Newspaper Page Text
SATURDAY, AUGUST 15, 1959
to Celebrate
Chid Anniversary
Rev. L. W. Stevens, Pastor
The week’s celebration of
sixty-second anniver. a:y of
First African Baptist church
East Savannah, will begin Au¬
gust 20. The nightly program,
will begin at 8 o'clock.
Rev. L. W. Stevens, pastor
■announces that the
Men’s Day At St. James
A. M. E. Church
The observance of Men’s
last Sunday at, St. James
church was marked hy a forum
that featured several of
community’s leaders magnify¬
ing the theme for the day:
“Christ The Answer.”
Sidney A. Jones spoke on
“Better Family Relationships;”
Joseph R. Jenkins, ‘Juvenile
Delinquency;’’ Clifford E. Hard¬
wick, III, “Problems In Educa¬
tion;” A. L. Sampson, “Moral
Decay,” and Rev. J. L. Key of
St. Paul OME church, “Better
Church Relations.” Walter Sim¬
mons was emcee. Music was
provided by the men’s chorus
with Cjjrenpe Perkins at the
organ.
The morning sermon was de¬
livered by Rev. Bruce C. Cars¬
well, pastor of the, church. The
Sunday School teachers were
Jeff Brooks, A. L. Sampson,
Walter Simmons, B. C. Cars¬
well, Jr George Sawyer and
Charile Wilder.
Others participating on the
program were H. B. Hannah, J.
L, Robinson, Vernon Oliver,
Willie Sheppard, Ben Simmons,
Franklin Bryant, William Por¬
ter. John A. White, Adolphus
Logan, Joe Lovett, Wesley Hall,
Thonm Williams, Willie Sing-
eton, Robert Sams, Herman
Johnson, Ephriam Alston, Joe
Cohen, Felix Jenkins, Isaiah
McBridc, and Christopher Wil¬
liams.
First Evergreen Bapt.
Church
Echoes from the Berean
Bnntist Sundry School and
BTU Convention were heard at
Evergreen Baptist, church last
Sunday from Mrs. Alve.rnia
Smith, Mr.-. Bet- 1 ye Aike.ns, Mrs.
P>lie Cvarr and Mrs. Cassie
Sfrawferidge. An inspirational
address was delivered to the
Junior Department by Mrs. C.
Williams. James Hamilton was
one of the panelists at the
B.T.U. hour. Rev. E. A. Capers,
pastor, delivered the morning
and evening sermons.
Abyssinia Bapt. Church
Men’s day was observed at
Abyssinia Baptist church last
Sunday. Willie Richardson was
the morning speaker and An¬
gus Henry, the evening speak¬
er. J. Jackson was in charge
of the Sunday school. Rev. R.
L. Byrd is pastor of the church.
First Mt Bethel Bapt.
Women’s Day will be observ¬
ed at First Mt. Bethel Bap¬
tist Church Sunday, August 16.
A special program has been,
planned. Rev. Roosevelt Scott,
the pastor, was in charge of
the communion services last]
Sunday. All choirs and ush¬
ers served during the day. Bi¬
ble Training Union is held ev¬
ery Thursday at 5 p. m. Benja¬
min Washington is president.
IF YOU ING WANT HIGH QUALITY PRINT¬
.. .
IF YOU WANT RAPID SERVICE
IF YOU WANT REASONABLE PRICES
EF YOU WANT TO KEEP INFORMED ON LOCAL, NATIONAL, AND
INTERNATIONAL NEWS . . .
SEE
The Savannah Tribune
ESTABLISHED 1875
JOB DEPARTMENT WEEKLY NEWSPAPER
1009 WEST BROAD ST. ADAMS 4-3432—4-3433
Tap
FREE!
>ot £xtta Cost According to Plan —
R0AXE BIG
£ MONEY NOW:
Br Don’t wait another
f minute fe.*rr ing* up to
JSVUW to *.> 00.00 posai-
* ,-Gr J £' bt'f Va'morDealer. Full
Vink- QwrkMoney Make in BIO
y or Spare time.
