Newspaper Page Text
smurn TWKj
--
t .^ Roo.se\ cil Sykes
AND THE
. ^ Original Honey Drippers
t .' L."
'
with a Hollywood Stage Show are coming to the
The Beautiful
Melody Theatre
FRIDAY SATURDAY NOV. 22 23
AND A SPECIAL
MID-NITE RAMBLE
SATURDAY NIGHT
Shows at 6, 8, 10P.M.
s ADMISSIO — 25 and 50 CENTS
Con*o>4Jver And “Dig The Jive” with Roosevelt Sykes
At The Melody
IS nlHcifl SRS. TO TFiy
(•MPSI COLA SCHOLARSHIPS
--
Continued rrom Page One
—— to "v ^••«ndid,a.< f o-tsi ----------------- throughout —;—~r
s
tl 1 t amu. ; i' ■' v
arrive k| his off.ee m a
psekace tMJd are not lobe
t; ‘ ■' ' uutil the day ol the ( '
amina ion and then only in
pn enci of the
TniiueutolMy n™ following the
a- i the papers will
eo lecteri placed in an
provided for that purpose,
sent at once for scoring o
LISTEN OVER
W. D A. R.
Mondays, Tuesdays,
Wednesdays & Fridays
7:20 to 7:15 p- m. and
Sundays from 6 to (1:15
p. m. Hit Tunes of
the week presented for
your listening pleasure
by
A. B. C.
Furniture Stores'
125 \V. Broad Street
Bethlehem Cafeteria
(Corner Park Avenue and Cuyler St.i
Sponsored bv Bethlehem Baptist Church in its well
equipped Dining Room — Opened Each Week day
12 Noon To 10:30 P. M.
!C We believe the Church should furnish a wholesome place
for religious people to eat
Co-Managers
Mrs. Maggie Canty
Dea. A . Jackson
Dr a- e W. Weaver
Rev. E, A. Baker
UNION DRUG
COMPANY
410 WEST BROAD CORNER OL
STREET BERRIEN
PHONE 7310
NOW UNDER THE
MANAGEMENT OF
J. E. Randall
PHARMACIST
Formerly at Park Ave. and West Broad Street
Prescriptions Carefully Compounded
Drugs — Sundaes
College Entrance
Board.
j I That fa rly this test be
oil and uniformly to
j ’ candidates is imperative,
pr ncipal Heynes , since it
I as one of the most
bages fQr selecting the b
and girlg to bf> awarcied
, scholarships and cert fica es
mer t in this third nation .
competit -
* on _
A11 A dinners . will , be
; 1 011 1311 1
'
1 one of the boys and
| elected from Beach h'gh
I wins one of these liberal
arships. he or she will have
full tuition and certa n
dental fees paid for four
i . any accredited college in
Un'ted States he wishes to
tend. In addition he will
THERE WILL BE AN
OYSTER ROAST
At The LOUISE SHOP
Thunderbolt Old Shell Road
Thursday, November 28, l!!4'i
Mrs Louise Johnson,
STOKES SHOE
ERS
For best, we have it
Ladies Shoes Hatf-sole
Invisible
922 West Broad St.
Phone 9417
fill ivc v i- |U> i r i.l. *,i t«.
m rwtd.r in . . ui t .<*•
?ft^!Wi<»riul-Ohrl.st uti chniith's,
will preside at the (veimi;',
\ mt-clin!'
institu.e , ihe mwr will " be devoted Sl ' f on to ° r "Ba- * hc
s c Understand ng*. Discus-
sionii . wi,! bf led by Ruth Bene-
'
dict - notert anthropologist and
auUl01 and prole, s r of an-
( thtopology at Co.umbia
vcrs y; M * Ashlay-Montagu,
pmfesor jf anatomy at Huhne-
P rofe ssor of anatomy at Hah-
nemann Medical College, Phil-
adelphia and author of Mans
M °' t Dangerous Myth me
fallacy ol Race, and Smiley
Blanton psych atr sl. author
and fiircc or ° J Ule conmlta-
Bon clinic at Marble Collegiate
chinch, New York Ira De A
Reid ’ proivnaor of soe ology at
New Yurk University and Hav-
erford College, will preside.
