Colonial Opens Accounting Div. In Capital City RALElGH—Colonial Stores announced today that it ia establishing a division account ing office in Raleigh to service the 76 stores in Its Raleigh Division. Gordon D. Zuber has been named Division Controller in charge of the now office which ultimately will employ from SB to 40 people. The new ac counting office will be located in Colonial's division head quarters office at 2233 North Boulevard, Raleigh. R. L. Belvin, Colonial's Raleigh Division Vice-Presi dent, said the new accounting office became necessary be cause of the growth in Coloni al's business in North Carolina. The new accounting office will be equipped with computers which will be tied in by leased wires with Colonial's general computer center In Atlanta. Zuber became associated with Colonial in nld-summer. Prior to that time he was with the Alcan Aluminum Corpora tion in Cleveland, Ohio, as staff accountant to the corporate controller, and he was with Thompson, Ramo, Woolridge, Inc. in Cleveland as administra tive assistant to the division controller prior to joining Al can. He also has had experience with the public accounting firm of Haskin & Sells, and for two years was an instruc tor in accounting at Texas A & M University, from which he holds a master's degree in business administration. the Sportsman's r ' by Clark Webster, Remington Wild Life Expert HUNTING SAFETV HUNTING IS ONE OF THE MOST POPULAR OUTOOOR ACTIVITIES, WITH MO RE THAN 20 MILLION PARTICIPANTS. ALTWOU&H THE INCIP&CE OF FIREARMS ACCIDENTS IS ON THE P6CLINE .TVIEY STILL PO HAPPEN. DO yOU KNOW THE RULES OF SAFE SHOOTING ? FOLLOW THESE TIPS SUGGESTED BY THE REMINGTON ARMS COMPANY AND CARELESSNESS WONT RUIN HOUR HUNTING TRIP: - CARS'Vour GUN reNCE WHM A •C SUM Ofi you* TAMCT ?ORE YtXJ PULL THE TRIG6ER;KNOW F l/wJHI THE IDENTIFYING FEATURES OF THE / W | Jtiulgl GAME VOU HUNT. AND NEVER - I|L Twill I POINT A GUN AT ANYTHING yOU >?\ Mlmi T / PON'T INTEND TO SHOCT Z • : j! (V JI J I UNLOAO &UNS WHEN 11-PI? #ll 1\ 7'l ll\ I GUNS AND AMMUNITION | I 7. EP>/ L/' )/■ 11 Kvt>gp WE REACH OF WSSB Radio 1 In Durham tuck Po# riy ttwcur 9-7 PJM. Durham's Only 24 Hour Station 1490 on Your Dial ML '^Sns •* fBjJ Kf aw TORCH SINGCR Nichelle Nichols, a torch singer, finds singing and acting compatible, as she plans to re-emerge as a vocalist while continuing as Uhura, the communications of ficer, on "Star Trek" over the NBC Television Network Fri days. Meeting is Set SEOUL The United Nations Command will meet Communist North Korea Mon day in a joint Korean Military 1 ■ * Sweetpotato "Flavor-Full" Nourishment Sweetpotatoes, eaten boiled, browned, fried, candied and glazed in various ways, are one of the most all-round nutritious foods in the world. Sweetpotatoes are brimming over with vitamin A, and also contribute vita mins B and C and iron to our diet. Sweetpotatoes were found by Columbus and his ship mates, and are believed to be native to this hemisphere. Frosty air of fall and winter months spark appetites for hearty meals and the versatile sweetpotato is especially abundant October - March. Make the most of any meal—and the most of the sweet potato-if you want happy faces at your dinner table. Here, Sweetpotato Sausage Casserole for your eating enjoyment. SWEETPOTATO SAUSAGE CASSEROLE 2 pounds sweetpotatoes, 'A cup butter (about 5 medium) 2 tablespoons chopped 1 medium apple onion % teaspoon salt V 4 pound small link Few grains pepper sausages (8) Peel sweetpotatoes; halve lengthwise. Quarter and core apple; chop coarsely. Arrange sweetpotatoes and apple in shallow quart casserole; sprinkle with salt and pepper. Melt butter; saute onion over low heat 5 minutes; • pour over yams. Cover and bake in 375° F. oven 45 min utes. Brown sausages. Arrange on top of sweetpotatoes. Cover and bake 20 minutes longer. Makes 4 servings. Impotted MACNAUGHTON CANADIAN WHISKY 2 "PTNT llml 4 4/6 QT. M IMPORTED 1 I I I MACNAUGHTON I CANADIAN WHISKY I A BLIND I ■ I I AGED SIX FULL YEARS _ t * mooucT or CANADA | MMHM WMW.it K|M • |IUtl QL> • tM MMf • OKHtWiT IMMITI OH. tX, I.V. Armistice Commission meeting at the truce village of Panmun jom. The announcement did not say what will be discussed at the 279 th meeting requested by North Korea. Applications For Trainees Being Accepted The Interagency Board of U. S. Civil Service Examiners for North Carolina announces that applications are now being accepted from college students for Trainee positions in Agri culture Management, Agricul ture Statistics, Soil Conserva tion, Soil Science, and En gineering. Salaries will be SBB. 00 and $98.00 