Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / Sept. 28, 1957, edition 1 / Page 5
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WEEK ENDJNO SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1957 COUBT INDICTS KASPER Wiute his attorney. Montaeme Ross Criqht). ecowk wife dispteas un\ lrsT»ky someaatioßist John 'tar-i-ier hears him sell mdieted bv a NashviO*. Town. General Sea- Siicvvs court OR tho charge ol inciting to Hot. Kasper addressed « mob in Nashville the night before a 5500.000 public school was dynamited as a protest Photo). Kyles 'Temple AME Zion: j Miss Benia Perry To Give Recital At Durham Church \ \t . v .- '• >** »■> * h : :.h • y ■ Xor! h Cci vo. ■v.* *■> «QXiot; Xiy ; ry Musical which wiD ht j v. -m at. Kyles Temple AM E. tiov Church, Friday night. Sepierrw • F r ; 27th. "Washington TERRACE APARTMENTS ■? bedrooms, living room, kitchen and bath. Stove, vefrlgerntor. heater, water furnished. $45. Apply in person Tel. 3-1107 »W 1 U’M ■■■ im in.wviiwi«m*n*t ,-Hjij.t-jItiCMBTIIjiI. IIIIIMIM—i ms I Ci nun v^fß>n«ei<MiinMß«r 2IIOUR CLEANING SERVICE A r Tn o ; I‘rmzßTzmso se r * —nsfcemisgtyaiHwe-yv t NU-PRO fl pROr E S S If U S ™ j F? f < e <; n e fe & «*'* *.« *jr tu? O { Hatters N. Cleaner:-'! .!' ? W. MARTIN ST. | Dial TJ .njili .’ "RO! *®* s ■ sncl' aseejessr*.-■.- s.-s jtn^w*s<<,swvte;<t-t itpitjiio-.—• nr«o«j w *iu j.i.r...jrtu.ji i.jLtu.ru'w/rniummii'mimnuLtMiMjmiwi FAMOUS BAKERY T - SPECIALS — Again By Special Request OVR DF.fiICTOVS 7 tV \\ Ihin layer Fresh Coconut Cake IT’S SO GOOI.) Spec, Price J .50 CHOCOL VTE ECLAIRS Boiled Custard Filling: CINNAMON RUNS doz. 36c Fresh Glazed DONUTS do/. 40c Pineapple, Carmel and Chocolate Layer Cakes ... in ice fa.vui.v si/ei. ... 55c M r-—Are—Open—Ail—Day—Wednesday—All Through Summer FAMOUS BAKERY 107 s. WILMINGTON ST. I‘HONES TEmple 2-8333 - 2-8334 Mi» Perry is a recent grad ual of lae School of Music. Boston Tniversity and is known to possess rare, musical j ability. She marie, an nutsland- j ins; record while at the school and receiver! soa.;y honors. She wvs vice president of the t’ha r,c! Choir, Chairman of floor counselors at the dormitory and represented the Boston Herald on the campus of the fnned institution. t.iembcrshfn in Mu Phi ! RbsHon, a honorary musical -society ; and the Ap>.*s Only students who j esbib.l ex-'.Tent qualities in lead- j riershio ar.d scholarship are eligible , for membership in these two clubs, i She has made several radio ap- ; pec ancer in Boston and Winston- Salem and ir now prepanne for an | extended tout 'ha* will take her j to many of the principal cities of She is the daughter of Rev. vvl the late Mrs. Bertha Per rv. H ’• fill her is the pa-tor of Oder Memorial A.Mb. 7ion fuurch, Winston Salem. Due to the record of both her father and uncle. Rev. S T‘. Perry, who pastured St. Mark I TWIN INN | OIL SERVICE if Trial temple 3-5831 H i H"fl Southfield Raleigh H J J. E. COEFIELD, Prop j£ f.hurch here for a number of years ,a large attendance is expected. The recital 3s being spottseved by the Home Missions Dt-pt. of Kyles Temple Church, with Mrs Alex ander Barnes serving as general chairman, A sponsoring committee, composed of persons all along the eastern seaboard is aiding in the planning of the recital. Broiler producers can look for a slight drop in price this month. Mm “Os all human ins tuitions the most worthless so an ex cuse!.* New Liberal Credil Terms Now in Elfeti AT Tiresfone -T '■■■■■ -’'V'Tst OM ?