Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / June 24, 1950, edition 1 / Page 8
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PACiE EIGHT THE CAROLINA TIMES SATURDAY, TUNE 24th, 1950i (-)rleai»H, is 62 year* old. Ht* wm —‘»iii»lniit‘il from Howard I’ni- East End News . . Till- ’-liui'at 'Mi- i I'tub itsj - Ht tilt' iii>iin' -iJ Mr inul H= iikiali uuttiu^. ill* 1-'. -:Vii Stn.'t, - !Kin\. .Iiill.' 1.'' t A il: .111 II .-lint.' IS witlt It iifft'r whii ’i tlif topic - -m1 lit w.n- Mr Mr aiul Mrs. ' ! 'nihrrs pr aikI Mrs Ruffii Ell 'isli. .Mrs. Si.iulra Mrs L--na Ellberbi r William Tooke Ml Ivin l-naoh, Rolwrt Winston A.,»‘ne Hinton •iiul Mr^ C. R Brown. ,lohn Douplas Allison of this (^mintmity was a IfiSO p^raduate of North Carolina Colletre. TI* received a Baehelor of Arts Dp prpe and plans to teaoh this fall Mr Allison is a moniber of the Omesra Psi Phi fraternity. The second anniversarv of the pastor of Mnnnt Gilead Baptist r^nr*^i. Rev Hamid Roland win h* obw^r\'ed Snndav, .Time ?5th. with ‘Jt-rvif’es at 11:00 n ni. and .S :00 p ni. Tlie anniver- sar\’ spefllf^'r wiH h*' Doan W T? Stra*”or r>f T?pH- eion, Shaw 1'nii*r‘;ify, 'RnlfMsrh. Tli. ViUMfion lUblc School of the Mount flilead Bap tist f'hiirch win flose Friday uijrht. .Jniif 2'1 with a iinique jiropTHiii. Tliis yt'Hr tlie school hail a stiiff of 1!' workers with ‘JIT I'upils Immiij' enrolled. Mrs. Willie Snccd wa> principal. School Suits ' t'outimu'd I'l'om Pajre (hie) earlier this year to have a jur}'. Attoruc\s for the plaintiffs in the Dnrhani public .school suit are .1 H. Wheeler. Durham, Oliver W. Hill and Martin A. Martin. Hichmond, Va. O. Pears^m is the plaintiff attorney in the I-aw school suit. Among the defense attornejrs are State Attorney General McMullan R. P. Reid, and former U. S. Senator William B. Umstead. Durham County News By Mrs. Ida Lee Scurlock Mai'viu Cooper and family of Wafchinjrtou, D. C. was the week end guests of his father and fam ily, Ed Cooper, his wife’s par ents, Mr. and Mrs. Sterling Ruflin of Hillsboro. 11 rs. Christiana Hopkins and Rev. J. W. Valines were the week-end ^ruests of Mrs Ida L. Scurlock. Uur s\mpathy to Mrs. Julia Whittcd and family in the pass- in|L' of her .sister in Virginia. Mr. and Mrs. IxToy Wilson luve moved into their new home on the Criage Rfjarl. Sick and Shut-In; Mrs. Jen nie Burton. Page Wliitted and Mrs. Emma Hall. Pastor’s Aid Of St Joseph Meets With Mrs. McLaughlin The I'fislor's .\id Clidi »f St, Jdscpli M. E ( hur'li met at till* hiiiiie of Mr^ KHa Me I.Huyrhlin iit l)H\\kiii' Street at ej'j-ll! o'eloek last 'I'liesdaN . After thi i!i-'tiif,' wis open ed by I’nsiiient, Mrs .\niiie Alston, sintriiis.' and priiyer Mere eiiiKhieteil by .Mrs. Hosa Taylor \ shower was riven in the honor of Mrs. Meiitell 1‘atter- sun h\ members of the choir, .Mrtiiibers jtrest-nt at tin' meet ing were: Mesdames Allie Mjtehell. Hattie I’age, I>«ura Baile}-, Hattie Spells, Willie Burnett, Mary C. Earens, f'annie Hall. Rosa Taylor, and I>aura Strayhorn. Miss H. Juanita Page, daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph M. Page, Sr. of Durham was recently graduated in the class of 1950 of the Penns- bury High School in Moke- field. Pennsylvania. Miss Page was with her aunt and uncle Mr, and Mrs. Willie Hutch ings in Yardley, Penn. She was one of only four Negro seniors in that class. Her mother Mrs. J. M. Page and a cousin, Mrs. Maynard Law rence attended graduation exercises in Makefield. W. G, Speight, resident of route three, Durham County, observed his 75th birthday last May 22. He is the father of Dur ham’s Business and Professional Chain president, Theodore R. Speight, who is also manager of Speight's auto service here. AM A Seeks ((’oiitimied from I’uge One) liealtli iii.suraiiee plan. Dr. Marshall told the mem bers of the society, meeting for the 63rd time, that he could not