i Durham Morning Herald Saturday, January 7, 1961 Weather Mostly sunny and mild today. IncreasIng cloudiness and not quite as warm morrow. Expected temperatures: High 62: Low, 33. Sun sets tonight 5:17 p.m.: sun rises tomorrow 7:27 a.m. YESTERDAY: 1 a.m.: 40, Humidity 57.
a.m.: Temperature 33. 69. p.m.: Temperature 57. Humidity 32. 7 p.m.: Temperature 49, Humidity 45.
Highest temperature 60. Lowest temperature 32. Mean temperature 46. Above normal for the day 4. Barometer at 11:30 p.m.
30.18. Total Preci ration 0. Pumping Station to 6 p.m. 0. Total precipitation for the month .46.
Deficiency for the month .14. Total precipitation for the year .46. Deficiency for the year .14. Furnished by U.S. Weather Bureau at the Raleigh-Durham Airport.
Forecast for Durham and Vicinity: By Weather (high, last and rainfall p.m. for STATION Albany Albu' que Asheville Atlanta Bling R'k Boston Buffalo Cha'ston Charlotte Chicago Cincin'ti Clevel'd Columb's Denver Detroit Durham Ft. Worth Galves'n Jack' ville Kan City COLD COLD LOW. A 30 Data From U.S. WEATHER BUREAU 40 50 HIGH 50 30.53 60 60 70 70 HIGH 30.18 70 Snow 70 FORECAST For Daytime Saturday Figures Show High Temperatures Expected Mostly Sunny, Mild Mostly sunny skies, with peratures are forecast.
Carolina today. Rain and forecast for the Pacific and in the Gulf area. are expected in the northern mild tem- and the Great for North the rest of drizzle is to partly northwest colder from Snow flurries the Great Rockies change is Local, State Deaths And Funerals MARY SNEED WHITTED er, Jim Barnes of Fayetteville; Funeral services for Mrs. Mary and three sisters, Mrs. D.
W. Sneed Whitted of 1208 Rosewood Canady of Fayetteville, Mrs. R. will be held Saturday at 11 a.m. L.
Sarbough of Kure Beach, and at Beechwood Cemetery. Mrs. Mrs. J. O.
Bracy of China Grove. Whitted died Wednesday after a MISS OLLIE MAE BRANTLEY ROANOKE RAPIDS Miss Ollie Mae Brantley, 28, of Roanoke Rapids died in a local hospital early Friday following a long illness. She was a lifelong resident of Roanoke Rapids. Funeral services will be conducted at 3 p.m. Sunday from the First Methodist Church here by Rev.
W. J. Neese. Burial will be in Cedarwood Cemetery. Surviving mother and stepfather, Mr.
and Mrs. Grady Outland: one stepsister, Mrs. Linda Fields and her maternal grandmother, Mrs. Isabella Powers, all of Roanoke Rapids. MISS FLOSSIE MUSSELWHITE FAYETTEVILLE Miss Flossie Musselwhite, 81, of Fayetteville, died Thursday morning in a local rest home after several years of illness.
Funeral services will be conSunday at 3 p.m. at Calducted, Methodist Church by Rev. I. J. Strawbridge, assisted by Rev.
D. Lowder, Burial: will be in Lafayette Memorial Park, The body will remain at Jernigan-Warren Funeral Home until 30 minutes prior to the services. She is survived by two sisters, Miss Lottie Musselwhite and Mrs. Fannie King, both of Fayetteville: and a number of nieces and nephews. MRS.
FINARD T. OWEN CLARKSVILLE, Va, Mrs. Finard T. Owen, 57, died Friday in a Richmond. Va, hospital.
She was a resident of Clarksville. Funeral services will be conducted at 2 p.m. Sunday at Buffalo Baptist Tabernacle Church by Rev. David E. Pruett.
Burial Statesville Man Dies After 2-Year Leukemia Battle STATESVILLE (AP) -Death has claimed a well-known Statesville businessman after a heroic two-year struggle against leukemia. Heath B. Helms, 37-year-old former manager of a finance company here, died Friday at Winston-Salem Baptist Hospital. Helms had achieved widespread attention because of his willing. ness to undergo experimental treatment for the dread disease.
