1
/ AGE FOUR ,ELEPHONf 2-7079 Sooth Carolinag Wwkly*1 aHE LIGHTHOUSE A1VD INFO^pR. COLUMBIA, S. C. MiliUnt, ProgroHdm DyaM® SATURDAY, JULY 31, 1954 ■>. % AND . . TELEPHONE :0U53C -7079 ' INFORnUfj Published by Xhe Lighthouse Publishing Co., Inc., at 1507 Harden St., Columbia, S. C. ^Vlojeska M. Simkins _______ -_______ ----------------------------- Acting Editoi Subscription fotea, must be paid in advance: 1 yr, j;>.75; 6 mss, |2.50; Tmos., $1-50 Price Per CopyTen Cents Advertising foies on request: Represented nationally b* Inter8Ute United Newspap- ers, Inc., 545 Fifth Avenue* Jsew York City DEADLINES; News and stories by noonon Tuesay. sPlay ads, lo A.M. Tuesday Entered as 2nd class matter in the Post Office, Columbia, S. C. unde,. Act, Mar. 3,1879 Note: Checks, orders, etc. should be made payable to The Li?hthouse Publishing Co, % I. Columbia All American Recreation Program 'ITie coveted ‘‘All-Anu'ican City" Award received by Columbia sometime ago, cause analytical thinkers to take inventory as they should on certain occasiohs. Just who processed the date on which this award was made? y the poeessing was done honestly, methodically, objectively how did Columbia eet the award? Perhaps the term All-American".means something very-different as whj go from mind to mindfrom ideal to ideal. Just a fev ^^3 ago Columbia opened another white” Park in the Edgewood area. Although t!*ere ^as IK"ver 11)6611 adequate recreational facilities for Negroes, and the perennial tale is told that no space is now available in Columbia for re- creational purposes, space always can be found and are always on the budget for that wiych the City Fathers actually want to provide. They find wavs to get done anything the really mean to do. The Charles R. Drew Memorial Park is tfye only Negro recreational facility act- ually bought and developed new from the ground. It took years of petitioning, beg- ging and dipiomacy followed by close to a young Korean conflict to even make a dent in the thinking of City Couch. If the Wearing Decision had not given th^e ballot to Negroes there still would be no Drew Housing Ariu Ae Schools Since May 17, tha brilliant minds of cmagogue^ hftv* been seeking every method of clrcuihventing the unanimous tJ. 8. Supreme Court decision against seg- regation iJ1 Public education facilities. Under major consideration, it seems is the plan make moe neighborhoods into toally v.;Vte residential areas and to en- tirely keep or make otners totally Negro. As a natural result the pupils attending the schools in the given areas would make them either definitely Negro or definite- ly white schools. . Another plan will be the gerrymandering of school districts as voting district lines n some state and cities are twisted and curved to the advantage of political mach- ines. This brings us^to another important point. Repeated accounts of bombing and fir- ing upon residences occupied by Negroes in so-called white areas happily are not duplicated by similar attacks of brutality and vandalism perpetrated upon white residents in thickly oppulated Negro Areas. So from one so-called Negro area to another jn Columbia and in hundreds of other Southern neighbors one finds whjte citizens in business there. Often their families reside there with them for years without neighborhood friction of any kind Tijere they gather their substance, live in- dependently and at peace with all. | Sometimes these white families are South Carolina Again The award of the Miss Universe bea- uty title to Miss Miriam Stevenson of Winnsboro has raised South Caolinas blood pressure to a height not reached since the atneletic prowess of J. C. Caro- line on non-south football fields brought to mind the era of Red Grange. As with most valuable natural resource is it youth any other southern state, South Carolinas exemplified by such young people as Miss Stevenson and Caroline. It is to them and their contemporaries that our state must look for its future. South Carolina must labor to hold these young people within its borders and to give them inspiration, a feeling of belonging and a desire to re- main with us. Regrettably as of now, Negro boys and Without reproach, an asset to any commu- nity, However, they often are persons of ^ repute who follow nefarious business klisiness practices without qualm because they are in Negro districts where even the yawseldom bothers at all about whatever they do. On the other hand, Negro Americans whohave moved into “reputable" white ar&a& are always the exceptions, far above any nile, usually above their white