PAGE TWO RALEIGH PERSONALS . CLUBS . CHURCHES fBV MRS. L. HARGETT GREENE (items for this column, should be mailed to P. O. Box 62 % or tailed matTE 2 -45 *9 or TE 4-5558 before Tuesday mornin*). «<> MRS. GREEN® JACK ANl> JILL TALK* SET The Raleigh Chapter oi the Jack and Jill Club of America wnl meet at 8:00 P. M. Monday eve ning at. the home of Mrs. Fannie E. Latham. South Bloodworth St. Others serving as hostesses will be Mesdames Susie V. Perry and Gladys Hunt, All nSerabera /are u'-geri to be present because plans win be made for the program and activities of the year and Mrs. Elizabeth Cot-field will report on the convention held in Cleveland, Ohio. FINANCE GROUP MEETING The Finance Committee of the Davie Street YWCA will meet at, 7:20 P M. Monday, Septem ber 24th at the YWCA All mem bers are reminded to be present- BRIDE-KI.ECT HONORED Friday night Miss Murry Ann Turner honored bride-elect Miss June Thomas at a kitchen shower at her home or* South Person Street, Many lovely and useful gifts were received. De lirious refreshments were serv ed while listening in records and playing cards. Those en joying the delightful evening were, the Misses Margaret A) Mon, Ada Jernigam Mildred Alston. Louise Edwards. Ger aldine Harris. June Thomas, Nurry A- Turner and Mes dnmes Pear! Wilson Smith and Lydia T. Wall. i- \MILV DAY DINNER The Morning Choir and the Manly Street Christian Church honored their family and friends at. a Family Day Dinner in the dining hall of the church at 1:30 on September 9th. The menu con sisted of a variety .of chicken, ham, turkey, apple pie and all the t rimni ings. Everyone tremendously enjoyed the harmonious spirit ex isting. MRS. FREEMAN HIRE FROM Dl* CEE fji-?. Minnie Iftre-man of Wash* - ' ' ' - -- m | relska VODKA \ 52.50 But 80 Proof. Also 100 Proof, Mad* from Crain. Bottled at the Distillery by LRelsky & Cie, Cockeysvilla, Md. It’s Easy Once You’ve Learned the secret of REGULAR Saving! REGULAR CHECKING ACCOUNTS i We furnish without chart* a personalized check book j cf 20 checks with your name and address on each check. j SPECIAL CHECKING ACCOUNTS ~ | You can purchase a book of 20 checks for $1 05 and you pay NO SERVICE CHARGE on your account. Mechanics & Farmers Bank RALEIGH * DURHAM j i SJepsi^LQ Pepsi-Cola Bottling Co. Os Raleigh 3705 HILLSBORO STREET, RALEIGH, NORTH C'ROLJNA TEL. TE. 3-1071 ■ Ingfcon, D. C spent the weekend . in the city to attend the meeting of the Links. MRS. HIGGS ENTERTAINS Mrs. Puttie Lou Higgs of Tar bor.o Road entertained Mrs. Rer : tha Monroe of New Rochelle. New ! York at dinner Tuesday. :i FT A AFFAIR ; j Mrs. Ruth Rand of Chavis i l Heights, chairman of the Social ! Committee of the PTA, Ligon High I! school, was hostess to the Execu- I tive Board of the City Negro '! Schools last Tuesday night, at ! .(CONTINUED ON PAGE 1:2) Dentist Recuperating RALEIGH Dr. Robert M. Beil, local dentist, has been re i leased from St. Agnes Hospital * after suffering a cerebral hemor rhage and ss now recuperating at, Sanford. ODDS & ENDS | (CONTINUED FROM PAGE D ! public in general of the nece.ss- I it y and comfort of a paved street | It, is very likely that the home I owners on the opposite side of | Srnithfield Street are least able |to bear the cost of street paving i than Shaw University i? but they i have not appealed to the City ! Council to hold it. up. Many small ' property owners are finding it a “financial hardship” for them to ! comply with the newly enacted and long overdue minimum hous :; ing standards but sub standard i | homes like unpaved streets are a i j menace and a hazard to the com - j fort and welfare of all concerned . i A hardship plea will not be en ■; tertained. It should not. be enter i tamed in (.he paving of Smith ■: field Street, i * ■> Two Party System:The Republi : can National Commit tee r re -1 ported to be rolling in wealth but ’ the Wake County Republican | | Committee seems to be rolling in | poverty. A report given by the treasurer of the local unit shows j less than SIOO in the cash drawer • at this time. An urgent plea that, “now is the time for all good men to come to the aid of the party,” has gone out to all Republicans and to those Democrats and in dependents v/ho fee! that a two j party system is a Rood thing. In i sofar as Negroes are concerned in j the South, one party is just as 1 antagonistic toward them as the ; ; other is. Witnessed by the efforts i made by the North Carolina Re publicans to prevent Dr. H. Ed ' ; monds from seconding the nomi ' | nation of the president at the ' ; California convention. In spite of j this known antagonism the Ne gro would be better off if he were ' I to go to work and help build up 1 j the Republican party in this state. 