Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / March 8, 1958, edition 1 / Page 8
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8 THE CAROLINIAN WEEKENDING SATURDAY, MARCH 8, 1358 Things You Should Know I 1 '®\ AM FW |f I WW ftJ» ia®** I N| B®6 -*ir' Mi ’wr 4 J*J 1760-18 31 - :v% i Born }n slavery in phil ane joined the ' x , / ,~U .. M£THOO!ST EPISCOPAL CHURCH AT I7ANO was $ ■ a ;\. s,#-.<> LICENSED TO PREACH AT AGE 22 /in 1756 HF, Pi m s( \f CHASED HIS FREEDOM FOR $ 2000./HE BECAME \ •• \ PASTOR of ST G£ORGr/s ME.CHURCH»IN I '787 HE OPENED HIS OWN BETHEL CHURCH AND MAO A NEW GUUJDIN® BY 1794 / IN 1799 HE WAS THEFIPSTN£6RO TO Bt ORDAINED IN THE M EL CHURCH /in (816 HE lin.llinw,—WU'i.lM—i—•• BECAME BISHOP OF THE NEWIY-FQUNPED A.M .E.CHU.RCH / I ; r -?5 Convicted Os Arson, Says j it 51 risdTo “Cremate” Hubby DETROIT <ANP'. A 35-year >l-3 ide mother of five, Mr?. :T’ Hi’; • .rtjced >0 1 to j Charter i Oak * | BOURBON » ■ r<- ywsitat*!' C ■ hi, '.T, 7 % mn f| din *6 |»v?;«4< £':• ,*£.7 & 'T V v dS I u4iii I" : -rs artel I (Ml? .7 gjg ' ■ v ■ •• t v? ■ - ,?j 1': i ; ? IOM3, .. i-x- ; ll 4/S wwr | s4’o S;?6S j| w.-a ?s:w?3V iXffi w yuddf ll X- ■■'.■i'll :«?BiW!5 CWMRI9N i ® asm pc * wmwt, | Uwygt*. %&. s>atunmaims*»mM !---"* —* - -* ~~ .hdK 11~ 11 I I, 111! li I HIM *»%»»..****■*!.*«*. cinrui iii iwinnuwmw»«i . jiwmnn>nhibiimsim j I-^DIIS 1 ©AY | IS EVERY DAY i ! Because We moke a special effort to make bank ing easy and convenient for women! FIRST -CITIZENS BANK AMD TRUST COMPANY , 5 years in the House of Cor roc- j j Mon last week by Recorder's Judge ! ,; George Murphy after she was ! convicted of arson l Pohee said Mrs. Hill admitted pouring fuel oil against t.he bcd | room door of her common-law ! husband, Aaron Hill, 36. Decem | her 4 and igniting the ■ 'J with ! matches. She also set, fire to the | hallway of the buildmg by the j 1 same method. j The officers said Mrs. Hill said' i 2l SMem “O' 1 "* 1 ”" Belmelt In Events Held In Three States GREENSBORO A total of 21 mum, J«st Received j NEW STOCK WOOD’S ' ; Garden Seeds ! On ions»Potatoes ALSO ! Fertilizers*Tools ■f -f s.w. YOUNG Hardware 130 E. Martin St. Dial TEmple 2-712.1 i she was angry with Hill She m ! cured him of bringing men to then home and insisting that she have intimate relations with them. Mrs. Hill said she was beaten by her husband when she refused to obey his orders. Meantime, Mrs, Hill was on probation for a similar charge when she was arrested on the ! same offense the second time. Hill i was arrested for investigation of' 1 pandering. students, representing three in terest areas, represented Bennett College in events held in three states last week. Twelve members of the Worn- I j an *s Athletic Association parties i paled m the Sports Day staged by j the Woman’s Sports Day Associn ; tion at Hampton Institute, Hamp j ton, Viriginia. Friday and Satur ! day. The group, headed by Miss j Joyce Johnson, physical education ; instructor, included: Misses Ge neva Baldwin, Pittsboro: Janet Dailey, Houston, Tex, Addie Wat son. Charlotte; Nannie Poole, Bal timore. Md., Veronica Dean, Mi ami, Fla.: Ethel Riggsbec Chapel Hill. Frances Keck, Greensboro; Elizabeth Miller, Camden ,S, C.; Joan Pritchard, Jefferson City, Term., La Verne Gee, Norfolk, Va.; Sonia Weldon, Chicago. 