Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / Nov. 9, 1957, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO ODDS & ENDS (COKXJNUED FROM PAGE !) ftwtes* *■ greater interest in Bible reading -end study Although this column was aware of the date for this observance no mention was made of It before hand because we were interested in making a check afterwards to learn to what extent the occasion was observed. Our rheckirif consisted of asking sev eral persons in various walks of life to what extent did they ob~ serv National Bible Week Although the persons questioned Included several ministers not one of them had made any particular study of the Bible that week In fact, only 2 of the persons asked bad any idea what we were talk- i trig about. Os course we are sorry | ♦hat an event that could have j meant so much for so many pen- ! pie could pass almost unnoticed, j Bible reading and Bible studying j plus the practice of the truths and | virtues contained there are sure , means of a healthy and prosperous j life on earth and the hand of the divine province of eternal life Setting aside a special week each ■rear for s consecrated study of this ‘‘book of books” could serve to alert the minds of men to the importance and need for this study but mankind everywhere would he so much better oft if every week was considered Bible Week to the extent that man would allow him self to be directed and governed by the principles contained there in MORE PERSONS LEAVING: The fact that there are 20.000 more persons leaving North Carolina ♦ban are entering it. each year should be very disturbing news It should be especially disturbing to those v- ho are now attempting to portray this a? a state of opportun ity The fact that over half of these migrants are Negroes should be : furthe- disturbing because it gives the life to the oft repeated claim that s in North Carolina i v. ell treated and contented group. People just don’t run away j from opportunity, they do not, run ; away from good treatment and con- j tentment. We believe it would be , a good idea for this state to get its house in C'-rier and polish its war p,. before it goes into the market pleo" to sell its goods. vn.'-NTA. GA. and RALEIGH. N c In Atlanta capital «f a Gate that has vowed to maintain all phase? of segregation, come what j may. 74 white Protestant pastors have Issued a statement calling for “ebediance to jaw, preservation of the public schools, protection of free speech and the maintenance of Meet Your Friends j —At— ROSE’S 5 w 10* i s sc STOR E I “Your Popular Store WILSON, N. C. WE REPAIR Automobile Radios Also TV’s & Home Radios DIXIE ■ RADIO SERVICE ! 215 S. GOLDSBORO ST. Phone: 2314 WILSON. N. C. “The Men’s Shop" We Are Moving! Visit Ms in Our NEW STORK for Quality Men’s Wear! A 'ext To M & f Restaurant HOWARD ADKINS, INC. FURNITURE WE HAVE IT! ALL KINDS! WILSON FURNITURE CO. Telephone 3035 125-127 S. Goldsboro St. Wilson, N. C. liILIG-MEYERS 1 ‘“For Wise Buyers’ 1 The Home Os The Health Bond Mattress Wilson, N. C. | ] Arrow Shirts McGregor Sportswear Dobbs Hats Freeman Shoes BRUCE LAMM j STYLED MEN’S WEAR ! I Wilson, N. G j' I contact and eormnunieatioru? be- i tween Negroes and whites”. This j action of Georgia pastors also aim- j ed a barb at the segregationists fanatics who attempt to frighten by saying that integration and race amalgamation are synonymous “To say that a recognition of the rights of Negroes to the full priv- j ilegcs of American citizenship, and j to such necessary contacts ss might j follow would inevitably result in i inter-marriage is to cast ?s seri- j ous and unjustified an aspersion } upon the white race as upon the Negro race”. The pointed and time ly manifests of this Atlanta group contains many other factual state ments but whs! we are really try i ir.g to point out here is the f ;ct