PAGE TWO ~ INQUIRING REPORTER | (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1) BSistf.r Gary, 1506 E. Lane Street. Minister: I think an offer of SIOO to one person would create more interest in the promotion. When you break down the amount it does not par ticularly inspire a person to the point where he feels that he should patronise the advertisers of ( Mrs. Anne Miller, 809 E. Hargett Street Worthy Matron, Ordct of Eastern Star: "I be- J§§p[,l j lieve it would be more interesting if the money was distributed between just two winners with the bonuses being $75 for the first winner and Jt..' \ Cecil H. Flagg, 131 Lincoln Court, Postman: |fp’ \ “Personally, I think the idea of breaking the iff, ‘ money down is very good because it would rre ate a greater amount of interest and clause more (•■■■ ->at t'cipation.” '.’L Mrs. Mozllle D. Merritt, 725 S. East Street Beautician: "The way l see it is if you gave two or three awards then the chances would be two g|§P||; or three to one The SIOO would still be given & W away and I feel more interest would be aroused BONUS RULES I CONTINUED FR OM RAGE 1) ed by the week in your envelope. Flare the total value of (he purchase slips on the outside of the envelope. Merchants advertising in The CAROLIN IAN will be listed each week Only residents of Raleigh and ttake County are eligible. Purchase slips must be saved each week as slips only count if the advertisement appears in The. CAROLINIAN, during a given week. No slips count unless the j purchase is made during the week the “ad" appears in this paper. At the end of the month purchase slips will be totaled. A CAROLIN IAN check for SIOO will be issued! to the Bonus Money receiver and his or her picture and name j printed in oui columns the fol lowing week. No purchase may exceed $300; in any one week in any one store. In the event, of a tie, the SIOO will be divided between the reci pients."' If you don't receive bonus money the first month, keep on saving and buying from CAROLINIAN merchants each week. You can be a bonus money receiver more than once, in fact as many times as your accumulated slips earn you the top position in money spent with CARO LINIAN advertisers. Each week begins Thursday morning and ends the follow ing Wednesday at midnight. The current week begins Thurs day, March 14 and ends at mid night the following Wednesday, March 20. The first SIOO bonus money will be given away at The CAROLIN IAN'S sth Annual Pood Show and Homemakers Exposition at Memorial Auditorium, April 4th or 5 th. For further information con tact The CAROLINIAN at TE 4-5558 or 518 E. Martin Street INTEGRATION (CONTINUED ON PAGE 3) ored girls,' 1 “Not necessarily.” “Did you oi didn't you." Hawes persisted. “I may have ' “Did you do it? ' “If I ever did. it .-.as very in distinct.” “Did you evn ?” ”1 probably have once or twice.” Be Ready T 0.... Come In N0w.... Select Your Spring Ensemble From New Look Style And Fashion , For The Ladies • Dresses • Suits •Dusters • Toppers • Coats • Hats j Open A Charge Account PAY WEEKLY MEN’S Suits - Pants - Sport Coats - Hats It's Easy To Pay The 0. K. Way! 0. K. CLOTHING CO. 1 US EAST MARTIN STREET l A ' Land demanded that Kasper an swer yt*s or no, or refuse to an swer, Hawes repeated the question, and Kasper answered, “Yes, I have." Kasper said he had danced with Florette Henry, a Negro girl or,- Committee Chair ma n Henry i ployed in his book store. “She showed me how to do the j shango.’' he said. He explained that j | the shango was a West Indies | | dance. Kasper said his acquaintance' i with the girl continued for several ' I years and that he once took her | | on the train to Washington with , Ezra Pound, the- poet. He said he sent her a Christmas j ! card from Tennessee last Decern ! her and that he still thinks "she is , a (ine girl.” ABORTION | (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1) ; edlv two months pregnant ! After