per week de pending upon the grade level of the position and academic level of the applicant. Lists of eligibies will be used for filling Trainee positions with the Department of Agri culture and other Federal agen cies with appropriate vacancies in the states of Alabama, Flori da, Georgia, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina and Tennessee. Applications and further in formation may be secured from the Interagency Board 01 U. S. Civil Service Exa- M you KNOW? " . } •, «Y%L THE PRLVE TO SAFETY W SKIPPING WAS ONE OP TVTE MAJOR CAUSES OP NEARLY 13 MILLION AUTO ACCIDENTS LAST YEAR,RESULTING |N OVER 50,000 DEATHS AND J ABOUT 2 MILLION INJURED AND DISABLED. SCIENTISTS HAVE FINALLY TO HELP PREVENT SKIP DING ANP SWERVIN&- 'OBG|R-* I THE LEEMYLES ROAD "P'JNR PILOT, AN ANTI-SKID I F®/ AUTO STABILIZER. IT'S IF HL-JL WI A COMFFCCT, FULLY EN- TIXJBI CLOSED INSTRUMENT THAT W//, HOUSES A HORIZONTAL il/l PENDULUM ANP, WHEN J l //! ANCHORED TO THE TRUNK, ■ Mill INSTANTLY AND AUTOMATIC M ill ALLY HELPS THE DRIVER JLL IB M'/JM MAINTAIN COKTROL ON ML _V\S'^W SNOWY ROADS,PANIC 'WFF|||| >J TI ! ||||l||||| IT WORKS — .' WHEN A SKID STARTS,THE REAR OF THE VEHICLE GOES IN THE WRERNON TO THE „R>STION OF THE JTEERIN6 WHEEL. THE PENDULUM IN THE HF STABIUZER MOVES TO'PUSH* GGI? THE REAR END BACK TO A ,O STRAIGHT LINE. POLICE, 80S :Jr// ANP N,?E FISHTIN6 VEHICLES AgE NQyS IK^TAU ' N& T>l£ CONTACT LENSES £3JS # YOU , "*J >T GtO«G THOMPSON VANITY, THY NAME IS CONTACT LENSES New York (NAPS) - What heautv aid can't be seen, goes on in a wink and puts a spar kle in your eyes? The answer is tiny contact lenses and they are being worn by millions of women. According to Barnes-Hind Ophthalmic Products, makers of adjunctive solutions and ac cessories for the care of con tact lenses, some 60 percent of those who use the vision aids are women and they freely ad mit that vanity is the reason they own them. Better vision is a happy bonus. Vanity is good for us. psy chologists say. and women know a good thing when in/the pursuit of beautiful eyes. His tory is filled, with tricks and rituals used to make them lusterous and limpid. Egyptian ladies, for instance, drew circles about their eyes using a powder called Kohl, made of crushed pearls, coral, ambergris and a bat's wing! African natives added ants and mud to the recipe. Spanish ladies of the Court achieved shiny eyes by bath ing them in orange juice. Bell adonna was good for dilating the pupils giving a wide, in nocent look. Later on, worpen who were hopeful of putting away their eyeglasses turned to cumber some glass contact lenses. These were bulging, eye-cover ing shells which needed spe cial fluids to be worn. These may have blurred a girl's so cial life, as she had to see around the bubbles that form ed. Modern contact lenses coyer, the cornea, the clear section that covers the colored |>art of the eye out of which we see. Made of featherweight plastic —also, paper thin—they rest on the eye's own natural tear layer and often can be worn 12 to 16 hours a da^v. A bonus beauty aid to wom en who wear the tiny vision aids is the colored contact lens. These not only shield bright sunlight, as originally intend ed, but can actually change the color of the eyes—from grey to brown, blue to green and more. Only woman, spurred by her charming vanity, could have made that discovery! Make food chopping aa adventure! Go to a different aection of your city and try a different (tore. You'll m new product*, awl add net to year shopping qjjores. 12F 4! r ■ ifl SK jf^ i /^jjj WMMMH CHAT ftlFOftl SYMPOSIUM— Dr. Jane C. Wright, assistant dean and professor of surgery at New York Medical College, miners, 415 Hillsborough Street, Raleigh, North Caro lina 27603. Refer to j An nouncement No. AR-8-16. VOTE FOR J.C. SKEEPIE SCARBOROUGH FOR County Commissioner TUISDA Y. NOV. 5 ™ I • wfrw - ' m ■r'- ": §*, ■■■F^a A MAN FOR PROGRESS Your Support Is Heeded And Will Be Greatly Appreciated ;' SATURDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1968 THE CAROLINA TIMES ■ Mrs. Joan Fisa Bishop, director of Placement at Wellesley Col lege, Mass., and Judge Con , stance Baker Motley of N""' SAVINGS ACCOUNT mc»MI N» 51 ~ OWU ! MX j bt »•»».* ' ».»t» t KAI.AKCI , « 1 ! \ W''JM f H H Hi Wk JKtiHk fl flj 4 ■ Wmm II B »»B ull II w ; • ; WHHn DIFRRENCE K ; I; «: j - \ WHY? Your savings add up fast. Your savings are always available. Your money supports community growth. Mutual Savings & Loan Association 112 W. Parrisb St., Dirboa, N.C. York chat outside Pfeiffer Chapel before appearing on symposium at Bennett Co'lege. 5B