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7ff ‘ANNOUNCEMENTS CARDS OP THANKS IN MEMORIAM LEGAL NOTICES REAL ESTATE ROOMS - APARTMENTS HOUSES FOR RENT
VIEWPOINTS m THE NEWS
NO MORE !
JIM CROW !
BERKELEY, Calif. A state-j
ment issued by President Clark
Kerr of the University of Califor
nia set September 1, 1364 as the ;
deadline for the complete elemina
tiorj Lorn fraternities and sorori
ties ol membership rules which |
discriminate because of race, re- j
lifion or national origin
President Kerr said a ma
jority of student groups al
ready have eliminated discri
minatory membership require
ments. The new policy state
ment was adopted two weeks
ago,
N. Y. PREACHER
TO AUSTRALIA
NEW YORK A prominent
v New York preacher and pastor i
of a 10,000-member church will
deliver 102 sermons and addresses
during a six-week tour of Austra
lia. „ |
The Rev Dr Gardner u. Taylor,
a member of the New York City
Board of Education, left cm Mon
day for a tour of Australia wheie
the hopes to stress “the need for
religion to counteract dehurhamz
ing influences ot urban life
The 40-year-old pastor or
Brooklyn's Concord Bapt. is t.
Church will begin his fireacning
August is in the Sydney Town
Hail. He hopes to visit Melbourne
and other municipalities on the
East Coast An August 2T he will
jo to Perth in the West to address
the Triennial Assembly of the
Baptist Union. , ,
Dr. Taylor, when told by friends
to expect questions there on the
American attitude toward race,
’ a *Tm apprehensive about how to
tell the truth and the hope of
strides we are making on race, and
vet not seem to be white-washing
b us ’” ....
Eleanor Roosevelt
Speaks On Incident
NEW YOFK Mrs, Eleanor
Roosevelt, widow of Franklin D.
Roosevelt, reproached the swank,
tennis club in Forest Hills, L I.
for the recent incident of discrl
m miration against Ralph Runcne s
son. She said"
“The members of 'his club
may think themselves better
than people of other races, and
they may think that in their
club and in their homes they
can be justified today in re
fusing admittance to people
ea a of race, color or re
ligion, But 1 would like to
point out to them that bombs
do not discriminate in this
maaaer.
SANDERS
USED TRUCKS
1951 Q. M. C, 620 TRUCK TRACTOR
1955 WHITE WB 22 TRACTOR TRUCK
1952 V 2 TON STUDEBAKER
r With Utility Body -
1958 FORD F-850 TRACTOR TRUCK
1 (Like New)
1956 FORD G=BOQ 2 TON
/ With Stake Body
1958 FORD RANCHERO
With F.O.M, Transmission.. Real Nice.
1950 MACK TRACTOR TRUCK
1951 DODGE VANNETTE
Come in and let one of our courteous salesmen show you the
great values we have in USED TRUCKS.
SANDERS
MOTOR COMPAN ¥
329 S. BLOUNT ST. . TEmple 4-T3Ol
N. C. »«der !553
“If you can't play tennis with
Negroes,” she asked, “how coome
you are willing to let them be
drafted into your Army and die
for you’”
Mrs. Roosevelt felt that the
Buncnes haa too many open doors
to fee! a slight of this kind or to
be hurt by it. She concluded
“I am ashamed of my white
people, i am one of them and
their stupidity and cruelty make
me cringe.”
BIAS EASING IN
WAITING ROOMS
ATLANTA A recent survey
conducted by the mixed Southern
Council in twenty-one Southern
cities tended to show that the col
or bar is being raised in waiting
rooms for trains, busses and air
lines.
However, there is an "increased
awareness that the pattern of
segregation is not uniform
throughout the South, but has a
manifold variety of forms,” the
survey pointed out. The following
summarized the findings of the
council:
1, Airline terminals desegre
i gated or rapidly being desegregat
ed
| WORLD HAPPENINGS j
AFRICAN EDITOR’S
HAND’S ARE TIED
CAPETOWN. South Africa A
magazine editor here will be pre
vented by law from attending
gatherings for five years
Ronald Segal, editor of the Left
wing magazine Africa South must
not attend any gathering in South
Africa or South-West Africa for
five years, according to the terms
of the Suppression of Communism
Act. The order became effective
on Saturday, last week.
