PAGE TWO ODDS & ENDS ■ CONTINUED FROM PACK J) ■ esa, out to sot ))■>" clock back wards. Figures just reVe. q show trial it co. 1 this static • -j $270,000 to hold th«. elect lot', that was called t f > prov school ifiti-cration in, North Caro ; *.-i Prk, tn that lec tion, a huge sum w?.- • xpended for * after at session of the General AsseifiUy, a pre-arranged session, railed to this perks! "loctton Prior to tk.it. a tun. '' sum w.v sprat by s commlslon whose job it v. at to report that mtegiation was not ; possible in tins state. It <> very conceivable Hint oth er sums of tax money were al so used in this massive >ttmnt to circumvent the law and that altogether a half-million or ! more dollars will be spent to keep this state s schools segve- 1 gated. And who gains from this lavish waste of money? Not the children of this state be cause no one gains from Is noiance, intolerance and bias. In a world of confusion, has tening- on to a showdown with a force that will show no more mercy In the “supreme” whites than it will to the “inferior” j blacks, it would seem that In- ! Ktearj of the continued forced separation of the races, self preservation would dictate ihe need for school integration in order that ati may learn to gether how best to preserve, ntili-r and defend the ideals ; of tub great nation. It. would seem also that the time i has rived when white children i chnnlr' Vies faiittVjf ‘fV»n trUtll. tLc truth that this is not. a white world that, numerically the white I race r far inferior to Ihe black ; rare ar.d that the lessor can not hop" U- always control the greater | No, Inc- white children of this state ' «ill not gain anything from the expenditure of that half-mihion j dollars They have been defraud- j ed, f f- d and cheated. And fm j thr a■ eos a whole a state that ; ranks 44th from the top in public : * ciucatton. 47th in per capita in- i come, a state with one of the high- j est l„v : tes in the nation, a stole i where one-fourth of it?, families, have lo subsist on SI,OOO or less i per v .ar. a state that lead' this ; area in rrueratton. Can a state with'; so many glaring basic def'ets as- i ford to waste one-half million ctoi- i Jars \r.d who can truthfully say i! . was n ! wasted. Even the most ra- , bid *.< gr"aaHomsits will privately j 'ht; I (i:a; intes at ion will cornel and Ihe tactics now being employ ■ ed are merely delaying action?. | set up for ijroorwn-jda "ad political | rrj-son,x. One-half million dollars, j v hat a toll to extract from a pov- j <*i t> ndden state for the further-i anec of the political ambitions and) s< eurU' of a greedy few. And i whai a logical argument for a new j politic;:! day in North Carolina, i Committee of 100: Isn't it taking | '" i h so granted for 100 pp. i sons in a city of 75.000 to attempt ! ' i ’ .-.hen the motives of all of l ! tn do nut acre that th« i < *tv Ibueigh should spend over • one uiliori rto'lrs more for the i e>v<.-iic veal of that commit*. | Apparently its; one concern is lo | nbt.-.n a badly-ncdcd new city it 'll j hen , ;u! vyhv nii i■.,n ;h" hon ■ ; csty a.-.fi good inti ntions of those ' wh" also v.-rmi a new city hrII but I sec no need for waning the t,.v. paven .nonr-v to achieve that want. To d it" not one t.-.