Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / Sept. 5, 1959, edition 1 / Page 2
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nss; cmoumsM WERE ENDING isATU«.DAY, •SSFTRAttSJt 5, IS&S 2 GANG WAR VICTIM'S RITES HELD I {casitum ed from saga 15 SOS ,; ia ar. effort to spark shame end AotJOB out of New Yorkers j The .Rev. Myers, who has his j owa parish .at St Augustine’s cha • : pel in a slum area. Usbed out at j police, social workers, clergy and ‘ the entire citizenry as to the blame 1 of Theresa s slaving Addressing the congregation | which filled one-third of the i. 500 | j seats in Trinity church, Rev My- 1 j ess Said. r ‘lf you cared about her, then j j let this be your memorial to I her Let there he no more Mid- ! den death in the streets of the i lower east side. Let no tnao cent people fall to these streets j Banish all thoughts of retalia tion Have heart, rsa! heart I like our Lord Jesus Christ, who i had courage ” Three years ago he arranged 5 j I truce, between the Sports:non and j [ the Forsyte street gang. The true ! I fell apart and bla.ied into open | I warfare, last Sunday. The. girl was ! I reported the friend of the presi ! dent of the Sportsman I A LANDMARK I Trinity church 1? considered one j cf New York s -best known land- j I marks and just a block away is the ; I New York Stock Exchange. Keith ! I Funsters, exchange president., is a | I vestryman at the church I The two gangs are racially mix- j ■ed although the Forsyth gang is j I largely Puerto Rican The trouble [ apparently started four days be ■ fofe the fatal shooting when a fist-- i I fight developed between a member [ of each gang CHUCK’BERRY’ TO FORFEIT MISS, BOND? (CONTINUED FROM PAGE, it I the Officers Club at the Meridian I Municipal Airport after he was ac- j I cased of asking the 20-year-old ; I white girl for a date, and said he i I hid for 45 minutes in empty mill- j I tary barracks at the airport until j I police arrived ■ Berry said the white teenagers j I begged him to play overtime at the I dance ’ Those young cats were really i I having a ball.'' he said 1 think j I the manager of the place, stopped 1 I the overtime idea Somebody puli | ed the plug from the guitar am- i I plifier "Then the** young folks came I s round for autographs.” he I said He said some of the teenagers. I then began’‘ acting up” and in sisting that he sing some more I of his songs such as "Maybe! - line 1 and "Memphis, Tennes -1 "Some bov came across the room ; I and called me a smart nigger ' He j I later said something about dating I his sister ' hose autograph I had I signed.' Berry said "She was the daughter of a rail- j I road official or something. She was . I ss prelrv a* you ever saw. She j I looked a lot younger than 20 like j i they say more like 16." he said. Berry said the hand a group I from Meridian which played for ( I the dance, "got. out in a hurry.” I He said he was left alone with ; I the ' kids acting up” and decided 1 I to get outside He dashed into 'be 1 I empfv barracks, he said and hid I for 45 minutes '"The border from Mississippi to I Alabama was about 20 miles and I 1 was thinking about trying to run I <h,e way. Those ca‘s were real I warm 2 81-RACIAL I F APES CLAIMED IN THE STATE (CONTINUFD FROM FAGF it 15-year-old girl who thought she war going to a babysitting job Officers identified the youths as j Wentworth ,Jamison and .Timmy j Mosley, both of Wilmington They | were being held without bond j pfnrbn; a her-ring. A police spokesman said the THE CAROLINIAN i 'Covermj! the Carotins*' Published b; the Oatolinl»n Publishing Company MS East Martin Street Raleigh. N C. CEn-treo *4 Second Clat, Apr)! j * 1(H0. fh.e Fc«* Oftic* tn Raieign. i North Carolms. uhder tea Act of 1 March. 