Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / July 21, 1956, edition 1 / Page 6
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PAGE SIX '!srsjaeaac!»sw»w. , tnpUE«r: fr*mt‘t.r • ww-rasts ■ '.^tgrr^vyjra^grss^^.^'aagg^ I Many Dangers Seen la Dope Bill By BAKER MORTEN CHICAGO (ANPi -- Con... Vac c«n t to til p WV. i i... X.7 .. Islation allowing tm ~■ to recom mend the death penalty for p< v.-ons who sell or give heroin to anyone picture EARTH A K ITT, brilliant \ meriean nit?. club sm.err aori sc tress, Is shown here in a >■ *•* f*n!» her firs), 'h ~ ■ .. pp.-, , p . tj BBC Television in tee strong dramatic, part ot a m • on.-r , waiting execution for mm !• > The play written by \nv ic; i Could Divert Purpose: ■uv^J^iai— w ■ - mini Fachinn Rasinmorc Untp I udlllUli 0 iUll# Against Suing Stork Club By CONRAD CLARK NEW YORK >ANP> - r-.i,- to expectation;- *»: ror;; the grapevine vr :) ‘., Association of Fa d sory Designer- "vs d not. to ! •. - sue the matte- fin’l-.,-- ,- courts" regarding the re -nt St Club issue. On June !fi the \ w \fv« has) Scheduled ! >?'•> p:-r pt mn cocktail fashion «-.how at %h» 1 man Billingsley's *-torU f lnh in New York City the -.0r..- f!ul> which d''-.rri:ni'v,tprl -i . gainst Josephine Baker >m#r. time ago According to ■ v,. : .: P , ,• less than 24 boms pnm ; n ;. o'clock Saturday aft (’ '■noon h-n that the affair was • i >r •■> • o, the Stork Club, through BPi : r>; ley. cancelled reservations Ai er "incident" was ;h ~■» ration's check had bonnet d. Following its closing r.r • ~r, gMWCTMßM»»Bi«3ea3»aE''flt .v^csj;v»‘ ■; ■ -.-;■ ..... .. ■ ..<t’^»*aißJ»K.~'-fwwrT..; wawNey > -efr w JaWild Savage Indians i• •-*t Mr? sat? re and Action Galore ■ In This Outdoor Fpic and in Color Too! HI DANA ANDREWS - LINDA CRIST AN I “COMANCHE” II ROCK AID RQLUAMBOrEI | FREE WHILE THEY LAST | WolLt Size Photo Os . . . i ELMS PRESLEY | COME EARLY AM) GET VOLKS ★ Open 7.15 - Starts 7 st) 2 Complete Show:. Nightly if j 1 u m '■■■vw-. —.. ,-„. Jt ul r „ MsSces baby’s wash | ■ *" so fresii and pore! j jjjjjpjj? ~ j 9 Flsecy While soniHzes r | deodorizes end whitens f j4**h baby’s cottons end linens | || gently and so sorely. I % % TH» is but one of the many ways | * fan* aim 1 > this outstanding liquid blc-u-h ||. M 'JI | and household disinfectant can | Arfr F™.* J serve you. You’ll find other uses y * '«« qj and directions on bottle label. ; P•* ** S* W v | BLEACHES; V/hlten* cotton* oncf Hinpnjt, brightens fast colors, easily without rubbing. \ DISINFECTS: Sotiilizet your wash, bothroorn ,> „ < ftirlur#*, kitchen jink, .-><><l toy). DEODORIZES. Baby wo»*« -wA ckuhe?, mtiftg£U»|gS^ refuse cons ... •ttmfnata* urpfeowr-i odors. W REMOVES STAINS; Emit , v -„ scorch *nd mi'dew. Alio froirs tile, «■ 'to«t«I. '' 1 PLEASANT TO USE... LEAVES MO OFFENSIVE ODOR! . under 18 years old. The measure was sponsored hy Daniels, who after discovering : that illicit drug traffic in the U. hai tripled since World War I.; | has be - a in hot pursuit of legis* : | iation to stamp out drug trif/u; in | .rushers Hnlsworthy Hall and Robert Middleman. also stars F,di V.if i (left : ts prison chap lain and Natalie Benesch (cen if'! as w.i-itrn Earthy plays the nd(! of j.iii,’ Dvk<r * convicted min ■>!','- in ,n Oregon pent t ten! i .,> , tvr I Sunday, the NAFADS. through its i newly ejected national president, j Lon K Alexander of Washington. ■ IT C . is 11 oci the following state ment to the Press: ■ ; ia rmaii Bi’ltngslfy, owner of the Stork Club, cancelled the benefit fashion show of the Scholarship Committee of the National Association of Fashion and Accessory Design ers scheduled for his club on June 16, 1 DISC, because be be lieved if