j that dispute the fact that both Ne | groes and whites m North Caro : lina arid Raleigh tor some unex ! plained, reason like to belsive that | race relations are better here, no j group of white pastors or any I other white group has seen fit to |-utter one word on favor o f up- j holding the law or in protest a gainst the evasion of it where it Concerns the lights Os Cgroipt. Ts the white pastors of Raleigh have the least regard for law com pliance, it would seem that at least | one nf them would have spoken j out against, the wilfull evasion or. | rather the arrogant defiance of the law by the Raleigh school in its refusal to admit a Negro to a school he has every legal and mor al right to attend. The silence of these Raleigh pastors on this, and other occasions when the rights of Negroes have been trampled upon is in sharp focus with this chal lenging statement from Atlanta. Georgia. UNITED NATIONS DAY: A , reader asks '‘Wouldn't the observ ance here of United Nations day seem more significant had the P' * ticipants been composed of several nationalities.” We think it would have been. As a matter of fact, it is our understanding that the lo cal United Nations Day Committee j ! was made up of persons of several I races including a Negro. Possibly iit was an unintended oversight • that the program did not have a olace for more than one national ity ' A TRIBUTE TO LEADERSHIP: A very fine tribute'was recently paid to the Negro leadership in | Durham bv the nationally known , author, lecturer and ABC network j Commentator, Edward G. Morgan , Mr Morgan was in Chapel Hill j last month to give a series of lec tures at the University of Noun Carolina. During his visit, there he found time to browse around in (Durham in order to get. a picture | of race relations in that industrial I center. , . , j i According to his story which j ! continued for 3 days on his regu- j kii AFL-CSO evening broadehat. i he was mightily impressed by the i manner and methods employed by j ! Durham Negroes to achieve solid- j I itv and the resulting achievements j !of the unity and cooperation i ‘ obtained. Mr. Morgan, an outspok- j i -n defender nf equal right'- was j most lavish in his praise of the ! ability of Durham Negroes to lick I their greatest enemy themselves. It is our earned hope, it is our i prayer that some day soon, that same spirit will descend upon the Negroes of Raleigh. North ( aro- Una May God speed that day i N AB WOMAN (CONTINUED FROM PAGE !) ! She admitted buying policies: totaling thousands of dollars on; the lives of persons she “chose at' i random.” forging their names j i without their knowledge, Baker j said. Mrs. Perkins has confessed to j ! poisoning two persons, a neigh-j ! bor’a child and an elderly woman 1 | acquaintance, because °he needed money to make premium pay- j PRESENTS COOKERY DEMONSTRATION AT SHAW— Mis* Hattie McSwain, a field heme economist with the Nation al Live Stock and Meat Board of Chicago, 111., presented a meat cookery demonstration before the home economics classes at Shaw University Raleigh. Monday. She stressed points on meat buying, the identification of the various ruts, meat cookery anil serving. Miss McSwain, well-prepared in the subject of foods, draws upon the very latest meat studies con ducted by colleges, universities and hospitals, for her presenta tions ments on the numerous other pol icies. police said. “A lot of friends and rela tives of the woman are nearly hysterical,” Baker said. “They remember when they get sick. This case has spread to Ma rengo, Wilcox and Bibb Coun ties as well as Dallas. And no body on the sidewalk can talk about anything but the poi sonings. Four bodies have been exhumed I and authorities intend to inves tigate a number of other recent deaths. Baker said. State Insur ance Commissioner James II Horn sent- in two agents to help with the investigation. Baker said the Mitchell woman collected SSOO on the death »f John T. Avery of Brent. Ala , $375 lon Herbert Duff of Brent, and | $927.50 on Will Stevens. Mrs. Perkins is accused of collecting payments on the deaths of her husband, Char lie Perkins, Sr.. 10-minths oid Glorida Jean Montgom ery. and Della Davis. 