f ' vL _ ' rft
, ...
•;; ODDLY Enough^
-t ' — m 1 ,
pS* |jf| often depends 0n... steel
M » f L—s~l pip*l In many cities, pedes-
UfaH I !pI-» jp f Sj|S : 8* 1 jfi 1 trians caught in the middle
I —' A jfs; I »B * «| | of'busy intersections are
IW?, ffi fltji protected by safety islands
WTnlbw (flflj IHII I ij\ lur rounded by sturdy butt
l( |l~Ej - ' I welded steel pipe.
What's a traffic light mounted ''W'f n[ii
remain
Outdoor semaphore stands and communication jystems, used to
£ , keep-U.S.A. railroads safe, almost always rely on butt-welded
Steel pipe. Cwmlttw •« steal Pip. Prttfuttrt. a.i. s.t. K
i ==—
. tT
Shepard Sponsors Workshop
•tHt 1
Jghe Student Council of James
Stffpafd Jr. High School sponsor
el-'an Officers Workshop. The
wttckshop was to interest those
wjj§ are'candidates for offices. It
ws", held Saturday, Jan. 23, at
9:80 a. m. The officers of Hillside
High School, Whitted Jr. High
School, and the President of the
|pajt| of North
lioa College attended as con
nts. The 1 adtyfilrs "for the
Flips
Were M. Smith,
t-J. Mrs. .L.
>n of gh'.-pai'd, junior High!
" X. ' feci Mrs. A.
: of The -Vorkshop
"iftHhis ofrdfer: Registrar
[ Purpos* !ol \.tyve. Occasion,
presi-
Ren>aj"k.vMr. J.-9A. Schooler
piHpcipal jof,..Shepard Jr. High.
The group discussions followed:
—""Group I Jennifer Durham,
President of Whitted Jr. High
School, Purpose of the Student
Council. Group H Joyce Grant,
President of Hilbftje High School
selection "pf; jM£ Officers. Group II
leanette""* Bunie%tV .Secretary of
Hillside High School; Duties of
officers. Group IV Hilton Cobb,
President of the North Carolina
College Student Government; Par
iimentary Procedure*. There was a
juestion and answer period, and
i social hour.
attending the workshop
wemnrom various schools coh- ,
sisting of Shepard, Whitted and
Hillside Schqol. Jennifer Dur
ham, Dearia Ratliff,. Pa'repa Mc-
Crae, Stephanie Wilson, Joyce
Grant, John Dixon, Patricia Med
dling, Jeanette Burnett, Hilton
Cobb, Charlotte Brpwn, VancU
Davis, Tyrias Graves, Milton Pat
terson, Mary Crawford, Cynthis
Joy, Micheal Jenkins, Mary Wil
liams, Earleane Peace, Loifaie
Trollinger, William Turner, Leon
Swinton, Dianne Walker, Carolyn
Grant, Reging Robinson, Cynthia
Manuel, Cynthia Crawford, Wan
dra Hill, Joyce Keith, Linda Crews
Shebbia Smith, Juanella Thaxton,
Harriet Brooks, Ada Shaw, Joyce
ICATgyCHAT
/ - By Ori Phillip M. Hlnu, Director, Friikiet P«t Food RoMorch Cantor
KNOW WHY
, SIAMESE CATS HAVE BtiHftVfeJ?!' /V^
'' fKc6dDttKi Tt> LEG£HO, , , '
WHBN meCATt PEFEHOEO J / \
R TEMPOI ALTAR AfiAlftST
The barbarian fr^HllwlH
SACRILEGS.THe PRIESTS i i 1
SWOOLC v.
8E VISietiZIHTHG CAIS'J&GS.' \
FEEDING TIP
' tv IDEAL FARC FOR THE CAT THAT
PREFERS TO CAT A UTTLE OF (T£
tJJA e/T\\ MEAL AT A TMC IS A DRY CAT
ti. q>\ _ food such fakkics
/" •' |TAV poßirooewTSFoi-ORocVEtop
WH LEFOPT".
&2 f '■ ■ .
Whitherspoon, Yvonne Watkins,
Joanne Roberts, Betty Giles, San
dra Pointer, Albert Hayes, John
etta Roberts, Linda Trollinger,
LaVern Beamon, Bernetha Belton,
Charles Henderson, Dalphine Rob
erts, Florence Walker, Theresa
Hill, James McGhee, Foster
Brenda Hopkins and Carmen
Ellison.
STEWARDESSES
OF ST. MARK IN
SUNDAY MEET L
Stewardess Board No. 3 of St.
