Big Crime Wave Descends Upon Raleigh fflSSp '-0 : i§N' * §«& * £ ■ SET ■ m: w 1 w / WM PEERING FROM BEHIND CELL BARS is George Wilson M who was sentenced to die in the electric chair recently for the slaving of two postal inspectors Criminal Court Judge David Caned handed out the death sentence to Wilson and court veteran ••aid it was the- first death sentence on a guilty plea in many years Wilson is scheduled to go to the chair on September 73rd w Chicago, 111 (UPI PHOTO) Hold Man In Seating, Robbery Os Cab Driver ROANOKE RAPtOS A 37- •• ear-old Roanoke Rapids man wv held Saturday under $5,000 bond on charges of beating and robbing a white cab driver. Police Chief .1 R Daniel said Arthur Fleming, on parole from a 30-year sentence for murder was arrested at his home Friday night Fleming is charged w ith beating cab driver Edward Gums and tak ing about SBO Daniel said Gums. Elks' Annual Pilgrimage Honors Late John Brown RT ,? R HAFRF.N HARPERS PERRY. W. Va - A pilgrimage of more than 500 mem bers and friends of the Improved Benevolent Protective Order of Elks of the World (IBPOEW) ga thered near here recently at. the famed John Brown Farm (owned Ist Psychiatrist CHARLESTON', W Va. Hr Mildred Mi*c hell-Bateman a Negro psychiatrist, last Friday became *he highest paid mem ber of her race in the history of the W«t Virginia siatp govern ment when she was appointed head of the State Mental Health Department’s Division of Fin fesslnnal Sprvire* bv Director R P. Haeerman at an annual salary of «14 fi?R CAROLINIAN ADVERTISERS BUY FROM THEM PAGE 2 Holton ; Cash Grocers PAGE I Winn-Dixie Store* Carters. Jnr. James O Blount Martin St Laundromat Cameron-Brown Co PAGE 4 Hudson Belk Walker-Martin Grtftls Food store Sunshine Bakery S M Vouns: Hardware PAGE ft Mechanics and Farmers Bank Federal Acceptance Corp Pittsburgh Paint A Glass Co. PAGE 7 Carolina Buirk Co. O’Neal Motors, Inc. Weaver Bm Auto Sales Sanders Motor Co. PAGE 8 Colonial Stores Taylor Radio & T Servlca € Karl Lichtmaa Odom Cur Rate Clothing K. E Quinn Furniture Co. Modern Finance Coro. PAGE « A&P Food Stores Firestone Stores Ranker* Fire Insurance Co. '■'‘till.. My God!*** Yells liixie Judge As Demos 9 Rights Plank Told scheduled to be transferred from here to a Richmond. Va , hospital, suffered a broke n jaw. a fractured hand and mutiple head injuries .n thr heating Gums identified Fleming as the Negro he picked up Thursday night and drove to the Bridgetown section of Roanoke -Rapids where the beating occurred. Daniel said Fleming denied the robbery and told officers he was at home Thurs day night. :by the Elks! for the annua! cele bration in honor of the famed abo litionist - John Brown and his men who staged an abortive at tempt to liberate colored slaves here in October 1858 Despit the fact that John Brown s raid was quickly halted with most of his 23 men 'slaves and whi tes* home either killed or captured and Brown himself being convicted and hanged for treason, today, the world, more and more considers the well-planned raid by Brown an immortal event and hundreds daily make their way to the old Engine House Fort which bears his name as it stand on the high bank of the Shenandoah Fiver on the campus of the now defunct Storer College NATIONAL SHRINE Tbrtre moved for historical (CONTINUED ON PAGE 2) , Efird's of Raleigh First-Cituens Bank and Trust Co. 1 Macon Barber Shop James O Blount PAGE Ki Ridgeway's Optician* Carolina Builders Corp. Caveness Insurance Agency 7-1 P Bottling Co. Dillon Motoi Finance Co. Popsi-Cola Bolling Co of Raleigh Warner Memorials Fayetteville St. Baptist Church Dr'uxe Bote] Bloodworth St Tourist Home PAGE H Washington Terrace Apts., Inc. Community Florist Umsfeads Gro A Trans Gus Russo Hatter* A Cleaners Pub ic Service Co. of N. C„ Inc PAGE IS McLeod & Watson Co. PAGE IS Hunt's Genera! Tire Co. Dunn's Esso Servicecenter Raleigh Funeral Home Acme Realty Co. | Raleigh Seafood Co i Gem Watch Shop i Standard Concrete Products Co. I Branch Banking and Trust Co. j Montgomery Ward i James O. Blount ii . f jSi** VOL 19. NO 40 Charlotte Ej&tret'H Stars: Second N. C. Lunch Counter Bows ‘Queen City' Stores Now Serving All CHARLOTTE lntegration of lunch counters in Charlotte began lowly Saturday wnth few Negroes taking advantage of the hard-won tiling by local merchants. Seven variety and depart ment stores agreed with the Mayor's Committee on friend ly relations to permit integra tion at their lunch counter* Spot check.