Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / Sept. 19, 1959, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
THE CASOUMXAII WEEK ENDING SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1»»9 2 “SWEET DADDY’S” ! “SOLDIER” OUT ON BOND NOW (CONTINUED FROM PAGE I) and Henry Clark, 17, all of Ral eigh. Witnesses told police the three I youths were “horsing around” with Richmond in front of "Daddy” Grace's church. They said the young men dropped the rope in play hut Richmond reacted in ear nest, drawing the gun and shoot ing. NEGOTATIONS ARE MADE IN TWO CITIES (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1) w;]) go to the Chicago White Sox; Don. Bush 18-year-old third base man. and 19-year-old shortstop Kenny Free go to the St. Louis Cardinals' organization. However, the Tigers’ managerial and promotional operations wiil he carried out on a much larger scale during the 1960 season. 16TH ANNUAL” NAACP CONFAB TO ASHEVILLE (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1) he held at Mt. Zion Baptist C hurch. 4” Eagle St., where (he Rev, I. W. White, exerts five vice president, N. C Gen eral Baptist Convention, is minister. Whh the. official opening of the convention proper on Friday morning, October 9th. seminars " Cl be conducted by Herbert Hill. N AACP Labor Secretary just re turned from a study of labor con oitions in Europe: Jack E. Wood, ,tr special assistant on housing; and Mrs. Constance Baker Motley, a;D counsel. NAACP Legal De tfi<« and Educational Fund Inc., will deliver the keynote address on Friday night at the opening - ass meeting. Attorney Motley is edited with winning the recent Atlanta school cases and was act iv* in the Greensboro cases. On Saturday. Attorney Jack Oh eenberg. Conrad O Pearson, Ttuben J. Daley Floyd McKissack and ether lawyer? will discuss le gal strategy in a special clinic for j a u' ver* “LOVER^SHOOTS INTO HOME OF HTS GIRLFRIEND (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 11 Gaines a native of Georgia, first began having 'trouble on. Monday when Miss Bowler signed a war art accusing him of assaulting her ■ ■ :th a knife After he was released on bend. Gaines stent to Wi South si re*! to see Miss Bowler. When she refused to talk to b<m h* raught a bus in Crreens hero where he picked np a AS pistol and returned here. »e --eording to police. Monday at about II p m he walked up to Miss Bowler's door «ay and fired four wild shots T -ere were about eight persons in the bouse at the time Gaines reportedly grabbed Lis- j on in the dark and shot him with out ascertaining his identity. CH \NGE OF PLEA MADE IN ASSAULT (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 11 She said she jumped up and dirs-rd but was afraid to try to get away Mrs. Matthews rp- U*te how she talked and play ed records )>,r two hours he so-e (he man left the house. She »--'d he never threatened her ’Jr; Matt new- said France asked he- (0 go back to bed hut that she refused Her husband, she testified had left home earlier to take a truck fi;i of grain to Statesville The woman said she waited un -1 ' d-v bght to report 'he incident * she did not know what the assailant might do. When dawn THE CAROLINIAN 'Covering the Carotins*''' Published b; the Carolinian Publishing Company MS East Martin Street Raleigh. N. C. (Entered as Second Class Matte! April * igio. it the Port Office tn Raleigh North Carolina, under th* Act of March. 