Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / March 8, 1952, edition 1 / Page 7
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Nonos Of Kxsoumx NORTH CAROLINA) DURHAM COUNTY) HAVING QUALIFIED as Exe cutrix of the eatcte of Robert F. Fulwood, deceased, late of Dur ham County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons hav ing claims against said estate to exhibit them to the uindersigned at 1406 Fayetteville Street, Dur ham, North Carolina on or be fore the 9th day of February, 'l952 or this notice will be plea ded in bar of their recovery. All persons Indebted to said estate will please make imme diate payment. Dated this 9th day of Feb ruary, 19S2. Mrs. Clyde Scarborough, Exe cutrix of E^te of Robert F. Ful wood, deceased. NORTH CAROLINA) DURHAM COUNTY TRUSTEE NOTICE OF SALE UNDER AND BY VIRTUE of the power of wle contained in a certain deed of trust execute by George McIntosh and wife, Len- ner McIntosh, dated the 8 day of November, 1949 and record ed in Book 3996, page 516, in the office of the Register of Deeds of Durham County, de fault having been made in the payment of the indebtedness thereby secured; and under and by virtue of the authority vest ed in the undersigned as sub stituted trustee by an instru ment of writing dated the 20 day of February, 1952 and recorded in Book 204, page 343, office of the Register of Deeds of Dur ham County, ahd the said deed of trust being by the terms there of subject to foreclosure, and the holder of the indebtedness thereby soured having demand ed a foreclosure thereof for the purpose of satisfying said in debtedness, the undersigned •substituted trustee will offer for sale at public auction to the highest bidder for cash af the Courthouse door in Durham, North Carolina at Twelve o’clock Noon, on the 22nd day of March 1952, the land conveyed in said deed of trust, the same lying and being in Lebanon Township Durham County, State aforesaid, and described as follows; BEGINNING at a stake on the East side of LiUie Drive 697. 3 feet in a southerly direction from the .South side of Lattie Road at the Southeast comer of Lot #54, and running thence South 82 deg. 30’ east 406. 9 feet to a stake; thence South 9 deg. 41' west 76 feet to a stake, northeast comer of Lot #56; thence North 82 deg. 30’ west 409.7 feet to a stake on the Bast side of Lillie Drive; thence along and with the East side of Lillie Drive, North 7 deg. 30’ East 75 feet to a stake, the point of be-, ginning and being Lot #55 of LeBanon Acres, as per plat and survey thereof now on file in the office of the Register of Deeds of Durham County in Plat Book 18B, page 127, to which reference Is hereby made for a more particular description of same. See deed to George Mc Intosh et ux. Book 186, page 356. Durham County Registry. Dated this 20 day of February. 1952. J. S. STEWART, SUBSTITUTED TRUSTEE M. HUGH THOMPSON, ^ ATTORNEY m SUPEMOS COURT KATIE M. BASS vs. NOTICE THOMAS BASS THE ABOVE NAMED DE- FENDENT, THOMAS BASS, will .take notice that an action entitled as above has been com menced in the Supe'rior Court of Durham County, North Caro lina, by the plaintiff to secure an absolute divorce from the de fendant upon the ground that plaintiff and defendant have lived iseparate and apart for more than two years next pre ceding the bringing of this act ion; and the defendant will fur ther take notice that he is re quired to appear at the office of the Clerk of he Superior Court of Durham County, in the Courthouse In Durham, North Carolina on or before twenty days after the 20 day of March 1952 and answer or demur to the complaint in said action, or the plaintiff will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in said complaint. This 20 day of February, 1952. W. H. YOUNG, Clerk Superior Court, burham County M. HUGH THOMPSON, Attorney NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATOR CTA North .Carolina) Durham County) HAVING QUALIFIED as Ad ministrator CTA of the Estate of Thomas Atwater, deceased, this is to noti^ all persons having exhibit them to the undersigned claims against said estate to at 1024 Kent Street, Durham, North Carolina on or before the 26th day of February, 1953 or this notice will l>e pleaded in bar of their recovery. All per sons indebted to said estate will please make immediate pay- pient. This 25th day of February, 1952. TOMMIE ATWATER, Ad ministrator CTA of the e^te of Thomas Atwater, deceased. M. HUGH THOMPSON, AT TORNEY. Clemmons High Student Wins Shop Contest EUZABETH CITY—Rudolph Hudson, a sophomore and mem ber of the J. J. Clemmons High School Chapter of New Farmers of America, won first prize in the Bias Federation of New Farmers of America