m CAROLINA TIMES M-MTUKOAY, JULY 1, IM1 DURHAM. N. C ti. C. Mutual and Los Angeles^ Officials Open Firm's New Office i h: i AID TO FREEDOM RIDERS— Hm R«v. Fr*d C. James, ccntar, AME Consul «nt-Direcl«r »f So- eM Action, accepts an offering of $330 taken during a sestien of the board meeting at Allen Chapel, Indianapolis, Ind., for Freedom Riders defense. Shown with tiim; am iolt t# right, Bishop Prank M. Re|^, Washing ton; Bishop Jonph Oomex, Cle> Miss Bryant Wed To Alvin Blount JAMES CITY—Hiss Eula Grace Biyant, daughter of William Bry- •Ot of 821 Eubank St. was wed to Alvia Wilbur Blount of Brices Creek Sunday at the Pilgriin CStapel M. B. Church here. The Sev, D. A. Hester, pai;tor offieiat- «d. Wedding participants included Mrs. L. B. Smith, Mrs. Sarah Mack, Miss Peole Johnson, Miss Barbara Marie Green, Miss Peggy Comp ton, Mrs. Ellen Murphy, Mrs. Pear] Edwards, Miss Gwendolyn Blount, Miss Grace Blount, Richard Mount, Freddie Hicks, Paul Dan- 1^ and John Daniels. Hie eroom Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Ulyses Blount BIRTH S The following births were re ported to the Durham County Health Department during the week of June 19 through 24, 1061; Edward and Winifred Reid, boy; Lenord and Katie Bynum, boy; Milton and Peggy Shackleford, girl; Joseph and Mae Evans, girl; Roy and Clarice Harris, boy; Mel vin and Dorothy Sanders, boy; Oma and Mattie Hunt, girl; Frankie and Erma Reid, girl; Jdin and Carolyn Hicks, boy; Homer ;'.nd Juanetta Alexander, girl; Ju lius and Matilda Barbee, girl; Taylor and Vannie Mason, girl; James and Carrie Huggins, boy; Thomas and Ruth Howard, girl; Gresory and Artelia Jones, boy. Your Old Tire ROBERT CORBETT Representative Be Worth Money to You DON’T CAP YOUR TIRES! UNTIL YOU SEE OUR NEW MOLDS Just installed the latest and most complete new •Quipcn^nt to oive you a b»fler cap, • NO HEAT Applied to wall of the tires • Whitewalls come out like new Yoa Ha«« To S«« I 'I'hdn to ^ , A / B^eve GwucantM A9 SixM in Sto^—Whitewall and! Blackwall Recaps AU. RECAPS GUARANTEED tSmH MILES OR ONE YEAR EASY TERMS TIRE CO. PImmm 682-S461 1. St veiand; Bishop Cooftfe b?r, Philadelphia; and B(^)|tt«l. iH. Conner, Selma, Ala. State Farmers Give Support Tj Gov. Sanford's Agriculture GREENSBORO -r- The Farmers and T. Colle'*e Extensioi hnd Homemakers Conference and and Marion Wright, Linvii the Rural and Town Ministers In stitute, holding sessions last week at A. and T. C(A|ejEe, voted “full support” to Gdvenror Terry San ford’s program Of North Caro lina agricukure. In a set of resolutions adopted at the cloring, joint session on Friday morning, the two groups arged its membrships to embrace the prosrarti which calls for in- cresi^d farm income, improved marketing and « step-up ih the »nd commmitf development program. NeW Officer* wfcre inl*allpd for both eroiips. A Johnston County farmer will lead^the farmer-home- msker qroMp during the coming v(*sr. David Ric|i&|irison of near Wendoll, was installed as presi dent. Othrr officers include; Mr.s. F.mma Johnson,,-’) f^st "H'-e j Katie' B attorney rnd a member N. C. Advisory Committei U. S. Commission on Civif^^^ts! Horace D. Godfrey, adiii|l^ra- tor, Commodity Stabilization ‘Ser vice of the U. S. Departanent 6i' Agriculture, Washington, Xi;' G.*, urged the elimination of the use of MH-30. Appearing as a panelist he told the group. “The changes in chemical and physical proper ties of cigarette leaf brought aboiit by this chemical suggest sevei) economic repercussions.” tie the loss of filling capacity threi^ ens to reduce the sale of U., leaf to high duty countries whii;] took 43% of U. S. flue-cured leji exports in 1960. and A. W-. Solomon. Ral- •’Hh. field representative of the M. n. Farm Federation, secretary-treasurer. Rev. .T, D. flay; Southprn PinRs, -loHorator of the Cape Fear Con- ff'Tonce. "A*’ Division, of the TJnited Frne Will Baptist Chtirch was elected president of the min- istprs’ group, Other officers '• in- ■stalled at the meeting were: Rev. ■T. J. Johnson, Fairmpnt, vice presi- ■^pnt and Rey. H^an Hines, Jr., Snow Hill, secretary. Rev. Cleo M. MeCoy, director of r«*lisious activitiek at A. and T. College and H. M. McNeil, staff member of the vy. and T. College Extension S|rvic^ will continue as director and co-director, re spectively. During Ow week-long confer ences, beginning'on Tuesday, June 13 and extending ihroygh June 16, main addressies '{Vere delivered by Dr. Samuel ti. f^otcor, presi dent of the Collie; R. E. Jones, State . agent,: in ebarge of the A. Ailments in Psychosis Rare, Survey Shows , - ^ . Person^ W\^re ttJ^jntal Iti free of a number of common phy sical ailments, a 15-year sufv^ of Veterans Administration pat ients shows. Among hundreds of mentally- ill veterans studied at the Bed ford, Mass., VA hospital over the past decade and a half, not a sin gle case of hay fever was discover ed and oqly one case of asthma was found. Rheumatoid arthritis was rare. S. W. Robinson, III Resigrns NAACP Post WASHINGTON, b'. q,-^esig- nation of Spottswood WJ;Rpbin- son, III from the NAACP'j^^Jation- al Legal Committee, was this week by Roy Wilki tive secretary. Now Dean of the Ho' versity Law School, Robij a long and brilliant reco NAACP attorney, having prominently in numeroul integration cases. a has makesmskin bleaches LOS ANGELES, Calif.—Formal ceremonies marking the opening of North Carolina Mutual’s new branch office on the West Coast were held Sunday, June 18, in the mpdern 1 story branch build ing located 1716 West Santa Bar bart Avenue. The affair was attended by be tween 1,300 and 1,400 of the Los Angeles area, Top executives from the home office in Durham also present included were President Ase T. Spaulding; W. A. Clement, Agency Director; Maceo A. Sloan, Assistant Agency Director; R. C. Foreman, Associate Controller; and A. P. Dum^s, Assistant Agency Director of Atlanta. . ’Fhe Los Angeles office is man- ageed by A. J. Clement, Jr., vet eran employee of 30 years scryice who was serving as manager of the NeWark (N. J.) branch at the time of his transfer to Los Ange les. „ Clement |s aissiste^ by five staff managers, .yrhq,resumed; their du ties, during, the parly part of May. They, and tl^elr former positions wi|!h the company are as follows; Witifen D. (jabbiness. Combina tion Agent,; Chaidotte. North Ca- rolinaj James W. McKnight, Spe cial Ordinary ^ent, Washington, D/ Alvin jL. Singleton, Staff Mianqjier, Philadelplxia; N. A. Sol- onian,, Combination Agent, At lanta; and Wi W. Twitty, Staff Manager, Chat*lotte, N. C. The fpllo'wing , statement was mad( by President Asa T. Spauld- inf ,0|? his anlvaWl).^^ Angeles; ;,‘1 wn delighted to be in tv>e woiiderfiil city of Los Angeles for the- formal opening of the new W'e?t’ Cbsst restrict Office of the Nprtli Carollfli* M’ifual Life In surance Ci. Today, consequently is a significant day in the rather eventful history of our company, anid jve believe the future will proyci ^o be equally as significant lii the history of the dty of Los XAg^les aei well as that of the state of California. “The public officials of the state and city, and the citizens of this community, have been most c» operative, generous and cordial In admitting and receiving us; and it shall be our purpose to prove our selves worthy by being good citi zens foy our. state and community. “It Is a pleasure, therefore, for me to bring Meetings to the city of Los Angeles and the state of California on behalf of the direc tors, officers, and more than 12 hundred representatives of our job catagories and approximately company in more than SO different 8 hundred thousand satisfied policy holders in the 9 other states in which we operate and the District of Columbia. “The North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company is more than a business; it is a symbol of Negro enterprise offering service to all segments of our population’, and is of international signifi cance as an example of what can happen in America. ‘‘Our company has already shown its faith in your great state by investing over $2 1/2 million of assets in the securities of poli tical sub-divisions of your covern- ment and of industries and busi' nesses and/or serving the citi zens of your state, before besin nine its operations in California.” “Tomorroty, our salesmen will begin knocking on the doors of your homes, calling upon you at your places of business, or meet ing you on the strents. to offor vnwthe services and benefits whi^h iiir pomppny is In a position to provide. I hope you will give ther" a cordial welcome." AT THE OPENING of Hie Nort;i Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company's West Coast Office, 1716 Santa Barbara Avenue, on Sunday, June 18, President T. Spaulding prssented a matured endowment check to Dr. and Mrs. Raymond J. Pi.ts on be half of their daughter, Kathleen Pitts. Miss Pitts, who now is 17 and a recent high school grad uate, was insured willi one of the company's «dwcat.'onal plans which was started in 