18795 gUBSCBIPnQN B ATES Eu-c iloiithi IS V> Y*4i Mto Payable In Advance Address all com- aid rfsake *U checks‘ end money orderg peyable to THE CASIO UINIAN I»terst.»te OCited Newspaper*, toe. V Fifth Avenue New York 17 N s Nat'Oftel Advertising Repreaentot ve n arid j&’Sric.fter of tht AA&6ciSt?,ed Nested, H Press and toe United Pres* Phctc I i Seiwies P R. JFC&VAY. Publisher i The Publisher is not responsibi* foi B toe return of uasolicited newt, oic-1 H tu res of advertising copy on test re:- j a esssry postage accompanies the »»v l B Opinions ex pressed by column let* in 1 | this cewspapet do r.ol nscesr.srilv i lepresen' the policy ot toi* oaptr Chur:h Bonus Money Rules Ail purchase jjijjs a: receipt* preifchtaa to your church roust uom* trow *tores adVeftisiaf tn tbs C'AfIOIJtNIAN . Saeh week came* a dal* us the Bcnv.t Money pcrtad rurmasus aligibl* Bust cosne from tne store during the week the "ad" appear* No purehste slips representing a nuewes* should »* submitted All receipt.' mu*t corns fr6ra individual purchases All c&urches tn Raleigh anc Wake County era eligible All pur'chate slips must b*ar tha a»mt at th* star* train wftief. the *u»- rheme u/fss t»*ffs Ail purchase slip* saouie e* submitted us the n»m« «{ the cnuroh, and eftould be fa the office of the CAROLINIAN the Mfortda.v tslidwmg close «M Bonus period id order that smeller churches may neve an aßuai opportunity to share ut K>» genus Money the fallowing regulation is expedient Ha church ot ever aw member* will ■*« awarded tti Bonus Money consecutively te should « church of JWi or merit memftprs receive Ist Bonus Money after the first pent** it would ftsv« to weit until tN. third Bonus period to he ffcrdaentaS Ist «*■ arr, again. except where a church he* 400 or less member*, the* tt could win top Bonus s*.v*.*d* consecutively However, this does W mean that serend and third award* cannot be sought consecutively Consequently every ehurch grin.' hat he 6pport!inif.y to aaepre an award every parted No purcbe.se of aver SAW »r #» any obc mars hast dnrtaj « weak kv,e fee ©05153 jfltere !.s a coifitts m SIS per person * week for grocery purchase* Eh the event ol the net amount of purchases fey nuts* Uut on* entry the ewfefjj will ae divided Weekly purchase total* should a* shown on each packet and total placed on the outside «! the envelope carrvln* the period's entry alone with name and address ®oaus money earners will fee snnourc as u< the tsattc ratio win* the efeetne of eH Ji period Ah entries remain th* property ot fti* c&MOLINIAfei Ail ui living tt final wh"h the names of Use Mop.ue Hues? earner* are *» Bout H-ad In The 1 AHOi INIAN. and no responsibility u accepted by this new*' paper beyond that point No receibtt flow bank* wit! fee cnastdared eerape mv«m»b< **a asvitaas**. gtd sold office** the hoys ftttf picked, her up «c the ptetease of tokto* hoi to s bnUysiUtag job but drove i&atead to a se cluded area about six sail** irons here. She Mjd bails of the youths assaulted her and then returned her to & street near her borne. The girl's toother notified police who arrested the two y-Ouths Fn 4ay The girl identified tb&H in a -police line-up. A medical examination showed the girl had had sexual relations, officers said DEAN BRANDIS IRKED OVER BOARD’S ACTION (CON’SXNifcB FROM PAGE T) cation was first rejected that | hi. would appeal to the courts if it were rejected -again. But instead, at Monday night's meeting of the board. Pearson con- j ; gratuiated the board for "taking j the step” of planning integration | I for next year GROOM, 96, WEDS BRIDE, 60, IN RALEIGH (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 11 Cars filled the parking space .toy the church and faces of spectators j 1 from outside the building poked | into the windows for a glimpse of j ! the happenings inside. The couple arrived at. .1:00 p.m. and the min- j : ister entered into the ceremony j i immediately. Mr, Frierson is the lather of & 50-year-old son by his first, wife. Mrs. Frierson is the mother of a 35-year-old daughter, now mar ried. Th? former wives of Mr. Fri erson and the former husband of Mrs. Fuerson are all dead. No plans for a honeymoon were revealed but the couple hope to reside a*. 