The palmetto leader. (Columbia, S.C.) 1925-196?, November 12, 1955, Page Page Seven, Image 7
| BatuidayH**"12, 1T>r?r?
PERSONAL MENTION
% Pvt. Wade Long, of this city,
j has returned to over seas duty ! J
) $ after spending 28 days hero with l
"|j his wife and little son,, : , , *
\ Mrs. Long, the, former Mrs. |
Addie Mae Myersj, will remain in
Columbia with her grand-mother
I at 929 Oak St. until he returns.
( 3 Both Mr. and Mrs. Lang attend.
a ed Booker T. Washington High
School.
i 1
'{ Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Celebrates 1st
Wedding Anniversary
Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Lloyd of ?
' G-5 Allen?Benedict Court eeleVirafnS
ftlpir first Wfutftirirr A?,?i_
^ ? l?VVU V..V.. .. 1
versary on iMonday October 31.
Mrg. Lloyd is the former Ruth
/ I Summers and the daughter of
Mrs. Maynie Summers of this
city. Mr. Lloyd is the son of Mr,
and Mis. Wlillie Lloyd of Edgcfield,'
srfr "
ELKS NEWS ??
Palmetto'Lodge regular meeting,
will be the third Tuesday night in
November 8:00 P. M. Elks Rest. A
joint meeting of the Bills and
Daughters. The Bills first meeting j
of the month will be the first Wed. i ]
night in every month. Second [t
meeting* third Tuesday night in M
< every month. j <
Primrose Temple 611. Prayerjrn
go out to the family of Dt. Julia
" Brown of Batesburg and Columbia i
who passed during the past week.'
The public is ask to come out to <
7 the Rest any nig-ht during the foot- j
ball season. Also the dining room i
. is now open for service.
Primrose Temple is having Jack ,
? - Pot night every. Thursday night 8
P. M. Elks Rest.
Eureka Club
News
' . I
The Eureka Club of Florence, S. j j
C. began its 1955-5(1 year of acti J ,
vities the 4th Monday in Soj>t. with ,
*\ ?,a meeting at the home of the pre- i
sident, Mrs. Daisy H. Byailey, 412 (
N. (Jolt St. ]
Plans were made for the Annual
' Harvest Festival at Wilkinson (
Home in Cayce, S. C., an 6rphan ! \
J home for colored girls.
I 0^ Saturday Oct. 8; a delegation J
consisting of Mrs. Iola Jones, Mrs. s
Juanita Lawrence, Mrs. Yashti 1
Vergil mil Mrs Tva Mae McQueen . ^
made the pilgrimage to the Ho?fe I t
carrying gifts of food, bed linen !
and a cash donation for the girls, i c
The attendance and reports from I *
the various Federated Clubs of the 1
State were very good and bespoke
the interest andf zeal the women > *
of the State have for this worthy i 1
project.
On the Fourth Monday in Oct., | 1
the Clul> met with Mrs. Dora H. J *
Thompson, 409 N. Chase St., Mr'sfH
Bralley presiding. Tin- delegation "
to the Harvest Festival gave an in- | "
teresting and informative report of.j?.
that meeting. A substantial dona- i ,
tion was made to Florence's United |
' Fund drive.
: With?much- regret the club rc-^|
ceived the resignation of Mrs.
Braily who has served as president
faithfully and successfully
for two years. The following offi- f
ccrs were elected. I (
Pres., Mrs. Iola Jones; Vice Pre- | s
sident, Mrs. . Juanita Lawrence; 1 p
Sec., Mrs. Iva Mae McQueory Ast.J "
sisting Sec., Mrs. Va.shti Vergil; "p"
Treas. Mrs. Aletha Williams;' Cha- ;
V plain Mrs. Dora H. Thompson.
In preparation for our Christ- t
mas activities (gifts to cripple c
^ Children's Home, Saniiarloum add j (.
