The Durham Sun from Durham, North Carolina (2024)

Durham Sun, Saturday, July 20, 1963 ASSOCIATE CHAPEL HILL SIT-IN SCENE-This the scene in Chapel Hill yesterday as police broke up a sit-in at the Chapel Hill-Carrboro Merchants Association office by arresting 35 participants. The integrationists had to be bodily carried from the office building. Those sitting on the sidewalk in front of the building also were arrested. -Staff Photo by Cooper. Negroes Vow New Demonstration TodayChapel Hill Sit-In Brings 35 Arrests CHAPEL HILL Negroes vowed to stage another "massive protest demonstration" here today in the wake of yesterday's sit-in at the Chapel Hill-Carrboro MerAssociation office which brought arrests.

The sit mostly Negro youths, were charged with tres- 4. Continued from Page 1 ommendations for solving all phases. The work rules would be held in abeyance during this reconsideration. Then there would be another 30- day period for bargaining by the rail lines and unions on these findings. Any items left unresolved would be settled by the board.

The President has been urged by Democratic congressional leaders to avoid any form of broad compulsory arbitration or seizure legislation. He has been told this could lead to lengthy debate and the offering of many amendments unpalatable both to labor and business. Kennedy undoubtedly is well aware of this from his experience in handling labor control legislation in the Senate in 1958 and 1959 when he was chairman of a labor subcommittee. The dispute involves what the carriers call "featherbedding." They want to eliminate jobs, largely those of diesel freight firemen, which they maintain are unnecessary and are costing the railroads and the public $600 million a year. The unions have fought the proposals to institute the new work rules, contending the jobs are necessary for safety and training.

Births The Durham following County births Health were reported Department to week of July 15-20: WHITE Dennis and Sondra Ferrell, boy. bert and Betty Clemons, girl. in and Eunice Ligon, boy. Willis and Rosalyn Stigall, boy. -bert and Bettie Masters, girl.

and Gertrude Fischer, boy. He ry and Naomi Storey, girl. A-'hur and Faye Gillespie, girl. Bohby and Virginia Meadows, girl. Jay and Jane Collie, girl, Tyler and Peggy Deierhoi, girl.

Revis and Edna Gordon, boy. Dalton and Betty Morton, boy. James and Mildred Gordon, girl. Fitzgerald and Meriwether Hudson, girl. Harold and Nancy Thornton, girl.

NEGRO William and Gwendolyn Burgess, girl. Garland and Mattie Bass, girl. Lynwood and Annie Howard, girl. William and Mary Walker, boy. Claude and Lorine Rogers, girl.

Kenneth and Jo Ellen Branch, girl. Paul and Mae Carrington, girl. Eugene and Geraldine Gooch, girl. Bobby and Patricia Moore, boy. Booker and Roberta Bennett, girl, James and Anna Harris, girl.

Willie and Hazel Wooten, boy. Asa and Shirley Spaulding, girl, Elliot and Allie Palmer, boy. Ernest and Elizabeth Clinton, boy, James and Mary Burton, boy. Joseph and Mary Jones, boy. Attacking Girl Of 13 Charged Tarheel MORGANTON (AP) Jesse Ray Powell, 27, of Morganton was being held in Burke County jail here today on charges of raping a 13-year-old girl last Saturday night.

Authorities arrested Powell Friday. A hearing was set for July 23. Trials are proofs of God's care. -Mary Baker Eddy. Howerton Bryan FUNERAL HOME Since FEARRINGTON James Phillip Fear.

rington, 64, of Route 3, Apex, Chatham County, died Friday at 5:30 p.m, at his home. Funeral services will be held Sunday afternoon at the Bells Chapel Baptist Church. Burial Church Cemetery. The body will be moved to the home sometime Saturday to remain until moved to the church to lie in state one hour before the service. HARDISON James E.

Hardison, 47, of Williamson, died Friday at 4:30 p.m. at the Duke University Medical Center. The body was forwarded by hearse Friday night to the Biggs Funeral Home, for funeral and burial rites. Governors Ask Change In Rules MIAMI BEACH (UPI)-Warnings came from Democratic governors today that the annual Governors, Conference, it must be wrecked "by the civil rights issue. Advance indications were that the 55th annual conference would vote at its opening business session Monday to restore its old unanimity rule despite opposition led by Gov.

Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York. Rockefeller is one of the goveronrs sponsoring civil rights resolutions sure to be shelved if the conference returns to its rule requiring a unanimous vote for approval of resolutions. For the past four years, it has operated under a rule requiring a twothirds vote. Gov.

Albert D. Rosellini of Washington, chairman of the conference, said he was confident that the conference would restore the unanimity rule. The rules issue could destroy the conference, he said, because Southerners may withdraw if confronted by more civil rights resolutions like the one which was lost in a filibuster at Hershey, last year. Rosellini is a Democrat and a supporter of President Kennedy's civil rights package now before Congress. Another Democratic supporter of the administration, Gov.

Richard J. Hughes of New Jersey, said forcing controversial national issues before the conference could break it up. "The rights issue is now before Congress, which is is legislating upon it, and it is before the legislatures of many of the states," Hughes said. "I do not think it is helping the cause of governors' conference or of the country to bring it up here." Rosellini said he personally would support a declaration calling for action in the field of civil rights if one is circulated outside the formal proceedings of the conference. Such a declaration would have no formal meaning, but resolutions adopted by the conference do not bind governors of their states.

5 Continued from Page 1 claimed "leadership of the integration movement in Cambridge is fragmented," and hinders tiations. Within 30 minutes, three Negro leaders exhibited a united front while addressing a group of about 100 persons from the tailgate of a truck parked outside the Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church. "We are ready to demonstrate tomorrow if that committee is not sent in here tomorrow, regardless of what the governor says," Mrs. Gloria Richardson, chairman of the Cambridge Non-violent Action Committee, said. Stanley Branche, a field of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, told the cheering crowd: "We're going to march together, and if need be, we'll go to jail together." "We must walk the streets of Cambridge until the walls of segregation come tumbling down," said John Lewis, national chairman of the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee.

In his address, Tawes contended "both sides are closer to agreement than their emotions allow them to admit." "One never really knows which individual is speaking for the Negro community at any one given time," Tawes said, or whether the leaders "are, in truth, leading, or being swept along in a wave of emotionalism." Tawes spoke several hours after about 50 persons picketed the statehouse in Annapolis to protest the detention of two Negro juveniles in training schools. The youths were picked up during demonstrations in Cambridge, and the state said they were committed for general delinquency. One Killed, 2nd Hurt In Fiasco SAIGON (UPI)-One U.S. airman was killed and another was wounded i in an exchange of fire between two groups of Americans during an alert at Vinh Long Airbase Thursday night, it was announced today. Each group of airmen apparently mistook the others for Communist raiders.

The names of the casualties were, not made public immediately. The one airman's death increased the number of Americans killed in South. Viet Nam since January, 1960, to 101. Red guerrillas shot down a U.S.-made H21 helicopter today in An Xuyen Province, but no one aboard was hit and loyal troops were able to recover the helicopter. It was not certain immediately whether there were any Americans in the helicopter when it was shot down.

Direct Hit ScoredJet 'Bombs' 'Frisco, But By Accident SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) A U.S. Navy aircraft scored a direct hit on San Francisco Friday in an accidental skip-bombing run on Market Street. The two-foot-long practice bomb which contained a small charge designed to give off a cloud of smoke on impact, landed in the middle of the crowded street at high noon. It did not explode, but did manage to gouge a hole in the asphalt a foot wide and four inches deep before ricocheting in a 300-foot arc over a five-story building. It then struck a cornice on the top of Build- the fourth floor of the Phoenix ing at Pine Street and tumbled wo the concrete below, striking a Pacific Gas Electric truck where three employes were eating their lunch.

Nobody was hurt. While San Francisco police cleared away the debris, embarrassed military officials sought to find out who had accidentally dropped the bomb. Several hours later, the Navy finally identified the pilot the A4A Skyhawk as Lt. R. A.

Kiner, 32, Anaheim, Calif. He returned to Crow's Landing in central California from what he thought was a routine practice mission unaware that he had lost one of his six practice bombs. The loss was discovered hours later after Kiner, a reservist, had left the field. He could not be reached immediately for comment. Rocket Shot FailsDestroyed WASHINGTON (AP)-A scout rocket launched in an experiment to test heat shield material was destroyed seconds after liftoff from Wallops Island, today, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration announced.