COUSINS VIE
FOR CONTROL
KINGSTON. Jamaica The
people of this Caribbean island
will decides in an election this
week which of two cousini will
control the new government.
Chief Minister Norman W
Manley, 66, and his party, the
People’s National Party, won
the 1955 election over the Ja
maica Labor Party, led by
Sir Bustamante, 15, Sir Alex
ander’s party had been in pow
er for 19 years prior to the last
election.
The present Jamaica parlia
ment is made up of eighteen Peo
ple's National party members,
thirteen Jamaica Labor Party
members and one independent.
2. Railroad stations largely
segregated but slowly becoming
desegregated.
3. Bus terminals almost com-;
pletely segregated.
Seven of the cities have
non-segregated waifng rooms
in railroad stations, according
to the study. In ten of the
remaining fourteen, Negro in
terstate passengers have used
the genera! waiting room. Ne
| grots are allowed to sit In the
same restaurant or at the same
lunch counter as white travel
ers in five of the cities survey
ed. Rest rooms are non-segre
gated In eight of the cities.
FAUBUS MAY
FIGHT AGAIN
LITTLE ROCK There is con
siderable speculation here among
. school officials that Governor Or
val E. Faubus will try again to
: block school integration when the
; city's four high schools reopen.
■ More than 600 Negro students
along with 1,504 white students
■ were registered for the fall term
• which is scheduled to begin Sep
tember. 13
Sir Alexander is also head of
the Democratic Labor Party of the
West Indies which he hopes will
command the majority in tpe Fed
eial parliament of the West In
dies
U.N. TO HEAR
AFRICAN PUPIL
UNITED NATIONS, N Y A
United Nations Committee on
South West Africa will give an
oral hearing to a young African
student'who has complained that
his passport has been withdrawn
by South .African authorities.
Hans Johannes Beukes wrote an
appeal to the United Nations ask
ing the body's intervention in the
withdrawal of his passport by
, South African authorities which
barred him from accepting a
throe-year scholarship in Norway.
Buekes is now staying in an ad
jacent British protectorate Be
chuanaland.
BIASED PREMIER
IS CHALLENGED
CAPETOWN, South Africa --
The Angelican Bishop here, will
quit his post in opposition to the
• Government’s racial segregation
• policies. But the Prime Minister
’ will have to quit too.
i Dr. Joost de Blank, 53, said m
CAROLINIAN
CLUBBERS’ CORNER
CLAYTON DEFEATED BY i
SMITHFIELD
Clayton 's little leaguers were de
feated for the first time on Fri
day evening by Smith!ield by a
score of 10-4. Morris Stith and
Bob Sanders formed the battery
for Clayton, Stith absorbing his
first defeat. Clayton collected eight
hits and left nine men stranded on
the base paths which led to de
feat. The iineup for Clayton was
as follows:
C-Bob Sanders, 18-Daylon San
ders, 2B~Harvey Barbour, 3B-
Carlton Lassiter, SS-Milton Bridg
es, RF-Billy Smith, CF-.’Ufrod
Heartiy. LF-Arnold Sanders, F-
Morric- Smith, Pinchhifcter-Rob
ert High
On Friday, July 31, Clayton
meets Smithfield at 4:30 p.m. in
Clayton.
NOTE; All children in Clay
ton who have not received
♦heir 3rd polio shot at school
are asked to please go to the
Clinic on Wednesdays between
1:30 and 3:39 for their last
shot
CLUB STANDINGS
PW L T
Holly Springs ....... 6 5 1 o
Smithfield • • 5 4 1 0
Apex ..... S 4 1 0
Louu-burg -5 4 1 y .O
Wilson S 3 1 1
Henderson 4 3 1 0
Clay ten 5 3 2 0
Eagle Rock - -5 3 2 0
Raleigh 3 3 4 1
Hillsboro • 2 11 0
Coley Springs 5 2 3 0
Tarboro 0 0 0 0
New Bern 0 0 0 0
an article in his church magazine
that ire was ready to withdraw as
Archbishop Metropolitan if Hen
drix f Verwoerd ‘‘will withdraw
as Prime Minister and return to
his native land." Both are from
the Netherlands.
i The Bishop said that although
| it, would break his heart he was
i willing to make such a sacrifice
! in order to “hasten the country's
! return tc decency and sanity.”
