The palmetto leader. (Columbia, S.C.) 1925-196?, November 05, 1955, Page Page Four, Image 4

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^ hf "'V *' ? ?bt palmetto leaber 1 PUBLISHED WEEKLY 1310 Assembly Street Columbia 20, S. C. Entered at the Pos^ Office at Columbia, St C., -as second class matter by an Act of Congress. " " SUBSCRIPTION , - One year 3.00 fllx Months 2.00 _ Single Copy .10 NOTICE TO ALL SUBSCRIBERS Date of expiration of your sub- aw+ption is stamped on your address wrapper each week. This isKor the purpose of giv- " J" ing you constant notice of the - date your subscription expires, j Postal Regulations Required ( Payment in Advance of All i ~ Subscriptions Yuui papei -.will '? Lbe discontinued after expira-V tion date: , I Thfe Leader will publish brief f.j and rational letters on subjects ei of general interest, when they tc are accompanied by the names tl and addresses, of the authors and are not of & defamatory j, nature. Annymous communi- j 0 cation will' not be noticed. Re;} n jected manuscripts will not be I returned. . s, > GEO. H. HAMPTON, publisher C1 , ' W. R. Bowman, News Editor n J a ^1 REMITTANCE p V Checks, drafts and Postal or Ex- s ? ?press Money Orders-should be -a made payable to the order of J t The Palmetto Leader. | d The Palmetto Leader is not respon-1 sible for advance payments to r carriers, dealers, or distribu- e tors until, the money is re- j ceived at the office of publication. Advance payments for t t subscriptions should be made 1 i direct-to T.lie Palmetto Leader l l ^ or through one of our duly,t s authorized agents. Communications intended for the 1 current issue must be very j < brief and should reach the < editorial - desk not later than 1 Tuesday of each week. i I PHONE 4-9439 < . i Saturday, November 5, 1955 FARM NEWS CURING SWEET POTATOES REQUIRES SOME CAUTION Clemson, Oct. .22,. Many sweet potato growers have already harvested their crop and put them in curing houses while other growers are~!n"'tKiTpr6cMS~or doing this7" Hugh A. Bowers, Clemson extension truck crops specialist, and W. C. Nettles, leader, Clemson Entomology and Plant Disease Extension Work, point out that grow- ' ers should observe certain precautions In curing potatoes. They make the following, brief sugges- _ _ . tions on proper curing methods. ' Curing is a term applied to the process whereby at the beginning of the storage period conditions are provided for quick wound-healing of sweet potatoes. All sweet af nro uiUam 1 pvvavvca ?ic nuuuucu wiicn incy^r ere detached from the vine and 1 handled during harvesting. It is through these small cuts, bruises,. ( end broken ends that decay-produdfc cing organisms gain entrance, and ' it is from these areas that water- [ ^Mr""To83 through evaporation is great- ^ Untjer "proper curfng conditions, the walls of a few layera^giLex- a posed cells in the woun<l~Lecome , W -rthickened and-hardened do-ring the } 7 first 24 to 48 hours - actual and < ( '. complete healing is accomplished^ by the production of several layers' of n?w cells just beneath the, woundetf.area. 'When healing i s f completed, sweet potatoes are pro- , v tected against decay and drying wt 'CurTnff taRes place most rapidly at a temperature between 80 and . ^ _ JM.degrosaFi wound-JiaoUngr^ * ?. ~pr+-?very- slow below 70 degrees F., and ? it practically stops at 60 degrees F. Tb? temperature of the bouse t should be between 80 and 85 de- 1 frees F- when the potatoes are s put in the house, or it should be t raised to this point just as soon as t poslble after the potatoes are put t in. Wound-healing is most rapid at t m relative huniidity of about 90 r k.~~ percent. ^ I Ntfwiy harvested sweet potatoes r gtvebff; considerable water, a n d 11 the jbigAtem is usbally not that of 1 Hi?" Mr sufficiertt moisture I jr. butK providing adequate ventila- I km Jt thai moisture does not col- r potatoes nor in t .h e n This Our Day ?|lp^ ' ?