Newspaper Page Text
PAGE SIXTEEN
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FIRST A. M. E. CHURCH
Rev. R. H. Martin, Pastor
Cor. Strong and Hull Streets
Sunday School—lo a. m., Miss
C. Wymbs, superintendent.
Morning Services—ll:3o o'clock.
Evening Worship—7 o’clock.
Prayer meeting at the church
each Wednesday night at 8 o’clock.
You are always welcome to
worship with us.
EBENEZER BAPTIST CHURCH
Cor. Chase and Reese" Streets
Rev. C. J. Gresham, Pastor
Sunday School—9:4s a. m.
Morning Worship—ll:3o a. m.
B. T. U—s p. m.
Evening Worship—6:3o p. m.
Holy communion rites will be
administered.
Come and worship with us.
Don’'t forget the ‘“Harmony
Queens” will be presented in a
concert at Ebenezer Baptist
Church, Reese Street on Wednes
day, August 15, 1951. We are ex
pecting our friends, both white
and colored to meet Rev. and Mrs.
Shields at this program.
St. JOHN'S HOLINESS
CHURCH
Elder P. S. McDaniels, Pastor
Mrs. J. E. Barnett, Secretary
Sunday School—1(:30 a. m.
Worship Service—ll:ls a. m.
Evangelistic Service—B p. m.
Junior Church—Tuesday, 8 p.
m.
Prayer services will be held at
our church each Wednesday and
¥Friday night at 8 p. m.
GREATER BETHEL A. M. E.
CHURCH
Broad at Billups Street
Curtis H. Boddy, Minister
Sunday School—lo a. m.
Morning Worship-~11:15 a. m.
The Men’s Club of Greater
Bethel are having a Silver Tea
this afternoon at the home of Mr.
S. R. Jones, 1398 W. Hancock ave
nue, at 4:30 p. m. Prof. O. C. Bod
dy, A. B, M. Ed, Principal of
Annie Sharkley School, Griffin,
Ga., as guest speaker., The pub
lic is Invited.
The Rising Son’s Gospel Singers
will present a concert at Greater
Bethel A. M. E. Church this even
e g
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(€~ 00.000 THERE‘S no reason under thesun for your Pontiac will perform
R - why you should postpone the brilliantly, year after year.
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‘ Stop in as soon as you can, we'll work glances of others, for Pontiac is always
out a deal—and then you’'ll know gsought after, always popular, always
what we mean by the extra satisfac- valuable.
tion of a Pontiac! i
o But best of all you'll notice it very
You'll notice it first in the pride you pleasantly on the price tag—for the
take in your Pontiac’s distinctive ou.; gatisfaction of a Pontiac costs
beauty, for there’s nothing else like it. nothing! If you can afford any new car
You'll notice it every mile you drive, you can afford a wonderful Pontiac!
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. CHIEF PONTIAC CO.
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ing at 8:30 p. m. Everyone is in
vited.
| SPRINGFIELD BAPTIST
| CHURCH
Fourth Street
Rev. W. H, Caldwell, Pastor
Sunday School-—10:30 a. m.
Morning Worship—ll:3o a. m.
B. T. U—6:45 p. m,
Evening Worship—T7:3o o'clock.
Prayer services at our church
each Wednesday night at 8 p. m.
You are invited to worship with
us.
ST. MARK A. M. E. CHURCH
Doblin Street
Rev. Hughes, Pastor
Sunday School—-10:30 a. m.
Morning Worship—ll:4s o’clock.
Today will be Home Coming at
our church. Dinner will be served
on the church ground. Holy Com
munion and Baptismal rites will
be administered.r We want you
to worship with us today.
MT. PLEASANT BAPTIST
CHURCH
Brooklyn Extension
Rev. W. C. Smith, Pastor
Sunday School—lo a. m.
Morning Worship—ll:3o a. m.
B. T. U—6 p. m.
Evening Worship—7 p. m:
We welcome you to all services
at our church.
HILL'S CHAPEL BAPTIST
CHURCH
Broad ‘and Harris Streets
Rev. M. Tate, Pastor
Sunday School—lo a, m.
Morning Worship—ll:3o o’clock.
B. T. U—s'p. m.
Evening Worship—l 7 o'clock.
A cordial welcome awaits you
at our church.
HILL'S FIRST BAPTIST
CHURCH
Reese and Pope Streets
Rev. R. B. Hawk, Pastor
Sunday School—lo a. m.
Morning Worship—ll:3o o’clock.
Evening Worship—~6:3o o’clock.
We invite you to worship with
—J. A. Johnson, Reporter
HOOKS A HUSBAND
CRAB ORCHARD LAKE, 1111. —
(AP)—Leroy Walker of Murphys
boro, 111., taught his wife casting
and she made a 160 pound catch.
"Twas Leroy.
Twice in her first six casts Mrs.
Walker took her husband’s cap off.
Her seventh hooked Walker in
the neck. He pushed the hook
through, exposed the barb and
clipped it to pull it free.
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TOURIST'S FAVORITE — The governor’s mansion at Williams
burg, Va., as seen through gateway.
TIME IS TURNED BACKWARD
IN FAMOUS MUSEUM TOWN
By JOE WING
AP Newsfeatures Writer
This year a million Americans
will journey through time towards
the era of their ancestors without
ever getting out of reach of hot
and cold running water.
This has been made possible by
a whole series of living history
experiments that have sprung up
across the nation in the last quar
ter century,
It was just 25 years ago that
John D. Rockefeller, jr,, told Dr.
W. A. R. Goodwin to go ahead
and have preliminary studies made
for the restoration of Williams
burg, Va.