NO BASIS FOR
ARREST SEEN
LONDON The British Gov
ernment's Commission of Inquiry
into the imprisonment of leaders
of the African National Congress
found no justifiable basis for the
arrests. The Nyasaland govern
ment. charged that the nationalists
had a “plan” or “plot” for as
sassination and massacre.
The four-man Commission,
headed by High Court Justice Sir
Patrick Devlin, said there wa* no
evidence that such a plot existed.
SURE,
1 WANT
TO SUBSCRIBE
TO THE
CAROLINIAN
I’M TIRED
CF WAITING
FOR A LOOK
AT THE
NEIGHBOR’S
COPY
!
(fc
- SUBSCRIPTION DEPARTMENT
« ‘SfKE CAROLINIAN
s »U E. Sfiairtia S tnrt >
SZtkiemb, M. ©.
CtigNTLEftOßf: »
Ssster sas siabeeriptien 4© “ITr.e CAROE2MXAJN tor: •
* t year (53 isenes) ..-$4-50 •
6 month* m issues) $3.75 »
I sD*;k»»e remittance in amount tr! $ •
N&me Street Address-... J
City State |
SCHEDULE
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 5 j
Louisburg at Raleigh, 1 p.m,: Wil
son at Holly Springs. 1 p.m : i
I-lenderson at Raleigh, 4:30 pm..
Smithfield at Coley Springs (War
rent-on) 2 p.m,; Tarboro at New
Bern (doublehe&der), 2 p.m.
SATURDAY, AUGUST 8
Eagle Rock at, Apex (doublchead
er) 2 p.m.; Hillsboro at Raleigh
(doubleheader), 2 p.m,; Wake For
est at Louisburg, 4 p.m.; Clayton
at Smithfield, 4 p.m
hlehe&der), ,t p.m.; Raleigh at
GOALS or LIFE
The family if a character-building institute
i. Be a participating member in the communii,'
3. Cultivate at least two hobbies
5. Know some one field well enough to make a livelihood
1 Resoect for law and order
5 Plan for a continuous education by reading the dad" paper; and num
erous periodicals
' Keep m the stream of event; , know what goes on in the world and why
Mar. is not static; he must advance or deteriorate
CHILDREN’S BILL OF RIGHTS
To each child regardless of race color nr creed—
1. The right to the affection and intelligent guidance of unde standing
parents.
2 The right to be raised in a decent home in which he or she is adequate
ted, clothed and sheltered
3 The right to a school program, which, in addition sound ■
training offers maximum opportunity for individual development and
preparation for living
( The right to the benefits of religious guidance and ’ram nr
5 Tire right to receive constructive discipline for the propel rie eiopme.-.
of good character, conduct and habits.
6 The rigt‘ to be secure in hi* or her community agaio-t U ue-- *
detrime., .1 to proper and wholesome development
7. The right to the individual selection of free and wholew- *.-•
3 The right to live, in a community in which adult--, practice the he’.ef tV
the welfare of their children is of primary importance
9 The right to receive, good adult example
10. Tile right to a good job commensurate with h’s or he »’-'•••
and experience, and protection against physical o- n - r u
hazards which adversely affect wholesome develop 1 ur - ■
11. The right to health services to prevent and treat dist-ve a-.-l -o •nr.i-c
the fullest mental, physical, and social developm.en
CHILDREN S BILL OF RFSPONSIBIi. !Tl> A
To God, My Country, My Parents and Mw’lf—
Grow in character and ability as I grow in sire
Be honest with myself and others in what ! «a' and do
Learn and practice my religion.
