1 *TME CAROLINA TIMES'. is—"THE THUTH UNBRIdLeD" ’ SAT., JAN 11. Aktms* Tourist and Foo —T-—« fMBt. W Hll Mmi»z . Shoulb 21 Rooms, 7 oatlu M kU • ■ *—lUrd !• kMt Hf ( I r?. Mvii. . Uftw oil bMt. rrir l» m Mtl I MUI Mlliil ^EinSSIFIED r AfA Ml I . m ftnrf HELP WANTED: FEMALE “OUR SERVICE STARTS WITH YOUR FIRST CALL” W* Estimat* «nd Dclivtr Durham Builders & Supply BUIDING MATERIALS Milton Av«. at W. Main Tel. 6mi67 COAL •‘OK In Every Weigh" M. H. Head & Son trading as McGhee Coal Co. CaU 684-0311 Practical Nurses Sponsor Contest For Fund Drive The Llcenscert Practical N\irses Alumni Assocation of Durham i& spbnsoring a popularity contest for the benefit of the organiza tion’s scholarship fund and mem bership drives. Classes One through 30 of the practical nurses will be represent ed in the contest. Leading the field at the end of this week's activities in the con test were Mrs. Jessip Smith, Mrs. Pearl Holman and Mrs. Eunice McArthur. SERVICES OFFERED You Caii'l Afforil To Miss Whal Wc Offerl Accident And Health Insurance llospUalixation Insurance Individual or Family Plan - Up To llO.OO Per Day Plus Miscel* laneoufl Fees Wilh Sir- gical Benefits 70 Days Per Year. AGENTS WANTED Local and Statetoide Men or Women Sonlhern Fidelil'v IVTutiial Insurance Company Phone 383-3331 527 Elm Street Durham, N. C. HOUR MARHNIZING (Incorporated) FOE THE BEST IN DRY CLEAN5NG AND SERVICE 400 West Main' S^eet tive Points INLAID LINOLEUM, COUNTER TOPS. ASPHALT, RUBBER AND WALL TILE —Free Estimates— Hunt Linoleum and Tile Company, Inc. Phone 681-8985 3505 ROXBORO ROAD NEW METHOD LAUNDRY and Dry Cleaners 405 Roxboro Street BROAD ST. BRANCH 1106 Broad Stre«t QUICK • SERVICfc: WASH TUB Roxiioro Road at Avondale Drive 10 Shirts, reg. packed ... $1.98 1 or 2 Shirts ea. 20c 3 or more ea. 19c Deluxe packed shirts .... ea. 20c (Cellophone) SANITARY Laundeiers and Cleaners DIAL 688-2503 CORNER PINE STREET AND LAKEWOOD AVENUE AUTO SERVICES Service Garages SPEIGHT’S AUTO SERVICE Road Sarvlea — Staam ClaanIng Sarvica — Recapping — Whaal Alignment PHONE 682-3575 Pettigrew and Fayelevine &ra. MttLCOMEI — Or. Samuel D. ^$nct»r, center, president of A«T College welcomes oKicert af'tile North Carolina Atsocla- tijt of Naaif Farmers of America held i^ently ttieir annua) . i l,|aier»hip Conference at the In the group from left to right are: Armitead Joyner, Henderson, secretary; McArthur Nawell, Jacksonville, presiden:,- Thurm^ Purnell, Waldon, *ac- onrf vice piaildent; James A'd> ams, Wilkesboro, third v. presi dent; James Adams, Wilkesboro third vice president; James Eat on, LitMeton, reporter; Alex ander Dawson, Be(haven, first vice president. MiLon Howell, Conetoe, Treasurer and W, T. Johnson, Sr., executive secre tary. lANY NAMES ^-CAPTAINS iklLBANY, Ga.—Arthur Gamble asf Frank Shaw have been -se- laeUd as co-captains of the 1961 /jptaay State fooiball tc?.m. f^amble, who according to NCAA Stictic*. was 13th among the Iters in America’s small col lages with a 40.7 average, is a Mior all-conference quarterback from Quitman, and has been a first-string performer since his Ireahmen year. The 6-4 signal call er is also the Golden Rams’ punt- er.. CORE Groups From Throiighout Countiy Send Aid to Tent City LEGAL NOTICES NORTH CAROLINA DURHAM COUNTY NOTICI HAVING QUALIFIED 38 Execu tor of DBNA BUSBEE, deceased, late of Durham County, North Carolina, this is to notify all per sons having claims against said estate to exhibit them to the un dersigned at No. 303 Umstead Street, Durham, North Carolina, on or before the 10th day of De cember, 1961, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their re covery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make im mediate payment. i TW* 2nd day of December, I960 rev! E. T. BROWNE, Ex- ecutof of the Eitate of DENA BUSBEE, Deceased C. O. PEARSON. Attorney Dec. 10.17. 