1878) , r , SUBSCRDPTION RATES: Six Months - tt-W One Year •••*•» Pavsble to Advance. Address ail eom rv'.uni-rations and make all checks and me.nev orders payable to THE CAJtO LESTAN Interstate United Newspapers, toe s' Vifth Avenue, New York 17. N V National Advertising Representat've end member of the Associated Negro Press and the United Pres* Photo Service. p. R. JERVAT. Publisher • Th» publisher is not responsible (nr the return of unsolicited news. 01c tures or advertising copy unless ner eis* rv postage accompanies the copv Opinions expressed by columnists m this newspaper do not necessarily represent (he policy of "ms paper Church Bonus Money Rules AS purchase silo* or receipts present®?! to your church must corn# from stores advertising in' the CAROLINIAN D iSac'i week came* s, date in the Bonus Money period Purchase* ellgic.s must come from toe store during the week the "•J"J»PPe*»- ... No purchase slips representing a husiness should be subm.weo Al> receipt must come from individual purchases All churches in Raleigh and Wake County are eligible. Ail purchase slip* must bear the name of the iter* from which the otir chasft was road«s. All purcha*« stiw should submitted in the nnm« oi the church, and aheu'id be in the office of the CAROLINIAN the Monday following close of Bobus period. In o-d&T tbirt emeller churches m»y have an equal opportunity to share ui the Bonus Money the following regulation is expedient Mo church of ever 300 members will s * awarded Ist Bonus Money consecutively, l.e should » church of 200 or more members receive Ist Bonus Money after the tlrr. pence It would have to wait until the third Bonus period to be presented Ist aware again, except where a church has 300 or less member*, then It could win top Bonus awards consecutively However, this does not mean that second and third awards cannot be sought consecutively Consequently every church grcu. ha* the opportunity to secure an award every period. No purchase of over S3W from any merchant durtfts * week can or cetsated . . There is a eettta* es W per persop * week for grocery purchase* m the event of the same amoont of purchase* by more than on* entry rht award will he divided. Weekly purchase totals abouW he shown each packet end total places or the: outside of the envelope carrying the period’s entry alone with name and address. Bonn* money earners will be snnonneed to the tmue fnliosrij,* ths elostna Alf af'tr?*' rur/salß the property of The CAROLINIAN All tallying is final when the carnet of the »ps«B Munt-y eamen e.r* *a mancsd Sa The CAKOLINXAN, and no r<wpsaa«>U!<;< Is accepted by this sews paper heyaad that putot. „ . Wo receipt* froro hvnirs will be ee-' iT, i eynmmt came, she went to the burnt of s neighbor who drove her to the sheriff’s office where she signed the warrant INTERRACIAL ~ TWOSOME IN i TROUBLE (CONTESUED FROM PAGE ») gfo blood. Authorities said Thursday they believed she U white. They said she toid them she was worth some half-million dollars and that she and Nash were shop ping in Bristol and planned to be married and settle down here j A Bristol bank said she deposited a check for $23,050 with it and re quested the money be transferred | to her Charlotte bank. The bank |in Charlotte reported it did not : have an account, in her name BOYCOTT ENDS IN GOTHAM (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1> ears outside the five schools said : , the scene was quiet, in contrast to | j picketing by both parents and J pupils Monday. Monday’s boycott in Queens j was billed by the students’ pa rents as s one-day protest »- gainst transferring students s eross county Sines, Two hundred Negro students abo boycotted their neighbor j hood schools in Harlem. Their parents plan to take them to morrow to Riverdale, an all- j white section of the Bronx, to enrol! them in schools there. This move was another reaction to the school board's policy of transferred several hundred white students t.o the Riverdale School, and the Negroes claim they have j as much right as anyone to be j transferred from schools they | claim are "segregated and inferi j or " No other incidents occurred to j ! mar the return of 1.500.Q00 students j j to the city’s schools, j There was picketing but no vi- 1 | olence at five elementary schools j i in the- neat Ridgewood - Glendale j - section of Queens as 302 transfer j students, most of them Negro, ar ! rived in special buses. Teachers