Honor my parents, my elders and my fearer-
Develop high moral principles and the courage to If •• b- the
Strive for health in body, mind and spirit.
Respect the right;; of others
Set. a good example so that others may eryoj and profit by -r .' ;
Give honest effort to m.v work.
Regard my education as pieps.ration for th* future.
Obey our laws so that we may live more happtlv tosetl ”
Preserve and strengthen our American way of life end g • ern:-
/cASAM O VA Mlf* ““1
MOW’S LOVEV-OOVEV? ]— j j j j
IT /NCI ' WMAT’S THIS NONSENSE J j-'N, - '
H ABOUT ? y
Casanova
Wait a minute. Dad. How can you forget so c
cot that old. Remember your first date : Remem hir f..e
first time you fell in love r How you suffered!
.Sure, Junior ties up the phone.' His conversation doesn’t
make sense t-o you. But he isn’t talking to you. Don't
drive him into secrecy by humiliating him,
J • V ’• *
And Junior* Have some consideration for your father He
might want to use the phone Himself. Show him the came
respect you expect to receive from him. Life is net a
.one-sided affair.
300 See Wake-Johnson
Dairy Calf Show In City
Mora that; 300 spectators wit- j
nessed the Seventh Annual ;
Wake-Johnston 4-H and NFA. Dai
ry Show, Thursday, July 23, on
the athletic field at St, Augus
tine’s College, Raleigh Tne show
is sponsored, by the Raleigh Mer-
The Commission published its
decisions in & 148-page White Pa
per.
A stats oi emergency was de
clared by Nyaaaland Governor Sir
Robert Arroitage on March 3. He.
ordered the dissolution of the Af
rican National Congress and the
arrest of ite leaders. Fifty-one Af
ricans but no whites were killed in
a riot which developed after the
order.
Opposition of Nyasalander.s a
gainst the Federation of Nyasa
land and Rhodesia was alleged to
have caused disputes between the
African National Congress leaders
and other members of the Nyasa
land Government.
* * • <»
Death Os Mao Man
Prisoners Studied
LONDON The British Gov
wrnmsnt Issued a White Paper last
Thursday on the death of eleven
Mau M&n prisoners at Hola de
tsnMoa Kmw*, saying; that
ih« camp superintendent was re
sponsible!.
A Commission of Inquiry into
the death of the prisoners at the
hands of ih?< gunrds found the
camp superintendent, Mlehael Sul -
liven, piilty of misconduct and
doratkstifflß of duty. Sullivan, wm
asked to resign.
Smithfield, 1 p m Raleigh at
Clayton, 4:30 pm.; Hillsboro
at Apex, 2 p.m
NOTE TO NEW BERN; Send
in record of games and dales
available,
Wednesday, AUGUST 12 -
Tarboro at Wilson, i pm; Hoi -
ly Springs at Hillsboro, 4:30
p.m ; Louisburg at Clayton, 1
p.m. Raleigh at Coley
Springs, 1 pm.; Raleigh at
Henderson, 4 pm.
SATURDAY, AUGUST 15
HloJiy Springs at Apes frtou-
! chants Bureau and supervised by
I the Negro Agricultural Workers of
I Wake and Johnston Counties
Twenty-nine of the finest an
| imais afoot took the eyes of
spectators as they paraded the
ring escorted by 4-H and NF \
members The show got under
way at 3.30 a. in. with a short
demonstration entitled, "Good
Points of A Dairy Cow," by
E. L. Wynn, dairy specialist. A
and T College, Greensboro.
Official judge for the show was
Fred Knott, Extension Dairy Spe
cialist. He was assisted bv R. L.
Wynn, and G. W Miller, County
Agricultural Agent.
Grand Champion animal was by
Curdell Jones, Cary, Route 1. Re
serve Champion was shown bv
Howard Hood, Varina, Route 1.