■ * APPtIANCES J 0 -k TELEVISION * TIRES & TUBES NuR BIG TRADtUH AILOWANCC WlLi MAKE Fthi down payment^ STORES 413 Fayetteville St. Tcenoiiiiegi warm floor comfort with a rirtfcr oil burning space heater ONIY £ j ««pouty Cory, v warfWft fa yAtirv 1 with a PREWAY*, the heater that , especially wvrms your floors as (t I heals your house, VottH like fins } ... a«d these other great PRENTAS ! features tliat do BO mnc.b but cost j so iirtle. Look ■ ■ * ’• , TH#ttTMllftt hmr flrerf* rUEL-STRETSHINO tttAtWt«(t~MH«M«re« wv*ry l>it *# from tvory droji oi ©li. MSRACif PUOT *■ Itoldi Urn ovtomnf* ( ically. At low sowing borm nearly 50 | hours «« on* oodon of oil, I 7-STAGE HAMM CONTKOI provlcf,, "iu.t j n*jM" settings from low to fir*. J KHaU like *t umTiO, ! rveNiTURt trniwo d.-Mv flnitW ■» ! |e?Atrous S«U«,c* o#i «nom«;*L ttMDKRWRftINft' IABOAATONICS fA NADIAN STANOARDS AS6M, APPROVED. fttry PftrWAY WOW ctndf Iwvs. Ecrw teyms. ELECTRICAL WHOLESALERS INC. 'ill N WEST ST K A LEIGH, N. C i _ : i Sellout Officials, lot Politicians, Must Handle ; Integration, Sap Louisviiie, Ky. Superintendent ; LOUISVILLE Dr. Omer i Carmichael. Superintendent of j School in Ijouitiville. Ky., said that I to make- imegr&tion work, school ; officials must accept the responsi i biiiiy handed them by the < ourts j and that politicians must, stay out j of the picture. In an exclusive interview re cently on the CBS Radio news program "The World Tonight". Or. Carmichael, who heads the Louisville school system now in its second year of integrated classes, said- 'tVe are begin ning this fall .just where we left off last spring with no ac cidents to give us any trouble j ai all.’ I Asked by CBS \>v snian Bill i Snipil, of WHAS. Louisville, what is the OivdiPcl ' sso.n of the Louis vilii? experii’i'.i.e, Dr. Carmichael j said: "My own belief is that there are two things which are fun damental to real success in this problem. First, that superintendents of schools and local boards of education take the responsi bility which the (Supreme) court decision placed on them, and second, that politicians stay out of the picture and that ine legally constituted state and lota! authorities support ON«- Os BENNETT’S i.AK- \ OKST —One of the largest fresh- I man *».lass»\s in th<* history of i Vespers Speakers Anpoyneed DURHAM - The R. - R ?.. Speak-;, paste of the S' Mark A.M.E. Zion Church of .Durham, vii! deliver the Octoner ves per speech ci North Carolina Col lege on S'lrui.'i.v. Ci toher ('• The speaker for Sunday, Septem ber 23 we? Dr T. K. Speigr ~r. In uldifinn to the Re* Mr Sfieaks, other October speak er-, are R, r. Ilougbis s*. yinnre, pastor of Ashurv Temple .Meth ndist Church, Durham. Oct ober 13; Dr. (•. F. S. Daises. V irginia State Coii. ge, October 2(1: and Rev Harold Roland, ni'tor. Ml Oilead Baptist Church. Durham. Ortober 27 T)j T (•’.• !)•••’ noted Duke l.inivr-rsity pastot, will Preach e.p November 10. Also xr.eakinc -- I .i- ;n -- -Vovemher ere R,-- rice.- M McCoy of A. & T College. Orwiisbin’o, November 17. and Rev. .1 W. Smith, dr. Cove nant Presyt- - i,iu Church. Durham. November 2-f \ spe*-i.‘,l Founders Dae sc--vice on November 3 will fc, tur? the college nnnisler. Or .! N- :■! Ilugiilet . T.i--- Rev. Charier M Joner. pas tor of the Community Church, Chapel Hil 1 , will deliver (hr ,«er- Ivon on December R and Dr. H’.igh k-y roll'etf minister, wili speak n n •lem.iary 5. m A « *ll, : I jaKiJi FAVORED TO WIN -- Vivian Jackson, lfi-year-old beauty froni New York is a big favorite of New Yorkers to capture top hon ors in the Miss N.H.A. contest Hotel Assn., to he held In New ark, New Jersey on Sunday, Sep lumber 23. 