PAGE TWO fs T . C. DENTISTS | (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1) 9 slitutioa and Dr. W. F. Mn- B roney of this city will re- I spond. s Officers of the Society aod 9 of the Women’s Auxiliary will 3 be recognized foliowing the. | response. $ Dr. Shoffner, who hails from [Weldon, will make the annual ■President’s Address. Clinics will comprise the re mainder of the first day, follow- j ing lunch, with Dr. John S. Pikes! of UNO's School of Dentistry con ducting a work-hop entitled i "Practice Management As It Re- i lates To Children", and Dr. Clar- j enoe L. Sockwell, also of tae UNO school, in charge of a clinic on "Indication, Cavity Preparation for and insertion of Acrylic Pill ing Materials. A banquet will be held at 8 p. m. in the college cafeteria. The final day of the conference will begin at 10 a.m, with a clinic on the “Complete Denture Pro theses and Its ramifications”, leu i by Dr. W. H. Allen, dean of the! school of dentistry, Meharry Med ical College, Nashville, Tennessee.! An "Oral Pathology” clinic will! be held at 2 p.m. with Dr. Thomas I L. Blair, local dentist, in charge, j The business session will get ! underway at 4 p.m. and will I include the election of offic- I ers, installation of officers I and adjournment. I A reception-, honoring the den- Itists' wives, will be held from fi ll! p.m., Monday, prior to the I formal opening. I The auxiliary will open its busl- j I ness session at 11 a.m. Tuesday j lon the college campus. Members, of the Women s committee are Mesdames C. W. Cooper. H T. Allen. P. M. Brandon. L. C. de que, R. S Hairston, J. C. Me- Knight, W. Meroney. D. R. Wil-; son and S. S. Wilson. Officers of the Old North Stats j Dental Society are: Drs. J M.! Cameron, president-elect, Kin ston; M. L Watts, secretary-trea surer Raleigh; J. H. Horton, as-! sistant. secretary, Edenton; L. H, Caple. chairman program, com mittee. Lexington; and V, H. Tynes, publicity, Greensboro. CHURCH BOMBERS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1) against Britt would not be tried for two months Also postponed from scheduled trial now was a capital case a-. gainst two other white men. charg* j ed with participating in the j bombing of four Negro churches, and the homes of two pro-lnte-! gration ministers January 10. Britt, 27, ana Livingston. 19, i were tried only for the bombing! of the Hutchinson Street Baptist; Church. The charge carried from i 2 to 10 years’ imprisonment on; conviction. James D. York. 52, and Henry Alexander. 27, lace possible death sentences on a charge of dynamting a Negro minister’s home. The bombing came a few hours j after shots were fired for the sixth time at city buses since they were racially integrated Dp- j ceniber 21 by a U. S- Supreme! Court ruling , I Thetford told the jury in clos- j ing argument that "we were on ; the very edge of racial rioting’ before police arrested the four | white men in the last few days of January "If you turn these men loose under the evidence She state has presented”, Thetford said, “you say to the Ku fvlux Klan, •if you bomb a Negro church or home it’s all right.’ ” John Blue Hill, chief defense, attorney, accused Negroes of j bombing their own churches to. arouse sympathy and win outside j financial support Negro leader,! Rev. Martin Luther King denied ; the charge. ! The verdict must “go down m history as saying to the Negroes j that you shall not pass” Southern segregation barrlesr, Hill told the jury. "We have got to say to these Negro agitators that we are not | going to yield another inch fight.- lor our way of life." Hill put on the stand witnesses j who said both defendants were somewhere else at the time of the bombings. CAMPTOOPEN (CONTINUED FROM PAGE !> from July 14 to July 28, Dr. Leslie B Ilnhman. President of the North Carolina Society for Crippled C hildren and Adults announced this week. Crippled Negro boys and girls between the ages of 8 and 16 will be admitted provided they are toilet trained, able to dress and ; feed themselves and able to walk.. even with braces or crutches Interested applicants, or per- i sons wishing to provide camper- j ships, should contact their local; chapters of the N. C Society for j Crippled Children and Adults, or j write Chapel Hill, Cost of the camping will be ; $25 a week or SSO for each child for the two week period, and which will help meet some of the expenses of the pro gram The N. C. Society for Crippled Children and Adults to to underwrite the balance of the cost. Children who are unable to pay should contact