70. all found to have been poisoned. Investigators have also exhum ed the body of Ed Johnson 70. I METHODIST (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1) work of other irstiiutions of higher learning in the con ference fi"nf alter a resolution on the admission of Negroes. Presiding Bishop Paul N. Gar ber of the Richmond area rul ed out of order the resolution asking th (-conference to "isMie a clear cut statement of its polices” on the “admission of Negroes to our Methodist schools.” Tiie Bishop declined to placr the resolutm - c , ,v ,-u student admissions introduced by the Rev. i W. E. Perry of Wesley Memorial Methodist Church in Warrenton. on the floor for conference action. The ruling of Bishop Garb, r '.'as i that the conference was called . solely to act on the fund-raisin;; | drive and discussion nf racial I problems was not on the agenda I The Bishop also declared that ri. - - I tails of college admin i, to, : inn. in i eluding student admivnon. was ur.- j dci the riu'C-l control of liusi-u. Inf the various colleges, n.n the 1 conference Following 1 h- la. . ■ ■ •. .n. the 800 conference dch-i.it ■ i journed to a luncheon at Ik site of the new Methodist colh here V breakdown of rimp'ign allocations shows tV-t, a -or drive rYtirns! Hie first 223,000 wi'l include VI n.il'i in to the new college here; a siin ilar amount to the new N. G. Wesleyan fo’lege at Rocky Mount; ami $225,900 to Louis lnirg College. The balance nf the emnnai-n n-i come will include ? ! million each i to Methodist and N Wc Colleges; $225,000 to l.buislj'h ■; College; SIOO,OOO to the Duke Uni versity School of Divinity, $130,- 000 to the Wesley .Foundation; and $50,000 each to Greensboro and High Point colleges. TRESPASS CASK (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1) pfesaibg on the “white only' side of the Royal Ire Cream Com pany. 1000 N. Roxboro Street, last, June 23 The group based its defense in Superior and Recorder’s Courts on the contention that they had entered the ice cream parlor in good faith. They said that the owner, by being opened for busi ness. had issued an implied invi tation to the general public I > patronize the store regardless of race \\ H. MhtrdwVi. solicitor, argued in Superior Court that the ca«e had nothing to do with the Negroes’ constitu tional rights. He said the ac tion simply Involved a ques - tion of private property. Under North Carolina Saw. a i .-,spas,“mg charge can be sus tained only if the defendant in truded on private property with out the permission or the invita tion of the owner of Use properly IKE TO CONFER (CONTINUED FROM PAG I 1) Mr. Powell had said in a speech before the NAACP in Evanston. 111. last week that "six weeks have gone by since I requested and Mr Eisenhower agreed to hold a con ference with Negro lenders. I do not know what Negro leaders have bcin considered, that is the total responsibility of the White House. But I do think that such a conference could hr very in structive end helpful to c-v co*>'l- j Ty end h i hon'd be held as qii 'kly py f-sxlbK" A' h'<: press conference Wednes day, Mr. Eisenhower relvrated THE CAROUNiAN I Ins original belief that it will take I patience, tolerance and consider ation to solve this civil rights problem It cannot be solved by law rr force. He pointed nut that the in tee ration order brings about j quite a social change in A merica. Vl> must remember that for sfi years wc have lived under the social order of sep | * rate but equal. Ami now that j whole system is considered j unconstitutional. The President stated that the Little Rock situation is improving daily, and he hoped and prayed! that the time will soon come j when he would be able to remove ! all Federal troops And he hoped that in the future this (Integra ] tion) could be accomplished with out trouble. He said he had called upon j business and Industrial leaders, i as well as the clergy to lend their j aid in helping solve this prob lem LABORER DIES (CONTINUED FROM r.