-THE CAROLINA TIMES SATURDAY. SEPT. 28, 1#«8 6A LAST RITES HELD FOR CARL LEE HERRING SATURDAY, SEPT. 21 Last rites were held Satur day, September 21, for Carl Lac Herring at Faueette Memo rial CME Church with the Rev. J. L. Thomas, officiating. They've Got To Go! { Savings Up To S I2OO j Most Of These Cars Will Be Sold At Cost or Below. 1968 Mercury Cougar /f^=\ HURRY! They Won't Savings Up To $1200.00 | /iff- 1968 Mercury Monterey Colors To Choott From 1968 Mercury Colony n Row Is The Time To Buy During Our f»8 Close-Out Sale Weeks-Allen 1 CON TINEN T AL-UNCOLN-MERCURY Service For Over 20 Years Cor. Rigsbee A Geer Sts. Dir. 1266 688-4331 | CHAPEL HILL DODGE, Inc. Brings You SEE THE COMPLETE j LINE 0N | 1969 DART CUSTOM 4-DR. SEDAN *2394 P^^TElMtNFli^^ | 3 1968 Company Official Cars ; ? 1. Monaco 500 ... 2. Monaco 2-Dr. Hardtop, Fully Equipped ', > 3. Monaco 4-Dr. Hardtop, Completely Equipped i' ? Coma A Dealing > • BEST DEALS-USED CARS e \ 1968 Dodge Coronet 500 2-Dr. Hardtop $2,588 1968 Chevrolet lmpaia 2-Dr. Hardtop Custom Factory Air Conditioned . . . Full Power 2,688 1967 Dodge Coronet % 1,688 1965 Pontiac Tempest Custom 4-Dr. V-8 1,388 1965 Pontiac Catalina 4-Dr., Factory Air * Conditioned, Full Power 1,688 1964 Pontiac Bonneville Convertible, Factory Equipped 1,188 1964 Plymouth Fury II 2-Dr. Hardtop, Full Power 1,288 1964 Plymouth Fury Station Wagon, Full Power 1,288 1963 Ford XL Convertible 888 )963 Ford Country Squire, 9 Passenger, Full Power 1,088 1964 Pontiac Catalina, 9 Passenger Wagon 1,188 1963 Corvair Monza, 4-Speed 588 1963 Pontiac, Full Power 888 CHAPEL HILL DOOCtlnc. Authorized Dodge Dealer—No. 2178 405 W. Main St., Carrboro Tel. 942-3112 itt-Msk Herring waa born In Garland, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Herring. Later his family moved' to Durham, where he waa educat- Ed in the city school*. Hare he was married to Hi** Jaaie Green. *n»ey later moved to Philadelphia where he depart ed this life September 13. He ia lurvived by hia wife Mrs. Janie Herring of Durham; mother, Mrs. Missouri Beatty of Durham; father, Lerer Her ring of New Bern; stepaaether, Mrs. Helen Hernnf of New Bern; sifter, Mba Beraadine Herring of New Bern; one uncle, Manuel Willi ami of Dur ham; two aunts, Mrs. Odell Satterfield and Mrs. Annie Ri ga n. Four nephews and six nieces and host of relatives and friends. Mrs. Mary Elizabeth Walker Funeralized Monday, Sept 23 Final rites for Mrs. Mar? Elizabeth Walker were held at Scarborough Chapel, Monday. September 23, at 3:00 p.m. Mrs. Walker, the daughter of Mrs. Lucy Cates and the late Lonnie Cates, was born January 24, 1951 in Bahama, N. C. and reared in Durham. She was educated in Little River and Hillside High School. She departed this life Sep teber 20. Mrs. Walker is survived by her mother, Mrs. Lucy Cates; a son, Nelson Walker; one sister, Mrs. Margaret Allen; two brothers, Lonnie Williams and Bobby Williams; three nieces; three nephews; six uncles and one aunt and a host of relatives and friends. -Session (Continued from front page) Washington Bureau of NAACP, who will make a special re port on the Democratic and Republican conventions and will give in depth the voting records of canddates. -Convocation (Continued from front page) committee of the World Coun cil of Churches to serve at Its Fourth Assembly at Uppsala, Sweden last summer. Rev. Cousin, minister at St. Joseph's here since 1965, is a graduate of Central State College, Ohio, and holds a sacred theology degree from Boston University. He was president of KittreU College from 1960-65 follow ing service in pastorates in Florida and in Danville and Norfolk, Va. He is known for his active leadeiship in civic and facial advances, and has also been ac tive in local and state politics. -Union (Continued from front page) "It will also require that church members begin to think of the church in new forms and new relationships," he said. Asked about a possible time table for union among the nine denominations which are presently in the process of drafting a merger plan, Dr. Crow noted that there is a