t® $ 1 11 1 f 1 I IBj ■Ry* "' y /. SORORITY EXECUTIVE—Mn. Mobert Taylor. Jr., (left), has been named Executive Director of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority. Announcement was made by BIRTHS |l The following births were re ported to the Durham County Health Department during the week of May 2 through 7: Thomas and Joyce Patterson, boy; Henry and Gladys Wilker son, girl; Rufus and Naomi Ev ans, boy; Guy and Bertha El lison, boy; Arlandia and Gertha Hillside School Honor Roll Tlie following Hillside High School students are listed on the 1 A" and "B" Honor Rolls for the fifth reporting period,' according to J. H. Lucas, prin cipal: "A" Honor Roll Michael Reynaud Geer—l2th Grade. "B" Honor Roll Seniors: Barbara Jean Alston, Esther Elizabeth Barbee, Noma Alycc Bennett, Hollio Neal Belk, De nise Maude Best, Dianne Pa tricia Best, Henry Curtis Blake, Linda Joyce Boone, Ronnie Lee Brandon, George Wayne Brown, Johnnie Mac Brown, Jeanette Elizabeth Burnett, Lillian Chad- Wick, Robie James Coffin, Brenda Gayle Cooper, Hettye La Verne Cozart, Marilyn Ja netta Davis, Richard Alexander Davis, Yvonne Delaine Davis, Diane Alvere Durham, Ada Markita Fisher, Melva Lynette George, Joyce Elaine Gilchrist, Gilda Ruth Hedgepeth, Saun dra Elizabeth Herndon, Carriel -16 Elise Herndon, Jesse Hill, Johnny Odell Hunter, Reginald Jenkins, Beverly Johnson, Char lotte Johnson, Claudette Yvonne Jones, Kathryn Chris tine Jordan, Wilma Elaine Liv erpool, Linda Carol McAuley, Lana Letitia McClary, Linda Janet McClinton, Effie Jane McDonald, Willie Catherine McDonald, Eltonza Rhea Mc- Nair, William Henry McLaugh lin, Helen Jean McQueen, Rhonda Kathryn Mangum, Eric Nichols Moore, Gloria Newkirk, Gail Elizabeth Gwens, Margaret Anita Page, Brendalyn Patterson, Sharron Susan Pippin, Thomasine Rob- i '4.00 B ■ VCjSr tomio B Bwrfea t* l«w B,"**""'. KENTUCKY • CIMCIKW** A ■■ TH£ BOURBON 0£ LUX£ DISTILLERY COMPANY, LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY, 86 PROOF. CONTAINS 49% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRIT | Dr. Geraldine P. Woods (right) J of Los Angeles, National Presi dent of the 35,000 member public service organization. j Clark, hoy; George and Audrey Judd, (girl; John and Clara I Williams, girl; Dorsey and | Mary Burton, boy; Harold and | Nonnie Hamilton, girl; Cleve | land and LaVonda Green, boy; J William and Ruby Borden, boy. Chicory helps to bring out good flavor, aroma, strength and clarity, in coffee. The Yale University book store —loses $90,000.00 a year to student thieves. inson, Michael Malone Sanders, Alonzo Ricco Speight, Dollie Faye Smith, Rosetta Scott, James Alonzo Stewart, Creasie Asenath Thaxton, Gloria Jean Toomcr, Beverly Faye Wash- ington, Deborah Chase Watts, Kennth Jay Whisenton, George Daniel White. Juniors Christine Delores Barbee, Veronica Blake. Edith Belinda Clay, Deborah Griffin, Brenda Gwenetta Jenkins, Floyd Herman Linder, Gurnia Michaux, Elaine Morgan, x lda Page, George Oliver Phillips, Cynthia LaVerne Ricks, Patri cia Elizabeth Ricks, Belinda Faye Ross, Alice LaVerne Sharpy Maceo, Kennedy Sloan, Smith, Bernadette StrudwiclO Thomas 5 ? Wayne Su i 11. Augustus Thompson, Shirley Mae Ward. Sophomores Gloria Alston, Wanda Yvonne Bullock. Greg ory Kortchez Brewer, Carolyn Yvonne Coffin, Dwyian Napo leon Davis, Allyson Kay Dun can, Ronald Hatcher, Kenneth Edward Jeffries, Addie Jane Johnson, Carlton Dwight Mc- Nair, Jacqueline Mangum, De borah Woods OLDEST MONASTERY The oldest monastery in the Christian world is St. T.iql.i in M.lloul.i. S\ria. the Catholic Di ces! tinds. U. S. ATOMIC PLANTS Sixteen nuclear-power plants are operating in the U. S., ac cordins to the Catholic Dicest. New Book on C-R Killings Now Available NEW YORK—It