511 Smithfield Street. : FAMILY OF ! THREE NOW OUT OF JAIL (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1) The Communist Party attempt ed to make a cause celebre of the, case A number of hearings into j the ca.se were large, noisy and; demonstrative. Members of the Women s Com | mifcte For Equal Justice in New York staged successive pilgrimages to Georgia Governors to seek clemency for the Ingrams, evefi though the original death sen tences had been commuted to life imprisonment. The release of the Ingrams was ordered by the State Pardon and Paroles Board Wednesday Dr. C. R. Yates, a wealthy At lanta druggist, who handled the Ingrams defense, has guaranteed ; employment for Mrs Digram and her two sons, ! MISS BROWN TRIUMPHS AT ELKS’ CONFAB (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1> ; N. C. chapter of Elks and grand ! 1 lecturer, was given the honor of ; j “Elk of the Year” by the. Civil; Liberties Department, headed by Hobson R. Reynolds. N AT MEMORIAL-EDUCATIOa 1290 At Memorial - Education Rally Some 1200 Bills and Da ugh ter - Eiks gathered here at the. Atlantic City Senior High Sciiol Sunday morning to pay tribute to the 435 male Elks and the 649 Daughter Elks who had departed this life since the last convention. The Rev R. H Collins Lee. grand chaplain ol' IPBOEW, as sisted by the Rev, Otis E. Dunn, an assistant grand chaplain, Ashe ville, N. C . conducted the serv ices. Chaplain Lee delivered the eulogistic sermon Music waa bv a j chorus directed by Mrs Florence Blango. The Rev. Lee spoke on “The Need for Faith in Our Times.'” | Declaring that it is not necessary 1 for one nation to race with an . other in the matter of armaments, I the AME Zion minister said! “Somehow, it has not been got ; ten over by the President of the ! United States that this nation 1 needs e renewed faith ir, God.” | "This nation, as well as this or i gamzation.” he continued, “needs 1 to return to the principles upon which it. was founded ” THE GRAND” REPORTS The convention opened officially Tuesday morning when the gave! was sounded by Grand Exalted 'Ruler Dr Robert ■ Our Bob) John son of Philadelphia. Pa. "The Grand” made his report of i the standing of the Order to some i 400 assembled official delegates, | along with grand secretary W. C, ! ' Bill > Hueston and grand treaA | urer Perry B Jackson, all of i whom reported the "Grand Old Order in good stead, both from j the standpoint of morale and fin- wise-. | JDr. Johnson. recounted sixty I ysars of progress of the Improved, 1 jßenswolent, Protective Order of Elks of the World and its sub stantial auxiliary—-the Temple. He lauded the founders among whom Howard; the late J. Finley Wilson, were the first exalted ruler, B P. immediate predeces sor: and the recently departed T Gillts Nutter of Charleston, W. Va„ whose guidance has been of inestimable value to the organiza tion during recent years. In 1547 receipts were listed as $ ISO ,217 In 1952 it was down to $97,137 and the two highest list ings of receipts were $212,681 in 1949, and $226,328 in 1950. The next hign was $208,521 in 1957 and. then a dip to $154,133 in 1958. the second lowest in II years. ! Among the' seven students 4 j boys and three girls—participat ing in tire National Oratorical Contest after having already won SI,OOO each on the regional level, | John Clay Smith, Omaha, Neb., j emerged the winner with an ad ditional $l5O purse. Runner-up to Smith was Fen | non L. Dunlop, Steelton, Penna. 