Newspaper Page Text
PAGE EIGHT
White and Negro Girls
Win Delta Scholarships
NEW YORK (ANPi-Two cash
scholarships were awarded last
week by the New York members
of the Delta Sigma Theta so-
rorlty, one to a white girl and
th The' h t0 winnerrwere
tw«>
• white, trail-
dPin . of . Brooklyn, ... , j. ,
uate of the Manual Training
high school, and Minna Key
Jamaica. L I., a senior at ttv
~
tion voted to open its member-
AT STAR THEATRE
|
IC3 LOUIS-JERSEY JOE WALCOTT Fight, Picture:: at I’he Star
Theatre, Sunday, Monday, TJe.day July 18, 19, to at A Popular
price.
Every year, 1
America has 5,000,000 j I
j
"fall guys"!
I vch passing vi \r, about 5,000,000 people accidentally
fall and get hurt badly enough to need medical atten¬
tion. So the National Safety Council tells us.
Above, you sec several innocent-looking yet fiendish
causes of such mishaps. 1'hcy’re put there to show that you
never can tell what unforeseen quirk of fate may change
the course of your normal existence.
And since it is impossible to predict the future, it's wiser
to prepare for it.
(hie sure way to do that is to invest in U.S. Security
Bonds now. Regularly . . . automatically. For a cushion of
dollars is a mighty comforting piece of property to own.
Why U. S. Security Bonds? Because they are ths,
safest investment in the world—backed by Uncle Sam. And
it is a paying investment—returning to you, after 10 years,
four dollars for every three you tuck away.
The handiest way to buy U.S. Security Bonds is on the
Payroll Savings Plan. Ask the cashier at your office or
factory about it.
★ Your Security Bond dollars do more than giv. YOU security.
They do their part to insure a stable economy. Wise saving
means more sensible spending—fewer dollars to bid up prices
on scarce goods. Also every dollar invested in Bonds retires
an equal amount of Inflationary credit.
^ISEHI AMERICA’S SECURITY
' SECURITY
*£ IS YOUR SECURITY
S'yxp
A NEW DAY WITH SPECIAL FEATURES FOR ALL
1 FRIENDLY, HELPFUL SERVICE
2. EXPERIENCED STAFF MEMBERS
3. MOST MODERN AND ATTRACTIVE
FUNERAL FLEET
i. LOWEST POSSIBLE COST
Food for the soul
Is a word, indeed—
If it be fitly spoken;
For who can know
How great the worth—
A word to a heart that's broken;
But. oh, how swift
Is the word unkind
l’«> wound the heart of a brother.
Better the word be left unsaid
Than sjauik wrong of another!
Every Day In Every V r /ay We Art* Serving hriends In The Most Profi¬
cient Manner
Sidney A. Jones Funeral Home '
511 West Waldbnrg St. Savannah, Georgia,
OFFICE PHONE 2-3464 RES. PHONE 2-3006
j ;tiip to any woman meeting
| the poet r,,,uiremcnts to creed, race without or religion re-
and Urn New York chapter (A1-
pha Sigma, followed suit.
Mtos K;y ’ v,!1 ,(,n J lnue
turlie; at (,) ■ i, mlle.'.c, l am
X1(VS 0 lpin plans to study pale-
ontology at Br >k.lvn college
Members ol the M'holarshi,
Maude
“ a
Jaekson.
PARENTS VISIT
LOG CABIN
A bus load of forty parents
* and friends left Savannah and
spent the day at Log Cabin
Camp with their daughters
They were met by a welcome •
committee of campers and car -;
ried on a tour of Inspection
upon their arrival. Girls live in
« rou P s ‘‘unite*’ according
(, 0 their age levels and lnter-
cs t s .
Since the guests were to cat
in ...... the dining the .. camp-
room
ers were cooking dinner and
Galley'**21" ° UU1 °° r
their units. One unit had cook-
campers stew, hush puppies,
cabbage slaw and Somemores (a i
dessert).
Parents were very pleasantly
surprised at the life of a camp-
or and seeing their daughter:
living and learning so much
They found five or six girls
living in a tent house which
was spotless, and beds (cotsi
were made without a single!
wi nkle.
The is being directed by ‘
camp
Mrs- Anita Manes Stripling
wtth ...m. the following staff. Alex
Randolph, assisting; dietitian
Mrs. J. D. Bennlng, Mrs. V
Benefield, assistant? nurse
Mrs. Williams; senior unit
leader, Miss Retha Gibbs; in-
L -
THE SAVANNAH TRIBUNE
termediate leader, Miss Calara
Bynes, assisted by Mrs. Willie
Thomas, Mrs- Elvira Brown
Miss Willie Mae Baldwin; the
Brownie unit leader, Mrs Alma
R Wade, assisted by Miss Dor-
™ 7 aL7st with
Program aides es who h assist whh
1 * 10 general camp program _ and
activities Misses Lois Bennett
Lorraine Glover and Betty Mil¬
ler. The campers attending
for 1948. are: Seniors: Sadie
Hall and Alva Bpps, Macon;
Emmalyn Franklyn, Curley
Roberts Lorraine Glover and
Betty Miller, Savannah;
Charle.^ta Reddick,^Ma-
Manigault, Charlotte
Cornelia Harvey, Pauline
Barbara Brown, Kay
Omith. The Macon girls
Willie Glover, .Shirley
Lillie Wilcher, Juanita
Parm Lee Hortry, Vivian
Sylvia Simmons, Abb 0
Riley, Manve Davis, Glo-
Turk, Era Branes, Marie
Browntes ^tending camp
vnnnah Irma pee-
' Malvin ‘ Powell ’. Ardell Fer-
Antionettc A f cox. ox Francev irauei.