1 ! Culture: Ore of the "reasons” i advanced by the racial supremists 11 for the continuation of school | segregation is that Negro children ! are so uncultured that their ad | mission to the now all-white schools would speedily lower the . high cultural level of the white j child. We would like an expiana : tion from these racists for the j conduct of the white Raleigh high ' j school students whose cultural. attainments lead '/hem to yell “Nigger” from the window.- of their school bus at, the Negroes they see. If this type of thing is what the whits man means by culture, we would think the Negro is bet ter off uncultured Negro Teachers: The chairman of the State Board of Higher Ed ; ucation has been quoted as say .; mg that this state is producing I more Negro teachers than are ‘' needed and that the job oppor tunities foi Negro teachers in thK I state are "drying up ” Although I I this fact has been apparent for , I a long time this is the first of -1 i ficial notice of it. The drift to ward an over-production of Ne gro teachers began when our great industrial schools like Hampton and Tuskcgee Institute began tc. veer away from indue - I trial education and to empha size genera! academic teacher 1 training. Our state technical and industrial school. AAsT College, followed in the steps of Hamp ton and Tuskcgee until today A i Stokes said that he would join him in a short time. As Stokes attempted to leave the place, he was reportedly jump ed on by four or five men, and one of the group cut him with a knife or .some type or sharp ob ject At, Rex Hospital Stokes was treated for cute on his back One ran from side to siri c and was about 12 inches long Officers E. M Meekins and D R, Yeargan. who investigated the incident are, still working on the case. ELDERLY MAN (CONTINUED FROM PAGE !■ Tuesday proved ths rumor to be untrue. Turner indicated that he was “up a tree' in solving the case and .said that he is not i holding anyone in jail at this time. An unidentified male resi dent of the Joe Louis Park area reportedly boasted to friends that he was going: to kill Graham and is alirded to have branished a gun in front of several persons. Graham's bullet-riddled body was removed from Saint Agnes, Hospital Sunday afternoon where he died at 2 p.m. by a local under taker, but was shortly re-claimed I by a physician for an autopsy fol - lowing reports that he had been shot and stabbed also. The examination revealed that Graham, a part-time plumber’s helper, suffered only shotgun wounds. A slug “tore a hole clean through his body," near the abdominal region Wake Coroner M: W. Bennett told the CAROLINIAN. Hr said that the bullet went in Graham's side and emerged from his hack. j Deputy Turner seemed concern- j |ed about the fact that law of-; j fleers were reportedly not. called 1 jin until 30 minutes after Graham j j died. How he got to the hospital j | from Joe Louis Park has still elud jed thus reporter. ; Funeral services were held' Thursday of this week at Light- i ner's Funeral Chapel and burial j followed in Hillcrest Cemetery. Merchants Ready (CONTINUED FROM PAGE II tions about, your home and how j ! you can make it more comfort i able and attractive. On display : will be traditional, modern and j ' contemporary furniture to fit i j every taste. This year’s line of ; i furniture is undoubtedly the most, j impressive ever offered to the ' I residents of this section of North 1 Carolina. i of the Raleigh Retail Furni ture Dealers Association. The retail value of each prize will be $30.00, Prizes will include .such luxury items as lamps, rugs, chairs, tables and many other type of furnishings. The names of winners will he post ed on each of the participat ing store windows each day. Stores will remain open t?. hours both days—from 8 a.m. until 9 p.m. Officers of the