Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / June 15, 1957, edition 1 / Page 13
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WEEK ENDING SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 1957 R OXB OR OR El PS VI L LE KOXBORO — Mrs. Jennie Petti ford Bailey. 53, the mother of Mr. William “Bill” Bailey died at her home at. 2U Johnson St 2:30 a.m. Saturday morning. Mrs Bailey was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Petti ford of Person County. She is survived by three sons and four daughters and numerous relatives and friends. Mr. William "Bill” Bailey. Rox horc, Mr, Carl Bailey, Jamaica, t. T. Mi Leonard Bailey. Phila delphia, Pa.. Mrs, Dolly Jones, Penn; Grove. N. .1. Mrs. Aelia Watkins. Philadelphia, Pa , Mrs. Ruth Bullock, Philadelphia. Pa., M”j Gertrude Barbee, Philadel phia Pa and Mrs. Lossie Reeves i of Burlington are the surviving j children. Funeral services are scheduled | for Thursday at ,3:30 from the ] Guinn's Chapel Methodist Church ! v !th the He'- G S. Gant official- ! ir. r assisted by the pastor. Rev. j A. L H-Meman. Burial will take place in Birtchwood cemetery. 'Jr William Pointer, student at Morgan Slate College is home for j the summer Pointer was a stellar : b ."’netball player while attending i TVvon County High School and I rv the teammate of such wide- j h known performers as • “Daddy" i Grace. Roxboro Robbie" Robin- | sun ' Togo" Jones and Harry ] Cole’ Believe it or not "Jelly" 1 Springfield performed with credit along with these perpetual rham *3 ions "The ole gray mare ain't what rhe used to he" ;? the toast that s group of fans sang about Theop hihts Jeffers Tuesday night when he flunked out completely trying to pitch 'be Colts opening came fi.ra-nst Hillsb- ro at Rocket Park h' e m hi? cove, hometown He inst didn't have it. He wee •v" a shadow of what he was a couple of masons ago Isiah and f.ehnisn Allen were far below their usual performance. Which (roe- to chow that you rsn t talk yourself into playing a good game "•*4l takes practice and training. ijtoot ball ace Sterling Smith is Rome on summer vacation from A&.T College . , So is George Clay and others. Mr Quincy Dickens and family It f l Wednesday for Chattanooga. T< rm to spend the summer. The many friends of Mr. Na tl-riel Harris are happy to have ’w“! bark home again after spend a few weeks in Veterans hoy pi nl recuperating from a sudden 1! Jn ess Cbff Gel breath will nperete baseball group this >.mnrr.fr. she home ground will be the Panther Athletic field All ycunr boys interested in playing amateur baseball should contact M y Galbrealh P hard for a pitcher to -,’in ? baseball game by walking every :*c cortd. third or fourth batter. . . »t •» very, very poor control, .".tcher* of that calibre can be bought 9 dime a dozen. So get on the ball and get some control ■ r.d b- a pitcher instead of an ter Somebody inform T.ev Royster. Earn chicks require infs of wa ter. MELVILLE Chevrolet Co-, Inc. SALE SERVICE Dia! LOoilSI 3-9flSt mi Rtvr .s r. '■<ig-ifP3" ■j.-"jare»wwrwMwnmwc c uiwinf |iiww«tWßf»y^ iV jg ''' Decides <ut mua mMcA t& 4f%&wd et Sharpe !s Funeral Home ?hF 9fPflUflt is ?Bn«r?ily Nsfifi OB fiaawM. am) ip with IN life nf fhfi ilßCßasp.il. • inrf nor services ere cnrnplete, regardless nf cost, miy family \% asjiirpH nl a cflinfnrting ami appropriate funeral ssrvie* Sharpe Funeral Home ; t *$ Worn* of Person Mutual Burial Association 24 Hour Oxygen Equipped Ambulances 802 South Main Street Telephone 616.3 FOXBOJRO, NORTH CAROLINA IVrites ‘‘Scorching** Letter: Preacher Paps lews On South Os Former