- shortly after the stores opened and at. 3pm show ed few Negroes were taking r.d (CONTINUED ON PAGF 2) Nab 25 In Case Incident ROCKVILLE Md Twenty five persons, including a minister, were arrested on trespass mg charg es Sunday when they protested the white-only service at a restaurant in this Washington D. C. suburb. The incident took place at the Hi-Boy Restaurant, which serves Negroes at an outdoor drive-in section but reserves the dining room and lunch counter for whites All hut three of those arresf (CONTTNUED ON PAGE 2) ({o>a Freed After Bills Trial NORFOLK, Va Circuit Court •Judge Thomas Johns Monday dis missPd charges against eight teen age boys for distributing handbills during an anti-segregation dem onstration. Johnson said the boys commit ted no violation but failed to rule I on the const it ut.a Mona hty of a section of the. city code under which they were arrested The youths were arrested April 8 for passing out litera ture urging Negroes to stay a way from variety store lunch (rONTTNI'ED ON PAGE 2) State News —IN— Brief j i READING CLINIC SETS OPEN HOUSE DURHAM The Reading Clin- | ic staff and participants extend to j you s cordial invitation to attend 1 i heir 15th Annual Open House which will be held In the Com merce Building. North Carolina (CONTINUED ON PAGE 21 North Carolina’s Leading Weekly RALEIGH. N C.. SATURDAY. JULY 16. 1960 -*j' ... l&vik JURY WAS DEADLOCKED Manhattan Borough President Hulan lack and hi s wife tr< shown leaving court in New York last week after a iury trying him on conspiracy and conflict nt interest charges deadlocked after more than 20 hours of deliberation. The iury was dismissed The chief assistant district attorney said he would confer with Attorney General Frank Hogan about the possibility of a retrial. (UPI PHOTO V Fired Professor In Alabama Asking For Reinstatement MONTGOMERY. Ala Negro Scholar Ln vrence D Reddick tired from his history professor ship at Alabama State College as Young llcmorrais Srrk Supporl l ; or Slmlnil* LOS ANGELES Calif—The Na tional Commute of the Young Democratic Clubs of America a dopted a. resolution Sunday urging active support of the Negro sit-in movement. Other resolutions of the group advocated abolition of the Houv Committee on Un-American Aotiv | it ms, criticized the Eisenhower ad j ministration for its handling of Dr. Proctor Assumes Post I At A And T GREENSBORO—The new presi dent of A & T College has sounded a challenge for a continu ing increase in the emphasis at the institution on academic excellence. Dr Samuel DeWitt. Proctor, the I former president of Virginia Un ! ion University. Richmond, Va . | last week assumed duties as fifth j president of the 69-year old institu | tion. He said this will be his fore most objective "to enhance the growing reputation of the col lege as a center of scientific and technological education re lated functionally to the social sciences and humanities.” 'Scholars are just as important {CONTINUED ON PAGE *> s Communist sympathizer, re quested reinstatement Monday i Gov John Patterson branded Reddick a Communist, and a racial the U-2 spy plane eposode and praised outgoing Democratic Na tional Chairman Paul M. Butler. The civile rights resolution adopted by the 350 young dcm fcoNTiNPEr on rune r> TRIBESMEN DEMONSTRATE Steel-hr I meted troop?,, armed with rifles try to put down skirmishing Baluha and Balanga tribesmen outside the parliament building as Joseph Kasa Vubu was taking the. oath of office as first president of the Congo Republic The tribesmen were i protesting that they were not represented w the government ( UP ! PHOTO) agitator. Reddick distributed copies of a 'ormal piea sent to members of he State Board of Education a. > mg them to rescind their June 1 ouster order. “My dismissal violated every prtnripal of derenry, fan plus and justice," wroie ihc teach er, who also requested a hear ing on the issue and that cop ies of the accusations be made available to him. Reddick was not present at the •tune 14 Board of Education meet mg when Patterson urged hts dr missal. The governor also present (roNnwyn on paof tn Shoplifting, Liquor, Other Raps Facing Persons Here BY STAFF WRITER Crime ran rampant in the Cen tal City during the past seven days as police officers reported several arrests for offenses which varied in nature. A shoplifting charge against