Newspaper Page Text
SATURDAY, JULY 18, I960
CHURCHES
Trojans Club to Celebrate
* Tenth Anniversary
i
5
s
4
I
f
f
£
!
MRS. L. S .STELL, Jr.
The Trojans club of Second
Baptist church, Houston and
President streets, will observe
its 10th anniversary Sunday
evening, July 17, at 7 p. m.
Mrs. L. S. Steil, Jr., president
of the Savannah Baptist Min¬
isters Wives Alliance, will be
the guest speaker at this spe¬
cial vesper service.
Mrs. Steil is a native of Grif¬
fin, Ga,., where she received
her elementary training. She
received her secondary educa¬
tion in Atlanta wthere she also
attended Morris Brown College.
Mrs, Steil is a militant religious
and civic worker and a dynamic
speaker.
jwThe Trojans club is one of
flhe women’s clubs of Second
Jj&ptSt church that is under
.leadership of Mrs. Anita
StriSIng. Rev. E. P. Quarter-
maiwtt minister.
» “The 'public is invited.
lain t •' ■ __L— ---
Speaking of
oif PUBLIC SAFETY
dl ■ . "Where there is no vision
14 the people perish”. m
4 b
Residential Modern Street
Lighting Chases Crime
•Ci.EVELAN’D, Ohio — Years ago,
s'wtreet attacks and assaults were
tUBTttK much confined to the bad
neighborhoods, but now a mobile
population brings danger to our
very doorsteps. that the
Police officers agree
possibility of being seen is the
most powerful deterrent to crime.
Modern street lighting provides
this protection, places for it leaves no
shadowy between spots of
Jigjit. It gives the potential crim¬
inal no dark place to hide and
spring on an unsuspectingvictim.
It leaves no dark landscaped areas
to serve as cover for robbery,
rape or murder.
Darkness attracts some very
strange birds, but the penetrat¬
ing power of modern street light¬
ing sends them on their way.
Neighborhood street crimes are
headlined all over the United
States, but they don’t occur in
lighted the’jdark situations. Muggings in
ington, neighborhoods of Wash¬
D.C.; Rape in a dark Chi¬
cago apartment alley-way ; Mur¬
der Under the uncertain lighting
conditions of Norfolk; Assault in
the dark by-ways of Camden.
“We can’t patrol every area of
every city every moment,” say
police. Modern street lighting is
a partner of the law.
t Leaders Sit-In “White
Lounge” at S. C. Airport
Hall, chairman of Greenville
Ctflfe. A. J. Whittenberg
chairman of the Greenville, N.
A. A. C P. and James T. Mc¬
Cain. CORE field secretary, “sat¬
in” at the “whites only” lounge
W the airport on July 7.
"The “three leaders 7 — were "ml
diHea-tened with jail by
officer Hughes. However,
We-remained seated in
-frrtmge until Rev. Hall’s plane
i .Ohariotte. N. C. left.
policeman said, “Don’t I know
to Rev. Hall. Hall re¬
plied, "Yes you do.”
}+] 0 ail had led more than a
thousand CORE members and
friends o'n a protest prayer pil¬
grimage to the Greenville Air¬
port on Emancipation Day,
G - M CLEANERS
1318 W. Gwinnett St.
Announces
New Pick-Up and Delivery
Service
DIAL ADams 4-9412
j Expert Dry Cleaning
Shirt Laundry Sendee
Open Six Days Weekly
4-Hour Service
James Kennedy, Prop.
Baptist Ministers Union
The United BaptLst Ministers
Union met at St. Luke Baptist
Church Tuesday, Rev. B. S.
Thomas, host minister. Rev.
L. S. Steil. Jr., the president,
and Rev. G. W. Carter, secre¬
tary, served in their respective
places.
Meditation period I
was con¬
ducted by Rev. L. S. Aikens. i
The Sunday School lesson was
discussed by Rev. Wm. Gwyn,
minister, College Park Baptist
church. The subject was
‘What is True Security?” Amos
6 : 1 - 8 .
Next Tuesday the Sunday
School convention will convene
in Thomasville, Ga., and the
Interdenominational Ministers
Alliance will meet at the Par¬
iah Hall of St. Matthews’s Epis¬
copal church.
On Tuesday, July 26, Rev. Steil
will conduct the meditation
period of the Union and Rev. C.