sense of urgency, but that "the spelling out of a time table is not necessary." He said, "First of all we must learn to deal with each other and with the dynamics ; of the churches involved as well as with the realities that | they face in their own situa tions." The general secretary indi cated three matters of import ance for the further considera tion of the Consultation's exe cutive body. First, priority must be given to the actual drafting of an ac ceptable union plan. Work on a plan has already begun by a commission appointed by the executive committee last June. Second, there must be an awareness in the churches of emerging opposition to the Consultation and its efforts. This opposition is both a sign of the Consultation's success as well as a reality that must be faced, he noted. "Those who have anxieties about us are not only the traditionalists who want to de fend the status quo." Dr. Crow said, "but also those who feel that radical steps should be taken to bring about a new kind of church." The real opponents of church union may turn out to be not the traditionalists but the renewalists who feel that the church Is not really on the frontier, he said. Transplant Dies HOUSTON -Mrs. Allen H. (Beth) Brunk, 49, one of the world's three surviving woman heart transplant recipients, died today when her new heart stopped, a spokesman (or St. Luke's Hospital said. Negro Businessmen Form New Organization at Meet Held Here Negro Salesmen, distribu tors and sales executives en gaged in various business throughout the country were invited to an organizational meeting at the Holiday Inn in Durham, on Saturday Sep tember 21st at 6:30 p.m. "The principal purpose of the new organization is to examine every possibility whereby the Negro salesman can tolly get into the main stream of the nation's business economy - in all its branches," said Clifford C. Sewell of New' York, its president. "Not only will the members of the organization be provided with factual information need ed to function in an effective manner, the president continu ed, but it will allow them a chance to meet, to be influenc ed and leam from the men Who direct business and industry.." . The officers of the Sales- I | I SEE AND DRIVE THE 1969 s z m I CHEVROLET A T HAR 1 i - i z , * „ > « « i - - f » 2 • 8 c /> cn j x • ■ ■ 18 I SAVE ON A CAR WORTH OWNING AT . . I | Durham-Chapel Hill Blvd. Ph. 544-1716 or 942-3191 ■ - | s | CONNBSM HdftftlSS • Introducing the 1969 BUICK Life really is full of pleasant surprises, isn't 7"^"^ LeSabre Custom 4 door sedan ' 1 men U.S.A: are: CUfford C. Sewell, New York' President; Joseph Pitt man, Rocky Mount, - Vice Presi dent; Percy S. Peek, Fort Pierce, Florida • Secretary; Carl W. Timbers, Philadelphia, Pa. - Treasures. A membership campaign has already been launched, and plans are being laid out to involve every progressive sales man in the United States. Those attending the meeting were: George W. King, Hender son; John V. Sharpe, Roxboro; R. T. HofTman, Mt. Gilead, Percy S. Peek, Ft. Pierce; Mel vin Griffin, Rocky Mount; Clifford C. Sewell, New York; Joseph Pittman, Rocky Mount; C. C. Burthey, Durham. British Gen. Edward Braddock was the first to use a conestoga wagon in a sizable wagon train in 1755 when he led his troops from Ft. Cumberland, M'l. across the Alleghenies. Teenager Charged With Firebombing , The 16-year-old boy, whose ROANOKE, V®. A name was withheld because colored teen-ager was arrest- & a g e was identified by ed late Wednesday night in an unnamed resident who told a predominantly Negro section policc he MW th e youUl and of Northwest Roanoke other youngsters trying to set scene of recent minor racial a house on /ire disturbances and charged OFFICERS later found two with manufacturing, possess- gaso line-filled bottles with ing and using a firebomb. cloth wiclu at Kene . Imported MACNAUGHTON CANADIAN jP|l WHISKY 6 years old 86.8 Proof f importVD^__ I jjgjfc SPOS I *§?? s>l9o PINT I IT 4/5 QT. OWADIAK WHISKY. A BLEND ■ ©SCKME* IMPORTS CO., N.Y., N.Y,

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