(MONEY tnk.n* easy oraer*
for our Vaimor and Sweel
Georgia Dressing, Brown Quality Nn-h Una
•f Hut w
d*-r. Me/pe Pink and Mticie
BrownVanishin* Cream,
B'earh Cream. True l.ov#
Perfume. 8 . Food Fla¬
vor*. Incens e and Jewelry
Sa e* made on ai«ht. No
experience neerfad. We
-hrvw yoa bow 8-mi name
'/ H niJrUees, for FREE 5AM-
__ _____f PUE .if Hair t>ree«ln+r and
a tuCet FREE _ xceordine »<:. Car sample rase. p;*en rash
|UtK SAM1I.F. FREE Catalog ami Money - Pl-ae
fAt MO a PRODUCTS CO- £>1
PT. B-WX3
2151 6. Mirhvsn Ave , Chlra-o 16, 111. I
churches and ministers are ex¬
pected to participate:
Thursday, Aug. 20, Wilming¬
ton Baptist church. Rev. E. A,
Capers; Friday, LaPagevilie
Ba-pist church, Rev. Thomas
Brown; Sunday, the host
church and pastor will be in
charge of the regular morning
service with communion at 3
p.m. and at night, St, Mary’e
A .ME. church and Rev. C.
Fogle will conduct the servicer;
Monday, College Park Baptist
church; Tuesday. Happy Home
Baptist church. Rev. L. L.
Small; Wednesday. Central
Baptist church, Rev, J. E. Ba:-
ley; Thun-day, Aug. 27, Litavc.y
Baptist church with the anni-
/ervary sermon by Rev. R. E
Scott, pastor.
The officers of the F. A. B
chuTch are Ben Baker, chair-
nan of trustee board; Mrs
Rosa Lee Palmer, clerk; and
he deacon beard, Richard
Smith, Ernest Baker, Henry
laker, L. E. Mitchell and H. R.
Mitchell.
Beth Eden Bapt. Church
Last Sunday morning the
members of Beth Eden Bap.1st
church heard a practical ser¬
mon delivered by the Rev. Geo.
Brown.
The regular meeting of the
sisterhood will be held Sunday.
Au,g. 16, following the morning
service. All members who did
not respond during the dollar
rally are asked to report at this
time. Mrs. Alma Davis is presi¬
dent and Mrs. Janie Hearns,
secretary.
p o] P n Methodist Church
The pastor. Rev. J. Reddick,
and Misses Mildred L. Ellison,
Amy L. Reddick and Rose Marv
Williams of Palcn Methodist
church left Monday morning
jtn- rUvtona Peach, Fla., to
attend the Leadership Institute
of the Methodist Church which
is being held at Bethune-
Cookman College, Aug. 10-15.
The MY.F. of Palen will hold
its 19th anniversary on Sun-
day, August 16, at 5:00 p.m.
The Sunday School begins
every Sunday morning at 9:45
o’clock, James Ponder, Su<pt.;
morning services at 11:15:
youth meeting at 5:00 p.m. and
evening worship at 7:00 p.m.
c: »conI St. John Bapt.
C^"»rch
The No. 2 Choir of Second St.
John Baptist Church will spon-
sor a program Sunday, Aug. 16,
at 8 p. m. Rev. T. J. Wright,
the pastor, will be in charge of
the mornin gscrvices. W. C
Ross will conduct the Sunday
School at 10 a. m.
mn you know?
last year the Good-Neighbor
Program of .the Seventh-day
Adventist Church helped 5,432,-
042 persons. The value of vol¬
unteer hours and material
given for welfare work amoun¬
ted to $22,949,664, and 4.633.062
articles of clothing were given
away. The church operates 197
hospitals, clinics and treatment
rooms and 5,222 schools.
Bolton St. Bapt. Church
To Honor Pastor
:
i
|
,
Rev. VV. N. Robinson
Beginning Monday night, j I
August 17, through Friday,
Auguet 21, the Bolton Street
Day of Prayer and Fasting
At F.A.B. Church to Initiate
Renovation Program t ~ » hoi
The First African Baptist
Church in initiating its renova¬
tion program will be in prayer
and fasting 19'., hours begin¬
ning midnight, Thursday. Aug.
13, through 7:30 p.m. Friday,
August 14.
The members of the church
not eat nor drink during
praying and fasting period.
purpose of the fasting Is
seek divine help, guidance,
spiritual strength from Al¬
God to help them be¬
and successfully complete
renovation of the First Af¬
Baptist church building.
are also praying that all
connected with the!
be strengthened and;
to fulfill their obliga-1
Therefore, they are
all interested church-'
Partridge to Go U. S.