*4?F Ajv# j ^UB>^9h^S 1^?"inn jB ^Tjpm 4 ' By C. A. Chick, Sr. "Of Thee I Sing" ! A ! ".'1 general 'concept of a adard bf living includes various ct? 1 s at'curdlng lu different wiit* s. Tire* ^purpose of this article is ? select tor primary emphasis >e more concrete concepts of ma^rial standards and levels of lrvig and, particularly, actual levels r scales of. consumption by the Aericon people. ' If one takes under consideration uch specific indicators a s per apita incomes, wages, and eonsuler expenditures in both money nd'real terms, the American peole today are in an enviable poition as. to their material stanurd of living. Till* f<iri-;r<dnfr j < rue when one compares the Stanford and or level of living bf the American people with that of peoiles of other countries or comporid to their on situation in t h t >ast. Moreover, it is true not onlj vith regards to what is technical!) ?rmed their standard of living, but t is also true and level to theii evel qf living -and level uf consumption. Statistics compilecUbytho Uiritnr S'ations indicates that the level :on?umption enjoyed by the Am ;rican people is not only highei fhan the average for the rest o bhp world but inconsiderable high er. The average per capita inromi of the people of the United State: is about twice the figure rcportec for Great Britian, three times th< figures for France, and about si: tiui?* thc -pur- capita income - in. -It aly. I' is around seven times tht average for the w<r!.l as a whole And, the American people's great er money income is not off set bj higher prices for subsistence item as compared with real wages ant real income in other countries Fo example, in T952 one pa$scnge automobile was registered )'< ? cacl four persons in the United Stare as compared with one car rb fewtnrty^one^-pornon^?rrr- the -Untfet Kingdom, twenty-six in Franc? and ninety in Italy. l>uring the first half of the pres ent century, Americans more thai doubted ttreir scale of living- in rea income. The foregoing is clea when one takes under eonsidera tion such things as housing, high pr qualities and different types o food, better clotliing, more educa tion, medical care, and recreation Federal government figuers shov that the typical American own; an automobile, a mechanical refri gator, a telephone, a radio, anc ather appliances. Not only is there an abundanc< if material goods in the Unitei States but such goods are widelj Jiffused among the people of th< country. For example, from 193( :o 1950 privately owned passtmgiu :ar registration in the Unitec 10,185,140. From 1933 to 1953 th( lumber.jsf refrigators. in_uss?ros? From 4,500,00 to 39,000,000, th< lumber of washing maohines increased from 8,000,000 - 34,i!00,00( ind the number of vacuum cleanup went up from 9,000,00Q t c 10,300,000. And on an on I conk jo, listing the material well-beinf? >f the people of the United States It follows from the above thai jesjjjLe iter many s.nort comings vc (all the people) should than) itorage room. After curing is completed, th< emperature should be gradually owered to 55 degrees F., and i 1 ihould be maintained as nearly a! ,his level as possible throughoul he storage period. Temperatures is low as 40 to 45 degrees F. must >e avoided. IF * the temperature eaohes 60 degrees F". or above foi irolonged periods, sprouting will esult. High temperature will tikey cause shrivelling and internal ireakdown. Once the sweet potatoes are ilaeed in the house, they should lot be disturbed until they are tc be removed either for marketin God for the United States of America. Moreover, we should lift our voices higher and .higher in 1 singing: "My country, 'tis of thee, Sweet land of liberty, Of thee I sing. Land where my father died! Land of the Pilgrim's pride! From every mountainside, Let freedom ring!" ABOUT BOOKS . BY ANT _ i | "BENEATH THE SOUTHERN CROSS," The Story of An American Bishop's Wife in South Africa, I by CHARLOTTE CHOGMAN WRIGHT, 184 pages, published by Exposition Press, New York, Price $3.50. The civilized world's interest now . centers on South Africa as never before. This book, written by one of America's most scholarly women, centers its