Shop Con test held in the P. W. Moore’s Hi^ School Agricultural Shop on F«bruai7 20. Member schools from the fol lowing. coimties participated: Pasquotank, P. W. Moore High School of Elizabeth City; Tyrell, Tyrrell County Training School of Columbia; Gates, T. S. Coop er High School of Sunbury; Per quimans, Perquimans Coimty Training School; Chowman- Colored High School of Edenton; Currituck - Currituck Union School of Maple; Washing ton, J. J. Clemmons High School of Roper. The purpose of the Contest, sponsored by the AlUson-Erwin Company of Charlotte, is to de velop skills in the use of hand tools so that the N. F. A. mem bers can better do the small jobs on their farms. Hudson will represent the KEROSENE AND FUEL OIL CUSTOMERS urr us .PILL YOUR OIL TANK NOW WHILE OIL IS PLENTIFUL. KENAN OIL CO. TELEPHONE X-12l2 HILLSBORO ROAD DURHAM, N. C. ■ 1 trnmmwAt . I *. BLENDID WHISKIY MJ Pn«£ CfBki IfMlnl Spirtti FREEDMANS HOSPITAL ARTHRITIC CLINIC TO TRAIN PHYSICIANS Dr. James A. Watson, head of the new arthritis dinie at Freedman’s Hospital, examines the knee joint of an arthritic patient. The clinic, closely integrated vrfth Howard University, is the first of its kind to be set up in a NegnM>perated hospital in conjunction with a medical school. The Washington chapter of the ArUiritis and Rheumatism Foundation assisted in the establishment of the clinic as a part of the Foundation’s nation-wide.program to expand facilities for the training of physicians and the treatment of patients in this crippling disease. Clinks have been set up at Georgetown and George Washing ton mfdical schools in the nation’s Capital. WEEKLY GIRL SCOUT GLANC{S By Virginia Moss Morgan The First Conference on Rec reation for the Aging convened in Chapel Hill at the University ot North Carolina on Thursday February twenty-first and lasted three days. The purpose of this meeting, which was sponsored by the University of North Caro lina jointly with the North Caro lina Recreation Commission, Was to discuss ways and means of organizing and conducting recreational activities for older persons. Eight states were re presented in the meeting. They were Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, West Virginia, Tennessee, Louisana, Alabama, and Florida. The following Dur ham recreation leaders atten ded; Mr. and Mrs. I. R. Holmes, Mrs. Ernestine Holmes, Mrs. Ray Moore, and Mrs. Carrie Hargrove, The golden age movement la well under way in Durham. There are tWo active clubs for Negro golden agers, the WaU- town and the W. D. Hill Com munity Center groups. Several areas, including Lyon Park, Burton, and East End are.> mak ing plans for clubs in the early spring. Mrs. Ernestine HolmM is working with the Walltown group, while Mrs. Carrie Har grove is leader of the W. D; Hill club. At the last meeting, the Wall town club elected the following- officers: President, Mrs. Jennie Carter; Secretary, Mrs. Mittie Jaclcson, Treasurer, Mrs. Savan nah Peace. There are fifteen per sons enrolled. The current pro ject of the club will be a friend ship quilt. Every one will work on it during meetings. The club seven counties of his district in the State Contest to be held in Qreen^ro, at the A. and T. Cbill^e in June. has also made contributions as a group to the March of Dimes, and to St. John’s Church. The officers of the W. D. Hill Golden Age Club are: Mrs. Pearl Williams; Vice President,’ Mrs. W. L. Patterson; - and Sec retary, Mrs. Annie Alston. The DeShazor's Beauty Col lege presented the Ahoskie Phil harmonic Male Glee Club at the Center on Wednesday night. Clifton T. Epps, Jr. is director of this group. After the program, there was dancing. Those atten ding reported a very pleasant evening. On Thursday night, the Dur ham Business School gave a dance at the Center. The Les Pe- tites Senoritas are planning a social recreation night on Friday night. They are planning some thing just a little different In the way of entertainment, and expect to have an .pnjoyable time. Students In Honor Groups Eleven North Carolina Col lege students were inducted in national honorary societies here recently. • Sevm juniors and one senior became full-fledged members of Alpha Kappa Mu, national lib eral arts honorary scoiety. Two of the students initiated into the arts honorary group al so qualified for membership in the national scientific honorary, Beta Kappa Chi. Initiated into Alpha Kappa Mu were Joyce A. Daughtery, New York City; Delores J. Dy son, Greensboro; Jeanne E. Mor gan, Kings Sfoimtain; Sarah Watkins, Rockingham; James L. Atwater, Chapel Hill; Josepii Battle, Rocky Moimt; and Wil liam A. licwls, Warsaw. All the above students are Juniors. The lone senior was Calvin H. Norman, Jr., Jamica, New York. Norman is president of the North Carolina College Student Government Associa tion. ^ YOU'RE ALWAYS WELCOME A Hotel Thtreta A.t Tour Strvieel U*k* New York your number one playUnd-wtian In New Tork •mnge tor iiOOOnmuNtotloD* kt - Bot«l Tberesa. CkMrlns to > dUtlncuUhed eUentale.