Air Force in
WASHINGTON, D. C. (By As¬
sociated Negro Press!—Dr. De¬
borah Cannon Partridge of
Cranford, N. J., will travel to
the LTnited States Air Force
Academy, Colorado Springs,
Colo., in September as a newly
appointed member of the Pres¬
ident’s Citizens Advisory Com¬
mittee on the Fitness of Ameri¬
can Youth.
The committee was formed
simultaneously in 1956 when
President Dwight D. Eisenhow-
members will meet with the
DU. WM. A. WTCXLEK
SCHWAB OPTICAL
141 Bull Street
Phone ADams 6-0X48
COMPLETE OPTICAL
SERVICE
Scientific Eve Examination
Oculist Prescriptions Filled
Lenses or Frames Replaced
Contact Lenses
Weekly or Monthly Budget
Payments
THU SAVANNAH TRIBUNE
conduct
programs nightly in honor of
the second anniversary of Rev.
W. N. Robinson as pastor of the
church.
The following church eg pay-
tons and organizations will par¬
ticipate: Monday night, Con¬
ner’s Temple, Rev. W. W.
Whitehead, ladles Aid Club;
Tues.. International I o n g -
shoremen. Rev. R. L. Plummer,
Deacons and Deaconess Board: j
Wed., Thankful Bapt. church. j
Rev. H. F. Grant. U mdav S 'hoc', j
and Junior Choir; Thurs., Mill-1 J
er’s Temple, Bishop J. E. P.-tler,
Senior Choir and PTU: and
Friday, Smyrna Baptist church.
Rev. H. Bag ins, Choral Group.
The program committee con-
sists of Mrs. B. J. Shou]t/,, M
Veronica Storne and J. C. Mai-
thews.
cs and Cnristlans who believe
in the power of prayer and the
power of God to join them at
this time ’ I
During these 19>(. hours the
church sanctuary will be open
where members may be able to
go into the church .offer a |
prayer ,or sit and meditate.
stay to sacred as long music as they by the like, organ-! listen j
1st and leave whenever they get !
readv: there will be no formal
services. !
All members of First A. B. who
feel the importance of the
program and who are interest¬
ed in its complete success will
be coming into the church at
some period from midnight,
Thursday through Friday night,
7 30 to offer prayer in God’s
sanctuary.
from September 13 thru
Fitness. As a member of
the committee. Dr. Partridge
along with other committee
er established his Council on
15 at the academy.
On Faculty At Queens College
Dr Partridge, who is a pro¬
fessor of education at Queens
College in Flushing, New York,
informed of her appoint¬
to the committee In a
letter sent to her recently by
Secretary of the Interior Fred
A. Seaton who is chairman of
p V/v- ■' '
•\ 8
-
i i
TOAST TO SUCCESS—President Wan. V. S. Tubman of Liberia
drinks toast to success with Johnston Avery, president of Libe-
rian American-Swedish Minerals Co. (Lamcet, which has begun
mining iron ore In abundantly rich Liberian Nimba Range moun-
tain area. 'Avery became aware of Liberia’s vast wealth of ore
while working as administrator for the United States Government
‘‘Point Four” program. Operation will yield estimated 4 million
tons of ore Photol
the Council on Youth Fitness,
Tenure on the committee be¬
gan If or Dr. Fhrtridge July 1
and continues for !2 months.
The committee meets once a
year with the council and has
as Its primary goal the obtaln-
mg 0 f “grass-roots facts on
fitness of youth throughout
the country.” The committee
was organized in the attempt
to “alert the nation of the ex¬
tent and nature of the prob¬
lem and means and methods
of meeting it.”
The committee's duties in¬
clude helping to interpret the
structure, program and objec¬
tives of the council; providing
the council with Ideas; making
suggestions and advising it on
plans; assisting in the imple¬
mentation of national, state
and local community programs;
serving as a clearinghouse, a
Opportunity of Your Lifetime!
ANA HOMES, INC.
Brand new 3-Bedroom homes on large lots,
paved streets, City sewerage.
Very Small Cash Payment And Term s That
Are Less Than Rent.
United States Government Supervised From
Start To Finish. / * *
There Will Be 107 Ghana Homes For Sale.
To See, Go West on Gwinnett Street to Stiles Avenue (U. S. 17-A) Then South one-half
Mile (Cloverdale) Then West, 3 Blocks. Salesmen on Grounds or Phone Sunday,
ADAMS 2-7646 OR
A. F. KING & SON
ADAMS 2-6292; ADAMS 2-5371; ADAMS 3-5025
OR
WILLIAM LATTIMORE COMPANY
ADAMS 6-9561 AT 202 EAST BAY STREET
sounding board, and a traffic
light for the council, and eval-
as a clearinghouse mwmwmf
uating its objects and progress.