J. Jackson will bring high¬
lights on the Sunday School les¬
son.
Rev. Jackson will conduct ser¬
vices Sunday at 2 p. m. at the
County jail and Rev. Gwyn on
Sunday, July 24.
The following joined t)he
Union: Rev. E. G. Lane, Rev. L.
S. Aikens, Rev. J. S. Wise and
Rev. Dan Singletary.
New Frank
Callen Boys’
Club Opens
CContinued from Page Ons>
Julian, a June 1960 graduate of
Savannah State College major¬
ing in business education, Ed¬
ward Greene, arts and crafts.
John E. Thompson, custodian,
and James Holmes, assistant in
Boys Work.
Volunteer workers are Wil¬
liam Pugh, James Moultrie
Horace and Norman Pitts, Gene
Johnson, Earl Robinson, and
Charles Henry Lee.
A group of younger boys head¬
ed by Zachery Scott, assisted
Mr. Greene in building and in¬
stalling benches in the locker
rooms.
Charles Weston and a group
of young adults contributed the
money to build some volley ball
standards. Jip Chisholm, A1
Walls and Norman Pitts, built
the standards using cement for
a base and iron pipes for poles.
These fellows are among our
boys who have completed a
Masonry course at Savannah
State College.
While there is an appreci¬
able amount of equipment on
hand there is need for much
more. A most urgent need is
for electric fans or some sys¬
tem for cooling the building.
was organized to protest the
attempt to exclude Jackie Rob¬
inson from the “white lounge”
In October of last year.
McCain reported that the
leaders plan to continue to use
al! the airport facilities in spite
of arrest threats. “We shall
be We are clt j
lzens and we ' are taXpayerS '!
The airport belongs to all of
just bo whites. We, (
us-not
shall continue to use it.”
As long ago as 1955 the In¬
terstate ruled Commerce that airports Commis- that' j
sion
receive federal financial aid |
cannot legally discriminate j
against Negro interstate pas- j
sengers.
We maintain eo active sale* force for selling houses, bun¬
galows, hestness property, lots and Investment property. ;
We are ready to serve you whether yon wish to bay or eelL ..
Insurance written at a 25% saving to yon.
We collect rents- -Over *• year* experience.
X Hum *}j
Suylng-SelUng^S-^ «■
Loans ;;
Insurance Savannah, Georgia
;; • York St., East Phones ADams 2-6292 — Adams 3-5925 V.
Direction
By J. REDDICK
Wear Your Own “Shoes”
There was once an inhabitant
in a community who occupied a
position as parasite to the other
inhabitants of the community One
night this parasitic individual took
the shoes of another member of
the community and wore them to
a nearby storehouse and stole
much goods. To further baffle
their attempt to track him down,
he went the direction in which
the other member lived. Dogs were
put on his track the next morning.
The dogs kept on by all houses
until they came to the home of
the thief.
Many of us today wear other’s
“shoes” to hide truths concerning
our real selves and our deeds, We
are more eager for the public to
be impressed than we are to repre¬
sent high principles. The “shoes”
of others might make better
tracks to impress the public than
our own. We therefore are busy
looking for “shoes” because we
are more interested in the track
impression than anything else.
Certain tracks keep the public
looking the other way for the
thief. This not only applies to
but, national, inter¬
national and local organizations,
the home.
As noted in the case of the thief,
the impression was not the whole
story. The essence of the track,
or the inside story makes the
difference. It makes the differ¬
ence if carried over into any other
area of life situations. Truths of
life tracks down the essence. We
might conceal our identity in many
ways but truth will unfold to our
doors as life progresses.
We might even have a govern¬
ment based upon the consent of
the governed, if bad people are
running such government, the
government will be of the same
contents or essence of those who
run it. Bad people make any
system that they use bad.
People here and elsewhere are
fighting for systems, along with
many other things. The name of
our system might be adequate.
System may not be the thing that
we most need. Systems are so
often used as shoes to hide reality.
In the case of the thief, it was
not a different shoe that he need-
ed. It was not tracks to make
certain impression^ that he need¬
ed in his favor. Rut he did need
a change of heart and change of
mind. He needed to find himself
and face up to the facts of life.
He needed to wear his own shoes
and find his right relationship to
»thers.
Many of us today are so much
like this thief. We fear to face
the facts of life. When we direct
our face against the essence of
truth and facts of life we are
headed in the wrong direction.
