Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / July 19, 1958, edition 1 / Page 11
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!&***. jlgv •>- % : ur:.: " -ski j \ \ * '"v 3 I ®pw r k,/ % ‘ ■ - * a* sl itlaML. * J < * ?, •HAH, THE QUEEN" T«nnfa ore Althea Gibson » eti smiles, as she cnxhtes in Hew York hem Hag*and. o:H<?r win* ■ninrj her ssscood consecutive Women's Wineries Crown at Wim bledon. Th3 Harlem sports car carries a stiver tray* symbol of her rank as tike world's “greatest female amateur tenrus player. She’ll compete at Forest Hills next month. (Nowspress £ : heta). mtm'o---. • -n i I- ■ I' * ; ' v iMm p|j Ol 11 191 j SNOW STORM—Thk scene at the corner of Morgan and Wilmington streets in Raleigh depicts the effect of a freak > snowstorm of April, 1915, which played havoc with Carolina Power & Light Company * distribution system. Crew a worked 10 days Hid nights to restore service. Oidtimers describe this as the of the many storms in CP&L's 50-year history. Savings Groups Expanding, Says Fact-Finding Report ATLANTA (AMP Tbs total | assets of 25 Negro owned and oper- | eted savings and loan associations j increased more than 400 per cent ; between 1540 and the beginning of 195?. Robert A. Thompson, secre- | tary, Atlanta Urban league, reveal- 1 ed ir. a recent fact-finding report During 1056. the Federal Home Loan bank board chartered three additional Negro-owned ravings and loan associations located m Birmingham, Memphis, Baton j Jtouge. Louisiana, the report re- j vealcd. By the end of the year, these in stitutions together had assets of This sum added to the DRIVE SAFELY!! T-U ■ O.V ~ li^llX—W> lTlWrtlltA^i.,»-0.1-»i . ... „1 ryf JMCBDaUW' •lvattrt *-<*.<■■**» £ njmmwmm *h«s Wothgr of The Year *« 7 r f 0$ * .. I ®3|gge« I&HNH3OLD& mm «LL REGINALD GONNSE SEVENS SijPl SHOWING ' Attention Automobile Owners. A SPECIAL DEAL ! ON WASH AND OIL CHANGE ! With Every Wash And Oil Change A j ~~FREE GREASE job”" I ALSO CALL us FOR ROAD SERVICE Price’s Shell Service Station COP.NEE SOUTH AND FAYETTEVILLE ’ TEmplc 3-2348 EALEIGH, N. C. j total of the 25 older companies a ■ | mounted to $53,420,167. Tha report showed that of the 1 23 associations. 13 sre in the Mid j dte Atlantic and North Central 1 stales with assets of more than s2s i million; 11 are in the South.“with I more than .S2O million in assets; ! and fout in the West with asset. | exceeding $43 million ! The study revealed that the Ci j tizens Trust, company of Atlanta is | tha only Negro bank with mem- I beiship m the Federal Reserve | system. Dm ing the six-year pen- I od covered by tjie .-tudv aij of the j banks showed increased assert. ODDS-ENDS ; By ROBERT G. SSKF&KD .... —— i WHY YOU BHOITLD JOIN | THE YMCA: The annual camp* n:g» of the Sloodworth St. YM CA ir now underway The goal if 1000 new members and a mini n') urn of $3500.00 in cash. As we recall the matter, the above has 1 been the goal in all of the. preced* i ins ‘Y’ campaigns but we do not. i remember that modest goal ever j brine realised We say it is modest because there must be at. toast JO. 000 Negro men and boys in the Raleigh area who are eligible for anri need memberships In the Y. M. C. A There ere many who have held “Y" memberships in past years but have failed to re- | new their membership. There are j more who have never enjoyed the i privilege of being a "Y” member, j There are those who have not I renewed their former member-1 ship who. when questioned About the matter will say they did not I “get anything out of it ” When | such persons are asked what, did i they expect to get they are usually j ! completely negative and evasive , in their replies, reminding you cf j persons who say they have failed to receive anything from their j church membership. There are many tangible, material benefits that the YMCA offers adult men. Included are Rousing, physical cul ture. cafeteria service educational and religious services etc. However, Important and an use ful as such material services