their local Easter Seal chap ter for camperships. A physician, a director, nurse end counselors will be in charge of the camp for the children who have been handicapped by polio, cerebral palsy, amputees, injuries,; congenital deformities and so forth “We are pleased that the N. C. Society for Crippled Children and Adults, in cooperation with the 4-H Club Council of A&T Col lege, Greensboro, found it pos sible to provide this long needed recreational camping program.” said Dr. Hohman. “Since tins is i the first time in North Carolina | that a camp for Negro crippled j children has been established, we anticipate a full enrollment and j a most successful program " Counsellors are needed-men particularly. killerlWght (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1) The Joyce woman. Mrs Thack er’s sister-in-law, was listed in 1 "fair" condition at a Greensboro ! Hospital today. The search concentrated along the Ouilford-Rcokingham Coun ty line, near the barn, owned by Wilkins, in which the shooting allegedly occurred. Deputies who searched the area iast night said they thought they heard some thing that sounded tilce a gun shot blast the reason for the belief that Allen may have killed himself. However, no trace of the man was found. The three victirne were Ne ; groes. | TRENT RESIGNS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 11 said that his wishes would go into effect July 1. The school has been operat ing under a committee, com posed of Miss Julia Belle Dun can, Dean M. F. Shute and Prof. J. H. Brockeit, during the illness of President Trent. The Board of Trustees named Prof. Brockett, acting head, , with instructions to carry out, the duties of the president un til a new one was named. The board also named a committee to search for a president, with the understanding that Dr. Trent’s successor would be named on or about the open ing of the 1957-’aß term. Dr. Duncan, class of ’27 and I supervisor of High Schools in Norm Carolina, gatv the graiuat -1 ing classes a challenging message, • from the subject. "To serve ef | fcctivcly in this day”. He began .by saying that education could ! not be divorced form the Chris | tian religion. He. traced the history of edu cation and showed that only those who applied their education in a spirit of service to others had really proved worthy of the time I and money that had been expend i ed to give them an education. He | told how the American people had j developed education through ser* vice. “Practically every president ! has left for history a significant : statement on education. Thomas Jefferson, the third President of the United States, chose to have inscribed on hie tombstone simply that “here lies Thomas Jefferson, ! the Founder of the University of Virginia”. In President Eisenhow er's message to the Congress on January 28 of this year. stated, II quote, "In a nation which holds sacred the dignity and worth of i the .individual, education is first ; and foremost an instrument for 1 serving the aspiration of each per- I son. It is not only the means for | earning a living, but, for enlarg- I ing life, for maintain* and im : proving liberty of the mind, for j exercising both the rights and i obligations of freedom, for un i derstanding the, world in which ; we live”, unquote. Speaking again 1 at the centennial dinner of the National Education Association in j Washington on April 3 of this i year, he said, 1 quote "Our schools j are more important than our Nike batteries, more necessary than our i radar warning nets and more | powerful ever, than the energy i of the atom.” he said. He continued, ‘ Out of the tnte -1 rest in and the support of educa j tion is derived the inescapable I fact that, society has the right Ito expect that the recipients of the blessings of education from the kindergarten t.o university, will not only set as their goal the pursuit of their own aspirations, bn? service in behalf of others ’ He admonished his hearers that they should be careful that ! they not get lost in the false idea !of self-pride and adopt a feel | ing that they would go forth to ; work for only themselves. | 'The day of the shoe cobbler when one man fashioned the shoe ; and built it with his own hands has gone forever. And strange as j it may seem, more credii, is apt t.o be given in this day to the man who sells the shoe than to (those who make it. In place of, ! the one -man process, there has | come the assembly line where san- I itarv working conditions, shorter | hours, and higher wages, have re placed the