Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / Aug. 6, 1949, edition 1 / Page 6
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PAOB SIX CAROLIIfA TIMES SATURDAY, AUG. 6th, 1949 WHAT JACKIE ROBtNSON REALLY SAID ( I'liiiiiiiiil frttiii I’aet' 1 V^.iT. Witll ,.U>Ut !-n intllinl* t.U r 111^ to I'l' mU |>1 t- tr> niff 1i' ■’! .iki tr\ Iiii; ’ ■ 'rt'' *' my li^'" ■ ' ‘I* '•' I ' •lUJ bui^v u'li . i..il it.M'i linll miti tiHMi .■|i till- IVMiift'!''', ainl 4 !iir fh* tinu' \%h«-n t I tins. l«»jfft)HT with f - li.t- h'• n fitiiiijrlj tt> kf»*p iin’ III It.'i-nTMliL 111 ‘•■'tirt' fXi'fJlt CHI ba>i>‘ -t' ‘ill:- >r ..i’'.ifth!ii>r Ukt'tlinl “Bui you can put me down «» *n expert on bfing a colored American, with thirty years of experience at it. And just like any 01 her colored person with sense encrttgh to look arounr him and understand wMt he Mtt, I know that life in these United States can be mighty tough for people who are a little different from the majority— in their skin, color or the way they worship their God, or the way tliey spell their names. I’m not fooled because I’ve had a ^ chance open to vt-ry few Negro Americans. It s trii‘ timt I Im-imi the lHl«'t'Htory .s|M‘ci iiH-n in H liicHt cliaiik;*" in (trtiimizcd ItHwhall I'm iiroiiil That !'v;- niaili* on niy HKsi^ii' iiieiil to tlif point wfiiTf o1ln*r iMiiort‘«I playcfs will fiinl it i jtsicr to cnt^-r the pMuic und >r«» to tfie top. Hift I 111 "T\ aware that cvt-n tliis limited joli isn't fiiiixh'-d yet. Tlieiv are only three major-lenv'iie clubs .with »nly s>ven eol oreti pJnycry sinuotl up. out of elose to four hiindrwl ma.ior-leatnie players on Mxteen elnbs START HAS BEEN MADE “But a start has been made, and pro gress goes on, and Southern fans as well as Northern fans are showing that they like the way things are working. And as long as the fans approve, we’re going to keep, •n making progress, until we go the rest of the way in wiping Jim Crow out of American sports. • \Ve are doiiip tiii.s Ix-eau.se the American faun are iiist he>riuninp to unler>tfind that a sport, to be a real sport, has pot to be conte.ste(l on the basis of the be.st man or team winninp—'' and that ‘best' has pttt nothinp to do wiMi how . mueh brown or red or yellgw tint is in a man s " skin. “We’re ftoing to make progress in other American fields besides baseball if we can gel rid of some of the misunderstanding fend confusion that the public still suffers from. I know I have a great desire and I think th.nt I have some respoasibility far helping to clear up that confusion. As I see it there ha.s- been a terrific lot of mis- undersant1ing on this subject of Com munism among Negroes of this country, and it’s bound to hurt my people’s cause unless it’s cleared up. “"fhe whiti pnblii' ,shoiill .start toward real understandin^x by appn*elntiiip tliat every .siiiple Ne^ni wlio is worth his .salt is poinp to ri'seiit any kind 'of sinrs and dis-rimiiiatioti hecaiisc of his race, and he's poiiijf to use (‘very bit of iii- l«*llijtenee, siirh as he has, to st(»p it. Tliis lias pot abaointely notliinp to do with \\ fiat ('oinMni- ■isUi ma^' or may oc.t !.. try'i;" ’o do. And white njii!»t realize that the more a .Vcjrro hates aomniiiiiHtn lH*eause it op|»osi*s !einocracy, the Iffrtre he is poinp t(» hate any other int'hioncc tJiiit kiljs off (h‘inf>onii‘y in this eoiintry—Jiiid that poos for racial discriii)ination in the Army, and seprepatioii on trains and buses, and .joli diwriiiiiiiafini because of relipious belief or eolor or place of birth. ^ ISSUES NOT CREATED BY REDS * “"'■And one other thiiip the American pidilii- onplit to understand, if we arc to make propress in ibis iiiattcr, is the fact that because it is a t oinimiiiiM who deiioutm- injns«*lc in the .