-:- -.1 n-:, ! penv and iiiconver.ienee of build- I :r. f; :'. criy hall .r: Hillsboro St!v» I j that is not overshadowed bv the J sound, practical reasoning of iho, j '‘ ho air opp ■ sme the Hillsboro Si. idea Tn- sea:' head now being us-.'d by this committee, that il | most ba Hillsboro St. or there will j ho no opw cit.v h'dl. 1?. to sav the > lea*•utiina below ihe belt. Si;. !, | taeti .i. calculated to cause or, ■ j to wi'ider iv-si v. hat is the r | purnoxr of this nltemot lo build ! on 'i.h. H. l'li'vo St rile The com- 1 mittee plu-’-'-in ' for Ffilslboro St. | has given out figure? to prove that i thii ,''v hond-d indebtedness is! well : ■ line with its finances ana ■hat ia position on the Mew York] bond iv.rket has moved from “A" to 'A A' What this committee has fail ed to show, however, is what the pi 'tire will He after tills $ , tl’>,ooo city haM bond Issue , i- Doa*" 1 and al-o the new 1.- ncs licit the citizens here LOOK YOUR BEST! VISIT . . BRO W NI NG ’ S | BARBER SHOP 1600 Oak wood Avenue | I s COUNTRY I | JjjgIjMHTLtMAH | §S BOTTLED BY ] A DOUGHERIY'S SONS, INC. DiSTILLFRC. PHILADELPHIA, PA £§ i: 'i - ■ A; 4 ij ' % 4 MV- ■ . ; i * W JSW i,• ) , ' ■ t IING Miss Louise Jordan is the j daughter of Mrs. Margaret Jor -1 clan of Raleigh who announces her engagement to Kirnber H. Kami, Jr., son of Mr. and Airs, j K H Rand, Sr, of Garner Mrs Joi dan a 1955 graduate, of Saint j in ii ;t.mcs f'ollege here, is now j on li>e staff at Saint Agnes Hos pital. The wedding will he field tlecember 14. i must pay on the 3-million dol lar hospital bonds and the fi I J ; million dollar school bond is sue the latter to hr voted on iiOM month. It w ould seem that (he only fact to he considered in tli is city hall issue is sir; i .. i.. i . ~ , ein e *■* ' li , J>i> t«.; ini*. iji»« *• I a new and adequate city hall I can he built for one million ,U"v than is pro'c; ii I,y the group favoring Hills boro street, why spend that e\- (ra million'’ Viirat" rial tu'llegc 'll' l ' 1 ?;■ uv j :>iilrg.-iicn oy tin State Board of Hiuhd Education to convert Eiu.- i ab' J.i City leathers College into | a 4-year vocational school is both . sound or,d good This prepostvi -r j will, wo hope, receive the htariy ! .appru>..l of all cone-mod No-v • : ;-days'. all around you, are to oe i found Negro college graduates ; traineu and qualified to t"ai'h oi,i ; anauU to fic-ci teaching j‘ib. thr ; the oth: r hand, ii is becoming m j creasiu 1v hard to sccui''’ good too -1 ,-hani''i' cransm. elencai v.u \ , : -s an i cmalific" tradesmi n. T may i bp that when the college at o--.-a --: v ,btn i. n> is concerted into a inoa ; , n well eauipped and h'- 1 t , rf i •, U |,. scliool turning or.: j vming people trained to m_ the ' needs of an economy mat is : -»* ; ~i ;o motion. W Will 'Wkb’V. e -a ] educational ha'unee thal was losi ,H',en tne schools auandon.-d . i drastically oui tail-d the.r ' m ! inurun. md thumiM '* ' i ,n t< rn-.s of tun uv; oat tone .■ v* 1.,. ,l i,:in*h: I hose who dor- I ing the Yorbi hvrles bed Ltd sought to laugh down Hon i N.'-.veombe's status a? a R u ; u pitcher, wow'd most certainly l„, y .-i to !.•■* ah'- 'o -“•nd «’» his '-IOCS i via :• Bit Bon hi- r 1 • > Iwn How 'd hv , persona! ■'OnS’-n'olatorv letter f President Eisenhower, r tlje recipient of two M halt’s highest honors t*> P Most Valuable Player in the Goiv-J I,c.urue award, t.w < i-yiviWv and, a ti’t'n", i v , n -il these honors, i ] v - ve -eSv lnrrri.se in v.\ ! ar v Wonder whv some of those were poking f ' ! " ar,,i 1 ',i,v at the hi" feline are not ’lau- ' ! |on 1'- ■’■ n ' 1 ’ “ 15 ’ v oGiiv aru ? in dv.‘ Snpc'ial Kfl t)no1 -a nev ' !i P' io-Mte p'nver. This 'i;' most useful because "i:i!>> ” 11 nim-s -hi" or :v. d: A r'-iv'c '' 1 such educ-'Uior-’t _ recow’s sh.m'H ,1 W JA.ion r\F> i»rtt r />f*' ,c(|\-iv|''-''t i "OM »’»*•••' 1 !’