-THE CAROLINA Sat., Det IS, 197 iMm m m RNSHIN rd UN 1 tk putie Mterwl fry A American Banters AmocmMmi A Safe Deposit Box-Your Personal Vault Birth certificates, insurance policies, wills, contracts and other legal documents aren't needed very often, but when they are nothing else will take their place. One of the easiest ways to make sure you can locate important pa pers when you need them is to rent a bank safe deposit box, the American Bankers Association (ABA) points out. Not only will you know where these irreplaceable items are, you'U also be as sured they have the beat fire and burglar protection avail able. The first safe deposit box as it is known today appeared in 1865. When the Safe De posit Co. of New York opened its doors, the sales pitch in cluded a new wrinkle. Not only was the customer offered the latest in security, but he was also guaranteed individ ual privacy and exclusive con trol of his own property. At the heart of the "exclu sive control" feature was a two-key system still in use today. When you rent a bank safe deposit box, you are given a set of keys to open one lock, and a bank vault attendant retains another to open a second lock. Conse quently, you know (unlike your ancestor who may have kept his valuables in the town goldsmith's strong box) that no one can get into your box without your permission. If you lose your duplicate key, you should notify the bank immediately, and an officer will have the lock changed in your presence. But, in the meantime, protec tion continues. The vault at tendant requires a signature check before allowing anyone with a key into the area, and generally he has a physical description of the legal box holder. When you rent a safe de posit box, you are required to sign a rental contract, for your own protection and the bank's. Once signed, the bank is held responsible for the exercise of "reasonable care" in providing protection for your property, but it is not normally considered a guar antor or insurer of the box contents. Although total security is an impossibility, the chances of loss from a safe deposit box are certainly far less than from your own home. Every possible safeguard is consid ered. The use of a heavy steel vault, the two-key system, careful identification checks and elaborate alarm devices are all combined for the best protection available. For the protection and con venience provided, the cost of renting a safe deposit box is amazingly low. The annual charge runs from around $5 for 'a small size to perhaps $50 for a much larger one. And, it's tax deductible as long as an earning asset (such as a stock certificate or bond) is kept in the box, the ABA notes. m Jim m V JwB m. A fM Wm EiB &I JP rMMsW Mm iw : Mm sBEJmm .. m , mm M Wm w Mm Mw -MWMA . . . - DIAL 682-2913 OR 688-6587 FOR SERVICE fftf: Sights On Safety fcS bv UL Public Information Office h:'V v ;-: ::::;v 'vaaBBHi HKv mW: 1km mm wm Holiday Safety Accidents don't take holidays. In fact, more accidents occur in December than any other time of the year. To help your family have a safe Christmas holiday, Underwriters Labora tories Inc., an independent, not-for-profit organization testing for public safety offers the following tips. Disconnect light strings when hanging them on the tree to avoid electric shock. Never try to stretch the wir ing on cord sets or extension cords. Also, use special weath erproof cords with outdoor wiring. The UL Label will in dicate if the cord is designed for outdoor use. Don't overload electrical circuits. Wires that carry more current than they can handle may overheat and cause a fire. Watch the placement of electrical fixtures. Keep them out of the reach of children, and never place them close to flammable material. Lighting sets can wear out or become damaged. So check them closely for worn insulation, broken plugs, loose bulb sockets. Replace them with UL-Labeled string lights and cord sets. Never use a regular string of decorative lights on a metal tree the danger of electric shock is great. Use a spotlight to illuminate a metal tree; Remember turn off in door lighting sets before going out or retiring. For A Gift From A Lady Bobby Riggs Suggests A Chain Saw LEGAL NOTICES NORTH CAROLINA DURHAM COUNTY NOTICE OF SALE UNDER AND BY VIRTUE of the power of sale contained in a certain Deed of Trust executed by CORNELIA H. LOWE, (Widow), and recorded in Mortgage Book 844, at page do, in tne uince 01 ine Register of Dees of Durham County, North Carolina, default having been made in the payment of the indebtedness thereby secured and said Deed of Trust being by the terms thereof