(lurt- pi.lici hrntaliiy and lyiiehiiiK, when it liap|M’iis. doi 'ii't i hiiiipe the triitli id' his eharpi .lust Ihciii'i'-' Hiiiimuiiist- kick up a hip fu over rai-ial di^”rilllilluti^>^l when it suits, tlipir purp" • a lot of ptKiple fry to ^trefend that the whoh' i'»ii 1* II crcatifiii of ('oniinunist iiM«j?iiia- tiiiii Hilt they'are not fiMilinp-any'one, with this kind (if id’cten.ser and talk alKiiit Com llllllli^t^ '•tierinp 'up Xeproes to protest’ only jiutl;*'' in’cKiit iiii^uiidfr'itaiid^np worse than c\(-i .N'c-jTocs w» fe Mined up loiip hel'ore there >Mi-. It t'(>niiiiiuii*.t* |iiH'ty,_ iiiid thc\ 'll Ktay stirred up loirp fiifer till* pint.^ has lisappeared iinleHs .liiii Crow has disappcarcil hy then as well. “I’ve been asked to express my view on Haul Robet-on’s statement in Paris to the effect that American Negroes would refuse to fight in any war against Russia because we love Rui.hia'so much, I haven’t any com ment to make, except that the statement, if Mr. Robeson actually made it, sounds very silly to me “But he has a right to his per sonal view, and if he wants to sound silly when he expresses them in public, that’s his business and not mine. He’s still a famous ex-athlete and a great singer and actor. “ I .luitlcrstaiKl that there some few N’eproes who are iiii*inhers of the (’ommunist party, in event of war with U’lissia they’d probaTdy act just as i.ny other Conmiunisls would. So would members of other minority and ma.jority proii|>*> Then' are sfniie coloi’ed pacifists, and* they'd act-just- like pacifists of aity color. Ami iiiost Xepi'C'es atid Italians and Irish and .lews and Swech's afjd Slavs and (►ther. Aiiierit'ans— w'ould act just as all thesi’ proii[)s did in the last war. They’d do their best to help their country stay (nit of war; if nusucecsstnl, they’d do their best to help tlieir country win the war— apainst RusKia ih' any other «*neiiiy that ,^hreat- ed us. LOYALTY OF NEGROES “This isn’t said as any defense of the Ne gro’s loyalty, because any loyalty that needs defense can’t amount to much in the long^ run. And no one has ever questioned my race’s loyalty except a few people who don’t amount to very much. “What I’m tryinp to pet across is that the •\nierican Public i.>5 off oii t)ie wronp foot when 4i. lM‘pitUi to thiiik -ut-radiciilii^iL in terms of any special minority proiii). It is thiukiiip of thix sort that pets people scared iK'caii.sc one Nepro, spi'akinp to a,('oniniunist proup in Paris, threut- ('iis ail orpaiii/.ed boycott by fiftetMi million tncnihcrs of his Nice. I can’t speak for auy fifteiMi iiiiHion people any more than any other oii(“ iierson can. but I know that I’ve pot tm) --i iiiiieh invested for niy wife and tdiild and my- s(df in the future of this country, nnd I and other Americans of itiiiiiy raccs .-iiid I'aiths }iav to much invi'sted in oiir country’s widfarc, any of iis to throw it away becausi* of a sii soup siinp in ba.ss. I am a lelipious man. The fore r chivish America where I am free to Air ship as I plca.s(‘, a privilepe whieli soiiii' c tricK do not pive. And I suspi'ct that June hundred aud ninety-nine out of almosjf auy thousand colored AmericuMs v(ui meet \^ll tell yon the same fhiijp, “But that doesn’t mean that we’/e going to stop fighting race discriminatiw in this country until we’ve got it licke^It means that we’re going to fight it all^e harder because our stake in the futur^/ is so big. We can win our fight without tfce Commu- ists, and we don’t want their hqp Labor Rep. Scom Skis Decision NEW YORK CITY K'P \’ito Miircuntonio. nierican Labor I'arty eaudidati' for Mayor, stored 1h‘ New York Court of Appealn' s.inclioii of Jimcrow housing at Stiiyvesjint Town, and said the “deciMion of the court will be reverHed by tlic j)efl^p!e.” He tti'iiiaiKU'd lhat Mayor n’Dwyer, ancl liik Dcmu eratic Mayoralty oppoiielit, with draw the city's tax exemption of to the inHtiranci’ company and “thiLs put an eiid to the O.’Thvyer po'iey of su'i- sidizinp jimt jou iti Stuyvcsjint Town throuph the iiS'- o'" the people's fiiiuls” I^ist TiiesIay tln‘ ('onr( of Ajipcals ruled that the .Mc'ro politnn I jfe liisiirancc (’oiMitnnv uas within ilN riphts in barrin" Xi'Proes as tenants in the H.TlHI «)iart ment tlcvelnnmient. I’aiil L. iUtsh, eJtairmuii of tlic City-wide Committee to Kud Diserimiuutiou in Stuyve>iaut Town, decl«ri‘d: “The mplit de cision of the New York State Court of Ap|H*ttlH favorijiy: dis crimination in Htuyvcwiu't T»vn n is not the last word on this crn cial is«ne. The court of lasit ivsort - - the people has yet to bo heard from. The ^Meti-opolitau l-ife i»» not bigt^er than the p«“0|)le, not ig it more powerful than the Bill of Kiphts, The di.sgraceful action of the Mjior's Corporation Coun- I in abetting MetrojKilitan iti the courts will not be forgotten. Discrimination apainnt Xejjroes in Stnyvpsant Town will be ended.” ^di^hday Poity Celebrants Pic ured above the kids who helped Jimmy Turner, son of Dr, and Mrs, I, E, Turner of Pekoe Sireot, celebrate his sixth birthday recently, The parly was held at the Stan ford L, Warren Library, Included in the group are Norma Roberts, Evelyn and iean Margh^ll, Michael Holt, [antha Goodwin, Marjori« Lennon, Evelyn and Booker Kennedy, Betty Joe Qoodloe, Eugene Turner, Wallace Toole,'Bobby Beale, Catherin« Pratt, Terksa Gret- pni Jimmy H^nry, Aaron and Kenneth SpAulding, Wauna Dooms, Jr., Billy and Wesley Clement, Joseph and Beryl Sansom, Dickie Taylor, Char les .'Btaq^ack, Jr., Winifred Richardson. Doris and Ayle Schooler, Carol Holmes, Willa Jay and Janet Walker, Cecily and Booth Smith, Gail and Sybil Ray, Doris Johnston, WilU«m Forte, Jr., Oeorge Logan, III. Dave Re«d, Jr., Joseph and Sandra Wray, Haywood and Luther Townsend, Judy Grandy, Billy Bibber, Chubby Miller, David Cooke, and “Biff” Handerwn. NAACPAsks Probe Of Jury Minutes In Case Of Race Motorist Slain By Cop for, Our Police Chief Says \ s. A*lunatic li(diind the wheel i,s I exaiuplc of rudeness^ and dis- no iijore daiiperous that th.- courtwii-, ’T ^^OliUlXiE driv(/r w ho has hecn tlrinkihg-.J TiiE AVA7.'AVEii iTlS Lm'LE are drivers as-, criininal a revolver in The iiiiiii wilt) " ^'Tp^irTnpJ^iy threat, ever, a>; the mail who has ■111 a few, ’ 'I'hrs is the driver • iio speeds, who is careless and •-ckli'ss. |iV(ilie 1o 1()V‘ his teiii- >er, uii'l wl.ov ri'actioiis have Ix'i'li slowed. 'I'hes -v_i'lii»s'‘ aetifiiiV an us liliiidiy firiii a crowded tlieiiter. IF YOl' H.WI-: IIKKX D'inXKIXG, TAKK a TAXI HOMK DH.VT DKIVK. Alxnit 12 drivers out of ev*ry ItMl in rural lata! accideiiis \v(‘re ■ I’eported to IxM'ii diivinp oii^tlie wriiiiy^ snie of the road, '1 here is \irtually no excwsc for tliis t\j)e (,)■ jiecidciit - it i(s 11 result of earejcssiie.vs uiitl utter di'.j'cpard for wise drivinp. Do not he cHii^ht (III the other IVI- low’s s'ide of the road. Be' snr.e y'lii have the ucccsHary dear ance and time before atteiupet- in"-M(i |i:rK aiiotbi'r car. IF IX THK -SI IfillTKHT IM'il'lJT ST\Y IV Y(M It OWX LAXK. Munv pedl •striaiis are lenipt- ei1 to do what a riiaii in Kjileiirh did rei-entK’ when a motorist «iiiie 1(1 a stop ill the middle of tl»^- cr'-!ssna(k. I)!»ckinp.liis iiath. *f*bej alker coo!