to be a publicity f-'int tv? h certain NAIAD members bad been put up to do in order to embarrass him. '•Vie, comid"r,able deliberation. ; taking into account the expensive j ami dedicated program the organi sation has launched at this, our 6th annual convention, a majority nf th-’ delegates pi ■ senl voted not to i puisne the matter further in the courts lest the organisation be come diverted from its purpose and objectives." the nation. The death penalty for dope peddlers may or may not be a panacea for the situation, but it wiil certainly bring about ad ditional problems The Congressional bill against. I dope peddlers would bring about j a waiver of the search warant law, which would violate personal lib- ' erties and add new evils to a field too evil already. The death penalty could be ex- . pected to have usual disadvantages in that juries, convinced of guilt j but. unconvinced that it warranted so heavy a. punishment, might \ bring in a verdict of not. guilty as the lesser of two great evils. Criminals also might become in- j creasingly desperate. The price of illicit drugs, and particularly her- j oin, would be likely to go up with . the risk of peddling it, placing slili ; more pressure on addicts to corn- ' mit still more crime. No suspension of sentence, pa- ‘ role or probation would be allowed ; under the bill. There is no ques- i tion of the fme intensions of the sponsors of the legislation, but all the potential dangers of this legis lation must be considered as well. Health For fill '■'now jg^TOt'^rotfs~rair«!wyCTrzirgwoTg<gy>mgrr-oc--:fj*rja^sxjg/4ij BLOND BOMBSHELL V ou're tempted to bleach your hair the shade that, gentlemen are supposed to prefer, you might re member that the famous quote ends but they marry brunettes." If u can reconcile yourself to ‘he . de of hair that, nature gave 1 you, it will be better for the health i of your hair. Medical authorities < warn that a woman risks losing . many o the prized properties of t her hair when she sets about be conur... blonde the peroxide way. < The ha., sheen its ability to take : and he'd a curl, and its generally l healthy k are often sacrificed, i 1 Bleached hair always looks dry < and is brittle and hard to manage. ; 1 There little doubt, that bleach ■ stron mous'd to penetrate through weaks ns the lair, since it must be * the major part of each hair to reach the pigment, in the center of 1 the .shaft. ' Getting the right shade of blonde . hair is another problem Peroxidt most often produces a harsh yel- j low. unflattering to all but the very young. So a hair dye must be j added <o get. a shade that will be suitable to the complexion The : ’ two processes considerably in crease the strain on the hair. And that's only the beginning. 1 It isn t the initial cost, it's the up- • keep Hsir bleaching requires ski 1 i . and should be entrusted to no one but a professional. Hair grows a- , bout a half inch a month, so new ly grown hair must he bleached at least once s month—a continual strain on the budget. . Another problem is the fact that bleached hair resists curling Permanent, waves and even routine setting aft er a shampoo produce inferior re sults. So aek yourself before you de- I ride you must become a blonde * bombshell, whether it will be 1 worth the price, < This column is sponsored. In ; > the interest nf better health by, j ] Mecklenburg County Tuberculosis 1 and Health Association M 3 \Vesf Trade street - Phone ! 