neigh- bors in intelligence and refinement. The skin coior alone is their curse.Why is that whites can move without fear into Negro areas to livie and thrive and there be satisfied while whites would resent Negroes living or going into busi- ness j,, tbjeir neighborhoods? The power and Majesty of the Almighty dollar which has done more thjan the fears of Almighty ipod to bring the southland to its Knees must be used to help imple- ment the school segregation decision at this time. There should be a close check on all whites who seek to circumvent the decision. Where they are in business, boy- cott should be used and consistently. Negroes have been trained and lead to work within the law to obtain their rights. Boycotts and protests will do for honorable law abiding citizens what the law breaker employs violence to obtain. A Pew more years and all this foolisly nes about schools and color will pass from the Pathetic to the ridiculous. In The Limelitfht girls must leave the State and even .he country to display their talent and prove their worth elswhere before they can feel that they may have, some quirk of circu- mstance the opportunity to rove their value as an American citizen as shown by Martha Kiett, Mattiewilad Hobbs and scores of others. Caroline could have caused thy: 1953-54 ootball record of Carolina or Clem son College to spakle like a diadem for none were here to compare with nim. On the other hand Miss Stevenson will or can re- turn to us with absolutely no mis giving to highten our spirits with her charm, beauty and disposition. Congratulations to her! But We Pro^ge More Harmc ny, From Now On/THE OUTLOOKBy B. A. ROBINSON Park, A listing ill other so-called Negroparks ^nd play grounds will show that they either were abtained by other than outrigjjt purchase and development, or they aI-e just make-on some property usea by agreement. There are no beautiful tree-shaded, ful- ly equiPPecl city parks and playgrounns open b.V local custom and practice to Ne- groes that compare at all favorably witn the at least twenty whitereceration areas. though thesie are all provided by Public fuf)ds demanded of all of Unpeo- ple, the same funds are always depleted or just around the comerwhen Neg- rojUeas have, been requested. giiice Columbia city officials have the and ga^> to continue their subtertuge and afire11 tory, wnich* means the nerve, brass predication while doing just what they Waft to do about recreation, and refusing without shame to do what they ought to do about each child, only one course is 0p/n to Columbia Negroes, that is to use Cnjsting and nearest them. The use of such tli6 respectable tax provided facilities now facilities, in the light of deliberate discri- mination could be tested and won in the pederal Courts, 1 adll^ducati0N with a in the case of theological philo- PURFti® „! S0Phies. We are willing to con- m. irase adult education, Tl^e , sent to a scientific explanation r too many of us a sort . , ^ means ^ f . or to profit bv itc rpiult . j work for the unfortu- 6 Dy ns -result oi resc. nates irase adult educationf too many of us a sort ofit by its results; but n. les ho missed adequate we 316 rarely fcred with any training1 dieir youth. We for- wsire to know what science* it- J Vj -CiV/v get thrhose men and women ^ is- 1 who ,/unt to anything in this j world ;ver cease their educa- q at .tho average ci ' Ifi moment. SC1fnow * non u>r eral ruies of conduct by . It is markable how much we keep ourselves in h I anyone®11 accomplish by the use television, or run our ir habit teady reading. There cars. If it is lrue thal are ma' businessmen in Abler- when it ceases to be the neoJ \ isily be- of reason- SO^dS AWFUL f ■%\ Death Is ^ut The Of Life crumbled and fell. by Rev. i>r> Edlnond B(.nard sence of the« iust God. or in and armies, _______ Catholic Univorsitv of America t,le state oi w4iting and Puri:fi- Tne grandeur and might of pa- cation, that pr^ration for the ganism ica* todfwho* m spite of.the tured expression of a fact tliithey have only short worshipful soul, loo mtervd leisure, have made comes a safe method themse?5 -Profoundly learned, ing for the spiritually indolent, often 1 rather large areas, then it is truer that science, if Their Fet is to 1156 regularly tile scientific spirit is left out, the brf68^ at-ease periods. If converts the world into an en- they fve ten minutes, they ormouns toy. Or, more seriously read; j| otliy five, they still into a fearful juggernaut, which read-tf-man who assumes that we can start, and to some ex- somediM will have plenty of tent