BIAUTIFYING THEIR COM MUNITY—Thra* members of Hit "Smirnoff Club," a group of oldor toon-age boys and girls In fha Lakeview community jutt northeast of Durham, ara shown abova at work during a ipacial mall box painting projact tha club adoptad to halp baautify "I used to cry for no reason at all" One of the first *change-of-life" danger signals No wonder • woman feels like cry*ng! The suffocating surge of hot flashes one minute; cold, clammy perspiration the next can make a woman wonder "What's come over me!" Change-of-life panic sets nerves on edge, fills her with fear! Proven help! Woman after woman in doctors' tests got remarkable relief from hot flashes, nervous tensions! Some women worry themselves sick; some women do some thing about awesome change of-life symptoms. Thousands have found that Lydia E. Pinkham Tablets helped them as dramatically, as quickly as this gentle medication has helped other women. Not a new, johnny-come-lately rem edy, but a tried and trusted "friend"...to relieve func tional mid-life complaints...to relieve woman's burden of suf fering! Get Lydia E. Pinkham Ikblets today. Seagram's Extra Org 6m ■ i H I i^l -- - *»» li 'Vi | "*•'■' -9 MM—miiniinwwr.ttiww.. thoir community. Laft to right { ara stave Mann (painting let tart), Ronald Burton and Owight Hicks (back to camara). Thay r - TO RECEIVE CITATION—Mrs. Mabel J. Chappelle, the widow of the late Reverend M. Peter Chappelle. will receive a Cita tion for her outstanding contri butions in education and civic enterprise at the Summer Com mencement of Bethupe-Cook man College on August 7. Mrs. Chappelle, the mother of 5 children, was one of the first to receive the B.S. degree from Bethune-Cookman College. She has done r.raduate work at fcoth Florida A. and M. University and Atlanta University. She is a member of Allen Chapel A.M.E. Church and is an outstanding religious and civic worker in this community and the State of Florida. After giving 40 years of dedi cated service to thousands of boys and girls of this Stat*, Mrs. Chappelle retired in June. and' naariy 30 of tfwir fallow club members spent all day last Saturday and Monday painting nearly 200 mail boxes. Your Heart Association Says Like a boomerang . . . rheu matic fever run come back, and if il does, il may damage the heart. If your child has had rheumatic fever, ask your doe tor to help you protect him against repeat attacks. MBMIW il,♦ : -I IHf * 't* uv w' 10,000 th ANTI-POVERTY BOR ROWER Sam Newton, hard pressed day laborer of Samp son County, with a family of seven, received recently the 10,000 th rural Economic Oppor tunity loan made by the Farm ers Home Administration of the U. S. Department of Agricul ture. The loan for (1,800 was ») -> ■UIWmUHI I !. *v* mk NIAGARA SCENERY—Tho ma i#«ty of Niagara Falls provide* a dramatic lotting for Hii* prot ty visitor who appoars to bo daop in thought porhapa modi Martin Named Head Cage Coach at VSC PETERSBURG William (Bill) Martin has been ap pointed head ... basketball :oach and associate professor of health and physical edu cation at Virginia State Col lege President Robert P. Daniel announced today. The health and physical education department is un dergoing a program of re organization and expansion as the new million and one half dollar health and physi cal educational building nears completion. Paul Godwin, basketball coach at Virginia State for the past two seasons will re main as instructor in physi cal education and head the college's swimming program. Martin comes to Virginia State from Dillard University in New Orleans, La., where he was Athletic Director and Head Coach for ten years. A graduate of Alabama State College and Indiania University (master's and director's of health and safe* ty), Martin guided Dillard's basketball teams to eight consecutive championships in the Gulf Coast Athletic Con" ference and posted 164 wins against 83 losses during the period. Martin's football teams from ,1959-1964 recorded a 26, 19, 2 record. His grid teams were GCAC charhpions in 1959, 1960, and in 1962. He was head track and field coach in 1958 and golfing used to buy the chain saw be is carrying and a used truck which is not shown. With these, New ton will become an independent pulpwood cutter and hauler with an expected income of $3,600 a year. Inset showi New ton proudly looking at his new chain saw. fating en MM force* of Nature which created the cataracts. The fall* are teni of thousand* years old. MISS BATCH 2 Bethune-Cookman College Students to Study Abroad DAYTONA BEACH, Florida- Two Bethune-Cookman College students will be among the 30 representatives of the Mid-Flo rida will leave for Europe on August 19 to spend the 1965-66 year as a part of the Studies Abroad Program. Patricia Sadler, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Willie James Sad ler of Natchez, Mississippi, a Junior, majoring in English will study at the University of Strasbourg, in France. Studying at the University of Freiburg, Germany, will be Louis Batch, a Junior majoring in Biology. Batch is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Batch, Sr. of Mc- Keesport, Penna. A joint program sponsored by the Associated Mid-Florida Colleges (Bethune-Cookman Col lege, Florida Col lege, Florida Southern College, Rollins College, and Stetson University), the Studies Abroad program is designed to contri bu t e to independence of thought and study habits on the part of the student and to give him an understanding of an other culture, its literature, language, social institutions, history, artistic and scientific developments. Miss Sadler was the recipient of an award for excellence in the French language during her Freshman year and is a mem ber of several campus organiza tions. She is soror of Delta Sig ma Theta. Batch, a member of Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity, an honor student each semester that he has been enrolled at Bethune-Cookman College, has won several honors because of his scholastic and speaking ability. coach In 1964 and 1065, and his teams won league cham pionships in all three seasons. Martin is a native of Mont gomery, Alabama, and he and his wife, Lula, are the par ents of a son and a daughter. NOW YOU KNOW why more people smoke Winston than any other filter cigarette. Flavor does it every time—rich, golden tobaccos specially selected and specially processed for filter