\»« I. I) | ter Walker, 22, was in critical j j condition and expressed doubt he i would recover. Police broke into j I Walker's tightly-closed House and! found his wife, Doris, dead in bed. Nixon Neighborhood (CONTINUEO FROM PAGE l) | scheduled relocation oi a Negro j I family would be in Nixon’s neigh - j borhood in suburban Washington. I _ I but he and Alan Kemper and Roy j V. Ranis, tin- two other members, ! j agreed it would have been an “i- j i deal” location. “Os course we would be inter- I i esfed in considering property n I j Mr. Nixon's neighborhood for re- : | locating Negroes and 1 ant sure he i : would not object, for his stand ! ! against segregation is too well- j | known.” Fowler said. i WIFE KILLER’ (GONTr UFO FROM PAGE 1) barrel on Sept. I. The brutal j slaying shocked the citizens of the Wesley Heights section i where the Morrows lived at 123 Frazier Avenue. : : Morrow pleaded guilty to mur-' ’ dev in (he second degree. > Headed by Mrs. A. G. Gan - , or-' l eanizer of the Gan Auditorium - he”?, a parade of character wit-. | nesses testified Morrow had a j i good reputation and had never -been Involved in cA nr before. ! He worked as a janitor at the | Garr Auditorium. . STATE BRIEFS (CONTINUED FROM PAC E I) ' until a mysterious flaming object was seen over West Texas arid New Mexico over the weekend. Charged In Hubby's Death MONROE Officers are holding Mrs. Jessie IV. Win field without bond here in (he death of her 65-year-old tenant-farmer husband. Sher- j iff Ben Wolfe said She wom an admitted shooting her husband with a shotgun Sun day after an argument at iheir heme near MarshvMc. Sheriff Wolfe said officers were seeking Fletcher Bin field, brother of the victim, who was guest in the home at the time of the shooting, but fled lit G! Uir Molesting Coeds GREW SBC HO Isaiah Cm | tey, 19-year-old laborer was ur • : I rested here Monday night on I charges that he threatened a j number of AJiT College coeds, i made indecent proposals to them and slapped several of them. Can tey. who lives at 302 Boyd Street.; faces, in addition to four assault j ehai'fjps a trespassing charge on the ATT campus. Police said lie also made lodece.rtl proposals and assaulted a girl m u shoe stove cat i’.i ■ in the daj Bono was ~<n at $530. Prd' Found In Creek U ISLINGTON, V (’.—The body of elderly Lid Gaylord, partially paraliwd, was found floating in Blounts Creek, near his home last Friday af~ ternom. Gaylord had been seen entering the swampy wood <1 area late Wednesday «* !)(. He was reported miss ing ‘1 hours liter and a Kearch was begun. Gar Kills Boy. fi DUNN Johnny Dale Beasley fi-year-old first grade student at! the Meadow School in John.,on County, was fatally Injured when he was struck Monday by an au tomobile at B am. The car was; driven bv Robeit A. Merritt, of j Kenansville. The boy died envoute jto « hospital. The child ran in j ‘j front of the vehicle. , Mrs. Boston Succumbs .lAMFSVHXF. N. C. Mrs. Bessie Pierce Boston, 66, wife of Elder Noah Boston, scribe of the Washington- Norfolk District, died at the Wash ington County Hospital in j Plymouth, Friday, November 1. She was a life-long member of the Free Union Community of farnesvMle Township in Martin County. An urgency i necessitated that Mrs. Boston he rushed to the nearby ! Washington County Hospital, Tlmrsdiiv. Oct. ”1 when she apparently became deathiv ill. Funeral was preached the Free Union Church of Christ by the Elder 8. W, R. Keys. Sr.. Chief of the Wftsh ington-Nor’olk District. Dis cip'es of Christ. Elder .foscnii James, pastor tis the Free Union Church is the late Mrs Boston's uncle. Interment was held in the church cemetery. Fni'cral tva* l- 'ndled hv Ton dle Funeral Home of Ply mout h. HONES MONEY (( O.YTIXt I D FROM PACK 1) Thursday, November 7. and will , nd ai midnight on Wednesday, •irrinc in receipts and purchase I . ipi will he announced to churcher J • in re.vt a I'.'