Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / April 19, 1969, edition 1 / Page 9
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"V . ' J .. • '/ ‘ ' ' - • - .f ■ ' ’ ■ •• ''. /• V ... ■’ ’ 1 . ' ‘ : Clcsssifisd Rates Cosi per word 5c te Ciasafiiee Display iPer Lirss Per U*ue 15s lac Sach word etobrevieted, initial or symbol count «s one word. |eip wanted] WAITRESSES. kitchen helpers. assistant manager. Uncle Dan's Barbecue House, 823-4353 (MOTOR GRACES OPERATOR experienced. Cal! 772-2628 BRICK CLEANERS needed Apply 502 E Bragg St. 323- 3845 Ik [FORSALj An Equal Opportunity Employer DISK ' HANDLER, rood salary, paid v-.cation, group insurance available THE BROILER. INC., 217 Hillsborough St ALUMINUM SID IN Li. $75 00 a sq Uniti'd Enterprise; of Raleigh 833-1571 PICTURE FR AME MOLDING CAPITAL CITY LUMBER CO, GOLF BAILS, 50 percent off. All Golfers Pro Shop Wendell High way. TYPEWRITERS, adding machines. Diamonds radios and all kinds of musical in-truments We trade, loan or buv See us and save RE LIABLE LOAN CO . 3.7 S Wilm ington St.. Raleigh. FOR SALE - Boy's all-weather coal, '.mod-; and slacks, size 14. Call 831-5158. POOLE BROTHERS Well Drilling and V, Boring. Day Phone asp No' i Phone 268-142 R7 . e Rale h N C THROW . 11.1.0 .: from SI up THE BARGAIN BARN. 3CI W North V.r 822-2618 Open 9-8 p.m , Mon.-Sat FOLDING CHAIRS, from $3 up THE BARGAIN BARN, 331 W. North St. BJ4-26..8 open 9-6 p.m , Mon.-Sat. PRE-SEASON SPECIAL on all sizes American Standard cen tral an conditioning units. Very limited stuck ot ’ indow units. 25'c off while tiiey las’. 828-6-397. BURGLAR AI.ARMS for business cr home. E.cc estimates and in formation Citium built to your m ods. 833-7707. «HXED GERMAN SHEPHERD puppies. $3-5 each. Beagle cock •r, $2. Some puppies free. 467-1333 JCNTAGL'E FURNITURE Used fiumt.iii m good condition, ’hor.e 833-9785. IIIC S. Saunders Street Cooper’s Bar-B-Q BAR B- i and CHIt.iEN (Our Specialty! PIG AND CHICKEN 109 E. Davie St. MONTAGUE'S New & Used Furniture EXCHANGE We Bssy Used Furniture 1110 S. Saunders Tel. Bs2-97S r > r : —1 SE RA iC‘ S] L A room additions, garages, carports, patios, awe ,gs. aluminum siding. No job too nail. Cal! Raleigh Builders and lun.tnum Products, 834-2C96. . W HARRIS TRANSFER CO.— Local and long distance itiov ?• Rhamkatte, N C. or contact East Side Restaurant, Cabat s Street. ANTED. PuDDies Type, small breed. 487-1333 :v 7 t ] A FOR RENT ?ooms for working girls, looking privileges. Phone 33-5854 or 834.. 1570. MUSICAL MENTAL •IANO rental $8 a mo., all rent ppiies to purchase. Ooen Mon. 1 Fri '*il S p.m MAUS PiANO , 2420 Wake Forest Rd. 832-6449 lOM FOR RENT —Prefer a w-o --nan. Call after 6CO p.m TE mi. 517 S East St. ROOMS FOR RENT or couples as well is single persons, valeigh’s best. Ph. $33-3048. irnnmmmwi t I ] .■ ■ ; -ELLA BEAUT’.' COLLEGE—A V- auMetc course in Beauty Cul ' Personality and Charm. Day 1 nnthtly weekly or ntlily An conditioned. Mrs. C. Pitt. On no: Manager. 229 S r Street. Balcish. 2L C. AUTOMOBILES AUTO LOANS Financing, refi nancing. AUTO DISCOUNT CO 801 Fayetteville St. 828-7436 i Legal 1 [notices] ... . NOTICE NORTH CAROLINA WAKE COUNTY UNDER AND BY VIRTUE of the power of sale contained in a cer tain mortgage executed by Geo. Washington and wife, Esther Washington, dated the 2nd day ot June, 1543, and recorded in Book 99S at Page 124 in the office of the Register of Deeds of Wake County and under and by virtue of a certain assignment executed by said mortgagee, transferring and conveying to the undersign ed, said mortgage and the land therein conveyed, together with the power of sale therein con tained, default having been made in the indebtedness thereby se curred and the said mc.tgage be ing b\ the terms thereby subject to foreclosure, the undersigned mortgagee will offer for sale at public auction to the highest bid der for cash at the courthouse door in Raleigh, North Carolina at 12 :C. o'clock noon, on the ninth day of May, i:S9, the land conveyed in said mortgage, the same lying and being in Raleigh Township, V/ake County, North Carolina and more particularly described as follows. BEING Lots Nos. 178 and 179 in Block 'X" as shown on Sub-di vision of the property known as Joe Louis Park, as surveyed and platted by L. E. Wooten, E. E., January. 