interest not on the politics of South Africa, but upon I something far more important and lasting; something absolutely ne-, cessary to be known before "one can understand the present intense and unique political gitnatinn n f that interesting land beneath the Southern Cross; that is the people of Soutl^ Africa, their origin, their languages, their usages, their reli-' gion, their industry, their occupations, their education, their govcrn! ment, the place of their women,., their marriage customs. Particular attention is given by Mrs. Wright to the native doctor the gold mines, the influence o f English, Dutch, Portuguese, French and other European nations. " The book also contains wonderful descriptions of the land itself; I its rivers, valleys, mountains, " /plains, deserts; its flowers, and fruits, the wild and domestic animals and the new agriculture. The. , I book is- sort of a primer to t; h . j understanding of South Africa. / The author discifssed the II sionary work of the Christian de^ j nominations of Europe and Ameri-I ca in their struggle to turn the - -minds of the-Africans from their I native religions - to. .Christianity; j. also the fiercer battle of the Christians to keep their toe held in Africa against fast advancing MeP hammedanism, whose opposition to racial prejudice, gives it an advantage over present day Christa j . . < lanity. . j She describes the rapidly expand % ing work of the African Methodist Episcopal Church, a unique Christian missionary effort initiated by ~ American Negroes for the Christianization of their motherland. She 1 follows the trial of her husband's . missionary endeavors throughout I ' the Union of South Africa into the , s . ' Protectorates of Swaziland. Bech- | unaland, Basutoland, Northern r and Southern Rhodesia, Mozanrbique, Portuguese East Africa. Mrs. Wright also describes the schools and churches and the nar .. ' - , . . . . P1 tive women s missionary ^oyypties, 4 young people's leagues, and the ' different annual conferences. She gives an insight into the unique inter-racial situation in South r\ j Africa wher<> three groups; t-h_eblacks (Bantu or native) the whites (Europenas) the coloured (Asiatic or mixed) present a far ? more complex problem than that to which we are accustomed i n our country. Mrs. Wright's book takes on a new and increased value from the I fact that she lived in Africa long- . ' er than any Negro American writer; that she traveled over 100, 000 miles within that territory' and j that hers is one of the very few books which gives the story o f South Africa from the point o f j view of an American Negro. I n fact very few American Negroes j~ have been permitted to live in South Africa more than six months! ? "BeneaTfT'lheT Southern Cross"" r ..contains ten chapters and might ^"esrstty~he inred as a text book~fof~ Miasion S^udy . cLaases^ Its lan^ guage is simple, easily understood , and many of its descriptions and illustrations are superb. I The author is the daughter of tne late lJr. W. H. Crogman, distinguished classical scholar and ' once president of Clark college, i Atlanta, Ga. Before marriage she ' won the M. A. degree and taught college Latin and Greek. She traStates, in Europe, Africa, South 1 America and the West Indies. Her ' husband, Bishop H. R. Wright, the holder of two degrees from the University' of Chicago, and Ph.D. from the University of Pennsyli J vania, is vice senior bishop of the i l African Methodist Episcopal ! I church, and editor (with his wife's assistance) of the Encyclopedia of I African Methodist Episcopal Church end many other publicaI tions. BUY BONDS t. r, 1 THE PALME! Farms and Folks By J. M. Eleazer 1 IT RAINED: n After four dry years, Chester lilfe most other counties, can sing a cheerful tune again. Listen to County'"Agent Wylie: 1 "Chester county, will reach a a new high this year in the-amount v of roughage put up for livestock 0 feed. Quite a few farmers havtf" ^ dug trench silos to take care of * excess grazing and silage crops. * Hay crops are good too due to the a good season." The old story! . a The average farmer has t h e c know-how for making good yields 1 AmtL he ran make Jemr yes, If Ho - No wonder there is widespread interest in irrigation: Survey care- v fully, folks, for an adequate water t source first. Finding that, you are 1 -mt4y to-4)mva. Qthorwise, irriga. J tion is not for you yet. Our extension engineeJ* and your SCS 1 technician can help you determine!' yuui piuspcct. 