6A -THE CAROLINA TIMES SATURDAY, MARCH », IM7 Durham Social Happenings White Rock Jr. Missionaries Meet With Mrs. Torrertce The White Rock Junior Mis sionaries held their meeting, Sunday, March 5 at Mrs. A. T. Torrence, 1217 Fayetteville St. at 5:00 p.m. The meeting was opened by the singing of "My Faith Looks Up to Thee," "At I the Cross" and "The Old Rug ged Cross." The Lord's Prayer was repeated and prayer was offered by Mrs. A T. Torrence. Following the prayer, scrip tures were read and explained by Denise Ratliff, Lamenta tions; Tetrina O'Neal, Luke 20: 21, Barbara Boykins; 2 Timothy 4:18 and Claudia McCrae, Isaiah 19:26. After the scriptures were read and discussed, the lesson from "The Missionary Helper" was discussed also. The lesson dealt with Lenten season and self-denial After the discussion of the lesson, a short business ses sion. which included the read ing of the minutes, explana tion of the union meeting, collection of dues and re ports of missionary work 'done since the last meeting was held. Following the repeating of the Mtzpah and the singing of a hymn, the group was served a delicious repast. Those pres ent were: Denise Ratliff. Clau dia McCrae, Cathryn Thomp son. Carmen Ellison. Annie Jo White. Sharon Williams. Bar bara Bovkins. Tetrina O'Neal. Margaret McAdams. Ida Page and Mrs. A. T. Torrence. The next meeting • will be held at the home of Miss Yvonne Thorpe. National Workers Of Church of God To Convene Here The National Workers Con vention of the Church of God in Christ Jesus will convene at 504 S. Queen Street, March 21-March 26. It will be prefaced with two days and nights of fasting and prayers beginning Tues., Mar. 23 at 6:00 p.m. During this time of fasting and praying, the program will be conducted miscellaneously. Officials at this program are: Bishop W. H. Amos, Bishop R. B. Mumford, Bishop W. E. Ed wards. Mother Lelia Singletary, MEBANELUMBER COMPANY ANNUAL (gtiM I APPLIANCE and PAINT - ' ".j'** *■ »• u Open All Day Easter ■ Monday ~ MEBANE LUMBER CO. The Company Thai tiifthst* on Quality JPHONE 688*7051 1 MILE «ST OF MEBANE, N. C. ON HWY. 7tA Mother C., P. Jeffreys and Moth er M. Black. • • * MISS/UNION MASS MEET fa GCTHSEMANE SUNDAY The Durham County Mission ary Union Mass Meeting will be held at Gethsemane Baptist Church, Sunday, March 26 at 3 pjn. Rev. A. D. Moseley will give a sermonette and Mrs. C. E.' McLester will be the guest speaker. \• O • Friendly Circle Club Meets Mrs. Parker on Sunday On Sunday March 19, the Friendly Circle Club of St. Mark AME Zion Church met at the home of Mrs. Omega Park- Devotions were led by the president, Mrs. Odessa Alex ander. Members present were. Mes dames Ada Bates, Elizabeth Brown, Margaret Bumpass, Sa rah Cameron, Carrie Grantt, Ida Roberson, Odessa Alexan der. Helen McNeil, Mr. and North Carolina College Has Two Woodrow Wilson Fellows A North Carolina College senior and a 1966 NCC gradu ate Wednesday were 'named winners of Woodrow Wilson Fellowships for 1967-68. Miss Edna Earle Clegg, a French major from Hampton, Va , and Richard Argrey Cagle. now studying English Litera ture at Haverford College un der a post-baccalaureate pro gram, will receive one year of graduate education with tuition and fees paid by the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation, in addition to a stipend of $2,000 for the year. The two were among 1,259 students named from 369 col- SERVE AND PRAY Tomorrow is not promised us, So let us take today And make the very most of it And serve as well as pray. Let's speak aloud the kindly thought, And do the kindly deed. And try to see and understand Th« 9th«r jxnpn'i n««4; fothort'ow is not promised us, Nor any other day So let us make the most of it And serve as well as pray. —Selected Mrs. W. L. Thompson and Le roy Roberson. Mrs. Elizabeth Wiggins was a visitor to the club. After the business ses sion, the hostess, Mrs. Alexan der assisted by Mrs. Bumpass served a delicious dinner. Mrs. Brown thanked the hos tess for an enjoyable evening. Next meeting date will be an nounced later. • * • Gleaner's Club Meets with Mr. and Mrs. J. Q. Parker The Gleaner's Club of St. Mark, met at the home of Mr. and Mrs. J Q. Parker of Oak mont Circle, with Mrs. Kittola Curtis as hostess. Mrs. Lula Royal, presided Plans for the anniversary to be held May 28 were discussed. A delicious dinner was served to the following members: Mesdames Lula Royal, L. Par rott, P. Lennon, G. Barnes, B. So well, J