Thursday, August 12, caaiiujjiii what makM Dal Monte so special? ... In a word . . . "OUALITV" . , . and It Is the kind of quality which you can depend on time after time. Now we have the pleasure of pleasing you by selling this quality at low DEL MONTE SLICED OR HALVES PEACHES 49 No. 2'/2 Cans CREAM CORN sliced pineapple CRUSHED PINEAPPLE CHUNK pineapple TOMATO sauce iAi£ se&eRME (paAklTlTS RKqHTS- '.T)EL tAOUTE. ^GREENS ^ BEAMS ^ 303 CAU5 m 'JEC KAOIoTe- MIXED VEGETABLES 303CAW3 m 303 CAPS ^ T)£L greem LIMAS 303 CAOS _ ^CKFS1IP....SX’3«» BABY FOOD m* PERFECTION WHOLE SMOKED PICNIC 59 HOUSE OF RAEFORD REVEL'S CHOPPED BAR-B SCOTTISH LINK BY THE BOX SMOKED ' HORMEL'S BONE-IN RIBS QUE SAUSAGE 10-Lb. Box SAUSAGE 10-Lb. Box STEAK $|89 *11” $790 $139 Lb. I nTURKEY smoked PICNIC y o..„. E. OC LIVER PUDDING Lb A.. 9# ^Lb turkey necks Lb 29' BEEF LIVER 69' CUBE STEAK Lb *r HORMEL'S L *5“ RIB EYE STEAK Lb *2«| Lb 39' HORMEL'S SLICED BANQUET DINNERS Beef, Chicken, Turkey Meat Loaf, Solisbury Stook, Bean S Franks 49' HEINZ SALAD CUBES 6 0. 49' MUELLERS ELBOW MACARONI 4.0.M>° HORMEL S SHORTENING Sbc^M” FOOOLAND FIG BARS 2 Lb 89' VAN CAMPS PORK & BEANS 4. . o. 88' FOODLANO MAYONNAISE 79' Quart Size PARKAY MARGARINE KRAFT SLICED AMERICAN CHEESE KRAFT GRAPE JELLY KRAR 1000 ISLAND DRESSING 6 0.89' KRAFT FRENCH DRESSING l. o. 89' ^Qcr -W CJOJ)LAsWj> — VA^MILLA. .TEA 75^ DOWNY FABRIC SOFTENER 20c OFF JOY ARMOUR'S 4-BAfi PKG. LIQUID DETERGENT .. 99' POnED MEAT 4.0. 88' IVORY SOAP ... 49' rvcLLWvrvrD ruKCA _ — ^ , 39' CORN FLAKES .o. 29' DRY DETERGENT .20.79' MEeiT-A— CIKJKIAMON ROLLS iOob i noon^Ai^’s j PRICES EFFECTIVE AUG. 12, 13, TAth BO and MARGARET ABBOn WE RE THE PEOPLE WHO PLEASES YOUl 64oz.Sh^t^ DRIMCf 59^ SALADS BIG TEXAS STYLE ARMOUR BISCUITS 12-Oz. Con TREET t2-Oz. Con 2..49' 999 THE CAROLINA INDIAN VOICE Published Each Thursday by The Lumbee Publishing Company Second Class Posroqe Poid or Pembroke' N.C 28372 Page 5, The Carolino Indian Voice The Life and Times of, Henry Berry Lowry The following testimony is taken verbatum from a trans* dipt of a trial held in the October Term of Superior Court in Robeson County in 1870. Andrew Strong, by some miracle, had succeeded in implicating John Taylor to the extent of having him charged as an accessory to the fact of the murder of Malcolm (Make) Sanderson. State of N.C. va. Jtdui Taylor la The Soperior Court Robeson County, October Term, 1870 TRANSCRIPT “John Taylor charged with being accessory before the fact to» the murder of Malcolm Sanderson on the night of Friday, the 7th of October or on the morning of Saturday the 8th. “The defendent present. Andrew Strong called i» the part of State and being sworn, testified as foUowsi Q. Were you arrested lately and by whom? A. Yes, but don’t know the parties. 0- Where were you arrested? A. At Peter Dial's. Q. What day were you arrested? A. On the 7fii of October. Q. Had the persons who arrested you an other man with them whom you knew? A. yes, I saw Malcolm San derson, whom they had in charge. Q. When they took you and Sanderson away from Peter Dial’s where did they carry you to next? A. They carried us to Mr. Hugh Inman’s. Q. Dio you ever see frtat tope on the table and if so where? (Rope shown in court); A. I saw it at Mr. Inman's tied to his bridle, and it was afterward’s used to tie me and Malcolm Sanderson. Q. How did this rope come in possession of the men who arrested you? A. The leader of the gAng took both plow lines from a bridle hanging on the corner of Mr. Inman's crib and put them in his pocket. Q. After leaving Inman’s, where did they carry you to next? A. They carried us to the cross roads where they a lane through Mr. Taylor’s