E ght act ve organizations in
race relations field w 11 re-
p^rt on .heir programs of ac-
y on during the afternoon meet-
speaking for their respec-
t ive organizat ons w 11 be H H.
q i es> executive director, Bu-
reau for Intercut ural Educa-
tion; ’ Mrs Marian Perry as-
sista nt special counsel, Nation-
a j Association for the Advance-
ment of Co i or ed People; Jui us
Tpomas, director of induitfiai
relations, Na cnal urban Lea-
gue; Paul Williams, president.
Southern Regional Council.
------ Will Alexander ----------- vice president,
j u !i u s Rosenwald Fund, re-
porting ... for the .. American Coun _
c l of Race Relations; George
Hayn8S ’ dlr6CtUr departmei3t
° f chutcnes ot Chns 113
Amer ca; Herman Long, associ-
ate director department of
_ Uce re i at j 0 ns, American Mis-
, S O nary Association; and Galen
leaver, director, committee on
chu^p and racej congregation-
al-Chrlst an churches. Chan-
^ipg. Tobias, director of. the
Phelps-Stokes j Fund, ' will pre-
s de
The American Missionary As-
sociation was founded in a
Bapt-st church in Albany, N-
Y - f n 1846, and received its
f* rs f i ; irge grant of funds from
the MetRodist church. A non-
sectar an organization, it is
now part of the board of home
i . jV'i :,ii :i imVafKt' f.t $2 < [»i l
1
ii.inrip tiu ujji ytafcj
j'/iu. u.,vci4fi!' t-.xfjq rises ;u the1
r.iii- ul lit ret- cents n in U: lor.
one r. a ml tr.p from hotnu to
college tacit year,
There will be five runners-
for every scholarship
gran ed, and each will receive
a cert ficate of merit which
carries with it a >5j award
pi /able when the winner en-
ters college.
Once a student Is In college,
the only scholastic require-
men lor the continuance of
his scholarsh p thr ughout the
feur-year p.riod is that he re-
man in good standing and
progress normally from year to
year, ,f in the op nion of the
Board any student does un-
usually outstanding under-
graduate work, he will receive
a three or four-year graduate
fellowship of $1,500. A maxi-
mum of f.ve ut these fellow-
ships will be granted in any
one year.
Ih s nat.on-w de sch ilar.ship
program .s planned and ad-
ministered by a separately in-
corporated group of dis ing-
UiShed educators known as the
Pepsi-Cola Scholfii<#hip Board,
F.oyd W. Reeves, professor of
admlnistrat on at the Univers.-
ty of Ch.cago, is its president.
and John M. ^alnaker, dean of
s udents at Stanford university,
direct i of the program,
Through this board, two schoi-
arshps are awarded annually
in each of the 48 states and the
L strict of Columbia, and one
ooch each in in Alaska. Aloclfo Ma.noil Hawaii and onrf
Puerto R co with twenty ad-
fo Negro '"stud^ntf^n »s wi.5, ^those
..(]jaiate ‘ t narate scnooi school sys.ems svs ems for lor
the colored. Added to these
are the more than 600 fitty-
dollar certificates of merit
which are given to the live
runners-up for each scholar-
s.iiji All the awaids are made
possible by the Pepsi-Cola C6.
as a part of its program of
public service. i
Although it is just now going
into its third year, ihe Pepsi-
Cola scholarship program al-
ready has sent 242 boys and
girls to 110 of the nation’s col-
leges and universities for four
years of undergraduate work.
At least 1.150 more have receiv-
ed he $50 award to help defray
the init al expenses of enroll-
ment. This year's program will
add 121 scholarship winners
and more than 600 certificate
of merit holders to this out¬
standing group of young" people
who will be mmorrow’s lead¬
ers-
ATLANTA PREACHER STARTS
RAMPAGE IN CONVENTION
Continued from page one
] Auxiliary, Sunday School Con¬
vention and btu Department
Upon reading the resolutions,
1 Deacon Bynes offered motion
for adoption which was sec-
! ended by several. Before the
presiding chairman, Rev. N C-
1 Connor, could announce the
i motion. Rev G. W Jordan
; sprang to h s fee; In a furious
j manner, filibuster started a rampage and
! on the floor, which
virtually proved that the lay-
■ men’s actions against this un¬
christian spirit should be curb¬
ed. This Rev Jordan heaped
upon the laymen abusive lan¬
guage. call ng them almo t ev¬
erything but children of God
and finally ended by saying
that hey should be k'cked out
of the convention After fili¬
bustering on the floor a long
time Rev. W M. Hall of Ma¬
con, finally obtained the floor
and offered a mot’on hat the
rerolut ons be referred to the
executive board- That the
convention allowed this man to
go un-charged for his very un¬
christian manner is awful.