Raleigh Retail ; | Furniture Dealers Association j have informed the CAROLINIAN j that, they will be prepared for the i biggest display of household wares ,j that, this city has ever seen, when i ths stores open Monday morning. The member stores of this or ,; sanitation are known to be the | top stores in the city and their j by-laws as so planned that, they . make for better conditions and .: cooperation among the dealers. ! To them, their customers come firs! and it is their hope that the 1 1 service given will not only sell , I furniture but. will create respect ' j for the owners and clerks who | j,serve the public, i The display of merchandise, by i these merchants in their respec -1 live stores is another indication of trying to give Raleigh and vic * inity the very best in puces and I values, GASTONIA SCHOOL (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 11 solidateri University of North Carolina to accept Negroes Several white students alleged ly told newsmen that they did n’t like the ex-soldier’s admission , to the school, bur, there was no indication that any trouble would take place Feels "Right At Home” Lyon said that since he had just finished bis two-year hitch in the Army where there is no segregation, hr felt, “right al home among white j students “ One white student when ques-! tinned as to whether he was op-1 po:;ci to Lyon's admission, said, j “If I had known he was coming I I wouldn't have come.” He gave! no indication, however that he! intended to leave the school j Neither did any of the other stu- j : dents. Lyon said lhat hr applied to North Carolina Slate College in Raleigh and found lhat automotive technology was not taught there. lie was re ferred to the Gastonia school by N. C State officials, he said. A one-year course in aulomo . live, electrical, radio and televis- j ion technology is taught at the I institute. Some 200 students werei prerent for the opening of the i term Monday. A graduate of the Merrick- j Moore High School, near Dm -; ham. Lyon is the son of Mr and ! Mrs Eddie Lyon of Route 4. Dur ham. He was discharged from the Army in July after service in Germany DESEGREGATION iCONTINUED FROM PAGE D Fuller Warren is attorney for the organization WHITE GEORGIA TEACHER FIRED FOR RACIAL VIEWS ATLANTA - Mrs. Colleen Wig- : gins, white Gwinnett County i school teacher, has been dropped j from the state payroll because of | classroom expressions of racial ! views which "tend to alienate her j pupils from their parents.’’ Mrs. Wiggins said she would j fight for her rights before the j State Board of Education, which i promised her a hearing, and take legal steps if necessary. Petitions were being circulated in her home county both in hei behalf and lor her ouster U S. PUSHES HOXIE. ARK. SCHOOL INTEGRATION ST. LOUIS (ANP)—In an un precedented action, the U. S. gov- : eminent this week chose the Hox- I ie, Ar. school integration case. being tried here for its first court j intervention since the Supreme j | Court's desegregation mandates, j The case ma.v determine what j constitutes illegal Interference I with public school integration. Tire hearing was on an appeal! by three pro-segregation groupsj from a federal district court in-. j junction against interference: with the integration program of i the Hoxie school board. A ruling by the three-judge court is not expected for several I weeks. The government entered the ! ease last August 24 as a friend of : the court and was represented by | Henry Putzel Jr, a Justice Ds ! partment attorney. Arguing for a ruling upholding j the district court order, Putzel j said: | "If the court grants tnjuetive ! relief, it should give other school boards across the nation courage to stand up and assert their rights ' in overriding any personal feel- ’ i mg they might have” Telephone TE 2-8777 BuxjDwoirrH Street TOURIST HOME ! Clean, Comfortable Room* I Radio and Television 424 S. Blood worth St. Raleigh | ( Nye glasses , I SlaqueatioiiftMc Quality i Prudent Priiwa j I OPTICIAN*, lie. j I Bldg, taltldfc i THE CAROLINIAN During a televised Interview in Washington Sunday. Atty. Gen. J Herbert Brownell referred to the ' action of the Hoxie board as! “courageous.” TEXASS WHITES ENROLL IN NEGRO COLLEGE HOUSTON, Tev. (ANP) Dr. Samuel