field and near his house. Q. Did any of the crowd go to Mr. Taylor's house and if so what word did they bring back to the rest? OJECnON: on the grounds this is hearsay evidence; over ruled, defendant excepts. A. Two of the crowd went to Mr. Taylors and reported that Taylor was not at home, but was at William C. McNeill’s. Q. Up to this time did you meet any one on the road THE CAROLINA INDIAN VOICE 521-2626 Bear Swamp Youth Attend Conference DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATE TIm DUNNAGAN Campaign — Floyd Morgan, Treasurer Working people like Bob Dunnagane Anyone meeting Bob for the first time would like him immediately. He is a warm, sincere person who has a genuine interest in people. Workers like Bob because he is a working man himself and understands their problems. For over 25 years he served North Carolina workers as a safety inspector in the field and as Deputy Commissioner of Labor under the late W.C. "Billy” Creel. Together Billy and Bob developed the best safety program in the nation. That's why workers like Bob. ELECT BOB DUNNAGAN COMMISSIONER OF LABOR THE CAROLINA INDIAN VOICE 521-2626 Classified Ads Rate $1.50 first 25 words 5 cents each additional word whom you knew and if so, state who they were? -A 1 saw Badier and J.J. McLauchlin and Giles Inman. Q. Where were you first tied with the rope now in Court? A. In Mr. Taylor’s field. Q. Did the tying take place before or after the two men you mention had returned, from Mr. Taylors home? A. After they had returned from Mr. Taylor’s house. Q. How many of you were tied together, and in what manner? A. Two, Malcolm Sanderson and myself, each of our arms were pinioned by our side from the elbows, and then we were tied together. Q. Where did they carry you to next? A. They carried us to W.C. McNeill’s place and stopped in the lane. NOTEi WUliam C. McNeill was John Taylor’s father-in- law. A possible explanation as to why the posse of men led by Capt. Murdoch McLean, a Home Guard veteran, wanted to get Taylor’s approval before executing the two Indian men is taken ^tn the book "To Die Game’’ by W. McKee Evans: “Taylor was a wealthy man and a prominent citizen, but he was not in the county establishment. Why did the actual commander of this band, Acting Captain Mur doch McLean, a Home Guard veteran, need the approval of this civilian, who had no official civil authority? A pos sible explanation is that Taylor may have been an officer in the Ku Klux Klan or some other secret society.” To be continued next week. 1 DR. BEN F. CURRIN Let’s talk common sense about our schools: You can'! teach a child to read if you can't get his attention. We must restore dis cipline in every class room. If you agree, vote for BEIM CURRIIM for State Superintendent of Public Instruction (Paid Political Adv.) Youth from Bear Swamp Bap tist Church aod their leaders attended Church Training Leadershhlp Conference at Ridgecrest Baptist Conference Center, July 10-16, They re sided at the cottage of Mr. John L. Carter at Ridgecrest, NC. lYom left to right they aredeft to right front row: Donna Cnmmlngs, Pam Deese Audrey Jacobs, Ethel Deese, Veronica Hunt, Ronnie Brooks Myra Deese, Johanna Cum mings, Delton Locklear, Den nis Locklear, Mrs. Betsy May- nor, Ray Brooks, Maxine Bollard, Sylvia Dial, Sarah Dial, Karmel Brooks, Victor Lowery, Dale Deese, Dennis Lowery, Glen Dale Bollard, Albert [Pete] Locklear. Not pictured is Mrs. Lillie Jacobs. -VOTE- AILEEN HOLMES (St. Pauls District) ROBESON COUNTY BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS 18 Years of Business Experience And Presently A Member of the Robeson County Board of Education Paid Political Advertisement-