^ other needy persons). Eprcka is' a
"sponsoring ~a Tiny Tot Contestd-h
which will end Nov. 28., All friends v
are urged to help in this effort. 0
' Help Eureka "Lift as we Climb." | o
v !C
ALPHA KAPPA ALPHA SOROtf-j
ITY PRESENTS SHIVARM j r
Sh varni, the famous temple dan- 11
. car, of India now on 4ds?second f-h
transcontinental highly successful
JL'SA tour, hegan.hts training.a t ; v
six years of age-an extraordinary, j n
and exacting, rigorous f'2-year ap I v
... prenticeni^ntj lynuired of all Kat- 1
j Every morning at 11:00 a. m. du- 2
ring the six mbnths rainy sntrsoir, he
rose and sat in the dark facing
the bright glare on an oil lamp. I
Then for two solid hours he exor-1
cised his eyes, lubrication them in- j I
. side with clarified butter, rolling (
them, controlling them, darting 1
them this way and that, and;
swinging them in figures-of eight j
? Learning to be a temple dancer | t
; , was a 14 hour a day business, in- i
ji eluding the 700 symbolic gestures !
(each accompanied by special face- I
jp- expression) complicated "drumlanguage,"*
the meaning of Sanskirt I
songs for the U0 all night San- I
;i skirt dace dreams, and the roles I
-Lot all the characters in all t h e a e 1
National President (
Association Of Colli
Io Speak Here
li^fl
i ' I
MB
MK
i ^ ; . >
On November 12, the camptis of <
l>enedict College will tic the scene 1
if the South Eastern Regional .Conference
of the N'ational Asso- f
nation- of College Women. This 1
region comprises?Hie states o f ~i
Virginia and North ? mnl -Soulh <
Carolina. The. Columbia Hraneh, i
which is serving as hosSt, is t h e u
only branch in the state, therefore; .1
this will lie the first time for "such
a meeting in South Carolina; <
Foremost in the activities of tly J
[lay wiU l?e a luncheon with MrcsT 1
Thelma Taylor Williams, National ! 1
President, as truest speaker.? Mrs. 1
Willituns comes to us from Chicago
Illinois. At present she is employ- i
ed as librarian at the St. Eliza- '
berth's Hospital School of Nursing.
She is a member of-the Women's '
?if the ChicitL'o Conference 1
of' Christian and Jews, a chattel <
member of thc\\ omen'^-Auxiliary
jf the United Charities, for four i
fears a member of the Reviewing <
Committee of tlie Child On re A gen- 1
ies of the Chicago Community, 1
Fund, Special Libraries, Secretary Iramas.
During the hot, dry six 1
Months, the hoys dancetj -all night ]
n heavy wooden head dresses, and 1 t
.'oluminous, starched classical (
skirts, slept under a.tree next day,, t
received, meals anyone rupee, and i
valked sometimes seventen' miles t
h" the next place uf performance?>
.Shivarm is accompanied hy a n ' s
xcellent female dunce-partner, & J"\
diss Louise Lightfoot aut'horitrtive \
larrator of the program. <
The USA tour is arranged 1? y i|
dichael Podoli well-kno\wi Concert t
nanagement of New York Ci-ty, 1
Shivarm and his assisting art- i
sts will appear in Columbia o n t
donday, Nov. 14, 1955 lit Allen i
tmveesi-tv. This will he . Ulto?only- J
lUnearance of these famous artist
icre. . f
^ i
Cancer Society, S.1;
Z. Division News
The Richland County unit, of the J (
Society with Dr. C. J. Johnson, Jr. i
'hairman. wishes to thank all per- r
ons who helped to make the cam mi'Kn
in the great fig1\t again.^t '
Cancer," a success. We are <ri:at;> v
Til to all who part impale, in llie , *'
I i - ^ W
The need for concerted effort on [ 1
he part of citizens to assist i n j
ombatin.it the dreadful disease
" . |
re many ways we can assist in
relping this wort++y cause.- In any - .ay
that we assist, we feel that
ur efforts are directed toward a '
ommon goal, the < fighting o f ,
lancer.
We cannot stop now, but must
, I ?
e-dedieate our .services, to help [ *
hose who are in need. We need
riany volunteers to assist in var-1 ^
aus - activ.il ies? ??:?