the operation, the woman: j told police that she drove to the! | home of a friend, became violent-; | ly ill there, and had to be taken J i home. Groves said that the wom i an posted SSOO bond as a material I witness. She is said to have paid I the doctor S2OO. ! He said further that he had ob | tained a statement from the | nurse, whom he also declined to • identify, in which she admitted ; taking part in the alleged opera ; lion. Police say that Dr. Carter came | here from Reidsville and. has been practicing medicine for about 40 j years. ODDS & ENDS I CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1) jobs to prisoners. This is just what is now going ors in the the several state buildings here in Ka’eigh and it began under the governorship of Luther Hodges. CITY COUNCIL: A great deal of! concern is being manifested be- j ran:/- of the lack of candidates for j the City Council Primary which j will be held during the middle of i next month Strangely enough this j i concern is coming from the whites ] j of tb-e city. What wr are very much con i eerned about is the fact that as of .this date, not a single Nr gro has said he would seek the | nomination. It may be as » has i been in the past, at the last possible moment, a Negro may file. Maybe that is better than no fil ing at ail However, past experi ences should have amply demon strated the almost impossible task of properly organizing a campaign at the last, moment that -will be a success. Some people learn through experience. We haven’t found out yet what Negroes learn through. COLLEGE REOPENS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1) mand to resign because of news paper articles he wrote criticizing the NAACP. The college board de clared that all who defied a board ultimatum to return to classes Friday, were expelled, but left the “borderline cases" up to Dr Boyd. Prof. King said that he would return to Hazelhurst, Miss, where he is pastor of a Methodist Church, and await word from Boyd. “I will return to the campus if Dr, Boyd wants me.” he said, “and I think he wants me." Dr. J. R Otis, who had headed the institution, was discharged immediately, DEAF MUTE " (CONTINUED FROM PAGE li He allegedly admitted killing uer by hitting her on the back of the head with a poker when she re sisted his advances STATE IN BRIEF .CONTINUED FROM PAGE U ardship at the Sunday morning -'r viccs, March 18. Tins will be nis first appearance at this church Benjamin Neal, president of the Council of Presbyterian Men. will preside and John C Levingston will direct the music which will be composed of men William Jiro i merson Holloway, acting principal of Li.eon High School, Raleigh, will introduce the speaker. HELD ON MURDER OH ARC I. GREENSBORO A 37-vcar «ld local man. who is alleged to have fatally wounded an other man In a shooting short ly before midnight Friday, is still In city jail without bond privileges ori a charge of mur der. according to nolire reports. ! Officers were told that Clar i .'nee Otis Grßfin of (105 South Booker St., the alleged IcHler, >nd David S. Worley. It. of hill McConnell Road, victim, were arguing over "who «as (he richest in 1938” shortlv be fore the shooting Roth the ir glimeni and shnn‘in-r occurred I it 1006 Hacked Street TWO B > NOTTS SENTENCED CHARLOTTE -ChU-'s -shot gun bandits” pleaded guilty in Criminal Court Monday to four charges of armod robbery. Dan R Moote Joel Wil- I Rain?. 20. and Nathaniel 22, J both of 814 V, sth Sfv-.-t to froth’ | 30 to 25 years in prison. HURT IN CAFF Bit AWL RALEIGH—A fight at Edna's Ml-Nfght Case on \Y. South Street Monday night led to the wrest of two men and the ir<- hiry of a third. Patrolman Nor man Artis said James Rroadie 10, of 1?0 S Carver Street iva' treated at St. Agnes Ho-nital for a head laceration and re leased. Charged with assault 1 starting | J5S' - m .. . 6y m*XW£U ANOPMN ! GU, j IdMlHa MCS-. , ALF'fH.P H!TCt»COCA »u»4. *,»*«"*•<*"* **-“ itiITURY ' * i .. W&B** 2J.45 PT, I 0U111.U115 raooucts cmpounM.