarts were made glad
as he i>poek to-us. The, invitatior
was extended by singing, 147, C
For A Closer Walk With r.^x n.
j Lord's Prayer. Offering was lifted
I by Mr. John Gillimoor afterwhjch
1 Communion was served. Meditatior
j al reading was "Take My Life And
Let It He." We sang There Is A
I Fountain Filled With Dlood, And
j it is well with my soul. The Ilcnc1
diction. a
We were happy to have with u>
today, Miss McLaughin, and MiFrank
Taylor. (Both students ol
Allen University).
Mrs. Tabc prepared a lovely dir
nor for the pastor and his guests
Mattie M. Kesler, Rpt
j BUY BONDS
ILEEVY'SFUI
Undertaking and Embalmtna
LADY ASSISTANT
AMBULANCES
ANYTIMP! ?vvurniM..
1- ? & ?Y II I'ifVt
Superior Equipment
Superior Service
?SLOGANJi
O W E R PRICE
No Deserving Poor Refused
1831 TAfiTLOR ST. CO
Saturday, February 12, 1955
MT. PISGAH A. M. E. CHURCH
Rev. R.. II. Williams?Pastor
Sunday School "began at 10:00 o'
clock with the Supt. and teachers
at their post of duty due to bad
rainy weather. It was a good num
her in Sunday School. The lesson
was beautifully taught and discuss
j ed by the various classes. The le.v
I sen was reviewed by Bro. Gaff,,
j Supt. of Bethel Chapel.
I Morning worship began at'11:30
with the Junior Chojr furnishing;
: the music- After th" order of ser- ^ , "
vice by the pastor, a spiritual was;
sung. The pastor took his text
from Psalm 37-3. Trust in the:
Lord.,' and do good. So shall thou
dwell in the land and verily thou
-shalt he fed. T heme: "Trust And?
Thou wTTl"Tie saved.""A wonderTuI
sermon was preached by the pas
tor. Our hearts burned while the
1 man of God spoke. He planted a.
thought in our minds that we have
j to believe and trust the Lord. The ??
i invitation for joiners was extend1
ed, one came,- Mrs. Nettie Elliott
and united with us.
| * This being the first Sunday, the
{'Holy Communion \yas given to a
| large number. Collection was good,
; and quite a few. viators worshiped
I wit h ns.
Mrs. Josephine Bcaty is still in
tUe-Ju.spital. We arc praying for
all the sick and shut-in.
T. J. Rpt.
i PLKASANT HILL BAPTIST
C'Hl'RCH
Ki'V, K. I). Wise? Pastor
Prayer service l^egan at the usual
hour was conducted hy Sis ~
Ophelia Dallas, Sis. Lue Anna
Davis. After the pastor came forth
--singing hymn 391. C. M. Jesus
1 thou art the Sinner's friends. The
Mission offered was taken uj) by
Sis. Levy. Prayer by Dec. Dreher,
Scripture reading by Kev. Johnson,
Prayer by Rev. Gates. After the
"liasfo'r^rese'nfecl the speaker. His
text was taken from Neh. 4:-19
verse, using for his subject, The
Work Is Great At Large. We are
Separator ifpart. Theme: Building
up the broken down place. We can
truly say we heard a wonderful
sermon from the speaker of the
- morning. We are asking the meni- I
hers to pay their assessment for
j the weinner roast that will be spon
i sored-by the Gardner Sisters Satur
j day night asking all members alul
friends to cooperate with them for 4 +
the up huild of the church. Collec*
tion $6&,00 m ~J~_
Sick list. Mother Gardner,
Behuns, Sis Martha White. jy
1 hope fnr thonj ft gpnnrly rnnnw^ \ \
Annie Hendrix, Itpt. _
IHOUR
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DAY
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M DAY
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LUMBIA PHONE 3-7036 I