Mark AMEZ Church met Sunday, J
January 24, in the Usher Room
of the church. Devotion was led
by the chaplain. The business
session was presided over by the
president, Mrs. Minnie Alston, the
highlight of which was the elec
tion of officers.
Members present were Mes
dames Minnie Alston, Ella Hayes,
Ann Mitchell, Doeia Skinner, Ann
Hawley, Laura Burgess, Marie
Penny, Katie Adams, Mary Greg
ory, Mattie Fulton, Cornelia Hern
don, Ann Young, Ophelia Chan
wick, Lillie B. Thompson, Louise
Leach, Lenelle Bracy and Willie
Gerald.
63' NCC GRADS
PLAN TO WED .
RALEIGH Mrs. Alberta Sim
mons announces the engagement
of her daughter, Yvonne Simmons,
to Pfc. Eugene Pettis. Both Pri
vate Pettis and Miss Simmons are
1963 graduates of North Carolina
College at Durham.
The prospective bridegroom is
serving in the U. S. Army.
Miss Simmons, a member of
Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, is
secretary to the Dean of Women
at North Carolina College and a
night instructor at Durham Busi
ness College.
A spring wedding is planned.
'l
STUDY GROUP—A. T. Spauldlng,
president of Norfh Carolina Mu
iual Life Insurance Company, was
principal speaker at a meeting
->f liite Tuesday Morning Study
Croup which met at his home on
Lincoln Street, with Mrs. Spauld
hir, serving is hostess. He spoke
to the group on highlights of his
~Gar%i Time
Contiftuqd from page 3A
good judgJm&HtT'TMants need more
water on J a f>fi!?Kt day than on a
cloudy of the
night temperature is important
during cold nights. This is espec
ially true if you have tomato
plants.
flow is a good time to plant
apples, peaches, plums, cherries,
pears and grapes. When planting,
dig a hole large enough to accom
modate root systems 'without
crowding. Separate top and sub
soil and place the top soil around
the roots. After the roots are
well covered* pack with your
feet to within about four inches
of the top of the hole. Finish
filling with loose soil. 1 Set the
plants as deep as they stood in
the nursery row. You can easily
identify this soil line at the base
of the plant.
Don't overlook the dwarf type
fruit plants. They are well suited
for areas where space is a
problem.
If you have, apple and peach
~\ ~
PAINFUL CORNSVTir
AMAZING LIQUID
RELIEVES PAIN AS 4j(iX
IT DISSOLVES CORNS AWAY
Now remove corns the fast, easy way
wich Freezone.®. Liquid Freezone re
lieves pain insrantly, works below the
skin line to dissolve corns away in just
| days. Get Free/one .ft all drug counter*.
CHANGE-OF-LIFE...
does it fill you with terror
...frighten you?
READ HOW COUNTLESS WOMEN HAVE FOUND \ -jkW
THE WAY TO OVERCOME CHANBE-OF-UFE FEARS
Have you reached that time of
life when your body experiences
strange new sensations—when
one minute you feel enveloped
in hot flushes and the next are
clammy,cold,drained of energy,
nervous, irritable? Are you in
an agony of fear? Too troubled
to be a good wife and mother?
Don't just suffer from the
suffocating hot flashes, the sud
den-waves of weakness, the
nervous tension that all too fre
quently come with th» change
when relief can be had.
The gentle medicine with the gentle name L.YDIA E. PINKHAM
Imported
MACNAUGHTON
CANADIAN WHISKY
$ 9iS H MBS
PINT "T 4/5 (IT.
..!?
' IMPORTED 1
cmadiaril
I MACNAUGHTON I '
I CMIDIM WHISK* I
A S
9 StiOU ■
■ • AGED SIX FULL YEARS
5.8 v * __ ■"• ■♦««>ucrotfa*** ■ *j
I cmjicttoimu "jfly'TMlsiiifr «&hme • osqHtmir raws so-. H-V-iv.
visit to Panama and Central j-
America as a mumber of the U- ,
S. Department of Commerce's
sight-man Trade and Development
Mission. Members of the club
and guests shown above are,
standing from left: Mmes. Julia
Dawson, Alma Wade, Charlotte
Sloan, Josephine - Clement, Alice
trees, prune them and spray with
winter (dormant) strength lime
sulphur. The same treatment 'A>ill
Holds Record for Use
■ of 'Pacemidcer'
t : "
t
y
e
d I
I
h FOR FOUR YEARS his heart
has been triggered by an elec
tronic device (held in left hand)
which your Heart Fund dollars
helped to create. He's Carl Bar
ker, 42, a project engineer, re
siding at Milwaukee, Wis. Since
January 7, 1960, his heart has
been kept beating by electrical
impulses delivered by a "pace- i
maker" at the rate or 66 a nil- J
ate more than 138 million. t
Find comforting relief the
way countless women have,
with gentle Lydia E. Pinkham
Tablets. Especially developed to
help women through this most
trying period. In doctor's tests
3 out of 4 women who took
them reported welcome effec
tive relief. And all without ex
pensive "shots."