A NASA spokesman said there were no injuries to personnel and no major damage as flaming debris showered down on the launch pad area after the rocket veered off course and was destroyed for safety reasons. In the engine of an eight-cylinder car traveling at 50 miles per hour, 136 spark plug firings occur every second. ing and over closed circuit television as Drummond removed at least six documents from a file cabinet a few hours before his arrest. Drummond testified that he was framed by the Soviets in 1957 while he was stationed in London and falsely made to look like a After that, he said, he was blackmailed into service as an espionage agent. Midwest Gets Up To 5 Inches Of Rain; Dixie Searing HotVicious Th Thunderstorms storms Hit By United Press International Vicious thunderstorms whipped the Midwest from Ohio to Illinois Friday night, dumping up to five inches of rain in spots and causing a rare seiche on Lake Michigan.

The level of Lake Michigan rose more than six feet at Waukegan, and two to six feet along the Chicago lake front. Police ordered everyone off the lakefront and closed the outer drive to traffic during the danger period. A seiche is a sudden rise of water that takes place when a very long flat wave moves against the shoreline and piles up 'CHRISTENING TRAGEDY' -Mrs. Eunice Shriver, sister of the President, leads son Timothy, crying Francis church in Hyannis, last night after the child and hurt his knee, They were leaving the christening of Atty. Gen.

and Mrs. Robert Kennedy's eighth child, Christopher George. Following along behind is Victoria Lawford, daughter of Patricia Lawford, another sister the Chief Executive. -AP Wirephoto. Park Concert Set By Band The Durham High School Concert Band will present an outdoor concert at 4 p.m.

tomorrow at Duke Park. The program will not be presented, nor postponed to another date, in case of rain. The program will feature marches and semi-classical and popular music suitable to the tastes of a summer afternoon lawn concert audience, according to Joseph D. Secrest, director. The five member majorette corps also will perform several dances and routines.

The concert originally was scheduled to have been held last Sunday, July 14 at Lake Michie. Inclement weather caused the postponement of all of the special events at the city's recreational area there. The DHS instrumentalists have been holding weekly rehearsals this summer in preparation for their 1963-64 season. 7 Continued from Page 1 verdict on the first count of the two-count indictment. Murphy declared a mistrial on the second count, which charged Drummond with actually commiting espionage acts at the time of his arrest last Sept.

28 in Larchmont, N.Y. The jury reported that it was unable to reach agreement on that count. On the first count, Drummond was found guilty of conspiring with four Soviet agents in a plot to provide military data, including information on naval weapons systems, maintenance of submarines and electronic equipment. Drummond admitted during the trial, which started July 8, that he got between $20,000 and $24,000 from Soviet agents over several years. He claimed that the material he sold them was not classified and was harmless.

Drummond, a native of Baltimore, served 16 years in the Navy. His basic salary was $120.95 a month. At the same time he owned a bar and grill in Newport, R.I., where he was stationed. Drummond's first trial ended May 23 after the jury's only Negro, a man, held out for his acquittal. Drummond was arrested outside a Larchmont diner.

FBI agents said he was in the act of passing information to two secretaries of the Soviet United Nations mission. The pair were recalled from this country a few days later. FBI agents testified at both trials that they watched from hid- The wave is formed by the pressure surge associated with a line of thunderstorms. The thunderstorm hit the Chicago area in late afternoon and turned the skies almost black. The north branch of the Chicago River rose about eight feet and it was reported the fire department had to raise the bridges to get its boats through, In the South, the temperatures were searing hot.

Three players withdrew from the PGA golf tourney in Dallas, because of 100-degree temperatures. Kansas City, hit 100 Friday the warmest since last August. water because of its momentum. A minister was killed when he Data from WEATHER AD 70 COLD 10 FORECAST Until Sunday Figures Shaw tow Temperatures frecisitedion Not indicated Consult faracett WEATHER FORECAST -It will continue hot and humid Saturday night from southern Plains and lower Mississippi valley eastward to the Atlantic. To the north some cooler temperatures and less humidity are expected from middle Mississippi valley through the Ohio and Tennessee valleys to middle Atlantic coast.

