Newspaper Page Text
PAGE SIX
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photo by Tolbert—Tribune Stall P ho tog.
6The above piety t, .ere t hen art the op<*i. house given by the Vance Allison Post No.
2933, VIAV, in (heir new quarte . !<s alert on « wine li street, corner Burroush' .
Top to bottom (left to right), ilagg’ie Howard, l-hiford O. Kyats, manager; ficiaUl'me Fields
amt Robert Muehell; (center): a pillion o. th library with the origin: 1 charter in the
background: (bottom): t'onimindir Hopkins discussing business with Manager Kyals.
EXT. AGENTS DISCUSS
“A LOOK IN BOTH
DIRECTIONS’’
The annual conference ol
Georgia Negro Extension ag¬
ents was held at Georgia State
college December 7-10.
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19 EAST HAY ST. DIAL 2-2111*
“Substantial Dividends to all Policvholders” £
IIRE- -W1NDSTOKM—EXTENDED COVERAGE *
£ PLATE GLASS X
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Sch win-Built
£ I C YC LES §
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Large and Small
The Best For Less"
PAY AS YOU RIDE ON EASY TERMS €
RADIOS—TRI-CYCLES— WHIZZER MOTORS
EXPERT REPAIRS i i
Liberty Bicycle Store i
308 W. Liberty Sttset Phone 2-3525
“A Look in Both Directions”
was the theme for the meeting.
In addition to the state ag-
en’s, extension officials, several
specialists and supervisors were
prevent- This group included
Kenneth Treanor, extension
economist; E D. Alexander,
extension agronomist; Miss
Quinnelle McRae, extension
elothiifg specialist; W. S.
Brown, director, Georgia Agri¬
cultural Extension Service, and
T. M. Campbell, field agent, U.
S. A D. A.
P. H. Stone is state agent for
Negro work in Georgia.
(General)
V Meep^ m. ^
5 room house, Kernlix automat¬
ie washer. Good salary. Must
be reliable. Will pay fare.
Write Airs. P. Beagelman, 139
**X*f»*t©a Si.. W estbur.v, L. 1,
Don't Trust In Luck—Know' The
Truth.
Stop worrying and wondering,
get facts according (<> >i , "’ih«’ v
send me your date of birth and
one SI.00. I will send you you.
person;,1 Astro Numerology and
the magic Time Clock Free.
Chapel
169 East 115 Street
New York 29, N. Y.
—
HO BATANHAH TBIBUM
GOVERNORS DISCUSS
REGIONAL SCHOOI/S
Continued Irom page l
how to utilize it, therefore most
of its resources are untaped.
It was stated that Texas will
not be in the regional plan for
Meharry, since it has already
proposed a medical school with¬
in na ooraeia .or Negroes
It is proposed that there re¬
gional schools, which will be
jointly supported by the south¬
ern states, be located at Me¬
harry Medical college, Nash-
Tenn , for medicine and den¬
tistry, and at Tuskegee for vet-
ernary medicine.
In a press conference with
Gov. Caldwell of Florida it was
brought out that since the col¬
ored educators seemed so in-
terested in the Reg.omh Coun¬
cil, they increased the number
on the policy committee, add¬
ing four Negroes as consult¬
ants. They are Dr. J. F. Drake,
president. A. and M. Institute;
Dr. Lawrence A Davis, presi¬
dent, A. M. and N. college, Pine
Built; Dr. Win. H. Gray, presi-
dent, Florida A. and M. col-
lege; Dr, C. V. Troup, presidem,
Fort Valley State college, and
Dr. M. F. Whittaker, president,
Colored Normal Industrial In-
stl‘. ute A. and M- college, Or¬
angeburg.
It is interesting to note that
several colored educators invit-
ed to attend the Regional
Council did not put fn an ap¬
pearance. This may be con¬
strued as a boycott,
Af the 150 persons present at
the council, 15 were colored.
One governor and four coun-
«cil members from each state
will comprise the policy-mak¬
ing board.