subject to foreclosure, the undersigned will offer for sale at Public Auction to the highest bidder for cash at the Courthouse Door in Durham County, North Carolina, at NOON on the 4th day of January, 1974, the property conveyed in said Deed of Trust, the same lying and being in the County of Durham, and State of North Carolina, in City Township, and more particularly described as follows: BEGINNING at a stake at the curb on the North side of West Geer Street 146 feet in a westerly direction from the curb on the West side of North Mangum Street and running thence along and with the curb on the North side of said Geer Street, North 88 14 West 54 feet to a stake. Southeast corner of G. R. Rose; thence with the east line of the said G. R Rose Property North 2 14 West 109 feel: to a stake in the South line, South 88 00' East 54 feet to a stake; thence South 2 14 East 109 feet to the curb on the North side of Geer Street, the point of BEGINNING, and BEING the identical property conveyed to Cecile Daniel Osment (widow) by deed of record in Deed Book 155, at page 388, Durham County Registry); reference is also hereby made to Deed Book 63, at page 654, Durham County Registry; SAVING, EXCEPTING AND RESERVING, however, from the operation of this conveyance a strip of land 8 feet in width running along the North side of Geer Street which as previously been conveyed to the City of Durham for the purpose of widening Geer Street, all as more particularly described in deed from D. Lumpkin and wife, Maye B. Lumpkin, to the City of Durham recorded in Deed Book 85, at page 58, Durham County Registry. On this property is located a nouse known as 106 West Geer Street THIS PROPERTY will be sold subject to all prior encumbrances and taxes and all 1973 ad valorem taxes and assessments. THIS SALE will remain open for then (10) days to receive Increased bids, as required by law. This 4th day of December, 1973. J. J. Henderson, Trustee William A, Marsh, Jr., Attorney Carolina Times: December 8th, loth, zznd and zutn, 1973. Be Prepared Home Heating Problems Should Be Anticipated It may sound far fetched in these times of widespread affluence, but have you given any thought to what you might do if your home heating system failed for an ex tended period or if fuel for it became unavail able? With the energy sit uation what it is, the sug gestion may not be so far-fetched after all. North Carolina State University extension housing engineers sug gest that some thought be given to what to do in a home heating emergency. First, could your heating system, with a simple modification or through manual opera tion, continue to heat all or part of your home? If the answer is no, con sider buying, building, or adapting a device or sys tem that will fill the gap. The choice might be a space heater, castiron or sheet-metal stove or a catalytic heater. A small generator might be the answer, if it will keep your furnace in oper ation. Or perhaps you've always wanted a fireplace in your home and couldn't bring yourself to spend the money to build one. Now might be the time to build it. In beginning your planning for an emergen- When it comes to giving advice to women, Bobby Riggs has become a contro versial expert. The puckish senior citizen hasn't hesitated to offer helpful comments to Billie Jean King, Margaret Court and other female ten nis pros. Riggs, a bespeckled 55-year-old self-styled hustler, has carved a new career from bis contention that ove raged male athletes are the equal to the ladies in their prime. He was proved wrong by Mrs. King in their celebrated Houston Astrodome tennis "battle of the sexes." and he ajga wiser for the experience. 1 don't want people to think I'm a woman-hater," Riggs says while he seeks a rematch with Billie Jean. "I love women and I've got some advice for them: treat your men right and youll never feel you have to be 'liberated.' " According to Bobby, there is one thing that women are sure to agree on, and that is providing their men thought ful, useful gifts for Christmas or any occasion. "I like a woman to give me something useful, like a chain saw," Bobby says. "A light weight chain saw such as Mc Culloch's Mini Mac can let a man cut firewood, prune his trees and do all kinds of jobs without using up all his en ergy. 'To me, that's important. I like to save my energy to take care of my lady friends -on the tennis court. Or at least to try." ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE The undersigned, having qualified as Administrator of the estate of Nettle H. Herndon, deceased, late of Durham County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against s 'estate, to exhibit them to the undersigned Howard R Herndon, 309 Dunstan Street, Durham, N. C. 27707 on or before the 20th day of May, 1974, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will- please make immediate payment to the undersigned Administrator. This 20th day of November, 1973. Howard R. Herndon, Administrator, Estate of Nettie. H Hemdon Carolina Times: November 24, Dec. 1, 8, 15, 1973 NORTH CAROLINA DURHAM COUNTY IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE, DISTRICT COURT, CIVIL DIVISION, FILE No. 73 CvD 5904 MARY D. PLAINTIFF vs. VERNICE DEFENDANT SMITH SMITH NOTICE TO: VERNICE SMITH Take notice that a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed in the above entitled action. The nature of relief being sought Is as follows: Absolute divorce; said action being based on one year separation. You are required to make defense to such pleadings not later than the 2nd day of Jan. , 1974, and upon failure to do so the party seeking service against you will apply to the court for the relief so mm This, the 21st day of November, 1973. cy, take inventory of what's available around the home or farm. It might be a portable elec tric heater, a camping stove or other devices. Make a list. Thirdly, list the fuels that are available in your home or within reason able distance. Which of them could be used in the heating devices you have available. The list might contain oil or kerosene, coal, firewood, lumber scraps, corncobs, camp stove fuel, charcoal, newspapers, etc. When you've done these things, prepare a home heating emergency plan. Decide how you'll use the emergency heat ing devices. If you don't have one or more avail able, maybe you should consider buying, building or having one built. One very important precaution: Any device that burns fuel must be vented outside the house, both to eliminate smoke and gas and to provide oxygen for combustion. So don't take any risks. Any heating device you install in your home should be properly in stated or not installed at all. The risks of fire. property loss and death are too great to take any chances. BEETLE The Japanese beetle causes extensive damage to many gardens and crops in the Eastern U.S. This pest was first found in this country in New Jersey in 1916. Since then it has spread and is now present from southern Maine to Georgia and Kentucky. A fly alighting on a steel bar will cause the steel to bend under its wejght. (Verified by the U.S. De partment of Comiperce, National Bureau of Stand ards.) " FOR SALE ;j NEW PRINCESS BED ! RESONABLE PRICE ; j I WARM MORNING : ; GAS STOVE ! ' NEW SOFA BED ;I t 1965 MUSTANG ! ; j! EXCELLENT CONDITION ' ; ! CALL 688-0550 ' TV'g CAMERAS ' TYPEWRITERS RECORD FLAYERS TAPE PLAYERS SAM'S PAWN SHOP Phone 682-2573 122 Emt Main Street Durham. N. C Bafley FARM STATE Insurance Compantea Horn Offices: Btoongton. Wrwte BUMPASS, AVANT BELCHER & Hearing Test A Must "With another school year underway, parents should make certain their children are not encountering hearing problems. And the only way to be sure a child has normal hearing ability is to have a hearing test," advise officials of the Beltone Crusade for Hearing Conservation. The crusade is sponsored by Chicago-based Beltone Elec tronics Corporation, world leader in hearing aids and electronic hearing test instru ments, as a means of building public awareness to the need for hearing conservation. Crusade officials point out that gradual hearing losses can go unnoticed by a child as well as his parents and teach ers. A child suffering from an undetected hearing problem is at a definite disadvantage in the classroom because he cannot clearly understand what is being said, and he probably cannot compete at an equal level with his class mates. A youngster suffering from a hearing handicap might ap- BY: GEORGE L BUMPASS, ATTORNEY FOR PLAINTIFF, 112 Dunstan Street, Durham, North Carolina. Dec. 1,8,15 NORTH CAROLINA DURHAM COUNTY IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE, DISTRICT COURT, CIVIL DIVISION, FILE No. 73 CvD 6203 ETHEL BROWN MCRAE, PLAINTIFF vs ERNEST MCRAE DEFENDANT NOTICE TO: ERNEST MCRAE: Take notice that a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed in the above entitled action. The nature of the relief beimr sought is as follows Absolute divorce, said action being based on one year sertaration. You are required to make defense to such pleadings not later than the 2nd day of Jan, 1974. and upon failure to ao so the party seeking service against you will apply to the court oi tne reuei sougni., This, the 