«. i. . u raoof j : •{ with a deadly weapon was Wil lard Miai, 24, of 320 Tarboro Rd., and Nathaniel Quiller, 24. of 509 E. Davie Street faced charges for aiding and abetting. DRIVER DROWNS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 11 child birth. Robert was a member of the church where the funeral was held and served in the United States army three years. Two Others Escape Jam:. Cox and Billy Locklear, j both of nearby Sanford who were | riding in the car at the time of the I accident were unable to throw | much light ori the accident. They i -aid that the ear overturned sov . -cal times, after it ieft the Cox : Mill Road. They reported how they I crawled out of the car and made | :m effort to find Cameron. Due to : i the dark, they were not able to :j find him and they reported the | accident to an officer—who went : to the scene and also found no i traces of Cameron It was then de - ! idod that he had also escaped in i jury and had departed the scene. When it was daylight Monday ; morning and Cameron had not | been seen another search was j made and it was then that his body i was found in about 2 feat of water, j near the edge of the- river, ft is be j ! icvcd that he was thrown from i the car and drowned. The county ; coroner said there were no bruises j on the body and there was no evi ; deuce that he was injured. Total eijg production in the Unit- j ; ed States last year was a record j 60.837 million eggs. This was 2 per j i < cut above year ago and 7 per ! i -ent higher Unusual bleeding or 1 discharge I A lump or thickening in the breast or elsewhere i 3 A sore that does not heal 4 Persistent change in bowel or bladder habits ££ Persistent hoarseness %J or cough 8 Persistent indigestion or difficulty in swallowing g Change in a wart or mole i | Mono os thes* sympfomj neces* sari 1 )* m«v»ns that you hav* can- j ct*r but any on» of them should send you to your doctor! Cancer tMMiily curable whan datfteted *rvd treated early. REMEMBER THE DANGER SIGNALS I FIGHT CANCER WITH A CHECKUP I , , ,AMO A CHECK THE CAROL 11\ iain f SeewU j I \h Li ...... Jftj# Picture frames are coming’ back in style—and not only to frame pictures. Some clever people turn them into trays and coffee tables, but I never expected to find one on a kitchen range. Today I did. We were nhoto graphing the new RCA Whirlpool electric range !,«-„ ! U, i o, fj >lete with a H igolden - brown fJK Toast turkey in jV? the barbecue I i +.* meat oven. w-'-'vM**** “Hank, look!” .Uvx-A, I prompted, "Isn't that a pic ture?” “Sure is,” my photographer-hus band agreed. “Shall 1 carve?” “No, not the food. Hank, that range. Look at the copper-toned picture frame around the oven doors, li gives a sort of shadow box effect —and think how smart it would look in our kitchen with copper-colored accessories. isn't that just like a man? Hank was so busy examining the built in automatic griddle and the 2-set automatic clock, he didn’t, even notice the picture frame. What did intrigue both of us i was the illuminated guide-hue on t the rnantleback that points up heat j selections of cooking units in use. i “The Whiripool-Seegei people cer. j I tainly make it easy to see what’s I ; cooking.” was Hank’s comment. Our copper anniversary is only ! n few weeks away. That gives me 1 plenty of time to talk Hank into buying one of these new ranges. Think I 'll let him decide the color, since it’s his anniversary', too. : Pink, yellow, green or white are j available. SEEK JIM CMW IN VI. HOSPITALS WASHINGTON Southern j congressmen last week began cir- j I culating u petition asking Segre- ; ' (ration of the races in veterans’ ! hospitals in the South. Rep. Brooks u Make Your Own /\>. Terms-Cash-Budget | (J'* LAY-A-WAY 11 L v : r! (% Suits Are the Envy of Every vfejpF?V Woman. We Have the Suit ’P' DA The Eastel ' I That You Have Dreamed of. r Line Is