-■<> R. v G A Fisher, who . ■ ,-,-u '.I the id-n several months ago and svuo has served os chairman - Hi,_. ~| ~u;.oi in coT.mittyi -. a' Mu icason for the tc?.iim.ini'i! a. follow?: “Because of the Ion; a n I tiii-iiished services, both in (hr church a o '! -oninumitv. a group of Raleigh citizens deemed it wise and proper (o honor thr Rev. !>r, Rtdlork on ‘lds the 35th anniversarv of his residence in Raleigh and as pastor of *he First Baptist fhurch.” Arc lading to the Rev. Mr. Fisher, rector of St. Ambrose Episcopal Church, the program will get mi ll derway promptly at 4 p.m with a] invoc&iion by U»e Rev C. L. Gi«i ii nvy, pastor of the Wilson Tcmpic aj Methodist Church. Ii Prominent citizens of this city al who have followed the progress of 'll Dr. Bullock in many areas of com raunity Hie will, attest to his qual- S, jtics in these areas Attorney Fred J. Carnage, a |! member of the Raleigh School T Boa>d. will speak on hr. Bul 'li lock: Citizen”: Mrs. MoIHe il, m Lee, librarian at the Richard |i B. Harrison Library. ‘Dr, BUI- S' lack; Civic Leader”: President B: W. R. Strassner, Shaw Univer ■ ; sity “Dr, Bullock: Educator"; g >1- It. Yeargin. chairman of the. i. hoard of trustees at First Bap -1 list. ‘ J)i Bullock: Pastor' ■ Dr. g J. rhenvis flarulin church dea % con, Dr. Bullock: Friend"; and f: (he Rev. Otis L. Hairston. State & Baptist oficial. “Dr. Bullock' Trade-, of North Carolina Stale Baptist Convention." Following these tributes Mrs. i John Fleming will render a vocal | selection, accompanied by Miss Ida j -VI. Jarnagin at the piano. E L. Kaiford, executive secre- j ] Lsrv of the Bloodworth Street : j YMCA. will preesnt a bound vol- j | time of letters congratulating Dr. | j Hullo:.k on hi? 35th anniversary } i h-ve, along with a silver bowl j j Mrs. Eller. Alston. State Baptist I ] official, will present a gift to Mis j j O. S. Bullock. Mrs. Nora E. Lock-I ; hart. local school principal, wiii j j P”'fit flowers to Dr, Nancy B , : iVIcGc:. the pastor's daughter, and I Dr N Ison Perry, physician, wul > I P'-M-nt a portrait of Dr. Bullock ! to the church ' be unveiled by Barbara Ann West, ! grandniece of the pastor, A response by the honoree will | ! conclude the program. Dr Bullock was called lo Ra- HMgh from Ihe First Baptist ( curch of High Point, where he had been pastor for fifteen j '•ears He is a native of Y.ince County, the son of (he late Home and Etmna Bullock and received his academic training at Henderson Normal s,, hool and Lincoln l Diversity, I'.' where he luuk his college and theuingk-a! training and re c *=* i*' t-H ihe following degrees; \ M„ S.T.B and LET). On August 7 102! he took up 1 !’• luliv? as pastor of ;hc First ' B p i-st Church h.-ic. F rom that ' tin"- -n the church, which alrcndv had :• credltnFile record, continued • to develop physically and spirit- i , uAilv ’ j K was through the effort ! of Dr. Bullock that thr State j Baptist Headquarters building 'viis cvrcivil at tUv corner of Wilmington and Lenoir Street in 1"54 and has been valued at s::»,or#. r. Al r.i<)’••:•>• of the sponro’ in? .•■".) : ; <• niipn committees tor the n ?;,- moni.!l follow: Sponsoring ( ommitlee Tin Reverend George A F.sht r ' t hairmcn. TFie Reverend F, L i I r.:-1:;; ■ Toe Reverend FI S As- j k“w. l)r. William Green. FY'-ci Csr- ! ' D» I, K McCauicv. Dr J. T : ] isniii.i F. !. Raiford. Chari- s A ; . 4'.., n, ,j w. Yeargin. im,y , t '-her,aid. Th- Reverend Otis :. Hairsi.-n. The Reverend G F‘. Cheek, M V) Haywood. Dr W R '••! I'.'.SSIV'! D.D. D'. James Bo Eri.D. Mrs Ellen Alston Mrs. Arm :Hoi "i . I. P W "nb-riv : K' < option Committee Yu *. P Wintberlv M. Vrn ' Miller. WHITTS FACE < CONTI VJ' if) FROM PUIE t '.'P i nod Oct 27 and beaten. li-. w found a vr'k lat"f bv the FBI iu'-rej with a friend in An.!.: j lu d.r Aia Old, i t'd so trial wre G'-oi , Altrnan, K> tth Sands. Max Stun: , ; bo;. and FI?.