Nabrit. president of Tex !as Southern. University, a school set up for Negroes, said last week.! that several white students had j enrolled there. He did not give the exact num-1 . her of whites admitted, but said that one had withdrawn, ; VA. LAWMAKERS SPLIT I OVER LOCAL OPTION RICHMOND The Virginia , Legislature early this week, seero . ed threatened with a deadlock , over Governor Stanley's program s for preventing school integration. Entering the fourth week of a ; scheduled 30-day special session, ; the lawmakers were farther than ; ever away from agreement on the governor’s proposal to cut j | off state funds from districts: I I which desegregate their schools ,! Strong forces favored local op i tion on the issue, but Stanley s supporters feared this would lead 1 i to certain integration in a num - ! ' ber of areas. NA.ACP CONFAB , (CONTINUED FROM PAGE: 1 when T. V. Mangum was president in 1945, Raleigh had the firs! one in 1944 I The N. C NAACP Conference ; was officially organized by Miss I j Ella J. Baker of New York, then j ; director of NAACP branches, mi ! the Hayes-Taylor YMCA Greens-' boro, in the Spring of 1944 Mangum was the first press dent and continued in office, for five years. Kelly Ale-van- j der, the present head, (who succeeded Mangum) was the first secretary and N. L. j j Gregg. "Gate City' insurance j executive, has been the ureas- ; urer all the while. Other key persons who started! i with the organization in 1944 and = ■ have not faltered include P, 8. j : Price. Laurinburg. Rev. L W. | Wertz, Hamlet; Charles A Mo i Lean. Winston-Salem, now field j 'secretary for Tarheeiia; Mrs. B. I G. Burnett, Tarboro; W. . Saxon j ‘ and Mrs. L. B. Michael, Asheville: • and J. B. Harren, Rocky Mount. ■ STATEBRIEFS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE t> ; Deaton, 57, of Route 13. Concord OFFICERS SEEK GUNMAN RALEIGH Wake County officers Monday sought a young gunman who is suspect ed of robbing a Srnithfield motorist of his trousers and j a tvallet containing $5. Ro bert E. Wise of Srnithfield j told deputies that the man ; approached his car Sunday j night as he and his wife sat j parked at a railroad crossing near here Wise said the, man drew » gun, ordered him out of his car and made him re move his pants. He said tha* l the man then tied along the tracks with the pants. The trotisers were discovered by of ficers about 10 feet from the road and the wallet was miss ing. FIGHT ENDS SEGREGATION ARGUMENT LINCOLNTON —• Ear 1 Gates ! 40, was released Monday under a | $2,000 bond on a charge of as ; sauit with Intent to kill drying | an argument with a friend “over • segregation.’’ The victim. J P Hoilifield, 59, was being treated at the Lincoln County Hospital ! for a severe wound in the left leg. Sheriff Frank Hanover said that the shooting occurred Sun day night, at the home of Holii field. Gates allegedly admitted the shooting at the height of an . argument over jim crow. Holh field was shot with a .12 - gauge ! shotgun. LOCAL MAN GETS DEGREE j RALEIGH -- James Franklin O’Neal, .Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs James F O'Neal, Sr., 217 Cam-, i den St. . was among the 31 can- j ! dictates for the Masters degree, i | at Temple University’s Teachers • ! College last. Wednesday morning, j ; He received his Master of Educa- I tion degree in physical education. ! O’Neal graduated from Shaw Uni- ; i versity in June, 1954 with the B. j S. degree in physical education.; While a student at Shaw he was! an outstanding member of the! football team and took paid in I many campus activities. He at-1 tended Saint Monica's Catholic I School and the Washington High I School here. WIFE’S ARM (CONTINUED FROM PAGE I) treated the victim fear that she may lose her arm. accord ing to Deputy Sheriff W. L. Pritchett. McArthur, who has been charg * " j*! *"■* *' 0 '«' • 1 t-1■ ® "*** PT **’‘'*'*‘"**'*" * n it Ocean FresiiSeofoad I (Ask For Watson's Fryers 1 3 At Your Favorite Store p rs WATSON'S I Seafood & Poultry Company, ln«. fr 230 Cameron Strowt Whoie*aia Dept. Qunerae Vsliag* Rock Quarry Road ;J| | SU I v-tg |ed with assault with a deadly | weapon and inflicting serious i bodily injury, told investigating ; officers that he was playing with ! his. wile and “the axe slipped ” Both