Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / Dec. 20, 1958, edition 1 / Page 3
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■A**- A . VKTKII\NS A1 NCT CKOtVN CM'LI N Miss Barbara Valet, in-im>r) freshman. English major ; rom Baton U«h>kc. I om-iana has !> ni juiouai i{j s -. M’C Veteran of 1%8. I’iciured Ueic left to right are: ; Vndrmv Ivans, I e.veUr- t n-m- .•no, item- Ra in.rh; Robert Melvin, Fayetteville; Barbara Valet,! •Villiam <'ook. Onch.Mii- ‘antes '■ i 'ito* m boeLKfound) and .lames Wilkcr.soM. This Far 2 r Now Has His “Eggs” in Half A Dozen Good Baskets — , WASHINGTON, D C (AWPI— j ' ; Thio ffmpr *3OOI hag h'S ‘eggs’ U M 5 T E A 0’ § ji in half a dozen good baskets. He used to count on just cotton and TRANSFER COMPANY t» GROCERY STORE j j tobacco, but not anymore.” report* ' T '" 11 IA. S. Bacon, supervisor of Negro LIGHT AND HEAV Y FULL LINE O? I; agricultural extension work in HA ULING GROCERIES The farmer l» Haitian .Tone# LOCAL AND LONG ' Ynu , P & *. on „, of Ga ” wha t Cf Z I A liKTA»i(T' * ou - r&./tmag* several years ago that he , ' I *4 Appreciated couldn't earn enough off iS Looneoug Prompt aeres of cotton and three of to- I Efficitni haeco to provide adequately ED. DM;- IT \D. Mimage* *•'' fa '" i! -v of seven. So ho . , . began diversifying. adding 602 % Dawson Street • Jnrborn v iVLuTm Street* cantaloups, watermelons, corn, DIAL, TE 2~9*-8 —CE ,J G' j and hogs as cash crops. /0- -xssSS^S : sI&H \ ... . v £\ t I **% ' a : ',l ■ '4b * V-T'4, '; 4 ) 1 0 T m F'TDOF I M.t OLD TAYI.tS ’...? ■ % FftANKfORI & LOUISvILLfc. KENTUCKY OIST!I!OUTED BY NATIONAL. DISTILLERS PRODUCTS COMPANY Governor Harriman To Fight Housing Bias Now As A Private N. Y. Citizen NEW YORK (AHP> Cover- < nor Avereli Karlman told report era at tlie opening of cew quarters for the State Commiarlon Against Discrirr,ination that ha would con tinue to fight for equality in hous ing, but. as « private citizen. Governor Hnrriman will he sue- j ceedcd next month by Governor- j elect Nelson A Rockefeller, Be- I publican. “There can't lie equality of Opportunity," declared Gcven*- nor Harriman, “unlcsß there Is I equality to by and rent a i i home.” {“New Fork must keep ito Send an the anil-discrimination tirid, if only to be iu a position to demand that other states a. , S’andon their inherited we* i mdleep ’ | "The state's chief executive ! noted te the press that New York’s j SCAD still was limited In it* au~ j thority to file complaint*. Although Governor Hsrrimsn did not allude te the fact upstate Republican members of the state j "legislature created last year a Civ il Division within the State At- ’ torney-Geheral’s office. Privately i Negro leaders contended at the 1 time of the division’s creation that such a body might impinge on the jj ... Interracial Councils To j Number 50 > d TOLEDO, Ohio— Catholic inter* racial councils will number near fifty by next summer, Mr. George K Jimton, executive secretary of j. the Catholic Interracial Council of | [ New York, oredicted here. 1 At present, he said, there are 8$ j I such councils, including eieht In : the South. Mr. Huntoa spoke at the first annual meeting of this city’s Cath olic interracial Council. | Hospitals must vtwM tbs, | challenge of racial equality, he i declared. Only a minority of hospitals, be asserted, will sn- I courage the training of Negro nurses. Problem* exist In the acceptance of Negro private j patients and In the appoint* i ! merit of qualified Negroes to ! staff membership, be coptlmi- [ ed, j Mr. Hunton called the National ! i Association for the Advancement S ] of Colored People * '"great organ!