think of any reason that physicians should object to the government’s provid ing the means for making people capable of paying for their medical care. Dr, Marshall further stated lluit there is a difference* be- tw(‘cn what the national health insurance* plan opponents liavt* been saying is “socialized medi cine” aiifl the Truman health plan. He said that too many l)hysicians have been misguided on this point by the “profes sional propagandists." It was also pointed out here this week that the AMA South of the Mason-Dixon line has never accepted Negroes into it.s I'anks. and tlii;it until the national health insurance plan \came along, the |northern AMA had refused to put Ne groes on important, policy- forming groups. Dr. Murray, a native of New ivernity’s *wliil>ol of Medicine in ;1!)14. He served a.s assistant -«nru-eon-ehieP at Freedman’s ■ Hospital. Was' injrton, D. C from lOlfi-lfl'iO. l’res'iitly direi'tor of the uynecolo^',\ department at the Harlem hospital and of obstetrics anul _n necology «t Sydenham liospital of N'ew York, he is a trustee of Ilowanl llnivernity; iiieinber of the »‘xeeiitive e(mi mittee of the Medical Ho“iety of the County of Nt^w York; a >liiiloTMnte of tlie American Boarrl of Obstetric.s and Oyne- cohnry: a fellow of AMA. New York Academy of Medicine, .^mcriean College of Surgeons >nid International College of srir'»f*ons. NAACP Suits (Continued from Page One) riirolina Trustee Board, in adi- dition to a.sserting that the whool facilities provided Negro students at the grammar and high sc-hool level are substantial ly equal to those provided for whites, denied that it furnished WELCOME ^ SUMMER SCHOOL TEACHERS Re-Cap Your Old Tires Today, Before It Is Too Late. Make Them Like New . . . Tank-Up With Oas... Or Get A Check- Up. Let Us Give Your Car A Spring Cleaning .... SPEIGHT’S AUTO SERVICE Cor. Fayetteville and Pettigrew Streets SWEETHEART LOVE DROPS PERFUME Alluring unforgettable aroma attracts and holds love, n«ver fails. Be romantic, glamorous. Make them love you. Get that special charm; be irresistable and terrific in your romantic desires. Take all hearts with this tender odor of affec tion. Tiny drop lasts for days. Also good luck oils, Incense, Powdefs, Have triple power, make people obey you. Marry rich. Have luck, love, wealth. Write THE BARNES CO., P. O. B*x 226 Dept. B, Ports mouth, Va. 7 Welcome.. SUMMER SCHOOL TEACHERS OF NORTH CAROLINA COLLEGE American Tobacco Company SCARBOROUGH & HARGETT FUNERAL DIRECTORS 522 E. Pettigrew St. 24 Hour Ambulance Service Phone J-372J TINDALL: Funeral services for Mrs. Bettie Tin dall uf 114 Diin.slan Avenue were held here Sun day, in Chatham Cuiiiity. luteniient was in the lieeeliwoixl ('emeteiy. * * ♦ McCAULEY; La^st rites for Mrs. Sarah Mc Cauley, who died at Lincoln Hospital, June 16th, were held la«t Monday at 8aint Joseph A. M. E. Church. Jlrs. McCauley was a resident of 207 Memphis Street. * * ♦ PEACE: ilr. Percy Peace, 3021 Anpier Avenue ilied at Lincoln Hospital, Sunday. Funeral services were held Thursday at the Orange Grove Baptist Church. Burial rites were conducted at the church cemetery. .. * ♦ ♦ WATKINS: Mr. Burnett Watkins died at Lin coln Hospital, Monlay. Fii(“rnal arrang*ments are incomlpete. * * * SWEPSON: Mrs. Emma Swepson of 908 Foui;th Street, died suddenly Tueslay. Funeral arranpre- ments are incomplete. Ambulance Service Funeral Directors “Respect For The Living And Reverence For The Dead” AMEY'S FUNERAL HOME CREIG: David Creif^, ii^re 80, died May 31. Fu neral services were held at Lipscomb Grove, Friday J une 2nd. * * * JOHNSON: Leroy Johns«m of I-W8 Pine Street, »«)n of John Buie d^ial at Duke Hospital May 31. Funeral services were held from Kyles Temple Church, Saturday, June 3rd. Interment was in Beechwo(Kl ('emetery. * ♦ * HART: Baby Doniell Hart passed June .5th at the tender ajje of one year. She was the daughter of Noah and l.