Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / Sept. 12, 1970, edition 1 / Page 21
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APEX BY MRS. LOUISE COLVIN APEX - The senior choir of First Baptist was in charge of the devotion for the 11 a.m. worship services. Soloist was Mrs. Lottie Page. The organ ist and" director of the choir is Mrs. E. H. W illiams. The pastor , R e v. j. E. Per kins took his text from the book of Galatians 5:22, using for his subject, “Fruit Os The Spirit.” Visitors wor shipping with us were, Mr. and Mrs. George Perry from 0 MRS. COLVIN Longhorn, Pa. and Mr. Thomas Edwards of Florida, brother of Mr. Lajoy Edwards. We al way welcome and invite visi tors to Frist Baptist. On Sunday at 2:30 p.m. fun eral services for Mrs. How era Hayes Clark were held at the Calvary Baptist Church in Durham, with the Rev, W. T. Butler officiating. Soloist was Mr s. Matilda Headen, Mrs. Clark was the sister of Mr. Isaac Hayes and Mrs. Ruth Council of Apex and has other sisters in Durham and brothers in Philadelphia, Pa. and New York. We extend our deepest sympathy to thia family. We also extend our sincere sympathy to Mr. Henry Wil liams and sons in the loss of their loved one, M's. Mae Sue Williams, who passed Saturday morning. Funeral servicer were held Tuesday at 2 p.m. at the St. Mary's AME Church, with the Rev. Isaac Irvin, of ficiating. Soloist was Mr. Na thaniel Lofton. On Sunday, September 3, at 3 p.m. First Baptist will ob serve “Charlie Williams Day.” At this time, a portrait of Mr. Williams will be unveiled and placed in the church as a per manent memorial to his un selfish services, of which our Edifice is a direct result. All members and friends are cordi ally invited to attend. Rev. G. W. Jones, Sr., pastor of the Juniper Level Baptist Church and his choir, will be our guest. PERSONALS Specialist 4th Class Howard Peebles is home from Viet nam until Sept. 27. We are al ways happy to welcome our boys home after serving in such a capacity and thank God for tak ing care of them and keeping them safe to return to their families. He is the husband of the former Miss Carolyn Byrd. Recently Rev. and Mrs. "V. Davis and son, William Thomas, spent the weekend in Newport News, Va., visiting Rev. Davis' sister, Mrs. Ida Francis Jones, and family. They had an enjoyable time. Mrs. Margaret Dones and children, Mamie and Luther and a friend of Brooklyn, N. Y. spent the weekend with Mrs. Minders Mangum. The Doneses were here to attend their Aunt funeral in Durl :<m. M s. Dones is the daughter of Mr. Isaac Hayes. Her si -it •, also of Brooklyn. Mrs. Mildred Ross spent ‘he weekend wit! her Fiihe; and sister, Miss Ida TVh* hum aj. hearing it ec ! - • ; is :i delicate* and easii} damaged f-a • of the !>ody and deserves careful treatment ac cording to the Crusade so: Hearing Conservation. One method of protecting this de licate apparatus is to never put paper clips, pencils, keys or other foreign objects in your ear. ♦ * * The person who always says what he thinks is honest but un popular. lip Ym SMH Knew ggCtEOFAm m The woman who was courted by WWiih|b JUUUS CAESAR, AND LATER Bf MARK ANTHONY. SHE SPOKE GREEK, LATIN, JIL U jfin ETHIOPIAN, HEBREW, ARABIC, SYRIAN, jHii AFRICAN, AND EGYPTIAN! THROUGH M S UNSCRUPULOUS CUNNING SHE USED jjj* f CAESAR TO GET HER BROTHER KILL in ED AND SOON BECAME CO-RULER OF EGYPT AND THE ROMAN EMPIRE i —————— , The Reality Os A Leaf-Time Dream BY REV. WALTER M. PHILLIPS -6UNSET ACRES APEX - “He who depends up on the understanding of his own hearts, the seif-centered desir es of his own ego,” is a fool” wrote a very wise man. An other man, assuming all men as being some kind of fool, 'put a subject or title to a song: “What kind of fool am I?” What is it that makes us so unhappy with what we have? Oh, I know we justify this un happiness by saying, “dissatis faction with out present state is what makes progress. ‘That is true only if our motivations, our reasons are right. We envy the rank above us. We think of ways we can “run down” and step on others of another color, culture, religion, or language so as to give our selves “more class.” Lycurgus M. Starkey, Jr. wrote in his “James Bond’s World of Values,” under the subject, “‘Snobbery made sim ple,” We don’t run down the Ne gro.” the Black American, “the Latin American, the Indian A merican, the Japanese Ameri can primarily because of their different color. That would be ‘unAmerican, unpatriotic. No, one of the basic reasons we run down minority groups is to enable our own desperate grasp for status,” to put us, in our heart’s understanding, above somebody else. Segrega’ion is really a kind f pseudec legalized, certain - ’ a: organized status symbol str.. dowr. it assumes v.e ■ ; lot be somebodies on our own eilesi- we can make others into - m comparison. This . ••• understanding toou; rnul -* eiai Mansions. That is w>.\ '.4 decision must work for societies. !♦ must in ax .ate oui children against iso d. id!