direct, but which wc can't time tiimprove his mind will stop. What most of us need is probabl g0 unimproved to the the companionship of great 1- grave deals such as those J up in rsrr-ho,y hich: person > not content to accept balance without'aduiry whatever philo- sophy i;current at the moment, When people feel the need of he wan1 t0 Understand it r more profound resources in or- himself. der t0 live meaningfully the The or the Protes- rich years before them, they tant or bc Jew, whose piety can fulfill this yearning with keeps hf1 faithful to his reT' iess difficulty than most of us gious tr^iii°n> 0Ught to have suppose. A wealth of comfort enough J^Tcctual curiosity to and purpose may be found thr- find out^t that tradition is. ough a systematic study of the No aspec of is more discou- Bible. The highest education is raging th11 disposition of that imparted by Him with many go<® People who devote whom is wisdom and strength,themselW to noble causes, but out of whose mouth cometh who mak1 113 connection bet- knowledge and understanding.ween th<f 'Wotion and their The Bible brings together aU the principles which are needed cation, that preparation lor the ganism paled before Christs auhst Feature Service, happiness of h^^ called pur- teaching on the immortality of WASHINGTON, 17, D. C..--"- gatory. the human soul. ily that mL\S ^ Irtal. The SOUl is Wortal.Each A MAN WHO FULLY realizes But how oft S<JU i LS Jmrn pally us JS destined jjve for all the meaning of his own souls think what ° Wf Leaneternity- The days 0f our dfe immortality can never live as minds. , Do we Jr eZ e we be relatively lonfi or short, the pagans once lived, just for1 Today, Vould suppose, the either for this Me or the life to look upon ! r °nt!r he datively joyous or sad- What- a moment, just for the day, with dominant J^hasis is on the come. What education can be mav be w i '"^'Jiior ever they ^ 0Ur days on earthno thought of eternity to come.: scientific. ^ut here we come on higher than this. What can e- S/soui^ "of neopie 5re Iike the ot 3 Cl°Ud In a]1 his thoughts and actions, the same Curbing tendency as qual it invalue? pass us in the street We sit that vanishes with the winds he acts Christian, as one who ------------- -------------------- -------- —- will never J' - day, enjoy with God. die, but eternal will, one happiness! street. .. , >v. - next to thgm on trains and ssin^* streetcars, in theatres and base" TO REALIZE our soUls im- ball parks. Many of then1 we mortality, then, is to realize the have never seen before. Man.V true scale of values, to realize * of them we will never see agailk the overpowering truth of Chri- The future of freedom rests They touch our Jives dleft^sts words, Hot; is- amor- ret- fh r ~m; !1 minority ot man- and then pass by and are for- ter for jt, if he gainfthe whole kind. That is why it is mdispen- . rrtll<t gotten. But not one of them world at the cost of losing his sable that the people of our Re- wl ioW *he 0 ^ day, vig ^ will ever die. They are immor_ oivn soui?" pubiic, for their part, should Iy Pushjag n r year- tal. ' " FAiviiL.Y ROUND TABLE By Elgiva Ball NEW YOK>- (GLOBAL) TZKn-r1 TVtin^ t'-'V ... _ I watched another "from my jean hardly be gained later. There are times when parents pushing her year-old son should reason with their child- HISTORIES) TELL US about been, Eat, drink and be merry, the millions who have liveij for tomorrow v/e die.Then lv pushing her " puroue; ior meir pan, snuuiu / . n-^iipr mn k . The old pagan rule of life had holfl fast to the feith of our fa.t back for b n hls sttoller. ren but never argue, with them. Tiers. Just as freedom is conta- I while argujng with her eight- Parents teach their children year-old boy, who stood just be- respect best by showing respect. fore us. Today these figures are Christ came, and added, But ous One of the best ways to yond y l her^ .J Spirit of the 1101116 18 not a shapeless mass of after death the judgement.... keep our faith strong is t0 re. paienUy his way about reflected-ln a childs behavior. tics. Every man and judgement on mansimmortal ca]1 the faith of ourforefathers 'A>n*dhinS- The mother threat- A w -reguiated home where who ever lived isliving stili: soul. Underthe ^Pact of that andto keep fresh in our minds ened' Caj0,ed' .a" Vchased parens tee] secu!.e> means that either in the glory of heavcn tremendousteaching, the pagan the great deeds the near mira- himJ Shouting back, he went childien Will feel likewise, with their lovingGod, or in the power, thronedthroughout the cles which theywrought throu- on t0 , ^ started Sonle C ' 6en are wiser than eternal separation from the j>re. world and supPorted by Beets gh faith.john Foster Dulles t0 d°' 1 c°uld 110 help wonder- their parents realize. They real- jng about variou-s other aspects ly do not want all parenta] aut- I 0f the family'5 b'fe, and how hority relinquished, but they thoSe chi]dren wdl grow up. often will test a parent and Maybe I am all wrong, but I take the cue from there. I think this prother has the wrong If this boys mother does not I appn°acb. Do u agree. handle him with firmness and WiUip-^Philadelphia, pa. _! understanding, he will grow Up : Dear Willie; being an argumentatiVe, selfish, From the Picture you paint, determined person who cannot j thig .mother is truly creating get along without having his problemg for herself, and for own way. Here is a case wher« her boys ]ater in life. Although the father could help. 'Dus boy it might be advisable for him is probably only having mte- to explain his position, a young- rests and reactions that are n0r- ster shoU]d not get away with mal for his age, but which big arguing with his mother as you mother neither understands, n0r describe it, or doing as he has the time or energy for AME Youth. Lav Loaders and Ministerial Institute I n (iala Meet At Allen University begin CONSTRUCTION of" $200,000 PLANT AT CAM»eN CAMDEN Construction has started here on a new $200,000 COLUMBIA High churchmen Priscilla Waringj( Secretary, and laymen of the African Meth wil] preside during the laymens odist Episcopal Church wjli pe session. heard at the annual sessions of Dr. H. B- Butler, Bethel chur- State Congress of Youth and ch, Georgetown, and State Di- Laymens League of the Seventh rector of Religious Education. Episc-opai District Juty 27-3- at asssisted by Professor John Ha- manufacturing plant which will Allen University, Coulumbia. rris, Charleston, State Superin- employ 300 persons, L- W. Bis- Bishop Frank Madison R( ld, tendent of Sunday Schools, will bop, director of the State Deve- who presides over the Seventh direct thc religious educational lopment Board, announced to- Episcopai District said the meet- ing will be the most co,. occasion held since the fji-st meeting i nSouth Carolina ten years ago. Bishop D- Ward Nichols, New York, and Bishop Fred D. Jor- dan, South Africa, will address the sessions and bring greetings from the bench of bishops of tho AME church. Dr. S. R. Higgins, president of Allen University, and Dr. Henderson S. Davis. Dean of Dickerson Theological Seminary activities. A program ' t rranged under the guidance oi Dr. Butler and Professor Harris vbll be guided by the Deans Instruction, Mrs. Ma Belle Coan and Prof- essor J. T. W. Mims. The pro- gram for the religious education al activities will include instru- ction on Teaching Met hods. day. ffe said Al R. Landunan, nee- sident, has notified him the Tic Tac Company, fnc., manMactu- rers of childrens wear, expects to begin operation in about three months, on a site on Di- ceys Ford Road northeast of Camden. The building will be 33,000 professor Olin Smith; Daily square feet in area, of compiete- wilj be1- hosts for the sessions to be held at Allen University, Dr. Robert Mance, Columbia, ranking laytman and recently e- lec-ted Financial Secretaryof the AME church and Arthur Fund. Brooklyn, N. Y., president of the First District Laymens Or- ganization. have accepted spec Vacation Bible School, Mm. Le ila Bradby; The Church Pro- gram for Youth, Henry Webb- er. Other Subjects will be tau- ght by Miss Ruth Quarles, Miss .tm bn, Mrs. Henrietta Felder, Miss Ella W. Jennings, J. E. Smith, Mrs. Ruth Diknins and Miss Louise Rogers. ly modem one-story design and with refrigerated alp-condition- ing throughout. Mr. Landsman said his 'om- pany, which is affliated wjth the Skyline Manufacturing Co. of Kingston, New York, has in- vestigated many other states before deciding on South Caro- lina. ( In South Carolina,he added! Dos And Donts 'n ?< Vx we have found a friendly peo- Leroy Nesbitt, State president Youth Cognress and elected re- iaj invitations as guest speak- preF-entative of the AME church | le, a helpful and sound state ers for the Laymen League ses- irvthe World Conference of government, a •sound tax struc- sions. Professor J. E. Smith. Y0ith to be held this summer, time, and many other factors Georgetown, .State president of -vAcl preside over the sessionns necessary for a successful man- the Laymen League and Mrs. of 'he Youth Congress ufacturing plant.\ Mi cWi. ■eouriH&HTA*' A Theyre Darlings, But Dont Block The Sidewalk-