4-7*13, Charlotte N. C. 1 77?e Lavenders And Greens By John W. Fleming Mr. Fleming is religious worker for the North Carolina Baptist Convention, Inc., and a former Instructor in the Shaw University School of Religion. Once there was a kingdom And j the larger kingdom said to tht j smaller kingdom, “Your doctrine, of ‘Separate but Equal' is a fallacy There is no such animal The bar i riers which you have erected be tween the Lavenders and the Greens must be destroyed. They must be allowed to develop their educational potentials together And the officials of the little- 1 kingdom, all of whom were Lav- : enders said to the larger kingdom, ; “You don’t understand the sit.ua- i lion. The Greens are an inferior clan. They can wash for us, cook j for us. but eo to school with us NEVER!” But (hr larger kingdom, be tng the final authority on all matters pertaining to the wel fare of its citizens, said. “You mils! obey because It 1* now the law of 'he land.'' Then the ruling Lavenders rri j the little kingdom called two meet ings. one in the east ana one in , the west The eastern officials chartered - a submarine and sailed far out on the briny deep and held then j “rump session" 10.000 leagues on- j rier the sea. The western officials • mot in a cave atop Mt. Prejudicio, j to which they traveled by vnu! j back, that being the only mean? to ' reach that almost inaccessible spo*. , Both groups, having been noli- j fled of the plan before hand, do - : cided that the answer to the proh- ; Icm was “public-private schools ’ , or “private-public schools. ’ In a few days the little king dom made this plan, a law de claring all Lavenders who did not want to send their chil dren to school with the Greens couid receive tuition grants from the little kingdom to send their children to private ! schools. In the little kingdom there lived a Lavender by the name <rf Rachel Rmith -And Rachel supported this plan. for:, said she, “I like Greens, •h-illy Brown, a Green, has worked THE CAROLINIAN J I tfy, I . r : ; '’•*<s** . ... *v' , ' > . ‘ - . ! WED IN GUILFORD Mr and Mrs, George Morehead nf Guilford, who were marled re cently in a double-ring ceremo ny at Raleigh Cross Roads M E Churrh. are shewn here cutting Perrys Host Lawn Party As Dswliar Social Club Celebrates I 22nd Anniversary At Raleigh j * 1 1 RALEIGH - The Dunbar Soda! ' Club of Raleigh began the celebra- , tion of its 2nd anniversary on Fri- J day. July 3. with, a party attend- j ed by their wives, children ana | guests, on the spacious lawn of M; i i and Mrs, James Perry of Church j Street Grilled steaks. >»ith a 1 ! the trim mings and other refreshments were served afterwhich games fm everyone were, provided. Saturday * was reserved for fishing parties. , games and general entertainment.. , The celebration was concluded Sunday, the 15th. with a special New Group In La, Replaces NAACP j NEW ORLEANS CANP' A 1 new organization designed to take 1 the chare of the NAACP. which I has been banned in Louisiana, was ! I formed here last week. % Its first objective will be +c file I suits in federal district courts con- | testing the constitutionality of the j state's 'recently passed serosa tion ! bills. Under the name nf the New* Orleans Improvement League, the organization will seek j court action to show that bias bills passed by the legislature ■ and signed hy the governor are j I unconstitutional. These laws make |f mandatory : I to fire all teachers belonging to j ] the NAACP or similar groups The | I laws also jeopardize the jobs of j educators who advocate Integra- i lion. Officers of the new group are ! Dr W R Adams, president, the J Rev G N. Collins, vice-president; j Mrs. Eunice Lewis, secretary; Na- i than S, Landis, treasurer and. Rev. j Benjamin Maxon. chaplain. j for me for years.. She has nursed ■ my little Johnny and Jerry since their birth, but it would be de : grading for them to sit in the same j classroom with Molly's Billy and ! Tommy." So Rachel dressed her two little boys in fheir Sunday's best and carried them to that exclusive school. Groton-on - the- Moun ta in - Top. and to the schoolmaster she said, I have brought my two little | boys to attend vour school." The schoolmaster took a blank form front a drawer of his marble top desk and began to ask questions' “Was yottr great - grandfather an official j of the Confederacy?’’ “Did he i own more than a hundred ; slaves?" “Arc you of a pure j Anglc-saxon heritage?” “Do you belong to the First Church In your community?” When Rachel replied. ”Vo'- to these questions and others, the i schoolmaster told her that she ’ | would be bearing from her appli- ; cation. Two, three, fours years , i passed by and Rachel still had re- 1 ! eeived no reply. ! In the meantime. Johnny and ; Jerry wore growing up without , the benefit of the three r's. Soon DEATHS MRS ADA K HAILEY Funeral service for Mrs. Ada | JR. Hailey of Jeffrey Grove who ’ died at. St. Agnes Hospital Mon day were held Thursday at 2 p.m. from Bethlehem Baptist Church, i Burial was in the church ceme- , tery, Surviving: 2 daughters, Mrs. ; Settle Williamson, Bronx, N Y.. | Mrs. Louise Harris, Raleigh: 2 j sons, Mr. Henry Hailey, Brook- j !yn, N. Y.. Mr. Ernest Hailey, Rn- . leigh. fi grandchildren; 6 sisters. ! Mrs, Nannie Hunter, N. J.: Mrs. j Mary People, Raleigh: Mrs. Ora, * Ligon, Raleigh: Mrs. Martha Mor- i gan, Englewood, N. J.: Mrs. pearl I Hinton, Englewood. N. J.; and | Mrs. Bett.ie Hobbs, EViglewood, N. J . » brothers. Mr. Charles Hid- ■ a <djee of their wedding cake at t,he reception Mrs. Morehead is the former Miss Mae Lillie Milti fcrn, daughter of vtr snrt Mrs, lake MilHken of Guilford service at the. Manly St Christian Church. English Scholar j At rS University HOUSTON. Texas The Hogg Foundation, ‘he University of Tex as. made available to Texas South ern University July 5 and 8 Mi chael Newton, graduate of Cam bridge University and teaching fel low. University of Michigan. The young scholar is with The Hogg Foundation for three months and is scheduled to visit all of the ma jor colleges in the State of T< xa - Wh * .v r^llPlMHHi ||||§§|giPf; "'**&*■ ■***»> fgpl smm- jjpj HllllfX SH -*w* v . 'M&>~ VISITS IN ARKANSAS—Mrs. M. Frances Strassner, wife, of Dr. William R. Strassner, president of Shaw University left by plane on July 9. t P visit friends and relatives in Elaine Arkansas. Mrs. Strassner will return to Ra leigh the. latter part of this ir?on*h ; they joined a gang of fellow lav- i j enders who had been turned down j |at Groton-on-the-Mountain-Top. i Visiting dives and “juke-joints,” they soon turned to crime. After a few years, a crime wave rocked the community, j These boys were haled into j court as the party responsible, for il. They were sent to school, J for delinquents Sadly. Rachel I told the judge her story and broke down in uncontrollable tears. Anri in that day was that, senp ! turf fulfilled which saith, “There j j was a voice heard in. Ramah. weep- j j ing and great mourning. Rachel ; ) weeping for her children and re j fusing to be comforted." Bennett Instructor Attends WSG Session* GR.ENSBORO .Mrs. Minnie S : Smith, instructor of history and dt- | i rector of co-curricular activities at ; Bennett College attended the Wes ! ieyan Service Guild program of : th» Central Pennsylvania Confer- ' i ore. of. tl*,r Methodist Church at Williamsport July 7-d. t.on. Englewood, N J., Mr. One | , Hinton. Englewood, N. J.: Mr. ! i Lawrence Hinton, Bronx, N. Y.; j , Mr. Frank Hinton, Va,. Mr. Er-! I nest Hinton, Delaware; Mr. John! 