TWO and THREE PIECES **jSaP Forming j Cape and Fur Ti'immed. All Vou beion:; , of Good Quality and Y ln^ j Your Well-Tailored Topper '~ r T~^ Has Just Arrived! \ ! . \ T <\ j ««**•*. WMM 1 Be Sure to Get Your Receipt jt *J || |jj || Sj j| fl If fl % |v 1 for The Carolinian Bonus Fw»ij I|f j||j Hfj 1 || % Money Whether You Are |r 1p J ® jjj |f* f 1 i 3 Paying Cash, Budget or i f ... | i Lay-A-Way 1 The Little Shop Around The Corner __ Wilmington St at Hargett i _ ij Dr. Somerville Wiii Talk In City Sunday The speaker for the 15th An nual Foreign Missions Rally of i the Loti Carey Foreign Missions Convention for Raleigh and Vic inity will be Dr. Wendell C. Som erville Washington, D. c. The eleven o'clock morning ser vice Sunday will be at the First Baptist Church. Dr. O. S. Bui- j lock, pastor and eight o'clock 1 .evening service at the Oberlin Baptist Church, Dr. Grady Davis, pastor. DR. \V. C. SUMERVILLE The Lott Carey Foreign Mis sions Convention has work in Asia, Africa, Haiti and other countries. Many of the out standing workers of these countries were brought to this country and educated by the Virginia said state law should ap ply in the case of federal facili ties within a state and that there has been '‘violation of Virginia i laws” in connection with such 1 property for some years. Tuck .said he understood some other Virginians also have signed. — g Don’t Take Chances • Your stood watch desrves the fmj rwaw tK ,,- M -- - - Wli WEEK ENDING SATURDAY, MARCH 16, 1957 convention in various colleges and universities, in Raleigh, at Shaw University. Among the latter is Miss Angie Brooks. Assistant Attorney Gen eral of Liberia. Africa and a member of the United Nations. An Answer For Spring SS §k JN, Wi JSO \ 7 Ifi v i Jj \ As V No, we aren't recommending a new season! Just a new way to begin your spring wardrobe. You j can say farewell to old type foun ! dations that have bones to stick J you in the wrong places, i The big news for spring is the > Answer girdle, being debuted by ; Gossan!. It supports and slims ! like no basic has ever dref.med of, j Over a year in the designing, this garmenflieeps its control secret in inverted crossed Lands of clastic srt front and back which work against one another and for you —to give the smoothest possible figure. From waist to thigh, it supports you like a second self because the design of the front panel is mod eled on the way your own muscles \ work. If you think your silhouette could use a positive lift for this spring’s silhouette, this new basic j is the answer. Dr. Somerville, the Executive Secretary for seventeen years. Is a native of Reidsville, and a pro duct of Shaw University. Since the national advertising | campaign for wool was launched ! two years ago, per capita consump- I hot) of apparel wool in the U. S has increased 12 per cent. Total mill consumption of apparel wool is up 17 per cent, Stocks of wheat on North Cur iina farms are estimated to or 7(19.000 bushels as of January V, 0 Cooperative Crop Reporting Sc vice announced in a recent repo; North Carolina's commerce broiler production rose 33 per cor last year, but lower prices result' in a gain of less than four per c in terms of total gross income ii broilers. k&m misery fee! belter, faster; Try Or. Guild’s / Green Mountain j; v :; ! ~~BE SURE j SHOP TIP TOP CHICKENS 2V4 to 4 Lbs, HENS «*• 25i HEAVY WESTERN SHOCK ROAST Lb. 33s I “bacon i KING AN'S J| E i RICHMOND <4».|L J j POUND _ _* ** | | SAUSAGE | | FROSTY MORN ft | FARM STYLE 4JJjJ POUND 1# 1# FROSTY MORN FRANKS Lb. 43s I STEAK ! U.'S. CHOICE fk #! j SIRLOIN faMf* I POUND ...... . . U GRADE A MEDIUM EGGS | DOZ. CARTON QQc “bSa m ripe )EN • lye j POUND * ** L _ U _ J , ai |, wn^n —» ———---=—^ U. S. NO. 1 WHITE POTATOES j 10-LB. BAG 39c MRfiMISE ALL GOOD A 4 L LB. PKG j y New Bern Ave. Store Daily ilium rr ■ » —»...**«•» .wimkm Win Carolinian BONUS MONEY | With Cash Register Receipts From ~ . TIP TOP |