The Negro educators who at-
tended the conference were;
Melvin O. Alston, Florida A.
and M. college; W. R Banks,
Texas college; W. B. Brown,
Georgia State college; Mi’s. M.
E- L. Carnegie, Florida A. and
JM. college; Rufus E. Clement,
Atlanta u livers,ty; J. A. Col¬
ston, Georgia State college; J.
F. Drake, Alabama A and M.
college; Clifton O. Dummett,
Mehcrry Medical college; V/.
H. Gray, Jr., and Mrs. Lulu M.
Johnson, Florida A. and M. col¬
lege; A. E Manley, North Car¬
olina college; S. M. Nabritt,
Atlanta university; F. D. Pat¬
terson, Tuskegee institute; Geo.
E. Redd, Fisk university; Hous¬
ton Stallworth, Fort Valley
state college; T. S. Williams,
Tuskegee institute.
Almost out of the mouth of babes are
tbc delicious canapes which can be
made from junior canned meats, such
as veal and liver. Say there are unex¬
pected callers-just whip out a can and
season with salt, pepper, real mayon¬
naise and perhaps a little onion juice
or snack., curry powder and you’ve a tempting
insist
on the
genuine
Also in Giant Size — 25t
Economy Size 1 lb.—79(
Ladies’ and Men’s
HATS
Cleaned and Blocked
By
Approved Factory
Methods
Lamas
Bros.
Broughton & Drayton
EMPLOYMENT
PRACTICES BIl£
- ■ > Y f:
Wwm, „> i
‘A FILIBUSTER IS LE¬
GITIMATE WHEN IT’S
LEGITIMATE iwant to transfer -- m ■ 1
to the senate -in
BILBO'S STOP THAT SOME CRAZY PLACE-TO OF / \ . ;fjr
LEGISLATION 1 M
THEY'VE GOT,, \|
OVER THERE!
■'*-**vA v- -S*--
BEATING THE GUN 1
By Alvin Moses
NEW YORK (ANP i — Y ou
may look for our 1948 “sports”
story” which is nearing com-
pletion and will be cn the desk
of our editor, Frank Marshall
Dav.s, out Chicago way, and
director, Claude A. Barnett,
around December 10. Belated
answers to your welcomed
questions even before that
date; you readers had me burn-
ing more midrv.teoil than the
law should permit in these cold
var talk days. Hank Green-
ierg, interviewed by Daily
News’ Jimmy Powers, said on
Sunday, Nov. 20, about Leroy
1 Batch) Paige, Cleveland In ~
dians pitcher:
”Pa:gc loems large in the
049 plans of the Indians who
will beat out the Yanks again
in 1949. Sure Paige will be
back. We're definitely count-
mg on him for a lot of relief
work He is a freak. You can
not say he is elder, and there
fore weaker. Do you know he
made our good pitchers loon
bad out on the ccast? He reg-
ularly beat Bearden and Lem
on.
“Paige was the best deal of
the year- Not only did he win
six and lose one for us, but in
his first three games he play-
ATTENTION OUT OF TOWN
BEAUTICIANS
We take pleasure in announcing that we now ha\e a
Representative Salesman who will call on you at 'oin
establishments carrying a complete Jine of samples
consisting of Braids, Phge Boys, Chignons, Halos
Cluster Curls, and Up Sweeps- Also Adolph, Win¬ I
gate, Posner Products.
PLACE YOUR CHRISTMAS ORDER WITH US
I
REMIND OUR SALESMAN OF YOUR j
CHRISTMAS GIFT
Southern Beauty Supply
343 West Broad Street Phone 8564
Savannah, Georgia
HaneaRek;
Abie Futch’s Food Store
1201 WEST BROAD STREET j
ORANGES each Ic
STARCH, box 4c I
LARD lb $1.77 24Vic |
! ALL BRAND CIGARETTES . Cartoon i j
WHOLE RICE, 5 Ibc 55c
1 FLAT SARDINES, can lCc !
NO. 2 EARLY JUNE PEAS
—■* .1
j
Lumber and Brick i!