- [ ration in our American democra- ■ cyin which he j $ proud to serve ! as a. national director. recommended liaison be- j tween Catholic interracial noun - ■ c>i> and NAACP Mr. Hue ton said that In the lasi, j 25 years Catholic colleges and se minaries in the northeast have re versed policy and now accept Neg ••o applicants. A generation ago on ; !y * minority of such institutions > did so, he noted. He urged council members to !! participate In neighborhood and [ community projects, including: efforts to solve juvenile delinqu* j ency, antagonisms between group* and panic-selling of homes. What the Negro leadership wants | Mr. Hunton stated, Is equal rights j due to all as American citizens and children of God He said ! Negroes .want the responstbilites I rights and privileges “that our be- : loved country gladly confers on ♦be most newly-landed refugees cotton year the returns from these extra crops ease most of the pinch, says'Mr. Bacon His four acres of cantaloups and 12 of watermelons ■ gross an average of from SI,BOO to | $2,400 a year; and his 70 acres of icorn and dozen ct «o hogs adds about $2,000 more. < But diversification alone basK"* | accounted for all of Mr. .Jones’ In -1 creased income, he hastens to ex- \ | plain. County Farmers Home S« : j pervisor W C Thigpen, Jr, and ! I County Agent J B Steven* have I given him pointers on increasing 1 !his cotton, corn, and tobacco yields ; and on methods of curing his tobac co for better quality. “And the money we sav* by grow ing most of our own fend is counted also ms extra earnings,’' ■ Mrs. Jones adds. “Our home free*- j er is full most, of the year Even at Christmas time we do very little ■ shopping.” Mr. and. Mrs Jones began farm- ! ing IT years ego as sharecroppers wh«n be quit his railroad Job be- ? cause it kept him away from home - too much As s Navy veteran of j I World War 11, he took on-the-farm j training while, they grew * little f cotton. ? ’Three year* later they »p< j plied to the Farmers Heme Art minlstratiPM for » loan to buy a farm of their awn The I mn l came fhroogh and they bought ; 128 acres and hniU an isttrar ij tive cottage. "Few homes !n all Georgia are neater or better kept,” say* their home demon • strwlion agent, Mra. flattie T, Copeland. And neatness and orderliness go for the whole farm. County Agent Stevens points out. Their loots and equipment are nectly arranged in the tool shed when ritri. In use, and (he tobacco curing bam with its j coal stoker i* as prim as some s homes. Looking to the future, Mr. Jones? ij plane to develop more pastures and ! expand his hog production. *Td jj prefer to raise beef cattle,” be says, j “but I just don’t hav# enough land” a-XMiim- _--i rrj> u tnn , T , r - - It Pays To ADVERTISE efforts of SCAD 'The State Assemhlv r> * »*u-<i the law creating the division, rather than grant ih<« .Slate CemisiMlcn power to Invent! gate possible areas »t discriu#- iuatlon without » fimnal com plainp As it tn>* stands. Uie state’s Anti-dlscrhninaUon law i etlpulalrs that. SCAB cannot j act until a formal cotupt&tot I alteying disrrimlnation if. filed by an aggrieved peison or civ ic organization. Lately both the NAACP and the Urban League have filed formal complaints with SCAD, thus m- ; ablb g the estate epmey to inv< b i Join America's mnsi poplar slob j»gg-«£ ,?