Y ®
liv n Geraldine Jones and \
Broack .
After the tour of inspection of
units the parents beautifu'! were |
dinner in the
room with its rustic set-
After a dinner of baked,
green snap beans, potato
apple pie, a program was
by the scouts, the
depicting the many ac-
at camp. The parents
agreed to act as “ambassa-
lor the camp,’' as they had
been Inspired and learn-
much. John Delaware, a
leader, and a member of
Boy Be out board of direc- j
said in part “That he had;
so Inspired that he was
to Savannah and work
harder on the Boy Scout j
and he wished that he
bring all of the Boy
to see what the Gi*' 1
campers were doing. j
Mrs. Miimie G Williams, who
from the Republican
convent on just to at-
the last week of camping
the staff as a board
and interested citizen
IT PAYS TO
ADVERTISE IN
THE TRIBUNE
(Jrand Opening
SATURDAY, JULY 17, 1948
Free Fans and Shopping Bags. Come In And Ask
For Them
51 Guage, 15 and 20 Denier Sheer
A Real Special Light or Dark
NYLONS ~ “ - 69c
Another Real Bargain — MEN’S
WHITE “T” SHIRTS ~ ” 49c
SHIRTS ~ 45c SHORTS - 45c
BOY'S DUNGAREES ~ “ 12S
SIZES 8 TO 14
LARGE MEN’S
HANDKERCHIEFS ~ - - 5c
25c MEN’S
SOX, Pair “ - 15c
ALL SI/,1 CHILDREN’S
ANKLETS, Pair 9c
Where Can You Buv A Broom For 79c,
Also A Mop For 39c
BEN * f
5c — 10c TO $1.00 STORE
Huntingdon and West Broad Streets_
v
W/ I i! %
j A
. •
I
| T WASHINGTON, Headquarters For Better JEWELER Service
\Y a t ches—Radios—J e w el ry <;
? 348 West Broad St. Savannah, Ga. ?
% PHONE 2-1692 * •” * 1* 4 i
.: 1 * a
•V* V
Abie Futch’s Food Store
1201 WEST BROAD STREET
OXTAILS lb 29c
NECK BONES, lb 13tc
BEST WHITE MEAT, lb. 29c
ALL BRAND CIGARETTES, Cartoon $1.67
WHOLE RICE, 5lbs. 69c
LARD, 4 lbs. ’ T« i 9* 99c
NO. 2 CAN TOMATOES 12'c
i
j
Hi
■n
^ 8 *
**• "• a 1 il ’ < > vv - i °> Uo
SSSSK
,P? S
““ .‘.7
'^c^mrn'Hments'on" Urn civil , ,
rights legislaticn.— (ANP-.
Ala. Youth
VJCI3 RCpflCYC IVCJJi 1C V C
MONTGOMERY, Ala., July 9
Scheduled for execution curly
Samuel Taylor, 21-year
old rape charge victim, was a !,
last moment granted a re
* on order of Justice Wiley
...... of the jrjrt United State
Rutledge ss issued his order tc
stay execution in response to!
an appeal by Frank Reeves
NA ACP attorney in Washington
la ylor’s long fight to escape
death in the electric chair fol-
towed conviction by an Ala-
barna j ury j n Mobile on Novem-!
1945 . Arrested with j
thr(t3 other N / iro youth*, h
was charged with the rape of
a 14 -yyear-old white girl in the
sma n sou th Alabama town o
p r j C hard. Beaten and threat
ened by police, he confessed ti
, lllF j d i m e. La’jiir he repudl-
a ted this confession,
Tbe naACP. through a local
wpjtp attorney, Nesbit Elmore
und( . r t 00 k Taylor’s detense, ap-
pe a.ling first to the state Su-
reme Court, then later to the
umt ed states Supreme Court
jjaacP petition charged;
that the youth’s conviction was
obtained through the use of a
confession extorted by force
v j 0 i C nce and feur in violation
j t bc fourteenth Amendment ,
-j>hc petition was denied.
Following denial of the p ti-
Uon by lhe united States Su-
prcme court, NAACP lawyer; !
a writ of habeas corpus
the United States District
Court. This appeal was denied j
the district court without
j
KAPPA AWARDS
THREE SCHOLARSHIPS
CAMDEN, N. J. (ANPI—The
names of its three scholarship
winners were announced this
week by the Phi Delta Kappa
sorority ol teachers, this wees
me winners are; Miss Beulah
Mae Kibble of Cincinnati, na¬
tional pr.ze; Miss Lillian An¬
derson of Atlantic City, north-
eastern regional, and Miss
Jacquelyne Johnson of Tuske-
gee, southern regional-
It was also revealed that Mrs.