111.; and liazeline Taylor. Charlotte. Six sociology majors, accompa nied by Dr. Edwin R Edmonds, went 10 Maryville College, Mary ville. Term., where they partici pated in an interracial workshop sponsored by the YWCA, Febru ary 21-24. j In this group were: Misses Ger aldine Williams, Fayetteville, N, ! C.: Laura Sawyer, Salisbury; La | Vonne Barbour. Annapolis, Md.; j Gloria E. Brown, Bronx, N Y.; | Cecile Harrison, Houston, Tex.; and Ada Lomax. Tobvhanna, Pa Attending a conference on stu dent, government held at North Carolina College in Durham were; Misses Barbara Campbell, Greens boro; Jimmie English and Rose mary Wnght. both of Camden, Professionals ! Included In Security Act “The 1956 amendments to tne j Social Security Act brought law-| vers, dentists, osteopaths, veterm-j arlans, chtrpractors, naturopaths! and optometrists under Social Se- j runty. They are now. for the sec ond year, required to pay their social security tax along with their Federal income tax returns." This announcement was made to day by T. M. Langford, Group Su pervisor of Internal Revenue fox the Raleigh district. In conjunction with Mr Lang ford's announcement, J. H. Ingle, district manager of the Raleigh office of the Social Security Ad minstration pointed out that since i the extension of coverage to these! professional self-employed per- 1 sons, they are now buildmg the! same kind of insurance protection for themselves and their families that the Federally-operated sys - tem has afforded most, other sell employed individuals since 1851. Mr. Langford stated that the law was effective with the first j taxable year ending after 1955. Lawyers, dentists, osteopaths, vet erinarians, chirpractors, naturo paths and optometrists who file theii Federal income tax returns on a calendar year basis are re quired to pay a self-employment tax on their net earnings for each calendar year after 1955 if their net earnings amounted to S4OO 01 more in a year. Gains Against Heart Disease In Next Decade Forecast By 10 Heart Association Presidents NEW YORK CITY <ANP> What rlo the next ten years prom l ise in overcoming the heart, and ) blood vessel diseases that now take more than 800,000 Ameri can lives annually? What were the most significant advances again*! these diseases during the past ten years? The American Heart Associa tion, currently marking its tenth anniversary as a voluntary health agency, asked these questions of the ten physicians who served as its Presidents during the past de cade, * * * * Noting that greatly improv ed techniques have come into i use for the diagnosis and treatment of heart attacks and strokes during the ‘'lifetime” of thr American Heart Asso ciation. these experts pre dicted that thr next ten years would see important advances loward an understanding of atherosclerosis • or ‘‘harden- Imiß S' BI&S T ——— CKITia 49c *1 M *2” “ JEILS ’* r ' It* «■ «*' |! A f PLES POBK & BEANS c'.T 27, 79, *l-» W- 0 Wi~ GREEN LIMAS %r fZ rs Z w 59* *l n *3-« fi- CREAM COII s Th %r zr 35c 99c *!