- kial Alderman, all of ' ; Wil'.iv t.r.-: Robert Nesmith ip'l 1 ", m Lundy of Bellt-virw m i 1 Dovl. Charl"S Polk of Oxfr d Thcii i-onds wen coniinia ? a' • ?•’ 501! each, CASWELL SHIT (COX! JNCED FROM R VOF 1) . ■ -0: ! Tin .-.pit. a spokesman rt-vr .I'r?, '' k. .i.• ni; the same lm< ? a? rnp. filed endier against the Mont-; »y County School Board, still : : p pdii .- in Middle District mi i 5? .- believed that die piapos, a : -c' o t will seek: 1 -,p immediate temporal y it*, j ' .'i.nc! trt or restraining order in n'lue enforcement of the I" - i c : ! Plan or any law or ordi. nch tends to maintain segrega- . I tion ,n the schools: 2 An ultimate permanent in : junction to prevent enforcement j i of any law or order which has the j I effect of maintaining or perpetral• ! ing segregation in the schools, and j i 3. An order, following trial, to I | require the school officials prompt- j j ly to present a plan of desegrega- | ] tion, and to restrain permanently i nic m ti¥ c I MJ J. Am J ■ • SYLVESTER EVANS | I uncial services (or Sylvester | Evan >, formerly of Malaby's Cro.n ! Roads, will be held at 3 P. M Fn- | day at the Raleigh Funeral Home j Chapil Rev. P H. Johnson, the j pastor of the Martin St. Haptic j Church will officiate and tnuialj ; will follow in the Mount Hope j ! Cemetery The remains will j | rive from New York on Thursday | morning and will he placet! in ! ; state in the chapel at the funriM j I home until the hour of servici j ! Hi' is survived by his wife Mi i i Bersie Evans of Jumacis, N. Y : two sisters. Mrs. Emma Hinton of Krightuale and Mrs. Nannie VV.u ktns of Raleigh; three borthers, John Evans of Raleigh nnd Mur ! ray and Henry Evans of New York | I ROY WOODS Roy Woods of Route 5, Raleigh, died Monday at Saint Agnes Hos pital. Funeral services were held at 2.30 Wednesday at the Betftio hem Baptist Church. Rev. W. A. Perry officiated and burial follow 'd in In'’ church e< metcry He is survived by his wife. Mir | Fannie Woods three ciaughlc, a, i Mi's Dors Yarborough and Mias j Lena Woods, both of Raleigh, Mis* WON l- »K>T PRIZE LiUic SVilliain N. McDonald, Jr., is show n bring hefit by his moth er, Mrs. pailie McDonald, 323 S Haywood Street, shortly af ter he won first prize in a baby | contest sponsored by Raleigh i Chapter No. 27 Beauticians last j Sunday DR. CARTWRIGHT ft OVUM I D FROM PAGE 1) i siun for NESCO in 1952 Liaison | Officer, Department of Public In \ formation. U. N. Seventh Assem : bly, and in 1954, as a corrcspon ' dent. covered the U. S. Commis i sion for UNESCO in Milwaukee. In 1955 she covered the histor ;ic African Asian Conference in ] Bandung, Indonesia She visited the Gold Coast elections for sev : era! tJ S. and foreign pub’ica j lions. She is a. member of the Over j seas Puss Club of America, Unif ied Nations Correspondents As sociation. American Association j of University Women, and is on ! the. Advisory Committee of the; i Harlem Hospital. Nurses School. ] Prior to Dr. Cartwright’s ad- i j dress, there will be a band cori- j | cert, from 7:30 - 7:55 featuring; i the J. W Ligon High School ! Band, Others on the program will i | be the Mayor of Raleigh, the su-1 ; perintendent of schools, the J. W.; i Ligon Orchestra and the Vocal i ; Ensemble. STATE LAWYERS | iCONTINUED FROM PAGE 1! i bro.se Episcopal Church, will de j liver the invocation and Dr. L. E. ! McCauley will extend greetings. The Attorney General will be in : t.roduced by Herman L. Taylor. Another leature of the general meetinf.: will be an educational ! session at which time “Some Im j plications of the Student Assign ment Act and the Pearsall Plan ; will be discussed by Floyd B. Mc -1 Kissick, Major S. High, Samuel iS. Mitchell, and LcMarquis De ] Jarm on. Co-ordinator. * j. Kenneth Lee presidSll of 'the Association, will preside.'The 1 general and educational sessions j are open to the public. miss ! rev GDYnxi I D FROM PAGE 1! The University was originally : ■ h -fin ,wt |o answer the charge an Tri'lay, but U. S District Jucig: Mi :"; , Grooms granted a 10-day d( i; y beeaus University attorneys wc vo tu-ii uu with other matter:-: Mi", Foster, the school's first ,i. stuck-rd is asking the all • oib- :•> be cited for contempt "ii «:•«.ones thrd it excelled her Ft b 29 She said that il was , vioiation of a court order d • iier by Grooms. MENTAL TESTS ,ro\"ixi'FD f"uovt p\of: ii told of dreams of killing people ’tin r.i" ol'M!" d that someone war trying to poison him. CLINTON MOB , iC'ONTJVUED ’ ROM PAGE 1! which six of the nine Negro IHinils attended on Tuesday, come after a ttroun of whites " 1 - ! tii»* Rev. Paul Turner. 3 k ulm escorted them inside (no vil’ite tcen-aifers later tried (o gel into Use building to attack a Negro student, i The minister was chased and be- ton in the face after he and two volunteer aides escorted t 1 :: six to the school Clinton High's ; nine Negro students had skipped classes for four clays because of ; ihe mounting racial tension Woman in Group | Six white men and one woman , ' were m the group that chased and \ i attacked Turner They cornered j ! h’.m in front of the local telephone I ] exchange Police arrested Clyde | Cook, who had served as a defense j I witness at the sedition trial of John j j Alice Woods of Brooklyn, N. V., | nine sons, Harvey, Arthur, Churl;.; : Theodeie, Frank, and Ervin Woods, ! all of Raleigh; James, Roy, ,Jr.. and | Robeii Woods, all of Brooklyn. tiRS 1.11.1.1E A. SMITH .Mrs Lillie A.. Smith of 230 i E->- j- * etto Av.-nue died Friday at her j home. Funeral services were held j at :i P ;VL Tuesday from the Saint I Paul AML Church. The Rev. L. o. | Penn, the minister officiated and i micron nt followed in the Obei hn i Ceim.it" i y She i survived by one dauyi ter Evangelist Lillie Brown of New York; one son, Hamden Smith. Jr. of Raleigh: and sev eral njrces and nephews. AUSTIN HINTON Austin Hinton of Route 2, Ka -1 ugh died Thursday at his home Funeral services were held at 2:30 Sunday from the Good Hope Bap list Church. Rev. C. C. Jones of ficiated and burial followed in the Clan Cemetery, Sunning arc one brother, John- i nie Hielon of Wake County, one I sister. Mrs Dieie Hinton of Routt j 2. Raleigh: 12 nephews and four- I tern neice*. THE CAROLINIAN | Les Cousettes Meet Ii The Les Cousettes met. at trv. I; home of Mrs. Wanda Poole on I; Blount Street. Final plans wen. |i made for the annual Cluistinas || dance to be held at the YMCA on * December 7. Members present were Mosdamvs Mildred Horton. Roger Evans, •.j Janie Keyes, Sarah Thompson. i i Primrose Jackson, Marga re t f | Spriggs, Catherine Wilkins, Janie | Anderson and Ruth Joyner. Bingo was played. Wirin'. ' o’ Lie i prize was Mrs. Margaret Spriggs The hostess served a delicious ; repast at the close of the business [ session. j Kasper, segregation leader, last. month. The Anderson County School Board on Monday called on U. S. Atty. General Herbert Brownnell, Jr. lo help put down racial dis turbances that have kept Clinton High in turmoil for three month. The Board charged the federal authoiities failed to back up an injunction against interference with school integration. Sever*! students expressed reluctance to return to school until “HW- guar- ; | an teed protection by Brownnell ' ! Family to Move j The family of Jo Ann Allen, 15- i ! year-old vice-president of her jun- | ■ ior class homeroom, planned to! ! move to Los Angeles. Calif.. F'. i- ' I day. Brittain charged that 4.’ members of a newly-organized "Tennessee W h i t e Youth" group caused most of the trou ble inside the school. The char- I tered group, he said. “'Trigger ed" the most recent campus disturbances that included throwing stones and eggs at the Negroes. The aims of the orffanGation as j listed on it? charter are to "pro- , i mote improvement of its members j and to promote better understand - ! j ing and harmony of all races.' ! LUCKY "NUMBER | (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1! I ed statements in 1954 in New York that he would stop his racket. An ! other fraud order was placed by 1 j the post office in 1955 again -t 1 Hines for use of the mail? in hi? I alleged racket. INS. FRAUD ; (CONTINUED FROM PACE 1 > 1 acy. Following the hearing here, the j undertaker's wife, Mrs. Lucy D. (Clemmons. 52, and his employer. I Sam Caldwell, Jr, 22, had their j cases continued to December 14. | The state did not prosecute Clem ! mens’ daughter, Ramey 23. and i other employee. Hugh B. Collins ' 46. . | White Man Held Lee R Lunsford, 31. of Wm i | ston-Salem. the only white de j fendent. was held in $7,500 bond. ! He is a former agent, of the Home beneficial Life Insurance Com ■: pany of Richmond, Va. Municipal ;; Court Judge Weston P Hatfield | ordered bonds of $2,500 for Ella Mason. 27 and Arthur Mitchell, 41. Robert Page. 33. alias Clide Jefferson, was released on his ; own recognisance for trial on a | charge of making a false oath | Officers said that Clemmons pro j vided Lunsford with names of i persons ill and near death and : that Lunsford wrote policies on I them, which he collected upon | their deaths. j At the York trial. Lunsford was tried in absentia on a charge of j selling insurance policies for a i firm not licensed to do business in j South Carolina. He was convicted but not. sentenced. AMEZ LEADER (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 > Washington. D. C, delivered tin eulogy. He was assisted by Revs. J. E. Garrett, A. B Moseley. T. S. j Mauitsby. Interment- was in the , | Greenwood Cemetery. Mr. Moore was born in New i Bern and resided here all his life ! He married the former Miss Susie j Elizabeth Leath, to which union i was born four children. He con i ducted a store here for a numbet 'of years and gained wide repo- , ! tation as a real estate dealer 1 :%r --; JL. - j GEORGE A MOORE HLs greatest contribution va; in the religious life of tin city, the state, and the nation. He wa:- a, member of the. trustee board of Clinton Chapel for more than 50 ■ years and perhaps had more to. do with its development than any! i other person He served as super- ; intendent of the Sunday School I for more titan 36 years. He served as Giand Treasurer j of the Most Worshipful Prince j Hail Free and Accepted Masons j of North Carolina for 28 years, as well as District Deputy and as | Master and Treasurer oi the local j George B. Willis Lodge. He was j also a member of Queen Esther l Chapter No. 7, Order of Eastern j Star. In addition to these organi- j zations, he was Past President of j the State Association of the Ira-; , proved. Benevolent, Protective Or ; i | der of EJks of the World and Dis-; trict Deputy for more than 20: ; I years. j < Hp was recently appointed!! Senior deputy. Tn. the local Zeno! .A ' Lotltst No. 23, iv.