Scattered showers and thundershowers are due in parts of north Atlantic coast states and parts of the Tennessee valley. Samuel B. Davis Samuel Branch Davis, age 48, of Rt. 5, Rogers Road, died last night at 7:55 o'clock at Watts Hospital. He had been sick for the past seven months and a patient at the hospital for the past three days.

Surviving are his wife, Margaret Pendergraft Davis; four sons, Jerry Wayne Davis and NorCraig Davis both of the home, and Sammy G. Davis of Grass Valley, and Larry E. Davis of Grass Valley; one daughter, Mrs. Iris D. Houtler of Sacramento, one stepson, Ollie Henry Hicks of Durham; one stepdaughter, Mrs.

Margaret Ann Maynard of Durham; one brother, Oscar Davis of Durham; three sisters, Mrs. John Tilley, Mrs. Avery Rich and John H. Rigsbee, all of Durham; three grandchildren and several nieces and nephews. Mr.

Davis was born Sept. 9, 1914, in Orange County, son of the late William and Laura Browning Davis. He had made his home in Durham since 1935, and was employed by the W. 1 L. Robinson Tobacco Co.

He was married Nov. 10, 1955, to Miss Margaret Pendergraft. He was a of the Eastwood Chapel "church. Funeral services probably will held Monday. Interment will be in the Oak Grove Memorial Gardens.

The body will remain at a local funeral chapel until the hour of the service. J. P. Fearrington Funeral rites for James Phillip Fearrington, 64, of Route 3, Apex, Bells Baptist Church community, will be held at 3 p.m. tomorrow at the Bells Baptist Church.

Burial will be in the church cemetery. The Rev. Allen Wadsworth, pastor of the church, will conduct the service. Pallbearers will be Palmer Har- Copland, Earl Parker, Pittman ward, Alvin Womble, Robert Gardner and Clay Scott. The body will remain at the home until moved to the church one hour before the service.

Mr. Fearrington died Friday at 5:30 p.m. at his home. He was born and reared in Chatham County, the son of Tom B. Fearrington Grace Wynn Fearrington.

He ands educated in the Chatham County schools. All of his life he lived in the community in which he was born In where he engaged in farming. For many years he had been a member of the Bells Baptist Church where he taught the Men's Bible Class until his health failed. He was also a member of the local Grange. Surviving are his wife, Mrs.

Mina Bryan Fearrington; one daughter, Mrs. Marie Markham of Chatham County; two sons, Watts B. Fearrington of Raleigh and James Philip Fearrington of Greensboro; one brother, George Fearrington of Chapel Hill; two sisters, Mrs. C. E.

Prescott of Myrtle Beach, S. C. and Mrs. Mildred Gibson of Laurel Hill; and six grandchildren. George Mauney Funeral services for George Mauney of 2016 S.

Alston who died Wednesday, will be held at 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Emmanuel AME Church. Burial will follow in Beechwood Cemetery. The Rev. S.

I. Epps, pastor, will conduct the services. Surviving are three brothers, Charles Mauney of Stratford, Robert Mauney of Bloomfield, and Clyde Mauney of the home; three sisters, Mrs. Winifred Derr of Bridgeport, Mrs. Margaret Philadelphia, and Mrs.

Grace Ray of Los Angeles, and one stepson, Lindsey Faucett of Hawaii. Mrs. Pierce Funeral services were held in New Bern today for Mrs. Josephine Pierce of New Bern, the sister of A. T.

Best of Durham. Mrs. Pierce, who was the widow of the late William Pierce, died Thursday. Surviving are one son, Billy Pierce; one daughter, Miss Betty Jo Pierce; four brothers, A. T.

Best of Durham, G. W. Best of Franklinton, and Dr. James E. Best and Clarence D.

Best, both of Greensboro; and three sisters, Miss Elizabeth Best of Franklinton, Mrs. Mabel Pierce of Wake Forest and Mrs. Frances Bergman of Bessemer City. Mrs. Hutchinson Funeral services for Mrs.