He was one of four patients in the United States who had been treated with special drugs flown to this country from Germany. He was first informed that he the disease on Thanksgiving Day, 1957. Since then he had been in and out of numerous hospitals and had willingly submitted to any treatment suggested by his doctors, including the unknown foreign drugs. He was active in civic affairs even after contracting the disease. Survivors include his widow and a daughter.
will be in Oakhurst Cemetery. Surviving are her husband, Bailey C. Owen: two daughters, Mrs. Harvey M. Canada of Richmond.
and Mrs. Yeaman Newton of Buffalo Junction: one son, B. C. Owen Jr. Buffalo Junetion; four sisters, Miss Jewel Tillotson of Norfolk, and Mrs.
Royster Daniel, Mrs. Vernon Yancey and Mrs. Clyde McPeters of Richmond: four brothers, Ollie and Vest Tillotson, both of Buffalo Junction, Barrow of Virgilina, and Oscar Tillotson of Norfolk: and five grandchildren. CONNIE VAN SANFORD Van PowPOWERS. ers, 76.
of Sanford, died Thursday night in Lee County Hospital following a long illness. Funeral services will be conducted Saturday at 4 p.m, at Jones Chapel Methodist Church by Dr. Stanley Potter and Rev. Daniel Boone. Burial will be in the church cemetery.
The body will be taken from Miller Funeral Home to the family home Friday at 4 p.m. to lie in state until carried to the church an hour before the services. Surviving are his widow, the former Miss Mary Clark: four daughters. Miss Estelle Powers fof the home. and Mrs.
Thompson Little, Mrs. Leon Henry and Mrs. Fore, all of Sanford: one sister, Mrs. D. H.
Brewer of Sanford: five grandchildren and one great grandchild. JAMES H. HARDISON HILLSBORO James Hardison. 59, of West Hillsboro died in a Durham hospital Thursday night after one month of critical illness. He was a native of Beaufort County.
Surviving are his widow. Mrs. Mary E. Hardison of Nashville, five daughters, Mrs. John D.
Smith, Mrs. Herbert Keeter, Mrs. Clyde King and Miss Shirley Hardison, all of West Hillsboro, and Mrs. Mary Ruth Johnson of Nashville: two sons, J. N.
Hardison of Grifton, and Franklin Hardison of Homestead, his mother. Mrs. Margaret Hardison Ammons, and his stepfather, George Ammons of Rt. 1, Hallsboro; two sisters, Mrs. Marian Stevenson of Warmish, and Mrs.
Catherine Alford of Conway, S.C.: two a brothers, Isaac Hardison of and Miller Hardison of Fayetteville; a half brother. G. R. Ammons of Fayetteville; and 18 grandchildren, Funeral services will be conducted at 2 p.m. Sunday from the Church of God of West Hillsboro by Rev.
J. R. Doby and Rev. W. S.
Williams. Burial will be in the Hillsboro Cemetery. The body will lie in state at the church for one hour prior to the services. 2 Represent Duke Duke University will be represented by two faculty members at the convention of the American Association of Colleges in Denver, Monday through Thursday, Jan. 9-12.
Attending will be Ellen Huckabee, dean of undergraduate instruction at Woman's College, and Rev. Barney Jones, assistant professor of religion, Trinity College. Miss Huckabee is on the association's nominating committee for academic deans. Plantation Owners Arrive As Refugees MIAMI (UPI) A clan of Americans who operated a 10.000- acre plantation in Cuba arrived as refugees Friday with nothing but the clothes on their backs. It was a poor homecoming for brothers Clyde and George Jewett and their six sons, who estimated the value of their plantation, at Holguin, Cuba, at more than one million dollars.
CLEMENTS FORMERLY ANGOLANCE dial SERVICE 8-1224 SPEASE-Funeral services for Mrs. Alice Greenwood Spease, of Cary, former resident of Durham, will be held from the Epworth Methodist Church in Amelia, Saturday afternoon at 2:00 o'clock. Interment will be in the church cemeery. The funeral party will leave the Clements Funeral Home, Saturday at 8 a.m. Officiating will be the Rev.