.s Carolinian, All i id!eat|e-is point to th' fuel I ! that churches err p-orvcs-ins to ( ward the end of the initial contest | run when each congregation v.-’il! | strive "to roll over the top” home j in grand style. Four Bonus Money awards of SSO, $25. $lO and $lO will be given to the churches turning in the largest amount of purchase slips or receipts showing that, their members have patronized CARO LINIAN advertisers. Instead of giving money bonuses io individual families as was prac ticed in earlier months, awards will be made directly to a person I iv committee appointed by the par - • I Ui’lpytins churches in Raleigh and j Wake County whose purchase slips ! warrant these awards . Church members in the Ra leigh and Wake County area are urged to turn in purchase slips or recipts to a Commit tee ur individual in the church The slips could be turned in every Sunday morning. The Carolinian wishes to re- | ind church members that each week carries a date in the Bonus Money Period. Purchases eligible for awards must, come from the store during the week the adver : nsement appears. i SEVERS HEAD (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1> | Alia Avery married two brothers, Calvin, the deceased, and Mo di ester. Sobbing" uncontrollably as de | puties questioned her after the 1 shooting, Mrs, Avery said the, | shotgun discharged accidentally las Avery threatened to hit her; I with a stick. The woman said “he ran ; screaming from her small, four-doom <ft bin and threw the weapon in the weeds a iongside a small dirt road leading from her home to the Turnbull Road Cumberland County Sheriff L j L Guy estimated the time of j j death at about 6 p.m. Avery was • I’Tmg on the living room floor. ;ace down, with hi.s feet less than j two feet from the door silt Mrs. Avery’s son. 15-year-old Fletcher Avery, told deputies that his uncle came to their house at 5:45 p.m. Saturday. Both families Jive near each other. “He knocked on the door,” the youngster said. “My mo (her opened it and he asked if his wife was there, she told him no. He began curs ing her and she tried to close the door. He pushed it open and came in the room," the 'ooy continued. i Fletcher said he ran from he j loom and. in a matter of seconds,; : heard the blast of the shotgun j and his mother screaming. Re-i turning to the living room, “In boy found his uncle lying in a \ pool of blood. The wife of the dead man told; the sheriff that her husband had; beaten her the night before with I a stick of stovewood and had ! threatened to shoot her with a | shotgun and rifle. She said he f, ’ ,T <L the rifle into a fireplace 'Trc stood over the bed and fold : me he was going to kill me. He i .-aid then he was going to lay \ j down beside me awhile before go i ing to tell someone that he had' killed me." The following dav, she said, no mention was made of the argument and the dead man ts said to have left the house and stayed off until he ro i turned in his pickup truck at j about 5:30 p.m. "I was over to my sifter's house when he came over there, T didn't I see no shooting, though. I was in! the back of the house.” she said. The woman ha.s been charged with murdei until her story hits been checked out. MUTILATION (CONiINUEI) FROM PACE Ft verdict against Joe P. Pnich. . 