Old Cystic Paster TOLEDO. O (ANPt A To- ' ; ledo minister scored the Rev Sim- : on Peter Montgomery, former i ! pastor of Old Mystic Methodist : | Church, Old Mystic Conn., for his i statement that, Negroes in the 1 j South were better off than Ne- > I groes in the North. . i In a scorching letter, the Rev. ; 1 A. L. Roach, pastor n.f Mt. Nr bo • 1 Baptist, Church, declared: : "1 do not understant how any intelligent person can visit one I small village in the South and give an honest opinion of condi tions as you have attempted to do ■ Economically. educationally,. i politically, socially and other White Man Termed “Deranged” For Raping Cute 1 6-Year-Old Girl 1 McCOMB. Miss, *ANP! A 45- year-olri white mar- here, one of 1 ! four who are under indictment ror raping a cute, id-year-old Negro girl, may win his freedom as a 1 result of sanity test, which saye he is "mentally deranged''. The man, Ollie Dillon and three . other whites allegedly raped a j teen aged Negro girl last Mav 13.' 1956 in a swamp after holding her Male Graduate Os Bennett College Is Named President Os School’s Parents GREENSBORO - Joseph T ; Harrington, of New York Coy. I who was graduated from Bennett I Collets’ before it came a college j for women in 1926 was nominated ' as president of the Nation.-,I Ceun j cil °f Bennett Parents as the an ; nnal meeting came to a close he r>\ : last week. i Mr. Harrington, who served ov. • eral terms as president of the N«w ! York chapter, and 1h; entme slate of officers will be voted upon by | a mail ballot which w --s sent to the membership -his week Other nominees pro; Mrs. Bessie M Nance. Greensboro, first vice ! president. Mrs, Alma T Taylor. Greensboro, second vice-president. Mrs. Minn 5 e B Smith. Greensboro. | j cor:' -spending secretary: Mrs. Lau- I ra F. Sawyer. Salisbury assistant i corresponding secretary; Mrs. Da- I vid Hammond, Baltimore, Mi.. Re cording secretary Miss Barbara Campbell Greens boro. assistant reacordmg socrc ! tary. J f? Smith. Greensboro, fin- ; | anctal 5 ecrelary: Mrs. David D. | ..Tones Greensboro, treasurer; Wil- : 1 ham 1. Gibson, Greensboro, rrpor ; ter. the Rev J. E. Brower. Greens boro. parliamentarian, and th: Reav R. C. Moore, Topeka, Kan sas. chaplain. "~'’i - —.... MAR T H A Reauty Salon Corner Till I. A JOHNSON ROXBORO, N c wise. 1 believe that 1 know the , South a;; well as any man living j today because I was born, reared j and partially schooled there. I eon truthfully soy that there have always been and there al- •, ways will be some ood. sincere; people in t ire South both white j and black, f further agree that!' ■ve have good and bad people in i. the North “The Negro suiters in the North from prejudice in etn plovmrni. housing conditions and many other ways, hut in no -.ensc is the Negro’s con dition in lbe North compared ■ to the Negro's condition in the South." I , prisoner ago ins: her will One man, | has been cleared of rape charges! by an all-white jury. A letter to Judge Torn P. Brady of Pike County circuit, from Mis- • I stssippi Stale Hospital officials; I indicate that Dillon has "schizo- ; phrenic reactions, paranoid type" I i and is presently "incompetent, t.o! j face trial", All of the men involved in the Greetings from the faculty and staff were brought hy Dr. J. H. S.iylrs chairman of the science division, and Mrs Da vid S). Jones, director of ad mission-, -poke on'The Gra duate Returns to the Family" President Wilt a It. Player m ido a, i>ri,-i' -! itern,-nt The parents also saw a mini- ! ature fashion show featuring sitt- i dent mode! - in original