-Sauirt newljr uileoontwl bar, eeekfll louasa and dlnlnc room *U Ttdeo •quipped. ConTenUnt oot(*e ■hoppe. AU air-cooled. Injoy ■uptrb wrTlce-miperUttn food. 300 outtlde rooma-madam Ore- proof. At your aarrlea baoauaa you're alwaya waloome. IMta to day for partloulaia. WniuM H.Baow4, JlcridanC Hfir. (EfUTI tVE.. U4-ttS ST«EET ■E« Till IT.I.T. Hwtomm, mmr •9*nrtktMg goumiowm •Candle- (Continued from Page ’Two) nized as expert in the area, we call attention to abundant evidence in contemporary life. At seventy. General Mac- Arthur was providing leader ship in democratizing Japan. Winston Churchill is furnish ing the leadership and Elan Vital to the British Empire at Seventy eight. John Dewey, ninety-two is producing a type of thinking that any in dividual in the effective, mov ing, vital years would be proud to duplicate. William j^eard Kilpatrick is still writ ing and lecturing although he is eighty. Abbe Ernest Dim- net, physically fragile, at 85 has an article in the current issue of Vogue on “Art of Concentration.” There are ex amples from the past of men and women well along in years who made remarkable achievement. Verdi composed Othello and- Falstaff after he was seventy-four. Goethe fin ished Faust just t)efore his death at eighty-three. Michael 8ATUBDAT. MABCH Stt, ItSX fitt dJJtOUIiA 1BBS Angelo painted hJs Laat .Jadg- ment at 60 yeani M.; George Bernard Shaw wtuf writing and expressing himitelf vitrio- lically at ninety. Popular views on adult Reaming ^re found In Walter '^tkin’s Life begins at Forty and Careers at Forty; Petre Steincrohn’s Forget Your Age and Clare de Gruchy’s Cre ative Old Age. Great and near great achiev- ments in all areas of human endeavor attest to the fact that those who have attained maturity can continue to learn new things. The People’s College is go ing and growing institution in contemporary America. -Digest- (Continued from Page Two) interest in young newspaper men was deep and sincere. It was extreme good fortune to be an early beneficiary of his interest when, in 1926-27 he gave me my first real news paper job as New York Cor respondent for The Chicago Defender. Every veteran scribe never forgets the giddy thrill he ex perienced when as a starry eyed cub he received his first assignments. Harper gave me that thrill. I wish I could have known him better. Harper also encouraged htm- dreds of would-be writers in the theatrical profession. An instance was the widely read column, “Seen And Heard While Passing” by the late Sa lem Tutt Whitney. That and other columns began through the Defender’s publishing the weekly route of road shows. Whitney expanded these no tices to include human inter- esj comment and poetry. He later published them in a l3ook, “Mellow Musings.” The Negro performer is greatly indebted to Lucius C. Hari>er for encouragement and opportunity. Harper has left his i*emorials in the hearts of the people. CAROLUVA PLAYMAKERS TO PRESENT COMEDY AT HILLSIDE HIGH SCHOOL, MARCH 22nd The 45th touring troupe of — the fanrted Carolina Playmak«TS of the University of North Caro lina will bring their colorful production of a new muaical comedy, “Spring For Sure,” to Dirham, North Carolina for a one evening performance under the sponsorship of the Durham Alumni Chapter of Kappa Al pha Psi Fraternity. With a book by Catherine Mc Donald and music by Wiltoh Mason, this tuneful folk play concerns the turmoil brought into the lives of easy-going Ten nessee mountaineers by the sud den intrusion of a group of wealthy New York socialites. The comedy abounds with bright costumes, clever settings, lazy Tennessee humor, and a parade of new songs and dances It features a cast of 22 talented performers under the imagina tive direction of John W. Par ker. The musical was first tried out in the Playmakers Theatre at Chapel Hill, North Carolina, in the spring of 1950, when it was acclaimed by audience and critics alike. Such phrases as “a hit for sure,” "a literally how ling success,” “a refreshing, lighthearted air that makes for pleasant entertainment,” were not rare among the critical ap praisals. During the early summer of 1950, the well-known summer theatre producer, Robert Dag gett, produced the play with equal success at his playhouse in Westboro, Massachusetts. The Playmakers have revived their production, with added songs and dances, because of popular