HHjßfitiA lift mflH msMHfek SBBtiu flHflk 38M AR fINEI JtSbKL ihhb sbhb 9HB SBHIB flßk fl9B SSBBk vbmmhi m hhi ■■■■ J&B3& hhh hh {hhmhhb sbbb hi a iuh fIHMHfIR 2nd Offense Lands Two In Jail BURLINGTON - An attractive while divorcee and a Negro man were charged with fornication and adultery Monday following a sur prire police laid on a one-room shack near here Sunday night. Officers arrested Mrs. Ihtra C rouse Tripp, 25), and Wallace Wade, 32, in bed Two Negro men also were in Che room, according so Alamance shrr :■ CONTINUED ON I’Af.l ’ Seek 4 ‘Mixed” Golf Course For Miami, Fla, MIAMI. Fla. - Four Negroes asked Federal District Court, here Monday to integrate the Muni cipal Golf Course at Fort Lauder t .'CONTINUED ON PAGE 2> r™** ir* , “ I hire Victims sdfgsg Eight Fire Deaths Set Off Protests nr CHARLES K JON! > Acs la tam solicitor of Wake Su pfnor Court. Robert B. Brough ton, read e section of the law to Ihe CAROLINIAN tin? week w rrein it is believed to be a mis demeanor for an adult to leave m nor children unattended in a house This statute may lead In the ar,esl and conviction of par rnW responsible for the death? of eight colored ehiklrcn in this state during a three-day span last weekend Four of the deaths were record ed in Wake County. The other (CONTINUED ON PAGF 2) Att’y Walker Appeals To High Court A Weldon Negro attorney con victed of assaulting an election registrar has appealed to the State Supreme Court here and in a com panion ease asked the high court to declare unconstitutional the state’s “single shot’’ voting law. Attorney James It. Walker, tr. asked the Supreme Court in revise his conviction on a charge of assaulting Mrs. HeI (CONTINUED ON PAGE ?> Rocky Mount Physician First Os Race To Serve On School Board ET » B BARREN | ROCKY MOUNT Rocky OR »- W. PARKER I -j-. —— '■j" 4- ..|ro. + i Tar Heels Attend Inauguration I fl Wmmmim 1 mi'' iii E ’ft msm Is® ti m Wm mm £ ifll :>§ 1 m : Hi m wm U m LUCKY AUTO OWNER The lucky car last week was the on: bearing the tag num ber XL-148. If the owner of that car took U to Dun;- s e.sso j Service, corner Cabarrus and Bloodworth Streets in Raleigh i he received a free grease job. This will nappen every week Watch for your lag number. If it. follows the asterisk, you will : ‘ get the grease job. The ntirn ; her will be taken from any car j bearing a N. C. license. ! The numbers this week >re 1 V i-20; X 192; XB-431; CX-H23; j | j ••'XX-125; and CX-35L 4* f 4 + 4 4' + 4 4~ MEDICAL SOCIETY COMMITTEE MEET Members of the Executive Committee of the Old North Slate Medical Society met in Durham recently. Seated, from left to right are Drs. Clyde Donnell, Durham, secretary treasurer Emeritus; M. D. Quighss, Tarboro, president-elect; L. R. Swift, Durham, president: W. I Armstrong. Rocky Mount, secretary-treasurer: and C*. Wesley Alien. Fayetteville. Stand ing. left to right, Drs George Evans, Greensboro, chairman of program committee; S .!. Cochran, j Weldon, recording secretary; W. M. Bryant. Enfield; Rembcrl Malloy. Winston-Salem; C. B. Middleton, Raleigh, editor of Journal; J. D. Qiuek, Winston-Salem R M. Wvrhe. Charlntle. past president; Mur ! ray R Davis. High Point: R t Wimberlev. Raleigh; and Charlie Watts. Durham Not present for pie : turp; Drs. J. S, Simmons, Sanford; W 1 Wynne, Greensboro; J. ,1. Hannibal, Kinston, and I E, Jones. Elizabeth City. ;jSports Figure Speaks HAt Raleigh Jan. 30 Lee Calhoun. Tj. s. Olympic Wednesday January 30. at 8.00 j team hero of N. C College. Dm ; p.m I ham, will be guest of honor at a i He will bp accompanied by | public reception io be ■ponrored jby the Bloodworth Street YMCA,' frONTINUEH ON PAM. ?.) | Mount citizens are beginning to* ’ poke their chests out with pardon egfges r " ——™ Up. 10c 12c in N. C. ' ‘iMy— * Elsewhere VOLUME 16 RALEIGH. N C WEEK ENDING SATURDAY. JANUARY 26, 1057 NUMBER V. able pride now that they are able to point, to two 'firsts’ in race* progreso for this ‘Tobacco City’ in as many weeks. On January 11th tire citizens— including the white and colored | high school bands—along with city officialdom, honored Jim Boyd, the Olympic light heavy weight boxing champion with a gala parade and banquet. This was a big ‘first' for the commun ity. At a Board of Alderman meeting on January 17th Or. Joseph Willis Parker, Jr.. 38- year-old practicing physician and civic leader (the city’s youngest I was unanimously named to a posl on the city school board in succeed a white member who was report edly retiring because of ill health. This was another ‘first’ considered long over due by many citizens of both races. The nomination ol Dr. Parker was made to the aldermanic board by At 1 y Kemp D Battle, a 'leading white lawyer, whose wisdom is respected by both races. However, Battle made it crystal clear the decision of the so-called Bi-Racial Council of ten colored and ten white citizens was not to be taken in any way as an endorsement of integration Battle reminded all and sundry that since Negroes of (CONTINUE!' ON PAGE 2) NC Medical Leaders In Durham Meet DUR HA M - The Executive , Committee