creations. j : :-n art. demonstration by Miss Son- I ,ja Weldon, of Chicago and Ger trude Snv'-h of Greensboro, and a scene front the commencement piny. "Electra." played by Miss: ! Dolores Johnson of Baltimore, and ; ! Eddie Griffin, Guilford County j ! school teacher. j .Among those attending the t meeting wete Mr., and Mrs David j Hammond. Baltimore. Md.; Mrs Bennie H Edmunds. Cincinnati, O . hio; Mrs. James Justice, Cincin- i rati, Ohio, Mrs. Minnie Birgers. I Cincinnati. Ohio: Mrs Bessie , Nance, Greensboro; Mrs. Alma T j i Taylor, Greensboro. Mrs. .j r. ' Hankins, Louisville, Ky . Mr. and ' ' Mrs. William Parrish, Glendale. O hio, , - ■ Alphas Appoint New Secretary j CHICAGO ■ ANP'i Frank F. Stanley, general president of AJ j pha Phi Alpha fraternity an j noiinceri this week that the execu | live council has appointed Earnest ! L. Wallace of Dallas. Tex., as the • general secretary to succeed ; James E. Huger. Wallace, a graduate of Fisk i University with graduate work at ; the University of Southern Cali ! forth a. is serving as regional di vertor for the State of Texas.. EYE FEATHER CROWN Buddying up to o punching bog tier® ore Hogan Bassey (left) of Nigeria, and Cherif Horrent of France, laotherwcighle who have signed to fight hr the world's loaiherweiabt championship vacated by America's Sandy Sad- <il«r, The titia bout i» achadulsd !ui June 19. (Newppross Photo). The Rev. Mr Roach note! that hate groups are now 'terrorizing Negroes in the South merely be cause they seek to vote. "No people are better off." he wrote, "when the people them selves who make the law defy the rr’ing of the highest court of the ! land. No people are better off ' where they do not have protection j of the law because, of the color of i their skins, whether it is behind i the Iron Curtain in Russia or i behind the Iron Curtain m Mis inssippi." The Rev. Mr Montgomery made his statement after returning to Connecticut from a visit, to Pine- 1 ville. a small community in South • Carolina. iape case are relatives. They are Ernest, Dillon, 30 and j two cousins. Durea, 22, and Olen j Duncan. 22. in addition to the i elder Dillon who has been called I "mentally deranged '. The two Duncans are in .jail a j v. ait mg trial for kidnapping in ' the fail An all-white jury cleared Olen j Duncan of rape and the jury hung i in its verdict for Durea Duncan. , Mr--. Ophelia Williams. Balt'- , more. Md. Mrs Thomas J Wright, j Cincinnati. Ohio; the Rev. Mr ! and Mrs. R. C. Moore. Topeka, j Kansas; All's Carrie Green. Anna- 1 polls. Md.: Mrs Leila Zeigler..An- J piston, Ala.. The Rev J. E Brow- j cr. Greensboro: Mrs. Daniel I,ant- ! •r. Bath, N. C.. Mrs Mary Blatch. Miami. Florida. Mrs. Philip A I Homy.-. Chestej-town Md : Mr and Mrs C H. Holloway. Meridian. Miss: Mr. and Mrs. Ed ward 8010 High Point, N C.. Mrs Anna S Ellerbe. Cheraw. S.C ; Mrs. Nora Ford, Henderson. Mr and Mrs Charles Tyson, New Ha ven Conn.: Mrs Pauline Brooks. Ninde. Va : Mrs. Henry McGimp ey, Morg.mton. N. C Mrs. Lucille Wofford, Charlotte; Mr. and Mrs. N L. McCorkie. Winston-Salem; Mrs. Z-vppsyn Avereft, Greensboro; Mrs. Delia Lewis. Morganton, N C Mrs E. L Rhoden, Charlotte, Mr. and Mrs Zollic. Striggles. St. Albans. N Y.: Mr. and Mrs J H Smith. Greensboro, Joseph T Harrington, New York: Mrs. Cle ota Hudson. Greensboro. and Phil lip Davis. Parford. V C In addition t.n hi? activities in - Alpha Wallace has been active in 1 ; th« Fisk Alumni association and j ; | many civic organisations in Tex-. ,! as. ij Huger, after six years as gen ; oral secretary, has resigned to be come administrative