j I said the new students, neatly j dressed and weli-behaveed, got a- j long amicably with their white i classmates, CONTROVERSY ERUPTS OVER PREXY’S STAND (CONTINUED FROM PAGE I) (he right to discriminate » gainst other races, so long as said practice is restricted in the field of private associa tion, clubs and fraternities. "It is not legally wrong until a pere-on attempts to have his pre.i- ( I udices condoned by law and sup ported by the government, " CALL SPEECH “RACIAL TREASON” As news of Dr. Jackson s defense of prejudice and Jim Crowism flashed over the wire services to all sections of the country, a tidal j wave of resentment came from' both Negroes and libera! whites of all religious faiths, many of them who called the Jackson speech j "racial treason.” * A former Chicagcen. A. Phelps Williams, now living on the West Coast and describing himself as a "disgusted Baptist,” attended the Civic auditorium meeting. Once outside, he voiced his dis gust in no uncertain terms. "What, do you expect, of Jack son, ’ he told a rapidly-gathering crowd. "He thinks he's a 'little Jesus’ 'Napoleon, lording over .nearly five miilion Baptists, but selling out to the Negro-bating, race-hating Dixiecrats who hail him as the modern savior of his | people but who wouldn’t eat at the same lunch counter with him "DON’T MESS WITH MY WHITE FOLKS" ‘Dr Jackson has told (he Negros of America-, ‘Do-’ I'* 1 '* mess with my wh'te folks. Dcy know what dry’s doing and dey sho' is good to me.’ So friends, you can have Dr. Jackson from here on in. If you think like him. you’ll »ft like him. So make up your mind ” Other statements in Dr Jack son s speech, which lasted 90 min- j utes and has sipcp elicited nation -, wide condemnation were reported. Slate Briefs (CONTINUED FROM PAGE W I outcome, of the examination. He also said he had asked that the child be given a medical examination at a local hospital. The attack on the unidenti fied child wa* reported last week but was not made public until Tuesday. CIVIL RIGHTS DISCUSSED G R EF,NSBORO The chairman ... —j i , National Guard Is Attacked North Carolina’s National Guard came m -for criticism las' week from the state's Advisory Commit tee on Civil Rights. Commenting on the Guard, the committee said its racial discrimination is total and com plete. It said there are no Ne groes in the Guard because of laws against it, and added that there-is very little constitution al support for these laws. The comments were contained >n a report that is being forwarded to the committee’s parent body, the Civil Rights Commission. : The committee also looked into I the question of Negro schools ir, j Yancey County. Parents from the ! far western county appealed to the 1 committee for help in eliminating j the 80-mile round-trip their chil dren must take to attend Negro schools m Asheville, j The Negroes were rejected in an [ appeal for admission 1o white ! schools in Yancey County, which | has no Negro schools. of the North Carolina Cite! Righl? Committee' said Tuesday he pre ferred the sweeping proposals of the Civil Rights Commission to be done within the framework of present laws. McNeil Smith. Greensboro alio | ney in commenting on .proposals presented Mond • by the Civil Rights Commission, said it was ob ! vious North Carolina "doesn't hav<- the same situation as other .states where qualified Negroes cannot ! get. registered.” i Jn the cattle business, lush pas ture and a heavy population of stomach worms go together De worm calves befre sale time for ! extra pounds, — j Any livestock worm treatment • should be considered only as a supplement to a strict sanitation program; it is a treatment, no? a I cure. Use of a mechanical hay crusher speeds the hay curing period by up to 50 per cent. ! CARNATION ir'^'%, poking Hif ■■'. ,nm I A (1a s7)/> / i fy/fayrnfo | 1 HOME SERVICE DIRECTOR EEC HER , I J Pie is America's favorite dessert -and made the modern Carnation way. it c.y. be as good as, if no’ bet Mother's used to be! Carnation Evaporated M>lk gives vour cream pies a rich flavor and smooth texture not pos sible with any other form of milk. That's because it is whole milk with more than half the water removed by Carnation's secret process. It can be used like cream, hut. contains less than half the lat calories of cream. It s easy on the budget, too. COCONUT CREAM P'S "Makes 9-inch sir ~!c-crust pie'. :i!o pudding mix 2 leespoon 1 .