Richard Scott. Selected Member Order Golden Rule Thailand's Chief Criticizes West's Uncertainty In Laos Ike Says GOP Must Not Get Habit Of Losing WASHINGTON (AP) President Eisenhower told the Republican National Committee Friday the GOP must not get in the habit of losing elections. Given a standing ovation in his final as President before Eisenhower appearance, predicted Republicans will win control of the House of Representatives in 1962 if they work hard enough. He said the big job ahead is to reverse the trend of the last four Congressional elections when the party was defeated. "Four times is plenty and we'll have no more of it," he declared.
As for the presidential race defeat of Vice President Richard M. Nixon, Eisenhower said that when he was young his athletic coaches always said "if you have to take defeat, be a sportsman about it." He said he agreed, but added: "I never had a coach tell me I had to get used to it." In a burst of unity before the President's appearance at a luncheon session, the national committee unanimously asked Sen. Thruston B. Morton Kentucky stay on as its chairman. Morton said he would.
indicating he might remain at the party helm at least through this session of Congress. Top Navy Employe Avoids Explaining $100,000 Spree WASHINGTON (AP) A top civilian employe of the Navy at Brooklyn, N.Y.. refused Friday to tell Senate probers the source of almost $100,000 they said he spent between 1955 and 1959. George P. Cross invoked Fifth Amendment protection against possible self-incrimination when asked to produce bank records.
Sen. John L. McClellan, claimed the records would explain alleged business deals by Cross with real estate. automobile, stock and other firms. An investigator testified that between 1956 and 1959, while allegedly handling all this cash, Cross filed tax reports listing $7,017 income in addition to his salary.
Cross said he has no safe deposit boxes from which the nearly $100,000 could have come. But Cross insisted he had done nothing wrong in connection with his job as deputy maintenance and repair officer and superintending port engineer for the Military Sea Transportation Service at Brooklyn. Infegration Bids Not Yet Received By Orange Supt. HILLSBORO G. Paul Carr, superintendent of Orange County schools, said Friday that he had received no applications requesting reassignment of Negro students to the all-white elementary school in the White Cross Community.
A. L. Stanback, principal of the Negro school in Hillsboro which the students now attend, reportedly intended to turn the applications over to the school board Thursday, after attaching the student's transcripts. He could not be reached Friday night to say whether he had finished attaching the records. Carr said he has had no communication with Stanback recently and does not know when the applications, that will until be the received.
applications are received by his office he will make no official comment. The applications were submitted to Stanback earlier by Floyd B. McKissick, Negro attorney of Durham, with a request that he forward them to the school board. The Negro students, all from the White Cross community, are presently required to travel a number of miles daily to attend the Hillsboro school. McKissick said the next move is up to the school board.
Loan To Argentina WASHINGTON (AP) -The U.S. Import million Bank to Argentina Friday loaned for highways and housing. Hudson FUNERAL HOME Serving Durham Since 1928 1800 Angler Ave. 2-2169 Harriman Mentioned JFK Pondering Emissary To By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER dent elect John F.
(AP) Kennedy is beWASHINGTON Presi- WORLD a special emissary to see Soviet lieved to be considering sending news. sary would sound out whatever ideas Khrushchev may have for Premier Khrushchev. The emisBRIEFS improving Soviet-American relations. The mission to Moscow presumably would be assigned to former New York Gov. W.
Averell Harriman, whom Kennedy named a week ago to be his large. Speculation about such a move by Kennedy broke out Friday in advance of a conference here between the president -elect and Dean Rusk, the man he has to be his secretary of state." The problem of how to handle relations with the Soviet Unionincluding the possibility of developing some new approach on such issues as disarmament and EastWest tensions in Europe is one of the most serious awaiting action by the incoming administration. Khrushchev has generated what amounts to a new Soviet peace propaganda campaign on the theme that he wants to do business with Kennedy. One of the things Khrushchev is aiming at is a summit conference sometime this year. In the eyes of U.S.
officials, however, Soviet support for the rebels in Laos and for the Castro regime in Cuba has cast serious doubt on whether Khrushchev looks forward to easing really, West tension, or sees a new summit conference as another battleground in the cold war. In the Kennedy camp, there is said to be a strong feeling that the new administration must act as quickly as possible after taking office to sound out Khrushchev. JFK, Rusk Confer WASHINGTON (AP) President-elect John F. Kennedy Friday night conferred with his future secretary of state on international trouble spots, including Cuba and Laos. He said he made some decisions on top level foreign policy appointments for his administration.