ONE-DAY INSTITUTE TO
STUDY HUMAN RELATIONS
Continued from page 1
way at 56th streets, on FT day.
November 22. and will be part
of the one hundredth anniver¬
sary celebrat on of the Ameri¬
can Missionary Association.
Morning and afternoon sessions
will be limited to soc ologists
social workers, min sters and
students working in the race
relations field, but the evening
meeting will be open to the
pubi c without charge.
Margaret Halsey, author of
Color Blind.” and other books
deal ng with race questions:
Benjamin Mays, president of
Morehouse College, Atlanta
and Mr Brownlee will be prin¬
cipal speakers at the even ng
session Truman Douglass, ex-
-s.waV”\ n TninrN'E
•,.i n(iut ILir ('•)!» nv ,, ut.0.i:il
.
c'l.rutinu ci»u»i.u* i ■-* £<“- 1 1 1
erase "the sins ol caste' iruin
Amtiican life, it opened the
fra. school for freednifit south
of the Mason and Dixon 1 tie
and opened the first ant-siav-
American Missionary
Assoca j, or j founded such great
smthem col!egi , and univerv-
arf p igls university. Hamp-
Insti ute , Atlanta Univer-
s . Talladega College, Le-
Mo college, Tougaloo Col-
£ Dillard Univers ty and
^ 1Jutson uoilege, and took the
j ea(j n chartering Howard
Un j vers | t y These c'lieges and
un j verg | t j es now have an an-
nuft j enroliment of 11.500 s.u-
dent; .
Tbe Amer j can Miss onary As-
SCC j a uon played the lead ng
roJe jn establ shing public
schools ior f re edmen and train-
ed tbe first, teachers for these
schools. More than five hun-
dred schools were es abl shed
by the American Miss onary
Association in the South and
all but eight of them are func-
t oning today as free, public
schools-
The activit es of ihe assoc a-
Hon have not. been confined to
aiding Negroes. Inter-rac nl
schools have been establ.shed
for Sou hern highlanders, Ja-
maicans, Hawa ians. Orientals, \
Indians, Eskimos and . uui "
Ricans.
„ T'ihprnaclp Tabernacle was was se
lectcd as the s;te for the
, tennal , Tnst InSttUte tute because Deoause it 11/
was he center of ant -slavery
agl ation a cen tury ago under
the inspiration of' Arthur and
TapBan '“r Yor k
chants. chants, The Tabernacle , then,
the Chatham 1
was known as
stree chapel and it figured |
im n 0 rtantiy in early |
act'vities.
, As- ■,
The American Missionary (
sociation maintains a depar
ment direction of race relations of Charles under S- j
the
recently elected pres-
ident of F sk University and
an a dvisor to the State De-
par t m ent’s UNESCO delega-
u 0 n- This depar.ment has
gu jded race relations studies
f 0r a number of American cl-
lie . includmg San Francisco,
Pittsburgh, Kalamazoo and De¬
THANKSGIVING EVE
DANCE
SAVANNAH CITY AUDITORWM
WEDNESDAY NIGHT , NOV. 27, 9 P.
-IN PERSON!—
The Creators of “CHO-CHO CHIBOOGIE”—“STONE
COLD DEAD IN THE MARKET”—“BEWARE”
■ m
\
GV\
..
I
!
:
]
i
ADVANCE Admission S1.50- Tickets Now on Sale at Har¬
lem Cleaners, 801 West Broad St-. Sarboro and Lx ley Sts-.
Mclver's Barber Shop, Yours r.ml Mine Confectionery, Ben
Boles’ I* oe, Arthurs, B- and D. Cafe, Randolph St. Ad¬
mission at the Door Sl.75*
*»' y MASS MEETING
Y
| •{• % G. I. People's Party
% Attend this meeting and learn the truth how the CPL and its
leaders doublecrossed the colored people of Chatham County in the
£ how they promised
* last political race. Hear the true story of us
❖
(hey were for Carmichael and the secret deal they made with Ta!-
X
* madge.