>-' opened the fi^nr of the ear. walked "..V (,iit the either (Soor, ,,f them rme'n Ik‘- crosswalk-crepp- I' .!>!(■ 1,1 most eoinirifm eit^' fli'Hin aiii-,.. ^ fhipranl STRIP W RIGHT OF WAY, A pocKl driver repards the fel- low who weaves in and out of traffic in much the same way he does a bothersome hoastd’ly. rnfortnnatcly, the traffie-weav- r is as danperous as he is an- noyiiip. Practically no time is saved b}' darting in an out of traffic, and the cost iii frayed temj>enir'and the posftihjlity of a serjous accident make this un- *afe practice the heipht of '^*4, ishness. STEP OX” THE OTH ER FELLOW’S TOEX AXD YOC RE LIKELY TO THIP YOCRSELF. Passinp anotl,^er cat* is a niiiu- eiiver that reipiires the pood driver’s full concentration. Do not attempt to pass unless ,\-ou have visibility of th‘ road a head and no traffic is ap protiehinp. Allow plenty of room .to fiull out. |)as.s, and return ,n pain to the proper lane. Cnttinp ill t(Ki sharply may diMuii ho|h yoursdf and th(* driver yon have imss^'d. IF IX DOrr.T .MUH'T I’A.S.SIXfr WAIT' fatal traffic accident is double trapie if the victim is a child. The sense of the driver’s ptiilf is twice as stronp. Be es- •>e(iially watchful for dartinp voiiripsters id residential dis tricts and around school^ or nlaypronnds. It is an excellent "estiire of conrti'sv' toward the parents of ALL children to keep their welfare in ifliiids. FEW CONSCIJSXCE.S^ CAX AF- TORTT Tl'lE WEIGHT m- A CHILD'8 DEATH, Both aniioyinp and danperous is the driver who pulls away from the curb without first sipnalinp or lookinp 'or ap- proachiiip cars. The courteous, driver lets his intentions be known before h(> enters the flow’ of traffic. He luills away from the curb slowly only when the way is clear. The sjime care and caution are nec.es,sary when parkinp as when leavinp the tcurb. PULL AWAY PROM THE ('H’Rl', MLOWJvY AXT) WATCHFFLLY. Negro Nurses Assigned To Walter Reed WASHINGTON Captainr Ruth N, Faulkner of Monroe, North Carolina; First l4ut>nant Helen E. Templeton of Trautman, N. C. and Fii^ Lieutenant Oracle V. RobeR^ of Shelby, X. C, of the ^any Nurse Corps recently repoH^d to the Army Medical.Centei\n»^ to assume duties at Walter RS»*«1 General Hospital. Captain Faulkner enterfd the service in July, I942^d has served at Tuake^ne Air Force Base for si^i^earg as sui^gical war^i^ilurse, assiifc- ant chief and princlal chief liKiffr to entering the si'rvice w.'is superintendent of urst's at North Caroliiui State Sanitarium, McCain, Xorth Carolina. Lieutenant Templeton join ed the Army in 1944 and has sered at Camp McCoy, Wis consin; Fort Bragg, North Carolina; and Fort Dix, New Jersey. Before entering the service, she was a staff nurse with the 'Veterans Administra tion. liieiitenant Rol)crt,s entered the service in 194.5 and also served at Camp McCoy, Wis consin and Fort Dix. XVw .Ter^v before beinp assipned to Walter Reed General Hos pital, Prior *0 her enlis^ent in the Army Lieutenant Roberts was >un«rvtsor of surperv and T«edicine at the Richardson ■y.«a>ltal in Greensboro, North Carolina. BRO(»KLYX ('luu>:iiip that the Xepro re sidents of Hn.oklyn “are beinp siihjected to. H reipn of poHctv terror uni)recedcuteil in rcwnt X(‘W York hi.story,” James A. Powers, I’fesidcnt of the Brook lyn branch of the Xational As sociation for the Advancement of Coloi'cd People f(Kta5’' tWed nesday, July 27) petitioned Jiidpe Nathati U. SoIh*1 of the BrtMiklyn County Court for per mission to cJiaminc the Orftiul Jury minutes in the casi* iuvolv- inp the klllinp of Hennan New ton, At the same time, Mr, Ceo Shapiro, President of the Brooklyn Division of the A- merican Jewish Congress, also