For Sale Cheap ti
Apply At Warehouse *
914 EAST BAY STREET *:
V
ed to more than 200,000 paid
great colored halfback, played
admissions.
Wally Tr plett, Pena States
as brilliantly in a lost cause j
(Pitt 7, Penn State 0) as did
Jimmy (Whirlwind) Robinson,
browntone ace of Pittsburgh, in
an upset winn ng surer'. Penn
Pittsburgh and Penn State, all
Quakeriand institutions of
learning up a great and football each one year hanging that j
was chocked full cf upsets and
grand gr.diron spectacles. 1
A “Good Joe’ Caries on
cheering i
Before some 12 ,oc:
Qetroit fans the other n’te, Joe
Louis, greatest cf modern fight-
ers, received $9,000 for about
12 minutes work in the ring,
Aside from the high late of
exchange doled out to the golf I
loving Brown Bomber, hi.,
punching powers even w th 14-
ounce pillcws on h s big hands
was amazing. His opponent,
21-year-old Vern Mitchell, a
“nobody” on the fistic blue list,
floored by Joe in the first
and second rounds
Though a paunchy 220
pounds, there was absolutely
nothing wrong with the lethal
power of t’he champions
punches. T1 ^
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1948
with speed and power anytime
Louis turned cn the heat dur-
ing the six one-sided rounds
iought (pardon me, exhibition,)
at Olympia stadium.
Mighty “Little Atom?”
Sandy Sad tier is 126 pounds
of bottled dynamite, I think-
two weeks ago at Bridgeport,
Conn., the lad who is all legs
and arms whistled a sl.ngshot
punch in the direction of one
Beaton’s poor nose and
e-r-u-n-c-h, the smeller fold¬
ed up like a paper drinking
cup when you’ve finished with
it.
Maybe this kid is a throw-
back to the white “thin man”
of my boyhood, Harry Harris,
whem Abe Attell and other
great featherweights wanted no
part of any more than fight¬
ers of 1928-1934 wanted any
truck with A1 Brown- Inci¬
dentally I had a long talk with
Ai Brown the other day and
he is still in our city and has
a boxer under his coaching di¬
rection. His hands are brok¬
en and twisted fantastically at
certain places due to lias ter¬
rific punch power, much too
much for his skinny frame.
eg end has Brown once floor¬
ing a noted 175 pounder in
Billy Grupp's gym 20 years ago
and that fighter (withholding
his nlrrae 1 told me the story is
solidly-true.
Harry Maxksort, please do
not schedule a Jimmy Bivins-
Melio Bettina Garden fight if
such a fiasco is in your mind.
Watching the fella whom Gus
Lesnevich kayoed in 59 sec¬
onds tangle with Enrique Felpi,
Argentina, but no distant re¬
lation of Firpo, “wild bull of
Dempsey’s heyday,” we thought
him but a shadow of the man
who fought Conn and licked
ailing Tiger Jack Fox. The
years have gotten in their
deadly appropos, the bad tim-
shaky limbs, clutching fe-
when tagged, etc. Box-
ing can do well without a pre-
Xmas stinkeroo, Harry, or do
you see it otherwise?
Robby and “Campy”
Campanella and Jackie Rob¬
inson are called just that by
thousands in every area they
circulate. Over at the West
135th street branch of the
YMCA where once (for seven
years) this writer acted as box-
Our Great America ik 6y Mack
/VeW YORK LED "TriE NATION IN PAPER AND PAPERBOARD
—«*. PRODUCTION tN 1946-- I. 739. 513 fi.OOO (S ') TOYS
LOUISIANA, Wisconsin, AMCHUSAM, odio, PEnnsytvAnu '
AMO MAINfc FOLLOW IN THAT
ORPEW — TOTAL Li'S. PAPER ANP *
paperboarc* production 19 ,
C . /«/, 319,
■v 30 °0 IB) Tools s
I *V>» SHMGIOaJ
MAPl50ll,JR., AMOS ' I. — '
Cefei?red to
AS me 'FATHER
of our
CONSTITUTIOM'
WAS SSCRETA tty
OF STATE UNDER
fRESiPorr jcTreoil,
AWP lATEe
BERMEDTWO TERMS AS j j
C'jen 1
- -»ousts ?cuot , f’gESiO&n 07 j
fioBZferff IS FAST CP -Oig ' “THE U.«, W ,
u.c. -A-Np rr cannot Si reach j ifsaii (SOS*i2:?