personal satisfaction which once was derived from cre ativeness and independence," he warned "The opportunities for employ ; merit in industry, education, Christian education, scientific re search foundations, museums, hospitals, government, medical laboratories and elsewhere are, breaking ail around us for those; who are prepared In a recent, registration of scientific and tech nical personnel, the National Sci ence Foundation acknowledges | the existence of more than a thou -1 sand specialities in the areas of 1 Mathematics, Physical and Life j Sciences and Engineering Teach ! ers from the South are being call led to all parts of the country. ! The ministry has always been in need of ministers. Opportunities I for employment and for making j outstanding contributions to so ! cial betterment are numerous in many other fields as we all are aware. In fact, paradoxically, the same advice given to students in the past to prepare for two vocations, because of limitations in oppor-i tunities for employment, might, be used in the future because of the increasing extension of opportuni ties in new fields. Such prepara tion however, must not be limited to the academic,” he said |Concord Murders ! (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1) go back home, but he would not comply with her request. An other woman, Mrs, Virginia Brady was in the house when Alexander entered and she took to flight, | Sl.e is said to have become so ex- j cited that she was not able, to j say whether a noise she heard j 1 was the firing of the gun or not. Jin another death, Mrs. Isa | beile Hemphill Jones is charged with stabbing her husband with ; an ice pick through the left chest, Thursday night with such force that it entered his heart. Police reported that when they picked up Mrs. Jones she was suf-' sering from injuries inflicted by j Jones to such an extent that her! jaw was wired tip. He is alleged I to have beat her earlier in the i week and was to face the charges 1 in the Cabarrus Domestic Rcla-j lions Court. Investigation city police said va rious accounts showed that around “sundown” Thursday, Isabelle and her husband were “arguing” and “fussing" in the ditch and road in frent of 58 Third St. Henry came towards his wife and she stabbed him in the chest. He fell but got up. She told him “you ain’t hurt, go on home.” He came toward her again and she stabbed him in the left arm and turned and walked away. Henry, at that time, was lean ing against the bank of the riiich they said their information show ed Neighbors, officers continued, came out and helped Henry into his home, where they put him to j bed. As (here was no bleeding from the wounds, officers said, these neighbors did not real ize at first there was any thing wrong with Jones and left him in bed. They said he had been drinking prior to the occurence. Around 9 p.m.. a woman called the police department and said i that Isabelle had stabbed Jones and to send a policeman and an ambulance. i Word of Jones’ death “got a ! round,” investigators said, and | Isabelle was told. She then called | headquarters and told officers ( where she was. RATLIFF LEADS ! (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1? ; Liiiian Elizabeth Carnage, vale ! dietonan of the graduating class, i won a SSOO renewable scholarship i t.o Howard University and the ! Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority ! Scholarship award of $250. Mar tha Jayne Davis, class salutator ; ian. won a S2OO scholarship to j North Carolina College at Dur ham. Lucy Bundle won a S2OO | renewable scholarship to Shaw j University. !j Other awards were as follows; ; Cleveland Strickland, Vernier '! Harris, Richard Hunter. Jessie 'McQueen and Carl High $37.00 ! each to A&T College; Mary Alice Hunter, $125 to Shaw University; Harold Williams. $l5O to Shaw University: Corrine Harrison and j Flora Harlee, tuition scholarships to Saint Augustine’s College: Ef fie Forbes, the Delta Sigma Theta Sorority award of $100; William Vandersrriff. S3OO renewable scholarship to Kittrell Junior Col lege; Dorothy Fleming, $50.00 to the Civella Beauty School; and Bet-tie McLean, $50.00 to the Southeastern Business College. These scholarships were pre sented at the Commencement ex ercises held in the Raleigh Me morial Auditorium on May 31, 1957. Students who received diplomas at the commencement exercises last Friday night at Memorial Au ditorium were; Henrv David Andrews. Jr . Leon 1 Howard Alston, Robert Banks. James Bass. Robert Bovlc-v. George Ratliif Bennett. Frank Brooks, _ -Tr.. Welter Louis Browning: Jr. James Rogers Caldwell, James- Nelson Cothran, Har old Constance Cur'is, Louis cole Dav is Chester Dehnam, Jr,, Poy Cecil : Dunn, Frank Dunstbn, -John Henrv i Evans TIT, Willie Toggle. Jr, Alexander Fort. Robert Leonard Freeman, Em mett Lee Gill, Jackie Gill. Eugene A - Glascoe. Edward Gripper Phil lip Hagwood, Lynous. Willard Hall, Leroy Hammond. Carl Edwin flign, Charles Dudley Hinton. Herman u'c Hinton. Tnomas Henry Hockaday. J:., Char K-s Hubert, Samuel Hunt, Edmond Hunter. Jr., Richard Franklin Hunt er, Daniel Marshall Jarnagtn. Andra Lee Jlies, Benjamin Leon Johnson. .