Vandell Hutchinson of 112 W. Piedmont who died Tuesday, will be held at 12:45 p.m. tomorrow at the Kyles Temple AME Zion Church. Burial will follow in Beechwood Cemetery. The Rev.

George Tharrington, pastor, will conduct the services. Surviving are three daughters, Mrs. Alberta Dunn and Mrs. Myrtle Eilis, both of Durham, and Mrs. Marie Key of Virginia; two brothers, Robert and William Collier; four sisters: and two grandchildren and one great-grandchild.

End To Rowdy Parties Is Sought ATLANTIC BEACH (AP)-Mayor David Cooper has named an 11-member committee to draw up rules in hopes of ending rowdy house parties at this Tarheel resort community. He said Friday that the program will include curfews and restrictions on alcoholic beverages and is aimed at eliminating "a bad and dangerous situation detrimental to the conduct and growth of Atlantic Beach." Maternity Line GLENDALE, Ariz. (AP) Clendale 1 housewife Mrs. Graydon Hall dried her clothes in a laundromat Mrs. Hall for quite explained awhile.

that a a bird built a nest on her revolving clothes line and she didn't want to upset the soon-to-be mother. Mrs. Sarah Dennis ABERDEEN Funeral services for Mrs. Sarah Carter Dennis, 71, who died Thursday, were held at 3 p.m. today at the First Methodist Church of Thomaston, Ga.

Burial followed in Americus, Ga. Surviving is one son, W. S. Dennis Jr. of Mataire, and one sister, Mrs.

W. H. Barefield of Aberdeen. Dr. Ernest Phillips NORTH WILKESBORO Funeral services for Dr.

Ernest Nicholas Phillips, 69, who died yesterday, will be held at 4:30 p.m. tomorrow at the First Baptist Church. Burial will follow in Mountlawn Memorial Park. He was a member of the Lafayette Escadrille fighter pilot group during World War I. Surviving are his wife, Mrs.

Mary Belle Smith Phillips; daughter, Mrs. William B. Cothran of Burlington; three grandchildren; two brothers, Albert R. and Matthew D. Phillips, both of Dalton; and five sisters, Mrs.

G. T. Mitchell of Chapel Hill, Mrs. Tom Hunter of Fayetteville, Mrs. Lee Kiser of Statesville, Mrs.

Carl Reifsnider of Cleveland, Ohio, and Miss Ruth Phillips of Shaker Heights, Ohio. Mall Plan Due Airing Members of the City Council and the city administration will meet at 10 a.m. Wednesday in an informal discussion of the proposed closing of Main Street in the downtown business area to develop a shopping mall. Robert Anderson of City Planning and Architectural Associates of Chapel Hill, professional consultants for the City Council's Long Range Planning Committee, will present the new ideas now under consideration for the revitalization of the downtown section. Representatives of the Durham Redevelopment Commission, which is concerned with the availability urban renewal funds in the program, will bey present for the meeting.

The business area redevelopment plans are to be coordinated with projects already authorized, including the proposed expressway, for which bond funds have been approved. Head Blow Proves Fatal FLETCHER, N.C. (AP)-A Negro convict was in prison at Asheville today accused of killing another prisoner Friday by hitting him on the head with a broom. State Prisons Director George Randall said John Henry Kelly, 28, Negro of Forest City died about three after being hit by Thomas hours, 28, of East Point, Ga. Randall said the two men were working with a road gang near Fletcher when the attack occurred.

He added, "'We don't know what caused the attack. A full investigation is under way." King, taken to Craggy Prison camp for safekeeping, is serving three to five years for robbery. 6 Continued from Page 1 clear attacks, would be most acceptable to him and "would be received with great satisfaction by world public opinion." Washington's immediate reaction was to ask to see the nuclear test ban agreement spelled out before proceeding with Khrushchev's other proposals. Valerian Zorin, Soviet deputy foreign minister, told. a reporter the test ban talks may conclude by the middle or end of next week.

The talks, which began July 15, originally were expected to last about 10 days. There were indications Khrushchev's proposals may have been discussed by the test ban negotiators during their meetings. Khrushchev did not specifically dismiss a proposal attributed to the White House that a joint declaration of nonaggression might be more feasible as a companion of the test ban than a formal nonaggression treaty between NATO and the Warsaw Pact powers. He indicated he wanted more than that, but left room for compromise. The West has objected to a formal pact since it probably would require the recognition of Communist East Germany and the partition of Germany.