"We are nskiiijj all persons who > b
rorkM with us last year and all
thers who will volunteer in this p
worthy cause to meet with us, e
'hursday ni^ht, Xovemher 17, jh
500 Klmwood Ave, Crntcr^S
? j-Tb??kin>r you acrain, j li
Very truly yours, It
C. J. Johnson, Jr. j t
j <
OTA PHI LAM HI)A SONORITY >'
)HSEKVES AMERICAN EIHCA-j
riON M EEK ?1' . a
|l
Iota Phi Lambda SoroVitrp is |>ar-1 1
icipa tir?K hi t.he observance o f ; c
\merican Education Week from , J
November (V?12. This is one of the I
Sorority's national observances. 1
VIrs. Audre>c?Lucilc. Reynolds of >
Los Antreles California newly elect- I
:ed National Director of Education,
las presented the national theme
?or the week, SCHOOLS, YOUR
Df National
ege Women
,
B t '". ' " \ ' '
V
>f Kenwood Block Association,
iVinner pf? Northwestern University
Award (Second Honor in the
'ield.of hook reviewing), a mumic.r
of the Alpha Kappa Alpha Socn
ity, a freqent -ttn4ewer for-lhe?
"hieago Daily New^-ami-a-iutmer .
nomher of the Educational Comnittee
of the Commission on Hunan
Relations in Chicago.
The activities of the day will he
entered around the theme "Our
Responsibility for Establishing Total
Democracy in Human Relations
through Moral and Spiritual Vat-*
iies, FTducaTTofial Institutions, Go/ernmentah
Policies, Practices arid
Economic Efficiency." This theme,
will he carried out in a paifel consisting'
of Miss Trudell \V. \V*m.ush
of South Carolina State Col'W
Mi-; Everotta S. Rutherford
>f Benedict College, Mrs. Thcadore
I. t.edeen, formpr Executive Sec-?
etary of the Young Women'^
i<in A oonnio t irtir r*?\.l
iVendell Russell of Benedict Colege.
The panel will begin at 9:30 ,
M. in llenedict's Library.
;NVKSTMENT IN~A.MERIcX
Throughout the week, the nearly
linety chapters of the sorority are
ronsidering tliis investment from
be standpoint'Of character build,
g, teachers, classrooms, fundamen- j
aj learning,, better living, and a
troug niltinn, wirh special cmoha
>is on Saturday^ topic VYp.ur In- j
'estmerit is Your Responsibility."
.Founded in 1929, Iota Phi Lamb- f
la Sorority has as its objectives, to
iromote interest in business edu
ation among high school and col- j
ege girls and to encourage higher
'duration among its members; and'!
o provide national scholarships '
innually for students interested in
nrthei ing their business education, j
American Education Week there- >
'ore, has special significence for !
his august body.
Mrs. Marion E. .Jackson of Wash- j
ngtpn, D. C. is starting he*- second
ear as.national president and has j
is her ablf assistants in vice pre- |
udendtes, Mrs. Florence M. HHhof f
Philadelphia and Mrs. Ethel K.
rteen of Washington, D. C.
.M-IWS FLASH
Announcing the greatest, fun I
lacked, exciting and profitable-e- j
flit of the year.
!'l)o I'.i ttVel Ha/aar, Nov. 1<>. H)5fi
ethel~A~?M. K. Church, Corner of
"ayfibr and Sumter SlfeeT^rf^
T!iere will ho ten colorful booths
fferine: the most unusual aprons,
omennide cundv. holiday .decoraions,
potted plants, costume jewlery,
hand^rchiefs, foods, white j
lephant article, hot dogs urei
rinks. The hi^r surprise will h ei
uv fortune'teller from the land of
Sunshine, and Fruit."
'You can not afford to miss this.
! Come' Early ! ! ?Time 7 p. m.
IcCOl.L NEWS ,
Services were Very irood Sunduy
o all the surrounding churches.
At Heaver Dam our beloved
astor. J^v. W. G. McFad.v deliverd
a wonderful sermon, which was
ighly enjoyed. This was the first
urn in u from the association a n d{
iC.'SUiMfc -did preach like a new
irearher. Attendance was good ancT
he school was carried out by.our
5upt. Rev. W. M. Gibs'bn. Amount
aised in today's servhMT"$35.50
There .was a program rendered
it Fair Plains Sunday night, enitled
Rainbow; Wedding. This was
.eautifully carried out and enjoy d
by all.
diss 11 a 11 i A K. Ashe, Mrs. Lucjle
''ipkin and little daughter, Mary
delen and Mr. Garfield Morrison
ipent the week-end in Washington,
[). C. They report a pleasant trip.