SANDFLY
Ry George E. Jenkins
Funeral services for Mrs. Su¬
sie Hail were held Monday at
the Seventh-day Adventist
church with Elder H. L. Cleve¬
land, pastor, officiating and
eulogy by Geo. E. Jenkins. In¬
terment was in Old Church
cemetery with the Williams &
Williams Funeral Home in
charge of arrangements.
Funeral services for Mrs.
Lula Kemp will be held this
Thursday atflternoon from the
Speedwell Methodist church,
Rev. C. W. Ponder officiating.
Interment will be in Eugenia
cemetery. Mrs. Kemp was well
known in former years as a
mid-wife and was an active
church and community worker.
Successful Ga. Farmer
Follows Research Findings
To The Letter
Joseph Wyche of Valdosta,
Ga„ who believes In following
the agricultural experiment
station recommendations to the
letter, has become one of
most successful farmers in his
county, reports State Exten¬
sion Supervisor Augustus Hill.
Starting out as a K ' otton
sharecropper on a few acres In
1936, Mr. Wyche and his family
now own 73 acres and rent 80
more on which they produce an¬
nually about 12,000 pounds of
tobacco, 11 bales of cotton, 3,-
500 bushels of corn, 50 to 100
crates of cantaloupes, more
than 100 head of hogs, and 10
to 15 calves.
Eighteen years ago the
enough* tTLk^ds
farm they were just beginning
to develop after purchasing it
with a loan from the Farmers
Home Administration of the U.
S. Department of Agriculture.
Their tobacco yield averaged
less than 1.000 pounds per acre,
and their cotton production
stood at only 225 pounds of lint
per acre. Today they are get¬
ting 1.400 pounds of tobacco
and 550 pounds of lint cotton
per acre.
The Wyches’ higher crop
yields are a result of the care¬
ful way they follow the recom¬
mendations of the experiment
station says Mr. Hill. For ex¬
ample, Mr. Wyche Increased his
tobacco yield by spacing thp
plants 18 Inches apart instead
of 16, and by applying fertiliz¬
er and controlling Insects and
plant diseases precisely accord¬
ing to recommendations.
Cotton yield rose when he be¬
gan growing the variety recom¬
mended for the area, applying
the amount and analysis of
fertilizer suggested, and poison¬
ing against boll weevils and
other insects on the basis of
carpful weekly sample checks
of infestation.
“Guesswork won’t do," says Mr.
Wyche, “you’ve got to know
what you are doing these days,
PAGE THRU
if you arc going to make a liv-
ing farming.”
And he raises hogs and beef
in the same painstaking way
he grows crops. Hs provides
year-round grazing in lmprove-
ed pastures for his cattle and
swine; and by ordering special
f PP d mixes, he makes sure that
j^j s cowa an( j sows get' ade-
quate amounts of protein, vit¬
amin, and minerals In their
diets during gestation.
Mr. Wyche counts on County
Agent J. W. Caunders to keep
him informed of experiment
station findings. And h« fol¬
lows these as closely as he can.
Mrs. Wyche and their 15-year
old daughter Juanita try to b#
1 ^ aS ^* following th.
advice of their home demon¬
stration agent, Mrs. Lily G. Rog¬
ers. They often turn to her
for pointers on what to look
for when buying appliances and
other things for the home as
well as for advice In sewing,
canning and preparing foods
for their home freezer.
Mr. and Mrs. Wyche were
married 23 years ago. After
they paid the preacher they
were down to ,a five dollar bill.
But they had already bargain¬
ed for a house «nd groceries
from the landowner with whom
they were going to grow oot-
ton on halves.
The Wyches kept their gro¬
cery bill down by raising most
of their food. This enabled
them to clear enough to buy a
mule and become cash renters
Impressed with their dllllgenca
and careful management tha
Farmers Home Administration
approved their application for
a loan In 1940 to buy a 60-acre
farm. They paid out 11 years
later—29 years ahead of time.
Some years ago they replaced
their mules with a tractor and
all the necessary attachments.
Also they have a small truck.
For many of the farmers for
miles around, the Wyche farm
is a kind of model they try to
l