Wall. F. Cooper, D. Steele, F Bynum. H McClain, J Swann, Messrs Fred Cuttino, W Sherrill, William Stewart, Fred McNeil, J. Chancey, G. C. Burthey and Little Miss Fleur Heir Steele. leges and universities in the United States and Canada. Floyd W Hayes, 111, vice president of the NCC student body and a political science major, received honorable men tion in the program. Dr. Stewart B. Fulbright, dean of NCC's undergraduate school and campus representa tive for the Woodrow Wilson Foundation, pointed out that in North Carolina only the Uni versity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Duke University, and Wake Forest College had a larger number of recipients than NCC. "We are understandably very proud of our students' perfor mances," Dr. Fulbright said. Miss Clegg, whose home is at 106 Baldwin Terrace, Hampton, Va., is the daughter of Wood row Emerson Smith and the late Mrs. Edna Smith. A na tive of Durham, Miss Clegg was in the honors program, a member of the French Club, PI Delta Phi French National Honor Society, and Alpha' Kap pa Alpha Sorority. She has been an honor roll or Dean's List student each semester, and was named to "Who's Who in American Universities and Colleges." Cagle, who received an hon orable mention in the Wood row Wilson Fellowship pro gram last year, is a native of New York City and lives in Pinehurst. The son of Mrs. Pollie Cagle-* and the late Irv ing Cagle, be was valedictori an, student government and school newspaper editor at Academy Heights High School in Pinehurst. Cagle was an honor roll and Dean's List student at NCC. The easiest way to get to the top is to get to the bottom of things. The Youngstown Bulletin Call 682-2919 for Ad Man YOU CAN GET A n^fTEOE^ NOW AT ' J ' . ■' ' '■» ,•* .»• Our Volume Policy Means Saving% To You SHOP AT NIGHT - UNTIL • P.M. "• «• Ft* TOU* lAVma CONVENIENCE DURHAM'S ORIGINAL SEE THE A-l SIGN FORTHE BEST J VOLUME ,; USED CARS NOW ON SALE. > DEALER xr ' - tn - % , arrnrv # Spaulding Lauds Douglass At University of Rochester Meet ROCHESTER, N. Y.—"Fred erick Douglass was the man be was because of his drives, commitment, integrity, courage, wisdom, interest in his fellow man, and the responses he made to the challenges he met," Asa T. Spaulding, presi dent of the North Carolina Mu tual Life Insurance Co., told a University of Rochester audi ence last night (Mar. 16). i Spaulding, who rose from office boy to president of the multi-million - dollar insurance company, gave the fifth lecture in the University's three month Frederick Douglass Ssesquicen tennial series. In his talk prepared for de livery here. Spaulding said, "It has been man's response to challenge that has fixed his place in history and advance our civilization. It has taken him from savagery to civiliza tion; from ignorance to know ledge; from a cave to a palace; from poverty to wealth; from disease to health; and from slavery to freedom." Spaulding noted that Doug lass' life and works "are con stant challenges to all of us to use our individual talents at all times as best befits us in the continuing struggle for equal ity of opportunity and free dom and justice for all peo ples." Stressing his belief in chal lenges—"in converting obstac NORTH CAROLINA DURHAM COUNTY NOTICE OF SALE OF LAND UNDER DEED OF TRI|ST UNDER AND BY VIRTUE OF THE POWER of sale con tained in a certain Deed of Trust executed by James C. McDonald and wife, Mary Frances McDonald, dated April 26, 1965 ,and recorded in Mort gage Book 769 at Page 354, Durham County Registry, de fault having been made in the payments of the indebtedness thereby secured and said Deed of Trust being by the terms thereof subject to forceclosure, the undersigned Trustee will offer for at public auction to the highest bidder for cash at the Courthouse Door in Dur ham County, North Carolina, on Monday, April 10, 1967, at 12 o'clock noon, the property conveyed in said Deed of Trust, the same lying and being in the County ,#f Durham, City of Durham, State of North Caro lina, and more particularly de scribed as follows: BEGINNING at an iron fctake in the Southeastern property line of Weaver Street, said point being South 49 defrees 43 minutes West 99.96 feet from the southern edge of Al ton Street, extended, and be ing the Northeast corner of Lot No. 15 as shown on Plat hereinatfer referred to, and running thence with said lot South 40 degrees 17 minutes East 130 feet to an iron stake, corner of Lot No. 17; thence with said lot North 