Khrushchev proposed: -A test ban covering all nuclear explosions except underground, which he said is not feasible now. -A nonaggression pact between the Warsaw Pact and NATO. -A settlement of the BerlinGerman question. (He set no time limit). -Freezing, or reduction, of military budgets.

-A system of inspection posts scattered east and west of the Iron Curtain at airfields, railroad stations, highways and ports where their presence might spot any troop movements for a surprise attack. -Reduction of the armed forces in East and West Germany. In 1962, an estimated 21,500,000 amateurs were playing the piano. Hudson FUNERAL HOME Serving Durhem Since 198 1800 Angier Ave. Phone OBITUARY 15-Samuel Branch Davis, 48, of R1.

5, Rogers Road, died Friday night at 7:55 p.m. at Watts Hospital. Funeral services will probably be held Monday and interment will follow in the Oak Grove Memorial Gardens. The body will remain at the Hudson Funeral Chapel until the hour of the service. SERVICE BY HUDSON N.

E. Hamlet pass or blocking traffic. They were taken to jails here and in Hillsboro. All except three remained in jail in lieu of $100 bonds. After the sit-in, Mayor Sandy McClamroch organized a committee of local businessmen to seek to negotiate differences with the Negro demonstrators.

It was the second time this week that McClamroch had formed such a group. A demonstrator said the merchant group was selected as a sit-in target because it has publicly opposed a public accommodations law, one of the aims of the Chapel Hill Committee for Open Business. The committee staged the sit-in as well as other demonstrations that first began May 25. About 18 Negroes and whites invaded the office building, sat on the floor, clapped their hands and sang. They a refused to leave, and were bodily carried from the building by police.

Another group sat on the sidewalk in front of the building. They were arrested on charges of blocking traffic. 3 Continued from Page 1 ionosphere, the electrified layer high in the earth's atmosphere, as for the first is obscured and then cleared." Radio astronomers will bounce radio signals off the moon, and by the behavior of the returning echoes trace changes in the ionosphere as night comes suddenly with the eclipse. The eclipse begins in Japan at dawn, and the path of totality then sweeps about 10,000 miles in hours. It zips across Pacific to touch Alaska late in the morning, Alaska time, then across Canada and into Maine at about 4:45 p.m., EST.

Maine expected a heavy influx of visitors, hoping to see the sunlight cut to one-millionth of its normal intensity, and such phenomena as baily's beads, the last flashes of the sun shining through valleys and gorges on the moon's rim, and when the sun is totally covered possibly the licking tongues of great outbursts of incandescent gases--the solar prominences. For everyone outside the lucky zone, it will still be an interesting show, with the moon gradually blocking part of the sun's face up to some point short of total, then moving clear. Skies will dim a bit where the eclipse is great enough. 2 Continued from Page 1 much of what Khrushchev said i in his 3 public speech was a repetition of what Soviet negotiators have told Harriman and Lord Hailsham, the British delegate at the nuclear talks, in private discussions. the officials said, neither Khrushchev nor his aides made the type of concrete proposals they said are needed for meaningful discussions.

Administration officials were guardedly optimistic about Khrushchev's remarks on a nonaggression pact between East and West. Khrushchev, they noted, conceded that the important thing is "not the form, but This is understood here to mean that the Soviet leader would be satisfied with a declaration, instead of a a formal pact. The United States and some of its allies, especially West Germany, are concerned that a former pact might be viewed as recognition of the East German Communist regime and might freeze the status quo in Central Europe. ROXBORO Funeral services will be held at 11 a.m. Monday at the Ca-Vel Baptist Church for Sgt.

Nason Edward Hamlet, 33, of Ca-Vel, who died July 6 at Brindisi, Italy, as the result of head injuries received in a traffic accident. Burial will follow in National Cemetery in Raleigh. A veteran of years in the Air Force, Hamlet was a member of the 6917th Security Group. Surviving are his wife; his mother, Mrs. Theresa Hall Hamlet of Roxboro; his father, J.