•« ™ 2 ” ‘ “ ~ * " ’ ~ “ ‘ ‘ - ■ -~ “ ■ ~ “ “ Hwl Vine^Riit^nerf iiiirr for babies 4-oz vflJlljilU RIB'S ORANGE cam JLjr ® B f.4 e j TISSUE Boit 25c 73* *l A3 ; ±*L i JLS fiLAW CDPFMC WINTER 6AHOEN FROZEN KK». $1.19 ych" av, a - n/ 1T f COLLABD OS TURNIP pug. <&*#€ &" 84. CELLO * - hfo} vLf ■«-*. jwarOTßwawKi , ««iHK-r.te»cz!Bnowegnno‘aß»eE-?g.p= BEEF PIES ~ ‘BSS! 5 HF ~ 53, *1" >2 : " if HST;:,:, I GIInI PEAS so «o r z d e a n e 3t*c 99« $ !- 8 - r-ssMßasc-e-:^^ «UG MAB teli li.- POTATOES 29* 99c *1« IHHV BVIC REOGATE NO, 303 JB JLQ $f as SRH3... 29* till IN if * E»He3 SWEET GREFM CAN mnwr** W* m* •»»»-. c.w;e'ii r;mw mmeiw cam* 1 SPREAD ..SOI CUP 38? HOMELESS ROlftrD OR SfRUKBI CTFII ■s' Kcs t©3 \ —■- a ! Fi *, IB >IOO FEEE W E Fr TE-SrR } ■ WW C" CrVHi9l cut rib u. m i <m. & P| r, k Paras (MF»F3k4. I jR 1. If ISMS SlillSflbt BOJI 49g sea* « WTTB YODR PURCIIASSS IMF $3 OR MORS W\ | MminEßmm r AT COLONIAL THIS mulls, im 4?,Tx SAT- % fr t® mS» IWS. Wfinswr ' rntm ™ % LTMTTs t cawmi per emiotnet. Coupons no* goot after OM J CWontal Shows fistsd at bottooi of this «L !*■ * J« GekmMt pm. TI Jr ® PRICES SLASHED on famom Gmumd-Eleetrin TlXlde Winds FtOZCtt FutlUlil eppfmnee* .. .mm hom, *«•« MORE Colonial.l WJlf |fs €EIREXKAL-ELEGTRI€ A hetsfe trea-f your romiiy win enjoy . . . plurj?, fan'’ STEMS mO2RS selected shrtiwp, so cosy to serve and eco 1 I *. STEAM AND IHSY IRON l NEW STEAM-SPRAY MON Oven-Remly Btmmls Save $5.00 Saw 5,5.00 m» *s» W m A « «■ / u«nwaumaeammnfiwa>aaag»«aiaHraiii i .jii i i,» > ry^»-'-^^.T.--e:Rewnaißngßa!»a«M»3MMiiijaag*i GENkSAL-ELECTRIC «•! "J 95 POST TOASTiES 1 POST TEh v PORTABLE MIXER "J 37c Glenw:9d Village-111W. Morgan St. —ICorthside Shopping Center-Cameron Village *»*S e s the arteries'* which is an underlying cause of these conditions. « * A * They also fofeca&L dramatic new improvements m surgery on the heart and blood vessels with the help of heart-lung machines, N. C. PRODUCTS PERSHING ROAD RALEIGH PHONE 4-2557 OLIVE STREET KINSTON PHONE 2514 I “deep freeae" surgery and ‘‘stoo ped-heart” procedures, which have : already'benefited hundreds in ie ! cent, years ; i Still more effective control of 11 high blood pressure and a greater i j knowledge of its causes, and even ,! greater reductions in the inci- dence of rheumatic fever and rheeumatic heart disease, which strike primarily at children and young people also were among the. advances forseen for the next decade. When hav and forage are in short supply it may pay to fc d grain to milking cows “be PREPARED fTM 14/ * CIVELLA BEAUTY COLLEGt bourse in Beauty Culture and Classes, in Personality ami Cls arm. For Information Write: Mrs. Christiana J. Phis President 490 EAST MARTIN STREET Raleigh, N. C, A well oiled farm machine cost;? less in the long run Keep accural* and complete farm records, they are one of the keys to successful farming. Winter is an Ideai time to fe.y your soil, but any time is good Treat your farm woodlands weh They nay big dividends in the long run. Bette!' Buys Better Terms On Better Jewelry
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 8, 1958, edition 1
8
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