are. the most, important service your "Y 1 offers Is the great bulwark of moral, and spiritual force that it thrives up against the destructive elements of evil and through the influence of this divinely inspired force, reaches into every area of the Community. Inspiring and up lifting all it touch and reach. The i medium of this spiritual force must of necessity he the ‘Y* staff augmented by the “Y“ member ship When von enrol! as a- "Y” mem ber vou shouid not be overly con cerned with what, amount of ms - j ter tat gain you will receive, rather you should rejoice in the msipira- Uon of fellowship, be grateful that through your membership a wider sphere of good has been created: your membership has en abled the "Y" tx> project its in fluence for good farther into the community thus bringing to you the solace and comfort, that al ways accompanies good deeds and insuring for yourself and fa mily the protection that good in fluences always provides. It. may be that the above reasons why you join the "Y" or renew your mem bersbip are in the main more or less selfish if they are this Is bp area of selfishness that can be excused and condoned. On the other hand, don’t ever forget than your YMCA Is providing one of the most prolific means cf cha racter building for our pre-teen and teen age boys that ea& be found any place. Through its manv boys sad youth clubs and organisations j through guidance and coon* selling, through its media, of inrtitut.ion your YMCA te help ing our young bovs through their most dangerous periods of life and is pointing them te* ward a, fruitful life through character, morality tusd Chris tian standards. Your <S T H membership can help te pro tide all of t-hoee things for SoOT' hoc a.n«} your neighbors i fc«m You need the “Y” and the **¥" yon. Why not. min now while the idea, is frerh on your mind. Your "Y” membership cap help te make Raleigh a better place te live in NO NEW SLOTytS: Tn all tlkli : hood urban renewal will soon be ■ : with us. All right thinking, pro ; gressive minded persons must ; welcome this modern method of : slum clearance and urban redevel j opment. All of us most be alert however to see to it that no new j slums are created when old ones are destroyed. There is onlv one I way that this can be prevented, I adequately, standard bousing in i uncrowded ares* areas, must be i provided for the families who will find them-selves homeles® when i their homes are taken hv slum ; clearance We understand that tn ! some cities, Washington, D. C was r>o serious problems have beep ofated because the families whose former homes Had b«en de molished through urban renewal, were not provided other home*. A* a result there displaced person? moving into already crowded neighborhoods, created serious health, moral and sanitary prob lems a small crises was reached 1 here in the Raleigh community last year, when 175 families living in an area, that was taken cover for low coot public housing, had to scramble around in near panic trying to find homes for them selves For tun lately it is not be lieved that any serious problems were created by that, upheaval be cause fairly decent housing was found for most of those displaced persona. We know' however that the Raleigh community can not stand another major upheaval brought on by many families hav ing te find new homes For that reason, those who are promoting urban renewal should be busying themselves with urban relocation. 