„v.. unflavore-d ge!r 1 br.icn <• 1 % cups (loege tan) <t- I 't cI; P stJ S ;,r CARNATION EV ’ 1 Vi eug* shredded coconut 1 cup wo ter ’-inch single baked pie shei! Mix the pufldir > ’ >'•'*>' «M»° f ute^ ; BHrtxpJ Add / ? n Stiff I B bout 1 minutei.And and water, rook m>r u.w heat lemon juice, v. mr. i rr, -iff (2 according to pudding mix direr, ny-wu-s longei '• t.i'-na Cool until thirl en-’d ?' d j'-i’-i '.vh.; m 'r- ■ mixture mounds frdm spoon < p '' o -onU' 1 ’ ° h f - f * n -» I'a’ip-'t 4* m'T.utee) Peat until I "re Pour into cooied me shell. Istht 'and fluff; ' Ado vanilla. Toastwmainmgcocotiidmmod- Cr.ni remaining- Carr.at'O" in eiate oven <350 f ' * v-pr :“ refrigerator tray until soft ice on pie Chid *to e uourg in re* crystals form around edges of Irvgerator. i ANN! YES ARY SALUTES Two Los Angeles business institutions Carnation Company and The Los Angeles Sentinel were recipients of | anniversary salutes recently when representatives of the Negro press visited in the West Coast city. Seen above at Carnation World Head quarters arc S. A. Haigren, Carnation Company vice president- left, and Leon H. Washington, Jr., Sentinel publisher, second from left, are seen with Cleveland’s William O. Walker, president, National News- | paper Publish* rs Association. Mrs. Ernest K. Tave, Los Angeles con-; sumer consultant for Carnation, and Howard Murphy, Baltimore, who, is president of Associated Publishers, Inc. Carnation Company, pro- j duccrs of the world’s finest milk products, was organized in Septum- j her , 1899 a bile the Sentinel first appeared in 1934. High State Honors For Wake County 4-H Boy Benjamin Newkirk. Route 2 Ral eigh. of the Garner 4-H Club, chalked up the highest score in judging Ay rshire cows at the State 4-H Dairy Judging Contest held re cently at the State 4 - H Dairy Farm. R. L. Wynn. Negro Extension Dairy Specalist of A. & T. Col lege. notified W. C. Davenport, Wake County Agricultural A gent, that Newkirk scored 142 j WOULD HAPPEXIXCS j NIGERIA TO HAVE TELEVISION SOON LONDON The Government of Nigeria's Western Region and Ov erseas Redifussion of London will : ; set up a television system in Nige ria some time in September The new station v. ill have two transmitters, ai Ibadan, capital of I the Western Region, and at Lagos.j ' the Federal capital. In the meantime Twentieth 1 Century Fox Film Corporation is planning to install a television system in the Federation of Rho ; desia end Nyasaiand. Other companies ABC Tele vision. Granada Television. Asso i ciat-d Television. National Broad casting Company, Associated Re diffusion Ltd, of London— are ai !so considering plans for placing 'television systems in oihei parts : of Africa. v * # * Diseases Stemmed In Nairobi, Africa NAIROBI A. Kenya A meet in.: of the World Health Organiza tion was held here on Monday to discuss joint action against com municable diseases. Representa tives of nine countries were ex po" ted. > Evident eradication of yaws and points out of s possible 150. Others on the Wake County team we r p Charles Brandon, Route 1, i Varma; Wade McClain,• Route 3. Raleigh;and Everett Atwater, Ral j eigh. j Forty-two 4-H judging teams from all over North Carolina par i tieipated in the contest, I W. C Davenport is Wake County j Agricultural Agent. ! indication that leprosy is now in- j Dieting its last victims are result-s ■ of a similar meeting held last year; by the United Nations Agency, a spokesman