*r.. Percy Alonzo Jones, Jr., Shade Jones. Jr. Norman Earl Leach, Jr , Ernest Massenburg, Paul Massey, Charier Otis Matthews, Janies Mayfield, Henry Green Monroe. Jr., Lee Arthur Moore. ; Jr.. James Edward Oxley, James Davis Patterson, Jr . Leon Powell. Freddie Marshall Qmller, Ernest Ratliff. Tyron Cleon Reece. Millard Alexander Rod gers. Robert Edward Sanders, Wil liam Henrv Sanders, Eric Scarborough. Joshua Smith. Cleveland Strickland I HI, David Lee Terry, Alfonza Lotus i Thorpe, william Henry Vsndersu.fi, ' * Eugene Walton, Mandtson Clay Un der Albert Williams. Thomas Harold : Williams. Jr Richard Paige Wonp.us Beverly Avery, Valeria Mildred Bar nett. Rochelle Blackwell, Kathaleen 4 Bledsoe, Josle Bolton, Ida Mae Boysut, ! Mary Alice Boyian, Sarah Lee Bras j well, Bertie Jean Broadie, LaJuan j Brown, Lucy Bunch, Lillian Elizabeth ; Carnage, Joyce Ann Cooper, Manna - Javne Davis. Mae Frances De G r alien - I reaidt, Eva Delores Dolby. Barbara Anne Dunn. Betti** Louise Duns ton, : Loretta I/Vovme Fellers, Yolanda Ft«n- I or. Dorotnv Mar Fleming. Eflte Mane I Forbes. Kay Frances Foster, tone j Sullivan Freeman, Ella Mae Marie Giles. Vernell Giilard. Mae Lois Greene Flora Eliza h»th Harlee. Vernice Marie Hams. ; Ann Virginia Harris. Corrine Harrison, i Claudia Julia Hauser, Lula Mae Hicks, -' Bettie Louise Hinton, Margaret Fran ! t -f,g Hinton. Barbara Ann Hockaoay. ! Wilma Ruth Horton, Barbara Holden, Mary Aitce Hunter, Clementine Jeter, Henrietta La Vein Jones, Pauline Keith, Lillie Langston, Mary Evelyn Lassiter, Marv Josephine Leak. Ann Delores Mack, Bettie Jean McLean. Jessie McQueen, Ernestine Rachel Moore. Lula Jasnia Morgan. Shirley Ann Morgan, Emma Lee Olds, Hazel Ruth Perry. Yvonne Tisdale Roberts, Shirley Ann Robinson. Mar garet Reeves, Christine Sanders, Ger aldine Sanders, Anna Maxine Sander'. Gloria Ann Sandra, Katherine Avery Satterfield. Estelle Marguerite Smith, Patsy Smith, Satina Spincer, Bettie Lou Stokes. Joyce Anne Sutton, Bar bara Louise Taylor, Lula Mac Tisdale. Clara Bell Turner, Doris Alease Tur ner, Thelma Odessie Walton, Beatrice Bridges Watson, Jorean Whitaker, Elizabeth Eunice Wilder. .Toar.ne Wil liam:. Gloria Clementine Williams. ] Bernice O'Hara Willis, Bettie Jane | Young. Southern Baptists (CONTINUED FROM PAGE It Christian cannot stop at the point of law.” It added, “he is motivat - ed by love and grace. We must move to create a new, a Christian feeling toward persona as persons. The race problem is basically a moral and religious problem; not economic, political or cultural, but basically moral and religious. That means that, we as Christians in our approach to it must invoke the principles of our religious ! faith”. ’ | The report demanded that all j agencies of the government take ! action against those guilty of “vi olence and lawless" attacks upon Negroes, Irt contempt of the 'aw and the courts ot justice. Negroes, who only represent a tiny figment of the huge eight million Southern Baptists con vention, had no voice at all in the deliberations of the body. The j acceptance of a trickling of Nt - | groes in the faith disrupted white i solidarity of the Baptists, who i once boasted being the world’s | larged segregated church organi sation. At the meeting of the THE CAROLINIAN group, the convention messen gers elected evangelist Billy Graham to his first official position in the denomination. Graham was nominated to membership on the group’s Foreign Mission Board. The Baptists action calling for an end to social injustice came in the wake of all-out moves by j the Presbyterian faith three weeks , ago to end all facets of segrega- j , j tion within their ranks. The Pres byterian group voted down segre ■ gation at their annual meeting In Birmingham, Ala., in a slate- 1 -: menl that protested against: \ church-people joining White Citi , ! sens Councils, the Ku Klux Klan i and other movements, "whose pur- j i j pose is to gain its