1357 at the Terrace Ballroom. New Jersey beauties won in 1955 and 1956 hut hotel owners from 13 states are pre paring to invade New Jersey with some of the prrttiest girls ever assembled in any contest. Eve lyn Robinson, sister of champion Nugar Ray will !M C the affair, Rioodv, ortit Street Tourist Home, Hotel DeLuxe. and Stirksvilla Guest House ,*>! ,VH A members are exporter! (o be represented at litis ai l air. THE CAROLINIAN j tue schools in whatever s>rc j gram they develop.” j The interview with Dr, C.'ar- S niich&e! was part of an integration roundup from areas where it is working successfully It also in eaided a report by CBS Newsman Future Looks Bright For !i C. Poultrymen | A ray of sunshine is seen on the hurl/,m for poultry produce!a An it c-xpi-ii says egg prices are likely - ! t<; rise more this fail than usual, ■i then continue ai profitable levels j through the coming year. Clayton l, * beau, egg marketing specialist for the N. C. Agricultural Extension Service College, deciar ; i s smaller laying flock*, reduced | c,;g production and higher prices' are in the picture for next year's j producers. Li beau points out that American . termers arc raising an estimated 394 million young chickens this year—-18 per cent iess than last. Tb.s figure does not, however, tn ' elude commercial broiler produc Bennett College lB9 shown in front of Annie Merner Pfeif fer Chapel, following Sunday HAPPY KHMER NEW YEARS NEW WORKERS AT BEV- ; NETT E.ievpn addition' lo the faculty and staff at Bennett Coi- I lege, Greensboro, N. <\, are pic tured here Reading left to right from bottom step are; Mrs. Mary | If Knox, secretary, public rela- ) atiorm office; Mis* Margarle ; VI ivs. assistant in records of~ j fire; Mrs. Dolile Turner, phy*d- j cal eriuratifm (dance!; *ernnd I Contest Winners At Chatham Fair Announced; Many Attend PirrSßOßO—Mrs. Mildred B. Payton, Chatham County Home 1 Demonstration Agent, released to j The CAROLINIAN the names of i winners in several contests con ! ducted at the Chatham County | Fair. In the Beauty Pageant, the first prize war. won by Miss Zulla Mae Farrar, Apex Consolidated School, j Second prize went to Miss Sh;r --1 ley Merritt, Lincoln High School, | Chapel Hill: and third wlnnenr | was Miss Peggy Lee Stewart, Apex i School. ! Others in the contest were Misses Virginia Chavis, sponsored by Taylor’s Cbapel Home Demon stration Club. Virginia Holloway. Haw River Home Demonstration Club; Ethel Atwater, Lincoln j High, Chapel Hill; Jean Allen, ; Apex School; Kozie Pendergraph, Chapel Hill: Suferia Fearing ton, i Bynum-Hamlet HDC; Mae Ruth i Lassiter, Hinton-BockvHtij HDC, i and Annie Mae Johnson. Lambent Steve Allen, TV Star, Gets Brotherhood Award Sun. BROOKLYN, N. Y (ANP —The “Brotherhood Awnrd for 1057" will bo presented to Steve Alien, NBC television stir at. the annual Bro therhood Dinner Saturday, Sept. 28 at Concord Baptist Church here. He will he honored for his aon tribution toward human relation* through wholesome and in-spiring entertainment Citations will he presented to Harold Petri, taxicab driver, who j reported his find of $.11,00 In his taxicab, for his honesty, and to j Thomas L. Harwell end Milton West,booh, past, presidents of the | William M. Mo r * Brotherhood. The annual Brotherhood ajiirciS i will t>« delivered by United States George Thurston who reported from his post ir, Talahassee, Fla., that in tha deep South most polls indicate that, “about one fourth of all white southerners approve the Supreme Court opinion, or