ill •• •>•.. »J"' - MVHBVyB /A - Jt "im - 'MUDCAT AND HIS KITTENS'. (Miami, Fla.) Jim "Mudcat" I Grant, ace pitcher for the Min nesota Twins, is also the fea tured performer with a nite club get called "Mudcat and Hillside High School Honor Roll The following students are listed at Hillside High School on the fourth period honor rolls, according to John H. Lucas, Principal. "A" HONOR ROLL—Ethel Elaine Morgan—Senior, Addie Jane Johnson Junior: Carl ton Dale McNair—Junior. B" HONOR ROLL: Seniors —Cynthia Jean Allen, Christine Delores Barbec, Thomasine Ly nette Bass, Veronica Blake, Delphic Alinda Bouknight, Di Mrs. Lizzie M. Crews Speaker- Consultant An In-Service Training Con ference sponsorend by the N C. Fund—an agency dedicated to Ma npower Improvement Through Community Effort, was held at the Blockade Run ner Motor Hotel at Wrights ville Beach, March 13-16. Mrs. Lizzie M. Crews, in structor in the Department of Business and Economics. N. C. College, was consultant-speaker at the Secretaries' Workshop, one of the several workshops conducted during tbf four-day training conference. The Manpower Improvement Through Communit\ Effort Project serves sevc n rural Eastern North Carolina coun ties—Nash, Edcombc. Craven, Jones, Roberson, Scotland, and Richmond, and one urban unit which include Greensboro and High Point. Secretaries em ployed in these counties and in the Durham central office attended the In-Service Train ing Conference and took pari in the secretaries' workshop. Mrs. Crews spoke on Wedns day evening and Thursday morning from the workshop theme—"A Portrait of an Ef ficient Secretary." RADIO DISPATCHED DRIVE IN SERVICE '.TUSK ■ ■ DIAL i [682-1566 ] . WEAVERS CLEANERS : UU FAYETTEVILLI . DURHAM I >.% his Kittens." When Jim entered the recent Baseball Players Golf Tournament at the City of Miami Country Club he brought his "Three Kittens" ane Justein Anderson, Sylvia Louise Cannon, Edith Belinda Clay, Brenda Faye Clegg, Mar tha Francine Dalton, Margaret Narcisra Doles, Minnie Mae Fi'ite, Denise Belinda Gaddy, Deborah Griffin, William Lloyd Gunri. Connita Marie Hill, Doris Elizabeth Howard, Joan Jaby, Bivrda Gwenetta Jenkins, Gail T.y.ettc Joyner. PhvlUs Ethalia Ledbetter, Fl«* d Herman Linder, Bonnie Davie Logan, Alphonzo Mattew son. Gurnia Carroll Michaux, ,Ta"'\s Minor, Samuel DeLarn Mr prison, Ida Rosebud Page, Alc.io Leroy Pegram, George Olivr Phillips, Rose Annette Prirre, Brenda Joyce McCor mirk. Denise Louise Ratliff, Cynthia LaVerne Ricks, Patri cia Elizabeth Ricks, Alfred M.. •: Roberts, Yvonne Royster, Legal Notices I NORTH CAROLINA I ] DIRHAM COUNTY TRUSTEE NOTICE OF SALE UNDER AND BY VIRTUE of' i vhi powt"- of sale contained in a certain deed of trust exe cuted by Eugenia Simmons (widow), dated the Ist day of J' i:p, 1966, and recorded in j P >k 793, pages 152 and 153, ij) Ihe office of the Reristec/fjfj ds of Durham,... lv>rth Carolina, default hav-l ii.* been made in the payment | of ;he indebtedness thereby se ' fired and said deed of trust! beng by the terms thereof j subject to foreclosure, the un-i del-signed Trustee will offer I f-'i' sale at public auction to; the hilghest bidder for casn at fhc courthouse door in Dur ham, Norh Carolia, at Noon, on the 14th day cf April, 1966, the property conveyed in «aid deed of trust, the sa'me lying and being in the County of Dur ham, State ot North Carolina, in Durham Township, and more I particularly described as fol-i lows: LYING AND BEING in the City of Durham, BEGINNING at a stake in the property line on the West side of Picket Street, 40.1 feet South 4 de grees 9' East from the south west intersection of Pickett Street and Moore Street, and running thence with the prop erty line on the west side of Picket Street, South 4 degrees 9' East 40.1 feet to a stake: thence North 89 deg. 24' West 131.7 feet to a sake; thence North 0 deg. 36' East 40 feet to a stake; thence South 89 deg. 24' East 128.4 feet to the beginning corner, and being Lot No. 25 of the lands of the New Hope Realty Company, as per plat and survey thereof registered in Plat Book 3, page 53. in the Office of the Regis ter of Deeds of Durham Coun ty (see deed from Harrison Lyons et ux, to Daniel N. El lis) registered in Deed Book 174 at page 58, dated March 31, 1925. See deed from Caro lina Mortgage Company to Can tial Investment Corporation, Book 119, at pages 279-80, and deed from Central Investment Corporation to Eugenia Sim mons Book 120, at pages 364- 5, Durham County Registry. On said property is located