Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / Dec. 4, 1965, edition 1 / Page 7
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With Our Area Servicemen Army Pvt. James A. Caples, son of Mrs. Mary L. Caples, Lumberton, was assigned to the 82nd Airborne Division at • mi CAPLES :r ku l ANDERSON Nk WIGGINS rssrrai I # SIGNS IjMMfflM I that teu you QjffliHS ■ WHEN IT'S TIME FOR A I FREE jpjgS UilJlCiiiilxlLiil d • J d =■ I LOWEST COMPETITIVE ■MMNM prices! I and a Network of Stations.from WTTI.I,I JJI m I coast to coast backs your AAMCU MwUtUttUl I bargain IRONCLAD GUARANTEE J I [•TTI ■ ON ALL I LIFETIME GUARANTEE OrEN * A.M. * P.M. DAILY SATURDAY 8 A.M.-I P.M. Acrn»« the (racks from Mead TRANSMISSIONS Contain?™. At 2005 E. Peabody Street. Phone 596-81X3. the SHORTY - $35. MEDALO STYLE #665 r %Kw:« d .. c Hiu ,o c , .p°: address. It'« your» FREE upc* SBwsp*2s*S? haiTAoot 1 ; &. * - £' n&«. kr? k> YOUR SCALP. The condition of .. ||R your hilr oftfn dependa hMTtly COMB fff allthe natural h..lth Jl ««r BT /« Hib. Ytni l» DOCTOR CAJI- A WAY / JtX NOT Invented a medicate tar .formula called CARBONOKa GRAY ■ which la mixed with many prov- »"HI an beocficlal Ingredient*. CAR- WITH ' W BONOE& la auch a atronf, power- 1 " A ful antiaeptle and does such, flna THIS m S work In helping an ITCHY, aniAl- BUMPY DANDRUFF acalp that SOLOB gg * many DOCTORS regard It highly COMB T&r and PRESCRIBE it tor many ' (U JT scalp troubles. Many annoying ■nM»n externally caused scalp condi- tnWtff'lfVlili'ilCl tionj are frestljr relieved by the JWliiA/i WPJUv use of this Triple strengthtar - : ormuU. Write (or this DOCTOR'S f GENUINE SCALP FORMULA to nt u» Cm rr }"•' «» b *" d b,ukh 10 ■ dl "'r JSJi*! ?sayS voii mrm not * on# ' w "* h «* out * Wlll not rub otr • FOR 7 DAYS. «nd IT ym (JW »0« JfOTA DYE. E«»ie«t, quickest way satisfied. your 2"?P 'L » add color gradually AVOIDS only 91-SB on deUvery. This in- THAT SUDDEN DYED LOOK. eludes everything. Dont rtya Brush attach.d forremoving exc... penny more. You get i» with full co i or lng. Pr.v.ni. soiling, rubbing directions. Use the flnet* MEDI- o jr Comas In Plssiio Caae. Caa CATED SCALP FORMULA your carried in pocket or puraa. money can buy. Your hair and Come a in all ahadaai Black ta acalp deaerve fine care. Just send Platinum Blue. your name and addraaa to—COLD Juat writs, atata shads, par only MXDAL HAIR PRODUCTS INC. »1.9S on delivery plu. poatage. Dept. 4C 2 Sheepshead Bay. Money hack if not delighted. Brooklyn 33. N.Y. NOTE: THIS Cold M.dol Holr Products, Inc. FORMULA carries a 100% writ- Dept. *-I. BmoUya 35, Haw York *m mm* kaa guiulM Fort Bragg, Oct. 26. Elements of the division are currently in the Dominion Republic serv ing as part of the inter-Ameri can Peace Force. An integral part of the Strategic Army Command, the 82nd maintains an immediate force for airbone deployment throughout the world. The 22-year-old soldier entered the Army last May and completed basic training at Ft. Jackson, S. C. He attended J. H. Hayswood High School. * * « PARRIS ISLAND, S. C —Ma rine Private First Class David E. Anderson, son of Dr. and Mrs. Lewis E. Anderson of 2020 Sunset Ave., Durham was meritorriously promoted to his present rank upon graduation from recruit training at the Marine Corps Recruit Depot, Parris Island, S. C. His promotion recognized his outstanding performance of duties during recruit training. He will now report to Camp Le- Jeune, N. C., for four weeks of advanced infantry combat training, and four weeks of basic specialist training in his military occupational specialty. Army Pvt. Lee V. Wiggins, son of Mrs. Alma Wiggins, 506 1/2 East End Ave., Durham was assigned to the 82nd Air borne Division at Fort Bragg, Oct. 