HASTINGS NEWS Mr. and Mrs. Roy Moore were recent hosts to Dr. L. S. Goolsby, Presiding Elder of the Omaha District of the Nebraska Confer ence A.M.E. Church. Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Walker recently announced the birth of a son. Mrs. Ollie Yancy of Oklahoma City, Oklahoma is making her home in the city. She is a niece to Mr. Adolph Lightsy, 702 So. Baltimore. Mrs. Etta Frazier, president of the Missionary at Calvary A.M.E. Church has announced a Mother’s Day program at 5 o’clock Sunday afternoon. Mr. Roy Moore and Johnny Frazier were recently appointed trustees of Calvary Community A.M.E. Church. * • i i GETTING ACQUAINTED Mr. and Mrs. Roy L. Moore, 726 So. St. Joseph Ave., came from Kansas in 1930 and have lived in Hastings since that time. Mrs. Moore studied beauty culture^ under Ada Montgomery in Kansas City, Missouri, before coming here. Mr. Moore Who served 10 of his 12 months army career in France in World War I is a member of the Masonic Lodge at Lincoln, Nebraska. He was employed at the Navy Ammunition Depot dur ing the last war. One can see at a glance that the Moores are great home-lovers, the beautiful flowers, large gar den spot, and the many conviences for raising chickens are evidence of this fact. Not only did the sailors and their wives make the Moore home their headquarters, but it is now the temporary home of the three Kinchlows, students of Denver, who are attending Hast ings College, and Rev. and Mrs. Melvin Shakespeare who are regular week end guests. They are members of the A.M. E. Church, So. Baltimore and E Street of which Rev. Shakespeare is Pastor. They are beautiful examples of the motto “Let me live in a house by the side of the road and be a friend to man.” -o One good mother is worth a hundred school masters—George Herbert # Our Children By Mrs. W. B. Davis By Gladys Huntington Bevans My mother was a great believ er in fresh air for us children— and for herself, too. I can see her now, when it was raining too hard for us to go out, putting on her rubbers and some sort of raincoat, taking her um brella in hand and sallying forth for a walk in the rain. As for the children—my grand mother told me that when we were babies (not tiny ones, of course) she would bundle us up to our eyes and take us out in the baby carriage f or a little while, even in a snowstorm. The result for me has been that I love all kinds of weather, and crave the outdoors. I am sure it added to my general health. Fresh air, I think, has almost magical properties. The doctors or nutritionists probably can ex plain the purely physical reasons for its being so tonic. But there’s more to it than that. In any case, you only have to see how differ ently children behave, how much more zest they have, how much calmer their nerves (or disposi tions) are, and how much better they eat and sleep when they have lots of fresh air each day, in order to be convinced of its importance. If you’re a city dweller and have to get your children to a park, its often hard to manage the regular outing. Even if you live in the country or suburbs and have to array your small boys or girls in sweaters, galoshes mufflers, and snowsuits and watch over them while they are out, it breaks into your busy day. But these big daily doses of fresh air pay high dividends in health and disposition. -o The future of society is in the hands of the mothers. If the world was lost through woman, she alone can save it.—Beaufort A good intention clothes itself with sudden power. —Emerson -o TRAFFIC SAFETY Weather important. "If you don't like Nebraska weather, just wait a bitl" Sudden changes in weather require a driver to pre pare his equipment for immediate service. FORMER HOWARD LAW PROFESSOR ON STAFF AT UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO Latest Negro addition to the faculty of the University of Chicago is W. Robert Ming Jr., a graduate of the university’s law school and associate professor of law at Howard University from 1937 to 1942. According to an announcement last week by Prof. Ernest C. Colwell, the appoint ment carried with it the rank of associate professor of law. Ming’s duties will be concerned chiefly with research in social and legal problems connected with judicial review of adminis trative action and administration of civil rights. Prior to his appointment, Ming served in various capacities which give him a broad background for research. During the war, he was assigned to the labor branch with a commission in the Judge Advo cate General’s Department, and later was a legal officer at God man Army Air Base. Following this, he was associate general counsel of the OPA hearing cases in the emergency court of appeals relating to rent and price viola tions. Ming is also a member of the National Legal Committee of the NAACP and the President’s Com mittee on Civil Rights. 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