'Hinton. Pa.; Mr. Claude Hinton, New York; and Mr. Robert Hm- j , ton, Raleigh, JAMES WHITE i Funeral service for Mr. James j ; White of 220 E. Bledsoe Avenue • j who died at home Monday were! : held Thursday of this week at 2! | P.M. from Lightner Funeral Home : j Chapel and interment was in Na-. ! tionai Cemetery, j Surviving: wife. Mrs. Lillie! | White, Raleigh; 1 daughter, Miss j ! Margaret White, 2 grandson?. Cor- j nelious Miller. Raleigh and Hoye ; Miller. Raleigh. 1 Congregational Christian Church Holds Summer Conference At Br icks School ! BRICKS—On the site of the Old j Bricks School which was changed from an elementary school to a 1 junior college by Professor T. S. N. Inborden. the Convention of the South of the Congregational Chris , tian Church established in 1963 the I Franklinton Congregational Chris- ! tian Church Religious Center at Bricks. Last, week the Summer Confer- j once of this great denomination was held there with the Superin tendent. of the Southern Conven tion, Rev. J A Stanley of Greens boro. presiding The morning hours were filled : with classes and lectures; the as j ternoon with recreation and arts ■ and crafts, while the evenings pre- j sen ted special programs. The pro- , gram for the entire week was well filled with information from the kindergarten folk through the el derly folk. Lecturers during the week: Fev. Stanley on “Family Life ■'Problems''; Rev. Percy Alston of Borchesta, Georgia and Con ference. Religious Director of Music on “Church Music”; Rer. W. J King of Brick* and D!« rector of the Religious Center on 'Church Life Problems’’; Mrs. J. T. Stanley of Greens boro on “Women's Work Prob lems” and Mrs. Ora King of Bricks on "Art* and Crafts’. A special guest who lectured to the Youth Fellowship was Douglas Albert, s. native of Pakistan. India and a student as Elon College Jim James, Natoinal Youth Fel lowship Director, of Stanford Col lege, California, was in charge of t-fee youth. Rev. Stanley made his report of i the General Conference which met I at Omaha, Nebraska and told of i the merger which now is in prog- i res?, with the Evangelical Reform I Final Clearance! Womens Better Shoes For Dress And Play i ~ nm Including Pumps mF v Jr v shies All Sizes ito m and Sandals in High vs „ to 6-98 r . . TI , WSm m Group or Cuban Heels. "" r t. j flliiw IsK'SvsliJ vsSeragw , fs, J&wSSSfL just as easy to have the money ; vou need for a vacation by •-.*■> \ inn a little each week n- e---'S * I __ -Mood System VACATION CLUB ... . . Come In, join now and next ~~» el*.» t»r ererv budget - • ... , „ summer yotf ll nave all toe ■$ 100 eoch week for 50 we»*ks SSO . r .1 t , $ 2.00 ,och week for 50 week SIOO mone Y need for the best $ too eoch week for 50 week* stso vacation of your life. $ 5 00 each week for 50 weeks $350 $i 0 or) goth week for 50 weeks SSOO /\ $.; /I you nee*# money for this year's vacation come in for a "Mood System" VACATION LOAN HOOD SYSTEM INDUSTRIAL BANK Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation 122 S. Salisbury St. Raleigh WEEK ENDING SATURDAY, JULY 21 1956 Church and which should be com pleted by Jum;.. 1957. After the me;- j ger the church will be known as the United Church of. Christ in America Those attending this meeting from Ralrich were Mrs. iSfcA $2.45 |§| PT. *-s QT. ter *&♦#■* t- e- i **»- lew* IH aaa=^^ Seagram's A /0\ I jsfevm’- £ j R' r> ! n *o WHISKEY 86.8 Proof. 65G-. Grain Neutral Spirit* Seagram-Distilten Company , Vptt York City, Ye® York H. E King who was delegate fronr the First Congregational Church, Mr. Granville King, Mrs. Annie Av ery. Mrs. Pearl Spelling, Mrs. Mary Haywood. Mrs. Pearl Herndon and M. Y Josephine A. Bryant,
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 21, 1956, edition 1
6
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