was not un til the killing of James Reeb, the minister from Boston, that the 'Ahite public began to be coneerened about civil rights murders. For example, the death of Jimmy Lee Jackson. Alabama logger shot bv a state trooper, created no more than a ripple in the national consciousness— there was not wave of protest when the Rev. George \V. Lee was killed in Belzoni, Missis sippi—the slaying of Medgar Evers and the Birmingham chil dren reached and touched the country's conscience only mo mentarilv. So says Reverend Jack Men delsohn. pastor of the Arling ton Street Unitarian Church in Boston, in a book titled "The Martyrs—l 6 Who Gave Their Lives for Racial Justice." The sixteen "martyrs" view ed here include George W Negro Baptist minister; Wil liam Moore, white postman killed while delivering a letter of protest to Governor Wallace: Viola Liuzzo, Detroit house wife mother killed in Selma, Ala ; Andrew Goodman, Mi chael Sch'vverner, James Charl ey, three CORE members kid napped and murdered in Mis sissippi; James Reeb, white "family man," whose death was the first to cause a major im pact. •' The author visited the fam ilies of these sixteen, obtain ing access to correspondence, private and unpublished interviews. In some cases, he recorded eye-witness accounts of the actual circumstances of the murders. "Until now, some of the ra cial killings described here have gone virtually unreport ed," he states. "As the saying goes, 'everybody knows' who killed many of these about whom I write. The townspeople and local police know. The FBI knows. Yet, in some instances, there have been no indict ments, nor even hearings for that matter. I n others, there have been court trials of vary ing degrees of seriousness, end ing either in outright acquit tals or hung juries." "Unspeakable crimes, when they reach us through the Legal Notices NORTH CAROLINA DURHAM COUNTY ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE HAVING QUALIFIED as ad ministrator of the estate of William McKinley Husband, de ceased late of Durham County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to exhibit them to the undersigned at 620 Dunbar Street, Durham, N. C., on or before the 30th day of October, 1966, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make imme diate payment to the under signed This 26th day of April. 1966. James M. Husband Administrator, of the Estate of William McKinley Husband, Deceased April 30. May 7, 14, 21 E— v . %& iH SECRETARY OF THE YEAR— President James A. Boyer pre sents a v gift fo Mrs. Millie D Veasey who was named "Out Durham Boy Attends NYC Convention In St. Louis, Mo. uavia best, son of Mr and Mrs. Lonnie Best, i4OB South St., was one of three outstand ing enrojjees in the Neighbor hood Youth Corps sent from North Carolina to a national NYC convention in St. I.ouis, | Missouri, May 2 4. Young Best was accompanied to the convention by W R Pursell and James Wiggins, i director and associate director respectively of Durham's Neigh borhood Youth Corps. The convention theme, "Neighborhood Youth Corps— Prescription for Change," was carried out through meetings and discussions. Leisure activi ties for the participants includ ed attendance at a major league baseball game. prisms of mass communication, | can still remain impersonal," j the author says. "This book is ! written as an act of remem brance, an attempt to make as personal as possible the kinds of lives that have been sacri ficed."' NORTH CAROLINA DURHAM COUNTY NOTICE OF EXECUTRIX HAVING QUALIFIED as ex-! ecutrix of the estate of Mary I E. Gregory, deceased, late of nurham County, North Caro-' lina, this is to notify all per-1 sons having claims against said | estate to exhibit them to the undersigned at 120 West Hill- 1 side Avenue, Durham North I Carolina, on or before the 3rd I dav of November. 