Howard Hamlet of South Boston, one sister, Mrs. Margaret Phipps of Durham; one brother, Burley R. Hamlet of Roxbore; his maternal grandmother, Mrs. N. R.

Hall of Longhurst; and his step-grandfather, John A. Gibson of Charlotte Courthouse, Va. Mrs. Lillie Davie OXFORD Funeral services for Mrs. Lillie Wilson Davie, 86, wife of 0.

T. Davie, will be held tomorrow at the Perkinson-Currin Funeral Chapel. Burial will follow in Elmwood Cemetery. Mrs. DaSo vie died yesterday.

Surviving, in addition to her husband, are four son, B. B. P. and U. G.

Wilson, all of Rt. 5, Oxford, and W. C. Wilson of Oxford; two sisters, Mrs. Mattie Hester of Rt.

3, Henderson, and Mrs. Gertie Hawkes of Petersburg, one brother, G. C. Wilson of Petersburg, and 14 grandchildren and 24 great-grandchildren. 0.

W. Minnis BURLINGTON Funeral services for Omar W. Minnis, 55, an assistant supervisor of mails at the Burlington Post Office and a native of Orange County, will be held at 3 p.m. tomorrow at the Rich and Thompson Funeral Chapel. Burial will follow in Pine Hill Cemetery.

He died yesterday. Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Beulah Clark Minnis; two daughters, Mrs. Shirley Minnis Lloyd of Mebane, and Miss Jennie Faye Minnis of Raleigh; one brother, Edward Minnis of Mebane; and two grandchildren. John Hamilton APEX Private family funeral services for John Hamilton, 68, who died Thursday, were held at 11 a.m.

today at the Apex Funeral Chapel. Burial followed in Raleigh Memorial Cemetery. Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Jessie Kay Hamilton; one daughter, Mrs. Jessie Kay Crumpton of Cary; one grandchild; three brothers, Hughie and Alex Hamilton, both of Portland, and James Hamilton of Scotland; and two sisters, Mrs.

Dempsie and Mrs. George Benny, both of Scotland. David M. Johnston fell or was blown off an elevated platform onto an electrified rail. Four funnel clouds were spotted at the junction of the Illinois Tollway and the Congress Expressway on Chicago's West Side.

The Weather Bureau said a small tornado may have caused the uprooting of trees and unroofing of three buildings from Antioch, to Morton Grove and Skokie, on Chicago's North Side. The Coast Guard at Milwaukee, recorded a brief 18-inch rise in Lake Michigan, but there was no damage. Earlier in the evening, rain like a sheet of glass knocked out power in a wide area around Janesville, and disrupted the junior championship play in the state women's golf tournament. Four inches of rain fell in a half hour at Lake Geneva, and the high winds ripped boats loose from their moorings, piled them on shore and lifted them onto piers. More than five inches of rain fell in the Beloit, area.

Hail hit Kenosha, Wis. More than five inches of rain fell at Moline, and winds of 65 to 75 miles an hour broke the air speed indicator at the Moline airport. An Argos, a woman died Friday in a lightning-caused fire. Winds with gusts of up to 54 miles per hour smashed into the South Bend, area flooding streets and ripping down trees and power lines. An estimated 25,000 persons were without service for varying periods.

SANFORD Funeral services for David McCoy Johnston, 56, who died yesterday, will be held at 4 p.m. tomorrow at the Miller Funeral Chapel. Burial will follow in St. Andrews Church Cemetery. Surviving are his wife, Mrs.

Oma H. Johnston; two brothers, Paul Johnston of Sanford and Glenn Johnston of Sunbury; and one sister, Mrs. Tom Brooks of Rt. 6, Sanford. Mrs.

Minnie Cenable OXFORD Funeral services for Mrs. Minnie Hicks Cenable, 63, who died yesterday, will be held at 3 p.m. tomorrow at the Huntsville Baptist Church. Burial will follow in the church cemetery. Surviving are three sisters, Mrs.

Isabel Burt and Mrs. Annie Burt, both of Newark, N.J., and Mrs. Eva Ayco*ck of Oxford. STAFF MEMBER MRS. MARGARET GREENHILL CLEMENTS FUNERAL SERVICE.

The Durham Sun from Durham, North Carolina (2024)

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