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“DO THY AND PE MORE CONSIDERATE’
'SEE THE 1950 Servel
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The only Automatic Refrigerator
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36 Months to pay
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ator AnJ Any “CP” Gas Range
REGISTER FOR OIJR FREE WEEKLY FOOD
DRAWING
Savannah Gas Co.
“Savannah’s Oldest Public Servant’
Sidney A. Jones Funeral Home
IS
An Institution
Dedicated ,t<> the benefit of humanity, where
that sympathetic and understanding spirit pre¬
vail at all times.
No matter what your problems may be, we
are ever ready to give you assistance. The
hundreds of loyal friends we are constantly serv¬
ing is the strongest proof that we always render
the most dependable, reasonable and satisfactory
service. NmI
“Life is mostly froth and bubble;
Two things stand alone,
Kindness in another’s trouble
Courage in our own.”
CALLS ANSWERED ANYTIME — ANYWHERE
Careful and Courteous Ambulance Service
Most Modern Auto Equipment
I
511 West Waldburg Street Savannah. Georgia
PHONE 4-7226 RES. PHONE 2-3006
.have the good, the indifferent,
and the bad. Let us reward the
good equally, be indifferent to
the indifferent, and let law take
care of the bad, both white and
colored.
"My earnest prayer is that
some day Cty Park may be truly
a park for all the citizens of
New Orleans, so that all may
enjoy the good works of God as
He intended when He gave them
to men,” Father Brown declared.
j
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A CI.AUSSEVS BANQUET SCENE—Here is shown at the banquet given June „ 8 , t .j Claussen , s
Bakery for its colored employees and their fa nilies. ;
The banquet which was staged at the Village T ivern on West GvLnnett street, is an annual
event given by the company and is eagerly looked forward to each year t*j the company’s .
worker:!. hap]
In the picture, standing in the rear, are three iffieials of the company who addressed the
py celebrants. They are Peter Roe Nugent, J.T. Davis, manager, and A. W. Hendrix, superin
tendent.
riau'-S'‘n”s Bakery is one among the many loca' businesses which maintains a pension plan tor
its employees which is created wholely out of the profits oi the company. The company also
makes service awards to its employees who hav ' been with the iirm live years or more. Several
of these awards were presented at the banque' which was attended by over 100 persons.
Nine Apply for Admission
To La. State
BATON ROUGE, La.— (ANPt
The possibility of court liti-
gat ion faces of Heals of Louisi¬
ana State univer ity next fall
when the applications of nine
Negrpes for admittance to the
institution must be considered.
All nine obtained application
blanks last week and it is pre ¬
sumed that all will shortly file
them.
Concerning the precedence,
LRU President Stokes said: ^
“The question oi rights of Ne-
gro students to be admitted
LSU under recent Supreme
court decisions will be present- |
ed to the Board of Supervisors
at its next meeting.’
The next scheduled meeting
of the board is next August.
The incident to enter LSU
marks the sec :nd attempt with¬
in three year; made by Negroes
to enter. Miss Viola Johnson,
New Liberian, made an unsuc¬
cessful effort to get into the
medical school, and Charles
Hatfield, New Orleans, failed to
enter a; a law student.
The two suits were filed, and
ha ml Pul jointly, about three
College T and |
I Dept, Giving
cause of the aid received at Sa¬
vannah State college during the
period June 19 (o July 8, 1950.
In an effort to show the trade
•eachers attending the . hort
’ airs.e that they were welcome
and the willingness of each
faff member in the Division of
Trades and Industries to help
them, the in tractors shared
heir technical knowledge and
‘ rade erperiences by opening
heir various shops to them,
bowing the types of projects
used in aiding the student to
cquirc skill in doing such work,
hereby trailing a belter worker
ir industry.
Tiie following staff members
•It. that it would be a fine op¬
portunity for the 29 in-service
rade teachers, the staff of the
division of Trades and Indus-
ries. Pres, Payne, Dean Stanley,
’rincipal DuVaul. Spencer high
•h 'ol, Columbus, and O. L.
oouglas. Alfred E. Beach high
'hooi, and several others to go!
igether and discuss c omc pr;b-
'ins of the vocational work and
iow this work can be of great
a’ue in enhancing the curric-
ilum in the schools and help a
arger number of people in the
'date of Georgia.
Members of the Division of
Trades and Industries are; Rol-
ins Bacon, raido reparing; I.e-
iv Brown, auto mechanics;
\rthur Carter, masonry; Robert
,’hisley, machine shop practice;
ol Harden, shoe repairing;
obert Haygood, iioe repair-
ig; Nathaniel Vareen <substi-
ating for Murrell S. Johnson!
xrpentry; Samuel L. Lester,
ainting; Antonio Orsot, draw-
ig; Fred E. Owens, electricity;
’illiam Perry, auto mechanics;
enjamin R. Singleton, radio
pairing; Frank Tnarpe, car-
entry and building construct-
m; Henry L. Ware, body and
ender repairs, and A, Z. Tray¬
ago. The district court in
Baton Rouge ruled at the time
that the plaintiffs had not ex¬
hausted their remedies for an
education.