a house known as 702 Pickett Street. THIS PROPERTY will be made subject to all outstanding and unpaid ad volerem taxes and assessments. This sale will remain open for ten (10) days to receive in crease bids, as required by taw. ; along. His golf game can't com pare with his hurling, but who cares about "pars" when you can listen to "purrs," says Jim. (Miami-Metro Photo) Ronald Lee Satterwhite, Alice LaVerne Sharpe, Maceo Ken nedy Sloan, Coralene Smith, Chardayle Steele, Betty Jo Street, Gloria Delores Taylor, Augustus Rescoe Thompson, Jr., Cathr.vn Lillie Thompson, Harriett Van Hook, Shirley Mae Ward, Gizette Webb, Sharon Williams. JUNIORS: Gloria Ann Als ton, Wanda Brown, Allyson Kay Duncan, A 1 Jerry Fisher, Ronald William Hatcher, Har vey Hinton. Yvonne Holman, Brenda Hopkins, Jeanette Johnson, Edna Jacqueline Man gum, Silas Mayfield, Brenda Ann Henry. Beverly Jo Strud wick, Mpry Irene- Thomas, Brenda Gayle Watson, Shirley Ann Womble. SOPHOMOEES: Ava Denise Armstrong, Jacqueline Chan elle, Gail Linette Mason, Joyce Cordelia Page. Johnetta Rob erts Gwendolyn Harris. I Dated this 13th day of March, I 1967. I. O. Funderburg, Trustee : M, Hugh Thompson. Attorney ! 3-18-25; 4-1 MORTH CAROLINA DURHAM COUNTY ADMINISTRATORS NOTICE HAVING QUALIFIED as Ad ministrator .of the estate of Mable Ervin Williams, de •cea*>t'4ji latj. of Durham Coun ty Xo. Carolina, this is to no tify all persons having claims igainst said estate to exhibit them to the undeisigned at 116 West Parrish Street. Durham, North Caiolina, on or before Sepi ember 11, 1967, or this I notice will be pleaded in bar of (heir recovery, All peisons indebted to said estate vil! please make irame diuti' payment. This th 1- "'th day of March, 196'. . Mechanics and Farmers Bank, Administrator Estate of Mable Ervin Williams, Deceased March 11, 18, 25; April 1 NORTH CAROLLNA DURHAM COUNTY ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE HAVING QUALIFIED as Ad ministrator of the Estate of Albert Brewer, deceased, late of Durham County, North Car olina, this is to notify all per sons having claims against said estate to exhibit them to the undersigned at 116 West Par rish Street, Durham, North Carolina, on or before Septem ber 11, 1967, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their re covery. All persons indebted to said estate will please nake imme diate pyament. This the Bth day of March, 1964. Mechanics and Farmers Bank, Administrator Estate of Albert Brewer, Deceased March 11, 18, 25; April 1 AM AND FM RADIOS LUGGAGE WRIST WATCHES Royal Portable Typewriter $34.05 Poleroid Camera .... $24.95 Sam's Pawn Shop 122 E. Main St. Ph. 682-2573 Durham. N. C. Negro Leader Calls Right-to- Work laws Industrial Jim Crow In a fighting speech before the California Negro Leader ship Conference recently, Civil Rights Leader BayaTd Rustin lashed out at right-to work laws as a stratagem to divide the labor movement and to keep Negroes at the bottom of the economic ladder. "Right to work," he said, "is the same as Open Shop and Industrial Jim Crow, and no ,mat ter how you dress it up it is the same weapon that was used to kill trade union organization in the early part of the twentieth century,* the same weapon used to deny minorities their economic rights." Rustin's remarks came in the course of a reply to Reed Larson, Executive Director of the National Right to work Committee, in a debate on 'February 18 before the Cali fornia Negro Leadership Con ference in San Francisco. The Executive Director of the A. Philip Randolph Institute stressed the need for labor and civil rights organizations to unify against right to work laws by pointing to the com mon experience of both move ments: "Labor and minority groups have been where the real action is —the bullets, the dogs, the lynchropes, the billy clubs, blood dripping down through the leaves of the trees, and blood running out of the open shop. This makes us brothers not only under the skin, but also brothers in blood, in sweat, and in tears, all shed in the service of making America safe for democracy." Rustin brought five major charges against right-to-work laws: (1) They violated the letter and spirit of th e Con stitution; (2) They destroyed union democracy and the in stitution of collective bar gaining; (3) The perpetuated poverty; (4) They were anti civil rights; and (5) They were supported by every racist and rightist movement in America. The advocates of right-to work laws, he said, "have What a wonderful feeling tp live with flameless