demand. It is scheduled for performance at Hillside High School Auditorium on March 22, 1952 at 8:00 o,clock P.M. city, of which the Revmnd J. A. Brown is pestor, snnmmrart this week that it has estabUalied a Sunday Nursery for the bcfM- fit of parents who are foread to remain from church an aecoimt of small children. The nursery will be equipped with modenT' facilities and a trained personnel, aocordinc to W. W. Barbee, corresponding secretary of the church. There will be an infant de partment and two other age group departments where sonci, Bible stories, artcraft, how to play together and other char acter building instruction will be given. [DOING GOOD UNTO OTHi —and makiof mooeir for yourl church or youraell. You can make 1 good mooejr in your spare cimei selling the wonderful •ll-herbal \ East India Medicines which hai^ 1 help^ foUu since ISKM—48 \ long years. Write your oame and ^ , address on a postcard and anil , it to the EAST INDIA MEOICINI CO. i Tbtf0 it M 0U CLASSIFIED AND MAIL ORDER Church Offers New Service For Parents The Et>enezer Baptist Church, located on Glenn Street of this Postal Workers Want More Speed In Integration WASHINGTON, D. C.—Offi cials of the National Alliance of Postol Employees have told John M. Bedding, Assistant Postmaster General in charge of the Bureau of Postal Transpor tation. that high levt-i integra tion of Negro Employees is not t)eing effected with the speed which the Alliance had been led to expect. Conferring with Redding were NAPE President Ashby B. Carter of Chicago;,H. C. Gibson of Chicago, president of the Clii- cago Terminal NAPE Branch; and W. C. Day of Houston, Texas, president of District One of the NAPE. District Superin- tendent-at-Large Thomas P. Bo- mar sat in on the conference as a Department representative. Specifically involved are the post as “Confidential Assistant to the First Assistant Postma’s- ter General, formerly held by a Negro, MarsdeifNW. Cabell of West Virginia, but which is now vacant. A white empl^ee is said to be executing the duties of this post. The Alliance wants a member of the NAPE to be ap pointed" to the post. CLASSIFIED ADVEB'niSING BATES _$ .04 PEB WORD _ .04 PEB WOBJD . .OS FEB WORD . .03 FEB WOBD AMOCO AMOCO Oar Metered And Filter^ Service Gives Aasnrance Of Correct Amonnt Aad Clean jPredaeti. JtCKSON OIL COMPANY I ‘VAPA’* JACK. Owser PHONES S-5IS1 AND •-1749 ACCESSIBILITY!! Customers who prefer to use Cash and Carry Dry Claan- Ing service will find our plant easy to get to and assured at pmMag QMce. We are located near the major food stores which makes it easy for you to bring, and call for your clothas when you stop or drive to and from work. DURHAM LAUNDRY COMPANY DRY CLEANING Ooraer Gregaon and Peabody Btreete ~ PhoM 4-Nl BANKERS’ FIRE INSURANCE CO. Durham, North Caroling ConiBerTatiye~Solid-De{>endable ONE WEEK TWO WEEKS THBEE WEEKS FOUB WEEKS Minimum words—13. In estimating cost, cotmt each initial abbreyiation and group of numbers as one. The publisher reserves the Titfht to accept er reieot all copy. Contact NEW METHOD UUNDRY AND Dry Cleaners QUALITY 0 SEBVICE 405 BOXBOBO STBEET DIAL 6959 MISS FJB. BOSSES 504 Dupree Street Dnrham, N. C. FVLLBB BBUSHSS FOB ALL FITLLEB BBCSB COMPANY ABTICLES WANTED; Three women to sell AVON PRODCCTS in the Haytl Section. Write MBS. ERNESTINE HARVEY, Box 225. Durham, N. C. WANTED—Salesman for Beer route sales. Salary and com mission. Give full Information. Write Manager, Box 59, Dur ham, N. C. IW&J *• FINANCE COBP. 0 Auto Loans 0 213 Bigsbee Avenue (Back Of Post Office) PHONE 3-5721 “JUST WHAT THE DOCTOR •ORDERED” HOSPITAL INSURANCE For IVac CENTS PER DAT tf yon are not prepared Fer Hospitalixatioii >1316 Loaa Of Your Income From SICKNESS And ACCIDBNT. Write Us Or See One Of Oar Agente Im mediately Abo«t Oar HOSPITALIZATION PLAN. And HKALTP And ACCIDENT INSUBANCE. SOUTHERN FIDELTY MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY Ageata: THOMAS NICHOLS And H. C. DAVIS 527 ELM STKEBT DIAL S-SS31 there thouM be one on every farm This device makes it easy to pay obligations promptly, safely and costs very little to operate. Hie device is a book of diecks on thi* bank. Do you have a Checking AccoimtT It’s a great convenience for you. Mechanics And Farmers Bank DUBHAM AND BALEIGH, NOBTH CABOUNA FRESH FISH IN SEASON QUALITY SEA FOOD MEATS AND GROCERIES MOREHEAD AVENUE STORE Plioaes 7-S24S —And— SMITHS FISH MARKET 718 FayetteTille Street Phone: 6-3481 A Complete Electric And Transportation Service DUKE POWER CO: DIAL F-151 ^ Corner Man^im aiid ParriKh SIr.
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 8, 1952, edition 1
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