assistant, to the president of Bethum*-Cook ; man College. Wallace will iojn the staff on i July 16. THE CAROLINIAN FIELD f>¥TVOTTONS—Mwd-solaUrrel artillery (ralr»r**s at Fort Car«on, Coin, nawse during * ipnthfom for rdifionns sen?ires It? the combat ror?dsided according t<* thrir faith hr ChspHin (First Lk > «iim*nU Dadd Sfcarsky of New York City, Jewish chanlaln at the post HONORED IN GHANA—Famed British soccer star. Stanley Matthews (seated, center', ts*' shown after being crowned "King of Soccer’ at n ceremony in Accra, capital of the ~ no .on of Ghana. Matthews was in the country lot a one- ol or hibitions. {i-.e rc-pre; . Photo;. Crvn WAR AVERTED After a siege of strike . chaos and the threat of civil war. the Republic of Haiti is beginning to pull itself together Above arsonist:-, and pillagers are led away after they wore caught in the act of burning down the nation’s leading newspaper. L» Mcrtin. Haiti Mirror and Haiti Herald. Martial la and a curfew are still in effect at JVrt- An. Prince. the capital. (Nawspress Photo). t Speaker Gives Tennesee State 'Graduates 3-D Rules For Leaders NASHVILLE Analyzing the i role key D-D leadership must play in today’s world, Dr. Harold P W. Benjamin of Peabody College. Nashville, delivered the com- I mencement address at Tennessee | Stats University last week The baccalaureate speaker, ! Dr. W. o. Catrinrion. pastor of First AME Zion Church, 1 Brooklyn, N. T„ had already warned the graduating rlas:>e* of "the high cost of low Jiv ing,” H*-- pointed out in his discussion of courageous relig ion that "while good living high living— ls a costly thins tow living is costlier.” "If the modern world moves in to a global Golden Age instead of falling to destruction " said Dr Benjamin, ‘‘it, will be because, a key leadership has arisen through out the world.” Kc,v leadership he continued, must be one whose ! members are no longer willing to play merely the ordinary role,--, of ordinary timer There members j will construct new roles for them selves . look for extraordinary 1 Jail Sentences Banging From : Three Years To life Given ian ! J : MEMPHIS. Tcnn *'A.NF> - A 30*year-old man laet week heard a judge here bind the lost of his natural life to existence behind prison bars when the jurist sen fenced him to jail terms ranging from three years to life imprison ment,. Willie B. Harris drew' the sen fences after pleading guilty to five offenses committed between last Oct. 31 and May 6 Judge Perry Sellars sentenced Harris to life imprisonment lor criminal assault,, not more than , jobs to be done, and will earn-. j out those jobs in cr.traord.mary: I fashion The 3-D leadership role i omp of breadth- length, ?nd height—which Dr Benjamin charged the graduating classes 1 to nilv Is ‘not a safe one,’' he -aid, 'hut a role of broad, ’ far-reaching, high meaning that carries with i* the pnten- i tial of crucial ervire to all (he people of (hiss country and all the people of the world. For these peoples everywhere are on the move ... If you uni t would serve a« their outriders, we must mount <ml move forward As a part, of it? 25th reunion' activities, the Class of 1332 pre sented to President w s n vi ! ! a sterling tea service for the new ! ’ women's dormitory to open Sep ! ternb-ct- l George w. Bronx:-. pi e,- •! ldent of the class of Via'’ and now j | principal of Burt High School j ; Clarksville. Trr.i, made the pre- j septa I ion 10 year:- for armed tobbe.ry not more than five years each for burglary and larceny, and three > years tor petty larceny Farmer- marketed about 2 to 3 per cent, more products in lfl'ifi than n 1855. Cash receipts from" faun marketings were up about i the same percentage as marketing With additional income received from soil bank and wool incentive program*, farm operators realized net income for the. year rose for thA first lime smee 1951 : BRUCE’S .V to SI.OO ST ORE i Children Clothes. Variety Items School Supplies Ftioor 6633 Rnsboto, \, C — - ———-—————r.