of the Old North | State Medical Society at its infcer- I up. meeting in Durham last w eek ; approved the outlined program of i the Chairman of th* Program | Committee. Dr. George E-ins of ! Greensboro for the 70th Annual | meeting scheduled for the campus if ONI IN I JED ON PAGE 7.1 QDBS-ENDS By ROBERT G SHEPARD j GRATITUDE We, as a racial j group, are far too inclined to grum ble and to find fault, than to be grateful for the many blessings and evidences of progress all around us. Last Monday, within the space of i ighi hours, two signifi cant incidents occurred that should have caused every Negro in Ra j leigh to rejoice and give thanks. These evnts, wholly unrelated by , circuinstanr and distance, were, 1 nevertheless, concrete proofs that j if there is an inferior race, it is (CONTINUED ON PAGE 2) Bi-Racial Story Brings Relief To White Family n/ A bizarre story of how a young j white woman was found living in 'squalor on, or near, a farm which gave her close contact with a Negro family, is described bv Wake County Deputy Sheriff; Earl Duke, brought action by the Welfare Department and the wo- N. C.Leaders: Active At 2nd Inauguration (Special To The Carolinianl WASHINGTON. D. C. - - North C, olina Republicans who attend-; ed'jtlH’ recent inauguration of t r-'udent Eisenhower and Vice-' President) Nixon mixed business with pleasure over the three days , Dr Helen G. Edmonds. N. C. Col-1 lege professor, received briefings | on her extended tour as a roving ambassador to many foreign j countries. Alexander Barnes, who : is said to have the ear of state leaders, had a conference with Chairman Ray Jennings, while L E. Austin. Durham editor, talked with Val -J Washington. Attorney C. O. Pearson, who (CONTINUED ON PAGE 21 Rev, Robinson Is Institute Speaker Here j fi* Staff Writer Communism is forging ahead I lof us in the battle to win the minds of the millions of people in Africa and Asia At, the present time we hold the advantage be cause we were there first, but in ’ a period of ten years that ad- j vantage will be gone, unless we i start now to reach an understand-1 tng, based on unselfishness, free-1 dom and justice, we must, and j will, lose thLS struggle ” j The above striking challenge ; was issued last. Monday evening, •January 21. by Dr. James H Rob ! inson, pastor of the Church of The | {CONTiKUEn on rA.or t\ State News -IN- Brief * “STICKY FINGERS" NEWTON Catawba County, Sheriff Wade Davis is look-! ing for some “sticky - finger- j cd ' crooks, Davis said that Wad-1 die Gabriel, a resident of Ihej Sherrills Ford section of the | county, reported a. molasses mill. | valued at s man and her three children have j been given temporary relief. The story reads as a leaf out of the much controversial : ‘‘Tobacco Road” and has ear marks of "God’s Little Acres". (CONTINUED ON PAGE 2) Mothers To “March” On Polio Here Well over 100 mothers in Ra leigh and immediate vicinity wd! stage a “Mothers’ March On Fo lio” Thursday night. Jan 31. Mrs. Lillian S. Freeman, chan man of the ' march of dimes said record cards will be given so contributing families so that they might keep up with the number of polio vaccine shots that had been administered to their chil dren. Residents of Raleigh are urged to leave then porch lights on that, the workers will know That a. donation may be received How ever, Mrs Freeman said, in the event, that .some forget to leave their lights on the mothers will cal! at every house in the com munity. (CONTINUED ON PAGE Z) Army Officer Killed. Wife, Child Injured In Auto-Truck Collision MT. AIRY - An army officer, apparently e.n route home from Ft. Bragg on leave, was killed and his wife and young daughter se-j rlously injured Tuesday when his! car collided head-on with a trac- ] tor-trailor truck on U. S. highway I T y ’‘r. , . ea - HER GOOD DEED FOR THE DAY—Julie Nixon. 8-vear old daughter of the Vice-President, Is the center of attraction as she picks up her mother's pocket book which Mrs. Nixon dropped while the Eisenhowers and the Nixons were, posing for photographers aflrr leaving Pre-Inaugural services at Na tional Presbyterian Church Sunday. Left to right. Mrs. Eisenhower, Mrs. Nison and the. Preaide.nl, UNITED PRESS PHOTO “Qi. El OF BK liiTICIA 'S’l' OK iil.jT— M, ■ Lini .■ Lane, left, » graduate of OeSha/or's Beauty t 01l ".c, lhirh-> beneath their a par uncut, hou:-e Jm'kson was bound t vrj* (a IJp P; ?• jjh |»J -'a* *' :| ? i1 -a nCdiU Mi yiLu Sy , CHARLOTTE: 7 VILLi. V: .Arch-so:’! fyaiiomxl John Rr-rper i a. prehminar: hearing here Monday. 'ill ' v;nrr found BMur v vc: ;;; - :ik ; hsivum J.-tcivkoa ion ■ fur- i,, u;. ijircincnt of 'he oportrocni. houue ;s-e a wo inivTi' rr si on fa or, o Sc .» ii fi :» r tl trl*;•*f> * « »iv ,f Ipndrr didke HK f’r.f sjjcrrh I re 1 } rc hi*? • •' c-5 *r• of intoferin/: tvK’i school deseg regation al C'Unlur.. 7>n?i. i( OM !M • ?) 0> V \i,i l) Han i- wife T.ilhe Map 22 wag seriously injured with possible leg fractures and his three-year-old daushtci. Edna , was described -in critical condition with head in (CONTIN! M) ON PAG! ii