3t tor his part in the crirru Floyd allegedly performed the ; emasculation with a t . /.or blade I :<f part of hi? initiation min the j i Splinter Ku Klux Klan of the con- j ; (cderai ,v Pritchett was sentenced by Judge Alta King to tin maximum of 20 years and de clared, “this is the worst case i have ever heard in my years of experience as an attorney and on the bench ” ; Pritchett's attorney. Norman ! immediately appealed tin- conV.c- i ! tion and King set appeal bond at j $20,000 Pritchett the ‘'Cyclop o " of the Klan faction, allegedly ordered the i mutilation of Aaron as a warning j to other Negroes. Others indicted in the case were ; William J. Miller, 20: John N. Grit- ; fin, sft; Jesse K. Mabry, 43; and Grover McCullough 41, ail of the Birmingham area. Miller and Grif fin turned state’s witnesses Miller testifed the incident occurred after a Klan meeting attended by the six “to decide on the appointment of a cap- i tain, which would he an assis tant to the Cyclops.” Miller said Piitchott ordered them "to go out and pick up a Ne gro and .scare hell out of him" a? i.n example to other Negroes who might attempt integration. The siv spotted Aaron and Pritchett told him “you're the Negro we've been , looking for," Miller said. BEAT MAN (1 ON TINGED FROM PAGI t> "apparently without provocation"! by o group of young while men j Reports indicated that as j many as 20 youths were in volved i lithe assault on the man, who was Identified as Glcve Adams. Adams is reported to have rp- j lured a drug store ai. Denton Sun- j day where lie purchased a cold; drink, then started walking a round the town. The white men reportedly threw firecrackers and rocks at Adams as he walked along the main street of Denton. Chief GaHhnore said the* A druns was not seriously injured. ■ The Investigation was touched 1 Ts when a citizen telephoned i.-o dee to report the attack on th? t man. < rppi year’s ,-ejpport it fm < wheal ut North Carolina t* 25 jhm' buijhtd j t A Methodist Leader Appears On “Church Os Air” Program Sun. NASH vTLL'E,. Tfnn, (ANP) don. Pa president of tha national i Tho Rev. Howard A Bailey. Yea*Methodist Conference on Christ!- j Report From Stale s CHURCH SCENE WOMAN’S DAY ST AMBROSE EPISCOPAL , CHURCH will observe the annual Woman s Day on Sunday, Novem- ' her 10. at 11 a.m. Guest, speaker 1 v 'll be MRS. T. R. ROBINSON, in- - sfruotor of Biblical Literature and English at St. Augustine’s College, < The program is under the sponsor- : ship of the Woman's Auxiliary of the church . . . WINSTON-SAL EM'S KIMBERLY PARK HOLD i NESS CHURCH recently held its . I 2«TH ANNIVERSARY which clos- . ••t! last Sunday. At one of the serv ices REV, J. R, BRIDGES and members of the BETHEL AME i CHURCH were in charge . . . RAL i EY DAY was observed at NEW ; HOPE AME CHURCH AT LEWIS VILLE last Sunday at 3 pm. CHURCH BELL RETURNED ! 1 LITTLE ZION AT NEW LON | DON recently had the misfortune i lo have its bell stolen and moved ; from the church grounds. How- ! j ever, the bell was found several j I days later behind a garage near j j Pfeiffer College and later return- j i ed to the congregation who will i hold a meeting soon to hang the | hell properly. Formerly, the bell North Carolina SCHOOL BULLETIN GASTONIA TEACHER HONORED I MRS. ANNIE P. ROBINSON, ! first -grade teacher of the HIGII- I LAND ELEMENTARY SCHOOL I IN CASTONIa. became the first Negro to be honored as "teacher of the month" in GASTONIA. In be half of the Chamber of Commerce, i PRICE T. DICKSON presented a | PLAQUE Jo her on Oct. 11 at a I meeting of the PTA. She was hon i r.red for the month of September . . WINSTON-SALEM'S ATKINS 1 HIGH SCHOOL listed a total of ! ’.71 students who made the honor : roll at the end of the first six j weeks of school They include 4R seniors 37 juniors. 49 sophomores. 