1944. Plat of which is of record in the office of the Regis ter of Deeds for Wake County, North Carolina in Flat. Book 1942 at pace 75. to which said plat ref erence is hereby made for a more perfect description. See deed to Wake County, Book 705, at page 550 The above property will be sold subject to all prior liens includ ing taxes and the successful bid der will be required to deposit ten per cent (10C) of the pur cha-e bid to show good faith. IT,is sale will remain open for ten days to receive increase bid as requir ed by law. This B<ti dav of Anril. 1969. JOE UAFP’N" ~CN. '"ortgagee F J. CARNAGE. Attorney April 32-19-26; May 3,19 SB ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE NORTH CAROLINA WAKE COUNTY Having qualified as administra tor of the estate of Madalyne Moore Harris, deceased, late ol Wake County, North Carolina this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to exhibit them to the undersigned at 308 Perry Street. Raleigh, North Carolina, on or before the 19th day of October, 1969. or this notice will be plead ed in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to the estate will please make immediate pay ments to the undersigned. CHESTER J. HARRIS, Adm. 308 Perry Sv-eet. Raleigh. N. C April 18-25 May 3-10, 1f69 VSC Receives s7oG’sGrant For Computer PETERSBURG - Virginia State College has received a grant of $70,000 from the Na tional Science Foundation for a two phase program to teach computer technology and ap - plication. According to Lt. Col. Jesse J. Mayes (ret.), director of the VSC computer center, who will administer the grant, the N'SF has awarded $140,000 to VSC in 10 months for com puter science projects, The first phase of the $70,- 000 project will consist of a summer program of vocational training in computer science for high school teachers from July 7 to Aug. 15. According to iviayes, during the six week program area high school teachers will learn vocational applications of computer programming and automated data processing aslt is used in secondary schools. The teachers will take re gular summer-school courses in computer programming, computer concepts and in intro duction to data processing, Mayes said. Instructional staff Tor the program will include members of the VSC computer center staff, instructors from Ran dolph Macon College, Wil liam and Mary, the State Coun cil of Higher Education and the Division of Automated Data Processing for Virginia. Teachers who complete both phases of the program will re ceive 12 semester hours of col lege credit plus a certifica tion from the State Board of Education. Focus Os Turmoil OAKLAND, Calif. - (NPI) - As at other colleges, the Afro- American studies program at Merritt college has become a focus of turmoil. Even though the one-third Black college has a Black president and the Black studies program is run by a Negro department head, some Black students complain that the program is but a pawn of white society, They talk of mak ing the program a base of re volutionary action and a train ing ground for guerilla war fare. They also hope to set up an Independent Black college. dak -lijp&i, ttvlpY! HirsP HH HHi £ SHAW’S CHORALE SOCIETY SETS TOIL R - The Shnv Univt'rsity Chordle Society, above, under the direction of Hubert E. W.tlters, has announced its Spring schedule for 1969. The schedule is as follows: Sunday, April 20, 4 p.m., United Presbyterian Church. Kinston and S: . Gabriel’* Catholic Church i :3O p.m., Greenville; Sunday. May 4, 3 p.m., Cornerstone Bap tist Church, Greenville; and First Baptist Church, Wilson, 7:30 p.m.? Sunday, May 11, New Haven Baptist Church. 3 p.m., Murfreesboro; and Cornerstone .Baptist Church, i p.m., Kli/übeth Citv; Sunday, May 18, Gastonia, time and place has not been announced: Sunday May 25. 3 p.m., Mt. Zion Baptist Church, Roxboro. Rev. Charles Coleman, dean of men and pastor at Lawson Chapel will sponsor “Shaw Day.” PRACTICE BLACK FC oxo.