2 THE CAROLINIAN RALEIGH. N. C.. SATURDAY, OCTOBER IT. 1964 NC*S TWO-PARTY SYSTEM GROWS (An Editorial) (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1) granted. We zeem to enjoy and cheriah being productive *nd ap preciated. This election is presenting choices. And there are thous and*" and thousands who seem elated oveAthe opportunity to se lect a party or candidate. This is as it should be. No vote should bejppg to anyone, but the possessor of this cherished instrument of ltfwrty and freedom. Nor should it be lomed or sold. America seems now bent upon finding away for freer individual thinking. TMrjjttindreds of different organirat ns have done ysieman work in Rutting registration and voting utmost in the minds of the A* mdrican public. Destiny, at this tyne. seems inevitable in directs* individ ualism at the polls more than ever in the immediate past Politics may find itself in the next few years more in the hands of the public than ever before. The great control bv money and position is confronted wih a new public opinion. This great war of oppo sites who are brothers in flesh, ideology and spirit, should reap a harvest in behalf of the Rebublie never known before However, dangers lurk in any system and also in any change. It is our belief that each individual should be equipped with as much information about parties and persons who represent par ties to make up their minds after due research and study of the issues and approaches to them as presented by the above. To register is one thing. To vote is another. Be sure you vote, and. above all, be sure you vote YOUR convictions. LEAFLETS ARE AGAINST BARRY (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1) phlet, asked that it be withdrawn Iw-mim of possible bod effects In the Couth Ban. Hubert H. Humphrey, thr Democratic Vice-Presi dential candidal*, waa carry one of the folders when he campaigned in Atlanta recent ly. Said Hamphrey: Tm not much for a fallow who's for civil richta In the Dis trict of Columbia and whistles Dixie with you ... Ooldwater voted seal net the Civil Rights Act of 1964. which was one of the priority pieces of legislation of the Kennedy-John son administration. WORLD SERIES ENTERS SIXTH GAME IN MO. icontwi’ko raon esc* onii for the Card* hi the final of throe ramea played In N. Y. The cards waa an the eaiaslag plfehfwr Offcnem Ky • gPRf» ft# »-«. £ther lan stars In the series this are: Elston Howard, Al Down ing and Hector Lopes, for the Yan keee; and BUI White. Curt Flood, Lou Brock and Julian Javier, for St Louis. STATE’S BCLC HEAD BACKS ROBERT L. GAVIN CONTimJKP num PMC 1) to show th* Democratic leadership that they would not bo herded in to voting for • candidate just be cause he was a Democrat There wBS another eehoel of thought that the Negro did not hnow enough about voting to THE CAROLINIAN •aSste'SKR.- PwklteheC hr the CaroUaUa US I Martle Street tuieleh. n c.. rm tfnterec ••Second data Matter April S IMS. at tha Pott Office tn Ralalgh. Nnnh Carolina under the Act of **“?*' mSJacaiF-noN bates Six - Montba HB Salas Taa __ Sg Salaa Taa 14 TOTAL 'said Payable tn Advance. Addreo „ii communications and make all shack* and etUan (payable to TVS Arnalaameted Publtahara. Inc 110 tfaetaon Avenua. Maw York IT. N V. National Advortlalns Reprencntative end member of the Aaooclated Nerro Praia and the United Prom tniema tmhei Photo Service The Pu&Uahei la not responatble for the return n who thinks all that was “right cool.” So they are going to try out for the seme, at the upcoming IDC4 contest. Time: 10:00 a. m., Friday, October 16. Place: »am# aa last year. St the State fair. They are Jsaam O. Alston, Herman O. Alston, and Archie L Alston —■ ell of Wattenten. James la employed by Joseph L. Richardson. Warrenton ma sonry contractor who alee waa the employer of last year's . Champion. Harmon and Archie are working with William Bur woil, masonry contractor of Loubberg, Route 4. They are all In training under the State-sponsored Apprentice ship Training Program. They woik on the Job a* paid employee*, ac quiring tha kkllla of their chosen trade under the direction and ittper viaon of journeyman brickmasona In three years time, they will he Journeymen themselves end will command high hourly wages. And they don't do bad while working as apprentices. Incidentally, the AMona don't have a monopoly on tho brick laying contest business. It