1966, or this ! notice will be pleaded in bar of their recoveix All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate pay ment. Dated this 20th day of April, 1966. (Mrs.) Lucille Home, Executrix of the estate of (Mrs.) Mary E. Gregory, deceased M. Hugh Thompson, Attorney P. 0. Box 1422 Durham, North Carolina April 30: May 7, 14. 21 NORTH CAROLINA DURHAM COUNTY NOTICE UNDER AND BY VIRTUE of the power of sale contained in a certain deed of trust execut ed by Walter Scott Persons, Jr., Trustee for Beatrice N. Thompson and Beatrice N. Thompson (Widow), dated Jan uary 8, 1963, and recorded in Book 707. at page 340, in the office of the Register of Deeds of Durham County, North Car olina, a default having been made in the payment of the indebtedness thereby secured and said deed of trust being by the terms thereof subject to foreclosure, the undersigned trustee will offer for sale at public auction to the highest [ bidder for cash at the Court House door in Durham North Carolina, at noon on the 31st day of May, 1966, the property conveyed in said deed of trust, the same lying and being the County of Durham and State of North Carolina, in Triangle Township, and more particular ly described as follows: DESCRIPTION BEGINNING at a stake on the East side of a 15-foot alley North 32 degrees 30' East 350 feet from the North line of Lot No. 25 at the Northwest corner of Lot No. 8 as shown on the plat hereinatfer re ferred to. and running thence South 57 degrees 30' East 198 feet to a stake; thence North 22 degrees East 75 feet to a stake: thence North 57 degrees 30' West 186 feet to a stake on the East side of said 15-foot alley: thence along and with the East side of said alley South 32 degrees 30' West 75 feet to a stake, the point of beginning and being all of Lot No. 7 and the Southern one half of Lot No. 6 of LINCOLN HEIGHTS EXTENSION as per plat arid survey thereof now on file in the office of the Regis ter of Deeds of Durham Coun ty in Plat Book 24 at page 6 to which reference is hereby made for a more particular descrip tion of same. This sale will be made sub ject to 1965 Durham County Taxes. This 22nd day of April, 1966. J. J. Henderson, Trustee McKissick and Burt Attorneys at Law 213 1/2 West Main Street Durham, N. C. 2770 1 . May 7 14. 21, 28. 1966 standing Secretary of the Cam pus for 1965-66" during the , J observance of National Secre • 1 taries Week. Mrs. Mable B. Best's local NYC assignment is serving as janitorial assistant at Russell Memorial Day Care tenter Me also attends reme dial education sessions at Union Baptist Church as a require ment of his NYC enrollment According to Mrs Constance Scott. Best's counselor in the Neighborhood Youth Corps, "David is quite interested in improving himself He realizes 'hat he must get some educa tion. and he puts a great em phasis on the educational side of the program. For these rea sons we were proud that he could represent Durham and North Carolina." Egyptians of 1552 B.C. used such substances as beer, wine, yeast, turpentine, peppermint, caraway, wormwood, aloes, opium, colchium and hebane to treat diseases. Re-apportionment should boost the fortunes of the Re publicans in the South, South west. and West; Democrats in New England and the Middle West; and give minority groups a new voice. > at Central Carolina Farmers Service Stores ;! GARDEN SEED £ajT\^UWSfc : Ml, SWEET CORN Starts at 20c lb. * tfjl! i 10c P L Kentucky 31-Select lb. 19c ' 1 Ken,Ucky ®' ue rass lb. 55c > ? 35c lb. Creeping Red Fescue-Shade . lb. 65c ► ' J C™*^ 1 % yv\ riytfr"' Marglobe Lawn Mixture lb. 55c 3 ► TO mJ ™ K Whi,e Du,ch Cl#¥,r • • 1b ' 664 4 Price* subject to change without notice . ► Contendor S Eorly ; Green Beans | Thorogreen Seed & Fertilizer Spreaders j| Bu.h 40c lb. I Llm . B dflc lh Oycl«ne-Hea*j Dalj $5.26 ; 16-ln. Lawn Beauty $10.96 i ; Wander"Beans j !.'Ill".' 