presenfed a petition to the Court, supporting Powers'-re quest to examine the Grand Jury minutes in the case. Xew'ton, II Xegro resident of tion added that “it is less pos sible to secure an Indictment jagaJi]!st police officials who have victimized Negro citizens in Kings County, City of New York, than it is in some of the most lynch-ridden places of_ the South.” It seems, the statement added, ‘‘that there are protection Tonnectons a* mong police, proscutors, mag* istrates and grand jurymen which are so thickly enemshed that it has be«n virtually im possible to piece the m^ze,” Powers' petition pyintetl ^iul that eight eye-witncKsctt to New ton’s slAvinK w'ere J’eady located by nXaCP reprcsiMitatives, whci'eaa \he District Attorney hiid deidared that there were no cyc-witntW*» to the occurrence. Powers said that “ciretuustunees in many other ref^wit occurences pave UK ample cause to distrust the District Attorney,” Refcr- in BriMiklyn, was shot to death in a traffic dispute Memorial IMy, inj^ to the “reipn of terror by Donald Mullen, a Brooklyn Brooklyn, Powers charpel: policeman, Mullen, at the time, was off duty and in civilian •lothcH, He never arrested nor suspendwi, and no imlict- ment was found sipainsf him by the Grand Jury. Powers’ petition charged that 1 whitewash resulted in the Mullen case because of negleqt of duty by District Attorney Miles F. McDonald. The peti- “ Police officers can and do murder and assault Negro cit- break into the homes of Ne- izens with utter impunity. They break into the homes of Negro citizens with unbridled license. The use of search war rants is unknown. Frameups of Negro cititens are common occurrences,” STATE OF NORTH o State Of North Carolina Department Of S^ate Preliminary Certificate Of Dissolution TO At,I, TO WHOM THF-SK PUR- -I'\TS M.W «'O.MK (!HKl-rriN(i: WTIKJfIC.AS. ?( ;ip|ic,'i(M to my Hat inf.'ictiim, tiy (hily niitluMiticntcd rocoid of lli(’ iir(im>(liii(;f( for tlic votinitiiry '(lis.sdlntion thereof )>y tlie iin.'inimniis f’nnsi'iit (if iill tli(- iiieiiitx'rs. (l('|)o»iit(>d in mv office, Unit llic NOUTtI f.AT? OI.T.N’A ST.ATB AS.S0C'T.\T10X OF T!Rr.T.STfRI?FT) XT'RSR.et IXrORp(lTt.\TKIl. :i cnrpo/.'ition of lliiH Ptatc, wtioS(> ]>riiicii).Tl office is liliifilpit (It l.hifoln iros))iti(l in the f'ity of T>iirlipin County of niirti.Tni Kt.Tte of'Xortli f'iiroliiKi (Mrs. I.ufillo Zimmermiin Willlidiis iM'ing tlio ngcnt tlicri'in iind in eJiKrpp tlicrcof, iipon wl)om iirO(>pnN nfay lie sorv(>(l), has poinpliod witti tlip, rcqiiirpmi'ntR of ritnpfer ,5.1, Gpncrnl Ktatut('S, en- Htled • ^ ‘ r«rpnpatlon«, ’ ’ prplimintiry to ttip insiilnp of this Oprtifipnte of Dissohition: NOW THKBRFORB, I THAT), BT'IJK, Heeretary of StatP' of th^ Statp of North Carolhm, do pci'tify that the sflld eorporatloM oYi the 27th d.iy of .luly, 1949, flU’"^ my offi(?c a duly pxeeutpd iind attpxt pd consent in writing to the dl» solution of said corporation, P-Totiitt'd by all the inemliers theroof, wliich said consent and the record of the aforesaid are now on file in my wid office as provided hy law. I'M TE8TIM0?TV WHBttmr, I have lierto set mv hand niid affi'xed my official se(il nt Unleigh, this 27th day of .Tuly, A, P. 1940, THAD ETTRK, Sperpt,-iry of State. rOFFICIAL REAL) (KBEY AN ETP ON YOUR FUTURE) HOSPITAL INSURANCE for 2'/2C cents PER DAY if you are not prepared for HOSPITALIZATION And the loss of your income from SICI^NESS and ACCIDENTS, write us ot. see one of our 4g(i9ts im mediately about our HOSP|IAUZA£ia£ Jl^N, _ and HEALTH and ACCIPENT IITSURAKICE. Southern Fidelity Mutual Inaurance Company Agents; THOMAS NICHOLAS and H. C. DAVIS _ PEP AND VIGOR For Men