would : accept it. even though they dislike | it.” ■ tien. All (section? of the country cut- j | ting productions of chickens for I ' laying flock replacements, accord- ; j ing to Libcau. The decrease >« j greatest on farms with small j 1 flocks. By the first of next year, he- j dares Libeau, the U.S laying flock i* expected to in be at least ' 7 par cent smaller than a year earlier. Average rate of lay i* ex pected to ba up but total produc j tion may fall as much as 5 ,pe[ cent below last year s levels. Smaller production plus increase in housewifo buying power should , mean higher incomes and prices j for egg producer* < morning worship service. They rom* from 18 states and four foreign countries. row: Mis* Barbara Hunt iibarv science; Mrs. Gertrude Pryor, commercial education; Mrs, Mary ! C. Hughes, director of Barge Hall: ihfrd row - Miss Georrrie Latimer English; Mfss Joyce Johnson, I physical education (sports); Miss H. LaConyea Butler, psychology; i Willie. I,eon Young, bioiogy and | Miss Anne Jenkins, speech and i drams. . : Chapel—-Jordan Grove HDC. A Fashion Show entitled “La 1 1 Belle Dame," was held Tuesday ; night, sponsored by the Home | Demonstration Council a.nd Cos ! metologists of the county Emphasis was placed on the economy of sewing and grooming from head to toe Three models were on display from Louise's Beauty Salon. The eleven models taking part were: Mrs. Myra B. Craig, Miss Louise Jordan, Miss Helen Siler. Miss Suferia Fearington, Mrs Daisy McQuiller, Mrs. Ada Far . rar, Miss Guytanna Horton. Mis. Margie Chavis and Miss Gwen dolyn Chavis. Hair stylists were Mrs Ceola . Lewter. Mrs. Louise Smith and : I Miss Florence Fox. $175 was awarded to winners , j in the Garden Club Contest. Wln , j nets were Mrs E. V. Lee SIOO I Mys Elnara Paige. SSO. and Mrs , i HAt.Mde Alston, S2B. Custom* Judge Scovol Richardson, former chairman of the United States Parole Board. Soloists for the avent will ha concert singers Elinor Harper and John Cannady, Previous award winner* have been Walbw O’Malley, president of the Brooklyn Dodger*, and Richard Brennan, president of th* Bravart Savings Bank. Dr. Gardner C. Taylor, pastor. Dewey ®, Chester, brotherhood president, and Richard A.Jackson, awardschatrman, are officer* for the event. The Brotherhood is a member o* the National Baptist Mens Organization, which retires ente more than 13,000.000 church member*, Mad For Plaid? You’ll Love Our Dan River Wrinkle-Shed Cottons 595 Perfectly poised /nr any occasion ? jusy day brings. Crisp 'n colorful fall cotton- :r plaids that ignore wrinkles so prettily look fresh so long* They wash completely, ton. Misses and Half sires * p k . j '1 A Softly draped front, nnpr<'S'-ed pleated skirl . in brilliant Autumn Fust or Slate Blue plaids. 12 to 20, h' fsjk -<■' 1$& w* |fy \~.h # * f ! . .4/ i ylflll*! I %fc# h . 1 ! iilltti i B. Stand out collar accented by pert self-bow Fashioned in glorious Blue. Brown, or Red Plaids. 12 to 20. Budget Shop Second Float. i If You Can'l Come In. Mail This Handy Coupon HUDSON-BELK, Raleigh, North Carolina Please send me the following dre =.*<».< .' ‘ ! * fc plus ?*• salts tit i and She postage each. I j Style I Quantity Size "color "2nd Color f i 'j j j j j j 11 H r i | ! v : Name . i Address .. , , I I City ( ) Check or Money Order ( ) Charge to my a< count ( ) Cash Hudson Belk PAGE FIVE
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
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Sept. 28, 1957, edition 1
5
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