Kennedy, arriving at his Georgetown home after a round of conferences in New York, spent hours with Dean Rusk, named to be his secretary of state. "Mr. Rusk was just bringing me up to date on matters that affect foreign policy and the transition" of authority from the Eisenhower administration, Kennedy said later. In Swiss Hands HAVANA (AP) Switzerland took over protection of U.S. interests in Cuba Friday night and the Says Events Could Get Out Of Hand The bureau 12 hours; (last selected Pr 49 12 46 19 58 29 47 27 40 32 59 59 25 44 49 35 44 43 49 47 30 60 32 6866 53 31 46 37 1.30 .04 Associated Press report of temperatures low, last 18 hours) 24 hours) ending areas: STATION Pr Knoxville Angeles 74 47 Louisville 55.
38 Miami 76 61 Minn-S1P 43 15 New York 45 32 Norfolk 58 Omaha Phoenix 69 38 Pittsburg 43 Port'd Me Raleigh 60 Richm'd 60 St. Louls San Fran 43 36 Seattle 45 42 .17 Spokane 42 34 .09 Tampa Wash ton 53 Wilton 62 35 CHARLES C. HAYSWOOD Charles C. Hayswood, 87, of 1001 South died Friday after a long period of illness. Funeral services will be held from the Presbyterian Church 3 p.m.
InCovenant, terment will follow at Beechwood Cemetery. Surviving are two daughters, Alice Hayswood of the home and Mrs. Mary Connor of Concord. MRS. MARIA JOHNSON Funeral services for Mrs.
Maria Johnson, 103, of 52 Ridgeway who died Thursday, will be held Sunday at 1 p.m. at the Oak Hill Baptist Church, Laurinburg. Burial will follow in the church cemetery. She is survived by a daughter, Mrs. Annie McLaughlin, and a niece, Mrs.
Nettie Easterling, both of Durham. MRS. ALICE G. SPEASE Final rites for Mrs. Alice Greenwood Spease, resident of Cary and former resident of Durham, will be held from the Epworth Methodist Church in Amelia, Saturday at 2 p.m.
Interment will be in the church cemetery. The Rev. Richard Scott, pastor of the Epworth Methodist Church will officiate. The funeral party will leave the Clements Funeral Home Saturday at 8 a.m. for the church where the body will lie in state for one hour before the service.
MARY CARLOTTA STEPHENS Funeral rites for Mrs. Mary Carlotta Stephens, 83, mother of Mrs. Agnes Partin, 503 Gurley will be held Saturday at 3 p.m. at the Corinth Methodist Church. Burial will be in the Buckhorn Methodist Church Cemetery at Corinth.
The Rev. Daniel Boone, pastor of the Church, and the Rev. Wade Paris, pastor of the Jesse Howell Chapel of Durham, will conduct the service. The body will remain at How Funeral Home until noon. Pallbearers will be Henry Cross, Ben Mims, Zeb Harrington, Billy Harrington, Charlie McLean, and Allen Harrington.
Mrs. Stephens died Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at her home. DAVID DUDLEY ASHEVILLE David Dudley, brother of S. L.
Dudley of Durham, died at his home here Thursday. Funeral services will be held from the home in Asheville Sunday. Surviving are his wife, five children, five brothers and two sisters. MRS. NORA L.
BREWER CHAPEL HILL Mrs. Nora Lloyd Brewer, 68, of Rt. 1, Chapel Hill, died at 3:45 p.m. Friday in Watts Hospital, Durham, after several years of declining health. She had been critically ill for the last seven weeks.
Funeral arrangements will be announced. W. J. BARNES FAYETTEVILLE-W. J.