7 HARDY THINGS 1 The hard freeze on the night of 0 March 21, and those that followed v for several nights, gave us an idea s of the more hardy things, in t h e ? yard. This can be used as a sort ' -of guide for future plantings. In your yard I observed these ^ things: t1 Our large cape cesmine or gardenia was completely defoliated and died back to the ground. No blooms at all this year, but it has sprouted out,- from near the'1 ground and is a nice bush again 11 now. - 15 Leaves of hollyhock killed. But ^ they came back and it bloomed c normally. c< Violets were not hurt nor s pansies. Tea and semi-climbing loses singed hack and bloom buds killed. Very few blooms from ? secondary shoots that came .out. Dmothy?Perkins- rambler in full leuf, nor hurt, and later bloomed "jnu'fusefy. 4 ' ? ?? Sweet peas killed back-ta-ground. But sprouted out and bloomed ^ well. Neither lilac blooms nor/ leaves Kurt. And tulips in bloom were not hurt.- Cut away dying w branches all season. New growth n looks healthy now. . c Tea olive and banana shrub se- 0 verely damaged, much dead wood v cut out along during summer as it ? showed up, no blooms, but !~lhey' ^ recovered and made good~~neW growth in late summer. Tea-olive ^ bloomed in fall. " ^ Breath-af-spring not hurt at bll v and continued blooming normally. e Shassta daisies killed hack, hut " new bloom buds came an*d pretty flowers resulted. Iris singed hut bloomed and hearts-ease not hurt even though in full bloom. Japan- a ese "magholia defoliated, but not 11 otherwise -hu-rX- .No- .blooms, Snow-. JS bal^ui bud, not hurt. ^ Large flowering pomegranates n were in almost full leaf, kjlled to c the ground, but came out vigorous- . -ly. Pink spirasa killed completely. yc Camellia and azalea bushes 1 strangely not hurt but flower buds k all killed. Sasanquas not hurt a t c all. 1 WHEAT As with most things, wheat have been greatly improved in recent years. And a lot of disease resTstance has been bred into them.' Good yields of wheat are not uncommon now in all parts of the state. I've even seen- it in sight of the ocean in our coastal country. With the old wheats that wasn't possible. There are severaLfif .these rather new 'wheats. Your county agent can tell you the ones best suited to your area. Certified seed o f them all are availahleraccording to Bob Garrison, our better seed man. Recommended varieties aret Anderson, Coker 42-27,-- Taylor, _ Coastal and Atlas. November is the time to plant wheat here. Clemson recommends 400 to GOO pounds of complete fertilizer nnrlcr it orwl a K,,aV.nl a half of treated seed per acre 1 drilled in on firm seedbed.' Then 30 to 50 pounds of nitrogen per acre should be applied in the _sprtnji, who m g vo w t hjicg I h s. ~ ~ SETTING TREES AND SHRUBS .The best time to set trees and shrubs that shed their leaves i s any time after fVost^rvocks them off. The sooner the better then. They can be transplanted on out into late winter. But early set onek tend to live and grow o f f | better, as they have the dormant winter season ahead to get firmly established in the ground. Evergreens are a bit different. They can be reset any time after frost too. But later plantings of them usually do better, out in late winter and very early spring, just before growth starts. ' 17 " { v TO LEADER IOY*S AtlE THAT WAY The blacksmith shop, at t h e J not of the hill below our house in I he- Stone Hills, carries- many -me- | lories. There I played much as a id, watched the sparks fly, and eard the men talk politics. One of the big jobs there was | he building and repair of buggy nd wagon wheels. The flinty rocks /ere