% Do know that least five of their Aldermen belong to
% you at
"f Anti-Negro organizations and that three Talmadge dele¬
were
* gates?- Learn the true about Emanuel Lewis and his double¬
£ story
% dealing tactics.
y
v
Attend this meeting so that you can intelligently decide wheth¬
* er you wish the CPL or wish to vote for an organization composed
£ of men and women who fought for you and their country while
•> the CPL stayed in Savannah seeking political opportunity.
*,*
X Come Early Attend
—
X
G. I. RALLY, .
Thankful Baptist Church
Bolton and West Broad Streets
Friday Evening, November 22nd, 8:33 P. M.
G. I. People’s Party Campaign Committee
A. B. Odom, Chairman
Newspaper Publicity
c STATE FA1K A ,
SUCCESS
__
Continued from Page 1
through Saturday,
new record for attendance
number of exh'bitors was
.his year.
Through the untiring efforts
Dr. Collins throughout the
and his able board of of-
the best carnival, the
est number and best ex-
from farm and home,
biggest athletic attraction*,
mos; thrilling and largest
lumber of free acts and grand-
tand features were brought to
fair. It was by fai the
best in every way and many
ent agricultural and ed-
ncat onal leaders commended
the officials on their excel¬
lent show'ng.
Harrson Greater Shows
draught the largest, cleanest,
mest zhrilling and entertain¬
ing carnival Ever placed on the
midway for the fair. Thirty
to forty shows, fifteen to
twenty rides and numerous
coacessicna res f lied he loui'-
icie space for midway attrac-
ions. Cfficials have already
signed Harrison Greater Shows
or next year.
exhibits filled the half-acre
nain bu Id ng and were super¬
lative. More than one thousand
premiums were paid. The big¬
ger. and best cattle and swine
show filled two stockyard
uiidings.
Two athletic attractions
drew twenty thousand foo ball
fans. On B g Thursday Allen
and Bened'ct fought it out be¬
fore ten thousand rabid root¬
ers. On School Day, Friday, an-
o her ten thousand wilne sed a
bruising battle between Mather
Academy. Camden, and Booker
Washington, Columbia. Allen
won, 14-C, on Thursday and
Mather won, 7-0 on Frioay.
Monday was opening d ty for
ilacing exh bits and open ng
f Midway- Tuesday was "arm¬
ors’ Day. Wednesday wa New
'armors veterans and 4-H
Nub day Thursday, College
Lay; Friday, School and Sat¬
urday, closing day.
Officers of the Fair are Dr.
J. Collins pres den ; Mrs.
H. G Reese, secretary; Gaer-
ney Nelson, treasurer; A- P.
Harper, vice president; C- G
Garrett, super ntendent, and
R Stark, assistant super n-
tendenp
Directors are Miss Stella
Jenkins Manning, S. C : T- F
Friday. Winnsboro S- C : Geo.
Curry, Smoak. S C ; Rev. A.
W. H 11; Florence, S- C-: W. H
Stanley. Hands, S C : Mrs. L
W Brawn, Florence S C.; Mrs
Simrnie Smith. Columb a. F C ;
Mrs. Frances Thomas, Colum-
b a. S. C.. and Andrew Harris
Columbia, S C-
s. C- STATE COLLEGE
CHOSEN
__
Continued from page i
ball game played at Washing-
on, d. C., November 1, approx-
:matsly 23 OQo persons are re .
ported to have been present at
he class'c th's year, and this
number brings the total to
; , 3 000 within f ve years .
This year the number 0l
c holarships were increased in
number and in am0unts , and
?outh Carolina state Collegt
was signally honored to re¬
"eve the cash scholarship
il~ng v; th eleven other col
, e g es wbo ma j 0r j n health and
Tin'RSDAY NOT- 21, told
physical education-
The other colleges to receive
he scholarship; are Clark
Jollege, Atlanta, Ga.; Delaware
Late College, Dover, Del.: How-
,rd University, Washington, D.
Hampton Institute, Hamp¬
ton, Va-; Langston University,
Langston, Okla-; L'nccln Uni-
/ersity, Lincoln, Pa.; Nor.h
Carolina College. Durham,
2.; Shaw University. Roleigiif
1. C-; Tennessee State College,
1'ashviille, Tenn.; virgin a Un 3
on Un'versity, Richmond, V'a.;
,nd West Virginia State Col-
ege. Institute, We ; V rginia*
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939 W. ROOSEVELT ROAD. CHICAGO 8,ILL