1 end 40 freshmen . . Approximate ly 100 person' met Thuvsd-y. Oct i ober 31, and formally organized a ; new COLUMBIA HEIGHTS ,TUN- I 7OR HIGH SCHOOL PTA in WIN- j ETON-SAL,EM. MRS DORIS KIM- ! BORUGH was unanimously elected : president of the new group. Other | j officers were Mrs. Helen Gibbs, 1 vice-president; Mis? Glenola Vance, secretary; Mrs. Nell D. Fountain, asst Secretary. Mrs Mattie Deßer i v. treasurer; Mrs. Cloud, publicity chairman: and Mr. Bvnurn chap j iron. FIFTH DISTRICT TEACHERS MEET ! FIFTH DISTRICT COASTAL f'LATNS of the North Carolina i Teachers Association was held in i JACKSONVILLE and Miss Lillian Dap: -e fr mi Pend' i County Train mg School holds chairmanship of 1: pgimge-mis division. Miss Dupree also recording secretary . ! Count'’ Supervisor MRS. L. B i DANIEI. conducted a 2- day lam | arts WORKSHOP at the two countv high schools with MIS.S BEATRICE EI.AND. consultant. . : GIRL SCOUT COMMITTEE and I BOY SCOUT LEADERS recently ; held a session in the library where j I hey planned an "evening of fun . i •eheduled for November 8 at 7 o.m I ii; ?bf school rymtoiium. PROCTOR VII.F ! HIGH St'HOOI MAYS The senior class of Proctorville j | High School. Proctorville attend | ed Senior Day at the Agricultural I i and Technical College. Greensboro, > ! North Carolina. Saturday. October \ 26 The following seniors attended the affair. Loieteen Campbell. Her- j nice Burnett. Bobby Graham. Man- j on McCollum. Alice McDowell. Al ma Kairlev, Leontine Williams, Carolyn Ware. Carrie McMillan. Berne 11 HUJ. Willie Hill. Ariginal Stephens and Galento Show. Mrs. B. G. Clark, the seniors advisor, Miss Moody and Mrs. H. H Rob ertson were chaperones. The glee club met Tuesday morn ing, October 29. and organized. The officers are. President, Pearl Gray Nealy; secretary, Peggie Sue Wil- ; liain; treasurer. Viola Baker; and : reporter, Lula B Hill The direc- j tors are Mrs. L. S Thompson and j Mrs. N. F. Walker. The Eight Grade presented Its first, chapel program, Wednesday October 30. 1057. The play was en titled “The Fate of Mickey Mouse at Halloween". The characters were: Mickey Mouse, Waded Town send; Big Cat. Cleveland Rogers; Skelton, Kitty Winniogham; Witch es, Shirley Fulmore. Annie Mc- Collum, Trothn Faison, Hazel Hill. FLie Townsend and Carolyn Gra ham, Ghostly Chorus. Brenda Nealy. Grade Campbell Lula Mc- Rae. Julia Mcßae, Cleveland Ford, j Wndr Barnes, Rosa Prince and An- i nie Alford; Cat Chorus. Betty Strickland Rogers, Charles Epps. Rayford Ford and James Graham; Announcer. Brenda French. Miss P. D McLeod is teacher. UPON HIGH SCHOOL During the 1957 North Carolina , State Fair the J. W Ligon High J School won the first prize of fifty dollars and a blue ribbon for its art entries. The following students submitted entires: Ben Peterson. Bobby Gill, James Stewart, Mar tha Bird sail. Helen Kearney, Dew ry MeKnight. Irwin Hunt.'Charles Steele, Kay Haywood Adcock, and William Herndon. Bobby Gill re ceived a blue ribbon for a water color painting, a rustic autumn :crn< and a copper relief plaque entil led: "Power," Other works! submitted include mosaic composi-j lions, crayon drawings, pen and ' WEEK ENDING SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1957 ! had been resting on the ground, j Officers are stiil searching for the j persons responsible for taking the j bell . . . Through interracial co- ; operation among METHODISTS j IN MIDWAY' COMMUNITY a new church home will be built for the ' new BROOKS TEMPLE METHO DIST CHURCH . . . Two churches will present the VIRGINIA UNI VERSITY CHOIR at 4 p.m. next SUNDAY at the gvmaapiurr. of ATKINS HIGH SCHOOL. Sponsor ing groups are the YOUNG WOM EN'S PROGRESSIVE CI.UB of FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH, and the MUSIC COMMITTEE AND ASSOCIATION OF MT ZION BAPTIST CHURCH OF WIN STON-SAT,EM. SHILOH BAPTIST HOMECOMING Mrs and Mrs. Sidney Jones