not long in wearing steel tires ut. They would be shrunk and ightened?on?the rims several imes during their life. But when hey got just too thin for further ise, they were discarded. The ilacksmrth saved most o f them is strap ilon for varied uses. But iceasionally one was so worn a s o be useless for this. And these Vfefe the rare ones we~got. W e >rized t,hem highly. Every boy had his old buggy or vagon tire. As we grew up w e ;-rndii?ted from the light buggy ire to the heavier wagon one Ve would roll them for endless lours. A short stick held against t pushed it along, and we'd run ong distance with it. Unless w e vatched close and were skilled at t, that turning tire would drift ver and skin the side of our hand yith its frayed edge. But after a tick was used a long time, a ;roove was worn ,in it. That kept he tire from drifting over a n d!. utting the side of the hand. I on't know why we never thought o cut a notch in the stick for hat same purpose. But maybe we hought that would be sissy, we'd I ake the chance. As we'd go running down the oad or path, pushing our tire, j nagination ran riot and we imained it was a lushing luiuniutivc, I elching smoke, fire, steam, and inders from every seam. W e ould guide it perfectly with that tick. But sometimes it would out-1 un us^down the steeper hills and ake off down .through the .wood's r field. Yes, toys were few then. But re kids of_ the stone hills made urs. f roni-th^ tki?>gs--tbFatf4ay- a-^ ound. . j o a 'INE GROVE A. M. E. CHURCH Rev. C. R. Hawthrone, Pastor I S. S. was held at its usual hour, j rith Supt., officers, and a large j umber of scholars present. Each | lass.'had a wonderful discussion j f the lesson. Then a brief review | fas had. Then at 2 P. M. the Calcnda!lub had a wonderful program and ighjy represented by members, orn. in the said month, but one, fhich was July was not representd. A wonderful time was enjoye i y all. Sum of $160.00 was raised. On last Sunday Oct. 23rd, the tig Sisters Club sponsored a,Baby lontest. That was also an enjoyble time. A sum of money raised n this contest was $229.00 which ,'as sponsored by the Big Sisters Hub. The Big Sisters Club also domted $50.00 more to this great ause. We as members of this .said ifv our church inside. The Big listers Club is a live wire in the hurch and community, always tryng to bring sunshine along ad ines where they are needed. Subscribe For TL? D~1 u i tic i cuiiieuu Leader Worthwlv1 * B ^ msm. -*"w . raaiug . . . fa^ySurwhQTe fomi i _iii ihe world-famous pages of The Chnstior> Science Monitor. Enjoy Erwin D Canham's newest stories, penetrating notionol and international news coverage, how-to-do features, homemaking ideas. Every' issue brings you helpful easy-to read articles. you con get this interno' Boston by~ merit,- without extro chorge. Use the coupon below to start your subscription. The Christian Science Monitor One. Norway Street _ Boston 15. Mass.* U. S. A. Pteose send the Monitor to me for period checked. 1 yeor $16 6 months $8 Q 3 months $4 Q Inome) (oddreul (city) (tone) UtaM) PB-J4 | n THE PULP! \ By Rev. Hamilton T. Bos well ANP~~ MAKING PRAYER A COMMON ' PRACTICE The apolegetic words of t h e dinner chairman kept ringing in ! the mind of the Rev. Mr. ..Very I Good, as he "drove ^the^ monetonous ! miles back to the city. "Excuse the oversight, Reverend, when the dinner started, I did no see you, so I culled on a layman to pray. , AVe . feel.. so- much better thouah when you pray." It was very strange that he I could not shale those words from I ,-his. mind. After all, he reasoned. he actually disliked being called -Off to-i>ray, 'imperially at ilinnup, _ i Somehow, this duty when thrust I upon him in public ^affected his | indigestion, and truly he was 'glad that the chairman had not rsecn-hTm?as-he-Vtrrposefully took-j u seat in the rear of the dining ! room. There was something in the j apology, however, which disturbed him greatly. fHe know that the words were , spoken with a deep sincerity, foi^ the good man who .was chairman I always