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AGE FOUR

,ELEPHONf

2-7079

“Sooth Carolina’g Wwkly*1 aHE LIGHTHOUSE A1VD INFO^pR. COLUMBIA, S. C. MiliUnt, ProgroHdm DyaM® SATURDAY, JULY 31, 1954

■>.%

AND

. . TELEPHONE

:0U53C -7079' INFORnUfj

Published by Xhe Lighthouse Publishing Co., Inc., at 1507 Harden St., Columbia, S. C. ^Vlojeska M. Simkins _______ -_______-----------------------------Acting Editoi

Subscription fotea, must be paid in advance: 1 yr, j;>.75; 6 mss, |2.50; Tmos., $1-50 Price Per Copy—Ten Cents

Advertising foies on request: Represented nationally b* Inter8Ute United Newspap­ers, Inc., 545 Fifth Avenue* Jsew York City

DEADLINES; News and stories by noonon Tuesay. P»sPlay ads, lo A.M. Tuesday Entered as 2nd class matter in the Post Office, Columbia, S. C. unde,. Act, Mar. 3,1879 Note: Checks, orders, etc. should be made payable to The Li?hthouse Publishing Co,

% I.Columbia All American Recreation Program

'ITie coveted ‘‘All-Anu'ican City" Award received by Columbia sometime ago, cause analytical thinkers to take inventory as they should on certain occasiohs. Just who processed the date on which this award was made? y the poeessing was done honestly, methodically, objectively how did Columbia eet the award?

Perhaps the term “All-American".means something very-different as whj go from mind to mind—from ideal to ideal.

Just a fev ^^3 ago Columbia opened another “white” Park in the Edge wood area. Although t!*ere ^as IK"ver 11)6611 ade“ quate recreational facilities for Negroes, and the perennial tale is told that no space is now available in Columbia for re­creational purposes, space always can be found and are always on the budget for that wiych the City Fathers actually want to provide. They find wavs to get done anything the really mean to do.

The Charles R. Drew Memorial Park is tfye only “Negro recreational facility act­ually bought and developed new from the ground. It took years of petitioning, beg­ging and dipiomacy followed by close to a young Korean conflict to even make a dent in the thinking of City Couch. If the Wearing Decision had not given th^e ballot to Negroes there still would be no Drew

Housing Ariu Ae Schools

Since May 17, tha brilliant minds of cmagogue^ hftv* been seeking every

method of clrcuihventing the unanimous tJ. 8. Supreme Court decision against seg­regation iJ1 Public education facilities.

Under major consideration, it seems is the plan 1° make moe neighborhoods into toally v.;Vte residential areas and to en­tirely keep or make otners totally Negro. As a natural result the pupils attending the schools in the given areas would make them either definitely Negro or definite­ly white schools. .Another plan will be the gerrymanderingof school districts as voting district lines n some state and cities are twisted and

curved to the advantage of political mach­ines. This brings us^to another importantpoint.

Repeated accounts of bombing and fir­ing upon residences occupied by Negroes in so-called white areas happily are not duplicated by similar attacks of brutality and vandalism perpetrated upon white residents in thickly oppulated Negro Areas.

So from one so-called Negro area to another jn Columbia and in hundreds of other Southern neighbors one finds whjte citizens in business there. Often their families reside there with them for years without neighborhood friction of any kind Tijere they gather their substance, live in­dependently and at peace with all. |

Sometimes these white families are

South Carolina AgainThe award of the “Miss Universe bea­

uty title to Miss Miriam Stevenson of Winnsboro has raised South Caolina’s blood pressure to a height not reached since the atneletic prowess of J. C. Caro­line on non-south football fields brought to mind the era of Red Grange. As with most valuable natural resource is it youth any other southern state, South Carolina’s exemplified by such young people as Miss Stevenson and Caroline. It is to them and their contemporaries that our state must look for its future. South Carolina must labor to hold these young people within its borders and to give them inspiration, a feeling of belonging and a desire to re­main with us.

Regrettably as of now, Negro boys and

Without reproach, an asset to any commu­nity, However, they often are persons of ^ repute who follow nefarious business klisiness practices without qualm because they are in Negro districts where even the “yaw” seldom bothers at all about whatever they do.

On the other hand, Negro Americans who’ have moved into “reputable" white ar&a& are always the exceptions, far above any nile, usually above their white neigh­bors in intelligence and refinement. The skin coior alone is their “curse.”

Why is that whites can move without fear into Negro areas to livie and thrive and there be satisfied while whites would resent Negroes living or going into busi­ness j,, tbjeir neighborhoods?

The power and Majesty of the Almighty dollar which has done more thjan the fears of Almighty ipod to bring the southland to its Knees must be used to help imple­ment the school segregation decision at this time. There should be a close check on all whites who seek to circumvent the decision. Where they are in business, boy­cott should be used and consistently.