29. Wiggins entered the Army in May 1965 and received basic training at Fort Gordon, Ga. He was last stationed at Fort Benhing, Ga. The 20-year-old soldier was graduated from Merrick-Moore High School in 1964 and was employed by Duke Hospital before entering the Army. Army Pvt. Herman E. Thom as, 21, son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Thpmas, Route 1, Box 23-A, Pelham, was assigned to the 82nd Airborne Division at Fort Bragg, Oct. 29. Elements of the division are currently in the Dominican Republic serv ing as part of the Inter-Ameri can Peace Force. An integral part of the Strategic Army Command, the 82nd maintains an immediate force for air borne deployment throughout the world. Thomas last station ed at Fort Benning, Ga., enter- mmm IT^ Sv \ - JhiL «^! W : 1 Bt- : -- £dl jp9 ■ Ikll - ,jj| H^^ta______—>-«2 NEVER TO OLD TO LEARN— Mrs. Marie Vernon .adult ba sic education graduate, shows 95 Receive Cerfificates at Adult Education Graduation Program WINSTON-SALEM lt was graduation time last Wednes day in Fries Auditorium on the campus of Winston-Salem State College. No degrees were awarded but the graduates were as proud as if they were getting the highest degrees in the land. The occasion was the county's first adult basic education graduation. Ninety-five enrollees in the program received certificates for completing the equivalent of a fourth grade education and five others received certi ficates for completing the equi valent of an eighth-grade edu cation. Ed the Army in May of this year and completed basic train ing at Fort Jackson, S. C. He was graduated from Booker T. Washington High School in Reidsville in 1963 and attended Shaw University in Raleigh. I Mi ' THOMAS MUTUAL BENEFIT LIFE INS. CO. Jack Margolis HILL BLDG. 411-4975 Portable Percision Sewing Machine $29.95 Underwood Upright Typewriter $29.95 Poloroid Model 800 Camera With Wink Light $59.95 Sam's Pawn Shop 122 E. Main St. Ph. 682-2573 The Stallion CluV FOR RENT PARTIES-CABARETS PHONE 682-3120 or 5544-2103 . certificate to Dr. Kenneth R. Williams, President of Winston- Salem State Collegw. Many of the graduates were illiterate when the program was begun last June. Others could read and write a little but had dropped out of school before completing the eighth grade. There are about 400 adults enrolled in the basic education classes. Several are held on the campus of the college while qthers are held at Strategic places in the city. The classes are financed by federal anti poverty funds and are coordi nated through the Forsyth County Technical Institute. The average age of the gradu ites is 50, but their ages range from the late 20s to 88. All of the graduates give self-improvement as reasons for enrolling in the basic edu cation program. For the young er ones, improvement means better jobs and better living conditions. For the older ones, it means being able to read the Bible and to speak in church without embarrassment. PHONE 682-9295 j| A/%/% Laundry and J 1 fifew liliclhcJ Dr » c,emter * 1 CASH & CARRY OFFICES 1 f' t Corner Roxboro and Holloway Street Quick As A Wink—Roxboro Rd. at Avoadale Dr. || Drive-In, Cor. Broad and Englewood Ave. p* >MI : FIFTH *3.30 PINT *2.05 80 PROOF MSTIUfD FROM GRAIN BY L. RELSKV I CIE., HARTFORD, CONN. N. C. Veterans To Receive Higher Benefit WINSTON-SALEM More than 38,866 North Carolina veterans with service-connect ed disabilities will receive high er compensation payments be ginning in January 1966, Jud son D. Deßamus, Manager of Ihe Veterans Administration Regional Office at Winston- Salem, said. The bill increasing compen sation payments was signed it'to la v October 31 by Presi dent Johnson who said, "The Nation has no greater obliga