It was pointed out that the
state established a law school
at Southern and that a special
appropriation had been made
to equalize educational oppor¬
tunities for Negroes at insti¬
tutions outside the state.
From this sum. the state au¬
thorizes payment of the differ¬
ence in cost for an education
an outside institution and
in Louisiana,
The suits were appealed to
the State Supreme court but |
never pushed. They are still
pending.
Students seeking to enter
next fall are Lloyd E. Milburn,
29, Baton Rouge; Roy S. Wil¬ j
son, 29, Rust on; Lawrence A. j
Smith, 22, New Orleans; Nephus j
Jefferson, 25, Baton Rouge; ]
Henry Allen Wilson, 26. Ruston; !
Charles E. Coney, 25, New Or¬ j
leans; J. L. Perkins, 20, Baton
Rouge; Willie C. Patterson, 25,
Logansport, and E. George Hog-
an. ?4, Shreveport.
itinerant teacher training.
The second short cour e for
in-service trade ' teachers will
be he'd at Savannah State c il-
lege this summer. July 10-29.
Teache s attending the short
course are Wm. W. Graham,
radio repair, o. J. Gillis, gen-
eai woodwork, Brunswick Vo¬
cational School; Aaron Tappan,
brick masonry; R. M. McKinley, :
shoe repairing; Robert M. j
Walker, bricklaying; Janie Mao
Horton, business; Wil’.iam E.
Lake, bricklaying, Augu ta Vo¬
cational school.
Williaf Dobbins, radio repair;
Dan E. Berry, bricklaying and
plastering, Brunswick Vocation¬
al school; Jesse Jones, carpen¬
try; Mitchell L. Jenkins, auto 1
mechanics. Albany Vocational
! chool; Earl White, bricklaying,
Augusta Vocational school; Jack
iJerrells, auto mechanics, Bruns-
Vocational school.
John H. Davis, plastering;
William E. Monroe, radio repair;
Edward D. Harris, bricklaying
upholstery, Augusta Voca¬
tional school; Oliver Wells, car¬
pentry, Augusta Vocational
school and Boggs Academy;
Ulysses Tate, auto mechanics,
Brunswick; Tolbert Burch, auto
Rushiel Keiglor,
masonry. Albany Vocational
school; Richard E. Williams,
auto mechanics, Augusta Voca¬
school and Boggs Acad-
Keysville; Theodore R.
Hall, bricklaying; James C.
Wai(ick. bricklaying, Baxley
Vocational school; George Rog¬
er;. shoe repairing, Albany Vo¬
cational school.
----u-
SPECIAL SALES
REPRESENTATIVES
Continued trom Page 1
Calvert in the monoply
Before this appointment. Mr.
repre ented the com¬ j
in New York and along the
Coast in such markets as
D. C. and Balti-
more. He has been with the
company since 194C when he be¬
gan as a salesman in Metropol¬
itan New York for the Cars-
talrs division of the company.
Previous to that he was a solic¬
itor for whiskey distributors in
New York City beginning in 1937.
is a graduate of Cambridge
Junior & Senior college, British
West Indies.
The monoply states include
^uch important markets as
Pennsflvania, Ohio, Michigan,
North Carolina, Alabama and
West Virginia.
Uriv. of Va. ignores
Students Admission
Request
By Carter Jewell
Martinsville, Va., <ANP»—A Ne¬
gro lawyer who applied for
admission to the University of
Virginia in Charlottesville, va.,
Nov. 29, 1949, has not yet re-1
ceivecl a satisfactory reply to
his application, it was disclos-
cd last wee::. The lawyer said
he still intended to study fur-
ther in the field of law.
The disclosure was made in 1
Danville, Va., by Gregory Swan¬
son who was admitted to the
Virginia bar last February and
has been practicing in Danville
since that time in association
with J. L. Williams, young
prominent Danville attorney.
Swanson began the general
practice of law here Monday,
July 10.
So far as is known Swanson
is the first Negro in Virginia to
:ee,k entrance to any white law
school in the state. Special
significa ice was attached to
his announcement because
Ihe United States Sm '•
court ruled on June 6 that Tex-
as and 0 .1: homa must admit
Negro students to state law
schools because cornparaole an
equal facilities for Negroes
were not available in those
states.
Sivanson has the bachelor’s
degree in political science and
a bachelor’s degree in law from
Howard university. He receiv¬
ed the latter degree in June.
194S. He said he sought ad-
mission to the University of
Virginia law school to do legal
research leading to graduate!
degrees with the hope of> secur¬
ing a teaching position.
Neyro Woman Named
To Bronx Grand Jury
Niw York, (ANP -Mrs. Ann<'
H. Jones of the Bronx 'fas
•worn in last wees by Judge
Harry Stackell in the Bronx
County court as the first Ne¬
gro to be a member of the
Bronx County Grand Jury.
Mrs. Jcues. a housewife, and
mother of a 10 year old son.
formerly worked as a social
'Farker with the Red Cross.
With electronic factories, op¬
by mechanical brains, it
like a four-hoor day and
three-dav week ahead of the
race.