Negroes have been trained and lead to work within the law to obtain their rights. Boycotts and protests will do for honorable law abiding citizens what the law breaker employs violence to obtain.

A Pew more years and all this foolisly nes about schools and color will pass from the Pathetic to the ridiculous.

In The Limelitfhtgirls must leave the State and even .he country to display their talent and prove their worth elswhere before they can feel that they may have, some quirk of circu­mstance the opportunity to rove their value as an American citizen as shown by Martha Kiett, Mattiewilad Hobbs and scores of others.

Caroline could have caused thy: 1953-54 ootball record of Carolina or Clem son

College to spakle like a diadem for none were here to compare with nim. On the other hand Miss Stevenson will or can re­turn to us with absolutely no mis giving to highten our spirits with her charm, beauty and disposition.Congratulations to her!

‘But We Pro^ge More Harmc ny, From Now On/‘ ‘THE OUTLOOK”By B. A. ROBINSON

Park,A listing ill other so-called “Negro”

parks ^nd play grounds will show that they either were abtained by other than outrigjjt purchase and development, or they aI-e just make-on some property usea by agreement.

There are no beautiful tree-shaded, ful­ly equiPPecl city parks and playgrounns open b.V local custom and practice to Ne­groes that compare at all favorably witn the at least twenty “white” receration areas. though thesie are all provided by Public fuf)ds demanded of all of Unpeo­ple, the same funds are always depleted or “just around the comer” when Neg­ro” jU’eas have, been requested.

giiice Columbia city officials have the and ga^> to continue their subtertuge and afire11 tory, wnich* means the nerve, brass predication while doing just what they Waft to do about recreation, and refusing without shame to do what they ought to do about each child, only one course is 0p/n to Columbia Negroes, that is to use Cnjsting and nearest them. The use of such tli6 respectable tax provided facilities now facilities, in the light of deliberate discri­mination could be tested and won in the pederal Courts,1

adll^ducati0N with a in the case of theological philo-PURFti® „! S0Phies. We are willing to con-

m. irase “adult education” ,Tl^e , sent to a scientific explanation„ r too many of us a sort . , ^means ^ f . or to profit bv itc rpiult. j work for the unfortu- 6 Dy ns -resultoi resc.nates

irase “adult education” f too many of us a sort

’ofit by its results; but n. les ho missed adequate we 316 rarely fcred with any training1 dieir youth. We for- wsire to know what science* it-

JVj-CiV/v

get thrhose men and women ^ is- 1 who ,/unt to anything in thisj world ;ver cease their educa- q at .tho average ci' I” fi moment. SC1f“ now *non u>r eral ruies of conduct by .

It is ‘markable how much we keep ourselves in hI anyone®11 accomplish by the use television, or run our ir■ habit c®teady reading. There cars. If it is lrue thal

are ma' businessmen in Abler- when it ceases to be theneoJ

\ isily be- of reason-

SO^dSAWFUL f

■%\

Death Is ^ut The Of Life

crumbled and fell.by Rev. i>r> Edlnond B(.nard sence of the« iust God. or in and armies, _______Catholic Univorsitv of America t,le state oi w4iting and Puri:fi- Tne grandeur and might of pa-

• cation, that pr^ration for the ganism

ica* todf’ who* m spite of.the tured expression of a fact tliithey have only short worshipful soul, loo mtervd o£ leisure, have made comes a safe method themse?5 -Profoundly learned, ing for the spiritually indolent, often 1 rather large areas, then it is truer that science, if Their Fet is to 1156 regularly tile scientific spirit is left out, the brf68^ at-ease periods. If converts the world into an en- they fve ten minutes, they ormouns toy. Or, more seriously read; j| otliy five, they still into a fearful juggernaut, which read’ -tf-man who assumes that we can start, and to some ex- somediM will have plenty of tent direct, but which wc can't time tiimprove his mind will stop. What most of us need is probabl g0 unimproved to the the companionship of great 1- grave deals such as those J up in

rsrr—-ho,y„hich:person > not content to accept balance without'aduiry whatever philo­sophy i;current at the moment, When people feel the need of he wan1 t0 Understand it f°r more profound resources in or- himself. der t0 live meaningfully the