21st day of November, 1973. BUMPASS, BELCHER & BY: GEORGE L BUMPASS, ATTORNEY FOR PLAINTIFF, 112 Dunstan Street, Durham, North Carolina. Dec 1, 8, 15 pear inattentive or preoccu pied. Unaware of the real problem, a parent or teacher can incorrectly classify the youngster as a "slow learner" or even "dumb" w : . In other instances a child might mistake verbal instruc tions at home or in school and as a result his conduct might appear out of line. Conse quently he might be thought of as a "behavioral problem" when in actuality he cannot understand what is expected of him. FREEZONE IS FOR CORNS THAT HURT. Why fool around with painful corns, when FrttrWl can help you remove them Try it. You'll see In just days, the corn will be font the hurt will bo ION. Pain sly. No donierous cuttim. No uilv pads or plasters Drop on Preezone -take off corns. (ft "ioauusts Helps Shrink Swelling Of Hemorrhoidal Tissues caused by inflammation Doctors have found a medica tion that in many cases gives prompt, temporary relief from pain and burning itch in hemor rhoidal tissues. Then it actually helps shrink swelling of these tissues caused by inflammation. The answer is Preparation H. No prescription is needed for Preparation H. Ointment or suppositories. Make Christmas Merry Don't let your children be mere spectators of the Christ mas scene, or they'll miss most of the fun. Involve them in the pre-holiday festivities with a tree-trimming party for their friends on December 24th. t h, tnr the tHmminp assemble raw materials that renin re n minimum of dexterity to handle. Bright Animal Kingdom to Sew 7H What child wouldn't adore finding an amusing mouse or jolly, smiling frog pillow under the tree this Christ mas. Not too big to play with, plenty substantial to sit on. Make them of vel-vet-y Amel velour fabric by Blue Ridge Winkler which is machine washable and is available by the yard. All pattern books show beguil ing animal toys to make. The Humpty Dumpty bean bag, leaning against Mr. Frog, Is perfect for baby. pieces of felt, scissors, paste, sequins and glitter, colored .pipe cleaners, scraps of calico and yarn from your work basket: these are the makings of a truly splendiferous tree! Only the older children should handle scissors or needle and thread, of course. If all Children are small, an adult should hang around unobtrusively to give an assist where needed. You may have to cut out basic star and snowflake shapes from the fabric, for example, and show the younger chil dren how simple it is to stroke on paste and sprin kle on glitter. Interesting mobiles can be constructed by stringing several ornaments together so they sway and dance in the slightest air current. For modem, geometric orna ments, stack different col ored fabrics in a pile with the largest piece on the bot tom; glue or sew them all tbgethe tHWugh'tfte'mrddle. rnpe'1fea1iBs,lt51U9iyaW'dd up to some very original icicles. Angels and snowmen, cut from felt in sitaple cookie cutter shapes, are fun for even the youngest children to decorate. Sequin eyes and bright yarn hair can be glued on easily. To attach fabric wines or skirts, a staoler comes in handy. When the tree-trimmers are ready for refreshments, bring out your first batch of home made Christmas cookies a long with mugs of Carnation Instant Hot Cocoa Mix. The milk is already in this de- WATER TREATMENT PLANT SIPERINTENDEKT Excellent opportunity. Manage the operation of the Chanel Hill water purification plant. Need successful experience In operating and State Board of Health certificate. Beginning salary is $10-11,000 area. Contact University Personnel Department, 108 Vance Hall, Chapel Hill, N. C. 27514. Equal Opportunity Employer. i JEWflJY S jNt's. WATCH REPAIRS QUALITY GEMS J.H. PHONE 688-2205 PKTTt6lt4W ST. INTRHAM, N. & 1 1 Solke m to get your refrigerator to cook things. JfSOitarafftMftd Stir the right things into Jell O" Brand Gelatin and your refrigerator will fix crunchy salads, interesting ' fruits and new side dishes. For over 250 exciting ideas,' send 25c (in coin) with your name, address and zipcode to Joy s of Jell O, Box 8074, Kan kakee, Illinois, 60901. 