, Best Fitted was shown by Bmja
> min Newkirk, Raleigh, Route 2
i Showmanship was won bv Herbert
Sneed, Jr., Fuquay Springs, R«. 1-
Trophies were presented the 4
by J. B. Womble and G Wesley
Williams, President and Executive
Secretary, repsectlvely of the Ra
leigh Merchants Bureau, who con
gratulated the boys and girls.
All of the twenty-nine boys and
girls were given praise by Dr. J
A, Boyer, president of St. Augus
tine’s ' College; J A. Spaulding.
Southeastern District Agent; and
the Rev. A J. Turner, Raleigh
The Danish Systc-m of judging
was used. All animals fell in one
j at three groups: blue, $10; red, SS,
| white $6.
Blue winners were Bsnia
j rain Newkirk Raleigh, Route,
j £; flAvtd Chavis, Varina, Rt 'J;
tm CMM&Lmmx
WEEK ENDING SATURDAY, AUGUST 1, 1.953
r ?BETTORS OF CAROLINIAN
CLUBBERS’ CLUBS
OXFORD Mr Joseph Da
vie and Mr. Sidney Bass, Gen
eral Delivery:
LOUISBURG Mr. Willie
Perry, Jr,, P. O Box 344;
EaGLE ROCK —• Leon Perry
General Delivery; WENDELL
Phillip Harris, General De
t'vpry; HILLSBORO Mr.
Roosevelt Warner, Box 432;
DUNN Mr. Samuel Rhodes,
811 E. Devine Street; RHAM
KATTE Mr. Walter Rogers,
phone 3-2217; LAURINBURG
—Mr. Emanuel McDuffie, Lau
rinhurg institute; SMITH -
FIELD Mr Charles Fort,
804 E. Market Street; HEND
ERSON Mr Thomas Hunt,
1024 Andrews Street; UL
LINGTON Mr. Hazel Clark,
!* O. Box 382.
HOLLY SPRINGS Mr.
I -r.nzia Dennis. P, O. Box 387;
WILSON Mr. Tommy L
Young, 911 £ Green Street;
WINSTON - SALEM Mr
William Rogers. 502 Cleve
land Avp., and Mr. “Babe”
Spencer Davis, 2117 E. Bth St;
KINSTON Mr. Freddie Mar
shall, 27A Carver Court; NEW
BERN Mr. Louis Arrington
313 Liberty Street; HOLLY
SPRINGS Mr. Pender Beck
with and Mr. Richard Sinclair,
General Delivery, phone Al
bright's Funeral Home; CARY
—Mr. lames Moore, phone 1-
9133; CLAYTON - Mr Har
vev Heartiej, phone WA 2-74-
32 Ft Ql AY SPRINGS Mr.
Rov O. Street, 137 N. West St.;
BI RLINGTON Mr. William
Robinson, Colored Community
Cr;ter, WAKE FOREST
Mr. Richard Shackford, 524
E Juniper St., GOLDSBORO
Mr. J. H. Graham, 435 F,,
flm Street; RALEIGH Wai
te, Rogers, Jr., Rt„ 1, Box 68;
T iRBORO Mr. Horace Hus
sev and Mr. Battle, Apt. 16,
WHlen Street.
Also Mrs. Charlie Good
son, general delivery, Eagle
Rock, Mr. Millard Perry, gen
lies., Easle Rock and Mr. Cliff
Gaibseath. 117 School Street
Rnxborn. NEW BERN Mr.
Rufus Hatton, 810 Queen St.;
TARBORO -- Air K. B Hus
sey, Apt. 16, Woolen Street.
Young GOP’s Aidl
Judge S. Pierce
;
For Reelection
NEW YORK (ANP) Judge j
Samuel R pierce, Jr., firs* Negro ;
to sit on the General Sessions ;
bench through appointment by \
Gov. Rockefeller to fill a vacancy, i
has received the official backing j
of the New York Young Republi- j
ran,-, for the $.34,000 position,
j The jurist has been designed by j
| as their nominee for the post in j
| the Republic and Liberia! parties :
j the September primary. Lately
Rep. Adam C. Powell has been
proposing that Tammany forces
nominate a Negro Democrat to op
pose Judge Pierre
Verdis Hood, Varina, Kouif 1;
Donald Hodge, Wendell. Rt. 2,
| Prince Burton, Raleigh, Rt. 1;
j Neil Rowland, Clayton, Route
t. Claude Williams. Clayton,
i Route I; Curdell Jones. Cary,
Route 1, Lenwood Hood, Fari
na, Route 1; Sevrvia Richard
son, Wendell, Route 1; Howard
Hood. Varina, Route 1.