point by intimi j dation. reprisal and violence." DR. VASS" (CONTINUED FROM PAGE lj Dr. Vass was also a mem ber of the following organiza tions: The National Medical Association. The Oid North I State Medical Association and the Scruggs Medical Assncia - . i elation. I ! Funeral services were conducted i i Tuesday at 4 p.m. at the First i , i Baptist Church with Dr. O. S. j i i Bullock officiating. Burial follow-1 I I cd in Mount Hope Cemetery. ; I He is survived by his wife, Mrs. | ' i Lucille Jeffries Vass and one sis- i ter. Mrs. Maude B. Vass. both of ! this city . : SEMINARY . (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1) ! the annual meeting of the South ,' ern Baptist, Convention. , One proviso in a resolution approving the admittance is sue was that the Seminary be j , operated completely on it?, own property when Negro students ) • are admitted. Insertion of this matter was bo ! cause the Seminary presently is ■ holding chapel services in the j Wake Forest Baptist Church.! »; which it does not own and whose ; | membership is all-white. > j A chapel building on the cam- ! ' j now is being renovated and is ■ j expected to be available for the 1 1 beginning of the 1958-59 school ; | year. .; About 24 or 25 of the Seminary's , i 30 trustees were present for the i! meeting, and a spokesman report-' ; ed there was no dissenting vote . j when tiie resolution was approv-; , ed. The meeting was held at the [: Conrad Hilton Hotel. > j The spokesman noted that .the j i acceptance of qualified Negroes ( . I will bring Southeastern Seminary ,: in line with three other Southern ~! Baptist ministerial colleges which ,! already are taking Negro students, j These are Southern Baptist | Theological Seminary irt ! ! Louisville, Ky., Southwestern j Baptist Theological Seminary i in Fort Worth. Tex., and Gnl- j den Gate Seminary in Los ; i Angeles. ; i Southeastern Seminary moved ; t.o Wake Forest, in 1953 and took . over the Wake Forest College campus, last year when Wake ! moved to its new campus in Win- j • ston-S&iem. : STATE BRIEFS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE i) tion of Negro Womens’ Clubs to convene at Palmer Memor ial Institute. Sedalia, .Tune Hi as guests of Dr. Charlotte , Hawkins Brown. honorary ' president of the Federation and Miss Wilhemena M. Cros ! son. president of Palmer Me mortal Institute. The Execu tive Board will meet on Thurs day evening, June (1. Mrs. Jen nie Douglas Taylor of Tar boro, who is connected with . j the Atlanta School of Soria,l ! Service, will be guest speaker, Friday night and will speak ! j on the convention theme, :j "Meeting the Challenge of the New Era.” A large attendance ( is expected. CHARGED WITH MURDER l j FOREST CITY -- Police have j |! charged a Rutherford County man ■ .! with murder in the stab-death of j '! a Forest City man early Sunday. \ •; Two other men were held as ac-1 ! | cessories. Charged with the slay- j • 1 ing of James Quarles, who died | en route to a hospital, was Sam I Hines. Sheriff Vance Wilkins said ’ Quarles was stabbed through the ! heart Hold on charges of aiding i and abetting in murder were Har vey Miller and Zebby Hines, also ' of Rutherford County. Wilkins ! said the stabbing climaxed a feud among a. group which started more than a week ago. * * * HELD IN CUTTING RALEIGH—A Raleigh man suffered a bad cut on his arm late Saturday night, police re- ! ported. The condition of Hole Miller, 37, of 524 E. Davie St„ j was reported Saturday night j to foe too poor for police i to question him after ! the slashing. Sunday Miller told officers that a Matthew Bridges had done the cutting. Bridges was arrested later Sunday and charged with as sault with a deadly weapon. The nerves and muscles in the man’s forearm were alleg edly slashed. He is being treat ed at St. Agnes Hospital. MRS. LIGON (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 11 home at 573 E. Lenoir Street. She! was educated at Shaw University i in this city. She is survived by three daughters, Misses Hazel and Maye Ligon, of the home: and j Mrs. Johnsie L. Privott of Hertford: two sons, L. W. Lig on, and J. W. Ligon. Jr., both of Raleigh; three grandaugli ters, four great granddaugh ters and three nieces. Serving as pallbearers were: J. E. Lytle, George Vincent, .Jcsre! Branch, D. D. Brightwell. Joe i Christmas and M. H. Duke. ODD S~&ENDS~ (CONTINUED FROM PAGE I) men, women and children all seemed to be very happy, and very hungry The spectacle was all right for ’ what it was until we came to the | far end of