24 " ,n ' LaWn Bm «" " J,9 ' 98 | ► Pole 40c lb. Cantaloupes .15c ox. Don't waste your seed & fertilizer! These spreaders give easy-even distribution. . ► We have a complete line of locally adapted Price* *ubject to change without notice started plants. i| TOOLS I FERTILIZERS j I V W k U V POR LAWN St OAR DKN ■ I* Yard Rake sl.lO Garden Mattock*— I 8-8-8 Pebbles . . 100 lbs. $2.70 I % R.ke— with Handle $3.25 I 10-10-10 Pebbles 100 lbs. $3.10 ■ I'-'V"'' "1° W P ;S/H«_ '"° I VERTAGREEN 1 Po«t Hole Digger $4.85 _ 7m SL7O I ,25 lbs. -sJbl. . ► Heavy Duty All Steel Shovel — I $1.35 .50 I Wheelbarrow $7.15 long handle $1.95 ■ ™ ► Central Carolina Farmers, Inc. [ SERVICE STORES . ► Durham Creedmoor Siler City Hillsborough I Roxboro Carrboro Oxford Pittaboro • | Wright (left) Secretarial Prac > tice instructor at Saint Augus tine's looks on. ATTY. HARWARD TO HEAD LOCAL ARTHRITIS FUND Attorney Harvey Harward has born named president of the Durham County Branch of ! The Arthritis Foundaion Mr | Harward's selection is an nounced by Dr. Donald D Weir i of Chapel Hill, chairman of the | Board of Directors of the Ar thritis Foundation in North i Carolina Harward, who has lived in | Durham most of his life, is I active in various civic and poli tical activities of Durham He is an active member of Imma culate Conception Catholic : Church. Other officers of the local group are first vice president. Mrs. Thomas C. Key; second , vice president. Father David ' B. Nickerson; and treasurer, I Wayne M Hemphill Mrs. Key I is associated with Liggett and I. Myers Tobacco Company. Fath er Nickerson is priest-in-charge of St. Titus Episcopal Church. ! Hemphill is a lieutenant in The I National Guard and owner of ' Westside Gulf Station May is national Victory Over | Arthritis Month and a fund raising campaign will becon- | ducted in Durham County from May 15 to June 1. SATURDAY, MAY 14, 1966 THE CAROLINA TIMES- Asbury Temple Meth. Church To Observe Woman's Day Women's Day will be ob served at Asbury Temple Meth odist Church on Lawson Street, Sunday. May 15. at the 11 a m. service, with Mrs. Le Marquis Do Jarmon, presiding., Theme | for the observance will be The ! Woman's Role in a Changing ! Society." Speaker for the occa ' sion will be Dr Marie V Wood. | administrative assistant to the \ president of Hampton Insti tute' D,r- Wood received the A B. | Decree from Shaw University; • M A Degree from Howard Uni- ' versity and the Pn D Degree | from the American University | She has pursued post doctoral ! studies in guidance and coun seling at Geore Washinton U Dr Wood holds membership in several professional associa- | Dial 596*8202 for Service J | LAUNDERERS-CLEANERS I • 2505 Anjier Ave. « Welloni Village • So. Roxboro St. at Lakewood Ave. 7 /"S (Unw) UMunJ VV UUMMJ CASH IN A WASH • rrpfwrrae * • Mustcw KsrmjMem • SHOT GUNS and MFUS • US® THIVSIONS PROVIDENCE LOAN OFFICE 1041 main DIAL 682-4431 /r, /INTEREST NOW CUT »/ 2 AT PROVIDENCE \\ 7 JL_ 5A tions. She has served many educational and civic oraniza tions as consultant and lectur er. At one time, she served as Congressman Adam Clatyon Powell's research associate and legislative aide. She has lived and worked in Haiti and the Virgin Islands; traveled all over the Carribean and Latin America, and also traveled in "Europe and Africa OTOMI RACE the Otomi Indians, who live in a valley 70 miles north of Mexico City; are the largest separate racial group in Mexico and perhaps in all of Latin America, the Catholic Digest re ports.

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