1 they Should be greatly concerned with the prevention of row slums that, could follow in the Wake of i the old ones TWO YARDSTICKS: Many of the homesteaders on Obet - bn Road who had their home | condemned in order to make rooea ter the Wade Avenue underpass have Ml compel led te accept the unrealistic of fers made to them by the City of Raleigh for the, acquisition of their properties. Waving no assets but the homes that most of them had struggled a lift time to for, these un fort, unate persons were afraid in trust their chance* to a rmirt of arbitration knowing full well that too often color shades the eyes of justice. I It. seems however that ?,h<= pro . apei ous dwellers on Anderson I Drive have no such fffgfg, Thi' Credit Union Workshop Set For A & T College On July 24 1 GREENSBORO Officiate, of , sixty-five credit unions in North ; Carolina will attend a Credit !?n~ ■ Medical Association Holds its Annual Sessions August 11-14 MILWAUKEE, Wr-r. ~ At the coming 64th Curivention 01 the Na tional Medical Association, at to > c » five major problems will be dte- ' cussed: The great increase in tho • j disease of the Heart and Blood Vessels, the great problem of ru 1 I ral health, the growing menace of | j blindness due to Glaucoma, the j use and abuse of tranquil hang 1 drugs, and the effects of atomic radiation on the eye and other organs of the body, will be dis | ensued by experts .n these rub- I 1 iectu, also jhe shortage of physi | elans and specialists. Heart «nd Blond vessel sur ttery, which is relatively new, will come in for much discus sion. Coronary Heart disease, which continues to hold thr spot-light in diseases of the Heart, wrl! he d iscussef! hr Dr, David Leighninger and bv Dr. Claude S Berk of the Western Reserve University School of Med Seine of thp surcory 1 of tho Heart, will be discussed by nr, Mirvm Wagner, Marquette U niversity School oI Medicine. Mil- j waukee; T>r. Matthew Walker, pro fessor of Surgery. Mehany Medics! College; Dr Montague Lawrence of the State University of low's. Dr. ! Thomas Barter of Children s Mem orial Hospital. Chicago; and Dr. Con well Newton, Michael See.se, Hospital, Chicago. Illinois and Dr. George A Hellmbth, Associate Professor of Medicine. Marquette University School of Medicine, i Milwaukee, Rural Health, amone our people hag been n problem for many years —aggravated by poor economic conditions on most farms, lack of modern medical and nursing care, and lack of hospitals. All this, ac companied with lack of sanitary knowledge and facilities T! "~e conditions will be discussed by Dr T. R M, Howard of Chicago. Tl- Hnoks who has had vast experience in the rural sections of Mississippi: Dr F Irby Jones t of Hot Springs, Arkansas: Dr. S. C. Coleman ”1 You thy 18, Held In Death Os Farmer NEGRO HELD IN SLAYING OF EUDORA. Ark. (ANF) Law- j renoa Smith, an IS-year-old Negro ; told Chicot County officers last j week; that he shot and lulled a while farmer who would not. give j him money that be owed him The i shooting followed an altercation in a cotton field near here last Tues- i day. Deputy S H. Bafi said Smith is being he’d in the county jail at Lake Village m connection ' with the fatal shooting of Cary Cundiff. City Council has decreed that An derson Drive should be widened, not to the extent of taking over all the properties within the propos- j ed widening range as is the case on Oberlin Road The Anderson Drive project, merely calls for the , slicing off of a few fert from the ’ front of these properties. It is ' well to note that even though the ■ Anderson Drive owners were of ; fred a much higher per square ! foot null for there properties than | were the residents of Oberlin Rd., , many of these Anderson Drive ’ owners feel that they can get more bv having the court fix the am* | enmt they are receive. They are ; probably right m their thinking j because In their cares their will be j no color prejudice te weigh aeainst them As long as there are two yard sticks of measuring va lues and one of these is a yard j stick governed by color justice . can never be established in the. land of ‘'freedom' 1 and equality.” ALL DELIBER ATE RPEI I>: j In May, I9SS the U S Su preme Cimti implemented tto Mav, 1956 anti-school ■segre gation mandate bv ordering public iichnol Integration te proceed “with all deliberate speed.” In differed xreas of the South that order has hern taken to mean many thine* j In some places like Raleigh, H has been interpreted *« mean no speed or no action at ail. in miirue places like Virgin ta