McArthur and his wife had been drinking, Pritchett said. The man is: scheduled to be tried m the Fuquay Springs Re corders Court next Wednesday. ; SLEEPING " MAN ! ('CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1) while before (lie tragedy told authorities that Sutton had some shrimp and was plan ; wing to cook them before he j retired. Officers said that because of ; the complete destruction brought j by the flames, there appears to | be little likelihood that the cause (car. be determined with any dr j gree of certainty. Dlt. PARTRIDGE i (CONTINUED FROM PU.f l> high positions in a number of eastern colleges and uni versities. She has lectured at many institutions of educa tion in the North, holding the positions of Visiting Professor at New York University and the University of Illinois. | She is a member of the Ameri can Council on Human Rights. | Fellowship of Southern Church j men. American Association of | University Professors and the As | sedation of Supervision and Cir ! riculum Development. Her church affiliation, includes ' Music Director, Women's Auxili ary Convention of General Bap ! tist Convention N. J.; serves on ! the lecture bureau for National ; Council of Churches of Christ. ! in America and the National Con • ference of Christiana and Jews. I Dr. Partridge Grand Basileus I of Zeta Phi Beta Sorority, Inc., is i currently Professor of Education I at Queen's College. Flushing, New | York and a lecturer at Teachers ; College, Columbia University. Clinton Officials : (CONTINUED FROM PAGE I > • students who are still staying n way School authorities reported that 36 of the original stu dents had transferred to oth er county schools that had not been integrated. Some of these are expected to make requests to rome bark to Clin ton to join their former class mates after the last of the excitement has died down. I More than 650 white students have returned to their classes with 12 Negroes who have been ! the target of riotous attempts to ; bar their admission I Curtis Fortner, the county's ad ! mission teacher, said he was go- I ina to begin checking on absentee I students and persuade them to i return to classes | It is believed that, many of the I probably never; would “■ up at Clinton Il*rh ; school or any school. Tennessee I law permits students years old or more to quit school No court action is contemplat- l ed at present, against the parents j of absentee students on the as- ! sumption that most of them will give their consent when they are I convinced that order has been i fully restored. “As long as we keep our hands! off, as lone as the people here | feel that they are not getting ■ anything crammed down their j throats, we believe that they will j send their children back t.o ! school of their own accord,” Fort ner said TRANSIENT" FACES I CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1) : last- week Fred Washington. 29. was lodged in the Halifax Coun ty Jail as the chid suspect in the death of Ernest Davis, allegedly seen in the com- j pany of Washington and a woman. Miss Lottie Mae Arm- [ strong, 'shortly before James ' KCKUKL'JSI Since 1902—Marble-Granite | iftiiy Direct! WARNER I MEMORIALS 3919 Hillsboro, Raleigh. N O. (Across Railroad—Front of Method) WEEK ENDING SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 22. H 155 Banty. a friend of Davis, found ', the blood-soaked body with i ; the head beaten to a pulp and the pockets turned inside-out, according lo reports given Enfield police officers. Testimony al the cot oner’s in ' quest, conducted by Rufus Brit j ton, Halifax Coroner, placed ! Washington and the Armstrong 1 woman near the scene of the tragedy on Friday night. Miss ; Armstrong and Banty were both ‘ jailed as material witnesses ABC officers reportedly saw Washington in the area of (he incident on the evening- of the murder and arresting officers reported that he had blood spots on bis clothes. However, Mtss Armstrong reported that a bloody handkerchief, which was found, contained her own blood, resuitfirg from a nose j bleeding as the result of hav ing been slapped by Washing ton after they bad taken Dav is home. : Banty is alleged to have found i the body when he went to the l Davis residence. He is said t.o I have notified police immediately I CLAIMS ASSAULT ; (CONTINUED FROM PAGE II | The pair stuck to the same 1 ; story after being treated foi ex ■! tensive bruises and broken limbs. Willie Johnson one of the vie j tims, of Jonesville. Route j, Hst ;ed as the driver of the car. was j arrested on a charge of drunk.