b Ueea whe have completed net •pan to all registered appeen | mare than 4AM hour* es their I training. Bo Telia Yeung, of Warrenton. Route 3, will be there too. Telia also is training with Mr. Richard son, the champ-trainer Mayo tha Alstons better wretch out 3N.C MEN GET LIFE TERMS IN DEATH District BsHsHsr James C. Denman aisled the brutal na ture of the kflUng made It dif ftentt tn accept the The trio Is alleged to have stop ped Carter after he stopped at a Negro tavern to purchase cigar ettes. He was then forced ttnto a ear and driven behind n Negro school, where the alleged torture took place. His body was found the next day. * An additional 10-year sentence was received by McKoy for auto mobile theft and two more years for assaulting a white minor, re sulting from another attack. Johnson teas also handed more time—five years for auto theft. CAMPBELL’S TRIAL IS RE-SET HERE icournMUPD raon raus i> fleers. CamptosU, who has heeded the local NAACP branch for the last two yaars. Is also an offutr of the Raleigh Citizens Association end other militant civil rights organi sations in the city and State. The Incident took place on 8. Wilmington Street as Campbell and an unidentified passenger tn his ear were headed north on the street. DR SOMERVILLE TO LEAD AN ‘AFRICAN SAFARI’ (CONTINUBO FROM FAOR uNt) burg. Fennsyhrania: Mrs. J. c Hairston. Pittsburgh, Pennsyl vania; Tha Rev. M. L. Wilson, New York. N. Y.; Mrs. Lucinda Harris. Durham, North Carolina; Mrs. Agnes Jordan, Portsmouth. Virginia; The Rev. E. T. Brown?. Durham. North Carolina; Dr. Rose Butler Browne. Durham, North Carolina; Mrs. Henrietta Tindall. Jamai ca Plains. Massachusetts; The Rev RSMtSA.v W-14 V“« * . SSSSSIWtS « tvtU, * toM.fUvm Q, * It glllltl . . The Rev. O. D Brown. Richmond. Virginia; Mrs. M. A. Home. Wim ton-Balen, North Carolina; Th- Rev. H. Edward Whitakes. Ports mouth. Virginia: The Rev. Charles ton-Salem, North Carolina; The Rev. Henry Miles, Washington, l D. C.; Mrs. Mary Eagle. Akron. Ohio: Th* Rev. Elmer Williams. Vauxhall. New Jersey: and Mrs. T ' jtee L. Jackson. Washington. D C. n. cTnaacp" FAVORS MOORE (CONTINVn FROM FAOt It than la previous yaars If thatr votes are pooled, Prominent among the eeveral speakers to the convention were Glostcr B. Current, director of branches. NYC; Percy Williams of the President s Committee on Im plementing of Housing end Employ ment; Atty William Robert Ming. Chicago. 111. who addressed the ecor# attorneys attending the con vention in their dinner-meeting session, and the combined adults youth group. Louts L. Mitchell explain ••me as the complexities es the new Civil Bights act. saying that c'.gbt million dollars would YOUR THANKSGIVING IN NEW YORK ',j2| Hlk .& * J*, f wmWxsml i , JfßCaKSßra» ’ , yjir y - , ■mWI guySfiSH;V, • I HES3K' ■* v iMN| Nevember 26 through 29 can < be the greatest holiday time avar it you apend it in New York City. A highlight ia tha famed Macy't Thanksgiving Day parade along Broadway, hut thia ia only one of the many seasonal delights for the whole family. SPORTS: The exciting new Shea Stadium will be the scene of professional football fun. as tha thundering New York Jets meet Kansas City in what may be one of tha most thrilling gridiron treats to take place in Gotham. Madison Square Gar den will feature the New York Rangers in a dassling hockey game on November 25 for those who come early, while boxing on the 27th and New York Knicka championship basketball will follow on the ' 28th. On Sunday the 29th. the proa will be back - the New York Rangers, skating to thrills and spills. There's a chance of a tip-top college football game again-like last year's tense Notre Dame game. THEATRE: Some Broad way hits—" Any Wednesday." "Barefoot ia the Park." "The Deputy," “Funny Giri.“ "Hello. DtJhrl- and, of course. “How to Succejd ia Business With out Really Trying." At the re cently-opened New York State P«»tr**t Uncoin Center, the ef West Berlin Will prtolnt two plays in Ger man: "Don Carlos" and "The ROYAL CROWN COLA CO. BOOTH ATTRACTS THOUSANDS AT NATIONAL BAPTIST CONVENTION—RoyaI Crown Cola Co., Columbus, Ga., played aa active role in several activities of the recently held National Baptist Convention, U.S.A., Inc., at Cobo Hall in Detroit Several thousand persons visited the RC booth to sample Diet-Rite Cola, the nations’ number one sugar-free soft drink, and to register (or door prize*. Top left Chuck Smith (center), RC’a director of special market activities, discusses the Diet-Rite fact folder with (left) Mrs. Ann Hutchinson. Detroit, and th* Rev. Lee Green, Rochester, If. Y. At top right. Monica Moore. RC booth hostess, shows the two cooler doorprises awarded by Royal Crown Cola Co., along with 38 cases of RC products. The top cooler b a thermo* Diet-Rite cooler. The bottom cooler is s beautiful Cornelia* vendor in aiaeujatad wood grain he used tn up-grade pupil* whe are in areas of school drep-outs and poverty conditions. He eled title seven b designed to eradl • RM; •»«* tt.