It ha« meani a program of massive resistance to tire whole idea, in Louisville, tt.v it has meant a gradual compli ance while In Baltimore, Mrt. and Washington, D €., H ha? meant full and speedy compli ance. Apparently, however, not one of ; these shades of differences in th° compliance or non compliance of the Court* order can parallel the j action taken recently by a. federal judge sci his ruling on a, request : of the Lii.tle Rock School Board | This judge completely reversed the ; supreme oonrfcs order for comp! 1 - j anoe with all deliberate awed and j instead of ordering that school in tegration go forward with ah de liberate speed »s the supreme court had decreed, took It upon himself te stop the mtegratilon move altogether, Thi,? might well Vie the first tune that a lower; court has reversed the supreme | court. If If. is allowed to stand it j means that not only is school in- j tegration. doomed but also the, usefulneee, power and the Infhi ■ I ence of tt'e ty, r Supreme Court j is tncewtee doomed. There are te.OW) 4-H Club* u, the J United States and hs possessions, j Lift heavy objects with leg 11 • aiMey.«, abt w*ia y*ur bawk. 1 1 ; ion Wcrkxhop to be conducted in 3 i j one-day session at A Sr. T College I on July S 4. . Arkansas City, Ail.ans.is; Dr. W T. Armstrong of Rocky Mount. | North C;iroliiii>; oud Dr. H. B | Moore cf South Plttebuvgl:, Tcn- Thc fact that Ibcre are over i 200,0 DD people in the United j Rtate.-i who have become hlim.l due to fil.uicoma, will eogiigc some of the ties! medical uiirsds in the country in concentrat ing «n that problem Or. H. R. Venabli of St T.oul* will lead the di*russi<ms, ablv as sisted by Or. C. Richard Km ki v and Dr. Gerhard D. Straus. Or. C, J, Finn, Or. Rnsrer H Lehman of Marquette Univer sity, Milwaukee; on. ’Claude L. Cowan of Howard I niver- I xitv. Washington, C O. "Oho e' r er jncreasitiE use of tran j 'ruilteiiyr drugs and the vast «- | rnouni of new driHR-' being put on j the market, will also come in for | .lifontion Dr. Hugh A Brown, Sn ! perlntendent of Mcftae Morrortal j Ban*torium, Arkansas: and Dr | Harry Beckman. Professor Mar | mictte University, Milwaukee. The j last named professor will talk on : the subject, "To Use or Not 1o Use the New Drug, That is the Qucr hon.” The current menace of atomic radiation with its deadly "fell j out” and cosmic radiation will j come in for discussion by Dr H i P. Venable of St. Louis Missouri: iDr Jerome L Marks. Professor of i Radiology. Marquette University Dr. James L. Martin Phiisdelphla; j Dr. Lawrence D. Scott. West Side I Hospital, Chicago, Illinois: Dr. ! John W. Lnwlah. Howard Tjpiver ; rity ;md Dr G. J. Tarlefon; Me i harry Medical College. ! The usual social activities will i he held with the doctors and also j members of the Woman’s Auxi - | iiary part*?ir>--«ling. There will be i a social affair each evening spon ! sored by the Milwaukee business ! interests and ending with the Prc i sidenfs Ball on Thursday night. 1 August 14. i y ’ In describing tha shooting. Ball j said "its the most brutal thing that I over happened In this county. Cun- I diff was shot six times. j'w.m--■«■« >y—-.. -~— 1,1 - i,r ■-' - ■ i i nm iiiiiin-iiTrirnrrfrrmTTTM'TiwmTHiiiiiiirTiiii iMMiiiMi—i——rwiiiniii iiumum ■ ~ n»Bimffi'««nn- -n --! IK&asn WWW • ."J.rf. ■•■-:—^■"■g-yuMT-STS- I OH THIS RANG*E 'I if HOW WITH YOUR OLD RANGE CWe 5s Our Own Financing! CALL US FOR SERVICE We Have Factory Trained Service Men! VANCE - 8-5592 nr mi 11IIim it ***■ ~ -- n.-afm.r.MMM...—— ■firm— mi min i Beside# discussions on general | ! practises and policies of the mod j crn day credit union, the workshop will conduct special seminars with credit, union directors, supervisory committees and credit, committees A fill! corps of prominent leaders in the credit union government has been procured as consultants for the meet. Among them are: Stan ley Vails, examiner. Bureau of federal Credit Union?, Washing ion. D C ' H. L. Wright, Bureau of Federal Credit Unions. Atlanta, Ga.; Howard Fijahn. auditor, and VV, V. Didawick. superintendent, j both of the N C. Credit Union Di i vision, Raleigh. W. F BrdJStcrman and J. 5?. Hera . rich, both of the Credit Union Na tional Association Mutual Insur ance Society, Madison, Wisconsin; V, F. Lindsay, Woman’s College, Greensboro; L. C. Hodges, Presi.