1949. In 1955, Dr. Pitts eff Fort Valley Coliee^ t« accept a ^1'. tion in the Los Anegels State' College in Pasadena, but con* tinue^ premium payments at tho Macon, Ga. office. The policy maturad and check was present ed on the date of the fomal. opening of the Los Angeler District Offifis. From left: Dr. and Mrs. Pitts and their daugh ter, Asa T. Spaulding, W. A. Clement, Agency DirecSor, from home office in Durham who also attended the formal opening. ■Envoy Continued from 1-B the official welcoming party. "This experience should be the highlight of my two-year stay in the United States.” It was on March 9 that Dr. Fitzjohn and his Negro chauffeur were refused service at a Howard OPCm HCJS£—Mtlorrjjy Sher man Smith with family; Agency Director W. A. Clement (sacond frorh right) and Manager Ai J.- H. Clement, Jr. (extreme right). RllCBIVCS MSL$—The degree 0F Mester of Science in Library Sdertie^ was conferred upon Syi- Viji''C. i^tcKell ar .‘he one hun dred seventh Commencement ex- erciMs of Syracusa University, Syracuse, N*w York. -Miss Mit'.:hell, a 1960 graduate irf Virginia State College, Peters burg, Virginia, has^ccepted a position in the Tempi* Univer-,, sity Library in Philadelphia, ef-' fecMve July 1. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James J. Mitchell, 1111 Park Streiet, Elizabeth City. New Drug May Help in Figiit Against Diat)etes NETlir YORK —A four and one half year study of the first group of diabetic patients treated with QBI tablets by mouth indicates that this remedy Is “the most valuable of the oral blood-sugar lowfrlng agents." , *nils conclusion Is reached by Dr. Julius Pomeranze of New ,Vork City in the current issue of the medical Journal, Clinical Me^cine. Dr. Pomeranze,.a re ^archer in diabetes and obesity, Ur^t reported on the same patients qfter ithey^ had been taking the tablets ior two years. Orl^nall^, 128 diabetics were involved.. Iliey had been maintain ed^; the drug for 4 to 24 months at jjte time of the first report, pit ‘the original group, 21 for various reasons are not included in the continuing study, and 4 have been found unresponsive to DBI. Of the .remaining 103, Dr. Pom eranze reports, 82 cdntinue taking the same dose; 10 have had their ,tla6sge inpreased and 11 a|:e now ^ing lower dosages. 35 Pupils Apply For Charlotte Transfers CHARLOTTE—Ah NAACP cam paign urging parents to pr^ss {or change of p^pil' '^ssigonjienl froiii Negro schools to white ichools has resulted in 35 such application for the 1961-62 school term. The action seeking admission of J^Iegrp {)jy}ilp, to seven white burg County is considered out- ttmiMn?, T ~t9iartptte ~ WCACF cfrbkesmiin satd. School authori- *ies here have held to a policy of inlv limited school integration. Under the plan only two Ne groes have graduated from white high schools in Charlotte. At the present time one Nefro "•hild, a second grader at Bethune Klementary School, is the only Ne- ®ro in a white scliool in Char lotte. DBI, the latest of the iiabetes oills, differs from other types of iral agents. DBI acts to lower blood sugar levels without stimu lating the pancreas to secrete in sulin. The others, which are sul fonylurea drugs, are believed to dct on the pancreas. DBI is a pro- ■luct of U. S. Vitamin and Phar- rnaceutical Corp. “The practical and outstanding clinical feature of this oral agent,” Or. Pomeranze wrote in the cur rent report,” is that it is singu larly effective in control of adult, stable diabetes.” Johnson restaurant, about a mi' southeast of the city limits. A. that time Sierra Leone was a Brit ish colony. It became an independ ent country April 27. The red carpet treatment for )r. Fitzjohn, and his party sharply contrasted with the restaurant in cident, which had reverberations in the Slate Department and the White House. GORDON’S GIN I ; wit NFriiHi span asniEi nog quin • ao nosF • uneii'i gn M n. in., un. L1 Only at Midas... can you get a Midas Muffler! Sure you want a Midas Muffler. Expert Installation and the famous Midas guarantee* are part of every Mlda» Muffler ■old. Only by doing the Job ouVselves can we be sure that Installation is right. That’s why the only place you ean get,« Midas Muffler Is at the Midas Muffler Shop. Stop by todayl Muffler* • Tail Pipe* • Exfwuiet Pipe* 310 FOSTER ST. PHONE 682-8548 *»’ ,HRS.: 7:00 a.m til 5:00 p.m.; 7!30-4;00 Saturdbjr *H yott swr nsed another Midas Muffler for yow car, you pay nothing for the muffler, only a senice chailBe. J .Ml itpl lOtl I U'i, T ) 3 -