tion than its debt to those nearly two million Americans who have been maimed in mind or body while in the service of the ; r country." The increase in payments will so into effect on Decem ber 1, 1965, and will appear firs.t in the compensation checks to be mailed at the close of that month. This is the second increase in compensation payments in three years. In 1962 the in crease totaled approximately Sl2O million. The present increase is ex pected total $176 million an nually and will go to almost two million veterans. Individual increases will range from $1 a month for 'hose who are classified 100 lercent disabled. Even more substantial in -reases are provided under the new law for more seriously dis abled veterans 1 " (for example, those suffering multiple ampu tations, etc.) whose monthlv compensation pavment may tot al more than SBOO. For veterans whose disabili ties are rated at 50 percent or more, the law also provides in creases of approximately ten percent in the additional al lowances provided because of dependents. Other changes affecting de pendents that are brought about by the bill increase from 21 to 23 years the age limit of a child attending school on whose behalf a dependency al lowance may be paid. The addi tional allowance payable to the veteran-parent for these school children has been increased to a monthly maximum of S4O. FAYETTEVILLE - Theodore Roosevelt Easom, 59. of Fay etteville died Sunday in Duke Hospital after an illness of three weeks. Funeral services will be con ducted Tuesday at 3 p.m. from Rogers and Breece Chapel by Rev. V. 1.. Melvin. assisted by Rev. Fred Kails. Burial will be M " J fl ■ _ JM MA |L -*•• ,JA ' 3i •* OFF TO WAR Capt. Charles R. Summers, Greensboro, a 1958 graduate of A. and T. Col lege. now a navigator-intelli f.»nce officer with the U.S. Air Force, last week left the coun try for combat duty with the Air Force Tactical Air Com mand in Southeast Asia. With him and his wife, the former Miss Loretta Richmond of nearby, Sedalia, are their two children, Laurence Scott, 1, born in France, and Carla Elisa, 5. Living previously at Wichita, Kans., where Capt. Summers was stationed at McConnell Air Force Base, the family wilt re main in Greensboro pending hi» return. DR. H. THURMAN TO SPEAK AT LIVINGSTONE SALISBURY Dr. Howard Thurman will visit the Living stone College campus next weekend December 5-7 as guest of the college and speak in the regular Vespers on Sunday, December 5, at 5 P.M. On Mon day at 10 A.M. he will address an All-College Assembly in the Varick Memorial Auditorium on the campus and in the eve ning at 6:30 he will be the guest of nearby Catawba Col lege. Tuesday he will visit in formally with the faculty and staff of the Hood Theological Seminary on the Livingstone campus. Continued on page 6B SAVE Where Your Money Earns 4i Where You Save Does Make A Difference Mutual Savings & Loan Ass'n 114 WEST PARRISH STREET DURHAM, N. C. SATURDAY, DEC. 4, 1665 THE CAROLINA TIMES \ Kirscli Drapery Rods y F urnisljrd &. Installed ; * ftr Yimr New or Present Home. PhonJ for Free Estimates Mfe\A j Young Sales £r Service ""J,"- FOR POWER WHEN POWER FAILS jmm Not all was darkness durum the recent power failure in the Northeast I'nited States, (irateful office workers in several New York City buildings had lights within seconds through emergency lighting units powered by rechargeable nickel-cadmium batteries. According to one producer of such units, the Maintenance Com pany of Long Island City. N.Y., the emergency system is designed to take oxer automatically as soon as regular power fails.
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 4, 1965, edition 1
7
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