- dent, N. C. Credit Union League, Winston -Salem and J. F*. Grigsby, trearurer, School Workers Federal Credit Union, Charlotte The workshop is being upon aw ed bp the Department of Short i Courses at AAT College, headed by ; B W. Harris and the North Carol ; ins Credit. Union League of which ; B L. Webesterm, Greensboro, is the managing director. The lonttleaf has mor# re-»}ef»nae to fire than other Southern pine#, IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE *' nw.»nrilli«#nwl W <'iW»nrwewi jw^ms»OMn^4wa«smi<i#yffaHTWnßrrMyi*Wtlimil|»tllM3lßMPlMMWMElMiMßOTianMßwiiawyMiMaW»nMW«H»^» LOWE’S GROCERY WINES & BEER OPEN DAILY 7:31) A. M. TO 7:30 P. M. Open On Sunday from <DSO A. M, to 10:0(1 A. M, 318 West Lenoir Street * • l—i1 —i^ —ini inr-irt r i rm>? irrwwrniiiTiiiiiiinw[i>ini i7«a-rr , iM~TTriMmEWTwrjO‘frraiir«rißW»Trrn‘w-rri» ■ll rim- ( jAcom in I ROYAtE HI | |j nirititp hm turn - t* ceoor I WEEK ENTHTTQ SATURDAY. TOLY 18, 1«E8 IHL CAROLINIAN Employment Trend Up In ! The Ralemh Vicinity Business conditions are on tire upward trend in the Raleigh area according to the. Manager of the Haleigh local employment office, Lee J. Craven During the month of June there, were $36 placemer in employment made by the locai | offices, including 5H4 non-farm j placements and 52 on the farm | This compares with 823 placements | m June 1957 ot which 415 were non- \ farm and 103 farm. The decrease In agricultural placements over those of last June is partly due to the soil i hank program and partly to the inclement weather which pre vailed until late spring, thus re ducing the crops to some extent, thlw year. Among these place, ments In June were 253 female and 84 veterans. New Replications for employment were 149 more than those in June 1957 »nd totaled 1037 for the monih. Two-thirds of this increase in new applications was from female ap plicants There were 66 more vet - i era ns among the new applicant* ! j during the month than there were ; ■ | m the same period on* year ago. | and our present active file con i j tains 3219 applications including 1 1378 women and 638 veterans, j Job openings received during the j | month numbered 710 compared \ \ with 470 received in .Tune 1957 At j (he month’s end there were 340 job opening* unfilled and in the process of being filled. initial claim* for narmpinv rcicnt Insurance dropped 179 un der those for the previous evvntb. The bulk of this de crease was In additional claims, tsieathne those reopened during the benefit rear. There were --- SPECIAL! I LIMITED OFFER FRiSIDJUBE QUIGKUSE ICE TRAY *1 oo Only pgje 111 visits to employer* mad* by representatives of to* local office during the month. 66 of which were non-farm employ er* and 46 to farmer#, to the search for job opening# to re fer the above mentioned appli cants A total of 145 promotion - al telephone oall# were made by the interviewer# during the month also in search of Job op enings. With the egrieultural activity approaching it* peak regarding the cultivating and harvesting opera tions, it is anticipated that the lo cal labor supply in the Raleigh area, comprised of Wake. Frank lin and Johnston counties, will be ample to take care of existing needs as they arise. * Select gilts and bears from large litters, "The girl who lay* afi her cards os the table, will usu ally be left playing solita.iTa,’" ejeje SANDY LAND VILLAGE Lakelynn Road Near Jeffrey’s Grove School j CUSTOM HOMES & LOTS Opened 3-d Daily Anytime By Appointment Edward H. Chavis, Owner and Developer Dial TE 3-8721 ! 11
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 19, 1958, edition 1
11
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