these grounds and saw; there, fenced off from the others, a small group of "spooks” who we' supposed call themselves Negroes. Oh yes, they were eating too, and they appeared to be having a very fine time. This group was also di vided into men, women and chil-! drert, all decked out in their Sun day best. On our way back from the hospital, we stopped a colored lady who was passing near this scene of Southern goodwill and asked her what it was all about. She told us it was the annual Brunswick Stew dinner given by the Erwin Mills for its employees and families. Well, we see no reason why the Erwin Mills should not give an annual Brunswick Stew dinner for its few Negro em ployees i cleaners, laborers and janitors) could even, heroine so hungry for Brunswick Stew that they would allow them selves to be fenced off on the ! side of a heavily travelled street just to get a chance to eat this stevr. We certainly didn’t believe that making such a spectacle of themselves and the group they consider ! themselves a part of or they just didn’t give a rap. Which | ever it was, believe us, it was awful. * » * WHAT ABOUT THUS? Even j i though several courts, one right \ ! in Greensboro have ruled that a ; i governing body cannot exclude . Negroes from any public owned! and publicly used property ncith- ■ ! cr by direct operation or through; lease or rental, the city marewer! of Durham had the gall to answer; a request for unsegregated seating , .in the grandstand of the city ; owned bail park made by a group ’ of Durham citizens with the. illc ! gal statement that since the city ! has leased the park to a private ! organization, it. the city, could j not exercise any control over the i seating arrangements there. That ; this case v. ill ultimately be set tled (in favor of the plaintiffs) is a far gone conclusion. But, why. These court litigations cost mon | ey. a lot of money. We have the time to wait for our request to be I met, we have the time even if it takes 100 more years. But why should we have to stand by and see our money being used in court maneuver ing designed to deprive, us of what we are justly entitled to. It is our money you know because wo as tax payers, must help to pay the costs of these court battles. We have to em ploy lawyers to fight our bat ties, we have to pay the law yers and the court costs of those who are fighting against us. We certainly do not mind paying those who expense our cause in court but an injunc tion should be sought to pre vent the use of public funds for litigation instituted for the soie purpose of evading and defying the taw. Those : fraudulent practices now go ing on all over the South is ! not only taxation without rep resentation. it is taxation to make us pay for not being "represented. It is wrong in conception and operation and should be stopped . . , NOW. A TERRIBLE TRUTH: Did you know that you live in 8 state where every elected public offic ial from the governor on down to constables have all dedicated themselves to defying the law And that, your elected state of ficials have done everything pos sible to enlist the defiance even to the extent of trying to brow beat and Intimidate the Negro ADD: ODDS AND ENDS element into acceptance of this defiance. At first glance, or rath er, without stopping to consider the matter you would never have dreamed you were living in such j a lawless state, would you? The I above stated facts arc true, pain fully true, terribly true. They are part and. parcel of what Dr. Wal do Beach of the Duke University Divinity School told a conference ! on Human Relations here recent- I iy j Os course Dr. Beach did not go i as far as we have gone in stating I the case. His fartheresi point in j that direction was when he said | that "no where in this state are i the people even making an at : tempt to obey the law”. Maybe j that is enough to say because if, nowhere in this state are the peo-! pie making even an attempt to [ obey the law that means that no. state official is trying to have! the law obeyed and so, the of ficials must be a party to this j lawlessness. The next time you hear some 1 | " —— miin iiMiUManurw—i m »' lvja -.mrowTriinrriri'f-'niw jCTTiiiCu.ii | i We Are Observing— ! SPECIAL VALUE DAYS! i THURSDAY —FRIDAY —SATURDAY j ! | j The Most Beautiful Collection of , ' | Cotton Dresses 1 Are Being Os sered at.,. y^Ln-y DRASTIC REDUCTIONS A (JUNE IS BRIDE MONTH .. . ! i We Have Everything Needed for the Wedding! jp / "The Lift If; Shop AtOUftd The Corner” Goodman’s Wilmington at Hargett ! j j reactionary