4 the Gtmral (.! Ciirpiiraliim j! licious drink. You just add hot water and stir. Consider ing the occasion, why not stir each drink with a pep permint stick? Mix the hot cocoa to a frothy, choco late richness, and serve with the candy cane inside. After the party, teach them to leave a plate of cookies and a mug of cocoa: on ,the "hearth (or beside the tree) for Santar'Thts is art old Christmas tradition that each new generation loves. As a climax to the party, you might add some Christ mas giving to the trimming. Have the children decorate several small trees rather than one large one. Drive a round with the children to neighboring convalescent homes, children's hospitals and shut-ins to deliver the trees personally. Sharing their own happiness with others, your young tree-trimmers will come face to face with the true spirit of Christmas. Before you can hire handicapped people, you've sot to know where to find them. If you are interested In hiring people who have overcome their handicaps, hard-working, skilled men and women, write to your State Director of Vocational Rehabilitation. Tell him what kind of business you're in. What job openings need to be filled. And he'll put you in touch with the right people for your company or organization . People who wi 1 1 work to their fullest potential. And help your com pany, and our nation, prosper. Writt: Director, State Department of Vocational Rehabilitation at your state eapitol. He knows where to find us. i i- la. I By JOHN HUDGINS Did it ever occur to you that If you were thinking about buying one of those new small mustangs, to cut down on how much gas you buy, that the price has gone up. Where else but in this country could a car set on a lot and increase In price overnight by $160. I mean its the same car, nothing different Why did the price go up? Simply because more people are buying them O.K. so you still bought the car. But now the price of gas is about to go up by as much as 30-40 cents. Yep, same gas as it was yesterday. Why is it going up? Simply because there is less of it, so to keep too many people from buying it, put it out of reach of some of them. Now just looking at these things they may appear outrageous, but let us look just a little further. Guess who has made the most money in the past year? You who want the new car? No. You who will have to pay twice as much for the gas? No. The people who are selling you that car made more money this year than they have made since they been making cars. Yes, the people who sell that gas have increased profits by as much as 60 during the past year. One has to wonder where this madness will lead to. Last week we talked about Hilter Nixon being bought off, but it seems like we have just begun to see just a little bit of what is to come. Remember all the static Whitney Young got when he wanted to block one highway leading to the World's Fair. You see all those truck drivers who voted for Nixon out there blocking every road they could get to. What happened to them? Nothing. But more important why were they out there. That's right Bjack folks ain't the only ones getting kicked around no more. When them cars go up who does it hurt-the people who buy the most cars, same with the gas. When Black folks were walking around six years ago talking about how backward this country is, who wanted to beat our heads in, who voted in a fascist to give them niggers law'n order. Weil, they got it and this nigger is as happy as he can be. Finally white folks are beginning to feel a machine they thought they had set up to destroy us. But they got a Hitler Nixon monster and he just gon' wild oppressing everybody ...and they don't no how to get rid of him. They replaced an agnew dumbell with a ford dumbell (used to play football with no helmet). So brothers and sisters as we suffer (and we are used to it) we can laugh in our misery cause we can remember, AT LEAST WE DID'T ASK FOR IT.. Realtors Present $1 25,000 Grant To UNC Business School atC. Hill immm OSCARS, OSCARS EVERYWHERE - Columbia Pictures' boardroom, scene of a recent VIP cocktail reception following a private screening of the box-office hit, THE WAY WE WERE, staTHng Barbara Streisand and Robert Redford, provided the atmosphere and ready reference for discussions on the all-time great motion pictures. Exchanging such pleasantries while surrounding a trophy from Columbia's TO SIR WITH LOVE, which starred Sidney Poitier, are (from left) Dr. Aaron O. Wells, prominent New York City heart specialist; nationally noted socialite, Barbara Jacquet; Neville Burgess, Republic of Guyana Consul; and New York Urban League Executive Director Livingston Wingate. A poignant love story which spans the late 1930s through the early 1950s, THE WAY WE WERE is a Ray Stark-Sydney Pollack Production, which also features Bradford Dillman, Viveca Lindfors, Patrick O'Neal; Herb Edelman, Murray Hamilton and newcomer Lois Chiles. The critically -acclaimed film is now appearing before record viewers in theaters across the country CHAPEL HILL-A $125,000 grant was presented