Dont brood. Don't worry
yourself sick. Get Lydia E.
Pinkham Tablets at your drug
gists. Take them daily just like
vitamins.
| Kennedy, Constance Watts, Mr.
| and Mrs. Spaeldinr, Mmes. Elinor
Sus'e Bollock, SteHe
Clntend, and Ethel Hill. Seated,
Mm«. Louise Elder, Dolores Mar-
Barbara Ccoke, president of
the fctudy Group, and Alma Ben
nett. Mmes. Wade, Bullock, Cle
land, and Hill were guests.
also be fine for your bunch grape
vines.
Have your soil tested. If a
need for phosphorous, potash j
and lime is indicated, it is the j
better plan to work these mat
erials into the first si* or eight j
inches of soil before planting.
If applied to the soil surface,
these materials do not rrysve to i
the root area as does nitrogen, i
Band placement, to the side and j
below the seed, is all right for |
shallow rooted crops but will not'
provide the nutrient balance for
tttbre plants which have deeper
root systems.
NOW AT JttexlamderFOßD ■
IT'S MID-WINTER 1
FAST BACK
|fr I SUILE I
l. ' '
(This is the model that Placed 1-2-3 at Riverside)
Not A Stripped Model _, .
r Jl mi 1\&&& EQUIPMENT INCLUDES: 1
v FALCON JTUTURA CONVERTIBLE
f" 0 " 0 """""™' ★ 250 H.P. V-8 Engine
★ Cruiseomatic Drive s4r == ¥?m I
* 8.15 x 15 Whitewall Tire®
jrolß 500 CONVERT IBUt ★ Wheelcovers MUSTANG FASTBACK 2+i
★ Powep* Spring ?' r *■• *" •* 1 •
_ _ * Radio ★ Fresh Air Heater
* Outside Mirror . . I
FAnuuua: 500 4-DR SEDAN / ' ' ' , X TAIRUM* 500 2-DR HARDTOT
' !'l ■ :
B EVERY FORD MODEL—ON SALE TOO! ~. . A„ 4
u
No ft* ' 196y!sS:|e« Xet To 6o Save!
i ! sP*:Jl/exdnderFOßD
™.DE£ER G SEE OUR "A-l* USED CARS ON SALE
> NO. 1659 /If 1 'V
n fJOßnm™
i (/ nmf Durhamn ° |
' "if
'\ ' '''' '• ' -*r
1 r~ — DAY
Durham Dairy
Names Manager
L. M. Day has been named
manager of Durham Dairy Prod
ucts, Inc., a division of Beatrice
| Foods Co.
A native of Roxboro, Day has
been sales manager of the local
plant since 1956.
!' His career with the company
began in 1948 when he merged
his jobber ice cream business
in Roxboro with Durham Dairy.
He served as manager of the
Roxboro sales branch until he
was transferred to Durham to
fill the position ef sales man
ager. . '
lit ,? r '' j
"*,_> fe I '
'* -f R O LH-N Ar-T I M t S
i SATURDAY. FEBRUARY 6; 1*63 DURHAM, N. C.—
I :HiWAwni, rcßivuMM o, i -ca „ - - Ti -
t.-l«':*lnion •in be iyi■ > m.ii :•• •'* '• 1 'i»
Current proof of this Is "The Funny-.Company," a new show ntnr ,
being seen on local television throughout tho country. Each ftva
minute segment includes at least a minute-and-a-half sequence pro* t
Tiding background information about an interesting subject that -j
has been logically developed during the. animated comedy portion
ot the show. Shown- viewing the Wisenheimer, un imaginative
"super computer" which is one of the. many ways of introducing -
educational sequences, are (from left) Super Chief, Buzzer BelL {>
Bhrinkin' Vlolette, Jasper N. (for National) Park, Terry Dactyl, anJ
Belli Laguaa, cue of the Company's resident villains.
iThe most exciting story of our century! |
COLUMBIA PICTURES proudly presents JACK LE VIEN S production of ,
THE FINEST HOURS
COLOR I
.j k'■
Short, "UNITED NATIONS OVERTURE" Academy lj(
Winner. Daily at 12:45, 2:50, 4:55, 7 and 9:06 P. M. . ... ,
RIALTO THEATRE H , n .>m
• I
5-A