old hypocrite sound \ I off about the greatness of North i j Carolina ask him how can any j | state that openly evades and de-j i fies the law of the land* be great. | If he can give you a satisfactory | answer to that question, we will ■ gladly answer your question about how you can ;o to heaven without ! praying. * * • COMMAND RESPECT: Those were the words or some of the words used by the international newspaper ‘'The Christian Science Mon itor- ’ in describing the Prayer Pilgrimage made by some 30,- 000 or more Negroes to Wash ington, D. C. last May It. This paper went on to say, “From hero and there throughout the country come occasional re ports of individual Negro boorishness, even violence often provoked, no doubt, by personal insults or latent sense of group injustice. But i thus far when American Ne groes have taken considered action as a race and under their own leadership they command the respect of the nation.” All of this brings us to the point of asking why is our leadership so reluctant about assuming real leader ship and organize our people everywhere as the Rev, Martin | Luther King has done in Ala bama. If this were done on a national scale not only would our efforts “command re spect ' they would achieve re i suits. • ♦ * WORTHWHILE: The Book Parade Club, an annual reading program of the Richard B. Harri son Library is a project that is really worthwhile. This reading program is designed not only to keep alive an interest in reading by school children during the summer months when the schools are not in session but also to help those who failed or have reading deficiencies to make up. Boys and girls from the third : grade and up are eligible to par i ticipate in this reading project. The reading of and making re ports on ten books entitles a par ticipant to a certificate from the library. It is t.o be hoped that a large number of parents will see that, their children take part in this worthwhile program. iEONUSMONEY j fCONTINUED FROM PAGE 11 j Mrs, I,lines T, Johnson, 811 i Coleman Street, $195.84; Mrs. ! E M. Davis, 607 Quarry Street, | $192.26; and Mrs. H R. White, Method. $183.44. The persons listed above are ask ed to pick up their awards at the office of The CAROLINIAN, 518 E. Martin Street, Saturday morn- J — | J SIX YEARS OLD j M straight ! / 4 BOURBON gp} whisky "flllM #l/1E | lilKilf /i? j V Cm ' ' I I tJLP i j HICKO.RY ! i i Bfi PROOF OLD HICKORY DISTILLERS COMPANY PHILADELPHIA. PA . | WEEK ENDING SATURDAY. JUNE 8, l‘J57 j The fem* th month of Bonus Mon- * i ey participation began Thursday, I May 30, and will end at midnight, j Wednesday. June 26, In order to win Bonus Money participants must patronize adver- ! Users who are listed on the front ■! page of the CAROLINIAN each week, save purchase slips or re ceipts and turn them in at the end of the Bonus Money period, which will be announced one week before the deadline. Hampton Lists Additional Summer I Offerings HAMPTON, Va. Additional I course offerings have been ar- j j ranged frf> the Hampton Institute j j summer session, starting Monday, | j June 17, according to Dr. Hugh | M. Gloster, director of the scs- j sion. These offerings include ac con ’ting, art, advanced com pe it ion, an introductory course in physical science and three more Bourses in secre tarial sciences. The additional i classes will meet, student re quests from those planning to attend the college's nine week summer term. i ; Other courses available include | those designed for students and i ■ | teach e rs-in- see vi c e working to | wards a Master s degree in vari | ous fields of education and teach- ; | in «- In addition, there are some 50 ; : different offerings, by regular fa j cully and visiting professors, for j ; j undergraduate students and teach- j j ers-in-service working toward the i B.S degree or for certification for | teaching An Increasing!' popular phase of the Hampton Insti tute summer session is the week* term, which also starts j June 17, offering pre-college courses for high school grar’. uates. In the post this college ! i preparatory session has be n attended bv those seeking planned guidance toward col- i lege adjustment and success. | j The students in this program , \ take preliminary jr.tdics of basic college subjects to effect a befer command of these subjects and to • achieve a more successful transi tion from high school ■mu i hhhiiii«muhi-’u"ii mw •wtmuiinuiiiififaa—ibbhw CANTON TEA M c If SOUR PITTED CHERRIES No. ” 19c Bi««iiw»u«iCT*ao«awawi»JoaMiaiwi»gMP»t»giWK»»-iwi-)t i'\ ’-v •'. aMMMOP