Our sick friends are: Mr. John
Dee Murphy, Mr. Henry Davis and
Flizer Parker.
-.THB PAT.MWT
Southeastern Regie
Beta Sorority To
-The Southeastern Region of
Zeta Thi Beta Sorority will meet
at Fort Valley College, Fort Valley,
Georgia on Thanksgiving week
end, November 25-2(5. Beta Rho
Zeta Chapter, Fort Valley College
will hostess the conference. Mrs.
Grace Walker Phillips, Regional"
Director Announces the Highlights
of the Program.
The meeting will open on Friday 1.
November 25, at 11:00 A. M. with
the undergraduate Chapter o f
Fort Valley College conducting the
call to worship. .Mrs. Harriet Ta- bor,
Regional Marshal will welcome
the conference followed by response
from Mrs. Irene Matthews,
Associate Regional Director Tom
Florida A. and M. University. The
Regional Secretary will call t h e
roll of all Zeta Chapters in Florida.
Georgia, and South Carolina.
Following the presentation of the
National Officers and delegates.
Delta Beta Chapter will hold a
Fop Son Session. Farm Workshop
groups will he set up: Mrs. Lueile
Coleman, Past Regional Directoi
!)d Principal of Forest Park
iiool in Jacksonville, Florida will
conduct the Workship on "Organization
and Planning Procedure for
-a Regional Meeting,"- Mrs^Alethia
AVorthy, Instructor and Sorority
sponsor at Claflin College, Orangeburg,
-South Carolina will direct
the Undergraduate Workshop "Zqta
Responsibility on College Campuses,"
.
Mrs. Alpha Moore,' Past Nation-"
al Officer and Choral Director of
a Vocal group in Florida, who recently
toured "in Europe, will con
duet t.he Leadership Workshop for
all Chapter Presidents in the Regions.
Mrs* Susie Simmons, Region
al Project Director from Charleston,
South Carolina will hold a
workshop on "Strengthenning ^he
Program of/ Zeta's Project-Fight
ing Juvenile Delinquency."
Recorders for the Workshops
will -rump frnni Chnptpys m Atlan
ta, Georgia, Columbia, South Caroliha,
Albatiy Georgia, Spartanburg,
South Carolina. Consultants will
bo Dr. Deborah Partridge, Cranford,
New Jersey; Mrs. Anita
Stripling, Savannah Georgia; Mrs.
Irene Matthews, Tallahasee, Florida;
Mrs. Grace Phillips, Spartanburg,
South Carolina; Mrs. Ozera
Wysinger Johnson, Supervisor of
Schools in Florida and Blue Revue
Director for Zeta, has compiled the
History of the Regionand will enlighten
the delegates. During the
afternoon of the first day, State
Dinner Meetings will be held with
State Directors presiding.
The Public Meeting will be held
at Trinity Baptist Church where
Dr. Deborah Partridge, Grand Basileus
and Professor at Queen's
College will be guest Speaker. On
Saturday morning a Memorial Ser^
vice will be held for all deceased
Zetas and Sigmas within the last
year. A panel on The Theme: Zeta's
Three R's to Youth-Responsibilit
ies, Resolutions, and Resources,"
will be presented by Chapter representatives
from Palmetto, Florida;
Plant City, Florida; Florida
A. and M. University; Greenville,
South Carolina, Savannah^ State
College, Albany, Georgia; Sumter
South Carolina; Tampa, Florida;
Gainesville, Florida; Fort Valley
ucorgia and Alien university, Columbia.
South Carolina.*
L At, the Public Meeting,.
Thetd Zeta Chapter from Savannah
will present a Vocal ensemble i n
song: President C. V. Troup o f
Fort Valley College will also present
the Zeta-Sigma Vocal ensem
bit* of Georgia and Tommye Ames I
will iie soloist f6r the occasion. Musical
Selections from Florida and
South Carolina will be rendered at 1
the regular sessions. 1
Special Courtesies will include
t.he Pan-Hellenic Dance given b y <
all Greeks of Fort Valley, Georgia
on Saturday night* Soiree ior_ Jill J
Grpeks and delegates to get acquainted
prior to the Dance. On Fri- ;
day night following the" Public pro
gram a reception will be held. The I
Zeta Closed banquet will be featured
in the College Dining Room.