to the School of Business Administration of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hi II on Tuesday (Dec.ll) by the North Carolina Real Estate Educational Foundation. The Foundation, headquartered in Greensboro, is a non profit corporation affiliated with the 4, IjOO'tnember nN. " Ct Association of Realtors. Realtor Jim Fountain of Wilmington, president of the Foundation, presented an initial check of $25,000 to Dr. Maurice W. Lee, Dean of the School of Bus i ness Administration , at a luncheon held at the Carolina Inn in Chapel Hill. Also at the presentation were the Foundation Board of Directors, Business School faculty members, and members of the press. The remaining $100,000 will be presented in annual installments of $10,000 each. In accepting the funds Dean Lee said, "The grant will the academic, management, and activities ol the of B u s i ness especially as relate to the professionalism in the industry." "We fully anticipate this grant will help us produce even more meaningful results in both our teaching and research programs," Lee said, "and we are particularly pleased that the Foundation had placed its confidence in the educational programs of the University." Attending the presentation were the following members of the Foundation Board of Directors Richard O, Avery, Greensboro; Clarence B. Beasley, New Bern; Mosette L. Butler; Clinton; A.P. Carlton, Greensboro; O. J. Clontz, Jr., Winston-Salem; Leonard H. Craver, Sr., Lexington; Jim Fountain (presi dent) Wilmington; David L. Godwin, Fayettevllle; Susanna Gwyn, support advanced research School Administration, those activities real estate profession in North Carolina." The grant marks a new phase of professional endeavor in the 26-year relationship between the real estate i ndustry of North Carolina and the School, through its Bureau of Business Services, noted the Foundation's executive director, James L. Bichsel of Greensboro. DeWl tt C. Dearborn director of the Bureau of Business Services, has worked closely with Dean Lee and the Foundation Directors in developing the grant plans. The Foundation and the Bureau of Business Services are co-sponsors of the N.C Realtors' Institute, an adult training session held twice annually at UNC-Chapel Hill. It is the country's oldest professional Realtors' Institute and was originated jointly by the North Carolina Association of Realtors and the Bureau More than 4,400 students from throughout the Southeast have attended the 26-year-old school, which has become model for Realtors' Institutes throughout the country. President Fountain pointed out that while the N.C Realtors' Institute provides specialized training, the grant given to the Business School is "a major effort for the Foundation in the field of formal education." He called the grant the "most significant action taken by the Foundation to advaiw NEA HAS NOT SAT ON ITS HANDS IN REGARD TO DESEGREGATION The statements by the 116-member board, chaired by NEA President Helen D. Wise, indicates that NEA has not art on its hands in respect to desegregation in the past. Rather, "in most cases, teacher associations have acted aggressively and affirmatively in both advocating reform and protecting the rights of teachers and students." Early, positive involvement has "improved the general educational climate and public support for the schools," the board asserts. Too, it has minimized disenchantment with desegregation in those minority communities where many of the improvements the people expected still lie over the horizon. On the other hand, "in those few cases in which teacher groups have ignored or actively opposed progress toward desegregation, the results have too often been increased divisiveness in the school and community, discipline problems, suspensions, reduced teacher and student u morale, and general decline of eaucacionai quality in me school systems." (NEA has reported the depletion of thousands of black educators from school staffs in the wake of desegregation.) . Dm. If , Wl$ in CMMOUSA OaKa V04 JBJ1 I mKi I I 'zms mm I Brill - Beautifully Gift-Packaged at no Extra Cost. SGSM DISTILLERS CO K r C CM WSt'-' 5LSKD "M PEACE CORPS VOLUNTEER FROM GRAHAM IS VERSATILE COACH IN VENEZUELA SPORTS MENTOR-Reginald Isley (In hat), a Peace Corps volunteer from Graham, N.C, has been a dominant figure in the Venezuelan sports picture the past two years. He coaches basketball, baseball, volleyball and boxing in Rio Caribe, a town in northeastern Venezuela. The 24-year-old volunteer coaches all of the high school tearns In Rio Caribe, organizes InterdW leaguejanjes, and arranges for ttttde'ith schools from otWr cl'tjes. fejey Is a 1971 graduate' f WfcstoSaleil State University, with a bachelor of science degree in physical education and health.