The or the Protes- rich years before them, theytant or bc Jew, whose piety can fulfill this yearning with keeps hf1 faithful to his reT' iess difficulty than most of us gious tr^iii°n> 0Ught to have suppose. A wealth of comfort enough J^Tcctual curiosity to and purpose may be found thr- find out^t that tradition is. ough a systematic study of the No aspec of is more discou- Bible. The highest education is raging th11 disposition of that imparted by Him with many go<® People who devote whom is wisdom and strength,” themselW to noble causes, but out of whose mouth “cometh who mak1 113 connection bet- knowledge and understanding.” ween th<f 'Wotion and their The Bible brings together aU

the principles which are needed

cation, that preparation lor the ganism paled before Christ’s auhst Feature Service, happiness of h^^ called pur- teaching on the immortality of

WASHINGTON, 17, D. C’..--"- gatory. the human soul.

ily that mL\S ^ Irtal. “The SOUl is Wortal.” Each A MAN WHO FULLY realizesBut how oft S<JU i LS Jmrn pally us JS destined jjve for all the meaning of his own soul’sthink what ° Wf Lean’’ eternity- The days 0f our dfe immortality can never live as minds. ,

Do we Jr eZ e we be relatively lonfi or short, the pagans once lived, just for1 Today, Vould suppose, the either for this Me or the life to look upon ! r °nt!r he datively joyous or sad- What- a moment, just for the day, with dominant J^hasis is on the come. What education can bemav be w i '"^'Jiior ever they ^ 0Ur days on earth no thought of eternity to come.: scientific. ^ut here we come on higher than this. What can e-S/soui^ "of neopie 5re Iike the ot 3 Cl°Ud In a]1 his thoughts and actions, the same Curbing tendency as qual it in value?

pass us in the street We sit that vanishes with the wind’s he acts Christian, as one who — ------------- —----------------------------——- • — will never J' ’ - ’

day, enjoy with God.

die, but eternal

will, one happiness!

street. .. , >v. • -next to thgm on trains and ssin^*streetcars, in theatres and base" TO REALIZE our soUl’s im- ball parks. Many of then1 we mortality, then, is to realize the have never seen before. Man.V true scale of values, to realize • * •of them we will never see agailk the overpowering truth of Chri- “The future of freedom restsThey touch our Jives dleft^st’s words, “Hot; is- amor- ret- fh r ~m; !1 minority ot man-and then pass by and are for- ter for jt, if he gainfthe whole kind. That is why it is mdispen- . rrtll<tgotten. But not one of them world at the cost of losing his sable that the people of our Re- wl ioW *he 0 ^ day, vig ^will ever die. They are immor_ oivn soui?" pubiic, for their part, should Iy Pushjag n r year-tal. “ ' ‘ "

FAiviiL.Y ROUND TABLEBy Elgiva Ball

NEW YOK>- (GLOBAL)TZKn-r1 TVtin^ t'-'V ... _

I watched another "from my jean hardly be gained later.

There are times when parents pushing her year-old son should reason with their child-

HISTORIES) TELL US about been, “Eat, drink and be merry, the millions who have liveij for tomorrow v/e die.” Then

lv pushing her" puroue; ior meir pan, snuuiu / . n-^iipr mn k .The old pagan rule of life had holfl fast to the feith of our fa.t back for b n hls sttoller. ren but never argue, with them.

Tiers. Just as freedom is conta-I while argujng with her eight- Parents teach their children year-old boy, who stood just be- respect best by showing respect.

fore us. Today these figures are Christ came, and added, “But ous One of the best ways to ‘ yond y „ l her’ ^ ’ . J Spirit of the 1101116 18not a shapeless mass of after death the judgement”.... keep our faith strong is t0 re. pai’enUy his way about reflected-ln a child’s behavior.tics. Every man and judgement on man’s immortal ca]1 the faith of our forefathers 'A>n*dhinS- The mother threat- A w -reguiated home wherewho ever lived is living stili: soul. Under the ^Pact of that and to keep fresh in our minds ened' Caj0,ed' .a" ,°V™ chased parens tee] secu!.e> means thateither in the glory of heavcn tremendous teaching, the pagan the great deeds the near mira- him’ J Shouting back, he went childien Will feel likewise,with their loving God, or in the power, throned throughout the cles which they’ wrought throu- on t0 , ^ started Sonle C ' 6en are wiser thaneternal separation from the j>re. world and supPorted by Beets gh faith.” john Foster Dulles t0 d°' 1 c°uld 110 help wonder- their parents realize. They real-

jng about variou-s other aspects ly do not want all parenta] aut- I 0f the family’'5 b'fe, and how hority relinquished, but they

thoSe chi]dren wdl grow up. often will test a parent and Maybe I am all wrong, but I take the cue from there.