Mr, and Mrs. Leon Gibbs attended the homecoming which was held in the Shiloh Baptist Church, near j Morrisviile Sunday. The usual serv- j ice at Gilead Baptist Church at [ Orange include Sunday School at j 10 a.m, and morning preaching at i 11 a.m. l ! ink drawings, landscape eomposi- , | lions, and fashion designs . , . The j i Lucille Hunter PTA met last 1 Thursday night at 8 p.m. at which j time the annual membership drive j | was terminated ~ . Education I I Week received -special emphasis at j ! the recent meeting of the Crosby- ! ! Garfield School PTA. Raleigh. j | BEAUFORT COUNTY HIGH I Tile New Farmers of America : | recently held a meeting at which officers were elected, in a session ; at the Beaufort County High School of Pantego Officers elected were: | I John Phillip Mackey, president; ; Beriie Riddick, vice president; j i James Martin, secretary; Arr.el! j 1 Jones, as.-1. secretary; Johnnie Booner; treasurer; Richard Blount, reporter; and Mrs. H. F. Simon; advisor. The NFA Fr rh-i a’■ /- .' ill j meet at the Beaufort County High ; School in April. 1958 ... A! a re i cewt meet nr.: of ’hj Library- Club | the following officers were elect- j j ed; Sondra Furrow, president; Neil | Bonner, vice president: Dons j Saunders, secretary; Vernier* Lovi |<k asst. Secretary; Mary Waters, j treasurer- Justine Spencer and I Helene Boomer, reporters W py»^, ir n r . ini|TMWn|ll - | „ |>|t )a „ hlH)> „ Wl Ml| | Ul m , aJ K _ _ ff~a i : ”|'j $3-* | v,;!.- 100 Proof Made from G: by L. Relsky & Cie. Cockeysville, Md., IJ S A | WHEN WINTER COMES djfe I Have One Os These I Winter Coats jJvj fi To Save You the Uncomforiah> iSBS m Feeling of Being Cold. . . <ViPvfc C § Fine New Style I hV.I | DRESSES - SKIRTS W ,! j, I SUITS - ",-COATS 1 ; | BLOUSES - HATS Mtismti. Hi.' |j New Winter Styles | FOR MEN ly!m f I SUITS - TOP COATS M | ' I OVERCOATS - PANTS I % |" rP Open An Account With j ', 1 g Us . . . Today! j \ I It’s Easy To Fay The 0. K. Way! I 113 EASY MARTIN STREET | jan Education, will bs the guest I speaker on the Columbia Broad ; easting System’s radio program. 'Church of the Air", Sunday, No vember 10, ai 9:30 am.. Eastern I Standard Time. Mr. Bailey, who Is the exe cutive secretary of the Board of Education of the Delaware Conference of Methodism's Central (Negro) Jurisdiction ' the second Negro to head the Methodist Conference on Chris tian Education Dr timothy R. Erhois. Aus tin, Tex., for several years now a member of the staff of the denomination's Board of Pen sions was the first Negro to he the president of the Metho dist Conference on Christian Education. Mr Bailey’s pre-recorded mes sage will be heard on the closing day of the twelfth meeting of the national Methodist Conference on Christian Education. About PAD Methodist educational leaders are expected to attend the conference November 5-10 in Cincinnati. Sammy Davis , Jr. On Benefit Show I NEW YORK (ANPi -- Singer- I entertainer Sammy Davis. Jr., will ' star in "Lights On’’, a benefit p r - 1 formance to be Dec. 29 at the Broadway theatre here. Funds from the annual show go j to the National Council to Com ! bat Blindness. Asks Conference With Gov, Faubus | NEWARK, N,l fAND—A to ; cal Negro city councilman, Irvn* 1. Turner, has written Ar'vnxa l Gov. Orval Faubus requestin'-, a I conference with him on the inle | gration crisis in Little Rock, it j was disclosed. j Turner wrote the controversial ’ governor saying that he was will ing to talk with Faubus in Arkan ; ras and pointing out that Newark ; Lad forced racial problems similar ; to those of Little Rock —i»»iwiaiii—«jw»nrair<WTOrini>i»ira ELECTRIC PRODUCTS CO. Telephone 6142 111 South Garnett Street Henderson, North Carolina Zenith Frig id a ire
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 9, 1957, edition 1
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