- He is the son of Clyde and Vera Isley of 310 S. Melville St., Graham. Isley completes his two-year tour in the Peace Corps in January, 1974. He is one of 200 Peace Corps volunteers serving in sports, health and other programs in Venezuela. The Peace Corps is part of ACTION, the federal volunteer agency. Winston -Salem; Robert H. Harleston, Jr., Charlotte; T. R. Lawing, Charlotte; Richard S. Pindel I (vice president), Raleigh; and Charles P. Scott (secretary-treasurer), Greensboro. NEW PATTERNS Major pattern com panies that used to concentrate on clothes now are offering home furnishing patterns. They can show you how to make draperies, curtains, bed spreads and tablecloths, furniture covers, pillows and placemats, says Mrs. Edith McGlamery, exten- sion house furnishings specialist, North Caro lina State University. CAFTAN TIP For lounging or for mal wear, create a fashionable, comfortable caftan. If the design is full, select a soft, draping fabric, advises Harriet Tutterow, extension clothing specialist, North Carolina State Uni versity. If the caftan pattern is somewhat fitted, choose a firmly woven or knit fabric with enough body so the gar ment will hold its shape. MORE EXPORTS The U. S. is expected to export 550 million bushels of soybeans this year, compared to 480 million bushels last year. Ru mum... i by Joe Black I p, aij BBS Lw Pie-a-Plenty Wins Raves Beef Pot It's the most exciting use yet for leftover beef! Chop it coarsely, then eombine with cooked green beans, chopped onion, and cream of mushroom soup no browning or heating Is needed. Put this in a pie shell and It will suit you very well! Why? Because the flaky, tender pie crust is made from a mix, which makes easy, speedy and fool proof preparation for even the newest of cooks. How about treating your family tonight? . , BEEF POT PIE Makes 6 servings Vt teaspoon salt OneflOVn-oz. can condensed cream of mushroom soup Pastry: One 10-dz. pkg. Flako Pie Crust Mix 4 to 5 tablespoons cofd water Filling: One 9-oz. pkg, frozen out green beans, cooked and drained 2tt cupa coarsely chopped cooked beef 4 cup chopped onion ft teaspoon pepper Heat oven to moderate (375'F.). For filling, combine filling in gredients. For orust, empty contents of package into bowl. Sprinkle cold water by tablespoonfuls over mix; stir lightly with fork until just dampened. Form Into ball. Divide dough Into 2 parts, one slight ly larger. Roll out larger part of dough on lightly floured board or canvas to form a 13-inch circle. Fit loosely into 9-inch pie plate. Fill with meat filling. Roll out remaining dough to form a 12-Inch circle. Cut slits for steam to escape. Place over filling. Trim; turn edges under; flute. Bake In preheated oven (376'F.) about 40 minutes or until top orust Is evenly browned. Back m the twenties, there was a beautiful lady they called the Empress of the blues. Her name, was Bessie Smith. And she was famous for a long called "Nobody Knows You When You're Down And Out" That was a long time back. And yet, today, you can still hear it echoing in many Black commun ities, and from Black organizations. You can hear the rip off against Blacks who have achieved some measure of success. Downing tha achievers who, if you believe it, have turned their backs on their Black brothers and sisters. Well, I wonder just how many of those wailers can dig into their pockets, and produce an NAACP card, an Urban League card, or a receipt for a contribution to PUSH, SCLC, or any reputable Black institution. Of course, when you're not up there, it's easy sometimes natural to sit back and blame the achiever for a lot of things. Not the least of which is not being more involved. However, lots of achievers are involved. But, what's more important is this. Rather than allow an attitude like this to keep Black communities divided, I suggest we all do a little more to help ease the problems that exist in our communities. Repeat, all of us. Some can help more than others, of course. But please keep in mind, when we all helpnwe all help each other. Vice President The Greyhound Corporation The suede sport coat by Breier of Amsterdam There's thoroughbred styling In this ruggedly handsome sport coat of richly sueded New Zealand lambskin. Bi-swlng back. Flapped bellows pockets. Naturally a more elegant way to go for today's casual man. $150.00 lafwira GIFTS DOWNTOWN-NORTHGATE Nbrthgote Open till 9 MoriOuy thru'r'riday Copyright 1973