said. The spokesman said the meeting j was expected to call for a total ex penditure of $7,292,000 in consid | ering its 1961 program. • * * * PETITIONS HEARD IN ACCRA, GHANA ACCRA. Ghana A letter to Prime Minister Kwame Nkrumah appealed for an end to "acts of brigandage and hooliganism.” a gainst members of the opposition United Party. Joseph Appiah deputy leader of the Parliamentary Opposition,, complained that he and other members of the United Party were constantly attacked by gangs. Last Sunday they were attacked while on their way to an election rally. Severa’ - persons were injured and cars were damaged, Mr. Appiah is married to a ! daughter of the late Sir Stafford Cripps. Chancellor of the Ex chequer in the British Labor Gov - ernment after "World War 11. INDUSTRIAL DRIVE NOW ON IN CAIRO CAIRO Egypt In an effort to i double the national income in ten years. The United Arab Republc has started a drive to speed up the industrialization of this country. The drive is also s race agains the nation's birth rate. The current national income is about $2,800,000,000. Growing bv about 500.000 annually, the pop ulation stands at, 28,000,000 Industries introduced under a five-year plan begun in 1957 and included factories foi canning shrimps, assembling trucks and automobiles, building sewing ms chines, and making transistor ra ’ dins, electrical appliances, machine tools and armaments. The huiidmg of the Aswan High Dam on the Nile and the New Gal ley Program, a plan to expand ; Egynt r, cultivable land area are SELECT YOUR ... FALL CLOTHES NOW ATO. K LADIES' ~j SWEATERS WOOL SKIRTS WINTER COSTS 29m u. MEN'S Suits Pants Jackets Sport Coats JUST CHARGE IT! 0. K. CLOTHING CO. 113 E. MARTIN ST. VIEWPOINTS IV THE VEU’S TRUMAN SCORES HATE GROUPS ST. LOUIS Former President j Harry S. Truman called for an in- j creased effort by the American people “to eliminate injustice and to create a society which carries j our ideals” in a filmed address here last week, Mr. Truman said that, movements that were origin ally motivated by a. “desire for greater justice among men' had j “wavered and lost their way.'” He further said that such move- j monte “have become self-centered ] they have set up their own inter- j ests as the only standard of right j and wrong and they have degen erated from movements of libera tion into movements of tyranny and oppression.” Mr. Truman referred to such hate groups and bigots as “ene mies” of the United States who sought to undermine democratic principles by creating racial and religious tensions. Names were not. | mentioned, * * * « i ATTITUDES, NOT i INTELLIGENCE LEVELS, STUDIED CINCINNATI (ANP)— Dr. Shel-i don R. Reen, a University of New Hampshire psychologist, has con tradicted the cliche that Negroes are bom mentally inferior tc whites. “Psychologists.” Dr Reen told delegates to the convention of the ■ American Psychological associa other projects underway. NIGERIA PLANS A TRADE FAIR LAGOS, Nigeria A trade ex- ; hibition here will coincide with Ni- ! geria’s independence celebrations i in October, i 960-, it was announced i last week. / MORE INTERNAL SELF-RULE ASKED j UNITED NATIONS < ANP < | According to reliable sources. Bar bados will be granted a "further degree of Internal self-govern ment” by the British government. The. anonuncement was made subsequent to a conference in Lon don between British Colonial Sec retary A. Lennox-Boyd and Dr Hugh Cummings, premier of Bar . bados. No details of the new privileges have been revealed. West Germany To Furnish Experts MONORVIA. Liberia 1 ANP > In cooperation with the Food and Agriculture Organization <FAO), ; the Government, of Felerad Repub lic of "Germany is sending three forestry experts to carry out an inventory of the four million acres of virgin forest, already included in the national forest of Liberia. A forestry school, established by FAO in Liberia, is now in its four th year of operation. Experts