I think this prother has the wrong If this boy’s mother does notI appn°acb. Do y°u agree. handle him with firmness and

WiUip-^Philadelphia, pa. _! understanding, he will grow Up: Dear Willie; being an argumentatiVe, selfish,

From the Picture you paint, determined person who cannotj thig .mother is truly creating get along without having hisproblemg for herself, and for own way. Here is a case wher«her boys ]ater in life. Although the father could help. 'Dus boyit might be advisable for him is probably only having mte-to explain his position, a young- rests and reactions that are n0r-ster shoU]d not get away with mal for his age, but which bigarguing with his mother as you mother neither understands, n0rdescribe it, or doing as he has the time or energy for

AME Youth. Lav Loaders and Ministerial Institute I n (iala Meet At Allen University

begin CONSTRUCTION of"

$200,000 PLANT AT CAM»eN

CAMDEN — Construction has started here on a new $200,000

COLUMBIA — High churchmen Priscilla Waringj( Secretary, and laymen of the African Meth wil] preside during the laymens odist Episcopal Church wjli pe session.heard at the annual sessions of Dr. H. B- Butler, Bethel chur- State Congress of Youth and ch, Georgetown, and State Di- Laymen’s League of the Seventh rector of Religious Education.Episc-opai District Juty 27-3- at asssisted by Professor John Ha- manufacturing plant which will Allen University, Coulumbia. rris, Charleston, State Superin- employ 300 persons, L- W. Bis-

Bishop Frank Madison R( ld, tendent of Sunday Schools, will bop, director of the State Deve- who presides over the Seventh direct thc religious educational lopment Board, announced to-

Episcopai District said the meet­ing will be the most co’,. occasion held since the fji-st meeting i nSouth Carolina ten years ago.

Bishop D- Ward Nichols, New York, and Bishop Fred D. Jor­dan, South Africa, will address the sessions and bring greetings from the bench of bishops of tho AME church.

Dr. S. R. Higgins, president of Allen University, and Dr.Henderson S. Davis. Dean of Dickerson Theological Seminary

activities.

A program ' t rranged under the guidance oi Dr. Butler and Professor Harris vbll be guided by the Deans 1° Instruction, Mrs. Ma Belle Coan and Prof­essor J. T. W. Mims. The pro­gram for the religious education al activities will include instru­ction on “Teaching Met hods”.

day.

ffe said Al R. Landunan, nee- sident, has notified him the Tic Tac Company, fnc., manMactu- rers of children’s wear, expects to begin operation in about three months, on a site on Di­cey’s Ford Road northeast of Camden.

The building will be 33,000professor Olin Smith; “Daily square feet in area, of compiete-

wilj be1- hosts for the sessions to be held at Allen University,

Dr. Robert Mance, Columbia, ranking laytman and recently e- lec-ted Financial Secretary’ of the AME church and Arthur Fund. Brooklyn, N. Y., president of the First District Laymen’s Or­ganization. have accepted spec

Vacation Bible School”, Mm. Le ila Bradby; “The Church Pro­gram for Youth”, Henry Webb­er. Other Subjects will be tau­ght by Miss Ruth Quarles, Miss

.tmbn, Mrs. Henrietta Felder, Miss Ella W. Jennings, J. E. Smith, Mrs. Ruth Diknins and Miss Louise Rogers.

ly modem one-story design and with refrigerated alp-condition­ing throughout.

Mr. Landsman said his '”om- pany, which is affliated wjth the Skyline Manufacturing Co. of Kingston, New York, has in­vestigated many other states before deciding on South Caro­lina. (

“In South Carolina,” he added!

Do’s And Don’ts'n

?<

Vx

‘we have found a friendly peo-Leroy Nesbitt, State president

Youth Cognress and elected re-iaj invitations as guest speak- preF-entative of the AME church | le, a helpful and sound state ers for the Laymen League ses- irvthe World Conference of government, a •sound tax struc- sions. Professor J. E. Smith. Y0ith to be held this summer, time, and many other factors Georgetown, .State president of -vAcl preside over the sessionns necessary for a successful man- the Laymen League and Mrs. of 'he Youth Congress ufacturing plant.”

\ MicWi.

■eouriH&HTA*'

A‘ “They’re Darlings, But Don’t Block The Sidewalk-