electric heating (why not change over now?) Baseboard units save space, permit Radiant celling heoti concealed within Heat pump heats in winter, cools in Wall panel, with heoting units behind Central system: heating can easily be room-by-room temperotuce control. celling. Each room's temperature can summer. It's the thriftiest way to year- grille, provides radiant heat with nat- combined with cooling for year-round blend In with room decor. be Individually controlled. round comfort. Ural or fan-forced convection. comfort. Now, clean invisible electricity at a cost flameless electric heating is reasonable you can easily afford. And what a won- to own and operate. derful feeling. Before you build, buy or modernize You tiave no sensation of heat. Its your home, talk with the people at Duke gentle warmth is just there. It saves you Power. Although we neither sell nor in moneyon redecorating and maintenance. stall the equipment, we will show you And you live with a sense of well-being the way to the joy of total electric living, that makes you feel like a million all win- . More than 2,500,000 families like [ninflPTf? nDfOIWiYIfEi yours have already discovered that IJilliJlMlS U ULI lAj LS Lfu been opposed to every social and economic reform that would benefit Negroes and •workers," and therefore "it was no accident that the plight of Negroes was worst in States with right-to-work laws." Rustin said that the only genuine right-to-work situat ion would come about when the society provided condi tions of full employment.' Here he called upon the labor movement to end the dis crimination that still per sist ed in some of its minority segments, since only a united and democratic labor move ment could helo bring full employment. "The only way to guarantee this kind of right to work," he said, "is for Negroes and the Unions to work together. We cannot do it by ourselves, and the economy cannot do it witfiout us. We both have got to weld a great coalition to solve the problems of jobs, education , •housing. We have got to make our movement come to repre sent the majority will of the American society and help it move on to massive and planned social investments to end slums, inferior schools, and depression rates of employment." He szid he was in favor of right to work in the sense that President Franklin Roo sevelt was, namely, that "this society should guaran tee every worker a job at de cent wages with security and dignity; and if the private sector does not fulfill this task, then it must be the automatic, legal obligation ofthepublic sector to do sot." SHUNS LIMELIGHT Director Claude Chabrol's technical assistant for "The Champagne Murders," in which, Anthony Perkins is called upon to rifle a safe, prefers anony mity. The expert has diplomas from San Quentln, Sing Sing and Folsom and is presently on parole. Mm i -Ty A A H /,;i >v .\ j,fl H l V|J| ■ . jv BL %T p* sS.,y jig^^HE^^^H fc" 3B H9K IH HK:* 'aflMHlßt* MB "CHARM-ESQUIRE" CONTES TANTS—Tennessee State Uni versity's 13th annual Charm- Esquire competition involved students from across the coun try. Contestants were chosen on the basis of personal quali ties. The purpose of the competi tion is to re-emphasize the im portance of those attributes that contribute to charm, poise, and grace in women and to the gcntlemanliness in man. The acquisition of knowledge is stressed as well as social skills. Shown here are (from left) "Miss North Carolina," Pelores Duncan of Asheville, daughter SATURDAY, MARCH 25, 1967 THE CAROLINA TIMES of Mrs. Leata J. Duncan, with "Mr. North Carolina", Alfred T. Miller of Fayetteville, son of the John L. Millers: "Miss Virginia," Gloria A. Polk of Roanoke, daughter of Mrs. Les sie Polk; "Miss South Cajj^ SCENE FROM "CRISS CROSS" —Brock Peters and co-star George Peppard in a scene from Universal's "Cross Cross,"" in which Peters is cast as a Bahamian chief of police and Peppard as a private eye. That which proves too much proves nothing. —Claudian 1B lina," Deborah A. Gaddies of Charleston, daughter of Mr. Robert A. Gaddies, with "Mr. South Carolina," Bernard J. Lewis of Charleston, son of Mrs. Margaret Lewis. (Photo by Joe Zina BILL FOR BUNNIES New Zealand's bill for rabbit control work amounts to more than S4 million a year, the Catholic Digest finds. The coun try lacks the insects to act as agents in spreading the virus myxomatosis, successfully intro duced from Brazil bv- scientists in once-plagued Australia.

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