Grace H. Rucker, national pro-
ErSgfiSr "
rhe competition lor the so-
!0V *' ys scholarship was among
high school women graduates
who intended to take up teach¬
ing as a profession. As nation¬
al winner, Miss Kibble won a
Sc'-!) scholarship, and as a re-
m d , V.aor, M .. ,es; Andtc-
n ami Johnson won award.
oi each.
!•: ss Kinnle plans to enrol 1
01 Cincinnati. At schoTlhe -xnooi sue
v -*' ; a member of the Girl.
association, tlie Rudic
.mild uuilci the iho Latin Latin club, club, the the “Y’ V
n
In church she is secretary of
‘h ' church school, president of
the junior usher board and for
four years the representative tf
the church to the Sunday school i
convention.
Mis Anderson, who is 17 !
expects to attend Howard uni-
versity and study psychology j
subject she hopes to teach !
the Al school Latin club she and was a president member of of j j
the choral speaking group, the;
orchestra and the current events
ciuw
At 16 Miss Johnson was onp
oi Tuskegee Institute high’r
youngest graduates. She wil 1 j
ludy at Howard to become a ;
teacher of law. I
Mrs. Racker received her
award from the scouts because!
of her work with Girl Scouts
Under th e Juliette Low schol-
arship she attended the inter-
conference June 30-
July 9, at the Girl Scout Na-
.onal Training school, Camp
Edith Muey, Pleasantville, N
Y.
She was one of 12 winners
half from the United States
and half from foreign nations
With the scout movement she
holds the fol owing positions:
President, Bedford Greenpoint
lee dors association, secretary
citywide Executive as¬
sociation, and senior scout
Troop 2-389, Brooklyn.
Mrs. Racker teaches at pub¬
school 44 in Brooklyn.
Death Rate on
Farms Double
Non-As? Level
CHICAGO, 111—Farm workers,
colored, and white, had an ac¬
cidental death rate twice as
as workers in non-agricul-
tural industries in 1947, the
Safety Council reports
this week.
The 1947 death rate for farm
YOU GET BETTER¬
LOOKING SHAVES AT
A SAVING With-
Avoid discomfort
coused by misfit blode*
The Safety Cab Co.
*
Now In Their New. Location
Wayne and West Broad Sts.
'
~
C^UL
FOR SAFE, PROMPT AND COURTEOUS TRANSPORTATION
A NEW TELEPHONE SYSTEM INSTALLED TO GIVE SERVICE
THAT WE WERE UNABLE TO GIVE DURING THE WAR.
The Safety Cab Company Has Been Serving The Public Since 1937
'• NORMAN DASH, Manager
MILBOB’S
THE BIG STORE FOR EVERYTHING
VETERAN OWNED VETERAN OPERATED |
GOOD CTN
LARD, 1 lbs - - 9!ft
FANCY FREESTONE
Peaches, 2 cans 25c
BLUE ROSE
RICE, 5 lbs - - - 68c j
-—
FANCY 14 OK JAR
CATSUP 17c
• MIIBOB’S
IF YOU CAN’T TOTE IT WE’LL DELIVER FREE
PHONE .‘*-7786
WEST BROAD AT WALDBURG
was per 100,00C
workers, while in non-agricul-
industries the death rat -
26.
The high farm work death
gave added significance to
safety week, proclaimed
President Truman for July
which seeks the eiinu-
of at least 30 030,000 farm
East member of a
family was a ked by the
to accept persona’
for the elimina-
of at least one source of
during the week,
other highlights of the conn
annual farm accident re-
were:
1. Total farm residents deaths
19,593, about the same a
year. Injuries totaled about
2. Farm home deaths total¬
7,000, with approximately
non-fatal injuries,
3 . Motor vehicles killed 7.300
residents in 1947 and in-
250,000 mere,
4 . The total of 4,300 farm
SPECIAL DEAL
SijJli •K. At*
.
Complete One Booth Beauty Parlor Set-Up
EASY MONTHLY TERMS
Savannah’s Most Popular Supply Company
BEN SHEFTALL BEAUTY SUPPLY CO.
525 E. Broughton St. Phone 2-0760
Also
Complete Line of Page Boys — Chignon — Braids
Apex—Wingates—FGsners and Adolph’s
ICE AND COAL .
Savannah Ice Delivery Co.
Dial 8158
THURSDAY, JULY 15, 1948
work deaths was down 4 per
cent from 1946, but it still rep-
resented 25 per cent of the na-
tion’s occupational death toll
for 1947.
5. Public non-motor vehicle
deaths, such as drownings, took
(he lives of 1,900 farm residents,
a sharp increase of 12 per cent
over 1946.
6 . Fire destroyed farm prop¬
erty valued at i?,70 000,000 in
1947, one-sixth of the national
fi re loss,
Shop At —
Alan
Barry’s
“The Hoome of Fine
Togs”
26 W. Broughton St.