24, 31,: Jan. 7, 14. NORTH CAROLINA DURHAM COUNTY IN THE DURHAM COUNTY CrVIL COURT , _ DEAMER J. THIGPEN, Plaintiff certain deed of trust executed by Claude Woodley and wife, Penny P. Woodley, dated th« 17th day of February, 1951, and recorded ia Book 441, at page 142, In the office of the Register of Deeds of Durham County, North Carolina, default having been made In the payment of the indebtedness there by secured and said deed of trust being by the terms thereof sub ject to foreclosure the- undersigned trustees will offer for sale at pub lic auction to the highest bidder for cash at the Courthouse door in Durham, North Carolina, at Noon, on the 4th day of February, 1961, the property conveyed in said deed of trust, the same ly ing and being In Durham Town ship, Durham County, and more particularly described as follows, to-wit: All certain lots or parcels of land together with Improvements thereon, including electrical and plumbing equipment attached to the building situated and lying and being at the South Intersec tion of Lodge Street and Scout Drive In the City of Durham, N. C.. and more particularly describ ed as beginning at an Iron stake in the said Intersection and run ning thence along the property line of Lodge Street South 54 deg. LELAND R. THIGPEN. Defendant NOTICE TfHE ABOVE NAMED DEFEN DANT, Leland R. Thigpen will take notice that an action ®**'| 53>.Eagt 65 feet to a stake, cor- titled as aboye has been_^ com- yynnlng thence >oyi menced in. tile Durhain County Civil Court, Durham, North Caro- iiua, by the plaintiff to secure an absolute divorce from the defen- with the line of said lot South 37 deg. 22’ West 113.8 feet to a stake in the line of Lot “D”; running thence with the line of said lot daiit upon the grounds of two, gQ. ^ggt 27 feet, years separation; that the defen-1 so^j, jg deg. 52’ West 117.2 dant will further take notice thatifggj jq a stake; running thence he- Is required to appear at the - - - — . . office of the Clerk of the Dur ham County Civil Court of Dur ham, North Carolina, in the Courthouse in Durham, on or be-^ „ , fore thirty (30) days after the| running thence along and with 4th day of February, 1961, and property line of said Drive, North 66 deg. 38’ West 31 feet to an iron stake; and running thence North 5 deg. 41’ West 145.5 feet to an Iron stake In the property line of Scout Drive; 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 3rd day of January, 1961. MARGARET B. BEST Clerk of the Durham County Civil Court WILUAM A. MARSH, JR., Attorney Jan. 7. 14, .31, 28 NORTH CAROLINA DUHHAM COUNTY TRUSTEE NOTICI OF SALE UNDER AND BY VIRTUE of the power of sale coiitBlned In a North 60 deg. 19’ East 136.9 feet to the beginning, and being Lots “B” (and B-1 and C-1) as surveyed by -L. F. Tilley, R. S., October, 1948. There is reserved for the use of L6t “D” a driveway which comprises B-1 and C-1. THIS SALE will remain open fbr ten dikvs to receive Increase bids, as required by law. THIS PRO^RTY will be sold subject to all 0H|standlng and un paid taxes and assessments. This 3rd day of January, 1961. M. HUGH THOMPSON, Trustee Jan. 7, 14, 21, 28. GOLF TROPHY — Ray Mllehell, righFy director of the North- South golf tournament, poses with Lew Prir^J, Miami-Me!ro Publicity Director, and the championship trophy, after fhe tW‘0 ironed out final details* The eight annual event is teheduledf Feb. 20-24 at the City of Miami's Spring course wl!h about 300 man and women amateur as weli as pro contest- an'I't expected to compete for i. honors. MIAMI-MEtRO NEWS „ BUREAU PHOTO U S. Helned 3,500 Farmers Improve their Position in I960 WASHINGTON, t|. C. 3,500 white colored itnall farmers were helped toward Improving their position In aglrlculture last year, reports the Farmers Home Nearly farm of their own^ and others were up against the problem of financing debts on their farms. Loans to these families totaled $52 million. Of this amount, $19 Administration of the U. S. De- million came from private lendesr partment of Agriculture. Most of these were faced with the problems of obtaining funds to enlarge or develop their farms sufficiently to produce enough to meet their family needs. Some were in need of money to buy a NEW YORK — Emergency Re lief Committees for Fayette and Haywood Counties have been formed in Los Angeles, St. Louis, New York City, Chicago and In L;xthgton, Kentucky bjr COiJE groups. Chicago CORE l.aa 4rlready sent more than 100.000 pounds of food and clothing by eight trucks and an airplaihe to the Tennessee ^ II RAIN REUEF ^THAT COSTS YOU USSi — farmers who have dared to regist er , and vote. Other groups have sent truckloads of supplies to meet the critical need for Children’s clothing, blankets and food. Natioiial CORE has esSlgned field secretary Richard Haley to West Tennessee to work In distri buting the jupplies, Increasing the number of registered voters, and securing community support. More than 40 familes have al ready been evicted from their homes. Most have doubled up with neighbors but some have been forced into tents of “Free dom Village” where they have only the most primitive sanitary facilities. The Federal Courts are now considering an attempt to ei?lct hundreds of additional fami lies. Help for the sharcroppers has come from the A.FL-CIO, the Na tional Sharecroppers Fund, and the NAACP as well as from CORE. a— Economists estimate that in the next 5 years the number of farm workers will decline between 750,- 000 and 1,000,000 Member of Morgan Faculty To Write Book For Series I BALIIMORE, Md.-r^A book on Qeorge Washingtoj^ AjOj^ri- can author, will be written by Dr. J, Philip Butehef, J^ofessor of English at Morgan li^te College, and published by Twa^e Publilh- flrs. Inc., of New Yo^k. The book by Dr. ^uteher will ^ one of a series (k more than iifty to be known m the l^^ted States Author Series. The first of the series, whi:h is planned for the general head er as well as for the college and high school student and teacher, will appear in the Spring of 1961 The Intent of the series Is to present in clear, eoticiae litcjfar^y publications and to present analy- tical-critical Interpretations of their work. LOANS $25 to $500 Cash You Recaiva ManHily Paymtnt $ie3.oi liioo I28C.10 121.00 I32S.48 $421.80 ISILSO Slt.12 HS.25 MODERN PInanca Na. 1 Payments Inelwie All Chargas IDS W. ^hapel Hill St. PHONE 6l14f5f through the agency’ji insured loan program. Among the colored farmers who received such a loan was Silas Dolphin who lives near Helena, Ark. He purchased 48 acres ,,last year to bring his farm up to acres. He and Mrs. Dolphrn have been moving up step by-step through the years. After nearly 16 years of tenant farming, they bougth a 62-acre farm in 1940 through farmers Home. “It was big enough at first,” says Mr. Dolphin, “when we could plant more cotton.’ But with the bolphins trying to develop pastures and odd live stock in recent years to make up for their lower cqtton acreage al lotment, the farm was just too small, explains Farmers Home’s Arkansas county supervisor at- large Jesse Mason. The Dolphins now have 15 head of beef cattle and raise 30 acres of soybeans in addition to 16 acres of cotton. And they further sup- Dr. Player Heads Association of Church Schools DENVER, Colorado—Dr. Willa B. Player, president of ’Bennett College, Greensboro. N. C, was elected vlce-presi-lent of the Na tional Association of Colleges and Schools of the Yethodist Church at the annual cunvrntion of the organization here, lecently. In addition to membership in Kappa Delfa Pi OfT PI T.afflt>(ta Theta, national honor s'.icipties, adoptf''! as pat»-jn of and the American Association of intcr-nci.il 1> stice am', hat^.ony. University Women, Dr. Player is medit-1 commission of the a vice president of the North Ca- ggpred Conprepation of Rites met rolina Council of Cburchc li, a ^ examine date concern- mcmber of the Women’s Planning ^iie^efl miracles attribut- Committee, Japan International; jessed Mart!