> vir >! - that is killing 'HI t wn-ups. The monthly meeting of the Advisory Committee of the Westeri and Southern arms of Wake Opportunities met last Thursday night to formulate plans to help all the under privileged and needy or our communities, and we mean, All. Brother J. Farrar, chairman, left, an important District Con vention of the AME Zion Church to call his first meeting to ord er at 8:00 p.m. Mrs. Holland, d i r e c t o r, caused JirriYrty Mc- Clain to be brought before the committee for questioning be fore confirmation as Communi ty Organizer for the Southern arm, Holly Springs, Sunset Acres, Fuquay-Varinia, of Western Wake Opportunities, and Western Wake Community Action Council. Miss Pauline Blount is our new secretary of the Center and headquarters on North Salem St., Apex. She is sympathetic, efficient, hos pitable. The Welfare Rights, food and food stamps, and the acquisi tion of buses for transportation, Head-Start and child-care were discussed. Mrs. Holland intro duced decks of 27 cards on which were written 27 categor ies of subjects designed to help the needy. You picked 10 out of 27 as top priorities. Then you were paired to get 7 priorities, then you and your partner joined another pair and selected what you four consid e red top priorities. We will work on these selections for All The People, not bend ing to the reliable understand ing of our individual and self centered hearts. * * * There might be about 15 mil lion clerical workers In tiie United States by 1975, Labor Department studies indicate. In l'*6B, there were 13 million clerical workers, with secre taries and stenographers com prising the largest group of of fice workers. Mils group num be ed more than 2.5 million. T * * “IT> ISSI ES NATIONAL REG ISTRY The first registry of minori ty construction contractors ever produced--a listing in six volumes of 2,051 Negro and Spanisn surnamed building con tractors and subcontractors in 48 cities -has been published by the U. S. Department of Hous ing and Urban Development, * * * The man who earns what lie gets will be under obligations to no man. jest For Fuo BY MARCUS H. BOULWARE Diplomacy is the art of say ing “nice doggie” until you find a stick. The advantage of a detached garage is that it forces people to take a short walk. Socrates said this; “Marry by all means. If you get a good wife you will be happy. If you get a bad one, you will become a philosopher--and that is good for every man.” The reason dogs are alike is that they wag their tails instead of their tongues. There are two kinds of fools. One says, “This is old, there fore it is good,” The other says, “This is new, therefore it is better.” The diamond is one of the best and hardest substances known to man, particularly when he tries to get it back.. As gardens have multiplied across the land, weeds have been hard put to keep up with the demand for their services. But as we have seen, they have branched the gap and all is nor mal. * * * Nearly 7 million of the more than 15 million 14-17 year-olds in the United States were pro tected in fiscal year 1989 by the child labor provisions of the Fair Labor Standards Act. CRITTENDEN'S GROCERY APEX, N. C. APEX PAINT HEADQUARTERS Dutch Boy and Glidden Paints—Paint Supplies Philco Appliances, Philco tfadioa and TV’s Phone 354-8543, Apex, N. C. SHOES—SH IN TS— O V ERALLS —FEED—SEEL HARDWARE GROCERIES Good Line Christmas Fruit, Nuts and Candy APEX GROCERY APEX, N. C. Whittier's Old School Is Restored HAVERHILL, Mass. - An old New England academy, distin guished as a former school of the poet John Greenleaf Whit tier, has recently been restor ed with the help of a $50,000 grant from the U. S. Depart ment of Housing and Urban De velopment. The 19th century building, constructed In the surnmetri cally geometric, neoclassical style reminiscent of Ameri ;an architect Charles Buifineh (1763-1844), is in Haverhill, Mass. As a student, Whittier spent two terms at what was then called Haverhill Academy, making shoes to pay the $4 tui tion fee. In 1827, at the age of 19, he wrote an ode on the oc casion of the school’s dedica tion, Later, Haverhill recipro cated and honored the poet by renaming the academy Whittier School. The building was used by the Haverhill School Department until 1962, when all but the exterior was destroyed by fire. After completing preliminary plans for restoration, the city in 1967 formally applied toHUD for a Historic Preservation g rant. The restored building was de dicated in May, 1970, in a cere money that paralleled in part the circumstance of the first dedication in 1827. Former U. S. Senator Leverett Salston stall, 143 years after his great grandfather officiated at the or iginal ceremony, was the prin cipal speaker. Whitter’s ode, “Hail Star of Science,” was re cited by a student from Hav erhill High School. But though the eermonies were similiar, the restored Whittier Building no longer houses a school. In stead, it will be used as an of fice for civic organizations and as a meeting place for town groups. * * * MOBILE HOME LOANS Total holdings of mobile home loans by sales finance com panies came to $1.2 billion at the end of 1965, and to $2.3 billion at the end of 1969. Bill Gerriitger Company Phene 334-7432 '■■ll !■ 11l IIIMW 1111 I 111 i WIWIIHUHII I Will APEX CAB CO. 354-6447 or 354-5781 APEX, N C. RALPH MARTIN GENERAL MERCHANDISE Apex, N. C. SHOES FOB ALL T3SK FAMILY POE BROTHERS Ape*. N. C. Paradise Gril am * mm. samiiel BE&3BOVM S, Seksa M&m. Si. €*
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
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Sept. 12, 1970, edition 1
21
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