We can no more deal with facts
of life by wearing “shoes” of
others than we can borrow our¬
selves out of debt. Truths of life
will track us down.
Wear Your Own “Shoes.”
Announcing The Grand
Opening of The
Palm Night Club
THURSDAY JULY 14, 1960
2600 Augusta Ave. at Lathrop
Avenue
Featuring The Largiest Bar
in Savannah
FEATURING
James Drayton & His Organ
Combo
TIIURS., FRI., SAT. NIGHTS
AIR CONDITIONED
Paul’s Shoe Repair Shop
1110 WEST BROAD ST.
TRY PAUL’S FOR BETTER
SHOE REPAIR SERVICE
Also has a number of slightly
used shoes for men and boys
in many different sizes
Paul Johnson, Mgr.
THE SAVANNAH TRIBUNE, SAVANNAH, GEORGIA
X UAN ALWAYS TELL WHEN l!E X S LYING—
— HIS LIPS MOVE /
* t
clc a/' rsTj. 4 ,
Judge Rules Picketing
SPRINGFIELD, Mass., (ANP)
—Does free speech include the
right to picket Wool worth’s in
protest against the company’s
racial segregation practices in its
Southern stores?
“Yes,” ruled Superior Court
Judge Reuben Lurie last week in
a little-noticed but far-reaching
decision holding un-Constitutional
a Springfield ordinance that
barred picketing except in labor
disputes.
The American Jewish Congress
and the Civil Liberties Union of
Massachusetts, which had filed a
joint “friend-of-the-court” brief in
the case, hailed the decision as a
“significant victory for civil
rights.”
•------=--4-
13th Regional 4-H Club
Camp Set Aug. 8-15 at Howard
WASHINGTON, D. C. — The
13th Annual Regional 4-H Club
Camp will be held August 8-15
here at Howard University, the
Federal Extension Service of the
U. S. Department of Agriculture
announced this week.
About 125 outstanding 4-II’ers
from the 17 States of the Southern
region have been selected as dele¬
gates to the encampment. They
will be representing nearly 950,000
fellow club members of the South.
Accompanying them will be 32
State Extension Service leaders
who will take part in their own
4-H program workshop.
Carrying out the theme of the
camp, “Learn, Live and Serve
Through 4-H,” the delegates will
visit the White House, the Capitol,
the Agricultural Research Center
at Beltsville, Md., and other places
of interest; lay wreaths at the
Tomb of the Unknowns in Arling¬
ton National Cemetery and at the
tomb of George and Martha Wash¬
ington at Mount Vernon, and join
in the discussion of youth prob-
rectrr of tin Fl.rida State Exten-
Dr. Lunt Says:
Let us Share your pains.
CHIROPRACTIC HEALTH CENTER
1011 WEST BROAD
Next to Savannah Tribune
PHONE AD 3-0949
Real Estate Loans
Consult us before making your Real Estate Loans.
We haye handled real estate for 40 years.
Loans made on various plans to suit your incom*
It will be to your advantage to see us first
Southern Savings & Loan
Company
17 WEST McDONOUGII ST. DIAL ADams 2-2113
Assets Over $2,000,000
WE PAY 3% CERTIFICATES
3% SAVINGS DEPOSITS
The case concerned a Christian
minister — the Rev. Alan F.
Sawyer, Jr. — who had been
arrested for picketing a Wool-
worth store in Springfield.
He was charged with violation
of a Springfield ordinance barring
picketing in other than labor dis¬
putes. In his decision, Judge Lurie
upheld the joint American Jewish t
Congress-Civil Liberties Union I
argument that the ordinance was
an un-Constitutional violation of
free speech and as such could not
Constitutionally authorize the City
of Springfield to interfere with
Rev. Sawyer’s protest against
Woolworth’s segregation practices
in the South.
lems.
Among the camp speakers will
he Under Secretary of Agriculture
True D. Morse, Federal Extension
Administrator C. M. Ferguson, Dr.
F. D. Patterson, president of the
Phelps-Stokes Fund and former
president of Tuskegee Institute,
Dr. George W. Gore, president of
Florida A. and M. State Univer¬
sity, and Dr. Edward W. Aiton,
national director of 4-11 and Young
Men and Women’s programs.