After the first World War the
was in the throes of a
scare that makes the pres¬
phobia look like a philo¬
calm.
To ■
UNCF 1
j
j
Sylvia Bowen, Dr. M. D.
Wimam ,T. Bush, Miss
Campbell, Mrs. Sarah O.
Dr. Nathaniel Collier,
A. C. Curtwright.
Mrs. C. E. Ellerbe, J. T. Eller-
Miss Donella Graham, Mrs,
L. B. Griffin, Miss Madeline
Miss Luella Hawkins,
Julia E. Holloway, Mrs.
V. Hannar, Miss Ger¬
Hooper, Mrs. Nana Hop¬
Albert JaekSon, Dr, J. W.
Sr„ Sol C. Johnson,
A. Jones. Miss C. F. Lew- !
Mrs. Erma D. Lindsay, Rob¬
C. Long, Sr., Mr. and Mrs.
B. Law, Miss Mildred
Miss Anna E. Maxwell,
Charles Ann Meyer, John
Young, Miss Luetta B. Col-
Mrs. Lucile B. Johnson, A.
Cox.
Mrs. M. Moody, Dr. R. W.
Samuel Parker, Mrs.
Parker Mrs Edward
Rev. Picken A. Pat-
Miss Madeline Shivery,
-A ...........i__
Reader’s Digest
REPORTS THE RESEARCH
WHICH PROVES*
i Brushing Teeth
Right After Eating with
COLGATE
DENTAL CREAM
STOPS TOOTH
DECAY BEST
Better Than Any Other Way 01 Preventing Tooth Decay
According To Published Reports!
READ JULY READER’S DIGEST for
the results of “one of the most
extensive, costly and practical history”!
experiments in dental
The toothpaste used exclusively in
this research was Colgate Dentil
Cream. And read this, too: Two
years’ research showed brushing
teeth right after eating with
Colgate Dental Cream stopped other
decay best! Better than any
home method of oral stopped hygiene!
The Colgate way more
decay for more dentifrice people history! than ever
reported in
NO OTHER TOOTHPASTE OR ^• ; T • y■ ■■■ ..........'•••'' JP§|
POWDER —AMMONIATED OR *•
NOT—OFFERS PROOF OF SUCH
RESUITS! Over a two-year period,
leading scientists found no new
cavities whatever for more than 1 1 ;
out of 3 who used Colgate’s cor¬
rectly! No dentifrice can stop all .Jr
tooth decay, or help cavities al¬
ready started. But the Colgate | * - ;;
way is the most effective way yet (t't.‘*S
known to help your dentist pre¬ s
vent decay! * <
ALWAyS USE
COLGATE’S TO CLEAN
YOUR eREATH WHILE
you CLEAN YOUR
TEETH -AND HELP
STOP T0CTH OECAy!
♦Colgate Dental Cream was the tooth¬
paste used in exhaustive scientific re¬
search reported in July Reader's Digest.
SEE OUR MEN’S SUIT VALUES!
^eThrUt^iliesS^^dSave'' LANGS
; ' J
* a-- • -
3 BIG STORES IN ONE
221—223—225 WEST BROAI) STREET
WE CATER TO YOU
OUR EXAMINATION OF YOUR EYES AND PER¬
FECT FITTED FRAMES ASSURE YOU SATISFAC¬
TORY RESULTS. THE SAME COURTESY AND
ATTENTION IS EXTENDED TO ALL.
TO SEE WELL
CONSULT
DR. M. SCHWAB’S SON
OPTOMETRIST
118 BULL STREET
THURSDAY, JULY 13, 1950
Romeo M. Smith, J. P Stevens,
Samuel Stiles, Rev. and Mrs J.
H, Taggart, Mrs. Dorothy B.
Taylor, Mrs. Albert M. Thweaft,
L. B. Toomer, Miss Althea WiH-r
jams, C. Wimberly, Mrs. Harriet
P. Brown, Mrs. Nora Dovis, Rev.
and Mrs. R. M. Gilbert, Mrs. El-
dor a Greene, Miss G. A. Hurd,
Miss Celest G. Hatcher, Mrs.
Hattie Pinkney, Miss M. E.
Burnes, Dr. H M, Collier, Jr.,
Mrs. Willie G. Edwards, Mrs. 1
Maggie Goins.
Leon Grant, Mrs. Bessie
Hardwick, Miss Camilla Weems,
Miss Charlotte Williams, Charlie
Johnson, Sr., Mrs. Florence E.
Robinson, Mrs. Edna Williams,
Savannah State College Faculty
and Students, Dr. S. F. Frazier,
Dr. J. <W. Wilson, The Woodville
School Teachers, J. S. Poindcx-
ter, Slotin and Company, Inc.,
Thomas J. F.annagan, Mr. and
.
Mrs. John R. Stiles, Jr., E. C.
Blackshear, Rev. and Mrs. C. II.,
Caution, R. W. Gadsden, H. N.
Hardwick, Arthur Pope, Miss
Darby, and Ms. Frnes-
R- Harris.
W. K. Payne and Miss Made¬
line R. Shivery were chairman
co-chairman of the drive.