Red winners were Willie Lee |
Jones, Cary, Route 1. James Sin- ]
i clair. Clayton. Route 2, James Bro- |
die. Selma, Route !, David Sneed, j
| Fuquay Springs, Route ], Clinton i
i Debnam, Raleigh. Route 2; Charles j
| Heath, Clayton. Route 1, j
Also Alvin Young. Wake Forest, .
Route 2; Joe L. Burton, Raleigh, i
Route 1, Esther Mayo, Morriaville, j
Route 1; Herman Forte, Wake
Poreste, Route 2; Luther Walker,
Raleigh, Route fi; Dewamer Pc -
, ry. Eagle Rock; Joseph Spence,
i Holly Springs, Route 1; Herbert
| Sneed. Jr., Fuquay Springs, Route
| 1; Aundgra Richardson, Wendell, j
! Route 1.
White winners were Walter |
i Spence Varina, Route 1; John Mer- :
! ritt, Clayton, Route 1; James Bro- j
] die. Selma, Route 1.
i Agricultural workers supervi*- j
j ing the Seventh Annual Show |
• were L, R. Burton, G. L. Laws, W. i
! C. Davenport,, B. T Williams. T, j
J. Jjorke and C. L. Boone of Wake
Thacker, H, F. Palmer and M, B.
Albright at Johnston County.
PATRONIZE OCR ADVERTISERS
Legal Notices
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT
NOTICE
NORTH CAROLINA
WAKE COUNTY
ODELL POWELL, Plaintiff,
vs.
MARY LOU POWELL.. Bafendatst
The shove named defendant. Mary
j .Lou Powell, w'lll rake notice that an
■ action entitled as shove beer com
; menced in tit* Superior Court of Wake
! County, North Carolina, by the plain.- 1
I tiff to secure an absolute divorce from)
CLASSIFIED
| RATES
Number of issues and cost per word
ISSUES ..... 1 4 S IS
Cost per word 1c 4c Jo 3t
per line.
per Issue 10c iOc JUtr. Jl4l
Each word atmreviatior.. initial o
, symbol count so one word
I Punctuation marks are ,\OT counter
i as words.
The minimum number of word* ;r
. any want ad is 13 words. You wil
i save money oy ot-riarins your ad t;
run 8 or !2 Is: ues.
I Weakly Want Ads may be telephoned
through Wednesday up to 10 A M
FEMALE HELP WANTED!
Maids, New York .fobs waiting Fret
; rbom and board Highest, pay. vn’i
i immediately giving age. expenerv. s
i and reference, name and address .'a.
! fare advanced Have-A-Ma'.d Ageiv
I 1 Bond Street. G-ea- Neck New York
House workers Live-i ?05:t:.0.-
Mass,, Conn NY. S3O to 555 Ref ere .-v <
| required Carfare advanced Bv
] Emp Bureau. Great. Bar nr rtor M -
SPECIAL SEEVICES'"
SPEECHES WRITTEN tor tnisv per. .«
10-minutas 15.00; Research. M*n .
scripts eaued and out in good Eng
lish. MARCUS BOULWARE. Sam
Augustine’s College. Raleigh. N L
ROOM FOR~f7eNT
Furnished room '<nth heat and light
j Kitchen and l ; v;ng room privileges
Cal) TEmple 2-5512
AUTO & TRUCK RENTALS
WAKfc-U-DRIVE-IT—CARS. tF»JCB 9.