1 Other contestants were: Senor j Scranton, Los Angeles. Calif ; Se i rite Doyle. Dallas. Texas: Joseph : R. Jourd&in, Washington, D. C.; Dainne Simmons, Brunswick, Ga. | and James Overton, St. Louis Mo. COPS RAID WAKE SPOTS, 7 NABBED (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1) taxpaid liquor, and for operating j his place of business without a | state license. Arrests at the Social Ciub in volved Rudolph Mickens on a i charge of public drunkenness ar.d j Panda Banks on a charge of pos- i sessing non-texpaid liquor. More trouble is alleged to have occurred at the* Cabin bv 1 the River. Clarence Tharring ton. 23, of Wendell was treat ed at the St. Agnes Hospital for a lip cut he received at this night spot. To carry out. their detail, the : lawmen surrounded these night j spots, check each person as he leaves, and search the premises Departing vehicles are also check ed by Highway Patrolmen work i mg on the highway. BOYCOTTERS “EYING” NEW ALABAMA GOAL (CONTINUED FROM RAGE 1> teg rated, classrooms tomorrow ia five cities. They are Norfolk. Alexan dria. Arlington, Charlottesville and Front Rova.l. The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People filed suits last Friday and Satur ; day to integrate schools of Galex and of Floyd County Other suit* are pending or threatened, in Rich | tnond. Newport News. Staunton and ! and Lynchburg raleigiTonly MAJOR CITY WITHOUT MIXING' (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 11 Children of military personnel iat Seymour Johnson Air Force j Base entered previously all-white | classes in Wayne County. In High Point, two girls enrolled i in a white school without incident In Chapel Hill, where the appii i cation of a sixth grader. Stanley ' Vickers, was rejected for the sec i ord time on Monday night, en ap : peal to the courts is being consid | ered by Atty Conrad Pearson of ! Durham. A member of the school j board, Doan Henry P Brandis of I the University of North Carolina I resigned as a result of the board's 1 decision State Briefs (CONTINUE® FROM PAGE. 11 American Bar Association held a two-day meeting with the Presi dent's Committee on Traffic. Safe ly, st Miami Beach. The PR told the lawyers and (he committee that his denomi nation was vitally interested In Halting death on the highway amd the r.iamiming of bodies by automobile?.. He told the. meet ing that he thought a circula tion of the nation’s member, ship, throughout the churches, would prove highly helpful He urged an extensive program for rural drivers. The Committee agreed to fur nish helpful information on traffic safety. Mr. Barnes agreed to make it available to the members of the AME Zion Church MISS MAHAFFEY RESIGNS RALEIGH The chief X-ray techntoi&n of Saint Agnes Hos pital in Raleigh will resign her post so ®f September sft Mias Bernel L. Mahaffey. origi nally of Jackson. Miss., who has i held thjs post for 7 years, will en- I ter Washington University in St Louis. Migs. this fall. She received s scholarship from the National ! Elks Foundation In aid her in fur j ihering her studies | Sts, ‘.3 Collage A/.swers QUESTION: What are the sd i vantages of ftelled dorset sheep | ever other breed** ANSWER: The new strain of | palled dftrsat* has received a lot of attention lately. Actually, the fact j that, they are polled, white their i ehcestftrs bed hunts, is what makes i '.hem more useful and easy to hsn ! die. Korn* make shearing mare dlf | ficult. sometimes grow into the ! head- and frequently get caught in ! woven wirft fences and farm equip. | meat And polled animsi* require i less feed bunk apace and ma not I subject to infestation by the horn BEAUTY CONTEST WINNER Mu* Jeanne Toney. Spaulding 4-H Club member ot Spring Hope, and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Toney, a retiring beauty queen, i> shown crowning Miss *l>elois Hines, Red Oak 4-H’er. and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Hinas. ■ as beauty queen for 1859. . . . , _ - _ | JIEL jjk ; DRESS REVUE WINNERS Misses Gloria Richardson, left, modeled the best fashion dress and her companion, Miss Jeanne j Toney, is wearing the best party dress hi the 4-H Dress Revue held recently at Central High School, Nash County Both are members of ; the Spaulding Senior 4-H Club, Spring Hope. worm. j QUESTION How much of the beef consumed in North Carolina ii produced m 'his State? ANSWER: Home slaughtered beef amounted to about 7. per cent of the consumption in the j state In 1958. or roughly ft mil lion pounds, Os the estimated 28? million pounds of beef pur- We Don’t CLAIM to Give 'You Anything j 8ut.... More Value at Less Cost! Kraft’s Sliced Cheese 25c AMERICAN OS PIMIENTO Kraft a a j * Minute Mayonnaise Qt. Oatmeal 12-!)*. pkg SUC Morton’s tack Frost .... . „ , Mali Mb, U»-o, <g CA 1 Pk«> 2 frt! §yQ ; Stealc lb £P|jg BOR^MScOiTCTFOii4Sc Fresh Ground jg s» ' Home Grown a4| Beef . lb Tomatoes lb J ||o Blue Plate j Grind & ate Mayonnaise. . . Pt. £ j Bananas 4-ibs. | |JC| j Fresh Park Spare Ribs 41b,. 99c fresh Pork *«*.*«* ! Bfack *1 fj* Liver . . !b. Pepper 4-os. can | |j|g Good a* i Meadors Peanut | Weiners , lb. siyji£p j ®«M*r QL JjJJjJ j Open Friday Night Until 9 P.M. HORTON'S CASH STORE 1415-17 S. Saunders St. Dial TE 3-2*51 Raleigh. N C { | chased throuch retail outlets in North Carolina last year onlv about a fifth came from cattle produced and slaughtered in this state. The only denser confronting newspapers u their failure to print the news fairly and accurate- | ly TROOPER-TEACHER IN ALGERIA Algerian children art given their Imkcik by a Neg?e French soldier belonging to one of the infantry units occupying this rugged mountain area since the retreat of rebel forces from the district. The 2tt-man units live in the remote villages of ihe region, sharing in the daily life of the population instead of isolating themselves in forts. Each unit includes a medical eorp*- m&n and s, teacher. (TIPI PHOTO!, it Pays To j | ew Fashion Hits For advertise j School and Fa 11,,, Sept. Specials ! LADIES IQt Presto Cookery DRESSES COATS $15.93 to $10.95 WALKERSUITS SKIRTS 6 Qt. Presto Cookery t ___ $19.95 to $14.95 SWEATERS Standard House ‘ , I -——MEN’S——) High paint H ° USe CONTINENTAL | Rubberßase MEN’S SUITS [ paint OVERCOATS % COATS Iticofors SUEDE JACKETS OILS - THINKERS . DRIERS r„ , ■ - iT.a.T.r.-i-n-.nr-r-,, *» S.M. YOUNG “It’s Easy To Pay The 0. K. Way" | Hardware Q. K. CLOTHING CO. 130 E. MARTIN ST 9 *S*B «W* w ** s Dial TEmple 3-7121 j n 5 E MARTIN ST. flir ~ T * lll,lll 'irbiitmtin***'**™'™ ai'Mia n Timun nr nrin—mr ~ ~ n-wmrnr-yr Lovely Separates For Back - To-School! y The loveliest separates under the Aug ust sky . . . shaped and shaded in an Autum mood . . . designed in the soft- jr* v est and prettiest wool or cashmere BEAUTIFUL SWEATERS SKIRTS |V Priced Right to Fit Tour Budget M//" | REMEMBER | i FUR SALE 1 _ _ . «aHA IS NOW BLOUSES Fon Can Always Find Serviceable , Colorful Dresses At “The Little Shop Around The Comer ” j Goodman’s Ladies’Shop Wilmington at Hargett Sts. Far Style* Quality And Value ■ — See Goodman s
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 5, 1959, edition 1
2
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