showed a proper respect j for religion, and every clergyman , I in town spoke highly of his efforts ! when anti-clericalism is on t h e | ljise, it is good to have such well meant recognition of men of the doth. 0 ~ . The Rev. Mr. Very. Clood smiled! with a deep sigh of satisfaction. I ^ lie was always called on by clubs I , and other groups to give invoca- j| tions at their meetings. He felt | ' inwardly that he was recognized, I . not only by the church but by the j community, and as such thjs was | a good feeling. Hut why did this peculiar event,, tonight, leave him j ""With no peace, as the thought coninually raced across his conscious ' mind, "Excuse me.. J^lid not see i,,ayj"..... . * ! ' ( - As finally, the traffic iiegan to 1 lessen, and he drove with decreas- ' ing tension, the question in his ' mind began to unfold. The experi- 1 eince at the dinner was but ' a' ( symptom of what happening t o j 1 the practice of religion in t h i s j'' day. Religion and most of i t ? 1 means are becoming over profess-' iorralized. Increasingly is the cry, 1 "Let the nreachei* it* nfim* nil ' ? I I he is trained and can do the job more expertly. i This is the spill-over from other | fields of knowledge. To be sure if j a person is sick, call the doctor. { He is a specialist, and long ago j people quit practicing bheirr own j j medification. If your car is in need < of repair, the average man will ] j call a mechanic, for seemingly we J cannot make the simple repairs j which many auto owners were 1 < capable nf--dT)ing"a-,few yi'ar?~;rgn~H The television industry, more brus | que than other,fields of industry, j warm television?owners, not to j tamper with the inner mechanisms [ j of a television" set.. Television re-]) pair is a specialty^ let the televis- i; ion expert dp it. IJ There is much to be said f o r ' | specialization, and even though the i "do it yourself" fad is currently in i vogue, there are many areas of our ij life in whioh we must have the: specialist, because of the intrica- j cies of our growing knowledge. j Yes, this was why the Rev. Mr. Very Good had <sensed something j amiss in the well meant statement J by the dinner "chairman; "The ~fulf|{ force of his exception came forth, Religion will cease to exist i fj< its function becomes simply ^t h e j ^ the Rev. Mr. Very Good understood \ diu^a*--a--duopo?tng---H**ight--of his -* calling as a servant of the Myst 5 F'frh GViiI r ~ 3 Religion must have a priesthood, but" he reasoned that the professional priest also has the re-1 \ sponsibility, not only ty practice | i for the people, but more, to teach I > people to practice religion them-! selves. The minister is a teacher of . religion, and his joy is evident in ' the "6ffg<navenc!is -of his WrrhtTTifrj l In the fullness of his evangelical faith, he reaffirmed, every man j has a ministry to serve God for 1 He remembered the prayer,,i , prayed by the laymen. It was not ' as formal, or sensitive in ?<!?, ? I ------- --- ?* "?- I tion as he might have prayed. The 1 prayer was simple, direct, sincere -j .even, in its. awkardness. That lay- j man, however, wqs practicing reli- I gion and he knew that if more laymen were encouraged to offer prayers publicly then so many , more might be led to take prayer J seriopsly. Reaching home at last, he drove | his car into the garage, and sis he locked the doors and turned t o |j enter his house, he said mischievi- ( ously to himself, "The next t i m v I ' " IT VOICE that chairman calls on me to pray, I ~shatt" courteously insist, that- Iw DO IT HIMSELF." - " I ST. JAMES- A. M. E. CHURCH Rev. K. William Judge, Pastor Our last Quarterly Conference? A call for loyal, soldierscomes to ! one and all; soldiers for the conflict, will you .heed the call, will you answer quickly with a ready I cheer. .A volunteer for Jesus. Wonderful Sunday School o n time with our faithful Supt. and his full cabinet officers, teachers and seven classes entering a brief discussion of the topic: "Jesus Proclaim His Mission." As each and?every?one has a mission?k4each follow the perfect pattern of Jesus the Author and finisher of every good and perfect gift. Every one seem to enjoy this wonderful i lesson? Well represented. Secretary j report Adults ? Finance Banner. : Primary ? Attendance. Encourage the children to attend S. S. some where every Sunday. All visitors are perfectly welcome to join us hi rmiiuii}' oenooi. Koin olil ami younK. Service on time. Beautiful music by Master Jim Davis Holmes ami, the Senior choir. Join in the spi- ; ritual?A C-'.har^e to Keep T Have,1 A Clod to .