^^ssie Hart of Route 1, Bahama. Fu neral services were held Wednesday, June 7th at Little Kiver. sfe * ♦ TAYLOR: Thomas Taylor, husband of Mrs. Mary Boulware Taylor, who died June 5th were held from Mount Olivet ('hureh. Interment was in Beechwood Cemetery with graveside rites held by Doric Ma.sonic Jjodge No. 28. * ♦ ♦ BURGESS: Pinal rites for Norman Burgess, husband of Mtn. Laura Aiken Burgess, were held at Saint Mark A. M. E. Zion Church, Thursday afternoon, .Tune 15th at 2 p. m. Interment was in Beechwood Cemetery. * s|e ♦ MORGAN: Mrs. Lizzie Morgan died at Lincoln Hospital, Tuesday, .Tune 20. Funeral arrangements are incomplete. transportation to white students and not to Negro students. 'I’lk* Moard also n*quiKted the court to dismiss the ctmiplnint on the grounds that thf com plainants had not exhausted ad ministrative remedies by ap pealing to the State Board of Ediicatitm after fhe Coxinty Board had refusel to end dis- crifnination against the Nepro Students. •Masons (( ontinued from Page One) Chapel A M K. t'hurtsh oL. Hillsboro will be the principal speaker i'or the j)rogram. The organizations will donate all money collected from an offering which will be con ducted during the program to the Oxford Colored Orphan age. Features of the chundi pro- irram ineliule a “Brief TIis tory of Free and .\cci'pted Ma.sonry in America ajid the meaning of St. .lohn’s,” to be explained by W. A. Clement; presentation of the main i.'(peaker by J, P. Morgan, worshipful master of the lo cal Dorcas lodge; and a short talk by Mrs. Ivela Black, wor thy matron of the Daughters of Mount Sinai. LATH ALSTON Prese ^ V* n ts n BUDDY JOHNSON and his ORCHESTRA SUNDAY, JULY 2 DURHAM ARMORY Advance Tickets $LSO Doors Open 12:01 a. m. Until Dawn you a riNDmR£ FOS yOUP MONEY oi Qqqo Dana STOP WORRYING ABOUT YOUR SHOPPING PROBLEMS We Have Many Of The Items Right Here In Our Store That You Have Been Going Blocks To Secure, Such As Tooth Paste, Shaving Cream, Etc. Get Wise Call Us For Those Odds and Ends On Your Shopping List FREE DELIVERY Dillard’s Self Service 1212 FAYETTEVILLE ST. DIAL J-2585 FREE DELIVERY “Priced To Sell” WHEN WE SAY;—“PRICED TO SELL”—THIS DOES CARRY A DOUBLE MEANING- FIRST. WE DO ADVERTISE OUR PRICES, WE PLAINLY MARK PRICES ON CARS, WE HAVE NO HIDDEN PRICES, AND WE DO NOT RAISE THE ALLOWANCE ON YOUR CAR AND THE PRICE OF THE CAR WE ARE SELLING YOU. ALWAYS LOOK FOR WEEKS ADVERTISED PRICES. SECONDLY,—OUR PRICES HAVE BEEN REDUCED TO SELL CARS—WE SEEK NO PROFIT ON OUR USED CARS—YOU WILL ALWAYS FIND A WEEKS USED CAR THE BETTER BUY FOR VALUE. HERE ARE A FEW OF MANY LIKE VALUES FOR YOU. 1949 Mercury Sta. Wagon . , . $1,795.00 1946 Ford Fordor .... . 895.00 1949 Mercury Club Cpe.. . . . 1,595.00 1941 Buick Super 4 dr. . . . 595.00 1949 Ford “8” Fordor . . . . 1,395.00 1941 Buick Spec. 4 dr. . . . 595.00 1948 Ford Tudor .... . . 1,095.00 1941 Chev. Tudor .... . 295.00 1948 Kaiser Fordor . . . . . 995.00 1942 Chev. Fordor .... . 295.00 1948 Mercury Club Cpe.. . . . 1,295.00 1940 Ford Tudor . 395.00 1947 Buick Super Conv. . . . . 1,695.00 1940 Mercury 4 dr . 495.00 1947 Ford Fordor .... . . 1,095.00 1940 Hudson 4 dr . 395.00 1947 Mercury Sta. Wagon . . . 1,195.00 1939 Ford Fordor .... . 345.00 1947 Mercury Fordor . . . . . 995.00 1938 Ford Fordor .... 1947 Studebaker Tudor . . . . 995.00 1938 Ply. Fordor 1947 Nash Tudor .... . . 895.00 1938 Ply. Fordor 1947 Ford Sta. Wagon . . . . 895.00 1937 Ford Tudor 1946 Chev. Fordor .... . . 1,095.00 1936 Ford Fordor .... . 145.00 Weeks Motors, Inc Jli/icoSiA maiRir (4) (4) USED CAR LOTS 310 MANGUM ST. 506 MANGUM ST. 319 W. GEER ST. Franklin And Church Sts. — Chapel Hill
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
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June 24, 1950, edition 1
8
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