and Women If you feel tired, lack vim, enerry and visor, you should try HADACOL thii very day. Forget your ate—after taklna HADACOti, many are peppy, have that younser feelinc— •otne even at 70. I'll furnish the electric power. You furnish the greatest power of all— human character and brains. Together we'll make the Piedmont Caro- Ijnas the best place on earth in which to live and work. Duke Power Comoanv Embryo Study Moy Lead To Cancer Cure * I>ENVER, COLO. Embryonic and cancer tissues are alike in many respects. Both grow rapidly and they resemble each other under the miscroscope. The American Cancer So ciety is financing work by Dr, Harry H. Gordon at the Uni- yersity pf Colorado to find put some of the chemical characteristics of growth w|iich gr common to cancer, firemature infat^ts an4 the issues of embryos of the rat and hamster, One of the studies now being conducted concerns muscle development and the aminq ^cids — building stones — psed in muscle construction. These studies are being made both in premature infants and in unborn animals in fhe hope of relating the chprnis^iy of normal growth to the chemis try of the abnormal growth wWh is cancer, mtnls M6E lOY IrWe. II •an wor» l»ui« n«w roll i*»te. is iliowii. or II kaae Ml Iwglfc, ^ Prlci t j,oe eLntm CURLS lair wbaa you ««• tk* JBMIK KARN .OiMar of Curia, Mjr wtarina this favorlu ' ml, you 4» away «hk Um MO M . you «» away Iroaa Ihcraby riving yo«r hair Um U Mirim fadaa Ika curl* !• tUf *r other __rPrk« SJ,)0 Phone F-151 CORNER MANGUM AND PARRISH STREETS Mtor; TODAn SEND NO MONEY —pay poatmaii M dalivary. Dapl.. JESSIE KARE INC Caldwell Returns From Europe Tour NEW YOIiK Whilu paaaing'through New York on a return from a two months’ visit to Europe, in which he vi.Mt»d 11 countrie,s ineliuUiJg Poland, I>nmark, (>.echoHlovakia aiul Italy, Mr. Erskiue Cakhvpil found time to drop ill on his repriut pub- lislier.s to cjipuk fht> tiover OU TUB SI’HE hand OF OQI) which will bp n'leaw'd jn n HfCiX|ST odrtjoij iiexf month. Apropos of covers hp^l^ ' them that his Italian pub lishers have pioneered in un? ing old masters to decorate thf book .jackets of cpntemporafy novels and that the head qf Renaissance y(^lr adorns t)if cover of GEORGIA BOY, Of liirt «liffereut pnblishefH lie sa.vs tliat the Danes h^>^ published more of hut,it|t^!i than ftnyone el.se, tlie Poles print the larpr‘st elitions, and the Italians do the best l)ook .jaekets. ., BEDBUCS Roaches All lovectg Now aclenoe brings you the wonder killer, the newly devel oped ALLDfiAD oontaining DDT and the terepane ohemi- cals. Banish budbugs and sleep well tonight. Kill germ carrjdng roaches, destructive. ants, bius- zing flies, stinging mosquitoes, and rid yourself permaiiently of all insects with ALLDDtAD as thousands of satisfied users have done. Quaranteed to work or money back. Send $2 today for chemicals for one gallon of AIiL- DEAD—OR OUR ABSOLUTE MONEY BACK GUARANTEE that you must be satisfied or money returned. 5!Lct now. Write New York Insecticide Comp any,. Dept?"^ 359, 152 West 42nd “ .) aad uMpUg» Aart milUi yo«w orlei. >huwlnf IM ««n waariht Our braid I) M iMM loa •Uy.fhick. W« Mad a fr«t lChr« bt'HiU. Week End Sausage . . . Shoulder Pork Roast . Veal Chops . . - . ^ Roast Beef Rib Stew - - T - Boneless Stew T-Bone Round Steak .... Pork Chops Fresii Ham - Shoulder 24 lbs. Flour 10 lb. Flour Milk Eggs .... . ^ . Bacon ..... WILLIE Roberson Grocery And Market Corner Dowd and Rozbore DIAL: L-289 1
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
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Aug. 6, 1949, edition 1
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