from the U. S. furnish ed by the International Coopera tion administration, are also work ing closely with FAO specialists in forestry research. LIBERIA NAMES ASSEMBLY GROUP MONROVIA i ANP i The Li berian government has named its delegation to the 14th session of the UN General Assembly, which opened Tuesday in New York. The delegation consists of Amhassador-at-!arge Henry Ford Cooper, chairman; form er Atty-Gcn. Christian Abayo inf Cassell, permanent UN del egate; Charles T. O. King, as sistant secretary of state; Miss Angie Brooks, Liberian Ambas sador to Italy; Nathan Barns, House of Representatives member; Livj Martin, director, Asian and African Affairs: Ernest Eastman and the Rev. R W. Harmon, Sapt Palmas Liberian Ambassador to the U. S. George Padmore and former Rep Albert, D Peabody were named alternate delegates tion, "have been faxed by the fact that Negroes on the average don’t j score as well on intelligence tests j as whites, even though there arej many Negroes with above average j Urban League Backs Rights Group’s Stand WASHINGTON, DC The | National Urban League, at the end | of its three-day 1959 Conference of ; last week, voted endorsement of j the recommendations of the Fed j eral Commission on Civil Rights, i ! The conference was held at ! j Washington’s Sheratcn-Park Hotel j Almost 800 persons attended | The report of the Federal Civil ! Rights Commission was issued, co- incidentally, on the first day of the League’s meeting, Tuesday, Sept, 8. Among its recommendations were some relating to the Negro voting rights, housing and public schools , integration. j Take care in grading tobacco; it i pays at the market Chemical analysis may often disagree with the most expert” forage judge. We Appreciate Your Business CLUB or RIB STEAKS LB. 69c r—iiirMniiHMUMiwiwiiiiwn —mwap—— hihibjiiwiinw'i—rowwinii«>ii mu ■■■ nr-awawm[—wjMinurtSS«g«B—» Gootf Slived Fresh Pork Bacon Ih. Avlf Liver Ih <£»OiU Lard '-lb. pkg. Potatoes. IT lb- GWWOllOASrir^ Pork Neck .* |» j Sliced Pork a . Bones lb | J|o Steak l -' Hri|J Southern Fresh Ground Rio Coffee HvC Bpl>f -h Fresh Pork Spare Ribs 4 u»- 99c ■ iiiwimimi ■ ■ ii ■■i ■ll "is wi— m mu ■!—in ii ■■ ■■iiti mi ■ininmwi i iiMriii—nun - iniianf—inn »»i Fresh Fork Sausas;* !b Meal &-lbs Weiners lb. 39C j Milk T * !! Ca?! lOg - n - , | m M ii I ——s— Open Friday Night Until 9 P.M, 1415-17 S. Saunders St Dial TE 3-2551 Raleigh. N C j ~ II ■! I I Mill I Ml 11^-ir-M—— ~ I MITTIrTWIir ■ ■—■'l' V The llpciier Gala In Every> Wcy THE MIGHTY mr I 1 m m 1 THE FORMIDABLE S, €. Wolverines O'KELLY FIELD ?S ! C College » Dnrltant Kickoff I:3© P* 3i. See and Hear... N. C. College’s New 112 Piece Band and The Prancing Majorettes Perform at the Half! Gen. Adm. $2, - Students sl, intelligence “But some researchers are used to proving Negroes ha v « less na tive mental ability than whites ” Dr. Rcen -ontended tests over looked the important factor of th* Negro's personality—that is, how he viewed himself “A Negro," Dr Been declared "might simply refuse to tackle s tougn test because he feels he can't do it. "This can throw a lot of doubt on the results of the intelligence | tests.” | The psychologist cited the fart that intelligence teste given Negro and white infante and pre-school children "show no difference in intelligence.’ SCHELL IS NAMED CITY ATTORNEY GARY, Ind < ANP) Harr Schell a Negro who has been act ing city attorney for the past six months, has been officially named city attorney by Mayor Genre 1 Chacharis. Schell. 48. a. graduate of Fisk | University and the University of i Indiana lav. school, succeeds Paul I R. Piazza. He also served as as | sistant city attorney from !953-V> ! LOTS FOR SALE Large wooded lots Si7f srr* up jon Khamkstt.n Road. Terms Cal l Or' ! Powell it MUrray 7-4938. Fuqua -1 Spring-. N r
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 19, 1959, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75