(Bill) Barnes, 41, a former resident of Fayetteville, died Thursday night in Wilmington after a brief illness. Funeral services will be conducted Saturday at 2 p.m. from the chapel of Jernigan-Warren Funeral Home by Rev. Hubert Black, pastor of Highland Presbyterian Church. Burial will be in Cross Creek Cemetery.
Mr. Barnes was a native of Fayetteville. He was the son of Mrs. Rachel Jackson Barnes and the late James A. Barnes.
In addition to his mother, who now resides at Kure Beach, he is survived by one daughter, Kay Barnes of Fayetteville; one broth- Howerton Bryan MEMORIAL HOME Ale CHAPEL Since 1874 STEPHENS-Funeral rites for Mrs. Mary Carlotta Stephens, 83, mother of Mrs. Agnes Partin, will be held Saturday at 3 p.m. at Corinth Methodist Church. Burial Bickhorn Methodist Church Ceme tery.
The body will remain at HowertonBryan Funeral Home until noon when it will be moved to the church to lie in state. Lakes region. Most of the nation will have clear cloudy weather. It will be the northern Plains into Lakes. Little temperature expected elsewhere.
(AP) 'Mr. Sam' 79 Rep. Sam Rayburn of Texas, who has served as Speaker of the House longer than any other man, drew lavish praise from Democrats and Republicans alike Friday as celebrated his 79th birthday. "Mr. Sam" he, first entered Congress 48 years ago.
and realized his ambition to become Speaker 28 years later. (AP) Surface Harmony Prevails As Art Group, Bier Meet RALEIGH (AP) Surface harmony prevailed Friday as directors of the North Carolina State Art Society met Dr. Justus Bier, new director of the State Museum of Art, and discussed a plan to reorganize the museum. The quiet, lengthy, often dull meeting was. in marked contrast to previous board sessions which have seen heated discussions and sharp infighting.
Board members unanimously a by Egbert adopted, Winston-Salem deferring action on the reorganization report. A staff study will be made the organization and operation of the major museums in the United States. State Treasurer Edwin Gill said it also would be wise to determine the new administration's attitude toward the matter. According to Davis' motion, the board will then meet at a called session and will use the staff study and the administration's attitude as a basis for its decision. The North Carolina Museum of Art is currently governed by the State Art Society, essentially a private organization.
The Commission reorganization of State Government recommends that the museum and its governing board be reorganized into a complete state agency, with the governor appointing' the museum board of directors. Dr. Bier told board members that he regarded his new post as a challenge. For the past 24 years, he has been associated with the Department of Fine Arts at the University of Louisville in Kentucky and director of the Allen R. Hite Museum there.
"I come to my task knowing that it will take a long time for me to become fully acquainted with the great collection here," he said. "It cannot be learned in a few days. I hope you will give me time to "Dr. Bier will return to Germany Monday. He is currently holding a Fulbright professorship there.
In late February or early March he will come to the North Carolina Museum of Art to assume his permanent duties. Truck Snared The Gregson Street overhead bride, long a nemesis to trucks chalked up another victim early Friday night, A tractor-trailer owned by H. T. Phillips of Aberdeen, Ohio and driven by Meyers G. Emmitt, 35, of Maysville, struck the bridge while travelling north on Gregson, doing $4.000 damage to the top of the trailer.
Investigating policeman, E. R. Francis, quoted Emmitt as saying $9,000 had recently been spent the '59 model White vehicle. The bridge sustained no damage as usual. Emmitt told officers he was not familiar with Durham and thought the bridge was high enough for large trucks.
(last remaining American Embassy staff people made ready to leave for home. A short conference between Swiss Ambassador Bossi and U.S. Charge d'Affaires Daniel M. Braddock of Grand Rapids, preceded the formal transfer of diplomatic powers. Bossi went to the U.S.
Embassy to arrange details after being advised Washington had approved Rec. Czechoslovakia to represent Cuban interests in the United States. Cuban approval of Switzerland was contingent on U.S. approval of Czechoslovakia. Trip To Japan WASHINGTON (UPI) President and Mrs.