smoking! W if 4 ■ PURE WHITE. : MODERN FILTER ! tmmm 4 j PLUS FILTER-BLEND UP FRONT Winston tastes good like a cigarette should! »MBH. ■p.llii Wll«ll Hllß. tL * m is SADLKK Commanl from lh» Capital Must you join a union to hold a job. It all depends on where you live. In some 31' states, if the company where you start work has a union, you either join or you're out. In If others, the choice is still yours join or not you can still tret and keep a job. How long this choice will last is up to Congress. President Johnson has just asked our law makers to take away that free dom. When the Taft-Hartley Labor Act was passed by Congress in 1H47, the decision was left to the states as to whether their citizens would be compelled to join unions as a condition of employment. Now l!l states have "right-to-work" laws, giv ing each worker the freedom to join a union or remain a non momber. Since 11M7 a handful of "big labor" leaders have kept up the fight to knock out the "riirht to-work" section of Taft-Hart ley, Section 14 (B). Last Fall, President Johnson promised to do this if elected. Now he has sent n message to Congress ask ing for repeal of 14 (B). Many Washington insiders l>elievc the President is paying otf a debt for labor's help in his election campaign. Others say he doesn't really care whether the repeal comes through or not. It is a fact that when he was a Senator, he voted in favor of preservinir this riirht to work. However, the bill to repeal was sponsored by Rep. Frank Thompson (I)., N. •!.) and hearings are being held by a House labor subcommittee. Whatever the President's reasons, a man who carried 44 out of 50 states and l>eat his opponent by 16,000,000 popular votes hardly owes his election to the labor vote. The co-sponsor of Taft- Hartley, former Rep. Fred A. Hartley, termed the President's recommendations "a ridiculous move." He pointed out that "Bureau of Labor Statistics figures show there have been less man hours lost and fewer strikes in right-to-work states than in non-rigrht-to-work states." Union leaders have spent millions of dollars fichtinjr to SATURDAY, JULY 31, IMS THE CAROLINA TIMES- NCC to Sponsor sth Exhibit for Elem. Teachers The North Carolina Col lege Department of Educa tion will sponsor its fifth an nual exhibit of "Materials for Elementary School Teachers" in the conference room of the institution's Edu cation Building from Tuesday July 27, through Friday, July 30. According to Dr. Shipman, chairman of the Department of Education, the public is invited to view the display from 8 a. m. to 5 p. m. daily Continued on page 0A "THE RIGHT TO WORK" by Vant Neff repeal state "right-to-work" laws and millions more to keep states from putting them on the hooks. A single campaign in California in 1'.»58 was said to have cost $2 million. Natu rally, leaders want to get these funds hack and into union treas uries. If„H (B) is wiped out. dues and fees from workers forced to join up would recoup these losses. Union leaders feel that non-momliers get a "free ride" from unions in the 10 states. Whatever the union gets in the way of lienelits for niem l>ers in a shop, non-members get too —without paying union dues or fees. This argument is weak. Many veterans benefit from the activ ities of the American Legion's campaign for housing, medical care, job opportunities and the like. S'et they are not Legion members. Businessmen profit from the activities of the I!. S. Chamber of Commerce, but needn't join the Chamber. Many Americans benefit from the services of the American Tied Cross hut no one would argue that all citizens should lie com pelled to join, whether they want to or not. Labor leaders also assert that the right to work has kept hack economic progress in these states. This just isn't true. In ten years, 105:!-0.'!, non-farm employment increased 2fi'; in "right-to-work" states but only 10'.; in others. Individual in come increased 4.V against .'ls'/' for the rest of the country. Real wealth produced 00'; in "right-to-work"states— in other states. Industry seems to lie attracted to "ripht-to-work" states. As Republican Senator Paul Fanin of Arizona has said: "We are 3-A SPIAKIft Mrs. Olivia W. Col*, Assistant Dlrtctw. Aw tlslnf ind Public lUlitiMM, li C. Mutual LHa Insuranca Cam will dalivar Hia main addraaa at Whita Rock Baptist Church, Sunday, August 1, at 11 un. (Sao story B soctlon) convinced that it (Right to Work) has been an aid to us in our industrial development activities." Behind the reasons unions trive for the repeal of 14 (B), one fact stands out. 1050 was the peak year for union mem- Itersnip—l7.s million members. In 1902, the latest figures put union members at lO.li million. This is almost a million mem bers down the drain in six short years at a time when 3 million new workers were entering la bor's ranks. Has the Federal Government the right to tell any worker to join or starve? Most Americans don't think so. A went nation al public opinion poll showed (57',; of all people queried, ap proved of "right-to-work" laws. How most of us feel was summarized by a Miami attor ney, Bernard B. Weksler, be fore the U. S. Supreme Court. "This right to work is a large ingredient in the civil lil>erty of the citizen. The right to work is equivalent to the right to eat; and ... to make one's bread depend on church or union membership or forced payment of money to a union as a con dition of employment would l>e the worst spepics of anti- Americanism." 5 . Labor leaders have gone too far in this latest attempt to extend their monopoly powers. Witnesses before the suhcom niittee say they will press for .secret ballot elections for union membership drives, national "right-to-work" laws, as well as amendments to do away with most of the -special privileges unions now enjoy. As one of America's great weekly magazines wrote: "Let the federal government face up honestly to the fact that 'free collective bargaining' is impos sible when one party comes to the table with monopoly pow ers. Labor union memliership should lie voluntary—not com pulsory." But the pressures on the Congress arc tremendous, including threats to kill their chances of re-election unless they serve Big Labor's ambi tions. If you lielieve in freedom of choice instead of compulsion, you would do well to let your Senators and Congressmen know it.

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