ey WiTnear CAMOkj^ @0:HCr' -- ------S. I
► — 1 TH20.ASO
ing, handball and calisthenics
I instructor, the -<948-49 young-
! siers have the benefit of two
outstanding teachers. Robin¬
son, the greater of the two as
far as my vote counts, can be
mustered into teaching the
follow ng:
! Sprinting form, tennis, base¬
ball techni que, basketball,
broadjumping technique (man-
to-man protection tecnniquel-
I
One must remember that
Robinson can whip most guy3
who “walk hard and talk
loud.” He is essentially a gen¬
tleman, but B-r-o-t-h-e-r,
don't carry that gag too far,
or at least far enough that
“Robby” hears you. Many
things cculd happen in such
an event as:
i Soiled pants (I mean your
trousers). j 11 |
.. .
Rainbow-eyes (again, your
’ peepers).
! And, much use for such
things that pour easily out of
a bottle tagged Sloan’s lini¬
ment, Absorbine, Jr., Hest, etc.
Sivcn Club
The Swans met Dec. 10 at
the home of Mrs. Joseph Hill,
03 W. 35th street. Much busi¬
ness was discussed and each
member received their
savings. Each officer was re-
elected. After the meeting,
Mrs. Hill, assisted by Mr. Kill
and Mrs. Pearl Ehiggs, served
drinks and a delicious dinner.
Those present were Mr. and
Mrs- Rogers, Mr. and Mrs. Ha-
gin, Mrs. Mary Newton, Mrs.
Annie Nails, Mrs. Ora Smith.
Mrs. Rosa Roberts, Mrs. Mc-
Nichols, Mrs. Pearl Edgerton,
Mrs- Jessie Mack, Mrs. Georgia
Williams, Miss Susie Maynard,
Ossie Williams, Mr. and Mrs.
Logan, Mr. and Mrs. Maynor,
.Rudolph Williams, Mr. AJkins,
Mr. and Mrs Hill and Mrs.
Pearl Shiggs. Next meeting will
be at the home of Mrs. New¬
ton, 127 Yamacraw village.
HEALTH PICTURE AT
WOODVILLE SCHOOL
The Woodville high school
general theme for the year,
1948-49 is “Improving Health
and Safety in the Home, School
and Community.” The 8tli
grade classes of the social sci¬
ence division, urjrler the di¬
rection of Mrs. R- W. May are
fortunate in securing the ser¬
vices of Mrs. Wm. Rhodes, ex¬
ecutive secretary of the Tuber¬
culosis Association ,to work
with us this year.
Mrs. Rhodes brought materi¬
al on Monday, Dec. 13, pertain¬
ing to health that will be of
significant value in developing
the theme- We were also
shown a health picture which
was very colorful and inform¬
ative.
Mrs. Wm. Blount and her
7th grade class were our spe¬
cial guests and we enjoyed
having them with ns. Mrs.
Rhodeh will visit us often and
we are looking forward to her
npxt visit.
Deloris Green is reporter.
The Woodville elementary
school is in a whirl of activ¬
ity as the Christmas season ap¬
proaches. A beautiful Christ¬
mas scene is displayed on the
bulletin board in our hall. Each
classroom has a tree and the
children are getting ready for
f he big Christmas party
morning. Classes will reas¬
semble and gifts will be giverq
and exchanged by teachers and
students.
The students at Woodville
wish everyone a happy holiday
season.