AUTO TRAILERS FOR RENT -
301 N McDowell St Dial TE 3-0932
Night TE 3 0934
Get your money out of u.wd rein
i aerators, stoves and furniture NOW
| Use our classified ada Dial IX 4 S66S
FOOD SPECIALS
! JOY’S AMERICAN GRILL - 2&J Ra*’
Martin St.. Raleigh -Dial TE 2-83 SS
Cooper's Bar-B-Q
BAF -li-li and
Chicken
i Our Specialty!
Fig and Chicken
109 E. DAVIE ST
NURSERY
i FOWLER 3 NUUOUS V - KayotleviUe
Highway Phone UC g-o'iaS
i RENTING A t,OOMI! Register it will)
i us at TE 4-5558. Tins space wiil cosi
j you only 43c
SERVICE STATIONS
1 DUNN’S ESSO STATION —5 . 3. Bond
wortti 5t.. Phone YE 2-Wiit.
Consult our ciasaiiitd ads regtilarly;
there are many bargains offered
j the defendant upon the ground th*‘
j plaintiff ana defendant have lived sep
-1 .irate and apart ioi more than twe
I years next preceding the bringing oi
i this action; and the defendant will fur
; ther take notice that sne is required tc
appear at the office of the Clerk oi
i me Supeijor Court, ot Wake County, a;
I the courthouse in Raleigh, North Caro-
I Una, on or before the 29tn day of Aug-
I ust. 1953. and answer or demur to the
j complaint in said action, or the plan
| tiff will apply tc the Court for the
I relief demanded in said complaint,
j This 2 day of July, 1959
SARA ALLEN
Assistant Clerk of Wake Counw
Stioerior Court
TAYLOR & MITCHELL
323 East Hargett Street
Raleigh. North Cardins
Attorneys for Plaint .i;
July 11, IS, 23, Aug 1, !«■
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT
NOTICE
WAKE COUNTY* '
NORTH CAROLINA
JOSEPHINE WILEY
vs.
ROGER WILEY
Tire defendant in the above proc-tsi
rng will take notice that the piam’.if
has commenced m tije Superior Court
i Wake County, North Carolina suit
I asking for an absolute divorce cn the
I grounds of two-year separation.
And the said defendant wtil furthei
take notice that he is required to ap
. pear at the office of the Clerk of c.u
perior Court in Wake County a’ hu of
; fice in Raleigh, North Carolina, anc
answer, demur or file such olnss
! pleadings as he nrav see lit to the
j petition riled in the said proceeding
i not la'er than the 119th day of August,
i 3959, or the plaintiff will reply to th:
1 court for the relief demanded in tbs
said petition
j This trh day of July. 1959
SARA ALLEN
Assistant Clerk of Superior
Court
July 11, 18. 23 Aug, I. 135?
NOTICE OF SALE
Under and by virtue of a judgmem
; in special proceeding* number 6817
entitled GARLAND BAND vertu;
I PERCY RAND et ala the undersignec
j Commissioner will offer for sale to the
| highest bidder for cash at Wake Coun
ty Courthouse, at 12:00 noap. August
3. 1959. the premises in Raleigh, North
Carolina, described as follows
That certain lot or parcel of land
beginning at the Southwest inter
section of Tower Street, formerly
Second Street and Bedford Street
formerly Joint or New Street, run
ning thence in a Southern director,
with the line of Tower Street 93
feet; running thence in a Western
direction ISO feet parallel with
Bedford Avenue; running thence in
a Northern direction 85 feet to Bed
ford Avenue, running thence in ss
Eastern direction with the South
ern line of Bedford Avenue 168 feet
to the point of beginning and be
ing that same deed deeded to Mat
tie. L. Raud, widow, by that cer
tain deed registered in Book SOS,
page 345, Register Wake County,
and deeded to A. B. Rand by cer
tain dsed registered in Book IS3,
page 291. Register for Wake County.
The said sale being for cash and the
bidder being required to deposit ten
percent of the bid price as evidence
of good faith
This the thirtieth day of June. 1983.
D. H. HINTON Commissioner
Time of sale: 12.P0 noon, Monday,
August 3
Place ot *»]«•. Wak-s County Court*
house. Raleigh. N. C.
I July 11. IS 25. Aurust 1, 3958.
9