-is k trustee and j 1 Past Exulted Kukr. Ax a Civic J i leader, he was ton riding presi- J ! dent of the New Betn Civic Lea ; gue, meu:ber of the Board of Di-! j rectors of the NAACP. and mem-j | ber of the Board of Directors of i | the 4-H Foundatio'i. Inc, He is survived by his wife. Mrs. j ; Susie EliKabet.h Death Moore; | three daughters Mies Frances i Winona Moore-. Mrs. Carolyn M. Dean, Mrs Bene* M. West: one | son. George Axel Moore. Jr., three J 1 ,uandchildren• Tamara De an, j j Reginald West and Renee Moore: j la, riaughttn -in-law. Mrs. Kathe-j | rir.e E. Moore, and two sons-in- j law Princeton Dean and Russel! | ; West, j MIXED ROMANCE 'CONTINUED I- ROM FACE it J i whose liusuand is employed in j | New York; and Willie Johns..., : father of seven children and a res ident. ■,! adjacent Wilson County. Johnson received an 18-month sentence to Ihe county roads, while j Mrs McCullen was sent to Woiti j an's Siate Prison for It months. : The ease was originally tried in i Recorder's Court where a two j year .•nnonce was given last win | ter and appealed to Superior Court i At that time neighbors of the Mc | Cullen woman had allegedly cop: j plained vigorously about the al ■ loged oohuhitating of the couple at | the id -Cullcm home, according to j Sheriff Oh-nil O Womble and Depth. E. C. Strickland who worn tlie ft;,i witnesses for ti.e Rim,- ; as !ln v repeated what was said to j be statements or admission from ! the couple following their arrests i in Ft oruary. i Mrs. McCulien's husband was i reported to haw attended both trials. Ti'.erc was reported testi mony i . at least one witness who! : said he had observed Johnson f.e-J j querying the McCullen home fee j atuu ! a year while one State wi.-j j nor. said he had known Johnson ; j for !a years and bad even ‘ cn- j j trusted members of his family to j | Johns. n\s care” repeatedly.' 1 Charges Denied The defendants reportedly de- ] nb.-cl '.oat. they had lived togel.h- j ;er ’ as charged by Womble an..' j ■ Stricitiand. Womble had testify ct { that Mrs. McCullen had stated i-' . both a husband and a fat tv*t | | when anosted that ••Johnson hao { - to 1... and to her children and 1 that she loved him.'" Johnson wa» ouoted by Womble as saying *‘thet j ho thought an awful lot of hei (the white woman), that she had j ! done <: lot for him.” Sheriff Womble said that John j 1 son admitted spending nights at the I home, both when the husband was i there and when he was not. John- j son allegedly admitted to hugging j Mrs. McCullen and playing with ; her hair, but vigorously denied any ; sexuality. Strickland corroborated j Womble s testimony Tin case was quite a sensation ] in the county where the Pearsall ! i Plan in prevent the integration of 1 i races m public schools was orir : inateri. There was a similar c*- | j her" a feu years ago. I/r. SAUNDERS (CONTINUED FROM PAD! D | termed a “trumped no" drunk ; driving conviction in Mississippi i two years ago Although the Air Force denied : that, “pressure'’ bad been respon i sible for Saunders ouster, Sen Stennis conceded that he had | “invited” the attention of the Air j Force to Saunders’ ease Saunders was freed on S2OOO 1 bond while he appealed the drunk driving conviction returned by a Mississippi court while he was stationed at Columbus, Miss. He was transferred to Lock bourne Air Force base in Ohio before (be Mississippi Su ■ preme Court upheld the con viction, The state sought to have him extradited to serve the 8-month jail term, hut Ohio Gov. Frank Lausche lasi slimmer refused to send him hack, i FIREWOOD DEATH (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1) from a shotgun blast in the chest i from gun allegedly ir. the hand. '■ of Richardson Sheriff 0. C Holeman reported , Richm .Ison as saying that the! shooting was “accidental.” Accord j ing to reports, Richardson accused ■ ' Terrch of burning up a supply cf i firewood on Saturday night while ; courting Richardsons wife sister Miss Emily Carver. — STATE BRIEFS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1) CAUGHT WITH -MOONSHINE’ NORTH EAST, Md.