~- - IIM ' LEWIS FURNITURE COMPANY Quality Furniture Low Price* Easy Terms Call Us For An Evening Appointment 113 DEPOT ST. ROXBORO. N. C. - PHONE 4031 J— —_ _- , - SEVEN STAB 1 jp A : L| 90 PROOF I 1 sevenstas 1 $3 c "» 1 g n 4 4-5 PINT V '3Lb §*> M a ***• tmau* * want t**"** Wft «. ftr -—. -roaJi SEVEN StA*. MENDED WHISKEY. *0 H Ts-1 PROOF J7»A% STgAIOHT WH'SKET * m . /MS 1 years Ok At ORE Ota. 62H% grain neu k- ,_V f TRAI SPIRITS. OOOOIRHAA* 4 WORT* tro.. PEORIA. ILL PAGE FOURTEEN NEW YORK (ANPt —The New York City Council had be ; sere it this week a bill which I would outlaw discrimination in j private houring Mayor Robert Wagner had sl- I ready endorsed the bill. The bill stipulated that it wouJ4 he a misdemeanor, punishable by » SSOO fine, to refuse to rent or dwelling soars (or reasons of raa> color, religion, national origin * ancestry. Only exemptions would be th# | icntal of one and two family hois* s> s. the sale of private homes bujf in developments of less than i* units and housing accommodations in religious institutions Under the terms of the bill, ore* sistent discrimination would ma a violator subirct to contempt pro* rredircs. with a possible jail term A publr hearing on the bill U scheduled FAMU Summer School Opens iSaturday TALLAHASSEE The 133? summer session of study at Fieri* ; da a and M University begun i June 15 and continues through , August in, according to Dr, H, Manning Efferson, dean of ad* ministration and summer school | director. Two sessions will be held—six* I week—June 15, July 26. and nine* | week—June 15. August 10. In at!* | dition to the two sessions, several I workshops and clinics have been I scheduled covering such diversifi ed topics as automatic transmit* j si or? s. and home furnishings. Summer school registration will 1 beam Saturday morning, June 15. 1 at 8 o'clock and continue through Tuesday. June 18. I' will be held , alphabetically j Those persons tn commuting I distance will register on Saturday. June 15: those persons oStside commuting distance will register on June 13 ;Tuesday). The calendar of special features for the summer follows,: Football Coaching Clinic. June. 10-13. Bas ketball Coacni . Clinic June 13* 15 Automatic Transmissions Workshop. June 17-29- Economic Resource-Use. Education Work shop, June 17-July 5: Southern Cooperative Study, June 17-July: Landscape Management Short l Course, June 24-28: Home Frsez i ing Short Course July 8-19: Edu | cation for Exceptional Child, Ju ; ly 8-26: Farm Power Machinery | and Farm Shop Problems Work shop, July 8-26 Operation. Care and Maintenance of Farm Mach inery Workshop, July 15-18; Short ■ Course for Beauticians. July 15- 17, Conference on Reading Prob lems, July 22-August 10, Training Program for School Lunch Per sonnel. July 28-August 10' Home Furnishing - Workshop July 28 I A. ! HUMPHRIES 1 Groceries find Meats I PHONE 5513 R?.O n nrham !>.«a d HOVKORO, v r,. REifisviHi Laundry Co. fNCORPORATED Sanitone Dry Cleaning REIDSVILLE, N C. Phone DT 9-7044
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
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June 15, 1957, edition 1
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