a Martin Street man Saturday PRICE 15c Strong Civil Rights Plank Jolts Jurist From South LOS ANGELES Calif. "Oh. My God . Oh My God” That us? the reaction nf Judge T C Almon of Decatur chairman of thr Alabama delegation to the Demorratir National Convention when he heard the civil rights plank of the party's platform Sunday. The same feeling, expressed in many different ways came, from many southern delegates—leader and lesser lights alike Yet there seemed to be a lin aminit> of opinion that the strong civil rights plank draft ed bv a sub-committee and still to be adopted b> the tull roimTu!fee. will not prompt a e alk ons bv Kotft’iern delegate "I hove charge of the delega tion." Almon said, "and Alabama will not wa!y out. I may have to Judge Fred Duke' Slater Under Fire After Decision CHICAGO < ANP • Chicago Circuit, Court Judge Pred W Slat er was. under heavy tire heie last week because of his deer ion free ing an Evanston detective charged with accepting a $2,500 bribe. But Judge Slater, the higher ranking of the city's only two Ne gro jurists, is accustomed to meet ing head on attacks as he did when he distinguished himself as a line man with the University of lowa football team years go. STATE'S ATTORNEY “ANGRY’ An angry acting state's ai iorney Frank Ferlir called Slater’s action in freeing Id. Sigmund Worblewski “a grave miscarriage of justice" and has announced his intention of fi ling disbarment charges a gainst Slater Slater freed the policeman on a 'dense motion to dismiss after up state completed its case. Its hirf witness against. Worblewski as Richard Morrison, the volu ble admitted burglar who touched off a Chicago police scandal by charging a number of police offir ers with accepting bribes from htm and operating with him in his burglaries. Slater said after Ferlic let loose Ills blast.' ".n STICF W AS r>ONF” “1 fee! that 1 was mi good legal grounds," continued Slat er. “It was mv conviction that the duality and character of began the series Officers failed Charles Lee GUI, 28, of 534 E. Martin Street on the rap. He Is charged with stealing two box es of randy from Walgreen'* Durg Store on Fayetteville St Gill has pleaded innocent to Ihe charge. A manager of the drug store 1- drntified two boxes of candy, val ued at $2 each, as bearing a series of his firm's rode numbers, an of ficer reported A hearing for the defendant was scheduled for sometime this week. The second crime took place (CONTTNttED ON PAGE l> control them with an iron hand but there will be no walk-out by Alabama ' Almon told that the plank call ed for stronger federal action a gatr.st racial discrimination and ! expressed sympathy for Negro sit : ins. said I hate it . . it's disgus ting" the state's witness didn I war rant . . . subjecting him Worblewskil to anv further ordeal on ihe witness stand " Ferlic declined to say lust what aspects of Judge Slater’s decision he will ask he bar association to investigate. Hod y m Maii Is Soughi I CHARLESTON. S C-A search was underway this week in the Cooper River for the body of a Ne gro merchant seaman believed to have drowned. The master of the merchant vessel Lipscomb Lykes said abl: 1 bodied Seaman Mills H Cuffv. 35. ot Hampton Va . went swimming from the ship at Union Pier Sun day afternoon A call for help was : heard and Cuffy disappeared. A search by the Coast Guard was halted bv darkness Sunday, but was resumed Monday, Meanwhile, I the Lykes completed discharging ! its cargo of vehicles and depen dents' goods from Casablanca, and sailed late Sunday night. [ODDS ENDS | BY ROBERT G. SHEPARD “Lie net one (o another see ing you have put off the old man with his deed ” “ME TOO’ In giving out the box score of Us activities in supporting the student sit-in protests, the North Carolina arm of the National As sociation for the Advancement of Colored People reveals that it has already expended nearly $5,000 00. According to the figures re | leased recently, the bulk of this i money, has been spent in Greens boro, Winston-Salem and Chsr | lotte It seems that, in those cities, : the NAACP went, “whole hog" in defending and supporting the stu dents engaged in these protests. This is a record of support which every good American should be proud of. ft shows that this great, democratic or ganization is constantly on the firing line for the advancement of the American ideal* of jus tice and equality (CONTIWED ON PAOR I*