—A Ro wan County, N. C. man was treated in a nearby Elkton hospital Saturday after police said that his ear, loaded with | Illicit whiskey, crashed into the rear of a truck near hrrr Friday. Officers said after the accident, witnesses reported seeing the injured driver of the ■>» '-ihhV in In a wooded area. Police found '!7‘l half-gallon jugs of moonshine whiskey m the ear. They stak ed out the wooded area and waited. Nine hours later a man identified as Thomas C. Ston- ! ! *r, 1!, of Route 8, Salisbury, N {.'. came out and was ae rested. FIVE burn (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 11 home The victims were identified as: Diane Wright. 3: Curtis, Jr., 2 j an.' R.-wenda, eight months. Acemding to Sheriff John Allen j •he mother left the children alone i whit, she went for miik about a ! quarter of a mile away. When she returned, the house was in flames. Mr. Wright was at work. Cause of the fire was not determined. At .Statesville, Mrs. Elia Steven son White, 84-year-old housewife, burned to death as her bathrobe caught fire from an open hearth. Her daughter, Mrs. Margaret Sig mon, , tood by helplessly SHRINE~BOWL (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 11 football practice field and the j other drilled on Hillside High ' School's gridiron Faculty members at. North Car-' WEEK ENDING SATURDAY. DECEMBER 8. Dm j olintt College are provic • daily \ classroom instruction so; the 44 j visiting players. A special college | commute of student-- ami teach- I vrs has mapped :> full \ ••ogratn j for the Instruction .-md entertain ! ment of the boys Linon Pretty, NCC ft sitter, and : Hornsby Howe',' trainei for the I A and T Aggros of Greensboro, ! are providing professional care for the grid dm Selected By Coaches Players on both teams have i completed their high school eli j gtbliily. They v. ere selected hv | coaches throughout the .state by j popular vote. Dr W. T. Armstrong of Rocky I Mount, commissioner of the North j Carolina High School Athletic 1 Association, appointed the coach je. and approved the game. | Players for the Western team j are: Joe Fcmlstor. Asheville R Faulkner. Charlotte. Henry Crowe .jjjl j I (Ji/irra 88 PROOF 5 YEARS 010 .i.ViU,Uv Straight SS BOURBON pint Whiskey *^l 4/S QUART GOODERHAM & WORTS, LTD., PEOB.T * ILI.. i tel: « |ll|| ' ■ : • i|p s i up ■ : E if’ 111 1 RESERVE i tAIVi.9I liSIIUHS CC., H.f. C BIINDfO WHISKIf. 96 li PMOi ciT. SHAIN NftMliAl SfMltt C Chariotte. Tom itoc;. H'.uli i| Pcmt; Clifton McKnight, Gy,- j tonia; James Vinson, Salisbury. ’■John Ellison, Chariotte, Robert , j Calov/ell, Morgan ton: Earl Flint, | Asheville. Bobby Penn, Ml. Air; . ( Richard Hill. Lexington; Thojn . | Pyor, Charlotte; Sherman Acien J Winston-Salem, Wiliiam Gordon, j! Salisbruy; Nathaniel Brown. ! Greensboro: John Little. Lexit.e --| ton: and Charles Lyons. Lexm •- :! ton. ' NEW COURSES i (CON TIN IED J ROM PAGE 1, • funds. The action followed an t tion of recommendations made by ! ,i com’"liter which has studu.u ' problems of the college where er ■ roil:::.rul ha:-: been dropping i ! te: n't and ueauty opera! •>! train* , ir-v to be supported with at..'