\UCS-Mrs. Viltna Reid (left), tre9surer of Greensboro, N. C. branch ot the National Alliance of Postal and Federal Employees, and president, Joe N. Sims, deposit SIO,OOO of group’s money with Negro-owned American Federal Saving md Loan Association. Re ceiving the deposit are A. S. Webb, executive vice-president and secre tary of American Federal and Mrs. Louise M. Morales, teller. Charles D. Marsh, Harnett Principal, Seeks Alderman's Seat In Sanford SANFORD - Charles D. Marsh, principal of the North Garnett Elementary School, lo- C, D. MARSH The boo, o: Henry Oa! . • . lies slumped back in the huge, leather-upholstered s i in his office, a bullet hole in his right temple. Martin star,- dish, a young junior member of the firm, fidgets nervously about the room. It was he who phoned you oft!:- tram*.; about fifteen minutes ago. “I knew Mr. Callison was alone here in his office tc.r.ig! l he says. “I wanted to discuss so:: personal pn l.lems v.iti him . . . but when I arrived here at about eight o’clock, I found him like this . . , dead! You can imagine v hat a. shod it was to me!” "Have you touched oi moved anything at alt n : ; o\; ask. "No . . . only the phone there on his desk when 1 calle you.” You now bend over the typewritten note on Callison’s desk, with its hastily scrawled signature. It leads- "I'm sorry about this, but it’s the only way. Life no longer means any thing to me.” As you stand by the dead man you notice tb-- ballpoint pen lying loosely in his right hand which rests on his lap, then you stoop and pick up in your handkerebi- ftt - run which is lying on the floor next to his chair. ;• -,uick sniit at its Mrrel tells you it has beer, fired recently, then you dust it for fingerprints and find nothing. "Did Callison seem worried or depressed lately?” you ask. "Not especially,” young Standlsh eplies. "Os course, hi always did have a preoccupied air about him ... It was very hard to get close to him. But certainly I bad no idea that he was going to do away with himself this way." "As a matter of fact,” youthen say, "he did not kilt himself. I suspect he was murdered and that you know more about it than you have told me thus far"’ What has aroused vour suspicions? SOLUTION The pen lying in the victim’s right hand was the first thing to arouse your suspicions. If he had shot himself, his last living act would have been witli a gun, not a pen. Then the fact that you found the gun Itself clean of any fingerprints points to a murderer who has been foolishly over-cautions. cated off Ilighwav 210, between Angier and Lillington, has an nounced his candidacy for a seat on the local Board of Al dermen. A native of and lifelong res ident of Lee County, Mr, Marsh has served as principal at North Harnett for the past eight years. He will represent the Fourtl Ward, a post now being repre sented by Wilbur (Shorty) G<xl win. If elected, Marsh would be come the first Negro ever tc serve on the City Board. Hi holds the B. S. degree in busi ness administration from AAT State University, Groonsboi .. and an M. A. degree in p U lie school administration from North Carolina College at Dur ham. He has also pursue ! courses toward a Ph. D.degree in school administration at NCC. When queried as to why he decided to file for the Board of Aldermen,' the educator said, "1 am interested in all phases ol the community, and I think that when twenty-five percent of on: population has no rep •sentation on the city board, we need it." He formerly served as a principal in Iredell County for ten rears. Married to the former Miss Nma Lee oi Moncure, they are t! parents of one son, Char les Richard Marsh, a senior at the W, B. Wicker High School here. Mrs. Marsh is a teacher of the third grade at the Bon iee Elementary School in Bon- BT ‘‘We bold these truths to be SP self-evident. that all men ra! E are created equal; that they f| ■ are endowed by their Cre B j ator with certain una’ien- E; B able rights that among SI B these are life, liberty, and B B ’he pursuit of happiness.” gg H NEW '69 RAMBLER SSS: F, EIGHT ANOSTMIWUST«< fXT«A l Mof Weaver Bros. Rambler 223 W. LENOIR ST. RALEIGH, PHONE 833-2767 I - At ING Nil RDFR CHARGES - Detroit: Detroit Police Commissioner Johannes F. Spreen told an early morning news conference April 10 a .first degree murder warrant was issued naming Rafael Yierra, 20 of New York (R), in connection with the fatal shooting of a Detroit Police man at the New Bethel Baptist Church March 29. Another warrant charg ing assault with intent to murder was issued for Alfred Hibbitt, 38 (L) of Detroit. (UPI). INSTALLATION service SUNDAY - The Rev. Leotha Debnam, Sr,, will be installed as pastor of Tupper Memorial Baptist Church Sunday, April 20. Dr. Charles W. Ward, pas tor of First Baptist Church, Ra leigh will preside over the serv ice which is slated to start at 4 p.m. The Rev. Percy High, formerly of this city , now serv ing as pastor of First Baptist Church, Oxford, will deliver the sermon and the music will be furnished by the choirs of Watts Chapel Baptist Church. Other ministers who will help in the service include Dr. P. H. John son, Dr. J. H. Clanton, Rev. J. H. Bryant and Rev. J, P. jDempsey. DDm ®>pics/-<«s« A GOOD NEIGHBOR WOULD MAKE HIS NOiS 4T THE SAME TWE.WE MAKE OURS / " Go To Church Sunday THE CAROLINIAN RALEIGH N. C.. SATURDAY, APRIL l». iB6B FAPPO Holds Annual Mooting FAYETTEVILLE - There was an annual meeting of FA PPQ at »:(X) p.m. Monday night, April 14, at the Neighborhood Center on Scarbrough St, Of ficers for the FAPPO Board were elected and a progress report was given. The progress of the poor In our area cannot begin until all our signed-up members get involved in what’s happening. We have waited all winter long for it to get warm enough for us to start getting our selves together. Those of us who used "the flu” as away of not getting involved no long er have that excuse. We should Holding Tech Hosts industrial And Vocation Tutors Vocational and industrial teachers of the Wake County Schools met last week at Hold ing Technical Institute for a workshop, designed to better aquaint them with the vocation al and technical training a vaiiable through the Institute. The program began with a coffee hour, followed by a welcome from Robert L. Brown, Dean of Student Personnel. Robert W. LeMay, president of Hold ing Tech, then spoke to the group or. "The Role of Holding Tech in the Community”, after which the visitors were taken on a tour of the school. Following the tour there was a dicussion of the schools ( pro- / grams, admission procedures, etc., and then the visitngteach ill AN AUTO LOAN FOR ANY PURPOSE 1963* 1969 MODELS » Zmommm Tcnm-t* ?# S* a fetxfc fs SsdMJwst fate o Yowr Car Net Se P& Applications Aceapfad by Stuto (I®* Corner FayetfevilSo and'Unolr sfrwf» wla • WfwtsMl Tends* •M-T436 : Machine Operators Immediate opening for experienced rr t achine shop operators—to set up and operate lathes, milling machines, grinders, punch presses, drill presses, etc. Minimum of 1 year general ma chine shop experience required. Excellent work ing conditions and employee benefits. Contact MAC TALTON Personnel Manager Shdkrossllfg.Co. CUTLER-HAMMER CO. N. C. 27576 An equal Opportunity Employer (M/P) not let what people say FAPPO is doing keep us from coming out to find things out for our selves. It is time to stop sitting home watching that white man’s T. V. seeing our brothers all over the world doing their “thing” to help better our con ditions. We should be tired of waiting for others to get things for us and be wanting it bad enough for us to get it our selves. To long the Black Man has not been together, Be Black and come join us in our fight for complete Freedom, Dignity, and Better communities. ers were given the opportunity to attend workshops for more ir,-deDth discussion of sneciflc program areas and to observe how vocationally and technical ly trained individuals can fill the needs of industry and gov ernment. 1 GOOD HUMAN RELATIONS WEEK I APRIL 20*26 9
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 19, 1969, edition 1
9
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