Eisenhower expect to make a leisurely trip to Japan in September or October for a private visit, it was learned Friday. The President thus would be making as a citizen trip which he was to cancel as private, Chief Executive last June because of leftists riots in Tokyo. The idea originated with some Eisenhower's former associates lat Columbia University, which he headed until he sought the presidency in 1952. In Tokyo he technically would be the guest of the Columbia University Alumni Association of Japan. Integration Ordered MACON, Ga.
(UPI) The University of Georgia was ordered Friday to admit two Negroes in a Federal Court ruling that touched off an anti-integration demonstration by university students. Some 100 shouting gathered on the campus of the nation's oldest chartered state-supported college at Athens, several hours after the desegregation order by federal Judge William A. Bottle. An effigy of one of Negroes ordered admitted to the university at the start of the winter quarter Monday was hung on a school gate by students who chanted "two, four, we demonstration was without' incident and broke up shortly after the appearance of dean of men William Tate. The largest English-speaking city south of Miami is Kingston, Jamaica.
It has a population of 300,000. BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) Thailand's Prime Minister Sarit Thanarat expressed concern Friday over what he called Western uncertainty in the Laos crisis, He get "completely out of declared situation handoud His criticism seemed aimed at the council of the Southeast Asia Treaty Organization which met briefly at its Bangkok headquarters for the third time to discuss the Laos situation, then issued no statement. Sarit, who returned to this capital from a seaside resort where he had been recuperating from influenza, expressed his concern at a news conference. He said that continued indecision of the West over Laos may allow Thailands neighbor to slip off into a position where it cannot be saved. However, Sarit later told the Thai people the situation in Laos is "serious but not critical." The feeling of tense urgency which pervaded in SEATO headquarters here all week appeared to be dissipating.
Some sources said this was apparently due to growing realization that SEATO will not be asked to supply military forces to halt Communist advances in Laos at least until some other methods have been tried. Others said the United States apparently has stopped pushing its claim that the Communists have intervened with manpower as well as equipment. A majority of the SEATO members appeared to be firmly convinced the course is a call for political settlement while keeping its powder dry. It was possible that this approach may have been dictated by the lukewarm reaction of Premier Boun Oum's pro Western Laotian government to the possibility of SEATO intervention. Laos must request est SEATO aid before the organization can move.
In Washington, diplomats reported the Soviet Union had ruled out any formula for a political settlement that was based on Communist acceptance of Boun Oum's regime. Vietnamese Arrested BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) Border police have arrested several Vietnamese nationals who set up a secret shooting range on the Thai border opposite the Laotian capital of Vientiane, the Thai interior minister, Praphas Charusathian, said Friday. IT IS OUR POLICY to mark the costs of our funerals in plain figures Afall-Nunne, 5-147 Member of National Selected Morticians REGISTER NOW JAN. 6th THRU FEB. 25th IN THE BEAUTY SALON 3rd FLOOR for La Marick's Appreciation Contest 1st Prize- -Natural Pastel Mink Stole 2nd Prize- Week in Miami (For Two) 3rd 4th Prizes-42-Piece Set Melmac Dinnerware PLUS 312 Other Prizes To Be Given Away NO PURCHASE NECESSARY TO REGISTERYOU DO NOT HAVE TO BE PRESENT TO WIN One of the World's Finest Waves LA MARICK DELUXE OIL COLD WAVE $25.00 Value hair cut Protein Shampoo and conditioner test curls and 995 Style set and La Marick Super Soft Hair Spray complete Other La Marick Specials Deluxe Lanol Wave.
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Leggett Beauty Salon as advertised in VOGUE Open Friday Nights 'til 9 But one of them said he felt like he had escaped from hell. The Jewett family had owned the plantation for, more than 55 years. Clyde a Jewett, 63, a weatherbeaten, man, had lived there since he was six. Most of the family had been born there. They came to Miami Friday along with more than 100 other persons airlifted by the Navy from eastern Cuba following the break in diplomatic relations between the United States and the island nation.
Clyde Jewett went to Cuba in 1903 with his father and mother. The father, Albin Jewett, came from Davis, W. Va. He was hired by an American company to go to Oriente Province and set up a sawmill. After setting up the sawmill Albin preparing to return home when the company's local manager died.
The firm asked him to stay on and run the sawmill. The Jewett family built up its plantation over the years I since then. 1.