~>f> I vvv tstmas - (3£lu 6 It ; the intent wiy to prepoy holiday •**»<•«s« i. A|| you do is ep-en o Christmas Club account tor a« amount you con most easily afford !hen you save Shat amount each week <tr»d, when the dub Days off next Novemb*'' v you receive your Christmas Club check, @e sure to join ~. you’ll be glad you did, 50c To SIOO WEEKLY Available At All Three of Our Offices RALEIGH SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION ’’Rnleigh’s Oldest Fin&ncietl Institution (lania’Di) Viltigr—•Clark Vrr, a Ot'erlin Rd IJo'wrtiuwt* otiiA""-—(l* !• i vt< fovsi|«» sc West W*>ke otiiv-** A, is*, i „.• s •** 3>**iSci ‘i&as^- *-■<.*> *4 as# t»*-*.«• *»■*«*©•*o» f» * *••««*•> <*. ** 'v i New for the holidays! \ A gay variety of fudge ideas! ♦ - - ■ ' ■• ; •••" ". ... ’ t > » * \- ' » (y . ft* ; ft* lBeS&S^;: : f 2 *• *©&.. .A ~ : V>, 4.1 i „ -A-\,U : , FUDGE ROLL ?m saramc? fudge mixture op waxed paper. Shape Pour chocolate fudge info buttered 9-uwh square pan. Dee (into roll as lud/je cools. Then roil in additional nut*. Slice mate with colored mints. Allow to coo! and sties min sowssl. \ " * * A •»«»»****«•* 9 * - * • • • •* • * *.»»**♦ ft# # « e 'JS# ««* A ft- *«HT •<*#» ft •*#>« ««»<**.-»** **«*•**>«##**» #**###§* fr**’**#* *»##**••«■* •***,, #•» | -CAN’T FAIL-5 MINUTE FUDGE**' . i I MILK J,% cups (sugar ar»H ’ teaspoon salt In saucepan brand of * Ifi 11JS | csms* low Heal. Heat to boiling, cook S minutes, &tirei*sg Evaporated » S constantly.. Rerttpws from beat. Milkt } §|filßßy> I Add IVi cups {T€S triadlum) diced! marshmallow** I*4 cups '4dc''KfT' % BAKER’S chocolate chips or caramel chips, 1 teaspoon | vanilla .and % cop chopped note. Stir Ito 2 minutes, or Wjfo.* | until marshmallows melt. Pour Into buttered 9-ineh jpgfo til j jfll IT» i> * "L 'sk, v I square pan. Decorate or make Into roll as described above * ''' ’" ‘' ' | Or spoon Into drops on waxed paper, lwr| |ld - **'**' \ fimSc, r"'~~^~.rzz:^- m ■ yv;*iwaww»«>waggy-% / "nwn Contented Ccww” , g-ite flUegad drirrimhtnUon ; in this -'ouoecMon Governor Han iman promised to lend assist* ati'-e as a private citizen. Keep hasp moan G&m& BACK yr» MORK HAT. OOIW, SACK" PROttUTM-C-’. .RAIN. irr.m.(V;RATKw.« .wot«wo ATf to rs a vor ■M-n.rvi. VAtICJI HtPLLI.rNT DEHSULAN FRKSSiNG OIL HA£* ecc. /ou* jtair Girr teju ANr*tun«u yon »c£k» M.MAIT-3 S» NAtVRAi ,L°I M&f T N*D MOT GREASY • rCRTLLAM WAT&ft ?.£f*rLLC?fT FR.MffIVC Oil. CON. j t' * RARE MUCOKE.. . ASK TO U« a-ta^ ""pspst/fs/L. ii” ! / PRISON® QIL vim UA6H*!?*•». iMt•**>» *•» r~4 No* 4, *.«*6»* THE CAROLINIAN »** H ENDING SATURDAY, DECEMBER "<> i . JflCQumsJIL BANANA m tit mrn-ir §§ lOOPDOOf ||f NECTAR I eg* lIdUEIIR $2.79 PINT CHARUS JACQUIW «< Ctv. >*<, PMSIA , PTMfJIA. >OO FfOOf Taste-buddies from ’way back? | A tempting snack and ICE-COLD ’ 8 jßb ■ V f# j |jP| ■ BMWBBOMWNINWBHpSMiIfewiii tP inn Iwrpi'S W® sn tmi wauip %o wrt.CCMF expected ... as sparkling, delirious Coca-Cola? Fveiybodt goex for Coke w good in Carle in such erv-vj t<.i< ■' r-.r delightful enjoyment at -meek-time tneaJ Mmi .»i guy other tutxo .. . have lot.- of t.»t. ;w* hand ----■ '■ wn -.. 'flftyfiglff. I'T%B IV- frjcA-Of* CnffiJMrwp ?«• * y-ptjh< : «. t i f . Settled wilder egNiority of Th* Gwra-Coka Company by T4NT PAT I - 5 MINUTE FUDGE" The secret is Carnation in the red and white can the double-rich milk that whit) ■ / NO SLATING. no soft-ba!l lesU or candy thermometer needed, Smoother, too, because of Carnation’s cream like texture. And guaranteed failure proof when you use Carnation— ordimru m > V; won’t do! War th»r year’s holiday’-., make better fudge —quicker wit h double-rich Carnation. 3
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 20, 1958, edition 1
3
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