Coffee and Doughnut hours, co-ca
- Ola si^s and private house parties
witl be other features of hospitalitV.
. ' "I
Approximately forty Chapters
(40) are expected to exhibit materials,
and scrapbooks from the
local Chapters Projects under the
directorship of Mrs. Susie Sim- 1
mon#, of Charleston, South CaroIm'a
,'nnd Mrs. Anita Stripling o f
Savannah, Georgia. Awards will be
made to various Chapters for different
achievements.
Undergraduate Chapters from all
the Colleges of Florida, Georgia
and South Carolina are making
plans to keep the pep and spirit of
the meeting high , throughout the
two days.
V
J \ .
TO LEAPCT ?
?n Of Zeta Phi
leet at Fort Valley
Duke Students
Protest Ban On
Negro Visitors
DURHAM, N. C.?(ANP)-Some
350 University students have sinned
petitions protesting a policy
of the administration which pre-j
vents Negro students from North
Carolina College attending plays
on the Duke campus.
Southerners "were just willing
to sign" the petition as northern
students, the sponsors said.
The dispute arose when Dr. Hollis
Eden, Duke president, upheld a
"standing trustee policy of forbid'
ding integration at Duke.
North Carolina College?for ,\'g.
groes, liberal arts school located
in another section of Durham has
through its student leaders invited
Duke students to performances of
student?dramatic productions.
.Miss Ann Robertson of Richmond
Vra., a junior in psychology major,
and .Miss Phillis Baxter of Cald
well, N. J., a zoology major, initiated
the petitions.
the deal," Miss Robertson maintained.
- *
She said N'CC students have been
admitted to Duke's-copcert scries.1
"We are not asking* integrated
audiences," she said, " only that
one section of Page Auditorium
be reserved for NEC students." j
"Two seats are never filled, any !
way," she commented.
"Even if the administration does
not follow the suggestion of the
petition," Miss Robertson said, "we '
hope it will let the students at J
NCC kftow that the failure to issue i
an invitation to them is purely ad
ministrative policy"
" A few contacts by white col- '
lege students with their intellectual 1
equals in the Negro race during
college days would help improve"
race relations," she added.
Health For All
Savengali, M. D.
j It has taken centuries for hypnosis
to come out of the shadows and
become a respectable medical technique.
Until recently it was looked
upon as an unholy device used bycharlatans
to trick the innocent.
The novelist didn't help when they
invented such characters as Seven-'
gali who hypnotized a girl with
the voice of a crpw into a singing
star overnight, v
"Hypnosis is still very much on.
trial as a technique of medicine, <
but it has shown good results in j
certain tyjfes of illness. Recently j
with patients surtcring
verc burns. . '
"f'ne Of the peculiar qualities
of bad skin burns is the depression
patients suffer. For several weeks, j.
they are extraordinarily miserable,
certain they are being neglected
and maltreated. They refuse to
eat, call constantly for pain killers
and cannot do exercises that arc
necessary for their recovery.
Hypnosis helped some o f the
patients who had required force
feeding to develop good apetit.es..
It made pain disappear so that
limhs and walkagain.!n sucn cas j
es the patient may still b e far
From well, but he regaiqs his hope
end confidence, and that's half the
battle. He is able to cooperate in
the treatment needed to restore
him" Xo health. ' ' ~ ~ * ~Hypnotic
treatment was almost
too successful in some cases. One
patient,' who .had not been able to
xer' ise his burned hands because
>? the pain, under hypnotic suggestion
did his exercises constantly
;ven while he slept.
It took skilled medical specialistslbout
an hour and a half to put
Y" patient Intcdrhr-ffrst-^hypnotie-?
trance. After that, the suggestions
were repeated daily in trances
which took only minutes. Within a
few days, the suggestions made
furmg tw trances negim to- lane
told. The hypnotized patients de "OtAffed
enormous appetites a n d
heir feelings of pain were lessened.