(Horify. A soul, stirrinir prayer-by tiro. B. T. Johnson.] Beautiful introductory by our beloved pastor. Scripture text by Rev.. Massey - "The First Psalm, i Hear ye the words of the Lord. I The little plant bt;d children ami .heir mother presented their tWdd- ' ?n deeds, every one doinjf Jiis very j best and as the saVior tells us He'll" always do the rest. These child- j ren of today are our church jleople of tomorrow. Be careful and | train them in the way they should : ?P. At this time our P. R. dlnyer, 'irst. complimented our po-Unr'-j heefful took and a,t ease and sjiiit of which we as members are1 .hankful. At this point our Rider rook'.his. text from'I John 23rd rerse. "He said, 1 bun the voice jf one cryi'nj? in t|ie wdderness, ! make straight the.way of the Lord is said the prophet Rsaias:" Listen. leorii nnil ,.1............ ' 11 , ....... ...... vu lih* messed words of the Lord. Acknowledge, nod tell the glad tidings of Jesus the matchless son of (Jod.Tlie fire ran high in the saints hearts as 5^?^^o.aoo.o6.o66oddooo:o^c 1 Fuller Normal In 3 ' ?)01 Andei !5 Creenville, S< | . -1912.; A''ViMvatd^eli'n'ol For lid Wholesome Training in DOUMITORY OPEN FOR ( 8? TWELVE Y 8 8 VERY MODER $ 8 For further information, PI g ' MRS. L. g BISHOP ! L_ COLUMBIA 1 AND DRY CLE i One day serv BRANCHES: -3412 MA1N-S3U- 112 MA! _ TELICPHON & 2-2147 LEEVY'SFUN Undertaking and Embalming . . LADY ASSISTANT AMBULANCES ANVTIMB ? ..??? iui i nncKK Superior Equipment Superior Service ?8LOGAN? LOWER PRICES N? Deserving Poor Refused 1831 TAYLOR ST. COl _ Saturday, November 5, 1955 I they listened to the blessed word ot the hord. I1, fci. (rlever in- tho | name of our blessed Redeemer, > just keep on preaching the unadulted gospel to the saints. Keep on preaching. ' Our group still working with a will. The Sunday School Social very good. Thanks to the president of the school for being -so nice to allow your every day^phildTcn and " .ouv''Sunday School to use . your Lst-faool. I4'of1-working together is the way. In unity we always have strength. , j Today the Usher Hoards showI ed their colors. We are proud of you all. We /must thank Rev. Mas soy f.or spending t!ie idle Sunday with us in Sunday School. His remarks to the Sunday. School and church were both filled with the 1 thoughts of interest. | The lmryer for the sick and shut i in, both members and friends are | still living presented to our HeaV} only father. We nave ail enjoyed a working ! year with our pastor and his saint- : ed wife.) ami will not'f be satisfied untilnnT our work marks one hundred. Our presidinng Rider met us with a smile ami left with a smile. May the Heavenly Father bless every one. March on Mrs. M. L. it. Jenkins, Rpt. Will Pay 2c FOR lc FOR ALL Indian Head Pennies PHONE ? ?a:o.oooo<r<5>j^oO':>o<.'C?oooo<?^oi A. B. C. Furniture Co, IM'JW & I'SKl) FURN ITU RE no U( IT IT AND SOLD 11 Hi 1IAKDKN STKKKT ? Columbia, S. C. OZXOXf.O.OOO o o o oOOOOOO O O O O 0?P Dsa PjyuljHSL Dr. Green Compound or Cigarettes >:O OO OOO.O O.O OO O OO OOO 00 ?>t>G <sot dustrial Institute 1 son Road S uith Carolina ?. a .1955 I ? ys and Girls Who Desire 8 a Christian Atmosphere 8 ilKLS AND HOYS ABOVE jjj KARS-OIAr gj ATE EXPENSE I lease write: 8 B. MOOKE, Principal g \V. K. FVLI.EK, President g ^oooo:o:oo:ooooooooooo'0"0'o<?so LAUNDRY - S :aning corp- I ice if desirpri ? * B ^N frF; IttOT TAYLUK ST. J \ ' COLUMBIA 1. 3. C. ? fOpOOX>OOOOCH>f>0"00 OCrcO80S8!?)C9 IERALHOME " I I Jlfa I ^ S. T/W?y, Mir. IA IMBIA I?HONE 3-7036 1 ?