86 degrees 43 minutes 30 seconds East 69 feet to Alton Street; thence with said street as it curves in a conterclockwise direction haviny a radius of 199.72 feet, a distance of 88.77 feet to a concrete monument; thence continuing with said street North 31 degrees 54 feet West mument, the beginning of a ument, the befinninf of a curve; thence in a curved line havin a radius of 199.72 feet a counter clockwise direction, a distance of 34.34 feet to a concrete monument marked "Control Corner" in the South eastern edpe of Weaver Street; thence with said Street South 49 degrees 43 minutes West les into stepping stones, there by gaining strength and reach ing higher" Spaulding ex pressed the vftew that "a man's real worth to society is meas ured better by what he con tributes to it than by what he takes from it." The University of Rochest er's Frederick Douglass Sesqui centenaial Lectures are being held in honor of the 150 th an niversary of the birth of Fred erick Douglass, who lived and worked in Rochester from 1847 to 1872. Other speakers in thf series have been frx>f. Benjamin Quarles, chairman .Department of History, Morgan State Col lege; Prof. John Hope Frank lin, University of Chicago; Whitney Young, Jr., executive director, Nat'l Urban League; and Samuel Nabrit, member, United States Atomic Energy Commission. Scheduled to speak during April are The Honorable Wm. M .Hastie, Third United States Circuit Court of Appeals; John H. Johnson, editor and publish er, Ebony Magazine; and Prof. Allison Davis, Graduate School of Education, University of Chicago. Local Births The following births were re ported to the Durham County Health Department during the week of March 13 through 18: , Clarence and Lillian "Hiorn ton, girl; Harold and Lula Ed wards, boy; Louis and Sylvia Dunston, boy; William and Lillie Fike, boy; Walter and Betty Douglas, girl; Rogers and Irma Davis, boy; Albert and Shirley Richmond, girl; Steph en and Pecola Williams, boy; Darnell and Cora Parker, girl; Donald and Dorothy Johnson, boy; Charles and Arline Leath ers, boy; Edward and Cather ine Williams, boy. HATS OFF Sophia Loren, starring with Marlon Brando in "A Countess From Hong Kong," has the usual feminine passion for Paris fashions, except for one thing: an obsessive disdain for wearing anything on her head. 70.80 feet to the be finning arid being Lot No. 16, Sectlott 4 of Hillside Park as shown on Plat recorded in Plat Book 36, at Page 42, to which plat ref erence is hereby expressly made for a more particular description of same. TTiis prop erty is subject to restrictive covenants recorded in Deed Book 283, at Page 16. This sale will be subject to all encumbrances of record which may be a prior lien against this property. The purchaser will be re quired at the sale to make a deposit of 10% of the first ONE THOUSAND ($1,000.00) DOLLARS of his bid and 5% for the remainder of his bid as evidence of good faith. This 7th day of March, 1967. W. G. Pearson, n, Trustee March 11, 18, 25; April 1 • THREE THINGS must be re membered when teaching school: Know your stuff, know whom you are stuffing, and then stuff them elegantly. Catholic Digest—February. m § HIH m m ■ ■ ■ ■ TWO GET HIGH LABOR POSTS —Secretary of Labor W. Wil lard Wirtz (center) congratu lates Samuel W. Howard Geft) and Larry Still (right) follow ing a press conference at which the Secretary of Labor an nounced their appointments to high Department of Labor posts. Mr. Howard is the new Deputy Director of the U. S. Employment Service for the District of' Columbia. He had been manager for the USES' Commercial Office for the past five years. Mr. Still, formerly staff writer for the Washing ton Evening Star, was appoint ed Chief of Information Serv ices of the U. S. Employment Service for the District of Co lumbia. HERE'S PROOF! THE BEST VALUES COME FROM JOHNSON! You Can't- Beat Our Price On A 1967 BUICK! 1967 WILDCAT COUPE EQUIPPED WITH- Super turbine transmission, pow-m er steering, power brakes, rodiojj MH with rear speaker, whitewall ■* 1967 LeSABRE 4-DOOR SEDAN ! EQUIPPED WITH— ■ Arctic performance^ group, power steering, radio,U tinted windshield, deluxe wheel !li' '■■■rJm OVER 50 IH STOCk TO CHOOSE FHPM COME IN-TRY US-YOUWILL LIKE US!/I w. Have Durham's Finest Reconditioned Used Cars - • / W —. . ■ i in II ~ . . JfICQUIN'S VODKA ROYALE E3 I * * *! Vfitflß CtMrtM Jaequln * C 1.., Inc., MUlt- Pi. —E(t. IM4 • SO Ml OOF

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