- j on driving following the accident - His companion has been ident ified as Marshall Hampton of j Jonesville No distinction could he made by the men of which injuries were suffered in the wreck and which were made as a re sult of beins beaten up. ; j Other than to say their attack -1 j ers were white men, the pair said j they could not identify the men. | Carpenter is continuing an in : vestigation, PUPILS YIELD (CONTINUED FROM PAGE I • iban Providence, j National Guardsmen, order ed to Clay by Gov. A B Chandler when white vest , dents began to show hostilM' toward attempts a! Integra tion, bad escorted the chil dren to school last Wednesday, Thursday and Frida v. Is your Fire Insurance adequate on your home’’ Was it bough> to cover your home ten years ago or fiwe wars ago when the value was half *tm it is now.’ The value of your home is worth protecting. Let Caveness Insurance Agency give yon full protettior, on your home and 1 furnishings, CALL 3-3563 BEFORE YOU SUFFER UN NECESSARY FIRE LOSS. CAVENESS Insurance Agency ACADEMY BUILDING Dial TE 3 3563 ROY CAVENEinS. tr ROT CAVENESS, Sr. PRINTING # COMMERCIAL i « SOCIAL | Consult Us (or Reasonable Estimates j I Prompt Service CAROLINIAN j i PUBLISHING COMPANY SIS E. Martin Str*«t Phone TE 4-5558 Kaleigh, N. C. i ( **+*»»>*** e*** ww««m -"y——- rT —-rrnr:rrCTgmi~aTm»inrtjfii]ji: UMSTEAD’S i TRANSFER COMPANY m GROCERY STORE LIGHT AND HEAVY HAULING LOCAL AND LONG DISTANCF Courteous Prompt Efficient —» — F.D. UMSTEAD, Manager 602 5. Dawson Street • Tarboro & Martin Street* DIAL TE 2-9478 TE 2-921.2 .aa^ i| aa*« | eiiw?w.Trm ,||| iWi, r j Finance or Borrow f ij On Your Car I ji * % Through The | ’ Diliion Motor Finance Co. 1 » 126 E. Davte Street Phone TE 3-3231 , Their presence led to a com ' plete boycott, of the school b.y thf j 523 white students enrolled. ! Mayer H. 2 Clark of Clay stir ; red the antagonism by encourag ■ i ine; the boycott and attempting ' unsuccessfully to force withdraw. ! al of the militiamen. ,1 On Friday, the Webster Countv , Board of Education voted to bar ; i the children from the Clay school. ; The board’s action was taken un -11 der authority of a ruling fev Ai • | Gen. J. M. Ferguson, to the p?. ; feet that integration could be ac complished only through official - decision of the board, either vol untary or under court order ,\ statement on the board actum was read to Mrs. Gor don and Mrs, Copeland by Mrs Irene Powell, principal. »hen they brought their chil dren to school Monday morn ing. They accepted the ruling graciously and departed. A similar outcome was pend ing this week m Sturgis. Ky , where eight Negro children con | tinned under National C/uard protection, to attend classes at a 1 school being boycotted by all but 42 of its 267 white students. The attorney general on Tues day issued a ruling for Union j County rimiiar to the earlier . I Webster County opinion, declar ing that the eight Negroes could not attend the Sturgis High School without formal approval of the county board For A Better Well CAIX 'HWTF.R TO * CO. RALEIGH. N. C Phone TE 2-467* B»> IHS -*»WMnMwic‘na'a>y^anawi—wnajtiiiMiia ihwhiWiiim—awaw HOTEL Member of N. H. A. ; Clean, Comfortable Rooms | Miss Lucille Griswold. Prop. 220 K. Cabarrus St. Raleigh Phone TE 3-fiROO J ; weM»iriw"ni isß«yviiacq^ißrgii»yrr j ALLAN MIMS, | f NC. FORD SALES AND SERVICE i 325 TARBORO ST. ROCKY MOT'NT. N. C.. Telephone 3-20! i "insure I j YOUR HOME AGAINST FIRE Consult 1 YOUR LOCAL AGENT BANKERS 1 FIRE INSURANCE CO | Durham. N C. ) 1 .WBri.^nfr--ww'i*uu. **.> ik COMPLETE 1 Summer i L\\ \\ CHANGE !* 9 OIL CHANGED • GREASING g; • RADIATOR lIR.INM) Anti Freese Applied Y • Washing • Polishing |: Dunn's Fsso Service 50’ S Blood worth Si j PHONE TE 2-3196 ! i ——— Everything For . . BUILDING REMODELING REPAIRING * LUMBER * MILLWORK * ATHEYS FAINTS * BUILDING MATERIALS i • RUSSWIN HARDWARE Dial TE 2-7563 I CAROLINA BUILDERS CORE. 217-219 N. Dawson St. RALEIGH, N. C. FULL LINE OF GROCERIES Your Patronage Appreciated