Some patients, however, were
esistant to hypnotic suggestion,
?nd so could not he helped at all
hy this technique.
Obviously, hypnosis isn't going
to be a miracle cUre-all, and it can |
be dangerous in inexpert hands.
Rut it may become an important j
weapon of medical science in its
fight t6 restore the sick and in- [
jured to health.
This column is* sponsored, in
the interest of better health, by:
The Richland Tuberculosis Association.
r
'S ' ?1
- j
- - - - .... ....
SM A RT EST C OS I VM ES A K t
| SLIM ? BUTTON ED UT
cmm, sieeK uresses so eviuent lr
the fall fashion picture make lasl
year's bouffant, scooped neckec
dresses look like the last rose o
summer.
b Suits,dresses and even evonint
gowns show a decided preference
for Vtlim < il hrn U'H c n ml cnrh :iml
a sort of classic charm and elc
gance that is not he found in th<
; jeiine fille effect so evident in th<
j full, flared skirts.
Straight lines _ are sffhvetimc
[ varied by the use of bloused bad
I effects and the cape promises ?t<
be an overwrap that bears watch
! ing, fashion wise.
If you're one for playing th
-game, "Button,-button, who's go
.the button?", then you might a
well give It up, for everyone ha
the button this fall. That is, every
one who " is. in fashion. Not onl;
are jackets and dresses buttonei
but so are skirts. And there" ar
buttons in the oddest places, u|
the sleeve, across the waist or hi]
fine.
Yes, it seems that if one wouli
be in fashion this season, just b
slim and buttoned.
300 TO ATTEND BIRTHDA1
SALUTE TO M AH ALIA JACK
SOX . . " :
CHICAGO ? (ANT) --Mahalii
Jackson, queen of the gospel sfng
ers, celebrated her. birthday a n (
lent her nariie to a fund campaigi
for a home for girls, at a $25 s
plate in the Morris Hotel here.
Sonie 300 guests heard Mayo:
Richard Daley pay tribute to Mis:
Jackson as one of the greatest citi
zens of Chicago, and pledge hi:
support to the project.
The home for girls to be knowr
as Half Way House and will be ?
place of rehabilitation for girls
being sent to state institutions.
Mary Li Shaughnessy, superintendent
of the state training school
?)?MC0^occaooooo"o-o'ooooox>w
I SEE
COUNTS D
1105 WASH IN
? ?E
YOUR
Tooth Paste ? Pow
g
&?~ Lotions ?
I Sandwiches ? Cold
I Prescriptions Car
?
'>oo"ooo^:ox>ooooooooooo"oooo
MAKE YOUR HAIR
? all day long,
without a single
recombing!
? ' ' <' A < V
^
"' ????????
f for trirls' at Geneva, said ih?-Uo:i:\
would serve as a prevehtivt an..
-ll&ure ' 1
,{ . Co-chairman of the fund rui-i .
t for the $75,000 project arc A'
. ,Kdith Sampson, former altcst;:.;
j. delegate to the VX*, and Mrs. K >
imimivii oiex vfisum, luiniv; w >
\dlai Stevenson.
E ... Mrs; W*an-cn~T)ouif!V?7, fonTM7"
of Half Way House, made a .
Knot- I'. Waters, newsman,. <*.
master <ff'ceremonies.
2
. :
DR. HOSFv .HKC'KIVKS !!<?? >
AW.VftlK
r> ' NKAY YORK- (AvNM'i. Di . .la!.W.
IfrrCT. a f?8 year old Momp .V
physician, has received the -livrr
c
J. Hoey Award for inteiia .<
justice.
The award, given each year :
one Negro and one white lay ma '
^ who labored for justice hetAv.j
the races, is presented by. < ath'd;
e : . ?
iGALAjl
I SCHOOL OF J
i'| ^1 Laurel St ^
l| . Ballroom I
|'fl ' REGISTRATION
I THROUGH
DEC. 10th jP
rooo:ooo?aoo oo o o o o o o o o o
RUG STORE
[GTt)N STREET
N E E I) S
ders :? Face Creams
Hair Dressing
1 Drinks ? Sundries
efully Compounded
y mm
BEHAVE
,r.... ' |
\
, Pag*
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