Plans for the event are being
directed by Dr. M. O. Watkins, di-
Jon Service and chairman of the
camp committee; A. S. Bacon of
the Federal Extension Service who
is serving as camp director; and
Lloyd 1,. Rutledge, associate lead¬
er of 4-H and YMW program of
the Southern region.
States to be represented at the
encampment are: Alabama, Ar¬
kansas, Delaware, Florida, Geor¬
gia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mary¬
land, Mississippi, Missouri, North
Carolina, Oklahoma, South Caro¬
lina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia,
and West Virginia.
Roosevelt
Speak
(Continued from Page One>
Enterprises, New York;
businessmen William H. Kelly,
Philadelphia; George Berry of
Ohio; Edward Baker of
Richard Austin, De¬
and J. J. Henderson of Dur¬
N. C.
Theodore M. Berry, recently
of Cincinnati, and Ar¬
T. Shivers, Mayor of nearby
will join Mayor Donald
Clancy in officially welcoming
League.
The National Bankers Associa¬
headed by its president, B.
Mitchell, President of Wash¬
industrial Bank, meeting
joint sessions with NBL, will
workshops and panels on
July 20 . How lo Start
Bunk, Competition for
It Takes lo Be a Banker,
of Automation on
and Financing S ma 1
will ho discussed.
BusjnO.ss League President
I). Pattersop, of New
Fund director,
and President-Emeritus
United Negro College
present the
“Trends and New
in Business” at the
session of the Convention,
19,when he will present
speaker, Raymond J.
of Philadelphia, President
Carver Loan and
there. President
will introduce Mr.
the banquet. Relford V.
Washington attorney and
general• counsel, will
The National Housewives
headed by Mrs. Pearl Bell
Kentucky, meeting
with NHI, and
hold Its meetings on
1 hi Old, 7mm
“The remarkable thing
about school reunions is that
your old classmates have
gotten so fat and bald that
they hardly recognize you.”
throughout the world..
The
word
for gin
..... is
So take the worlds word for it...
There's no gin like * fjQRDONS World’s Biggest Seller!
^ .
[ST* All three “ a organizations ** ,h * M presi¬ ”’'
dents will speak at the Presidents’
Night session, at 8:00 , P.M., on
July 19.
Charms .Scruggs, of Cincinnati’s
Station WCIN, 9901 Beckman St.,
is the local Convention chairman.
r
i i~ CARNATION
j COOKING HINTS
!
^ HOME SERVICE DIRECTOR AND HER STAFF ^
Now ideas for summer pat io meals arc always welcome,
Ami if you like food with a touch of fcSouth-of the Border
flavor you’re sure lo like this different tamale casserole.
It’s an all in one dish that needs just salad and dessert
to complete the menu. Carnation Evaporated Milk i3
used to give this dish extra delicious flavor and light
texture. Dependable Carnation adds extra goodness to
all cooking and shelf. baking, and it's always SO hand/ r^ht
on the kitchen yUPiff"
SOUTH-OF-THE-BOROER CASSEROLE /<
(Makes 6 to 8 servings! J
Vi cup snlod o8 1 cup (8-oune* can! to w n - «wa»
t oound ground beef Vi cup water
Vi rup chopped onion 1 cup cormmot
1 Vi rup« II 2 ounce can) 2 eggs undiluted j
whole kernel corn 1 Vj or s (tetrg#
Vi cup sliced rips o'ives \ *1 . CARNATION E.’AFCRAI®
1 tablespoon chili powder MILK
Grated cheese i
JTeat oil in large frying pan. Add
ground beef and onions. Cook
until meat la lightly browned
and onions are transparent. Add
corn, olives, chill powder, salt,
tomato sauce and water. Mix
well. Remove from heat. Slowly
add cornmeal to the meat mix.*
c 208 Printed In U.S.A. (80)
PACE TnRB8
AWtlTlSFRS* in’thrSav.-.M-
i nuh Tribune will appreciate you*
! patronage. Please read their
i ads In every issue. They make
j it possible for us to print your
news and your patronage makes
It possible for them to stay la
business. Thanks!
turn, BtirriBfT eonhNntfy Oxd'
elightly. tiori. Mix Beat well. eggs. Stir Add into Carnap meat’
mixture. Pour into buttered
2 -quart casserole. Bake to modk,
crate oven (350° F.) about 45
minutes. Garnish with grated^
cheese, if dualled. .