-’’s interces- Chrlstlan University Foundation, Inc., and a member of the General Board of Education of the Meth odist Church. , She is also listed in Who’s Who ^0 in America. be^^WteWiLk SINGl^r^S ON ED SULLIVA>5,^]|(g Negro Priest in Peru May Be , Elevated to Sainthood by Catholics VATICAN CITY, — Events of the past few days here indicate that canonigatlon may not be far off for Blessed Martin de Potres, the Negro lay brother who rose from illegitimate birth tn. become the most influential man in ijis :OiiuU’y. The Sacred Congregat:6n of Rites held thrre meetings to ad- v!',"''e the cause of the Peruvian i'’FT •who ~hs*r been^ widely k for Sion. Immediately following the meet- Ile became surgeon and infir- marian of his priory, and extend- ed. his care of the $lck to tbe^., people of Lima. Among his works^ was the founding of an orphanage . j and founding-hospital. , ' Blessed Martin was given the ! office of distributing the convent’s daily alms of food to the poor, apd|.j, took upon himself to"care for the slaves who were brought to Peru from Africa. Before his death atj^the Rosary Priory on November 3, 1639, he had become the most influential h*' figure in the religious and politi- n' cail life of the capital city of Peru. •, t his death, he was carried to '' } grave by prelates and noble- I'' * men. ; In 1837 he was beatified, an acknowledgement that he had thing i^e' ?{>HjyTy B^lafpnt^apftpar da\^-*^S^i^ry ,22n(, (CBS-TtST. 9:00“ p.m.),'after copioletin:; & Sljc- ty-^^. city \t^)ur ot...^fe .natfon. ■/, Tyiey' will render ‘ a HiedVey of drainage folk songs from thcjlr concert program, under the direc- Itlon of Robert D^pCor'mier. Their last' television appearance was In plement their income by working jjay of last year, when they starr- in their community’s cooperatlce jn their own special, “An cyen- store. Mr. Dolphin is manager of| jpg with The Belefonte Folk sing- tbe store, in addition to being | y^jth The Belafonte Folk Sing- treasurer and board member of ers,” on ABC-TV. ing of the medical comrrission, practiced Christian virtue in an the preparatory and general as- heroic degree, and an important semblies of the Con^renatinn of step on the road to proclamation Ritrs were held. The meeting gave as n saint, rise to speculation that a canoni- iation date will be decided on shortly. - Bldssed Martin was .bora In lima, Peru In 1579, th^ cbfld: 9* JPor»S, a S^panisl».«il^; ' Negio free^oniirtt from •Th6 ,bo« ^jSttraeoh. ’ i4'"' '‘•it' iS jia /eitei/cd 'tlie, brdVr of St tni.'^ed 1b the' Rowl>^'CoWtiir tn Limu. eventually becom'iig fessed'^ ■lay-brother. Siich a proclamation would not make him the' first Negro sa||it. j St. B-'ne'^lict the Monir, a Negro who died in Sicily in 1589, * was C fn 1807. , ... I Wiirld tobaceo Jfrpducliot| in .^^t .j^tljer record — £1823 the co-op which also owns a cot ton gin. Altogether, Farmers Home loan ed $342 million to farm families last year. This included funds for farm aperating expenses which are rising, for housing soli and water conservation, watershed pro tection, and emergency assistance. During the year farmers repaid $305 million on total Indebtedness estimated at $1,125 million. About 173,0(XI farmers made use of Farmers Home credit in 1960. Some of these received their loans in previous years. Credit counseling by the agency’s field personnel helped many applicants prepare farm and money manage ment plans that qualified for pri vate financing. Needed farm management assistance is furnish ed borrower families by the agency. Following the Sullivan show the Singers will give a number of concert programs in Puerto Rico. NORTH CAROLINA DURHAM COUNTY IN THE SUPERIOR COURT NOTICE The undersigned, haveing qua lified as administrator of the Estate of Janie McClain, deceased, late of Durham County, this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to pre sent them to the undersigned on or before the 12th day of January, 1962, or this notice will be plead ed in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned. This the 12th day of January, IML C. J. GATES Administrator 428 1/2 Pettigrew St., Dur ham, N. C. Jan. 21 28, Feb. 4, 11. A.k druiiBitt for 11. H IP YOU! Union Insuranb And Realty Ca 814 Fayetteville St^' / Tel. 682-1133

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