%® % %
Today, with a half million visi
tors annually, a $2,000,000 bud
get and 1,000 employees, Colonial
Williamsburg is by far the most
ambitious and best known of
restorations in America,
But by no means is it the only
one.
Williamsburg has paced the na
tion’s enthusiasm, even if it has
not invariably set the style, for
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
historic town restoration projects.
Two dozen major ones stand today
in a score of states. New ones keep
cropping up. As a result, the na
tion’s interest in preservation of
its past never was so high as now
at a time when danger cf destruc
tion never was so apparent,
In general there are three class- |
es of projects, Williamsburg, al- '
most in a class by itself, combines .
preservation of existing structures
with re-building of thosé that have '
yielded to time, and with removal
of modern buildings. The recon- ;
struction is done on the basis o‘s?
research as extensive as possible. |
In a more modest way, Valleyt
Forge in Pennsylvania and New 1
Salem in Illinois fall in this same |
category. i
. o % }
Second and most familiar type is |
the one in which the principal ef
fort is preservation of existing
structures, without any spectacular
attempt to rebuild those that have |
crumbled away. This goes on in|
literally hundreds of cities - and !
towns where mansions and public |
buildings and the birthplaces of
famous sons and daughters are
on display.
But the towns in the living his
tory category are the ones like
Natchez, Miss,, Charleston, S. C,,
and Virginia City, Nev, where
preservation has been made a
community project,
Finally there is the museum
town-—like Old Sturbridge, Mass.,
Shelburne, Vt.,, and Mystic, Conn,
—where synthetic communities are
created in the spirit of the past,
without any pretense that they
represent an actual early day de
velopment,
Other places where historic proj
ects in one category or another are
in being include: Columbia, Calif.,
Deerfield and Plymouth, Mass.;
Fort Harrod, Ky., Leesburg and
Waterford, Va., Monroe and Rich
mondtown, N. Y., New Castle, Del.,
Newport, R. 1., Tombstone, Ariz.,
Virginia City, Mont.,, Winston-
Salem, N. C., and Harper’s Ferry,
W. Va. !
All this planning and patching,
hammering and hauling, fund rais
ing and tourist tempting could
hardly go on without differences
of opinion,
‘ Newton B, Drury, director of the
i National Park Service which has
a great number of the nation’s
monuments under its wing, cites
the precept—“ Better tc preserve
than to repair; better to repair
i than restore; better to restore than
| reconstruct.”
The park department, he adds,
does not recommend the hypotheti
cal or conjectural restoration of
| structures, or portions of struc
‘ tléres that have long been destroy~
ed.
Could he have had in mind such
grand scale projects as Williams
burg where restoration of struc
tures long destroyed is routine?
On the other side of the fence,
PENNEY'S
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° e ’
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Printed vinyl plastic : Long-wearing fabric!
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I'ABLE COVERS MATTRESS COVERS
SOC SRILOY 288
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cloths costing i&}:\' @ W quality fe a tures | ‘;‘* - S
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NOTRDET il e e SSE ’x" B &@‘Q‘
The Baker twins, planning their futures the summer after high
schoo! graduation, decide changes in their appearance are neces
sary if they're to fit well into their new roles. Here, wearing
gadgety costumes that do little for them, Barbara practices her
typing while Betsey studies college catalogues.
G. Edwin Brumbaugh, who has
resetored the huts at Valley Forge
and numerous other puildings in
Pennsylvania, writes in the mag
azine “Antiques” about the tech
nique of such reconstructions.
You must do painstaking re
search, he says, interview old tim
ers, make investigations on the
site, study general styles and tech
niques of the period, and employ
the same materials and methods
as were originally used.
The craze for historic preserva
tion stems back more than 100
years. It was in 1850 that the State
of New York started the boom by
acquiring Washington’s headquar
ters at Newburgh. Nine years later,
a ladies’ association bought Mount
Vernon. By 1895, about 20 historic
buildings—ranging from Indepen=
dence Hall in Philadelphia to a
Nebraska log cabin—could be
viewed by the public, By 1933
there were more than 400; today
hundreds more,
* * *
Every histeric building serves as
a tourist magnet. Mount Vernon
and Independence Hall, for in
stance, attract thousands annually.
But with the arrival of the pre
served or restored community,
history really has become big bus-
SUNDAY, AUGUST 12, 1951,
IR ll——.
iness,
At Williamsburg a survey show
ed that 200,000 admission-paying
tourists stayed two days on an
average and spent sls,
Eyeing that record, a Winston-
Salem newspaper commented:
“Businessmen are convinced that
in ignoring Old Salem we are over
looking a community asset of real
importance—the tourist dollar i
a fast dollar and passes through
many hands.”
In the same vein, a founder of
the historic Charles Foundation
has commented: “History is val
uable not only in terms of building
citizens but in terms of dollars.”
Big time incomes such as thege
men have in mind indicates big
time investmetns. Some $25,000 -
000 has been poured into Colonial
Williamsburg. Winston- - Salem
seeks $2,500,000. Even Tombstone,
Ariz., has a goal of $500,000.
BEAVER FOR ELIZABETH
WINNIPEG ~— (AP) — The an
cient and lawful tribute paid to
reigning monarchs and heirs to
the British throne by the Hudson's
Bay €. will likely be elaimed by
Princess Elizabeth when she passes
through Winnipeg on her Cana
dian tour.
Unde rthe terms of the Hudson’s
Bay charter, granted by King
Charles II in 1670, it was ordained
that the company pay as tribute
to his heirs and successors two
black beaver sking and two elk
heads.
The tribute was to be rendered
according to the charter, “when
soever the reigning sovereig:
should enter into his territory o
Rupert’s land of which . .. (the)
company was created true and ab
solute lords and proprietors, sub
ject to the paramount seigniory o
his majesty.”