-j-e. •*.• **• *»**- MM** ing capacity of the Negro col lege graduate* uiisw Ills time earning* only spprevtmate that of the average whltt eighth grader. Resolution excerpts called for the continued stepped up fight against all forms of segregation and the resolve on the part of the ministers conference to raise $3,000 during 1963 for NAACP Freedom Fund from among some 1.000 listed preachers. Among the Ministerial leaders v.-ere Revs. Jerry Drayton. Kelly O. P Goodwin. Winston-Salem: l) N. Howard, C. W Ward. T,. H Har ris. Raleigh- W H Fufler, A. A D Mosely, Durham; A. G. Dunston. t.ouisb urg: A Faison. Henderson; W E. Bank*. Thomasville; Julius I). Dougin. 1 .*. St. James Presbyteri an Church, where the ministers met. and were addressed by Rev. Htv. Edw. Odom. Hon. Capus N. Waynicß. chm. N. C. Good Neighbor Council, spoke to the ministers banquet and urged political solidarity on the part of Negroes in the coming e icetions Pre.-idcnt Kelly Alexander Sr, in his annual message stressed the need for continued progress with- • Captain from koepenic.” MUSIC: New York's City Center will have the D'Oyly Carte Company performing favorite Gilbert and Sullivan operettas, while at Lincoln Center's Philharmonic Hall. William Steinberg will conduct ithe New \ork Philharmonic. Carnegie Hall will echo with the Serendipity Singers on No i vember 26; on November 26th, the Clancy Brothers and Tom my Nakem entertain. In Town Hall on the 26th. folk music 'will ring to the rafters, fo!- low H on the 27th by the Amor Artis Chorale and Orchestra Sabicas. the famed flarr.enco guitarist, takes over on No i vember 28th. ! GENERAL INTEREST: (The Hayden Planetarium will ! have a "Message From Space ' program. The Time-Life Bui'd -1 in* will open "The Christmas I Story lobby exhibit to the fublic on November 28th. The mpire State Building. Rocke- I feller Center, the Statue of : Liberty. Times Square, and the United Nations are among the sightseeing attractions at the top of the visitor’s "must” list FREE INFORMATION: Contact the New York Con vention and Visitors Bureau 90 Esst 42nd Street New York 17, New York, for free folders on hotels, restaurants, shop, ping and events in New York. out reioprt to denionsiration* other than at the ballot box and in do nation*. FRONT PAGE CITIZENS FOR JOHNSON TO SPONSOR LARSON (CONTINOBD ntOM PAUft 1) administration. Or. Laiaop. la co chairman of National Ci laena for Johnson. Dr. Laraon*! talk her* on Oct. 21 la sponsored by Ra leigh Clttaena for Jatmaon and the N. C. Chapter of Sci entists. Engineers, and Phy sicians for Johnson. The public la Invited to come apd hear Dr. Larson., who is a very dynamic and appealing speaker. tar”heel GETS HONOR (CONTINUKD rSOH PAGE municipal auditorium. Atlan ta. Georgia. Tuesday morn ing, October 6th. Address for 'he occasion was delivered by Dr. Samuel DeWltt roctor. As- , noeiiif General Secretary of the National Council of Chur ches of New York, and former president of ART College Greensboro. Mr. Draughan was notified several weeks ago. of the honor in a letter from R. E Naugher. as sistant director of the Agricul tural Education Branch of the Department of Health. Education and Welfare. Office of Education, Washington. D C. The letter said In part: 'The member* of the New Farmers of America are grateful to you for the excellent cooperation and assistance given the organization and wish to express their appreciation by hon oring you with their highest de gree, that of the Honorary Superior Farmer.” After graduation from Waters CTOMyORP*** By A.C. Cordon 41 - fore I** enttac V - txl* •V - Mw'i mtt I - tushm ACtOSS !l - JUST""'* 11 ' JUL I ! ' , I *4 - Tncfcarn 11 - Umm , -IT.u-iunw NMM U-F«W|»Ue IB • BauUrr DOWN bibs-. its -7 -s-~ IJ-WJJW J - mSSbm a IS - Aartefe t-OmSy » ~ ii-QUNt g-y*? . ibpmb flfesii "rmwnrargttmi ®* nw with s capacity of more than two cases at RC products. Ai Qte bottom left. Mias Moore shows the name of the door prize winner to three httorcstod tor Sens. left to right, the Rev. John Hopkins, Chicago; Mrs- Carrie Lockhart Chicago? sad Mrs. Elizabeth Gamer, Detroit Winner of the nrEm b Mrs. Elton R. Carter, 466 N. Rod field SL. Philadelphia. She is a member of Vine Memorial Baptist Churoh, pestered tor Rev. L. C. Carr who is treasurer of the National Baptist Convention The Cornelius vendor and 14 cases of RC were presented to Vine Manorial Baptist Church. At the right Mia Moore serves three persons who ware among tan several thousand who sampled Diet-Rite Cola at tho convention. Left to right tha Rev. W. H Thomson. Chattanooga, Tenn.; tbs Rev. J. U Irving, Detroit, and the Rev. John G. Whitfield. Gastonia. N. C High School at Winton, Mr. Draug han earned his B.S. degree from ART College and began his first position in Vocational Agriculture. #!*•«*♦ «♦ T If A lo4r'• 1 at Lincoln High School. He held the same position during his en tire teaching career to date. He al so earned his Master's degree from ART College. Ha has assisted his students mt well as members of tbs A dult Farmer group In winning uumorous prises on tbs District, State and National levels and hence has brought much honor to Gaston county as a result of his teaching. He has also or gahlsod a community fair and assisted with the srganisatlou of a Credit Union. in his field, and coope ration with many other agencies has earned for him recently the title of “Omega Fraternity Man of The Year," by the local chapter of which he is a charter member As a participant in State-wide programs, he served recently as one of 16 Vocational Agriculture Tea chers selected to participate in a workshop at N. C. Suite College Raleigh, to formulate a new Vo cational Agriculture Curriculum for the State Schools. This committee was composed of four Negroes and 12 while teachers. He is a native of Tarboro. but has spent all of his adult years in Gas tonia where he has greatly enrich ed the life of the city because of his eagerness to be of service. His wife, the former Edna Houser, of Gastonia, is active in many projects and in the Mildred Wellman Ele mentary School, a teacher of Lin coln Academy. PERSONALS ATTEND WORLD SERIES GAMES Attending the World S-'rics in j New York :h.s vr k from Raleigh i were: William W. Laws. 802 E. Dr. Morris Keynotes 98th Year The Reverend James Kenneth Morris, director of Marriage Counselling Services, Dlocwe of Upper South Carolina, keynoted for Saint Augustine’s “Pamily” on the occasion of the College s nine ty-eighth anniversary Tuesday morning Octobey 6, 1964. Speaking on the subject. “Edu cation Work Success”, Dr. Morris told the assembly that “Our greatest privilege Is to be A live at this period in history, for we live in the midst of such an ac celeration change of tempo in knowledge. Invention -and discov ery as may alarm us on the one hand lest we destroy ourselves; and aspuse us on the other han& with hopes of breaking through Martin Street, and L. W. (Biggie) Ligon, owner of Ligon's Grocery and Market of E. Lenoir and Swain Streets. HLADQUAR 1 E.RS QucTiiciTaffUßj 50*1 r ” MANUFACTURER’S LIST ON ELECTRIC FIXTURES Electrical Wholesalers be. Ml N. Wmt St ■SBBBBBBi Pork Sausage lb. 33c or 3 lb. 89c Rib Beef Slew lb. 29c Fresh Spare Ribs lb. 36c or 3 lb. 99c Sliced Pork Steak lb. 49c Gold Note Oko lb. 18c End Cut Pork Ckbpc 6. 58c Fresh Ground Beef ft. 3fe or 3 A» 1.14 Rib Beef Steak E 65c Good Weiners lb. 36c or 3 lb. 99c Fresh Pork Neck Bones lb. 15c Sliced Pork Liver 5 29c • Center Cut Peek Ckopt h. 69c HORTON’S CASHSTORE - the banter separating thd utotert al from the spiritual, c To the youth of Mo Dr. Morris who lg chairman of .the Board of Trustee* of Vorheee Col lege. noted educator, and ardent churchman offend thete wards, “The magic ward." stated fie speaker, “and a disturbing on i to* day. Is automation. On the apt hand we have a population o . plosion, with manpower lncrear lng at an enormous rate; while, on the other hand, we have the mul tiplicity of machines capalfi of taking over more and more the repetitious processes fprm*r*y done by hand and perform i’\i them with a delicacy, preolMo ". and gpeSd that could never match!" ATTEND THE CHI *' ! or your cHC:n: MONDAY